All Episodes

August 22, 2025 181 mins
This episode has it all: news, current events, a guest, and the weekend news round-up hour. 

We talk Trump on the beat, DC crime rates, the left's policing of their own language, and more. Then, for hour 2, we're joined by BZ from SHR Media's Berserk Bobcat Saloon Radio Show, and we talk everything from history to BZ's career.

Then, during hour 3, the Weekend News Round Up happens with BZ and Brad Slager 
Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:04):
Hello friends, you have a moment so that we may
discuss our Lord and Savior minarchy. No, seriously, I'm just kidding.

Speaker 2 (00:13):
Hi.

Speaker 1 (00:13):
My name is Rick Robinson. I am the general manager
of Klrnradio dot com. We are probably the largest independent
podcast network that you've never heard of. We have a
little bit of everything, and by that what I mean
to tell you is we have news, pop cultures, special events,
inns of your attainment, true crime, mental health shows, drama productions,

(00:35):
and pretty much everything in between. So if you're looking
for a new podcast home to grab a little bit
of everything that you love all in one place, come
check us out. You can find us on x under
at klr and Radio. You can find us on our
rumble and our YouTube channels under the same names. We
can also find us at klrnradio dot com and pretty
much every podcast catcher known demand. So again, feel free

(00:57):
to come check us out anytime you like at kl Radio.

Speaker 3 (01:07):
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Speaker 4 (01:49):
My dad is really really special and I love my
dad luck. I'm proud of him and that even though
he is in here with us, but he died as
a true hero.

Speaker 5 (02:06):
How much everything about him.

Speaker 6 (02:09):
And 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
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Speaker 7 (02:23):
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(03:26):
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Speaker 9 (03:29):
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Speaker 11 (03:54):
Independent. With that declaration, America was.

Speaker 12 (04:02):
Inspired by a belief in the God given rights of
every human being, that among these are life, liberty, and
the pursuit of happiness. Our government was established to secure
these rights and for the good that comes from exercising them. Well,

(04:25):
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Speaker 1 (05:00):
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Speaker 5 (05:49):
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Speaker 13 (05:56):
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Speaker 15 (06:51):
The following program contains course language and adult themes. Listener
and discretion is advised.

Speaker 1 (07:05):
Take this job and chove it.

Speaker 16 (07:08):
Everybody is working.

Speaker 17 (07:14):
I want you want to be Fayne.

Speaker 2 (07:24):
You work the bordiary, hard.

Speaker 16 (07:29):
Work. It's so out, no work to day.

Speaker 2 (07:38):
Knock off now and take the next two days off.

Speaker 6 (07:40):
I was asking.

Speaker 1 (07:43):
Two then you can.

Speaker 11 (07:46):
You are so stupid.

Speaker 2 (07:48):
That's right, sold all, but that's right.

Speaker 18 (07:51):
There is nothing wrong in your radio.

Speaker 1 (07:53):
That's right crazy.

Speaker 11 (07:57):
I don't know, nor is walking my dad hole.

Speaker 2 (08:02):
I know how what I've said that it is burning there.

Speaker 19 (08:06):
I do not fucking in and do my skin co
Monday morning a hockey burn Co's finding freezing.

Speaker 5 (08:16):
I'm there running calling wild again.

Speaker 16 (08:20):
It's not a bed from.

Speaker 10 (08:24):
Getting no.

Speaker 20 (08:26):
Time.

Speaker 11 (08:27):
All we want to do is.

Speaker 21 (08:31):
A sugar baby down the road and she's sitting.

Speaker 2 (08:35):
Ready and you're being rocked in Hong Kong with.

Speaker 11 (08:37):
Dads up the stong.

Speaker 2 (08:39):
Later on to night'll be working.

Speaker 16 (08:41):
You ain't hollered out the ding.

Speaker 2 (08:44):
That rights finding.

Speaker 19 (08:46):
Frere running calling again.

Speaker 16 (08:51):
It's not a bed from burning for getting nosing the time.

Speaker 11 (09:00):
We got all this one were naked.

Speaker 16 (09:03):
Is that okay?

Speaker 9 (09:05):
Movement?

Speaker 22 (09:12):
Judys be wondered. I never said Wendy had a thirty
hour sty Conny by them.

Speaker 21 (09:21):
Owner of Fine Freeman.

Speaker 16 (09:29):
It's not time's all forget the version the good Time
Club time.

Speaker 11 (09:39):
We'll just do it, n.

Speaker 1 (09:43):
Gil all right, welcome into the program, ladies and gellnous.

(10:09):
The it's finally Friday edition of the Rick Robinson Show.
For those of you working for the weekend, you are
nearly there.

Speaker 2 (10:14):
It is nine to.

Speaker 1 (10:15):
Ten ish in the morning in God's time zone. I
say ish because I have three clocks and they all
have slightly different times. I don't they're all supposed to
be set by the same thing. Now I don't know why.
There's about a minute difference between the three anyway, So
that's why I say ISH anyway. So I hope you
guys are having a great Friday. Thank you to the
few of you I'm seeing starting to fall into the
chat as you are into the streams. As you've noticed,

(10:37):
these have been activated, So please make sure if you
would be so kind that you are sharing the feed
following along with wherever you're finding is that whether it's
the follow button on x or the subscribe button on
YouTube rumble, or the follow button on the Kalum Radio
Facebook page, and make sure you're sharing the feeds. That
is how we beat the dreaded algorithms, because they and

(11:00):
every time we think we've gotten this thing figured out,
they changed them again, and then we're kind of back
to ground zero. So yeah, that's kind of where we
are right now. So I hope everybody's having a great Friday.
I thought we were gonna be so in full disclosure,
I have two different people coming on tonight. So I
set the show rooms up and the titles and everything
last night, because you know, it's not like I haven't

(11:21):
been doing this for seventeen years and realize that anymore
the news to cycle can.

