Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:02):
Hello friends, we have a moment so that we may
discuss our Lord and Savior minarchy. No, seriously, I'm just kidding.
Speaker 2 (00:11):
Hi.
Speaker 1 (00:12):
My name is Rick Robinson. I am the general manager
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(00:55):
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Are you ready to reach for the stars? Tune in
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Speaker 5 (01:47):
My dad is really really special and I love my
dad law.
Speaker 3 (01:54):
I'm proud of him and that even though he isn't
here with us, but he died as a true hero.
Speaker 6 (02:04):
How much everything about him and.
Speaker 7 (02:07):
The moment that the officers and I had to come
see the children, my biggest reaction was, I don't have
seven arms. I have seven children who just lost their father,
and I don't have seven arms to wrap around them.
Speaker 8 (02:21):
I'm Frank Cla, chairman of the steven Sila Tunnel to
Talis Foundation. Our foundation is committed to delivering mortgage free
homes for gold Star families and fall and first respond
to families.
Speaker 5 (02:32):
To not have to.
Speaker 9 (02:33):
Worry financially is a huge peace of mind. The thought
of what in the world will I possibly do to
pay the bills? How will I possibly let the children
have a life that feels normal. I don't want them
to have to quit their piano lessons or their basketball.
I don't want them to feel that we have to
move into a little apartment and struggle financially. In addition
to the emotional weight.
Speaker 10 (02:53):
There are over one thousand families that need our help.
Tunnel to Taalis is honoring those heroes that risk their
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Those who serve us and then lay down their lives
protecting our freedoms and our safety. The least we can
do is eleven dollars a month to give them that
piece of always knowing there's a home.
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There's that sanctuary.
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When life feels like it's been tipped upside down, because
it has when you lose a parent in the line
of duty, to know you can go home, you can
be safe, there's no risk of losing your home. That's
a peace of mind that I can't believe you can
get for eleven.
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Dollars a month.
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I like to ask you to contribute eleven dollars a
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The following program contains course language and adult themes. Listener
and Discretion is.
Speaker 2 (04:45):
Advice Yesterday Decembers some nineteen forty one, a date which
(05:10):
will live in skin for me.
Speaker 8 (05:19):
For achieving the goal before this decade is out of
landing a man on.
Speaker 1 (05:23):
The moon and returning him safely to the Earth.
Speaker 5 (05:29):
We choose to go to the moon and discantay and
do the other thing, not because they are easy, but
because they are hard.
Speaker 4 (05:46):
Freedom is never more than one generation away from the speech.
We didn't pass it on to our children.
Speaker 2 (05:51):
In the blood streets.
Speaker 4 (05:52):
The only way they can inherit the freedom we have
known is if we fight for it, protected defended, and
then to and it to.
Speaker 5 (06:00):
Them with the well trought lessons of how they am
their lifetime.
Speaker 2 (06:03):
Let's do the same, Speakers.
Speaker 1 (06:15):
And happy thirty, Happy thirty, Jesus can't even talk. Happy
Thursday night. Welcome in Kaylee already. Hopefully you guys are
hanging out from disasters in the making. If not, where
you've been, you missed an awesome show. But we're here,
We're live. I'm one half of the crew, mister Brick Robinson.
She's the other half, Miss Jen Homestead. Don't forget coming
them after us as well. We're gonna go over to
(06:36):
our friends, over to a shr media and hang out
in Bez's Berserk bobcats Loon. But for now, you've got
me Rick and her Jin and I almost said it
backwards again.
Speaker 5 (06:46):
For you. We should just do it now. We actually
do it all the time.
Speaker 1 (06:54):
Oh so, how are you?
Speaker 4 (06:56):
How are you?
Speaker 1 (06:57):
House? Things?
Speaker 5 (06:59):
Things are things, and things are busy. Spring is busy,
I mean Fall's busy. Spring's busy, Summer's busy, Everything's busy
all the time.
Speaker 1 (07:08):
But there's no not busy anymore. I'm having to come
to terms with this.
Speaker 5 (07:12):
I know, but this particular little chunk of spring from
the last couple of months of school, there's all kinds
of you know, performances and projects and uh, you know,
meetings for new things for next year and sign up
this and at you know, end of school parties and
(07:32):
field day and then of course, on top of that
life as a twenty four to seven baseball mom. So
you know, it's busy. Not as busy as Trump's been,
but busy.
Speaker 1 (07:45):
Yeah, not as busy as Trump's been. But yeah, so
so did you hear about this one of the day?
This one, this one honestly even surprised me. So apparently
during a cabinet meeting today it was discover or discussed
and discovered between the Secretary of Labor and DOGE that
they have found four hundred million dollars in unemployment insurance frauds.
Speaker 5 (08:11):
No, but that doesn't surprise me.
Speaker 1 (08:17):
I mean, the thing about the thing, the thing that's
starting to surprise me is it And I don't know why,
but the fact that it's being discovered pretty much everywhere
in every aspect of our government, and then we wonder
why our money's worthless.
Speaker 5 (08:32):
Well, you know this is this is the thing. Something
my husband and I were talking about last night is
that you know, we've we've enjoyed what they're doing. You know,
I think it's a good thing. It's something that should
have been done a long time ago. It's definitely something
that is kind of it's because of the elon of
(08:54):
it all, and of course Trump, it's you know, it's
become too political. But really like this basically what it
should have just been approached to as is that, okay,
we're just going to audit every single department and every
single agency, which is what they're doing. But it kind
of went about it in a very you know, Elin
and his deep brows are coming in and they're a boy,
how cleaning up? You know, which I'll put off a
(09:16):
lot of people, and I get it. I don't care,
but I get it. But that it really if it
was just like, no, seriously, you have the things that
we require regular not just businesses, not just corporations, but
the average citizen to do, which is to audit themselves
every single year. By law, they have to audit themselves
(09:40):
essentially every single year. That and you require that as
the federal government. You enforce it via the IRS and
via jail threats of jail and fines. And yet nothing
has been audited here and any really, you know, more
than superficial level in decades, decades and decades. So that's
(10:03):
what we're gonna do. We're going to audit every single agency, department, office,
whatever and find out where to cut waste. And of
course you're going to discover fraud, of course you're going to.