Speaker 21 (11:25):
Turn on a dime.

Speaker 1 (11:27):
But uh yeah, So I rolled the dice and it's
been a morning. So we'll get into probably Trump on
the beat, maybe when Bez comes in, or maybe during
the news round up later. But there's other things that
have to be discussed right now, and I'm just gonna
be completely upfront with everybody, and this will probably come
up a few different times as more people start coming in.

(11:49):
I am not going to be doing the mental gymnastics
now that all the right leaning networks are doing about
John Bolton's home being raided, because now the left is like,
oh my god, this is authoritarianism, and the riots like, well,
there has to be a reason that they've done it.
It goes through all kinds of due process and this
and this, and the higher ups had to be involved
and it had to go to a judge. And those

(12:09):
were the same arguments the left was making about Trump
when we were all screaming and yelling that it was
crazy that this was happening. All I'm gonna say is,
I don't care. You wanted the government weaponized against us,
you lost control of it, sauce for the goose bitches.
I don't even care anymore. If that makes me petty,

(12:30):
I'm okay with that. If that makes me seem like
maybe I'm being disingenuous. If anything, I feel like I'm
being more authentic because I was pissed when they did
this to Donald Trump, because I understood that it was
all about how to get him out, to shut him down.
Look at what happened with Big Tiss James yesterday. I'm
pretty sure that appeal probably would have gone a little

(12:51):
bit different if her entire campaign hadn't have been I'm
gonna get you, sucker, great movie, bad campaign slogan, just
pointing that out, great movie, bad campaign slogan. I think
it would have gone a little bit differently if not
for that. But when you can pull up the tapes
and listen to her over and over and over again
at campaign stops, I can't wait until the day that

(13:13):
I can go to work every day, sue him, work
for you, and go home. And my favorite one is
the what was it this current administration is she tried
to do some weird rhyme with it. I don't even
remember it now because I think I've blocked it out.
But another little interesting point that I'll probably get back

(13:34):
into when the boys are on the show, because Bez's
supposed to be coming in for Hour two and then
hanging out for the news round up, so that way
we get some more time with him, since I'm gonna
have to step on some of the time with the
tributes that we do, so if you're new around here also,
our one is dedicated to you guys that are doing
the working man thing all day, every day and just
basically riding the time, riding the time clocked out Friday

(13:57):
for those of you to do the Monday through Friday thing.
Then on hour two we do a tribute to our
first responders, and our three is military. Now lately, because
of the weekend news roundup, I've been moving the military
tribute to the end of our two, but technically still
kind of same concept or using it as the music

(14:17):
break in hour two, and that will probably be what
happens again today is that will probably be the music
break for hour two. So and I've thought about it
since I do music breaks. Now, I guess I could
just do the regular intros and then play this stuff
as the music breaks, but I like opening the show
with this one on Friday, so I don't know. I'm

(14:38):
just thinking out loud because there's not very many of
you in here yet, so I'm giving everybody time to
come in because usually we're on fire on Fridays, and
so far we are not. And again, I'm blaming the algorithms,
and I say this repeatedly, and I know, but I
still think that that's the reason why he came up
with the dad joke that he invented the Internet, because

(15:00):
they basically name the damn things that run the Internet
after him, and I know it's a different thing, but
still I'm just saying. I'm just saying that's my story
and I'm sticking to it. And I'm also kind of
tired of this, right So I'm gonna put a picture
up on the screen in a minute, and then I'm
gonna go over some stuff that I have been because
I knew some of this already and then I did

(15:23):
some more research. So we're gonna We're gonna go over
something in a minute, because if I hear one more
person scream about the gold accents that Donald Trump has
put into the White House. Who don't understand that he's
spending most of his time working within Eastern Europe and
the surrounding areas to try to bring peace to that region. Sorry,

(15:43):
I was sharing out the post and every once in
a while on does anybody else notice that on X desktop,
when you try to do the whole share to a
group you've created, occasionally it's like, yeah, we're not gonna
let you click that. For as much as money is
supposed to have been put into this thing, and all
the money that we to be able to stream to
places like this, because trust me, for everybody's like, oh

(16:04):
my god, you're paying Elon Musk. No, it's because I
like to be able to multi stream, and the only
way you can do that now on X is if
you got the blue check mark. It wasn't a thing
when I first started doing this, but almost eighteen months
ago now and then like three months in they're like, oh, yeah,
we're gonna restrict this to just people that have premium.
She thanks appreciate that, but anyway, so hang on, I'm

(16:26):
gonna get a picture put up on the screen. Because
everybody's freaking out about this, and I'm kind of tired
of people apparently not realizing that there's a reason that
he does these things. So let me get this picture
set up first, because everybody, for some reason hates this.

(16:50):
I guess I did it down here. Oh yeah, I
keep forgetting that you can actually set up stuff in
different places now, so I guess I should have moved
it anyway. But so this all the gold accents. Now, Yes,
I will admit it looks tacky to me, but there's
a method to his madness. And I promise you this,

(17:10):
because this man has done business in this region for
a very long time. Europe and Eastern Europe have very
different well actually Europe and even Eastern Europe have very
different cultures from us, and this is one of the
things that I have been trying to explain to people
now for quite some time, is the differences in the culture.

(17:33):
So let's talk about this for a second, because there
are vast differences in these cultures and how they work.
So let me just kind of give you the cliffs
notes version of this stuff here if I can make
it work, because for some reason, it's not wanting to now,
So here's the cliff notes version. The use of gold,

(17:54):
especially when referencing to angels and luck, could subtly nod
to the orthodox and symbolism prevalent in Eastern Europe. So
hosting Zelensky or discussing Putin in a space that evokes
divine favor of cultural familiar familiary might create a subconscious
sense of alignment or comfort, particularly for leaders from Orthodox

(18:17):
Christian nations such as Ukraine or even Russia itself. So
gold in Eastern European cultures and its potential relevance Part two.
As we've discussed previously, gold in Eastern European culture, particularly
in countries like Russia, Ukraine and Serbia, carries deep symbolic weight.
We talked about some of those a moment ago, with

(18:38):
the religious significance. Now here's the other ones. So wealth
and power. Gold signifies prosperity and authority, historically associated with
royalty and elites in diplomacy, projecting strength and success could
appeal to leaders from this region who actually value visible
displays of power think peacocks, divinity, and good fortune. We've

(18:58):
talked about this one before, we will go again. In
Orthodox Christianity, gold represents divine light and protection. Trump's reference
to gold cherubs as angels that bring good luck aligns
with this, potentially resonating with Eastern European leaders who share
this religious context cultural residence. Also, gold is prominent in

(19:19):
Eastern European art and religious iconography, suggesting a familiar familiarity.
I'm gonna keep tripping over that ord today. Apparently that
could make a gilded setting feel culturally significant or welcoming
two leaders like Ukraine's Vladimir Zelensky or the current leader
of Russia, should he ever be allowed into the White House,

(19:39):
which I don't see happening anytime soon. Now, I'm not
saying that Donald Trump is probably not getting played a
bit by Putin. Donald Trump is somebody who believes you
can go into any room and make a deal if
you can find the sweet spot. I don't know if
there is one with this guy. And I've been saying
this for a while. I want the war to stop
as much as everybody else does, but don't want us

(20:00):
to give away so much real estate that in five
or ten years he's like, oh yeah, so we're gonna
start that hole trying to rebuild the Soviet Union again.
Because I'm gonna say this again. If he had managed
to walk through Ukraine like they expected him to in
three days, he would have already been rolling onto the
next target. But since he's had to put a bunch
of people through the meat grinder and everything else, Yeah,

(20:21):
that ain't happening this time. Not yet anyway, not yet.
Oh all right, so sorry, I had to get a
sip of coffee there. So let's take a quick hit
around some of the news. Actually, I forgot I've got
some stuff bookmark, so I want to save some of
that for one DZ's here though, So let me go
ahead and do this. Oh so I thought this was funny.

(20:44):
Let's talk about this. So this is from, of course,
Alex Cole, who's basically on X only for those of
us of our alignment to point and laugh at him.
So I'm gonna put this on the screen because reasons.
Oh hang on, I hit the wrong button again. All right,

(21:07):
So now we've got this one. Let's talk about this.
So the lefties are all having lots of fun throwing
these numbers around right here, So just to make sure
that we're on the same page. If you can't read
what it says at the bottom of the screen. Pull
Roughly eight and ten DC residents opposed Trump's police takeover,
so seventy nine percent to seventeen percent a pose versus support.

(21:30):
What they're not telling you is ninety percent of DC
residents opposed this presidency, So technically that's an eleven point
swing in its favor. Is it a lot?

Speaker 5 (21:43):
No?

Speaker 1 (21:44):
But why are you still talking about things like this
when see it? When Washington, DC just reported its first
seven day period with absolutely no murders in like forever,
like none. The city was averaging anywhere between three to
five a day and there have been none.

Speaker 15 (22:03):
None.

Speaker 1 (22:04):
Well, I'm sorry, three to five a week. Sorry it
wasn't a day, but three to five a week. So
anywhere between three to five people's lives have been saved
because of this crackdown. I'm gonna call that a win.
I'm gonna call the fact that eleven percent of the
people that voted voted against them have apparently changed their mind.

(22:25):
That's probably a good that's probably a good thing. Well,
I guess technically, I guess there's a there's a portion
of undecideds there because the math isn't adding up to
one hundred percent, So I guess technically there's only been
a seven percent swing in his favor But for DC

(22:47):
that's pretty good because they they don't like Republicans. They
don't like Republicans, they don't like them a lot. All right,
let's see what else we can get into here. Let's
start taking a trip around the stuffage. Oh of course,
now my internet's gonna start being retarded. Okay, I'm gonna

(23:17):
take the music break a little bit early because I
don't want this stuff happening when BEZ comes on. So
we'll be right back here in a minute eventually. Hang on,

(23:41):
m dude, I just fired everything up. This should not
be happening already. I really have to get a check
out here, all right. I'm just going with some random
stuff because I got to get this fixed. We'll be
right back. Stay tuned. That's not it. Hang on, there

(24:02):
we go. That's the one we're going with.

Speaker 14 (24:06):
Fever.

Speaker 1 (24:16):
I see a few of you. A few more of
you made it in while we were in the dead zone.
I apologize. I'm going to get a text schedule that here,
because whatever's going on with his modem is getting worse anyway,
well modem slash router, but anyway, so we're back, we're live,
and so now let's see if I can get into

(24:37):
these bookmarks that we were going to get into for
this part of the show. Welcome back into the program.
By the way, Sorry about that whole thing. So we
got to talk about this, right, So that a couple
of big thing, well lots of big things happening on
the left lately. I think they are in an identity crisis,

(24:57):
and I don't think they've realized it yet, but I
think they're starting to. So this just happened, all right,
hang on just a second, and of course it's going
to be muted. No, it's not playing it.

Speaker 17 (25:18):
My son, six years old, was prohibitive from sitting next
to his friend on the school bus because a parent
objected to my perspectives on book challenges. My older son's
history teacher allowed students to label him a Nazi file
simply for his interest in history and participation in ROTC.
She later nominated my son as mostly could become a
dictator and had his classmates vote on it and try

(25:39):
to force him to the front of the class to
receive the certificate, which he rightly refused.