So I mean, essentially those just like not surprising because
it's literally never been audited. They've just been rolling over
whatever was already in place. They've oh, we've got the
(10:26):
we already put that in the budget, so keep it there. Oh,
those people don't even work here anymore. In fact, we
eliminated that department three years ago. Well whatever, just put
it over there next to the other things that get
piled up in the utility closet of stuff that no
one uses anymore, like the old computers that are now defunct.
You know, it just keeps getting rolled over, and you
can see how bureaucracy bloats and bloats and bloats, and
(10:48):
there's no one really to fix it, and everyone's like, well,
it's not my problem, that's someone else's job. Well whose
job is it? Nobody freaking knows, So you end up
with this behemoth that you know, never gets checked. So
I'm glad that we're getting to see some of this transparency.
And I know that liberals have been freaking out about this,
(11:08):
the Democrats, you know, I've been freaking out about who
the who of it and the why and the administration
that's putting this in place. But I think eventually I've
already seen some people just even on my own like
Facebook feed, that are very dem you know, very very Democrat,
that are posting some links going wow, what is this? Like,
(11:32):
why were we wasting twenty three million there? That's ridiculous.
You know, they're starting to see the effects of it
now that the big woo elon's going to come in
with his young guys and make everythang happen. Now that
that's kind of out of the way a little bit
and not as sensationalized, you're starting to see the reports
come out where people are looking at real numbers and going,
(11:53):
holy shit, where has our money won. It's insane, it is,
it's beyond and then you just think about all those years.
But what has always really bothered me is like, Okay,
so you can do all of this completely, be completely
(12:15):
unaccountable and not have to really even you know, everyone's like,
oh no, I mean I have to turn in receipts. Yeah,
we're not talking about those kinds of receipts. We're talking
about the entire Department of Education not having to give receipts.
We're not talking about that you as the guy that
(12:37):
through the luncheon, having to turn in receipts for the
banquet that you hosted. Yes, of course you did. But
we're talking about overall, each department going pretty much unchecked,
and it's something they would never allow you to do,
particularly not if it's a whole department, particularly not an
entire business. You can't just be like, we're not filing
(12:59):
this year.
Speaker 1 (13:00):
Yeah, we're just not going to do it. I mean, honestly,
I thought about getting an extension just to see if
they ever finally did just completely get rid of the irs,
but I know it's not gonna happen, So I'm just
gonna find my damn Tex.
Speaker 5 (13:11):
But but it's not only like uh, just like oh,
we're not going to do it. It's also it's also
saying like, uh, I'm not going to do it because
I don't even really know where to begin, and I
don't really know who all I should talk to to
get all the stuff that i'd need to do to
turn into you anyways, So like, I mean, I guess
there's some stuff in a bank over here, and there's
(13:33):
a couple of W two's over here, and maybe some
W nine's out there, and I don't know, I don't
know where it all is. So like I or ten
ninety nines, but it's like I don't know where it
all is, and it's kind of hard for me to
have to like get together and I don't like, I
don't know, it's kind of weird enough to add at
the shitten Venmo and then oh, I don't know if
like the tax document is actually accurate that my bank
(13:54):
sit me and I have another account that I don't
really touch, but am I supposed to include I don't know,
you know what, it's such a hustle. I'm just not
going to do it because it's whatever, Like it's fine,
you probably owe me money anyway, So like, I'm just
not going to worry about it. That's what has essentially
been like, oh, as much as been like we're not
going to do it, it's been like, well, it's kind of
(14:16):
too difficult. No one knows who's in charge or where
to start with it. You know, there's no real oversight,
so fuck it. And also, by the way, please keep
giving us money. And so me as a part citizen,
I've just decided I don't want to do all that.
It's kind of a hustle and I don't really know
to go work all of it, you know, with all
of it, And like I'm not a tax specialist. So
(14:38):
if you could just send me five grand, that'd be great.
I'll take it, yeah, because I'm so I'm doing my job.
I'm doing my part as a citizen, So just just
send me money. That's what these bureaucracies have been doing
all these years.
Speaker 4 (14:53):
Dude.
Speaker 1 (14:53):
It's just nuts. I mean, if you start adding this
stuff up, we're literally talking about oh, just in the
stuff they've in the last cup, but we're what a
little over eighty days and now we're talking about about
a trillion dollars worth of money. That everybody's just like, yeah,
we don't even really know where it went. We just
you know, I mean, they're talking about people. Like one
of the things that drove me nuts about this story
(15:14):
today is reading through some of the things that they found.
There were people that were being approved for unemployment benefits
that had information listed in the forms, like a birth
date that hadn't even technically happened yet. Oh my gosh,
I'm like, are you kidding me?
Speaker 5 (15:30):
So this sort of like auto fill bot thing that
was just so.
Speaker 1 (15:35):
We just we just rubber stamped these things. Nobody says, hey,
you know, it's kind of hard for somebody to be
born in the year twenty one to fifty five and
be collecting unemployment in twenty nineteen.
Speaker 5 (15:45):
Yeah, and that's crazy too, because I even know, I
just I don't even know. Like that tells me that
there is such an aniquated process there still, because even
like when I was helping do employment unemployment records and
things for the company I worked for, which was fairly
(16:06):
mom and pop, but you know, there are multiple businesses
our software are programming in order to be able to
do some of the bookkeeping and everything wouldn't allow me
like I could do a typo for like someone that
would be ten years old, and it'd be like, eh, eh,
because that is an invalid birthday for a legal worker,
(16:27):
Like I can't put that in. So that tells me
that there's not even like checks on their software systems
if they're able to enter those numbers, and.
Speaker 1 (16:37):
That, I mean, you know, you would think, I mean,
and I get it well. I mean, you know, soon
as I found out that our federal government is still
using COBOL and has like eighty some odd different separate
it supervisors and everything else, and it was like, yeah,
the system is broken. I shouldn't have been surprised because
I did work for State of Oklahoma to a contract
for a while and they're still using DAWs, So I
(16:58):
guess I really shouldn't have been there. Oh no, there's
actual physical mainframes with like patches endoss and overly on
top of patches. It's terrifying. And then every time, every
every every year, they're like, oh, we're finally going to
get an update, and then they put it out for
bids and they're like, yeah, we're well.