Speaker 2 (25:43):
All because of his.

Speaker 17 (25:44):
Conservative values and our perspectives. Thank you, James, my son
six years old, was prohibitive from sitting.

Speaker 1 (25:57):
Nice all right. So just to make sure we're on
the same page, this is a developing story. And actually
it looks like, according to information that I'm seeing now,
the teacher that was involved in this has been suspended.
So that's a good thing for everybody. I have to admit,
being the smart ass that I am, I probably would
have it, because I'm sure this was probably going on
for a little bit. I probably would have donlt like
it to lean into it. I'm just saying, I mean,

(26:19):
if they're gonna treat you like crap, you might as
well just reinforce whatever they're trying to tell you, because
obviously the teacher wasn't there to teach you anything. The
teacher was there to indoctrinate you because oh you like
rotc and uh, oh you you want to learn about history,
you must be a Nazi voted most likely to be
a dictator by his fellow classmates. People are retarded. People

(26:43):
are retarded, all right. So let's see what other trouble
we can get into here real quick. Like, I know,
I've got a couple other bookmarks hide in here. For
things that I wanted to talk about, but I think
I'm a save the rest of those until one of
my first set of guests comes on. So this happened.

(27:05):
I have to admit I have been keeping up with
this stuff very well because the whole Biden hearings, because
I don't It's not that I don't really want to
know the truth, it's that I already know the truth,
so I don't really care. So this is from our
friends at town Hall. Matt Vespa, Apparently a top Biden's
comms aid that testified recently has apparently, either intentionally or unintentionally,

(27:29):
given some what is being considered damning testimony. So I
guess we'll take a look here. Hang On doesn't seem
like it's wanting to pull up through.

Speaker 6 (27:42):
Oh.

Speaker 1 (27:42):
I think it's just from the style that they did
the story, because they did one of those. We're just
gonna put it into texting. So former White House spokesman
spokes critter Ian Sam's spoke face to face with his
boss President Biden on just two occasions during his again,
I want to I'm gonna sow this part down. He's
spoke to him face to face on two occasions. In

(28:07):
his more than two years in the administration, saw the
Boss face to face twice. House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer,
Republican Kentucky, told reporters Thursday, this was a huge interview
today and I think it contradicts everything. And I'm quoting
at this point. This is a huge an interview today,
and I think it contradicts everything that the former Biden

(28:28):
people are saying with respect to the President's mental fitness,
argued Comer, describing Sam's appearance as one of the most
shocking sit downs yet. The two interactions, with a chairman
described in a subsequent statement as very limited, were in
addition to a virtual meeting Sam's joined involving the forty

(28:51):
six president and a phone call with Biden. In fact,
former special Counsel Robert Hurr spent more time with Joe
Biden and then Ian Sam's, added Tomer, in reference to
the prosecutors two day interview with the President while investigating
whether Biden willfully kept national security documents. So one Biden

(29:13):
White House colleague who worked with Sam's throughout his employment there,
found it credible that he had virtually no access to Biden,
noting both that Sam's office was in the next door
Eisenhower Executive Office building rather than the West Wing, and
that he typically interacted with interm intermediaries such as Communications
Chief Anita Dunn and White House councils Stuart Dellery and

(29:37):
at siskel So a special counsel Robert Herr, who Democrats
dragged for noting that Joe Biden had severe memory problems
during his deposition. You guys remember that, right, because I do.
He's a nice old man who means well, and I'm
not going to pursue charges because I don't think he's

(29:58):
able to to stand. Trial should have been an automatic
twenty fifth, if you know what I'm saying. So he
was right about Joe's mental state. The Democrats continued to
deny it until he imploded on that June twenty twenty
four debate with Trump on CNN. And I honestly think

(30:19):
somebody within his circle set that up on purpose. There's
really no other explanation for everything. And next thing I
want to talk about real quick. So Jen and I
talked about this last night because it kind of came
up the Kami Lama Hamasnik book tour after and somebody
in the chat had said this seems like it's maybe

(30:41):
one degree away from money laundering, and I said, now,
I'm pretty sure there's no degrees. And then I found
out what the prices are. Even the balcony seats like
the nosebleeds a one hundred and fifty bucks. To get close,
you got to pay over two grand. This is straight
up money laundering. The woman is doing a book tour
about her failed presidential campaign because it has an asterisk

(31:02):
by it for historical reasons, because it was the shortest
presidential campaign in history. Was also one of the most
expensive presidential campaigns in history if you take into account
the amount of time it ran versus the amount of
time or the amount of money that was raised. And
they still don't know where some of it went. They
still don't know where some of it went. It's crazy.

(31:27):
It's crazy. So I don't know if I mentioned this already,
because I got a little flustered when I realized my
internet quit working for a minute there. But okay, I
have to admit when I envisioned, at some point, maybe
the left and right finally remembering how to come back

(31:49):
together and actually agree on something, I didn't think it
would be about how much the new cracker barrel logo sucks.
And it's not just the logo. They're starting to sanitize
the restaurants. And again, I get it. I mean, we've
seen this happen with pretty much everything is they've become
modern and more sleek and YadA YadA YadA, blah blah blah.

(32:09):
But it's removing everything that mattered about the store to
begin with. The store was about tradition. The name itself
comes from a tradition when there were old when there
were old style you know, mercantile stores. You know, remember
a little house on their prairie. They sold soda crackers

(32:32):
in barrels. That's where the name came from. It's not
about racism, And even if it were, why would they
pick the white disparaging or what eventually became a white
disparaging comment if it was about racism since mostly white
people eat there. Y'all, with your hate didn't really think
this through very well at all. You just really did not.

(32:53):
But that's okay, that's fine. I get it. You want
things to hate, you want things to be able to
scream about. This probably shouldn't have been one of them.
As far as oh my god, it's a racist restaurant. No,
it's named after things that happened in history when we
were not as advanced as we are today. But we've
seen the same thing everywhere. I mean, look at McDonald's

(33:13):
today versus McDonald's when you and I were kids. McDonald's
used to be a fun place to go eat four
younger kids. It was bright colored, there were funny caricatures,
there were toys that were fun to play on if
it wasn't one hundred and twenty degrees outside, that were
brightly colored. And now it looks McDonald's literally looks like
it's gone from being a young, happy child to a

(33:35):
middle aged man in a midlife crisis. And I think
they are actually in a bit of a midlife crisis
because now I've seen reports that they're dropping their prices,
So I have a question about that. I'll admit the
article that I tried to click on to read to
see how much of a drop it was was one

(33:57):
of those ones that had tons of ads in it,
and I hate those, so I closed it out. But
the fact that they're shaving anything off at all negates
their entire argument for why they had to raise the
prices in the first place, and I'm kind of mad
about that. Not that I eat McDonald's that often. It's
usually maybe once a month thing because my kids love

(34:17):
it and my grandkids love it, so occasionally it's, oh,
let's go get some McDonald's and I'll get some a
few other things. And of course if you order with
the app, you save a little bit of money. I
have to admit I have got it. I have gotten
into the whole app thing. I like being able to
pick out what I want while I'm nowhere near there
and then basically kind of be able to pull over
and park and wait for them to bring it to

(34:38):
me instead of having to wait through the drive fro
lines and everything else. But the fact that they're able
to cut their prices at all negates everything they've been
telling us, because everybody's been complaining about fast food prices
now forever because it cost almost as It cost almost
as much now to go get a Burger combo from
somewhere like McDonald's or Carls Junior as it costs to

(35:00):
go go get food or to sit down restaurant as
an example. Because I just looked, because we're gonna be
going to alback steakhouse on Sunday because actually today, no tomorrow, sorry,
tomorrow is my youngest son's birthday. So I'm gonna go
ahead and say happy birthday. Now, I know he doesn't listen,

(35:21):
so it doesn't matter. No respect from your elders or
for year elders. I'm just saying. But yeah, no, So
we're going to Outback Steakhouse because it is my youngest
son's birthday and it's also my stepmom's birthday this week.
I think hers is actually on Sunday. No, hers will
be on Monday, So my son's is tomorrow, hers is Monday.

(35:47):
So we've split the difference. We're getting together for lunch
on a Sunday and we're going to Outback Steakhouse. So
I started looking at the looking at the pricing just
to see what I was gonna be dealing with. And uh, yeah,
it's fourteen dollars to get a burger and fries at
out Back. It's ten dollars to get a burger, fries
and a drink at McDonald's. Now, granted, the outback prices

(36:13):
and don't involve the drink, but I'm just pointing out that,
you know, the drink's probably no more than three bucks,
which to me is still crazy, which is why most
of the time when I go to restaurants anymore, I
just get water because I don't drink enough of that
as that as it is, because I'm constantly drinking caffeine
to stay awake. But yeah, no, I just I think

(36:34):
it's interesting that, you know, McDonald's, which was one of
the first ones that well, we apologize for having to
raise our prices, but YadA, YadA, YadA, YadA YadA. Now
all of a sudden, they're dropping their prices. I wonder
why that is.

Speaker 19 (36:49):
You know why that is?

Speaker 1 (36:51):
Could it be because nobody's eating there anymore? Okay, So
I gotta admit I wasn't really paying attention when this
story broke yesterday, and I missed it for a minute
because I couldn't. I mean, granted, it's a terrible thing

(37:14):
that happened, and I'll as soon as it finishes loading up,
I'll put it on the screen so you can see
what I'm talking about. But yeah, so this happened at
a Winsome series event. I guess yesterday. I think it
was yesterday, Yeah, looking for I have too many tabs open.
Did I mentioned I have too many tabs open, but

(37:36):
partly that's because it made me go to a different
thing to be able to show you the picture. That
wasn't really my fault. But yeah, so I gotta admit
I knew the name Win some sears. I never really
paid that much attention to her before, and then I
heard it, and then I saw her on the news
this morning, and I'm like, oh, this just took this

(37:58):
to an entirely level that I did not see coming.
So yeah, here's the sign, Hey, win some trans. If
trans can't share your bathroom, then blacks can't share my
water fountain. Holy crap. Now, granted that is terrible to
begin with, but fine, And again, I don't know how.

(38:22):
I don't know how I missed it, probably because I
don't really pay that much attention to Virginia politics that often,
because up until now it's never it's you know, it's
been blue up until recently, really really blue until recently.
So I so the sign itself was bad enough. On
I'm looking at that going, yeah, So of course the
arguments for this sign is well, it was it was

(38:43):
about satire, and it was about trying to prove a
point about how silly all of us is, And to
quote a friend of mine, the satire is often a
more direct expression of the feelings of the satirist than
those that they are attempting to discuss the sad tire with.
And I would have to agree with this because you

(39:03):
held this up at a rally for a governor gubernatorial
candidate who happens to be one of those people that
would have to use a different water fountain if you
apparently had your way. So I would like to point
out again, ladies and gentlemen, despite what the left has
told you, despite what they say all of the time,

(39:24):
they are still in fact the party of racists. Now,
I'm not saying there aren't some folks on my side
that that are retarded, because there are. Every everybody has them.
It's kind of like the whole, you know, bad teachers thing.
We hope that it's more, you know, a bad apple
spoils the entire barrel, and not an entire barrel of
bad apples with one or two good ones in it.