Speaker 5 (17:17):
And unemployment fraud. Unemployment fraud is interesting because there's a
lot of it that's kind of like overstaying visas. It
just never really gets corrected, so the people don't tell
them like it like there, I know that, you know
another thing with the same company. I'm having to keep
up with all of that. And so we have someone
that found an employment got it for whatever reason, because
they almost always died with the ex employee, no matter
(17:41):
how much documentation you bring them, like they were fired
for cause for being drunk on the job three times.
But sure they have a valid fun employment claim. Okay,
like just ridiculous stuff. It's it's it's bleeding hardship. But
they you know, after a certain point, some of them
(18:01):
get it for certain number of days and it depends
on your state, and and so some of them get
it for like ninety days and then they can file
for an extension. Some of them only get thirty days
or sixty days. There's just there's different time periods and
stipulations and the industry matters and all of that. So there.
You know, sometimes though, there would I would get unnotice
(18:22):
that like this person is still getting this unemployment and
I'm like, that person was gone six months ago. They
should not still be getting unemployment. They only worked for
US for X amount of time, and that in Texas
that factors into how long you get unemployment right, like
you how long you work there, And it'd call it
(18:43):
there and it'd be like, oh yeah, it was just
kind of like on auto reno basically, So that person
was still getting checks knowing they're not supposed to. So
that's the fraud. It's not really like, oh, they went
around the system and lied and did something. It's like
the system just didn't update what it should have updated,
and it kept sending checks. Like I just imagine that
on a grand scale, Like if I was catching that
(19:05):
ever so often with only like you know, working with
the payroll for around sixty to ninety employees at any
given time, then for sure with millions, with tens of
thousands of employees at the federal government, that's hoppening on
a much higher rate.
Speaker 1 (19:29):
Oh, I don't know all of It's just kind of
melting my brain the more I'm starting to just try
to figure all this out. So this is another interesting
thing regarding Doze that happened today. This is from Sister
told you So. Apparently the DOGE has done something now
on two separate occasions that is pissed off the Internal
(19:49):
Revenue Service because the acting director of that group is resigning.
But so, just to kind of go over this real quick,
the Department of Government Efficiency DOZE has of course been player,
and a lot of the issues going on with the IRS,
to the extent of their involvement, has been the basis
for a number of lawsuits against the Trump administration. But
they are working and they are working their way through
(20:11):
the court system. But while a lot of the media
focus on DOSE has been related to their cost cutting,
fraud uncovering, and workforced slim downs, it's worked, streamlining processes
and making things in general run more smoothly deserved big
mentioned as well, among them are recent actions taken to
rework the IRS website. Anyone who has had to use it,
(20:31):
oh my god, it's been terrible. I haven't messed with
it since apparently every work it's gonna have to go.
Look in the past knows that finding the log in
button could be a drag with the government in expectedly
replacing it in the middle of the homepage, so apparently
not anymore. Recently, DOSE worked with an IRS engineer to
move it to where it belonged after originally being told
(20:51):
it would take over three months to do.
Speaker 5 (20:52):
So what.
Speaker 1 (20:56):
Yeah, I was just like, so it takes three So
but this is part of what I'm talking about with
the government contracts and everything else. And this is why
costs for everything go crazy when the government gets involved,
because you go to somebody and up until now, it's
been oh, yeah, we can do that for you, but
it's gonna take us three months to get it done.
And then they're billing you every single day for the
(21:17):
three months it takes them to get it done. And
then because everything that the Treasury just pays out is
on an auto approve, doesn't even matter. That's like the
guy that had a ninety day contract and the computer
failed to terminated. Dude was getting checks for twenty years,
never told anybody, just kept catching the fucking checks. Like
I want, I want, I want to I Why didn't
that happen to me? I would I would have I
(21:38):
would have loved gotten twenty years worth of checks for
ninety days worth the work.
Speaker 5 (21:42):
Yeah, I never had anything nice like that happened to
me either. Why had a girl work one time and
the payroll company that you know, we send off to
payroll and payroll sends out and she worked one shift
and so her hourly play plus the tip out that
was via you know, the final payment from the client
(22:03):
was like two hundred dollars. Two hundred and four dollars
was what it was. And she got a check for
two thousand and four dollars and man, she catched that
baby as fast as she could and she never came back. Well,
I mean, it's utterly and that's part of what yes,
you have, you know, payroll insurance and stuff. But it
was basically like tough diddy, like, she's not technically the
(22:25):
one committing fraud because the check was you know, approved
through a payroll company to give to her.
Speaker 1 (22:32):
And that's exactly the problem that you were going to
run into with the dude that was cashing checks for
twenty years, since they were being approved through treasury. There
was probably absolutely nothing that could be done because yeah.
Speaker 5 (22:43):
It's more of a moral violation as important as opposed
to a legal violation. You can still take them to court,
we were told, but like what you're going to pay
for small claims court anyways and nots that you're now
diaress guys a little bit different, But what you were
going to pay anyways was it's just not gonna matter.
It's like, Okay, take a hit on your insurance and
(23:04):
just be done with it. But I will tell you,
like even when all that, when COVID hit and south
By Southwest went down, like I think this is part
of what happens with these things is like it's so
far out of side out of mind, like you were
talking about with the contracts, where it's like three months later,
it's like they've already figured that they've written that off
that it just goes out of side out of mind.
(23:24):
Like we had one of our main clients were supposed
to be a Facebook and they'd already given us, you know,
hundreds of thousands of dollars in deposit. And so when
south By got called off because of COVID, you know,
we were like, you know, what do you want us
to do? Do you want to just refund you right now?
And they're like, no, hold on to it, because we're
back next year as soon as like this whole viruses
(23:46):
passed blah blah blah blah blah. Well the next year
rolls around and they're still not doing it. They held
some events, but it wasn't really anything but the you know,
because twenty twenty one, most things were still pretty pretty
closed a gland scale, you know. Some stuff was back open,
but the big things weren't. And also Facebook had made
this announcement that until there were no more cases of
(24:09):
COVID that they would not be doing any in office
or in person events whatever. Okay, until they figured out, wait,
it's never going away. But that's was this grand announcement
they made him fall of twenty twenty. So again we
reach out and we're like, so, what do you want
to do? And the girl's like, ah, I'm sorry, I
wasn't even hear when that happened. I don't know, let
(24:30):
me call you back. So twenty twenty one rolls around,
and we've now had their money since twenty nineteen. Twenty
twenty one rolls around and south By it's not like
they're obviously not having an event with us at south By.