(39:45):
But anymore, it's kind of hard to tell anymore. It's
kind of hard to tell, all right. So I think
there was one other bookmark I wanted to try to
get to if I can find it. It was not
the button moment to press oh yeah, this one, this one.

(40:13):
And for the record, we may repeat some of these
when I have guests later.

Speaker 20 (40:16):
But I.

Speaker 1 (40:20):
Definitely want to talk about this one because I don't
necessarily completely disagree with the premise that he's about to make,
if I'm being completely honest. But I'll explain the differences
in our positions once he's done talking.

Speaker 20 (40:38):
What we've got at the moment is an aristocracy of
wealth in this country. It's also true of the United
States as well. So what I would do, what I
would do, and I wouldn't be opposed to, by the way,
I wouldn't be opposed to one hundred percent inheritance text,
or maybe let's say ninety nine percent. You know, my
rule might be that if you can put it in
two pea bags, then you can hand it over. That's fine,

(41:01):
ninety nine ninety five percent. I'm being provocacy, but you
see what I mean. I would not be against a
far higher rate of inheritance tax than we have at
the moment, which is forty percent above a certain threshold.
I wouldn't be opposed to putting that to fifty percent,
sixty percent, seventy percent. Why Because I think the quid
pro quo should be twofold. One that helps fund public services,
which actually helps level the playing field in achieving a

(41:23):
true meritocracy. Two it will help us reduce taxes on
income because at the end of the day, I want
to incentivize work. I want to incentivize productivity. I want
to incentivize people to get up off their backside and
do more. You don't have a right to inherit. You
should have a right to be to work while you're

(41:45):
alive and keep more of your own money. That to
me is more important, way more important than your rights
to just inherit some money from mommy and daddy that
you did nothing to earn.

Speaker 1 (41:59):
Right So, I know some of you are looking sideways
right now and going, wait, you mean you kind of
agree with this guy. Let me explain why though historically speaking,
we didn't used to have this, you know, carry forward
of wealth. As a matter of fact, a lot of
our founding fathers are very famously well known for donating
everything that they were able to make throughout their life
to do things like make their communities better, like by

(42:20):
helping build libraries, et cetera. If we still had that
kind of stuff going on, we wouldn't need taxation as
much as we do now. Again, I'm not saying that
if your family has earned it, you don't have a
right to keep it. That's not what I'm saying. And
I don't think it should be a taxation thing. I don't,
But I do think we need to get back to
the whole idea of philanthropy and the whole idea of

(42:44):
doing things to make the world a better place. We
have moved away from that for so long, and the
folks that try to tell you that they're trying to
do it are trying to do it through the by
the barrel of a gun because you're telling you, Oh,
you have to agree with us that climate change is terrible.
You know what I have to argue with you about
when it comes to climate change, that weather does sometimes

(43:05):
do some crazy stuff, and we still have an obligation
to take care of the environment around us, and we can.
If we can start talking about it from that perspective,
then I'm willing to have that conversation one thousand percent.
And I have proposed ideas to make things better. Everybody
forgets that a decade ago, actually over a decade ago,

(43:26):
Barack Obama was shown a water that runs on an
engine that runs on water. Why are we not exploring
that technology anymore? Where did that go? That was over
a decade ago? What happened to that? Why are we
not making plastics out of biodegradable things, you know, like hemp.

(43:49):
There's a real reason that everybody. So the other thing is, look,
I am I am a firm believer in Darwinism. I know,
considering I've had to have medical intervention throughout my life
to still be here. I understand that some of you
may see that as a bit hypocritical, but in a
lot of ways, I am firmly in support of vironism

(44:11):
and a lot of things like the idea that the
government overregulates anything and everything. Like there's a push to
put legalize marijuana back on our ballot again and our
next election here in the state.

Speaker 2 (44:24):
You know what I'm not.

Speaker 1 (44:26):
I don't necessarily want it legalized. I just want it
decriminalized because taxation is theft, and all they're going to
do is tax it to the point where people are
going back to buying it from illegal sources again. So
they don't have to worry about the taxes. And it
looks like we have busy waiting in the wings. So
I see him here, so we'll bring him in here
in just a little bit. We actually bring him in

(44:47):
kind of as the top of the top of the
rts here in just a few minutes. It's giving him
a heads up, so he doesn't, you know, be like,
oh my god, he brought me over early.

Speaker 19 (44:56):
But no.

Speaker 1 (44:57):
But yeah, decriminalization, I'm kind of okay with. I'm going
to be completely honest, and this is coming from somebody
who has dealt with addiction in my family. This is
coming from somebody who's to do the kind of work
where we were interdicting this kind of stuff. I say,
legalize all of it and then let God sort it out,
because when we're not spending so much money trying to

(45:17):
stop people from being able to use it, we could
take that money and spend it on the people that
can't handle using it, and they could actually maybe get
things like treatment to make it possible for them not
to be able to do it. Because that's just another
extension of the nanty state. This is what we went
through with prohibition, but we learned a lesson much sooner.
And I don't really know why. Now I will say this,

(45:41):
things like fentanyl one thousand percent interdicted, I don't care
that that's not anything that should ever be on the streets.
But the normal stuff we can agree, disagree whatever. But
I'm just saying that this whole thing and going back
to this whole thing this other guy was talking about,
like I want one hundred percent inheritance tax. Inheritance tax,

(46:03):
I don't want that, just like I don't want one
hundred percent marijuana tax or one hundred percent whatever tax.
I don't because taxation is bad. There is a reason
our founding fathers wanted us to not have any direct
taxation from our government because they were tired of the
other folks bullshit. But that's the story for another day.