So I again try to reach out, like, we're trying
to do the right thing here. It is a deposit,
so we will get to keep a portion of it,
but not the entirety. And I call again and they're like, yeah,
(24:53):
now that was written off in twenty twenty. It is
now halfway through twenty twenty one. No, there's not there's
not even any way for us to accept it. So
none of us worked here at the time. See you later, alligator,
Like what not.
Speaker 1 (25:08):
Our fault, man, not our fault.
Speaker 5 (25:11):
So I mean, I mean, thankfully, like you know, we
didn't touch it all that time. But my boss was
able to recoup some of what he lost out on
because of COVID, because of those, because of that deposit
from them, which I said was very, very sizable. But
that's just kind of what happens, especially when it's such
(25:31):
a big body. You know, it's like, okay, well that's
kind of small cookies compared to everything else. So whatever, Yeah,
just just just keep going. I don't care get rid
of it, you know what I mean, they just kind
of it's hard to know where it's like if that
happens to your big account, you know, the individual we
absolutely know and absolutely are like, this is absolutely life changing.
Speaker 1 (25:54):
Yeah. So, well, the thing that pissed me off right
is Monopoly did not prepare me for what actually happens
when there's a bank error supposedly in your favor, because
it's never actually in your favor. When they realized they
made a mistake. If you've spent that money, they come
after you.
Speaker 5 (26:11):
Yes, they do. The federal government does. Also, your company
will if they overbonused you. Things like that. They can,
they can in some scenarios. But anyways, it's wild, wild, wild,
(26:32):
and it makes you wonder, like, what what would our
debt be like? What would the national debt actually be
had more of this been done over the past at
least fifty years, but probably extending even beyond that, because
they we will look much afferent place.
Speaker 1 (26:50):
We will, we would be in a much different place.
I mean if we if we had tackled the fact
that we know that you know, China and a few
other I mean, I'm not even talking about all of
the people that we trade with. I think we've been
kind of in an unfair trade situation with a lot
of people, but some of them are worse than others,
And I kind of wish we would have started by
focusing on the worst actors instead of just saying, hey,
we're gonna hit everybody. But I kind of understand why
(27:11):
Trump is doing what he's doing, because he's trying to
give people incentive to bring their stuff back here. But
you know, we know that China has been ripping us
off since at least the Clinton era. That's a long
ass time ago. And we know it because and it's
not even that they were ripping us off. Our government
was handing them. Jimmy be like, yeah, here you go,
just back channeling and giving them shit like the some
(27:33):
of the missile technology just wound up over there, and
it happened during the Clinton administration. They've had the plans
for the F thirty five for forever and anytime you
and the thing that tripped me out, I didn't even
know that. I knew a lot of this, but I
didn't know some of this until I was listening to
mister Wonderful the other day when he was on like
C and C NBC or whatever it was, and he's
(27:54):
talking about, you know, I do business in China, and
as somebody who's not a Chinese citizen, if they steal
some of myual property, I can't even take them to
court because I'm not a Chinese citizen. I have no
standing in the court. Yeah, I'm like, that explains a lot.
And I don't understand why we have been treating them
(28:14):
with kid gloves for as long as we have, because
the other thing that nobody takes into account because everybody's like,
oh my god, it's gonna just it's gonna destroy trade
with China if we keep putting all these tariffs on
their stuff, and not really because they figured out ways
to get around most of that shit with with things
like Timu. So, I mean things like Timu. They're making
(28:35):
stuff for five and ten cents a unit and then
selling it to us for five and six bucks a unit.
So even if you put its four hundred percent tariff
on that, they're going from like ninety eight percent profit
to oh my god, only ninety percent profit. So I
don't know how I don't. I mean, I get it.
They're they're struggling. I mean, I saw a story today
that came out from a Chinese news source that even
(28:57):
though these things are just starting to kick in, there
are already business is suffering in China and warehouses are
starting to back up, and the EWE took a huge
dip today, So I mean, I don't know how long
they're going to be able to hold out, But I
just wish we would have taken care of all this
stuff a long time ago, because we've known what a
bad actor China has been and always has been, and
we kept looking the other way, and the same thing's
(29:19):
been going on in so many different places that now
we have no choice but to try to fix it
all at once. And if we had handled this over
time instead of letting it get to the point where
now we either fix it or we're not going to
be here anymore, I don't think we would be having
near the sticker shock we're having everywhere right now. Because
the truth of it is, if we had tackled all
(29:39):
this stuff, I mean, just looking at what we found
just in the last few months, imagine a trillion dollars
happening at least in waste, frauden abuse for the last
fifty years, and somehow we've still managed to only have
a what is it like, thirty six trillion dollar deficit
right now. So I mean, technically, with as much as
(30:01):
we know we've been wasting, we're in better shape than
we should be. But if we had done the responsible
thing instead of just you know, and I blame most
of the Congress critters because half the Congress critters that
knew we were doing this expected to be dead by now,
and they're not. So now they're like, oh shit, because
I didn't think we were going to have to deal
(30:22):
with this. I'm eighty seven years old. I was only
supposed to live till I was seventy two. So they
kept kicking the can down the road, thinking, Ah, by
the time anybody has to deal with it, I'll be
dead and all they can do is curse my name anyway,
And now everybody's like living much longer than they used to.
So I mean, I just.
Speaker 5 (30:40):
They're still serving in Congress the other day, the presidency.
Speaker 1 (30:46):
I'm like, dude, I get you know that. You know,
fifties the new forty, and forty is the new thirty.
Blah blah blah blah blah. But what I mean, at
some point there's diminishing returns. And I'm talking about this
even with Trump because I've noticed now now that he's
four years older than he was the last time he
left office. Even I've noticed a few times when he
(31:06):
gets even more rambly than he was before. So please,
can this be the last time we put a geriatric
in the White House? Please? Please please. I love the guy.
I love the fact that the media is exploding over
him every single day, and I love the fact that
he trolls every single one of them. And I love
the fact that dude has like full press conferences in
his cabinet meetings. I don't remember the last time a
(31:27):
president did that. I mean, dude had a cabinet meeting
today and then just took questions for like thirty minutes
after the cabinet meeting, just putting it all out there.
We had, cabinet members were answering questions. President answer was
answering questions. I mean, the one thing the guy does
is he does try to be as transparent as possible.
But the problem is he also tries to explain things
in human speak, and the media doesn't like that. When
(31:51):
you speak to the media like a normal person. They
look at you like you're retarded because they expect you
to be, you know, using proper grammar and half talking
like an attorney because that's how politicians are. And Trump's
just like, no, we're gonna do this, this and this
and this and this is why we're gonna do it.
And then you know, five or six days later he's like, yeah, no,
let's do this instead everybody's like, oh my god.
Speaker 5 (32:11):
Or or or five minutes after that's over. Is the secretary.
He just explained his position to having to come in
and clarify no what he meant was, which is happening
all the time too, because he doesn't quite get the
details right and he is very vague about things. So yeah,
(32:32):
you know, and it's gonna be very good and I
think it's gonna be a good deal, and so we're
gonna do that and it's gonna help this, and it's
gonna blah blah blah. And then it's like okay, and
then later you've got you know, someone actually explaining the
more meat of it, because he kind of glossed over
a bunch of things. It was like, you know, it's
gonna be great, you know.
Speaker 1 (32:55):
So do you hear about this one? Apparently there's a
new theory as to why the Wisconsin election and went
as well as it did for the Democrats. Okay, apparently
they told Kami Lama Hamasnik to stay the fuck away.
Speaker 5 (33:09):
I mean, by the way, what's she doing.
Speaker 1 (33:16):
Dude, I don't know the last time I saw anything
from her, she seriously looked like she was drunk, stone
or both.
Speaker 5 (33:21):
And go live your life, girl friend. You were the
first female vice president. Go on, I go somewhere over there,
away from politics.
Speaker 1 (33:29):
I mean that that's the thing though, right she she
did manage to break a glass ceiling. It wasn't the
one that they were hoping she was going to be
able to break, but it was kind of a huge deal.
She was the first female vice president of She also
either chose to or was more or she either chose
to act as if she were or she was in
fact more stupid than the potted plant that was her
(33:49):
boss and in certain cases. But you know, don't let that.
Don't let that stop you from celebrating the fact that
you I'm.
Speaker 5 (33:56):
Just doing bright side here, I'm just doing all bright
side okay. And now you don't have distress, You don't
have to dye your hair as often, you don't have
to get as much botox like you've madeor millions. Go
live your life, Go have some fun, be drunk all
the time, travel Europe, do whatever. Stay away from politics.
Get that up, you know.
Speaker 1 (34:17):
I mean, I mean, the good news is you did
manage to break your glass ceiling, even if it was
with your heels.
Speaker 5 (34:24):
No oh rick, oh goodness, but yeah, I am I
have I will have to say she's she went away
a lot quicker than Obama or Hillary did. And Obama
was actually president leaving because he couldn't let go of it,
(34:46):
but Hillary didn't go away so quickly after losing. So
I do appreciate that. I appreciate that. So yeah, go
get drunk, go get high, I don't care, brunch it up.
Speaker 1 (34:56):
Go home, gets to Oh wait sorry.
Speaker 5 (35:01):
Okay, but speaking of high, getting high, the the state
that everybody goes to to get high, Colorado. Did you
see what was signed?
Speaker 1 (35:16):
Which one? Well you oh today? Wasn't that the one
where they did like all kinds of weird shit with
guns or was that something else?
Speaker 5 (35:22):
Yes? Yeah, yes, so this is their governor signed a
lot that bans the production and most sales of semi
automatic firearms with detachable magazines. So like they're kind of
in they they're and the advocates are trying to imply
it's like you don't need their fifteens anyways, but that's
(35:44):
not what that means. That's basically all handguns detestable magazines.
Is yeah, I mean it is most handguns. So, first
of all, of course blatantly unconstitutional. Uh that that And
the thing is is here is who wrote this? This
(36:05):
is at red state. Oh it's bunchie. Of course, it's bunchie,
he says, here, you know that, Uh, it's not even
a question. That's gun control law runs and foul Supreme
Court President. That means that Puls signed something that he
has to know is illegal, making this move all the
(36:25):
more in citio is the stakes here could not be higher.
If Colorado gets away with this, you can kiss the
Second Amendment goodbye. If a stake gets away with largely
banning semi automatic handguns, it can get away with banning
any type of firearm. And this is the most radical
gun control legislation ever to be signed. So, of course,
like everybody better get up in our arms. Uh uh
(36:46):
uh real quick. So yeah, of course, a bunch of
advocate groups have already started the process of saying they're
going to file some challenges to this, but we really
need is to get to the Supreme Court basically as
quickly as possible, because the thing is and like he
goes on to say, here, let me find where you
(37:06):
said this. Yeah, every single demmer catlict stay in the
Union will pass similar laws, and with the lack of
reciproc reciprocity, half the country will essentially be a no
go zone for modern guns, and that's kind of the
scary part. So then you can't like drive across the
country with like I very often drive to Colorado, as
(37:29):
you'll know, and several of those times I've gone from
Texas or Colorado through Wyoming up to Montana, you know,
and uh, those are that's a lot of rod to
trouble and not be armed, and uh and always when
we're trugling here, we look up the laws in each state.
Of course I take it when we go to Oklahoma,
all of that, but you need the either the reciprocity
(37:54):
or know what the certain laws are in those states.
Usually you can still have them in your car. You
may not be able to feel them in a glove box.
That may need to be in a more visible area,
so you know, there's different things. You always check that
when you're going. But you know, if they could get
away with this, and then it could spread like wildfire
through the Blue States, there could be huge parts of
the country that like, you just can't even do that
(38:16):
with legally anyways. Of course I know everybody's like whatever,
they won't know I have it, but legally we should
be able to do that. This isn't. This is the
United States of America. We have the Second Amendment, Like
I should be able to have my handgun traveling with
me in my car without without worry, dude.