(46:25):
But this whole idea that we have now where everybody
just works, you know, as hard as they can to
make as much as they can, and then you know,
just does whatever with it. If we would get back
to this whole philanthropy idea, the world would be a
much better place. I mean if people like Donald Trump,
who have billion yes I'm gonna use him as an example.

(46:48):
Dude has billions of dollars inherited millions from his father,
and it's turned it into billions. Whether you want to
see that as a success or not, yeah, you can
say whatever you want. But I think when it's time
for him to check out, some of that needs to
go some other places and then the rest of it
can go to his family. Because if I ever get

(47:10):
to the point where I've got something to leave behind
that's more than twenty bucks in a gift card to Costco,
then I'm gonna figure out a way to do just that,
because I want to be able to leave the world
a better place than what I found it. And you
can argue the other side of this is that wool
rich people already do that because they're creating jobs, are
doing this, they're doing that. Most of these trust fund

(47:30):
babies really don't go I have to admit that Trump
families kind of surprised me because they didn't really go.
The Biden family out where they had money and they
were born into it, and they just kind of went ooh,
I'm gonna go crazy. No, they're actually trying to do
good things. So I don't know, like I said, just
kind of a mixed bag of ideas and yeah, just

(47:51):
kind of trying to talk things through here. But so yeah,
let's see what other stuff do we got going on today.
I still can I believe that, and I well, first
of all, I can't believe that I didn't connect it
out still this morning. Second of all, I can't believe
that I didn't that this lady actually went to a

(48:12):
win some seers rally with a segregation sign and thought
it was a good idea. In case you don't know
that that's actually what happened, I'm gonna pull So I
showed you that, I showed you. I showed you. I
showed you the sign. Now we're gonna show you the
chick holding the sign. Big but it's making me go
over to X to do it, so hang on. So here,
So I showed you the sign earlier. Now here's the

(48:36):
chick holding the sign. What's wrong with this picture? We
showed you what the sign said earlier. Now here's the
chick holding the sign. But yeah, the Democrats are not
are not the racist party anymore? All right? So we
are fixing to cut out here, But before we do,
let's bring Beezy over for a moment. Good evening, or

(49:00):
I said, good evening because we used to do new show,
Good morning, sir, how are you?

Speaker 21 (49:04):
I thought I was gonna be the one to screw
that up. Look, there's there's sun. There's this weird ass
ball in the sky. It puts out flames and shit,
and people actually have jobs and they work weird stuff

(49:27):
like that.

Speaker 1 (49:27):
It's bizarre, Gus, I gotta tell you, Yeah, it's weird. Yeah, dude.
I mean, most most of my career doing the other stuff,
I was usually even when I was running my own business,
most of the time, I mean I was working all
the time. Then it was like twenty twenty two hour days,
but most of the time when I was doing field work,
it was at night. So most of the time when
it was daytime work, I was inside either my office

(49:49):
or just working for my house. If I didn't have
anything I had to go in for that day. And
so yeah, going outside when I had to like pick
the kids up or from school or take them to
school was like, Oh my god, angry Horn's ball with
the sky.

Speaker 2 (50:00):
He's angry it is. It hates me.

Speaker 21 (50:04):
Well, fuck, it hates me, of course it does. I've
got melanoma for God's sake.

Speaker 1 (50:09):
Oh, I forgot about that. Oh all right, So just
to kind of let you know, so again, we're gonna
have you on for a bit. You are welcome to
stay for the third hour or two if you wish.
If you are staying, if possible, try to make sure
that you have brought a couple of stories to the
table so we can make fun of everything that's been
happening this week. Oh god, yeah, because Jesus.

Speaker 21 (50:33):
Jesus helped me, mord.

Speaker 1 (50:35):
So yeah, So I gotta say, you know, I had
planned on having a bit more. Well, I mean, we're
still gonna have fun, but I had planned on riffing
more about the whole you know, Trump being on the
beat thing. But apparently that wasn't quite what I thought
it was gonna be. And then I woke up this
morning to you know, dun dun, dun, dun, dun, dum,
all of a sudden, the FBI is knocking on Mustache's door.

Speaker 21 (51:00):
I'm like, excuse me, while I.

Speaker 3 (51:06):
That was bad.

Speaker 21 (51:07):
That was very bad. See this is either going out
or I hit the mic pad right here, the phone pad.
Let's try it again.

Speaker 6 (51:13):
That was.

Speaker 21 (51:15):
Okay, that's better.

Speaker 2 (51:16):
That was better.

Speaker 1 (51:17):
It was gonna yeah, but No, it was just I
woke up as I was putting show notes, starting to
put stuff together this morning that broke, and I'm like, oh,
and then, so the thing that irritates me right about
all this is now I see all the leftist news
media saying all the things that they said when it
was the FBI knocking on Donald Trump's store, and I
see all the right leaning media saying all the things

(51:39):
that left leaning media was saying when it was the
FBI knocking on Donald Trump's store. Like, I'm just gonna
tell you right now, wanted you wanted weaponization, You got it.
I don't care.

Speaker 21 (51:51):
Oh you could use the R word retribution, revenge. Uh hey,
I'm not against revenge, you know. I this is how
I wake up in the morning, my very own tankard.
Oh whatever the hell this is mons because I like
my caffeine, like I like my revenge cold thank you.

Speaker 1 (52:17):
Uh yeah, normally in the sum so so oddly enough,
normally first thing in the morning, I still have to
have like hot coffee, even if it's hot as hell outside.
But then after the first cup or so, I'll start
doing iced coffee.

Speaker 21 (52:28):
You were shocked, shocked, I tell you, shocked, and amazed,
amazed and shocked that I didn't drink coffee because you know,
I don't like where I came from. What the hell?

Speaker 2 (52:39):
What's wrong with you?