Speaker 1 (38:35):
So it's right, I am even more of a Second
Amendment that's absolutist. I should be able to I should
be able to fly to work in my Apache helicopter,
and I should have access to a nuclear missile because
this the same thing is the entire one of the
Second the birthplaces. But you know that's a discussion for
another day, all right, So this one weirded me out
because this story was scary enough, but now it's taking
(38:57):
a weird turn. So I'm assuming that you know by
now that there is a company that is a company
called Colossal Biosciences, which is actually in your neck of
the woods if memory serves, that has used Crisper technology,
the DNA editing tool they have now to basically technically
(39:19):
resurrected dire the dire Wolf, which died out like thirteen
thousand years ago. So it's not an exact resurrection because
what they did was they took wolf, and they took
wolf DNA and basically made the recessive traits that were
in the code for that particular type of wolf more
dominant than they put them in, and they fertilized them
(39:40):
and reread them and put them in surrogate mom dogs.
And now there's apparently two of the three of them,
Romulus Ramus and Calesi. But so this is where the
story gets even weirder, because as if we haven't all
seen these movies, and we I'm still trying to figure
out why everybody thinks that we need to die by
every Science five movie known to man, possibly all at
(40:01):
the same time. Because we have the emergence of artificial intelligence,
the emergence of robots, the emergence of self driving cars,
automated houses, and now we have genetic de extinction. But
here's the weirdest part of this story. Where the funding
came from. Apparently a lot of the funding for this
project came from a certain alphabet soup agency known as
(40:22):
the CIA, and that has questions.
Speaker 5 (40:29):
They need wolf soldiers.
Speaker 1 (40:34):
I mean, I kind of I kind of get it.
I'm thinking what happened is there was there was some
like you know, muckety muck high up in the CIA
watching Game of Thrones was like it would be so
cool if we could send people to war riding on
those fuckers while he's getting high and he's like.
Speaker 5 (40:49):
Wish, I mean, I'm not good. I mean it would
it would be. So we're like, hey, can you cure cancer?
And they're like, now we can calde ship home? Like
can you please cure cancer? And they're like, how about
a robot picks you up instead of an uber driver.
We're like, okay, can you cure cancer? They're like, we'll
(41:10):
bring that terri wolves.
Speaker 1 (41:13):
We're like, okay, well, so here's the thing, right, And
this is something that occurred to me after because I
didn't realize that crisper technology he had become as mainstream
as it is. But there is. There's a new show
on CBS and it's on Paramount plus two called Watson.
It's basically you know, Life of Doctor Watson after Sherlock Holmes,
(41:35):
and it's a modernization of course, so Watson is it
a clinic. In one of the episodes, they actually use
crisper technology, even though it's technically not been cleared from
the FDA to be used in this in that manner,
yet to basically rewrite someone's genetic code to remove sickle
cell disease. So technically speaking, as CRISPER becomes more and
(41:59):
more or prevalent and available, things like that could happen.
I mean, we're talking about getting on the verge of
like designer genetics in.
Speaker 5 (42:08):
This yeah, which.
Speaker 1 (42:12):
Is kind of terrifying in that way. But at the
same time, since we are starting to understand more about
what causes cancer in the first place, because it's not
now that we're starting to understand genetic codes, it's not
what we thought it was. There's like actual cell damage
that causes cancer. So if they can figure out specifically
what that cell damage is, they can actually go in
(42:32):
with CRISPER and make sure that healthy cells don't have
that ability to basically recreate that damage, and eventually the
damage cells dioph instead of spreading, So it would It's
an interesting time to be alive, but it's also a
terrifying time to be alive because I'm waiting for the
robots writing on dire wolves to come kill us.
Speaker 5 (42:51):
All robots writing on dire wolves that are going to
fight the billion army that's going to be genetically modified
babies that will grow up to be the army that
the newly uh resurrected. Hitler will then direct give me
(43:15):
the dire wolves for that.
Speaker 1 (43:17):
See that's more of what I'm worried about, is what
are the trees were going to start doing now that
we're doing these kind of things.
Speaker 5 (43:23):
You know what I'm saying. So yeah, if we're going
to have that, we need dire wolves. I'm on it.
I'm on board. There was also something else that they
were bringing back at some point, or they found enough
preserved DNA that they thought that they could maybe clone
it to bring it. Was another like a it was
(43:46):
announted on or something. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (43:48):
Yeah, they're still working on that too, the same company. Actually,
they just decided to do this one first because it was.
Speaker 5 (43:53):
Easier Wild Wild the second. They're like, Okay, cool, and
we're gonna have this amusement park and we're gonna have dinosaurs.
But don't worry, they're going to tank cages. But everybody,
come on out. I'm out.
Speaker 1 (44:10):
Yep, Nope, I'll be like, I really.
Speaker 5 (44:13):
Want to see them, but I cannot.
Speaker 1 (44:16):
Heye elon, when's the next flight tomorrow? Is throw them out?
Speaker 5 (44:19):
I saw all six of those movies. Okay, but that's
just it.
Speaker 1 (44:24):
I mean, we're talking about the potential emergence of sky
neet cure dinosaurs, wolves that were you know, aphex predators
when they were alive the first time, with none of
the things that we're able to kill them still in
existence now other than potentially us And I'm sorry, I
mean we talk about this all the time. Species that
(44:44):
weren't native to an Arab area being introduced to it
and suddenly just overwhelming everything because there's nothing that can
combat them. We talk about it. We talk about it
all the time on shows like the Bolo constrictors and
the alligators that have taken over everywhere because they weren't
originally there and there's no predators to basically takes them out.
And now people are sure, dude, I'm telling you those
diar wolves get out. We're fucked be bad. It's gonna
(45:08):
be bad.
Speaker 5 (45:10):
Well, the dire wolves are bad. But you know what
the state of California thinks are really bad? Roosters. Roosters
are bad. Okay, so they oh my gosh, so they
are pushing a law that would limit the number of
(45:32):
roosters that you could have on a property. And the
argument is that this is to crack down on cockfighting.
But it's weird because like there's only ever been twelve
prosecuted cases of cockfighting, So what is this big danger
that they have in these like you know, uh, of course,
(45:55):
like different cultures, there are some things like that here.
They but like, what is this massive problem that we
need to enact the bill? And it's like it's kind
of crazy because it's it would prohibit people from keeping
more than three roosters per acre or more than twenty
(46:16):
five roosters total on a property. And that's going to
include some people that it's going to include some farmers
and ranchers. You know, they're going to get in trouble
with us. And so if there have more than the
allowed number of roosters, it could be subject up to
twenty five hundred dollars per day per chicken. And then
(46:39):
the other thing they've come up with When people are
like okay, but like cockfighting is really not that big
of a problem and like we don't even really prosecute
very many cases, then they're like oh yeah, yeah, yeah,
but also like bird flu, right, they had to have
something else, so like yeah, but but bird flue, so
like you know, this will help with bird flu, and
they're like not having as many roosters is going to
(46:59):
help with bird flu. They can't explain where that is.
But you know, California, they don't need to make sense.
They just make rules, right, They just make rules. They
like making lots and lots of rules because you cannot
live your life there on your own. They must think
for you. So so then it's the other thing is
that critics are saying like it unfairly targets and disproportionately
(47:24):
affects like Hispanic communities because they breathe game foul, have
cultural you know, celebrations and exhibits. They have poultry shows
and this is not cockfighting. These are actual shows with chickens.
I don't know. We have a really fun thing here
and also called chicken chip bingo. It is at a
bar that that is what they do all the time.
(47:46):
It's hilarious. But so but this whole idea is that
cock fighting is a multifaceted threat with links to other
problems like silence, drugs and organize climb And they say
it persists throughout the States and everybody's going but where,
but where where are all these cock fighting reads that
(48:08):
lead to organized crime and drug rings and violence and
human trafficking. They can't give a single example, but it
must be banned.
Speaker 1 (48:18):
I mean, I guess I'm really confused as to why
you're so surprised that California is cockblocking.
Speaker 5 (48:25):
I mean I just started reading this, like just Charles
read this article about it, and I started reading. The
more I was reading, the more I was cracking up
about how the over explanation by California being like, but
we must have the rules, because rules, because nobody gets
to do things without my rules.
Speaker 6 (48:44):
Like it is, it's like this one not only protect birds,
that also has addressed the public health risks presented by
smuggled birds that have the potential to spread diseases like
Avian flu to legitimate legitimate poultry operations.
Speaker 5 (48:57):
Although also like drugs, violence and guns and stuff. I mean,
it just seems that they just kept making the sit
up to be like it happens in California with alarming regularity,
and everyone's like, what is that regularity? And they're like, well,
public records and court talk at show the prosecutions. There
have been twelve arrests statewide, twelve twelve rests. That is
(49:20):
alarming regularity of cock fighting rings that are the gateway,
the gateway to organize prime. So anyways, there's a fun.
Speaker 1 (49:33):
I'm just glad you put the word fighting between those
other two works.
Speaker 5 (49:40):
Anyways, I was just reading about it and going, oh
my gosh, of course, and they're like ridiculously adamant because duh. Anyways,
and I wanted to say cockfight. So that's fun. It's
just like when I anything with that. You know, it's
fun when you can say it legitimately. You're not like,
(50:02):
you don't have to be sensored. Like the other day,
spatch cock is a chicken, you know, it's fun. Dispatch cock.
Speaker 1 (50:09):
Yeah, I had no idea what that was, and then
I watched the video and I was like, I don't
really know why it's called that, but whatever.
Speaker 5 (50:16):
I don't know, I don't care, but I'm like, I'm like, oh, spatchcock. Stacey,
I told her about spatchcocking. Now she's patch cocks all
the time, and then she always tells me, I have
spatchcock today. You know what I did today? Dispatch to cock.
Speaker 1 (50:35):
Giggy giggley go had to be done.
Speaker 5 (50:41):
It's just so fun. Anyways, thought that was fun. How
you find that interesting about our California nanny state, saying
no more roosters sleeping in the coop.
Speaker 1 (50:56):
Oh man, as if the new cycle had hasn't been
weird enough.
Speaker 5 (51:05):
I know, uh there was something else? Why was there
something else? Today? I can't. I thought I had my bookmarks,
but I don't.
Speaker 1 (51:25):
So, you know, all these tell all books, right, all
these things that have come out since the election, Now
that it's you know, it's fine to finally tell the
truth after they couldn't do anything to prop up the
potted plant anymore. So apparently there's a new book that's
coming out that details Nancy Pelosi's role in getting rid
(51:45):
of Biden, and it's even worse than we thought. Apparently.
I'm still kind of reading through it. But apparently a
new book claims that Rep. Nancy Pelosi, Democrat California, privately
said President Biden had lost a step ahead of his
decision to drop out of the twin twenty four presidential campaign.
Dude hadn't lost a step. He lost a foot anyway, sorry,
(52:06):
before she publicly bashed a Street Journal story on his
cognitive decline. So, according to Whipple's book, Pelosi went to
the White House and made twenty twenty four for an
Awards ceremony and was startled by how much the President
had aged he was not the same Joe Biden, Pelosi
told a friend privately. According to the book, Pelosi was
at the White House to accept the Presidential Medal of Freedom,
(52:27):
but the day was awkward and even painful for her
as she worried Democrats would suffer on election day. According
to the book, she couldn't shake the realization that Joe
Biden was a shadow of himself. Fucking bitch.
Speaker 5 (52:43):
Yeah, and I think there's going to be more and
more of that. We're still pretty fresh off, so I
think there's still a lot of people kind of keeping
it close. But think about what it's even going to
be after he passes. I mean, after that, there's gonna
be you know, ten years down the road especially, I
think there's going to be a ton of people with
(53:03):
a lot of examples, probably even videos, you know, written
messages things like that of his absolute decline and confusion
towards the end there. And that's just sad to me.
I don't have warm feelings about the person Biden was
with his brain intact, but much like people with dimension Alzheimer's,
(53:28):
I can realize that they are. They're in a different
place now, and that is a whole different beast, and
they are not the same person, and they're elderly and
declined and the menaced and he never should have been
put in that position. And I feel sad that that was,
unfortunately how that all went. And I still feel like
(53:48):
it was abusive, even though even though I don't like
the guy one little bit and I think he's actually
a terrible human being, but it was still abusive.
Speaker 2 (53:59):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (53:59):
I will say that Joe Biden is probably the asshole
of assholes when it comes to the life that he's led,
because the thing that pisses me off is he gets
a total pass for everything that he did when he
was younger, like, you know, even trying to, you know,
stop people of color from being bust into his kids'
schools because he didn't want his kids going to school
(54:19):
in an urban jungle. And just because you know, he's
got a D behind his name, it's like, oh, yeah, well,
obviously he changed his mind.
Speaker 5 (54:27):
No he didn't.
Speaker 1 (54:27):
You heard the way You heard the way he talked
to to fuck. You heard the way he talked to
Kamala Harris, And you heard the way Kamala Harris talked,
talked about him. That's why lady mcbiden never good standard.
They only this was a party This was a party
decision to make her the vice president, just like in
Trump's first term. He got stuck with fucking Cotton Hill
because that's what the party wanted, because it made him
(54:49):
seem more statement, and because they were hoping that they
could get him out and put him in place instead.
And it's it's just I don't know. All of it
annoys me because he is a an asshole. He's a liar.
He had I mean, he's lied his entire life.
Speaker 5 (55:04):
He had to forgivable, yes, because of plagiarism. The unforgivable
thing to me is that he, you know, he goes
through this horrific tragedy with you know, the death of
his wife and uh daughter, and then he proceeds to
(55:25):
grandstand on national television and demean the family of the
other of the man of the other car that was involved,
call him a drunk repeatedly over decades, to the point
of where this man never recovered. His daughter said he
was on the brink of the suicide on a regular basis,
(55:46):
like he could barely function. He felt all of this guilt.
He was hounded by people everywhere he went. Some of
them changed their names. They changed their names because of this,
and Biden fucking campaigned off it, He profited off it.
He elevated his status by stepping on his back and
(56:07):
the graves of his family. I mean, there is nothing
more fucking disgusting than that, and that is absolutely unforgivable.
And by the way, it turns out that tragically, his
wife was in the wrong in the accident as far
as they can tell. And also the man was not drunk.
The officers reported the scene, he rendered it immediately, nobody
(56:28):
suspected him of being anything other than in track. And
so this whole drink is lunch thing that persisted for
decades and decades and decades, and really right until it
was finally cleared up. He issued a statement to the
daughter of the man who has since passed finally kind
(56:50):
of exonerating them as if it was his to do. Like,
it's just that that entire thing, everything else political fucking
hate it, But that, to me, that is on such
a deep human level of depravity that I can't even comprehend.
Speaker 1 (57:11):
Yeah, it's just I mean, don't get me wrong, I
don't like what happened to the man, but I also
remember that he told everybody when he started, when he's
when he won the nomination in twenty twenty, or when
they orchestrated him winning the nomination in twenty twenty, that
he was going to be a one term president and
be transitional, and if he had done that, we might
not be where we are today. But he didn't, Thank God. Anyway,
(57:34):
believe it or not, we are just about out of time.
Any final thoughts, oh, not a whole lot.
Speaker 5 (57:41):
Just going to keep an eye on all of this.
Are we or aren't we with the tariffs and see
how anything plays out, and see if the market stabilizes.
I think it is. I just I agree through the
transparency's good. I think there's sometimes a little too much
of it, and not because of transparency, but because I
just talkie talk. There's a lot of talky talk that
(58:02):
doesn't matter. But I'll take it. It's fine. And then
I'm just waiting to see kind of how some of
this is going to shape out, because I think there's
a lot of freaking out on both sides, for and against,
and we'll just kind of have to wait and see
how this is going to go. I don't like it
on its face the way it was done, and but
(58:26):
that that is very often my stance with anybody in
government and the decisions they make. So this is nothing new.
Speaker 1 (58:35):
I said what I said, Amish. You call him what
you want, I'll call him what I want. He's yelling
at me for saying for not saying Race Bannon instead
of Cotton Hill what I was talking about.
Speaker 5 (58:46):
Oh might Pence?
Speaker 2 (58:51):
All right?
Speaker 1 (58:51):
Where can folks find him?
Speaker 5 (58:54):
At JA homestead mostly on X other platforms as well,
and miss fits politics and tomorrow night will be missfit
miss Jeff, So come join for some phone while you
listen to calerin.
Speaker 1 (59:06):
Two screen night, two screen night. You can do it.
Listen listen on one device and play misfits stuff on
the other. Here'll work all right, so as far as
as far as me, I'll be hanging out with Busy
in the saloon running the board over here so we
can simulcast it. So I'll be working until about midnight
or so. Then I'll be back tomorrow night or tomorrow
(59:27):
afternoon doing the rig Robinson Show from noon to three,
hanging out with Agi recon starting at eight thirty pm. Eastern.
Then we'll be hanging out Saturday night, first putting the
pushing the buttons for the front Port Forensics screw and
then going into Juxtaposition That kicks off at eight pm
Eastern and runs for about four hours total, so usually
about eight to midnight Eastern Sunday. I am off Monday
(59:48):
night back with producing for the Ladies of the Red Wine,
and then America Off the Rails. There will probably be
a break in there because I don't know if I'm
going to be doing two hours worth of two and
a half hours worth of content to keep everything running
fluid before Sean kicks off, but there will be in
America off the Reels, I do know that much. And
then everything starts over again on Tuesday, So Rick Robinson
(01:00:10):
Show Tuesday through Friday, Manorama ten pm Eastern, and of
course before that, make sure you're hanging out for the
Cocktail Loud. On that note, folks, we have got to
go because suddenly my voice has decided it's near done
for some reason anyway, probably because I talked for like
twelve hours yesterday. I bet that probably has something to.
Speaker 4 (01:00:26):
Do with it.
Speaker 1 (01:00:27):
Maybe one of these days, one of these days, I'm
gonna figure out, you know, anyway, I only do it
because I only do it because I love it, and
don't listen to me a bitch about it, because I
wouldn't have it an any either way. All right, hang
out for Beezy, he's up next. There will be There
will be a changeover though, because it makes my life
easier with all the behind the scenes editing. So just
hang out on the x feed. It'll pop back up
(01:00:48):
in a minute. By everybody. I love how it always
says great show, Jen, like I'm not even here, alien bastard.
All right, bye, everybody,