Speaker 1 (52:40):
I don't know anybody from our background that didn't know
not necessarily even drink coffee, but just mainline the shit, Like,
just give me an ivy bag full of it because
I gotta go.

Speaker 21 (52:49):
Do you ever hear of jolt Cola?

Speaker 1 (52:51):
Yes, that was how I got through college.

Speaker 21 (52:54):
Okay, I'll tell you a story about Jolt Cola after
your break.

Speaker 3 (52:58):
All right.

Speaker 1 (52:58):
So yeah, speaking of which, we're gonna and take that now.
It is top of the hour. Don't forget. When we
come back, there will be a first responder tribute and
then the middle of the middle of the hour break.
This time will also be the military tribute to make
more room for Brad and Bez also hanging out with
us for our three for the Weekend News Roundup. I
am Rick Robinson. This is my show. We do this

(53:19):
thing every Tuesday through Friday and have an extended edition
on Friday because of the Weekend News Roundup. If you
would be so kind as I see more of you
starting to pile in this morning, I know it's early,
but share out the feeds for me. The algorithm is
being a dick again. We'll be right back. Stay tuned. Hello, friends,

(53:45):
you have a moment so that we may discuss our
Lord and Savior minarkey, No, seriously, I'm just kidding.

Speaker 2 (53:52):
Hi.

Speaker 1 (53:53):
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Speaker 12 (57:42):
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(58:04):
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Law dot com.

Speaker 14 (01:00:07):
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Speaker 15 (01:00:25):
The following program contains course language and adult themes. Listener
and discretion is advised.

Speaker 18 (01:00:52):
I remember that day like it was yesterday.

Speaker 2 (01:00:59):
Call came and.

Speaker 3 (01:01:01):
We were on a way.

Speaker 18 (01:01:05):
To a place side never thought i'd be. I saw things, sigh,
never thought i'd see.

Speaker 2 (01:01:16):
Or the flame.

Speaker 18 (01:01:19):
Lit up the sky still brings tears to my eyes.
Don't call me hero, that's not here.

Speaker 6 (01:01:34):
I am.

Speaker 18 (01:01:35):
I nobody special, just then ordinary man. I didn't do
for glory, he did do it for the thing. Don't
call me in your own because I don't feel that
word arrived at the scene confusion. Everywhere we're rushing, smoke

(01:02:08):
feels in. It was in ten sick words like us
not somebody's green, Evey's doing side noy thir Lord, how
we try? Please, little one, don't you hide. Don't call

(01:02:37):
me hero, that's.

Speaker 16 (01:02:39):
Not you him.

Speaker 22 (01:02:42):
Nobody's special, just an ordinary man. I didn't you Glory
did for the thing. Don't call me hero because I
don't feel that way.

Speaker 1 (01:03:05):
And welcome back into the program, ladies and gentlemen again,
This is McK robinson. This is my show. I only
felt it was fair since I had been playing a
lot of PD related tribute songs today that we gave
the fire eater to turn. I don't know about BZ,
but if somebody that used to run towards bullets, the
ones that ran into fire still scare me.

Speaker 21 (01:03:28):
One of the nicest things that ever happened to me.
A little before I retired, maybe about six or seven
years before I retired, I worked at EVOC for our department,
which was a multidisciplinary, multi agency department for driver training.

(01:03:52):
I started our department in the seventies. I worked for
the FBI for a short time and I dug their
t VOC, which was Tactical Emergency Vehicle Operations course because
they have to be tactically. I was in charge of
our EVOC cours, which means that I was our our

(01:04:15):
fleet manager and part of risk manager for oh. We
had at the time probably forty or fifty vehicles just
for EVOC, So I was my own little fleet manager,
so to speak. One of the nicest things that ever
happened to me is when I was leaving, I was

(01:04:35):
moved on because of let's see, when was that two
thousand and eight when everything turned to shit in the economy.
But as I was leaving the fire department, whom we
worked with there, because we taught, we cross trained everyone
emergency responders, the fire department, paramedics, box rig medics, cop

(01:05:00):
and of course you know the way it worked is
all cops wanted to drive the fire apparatus and all
the firefighters wanted to drive the cop cars, and so
I had to have my commercial I had to have
all that stuff during the time when I left an
engineer by the name of Ron as a going away present,

(01:05:26):
he gave me his helmet. You don't do that because
you end up paying for them. Those are multiple hundreds
of dollars for those things. And I was I got
allergic when he did that. And it's you can't see

(01:05:48):
it because it's you know, there's a little teeny room
right over there and it's looking at me and says
Sacramento engineer, beautiful, beautiful thing. That was one of the
nicest things anybody ever did. He gave me his hard hat,
his firefighters moment that just that blew me away.

Speaker 1 (01:06:08):
Incredible.

Speaker 2 (01:06:09):
Dude.

Speaker 1 (01:06:10):
Yeah, I dude, I'm just you know, and I have
friends that are firefighters, you know, from the circles that
I used to run into and and don't get me wrong,
and a couple of times, once on duty and once off,
I've had to run into burning buildings because I mean,
you know, sometimes you can't help with the training kicks
in and you just do what you know you're supposed
to do. But stopping to think about it, the ones
that willingly, you know, run into burning buildings, they honestly

(01:06:32):
terrified me because after I had after I had done it,
which again training kicked in and I did what I
was supposed to do. I thought about it afterwards and
I'm like, I don't know how I just did that.
That's fire.

Speaker 21 (01:06:46):
Burns are one of the worst things. If you haven't
seen a burn victim, don't. One of the worst things
to attempt to suffer through, and after a certain percentile,
very few survive. I mean, the skin, if I'm not mistaken,
is either the largest organ on the body, and people

(01:07:07):
don't think of skin as an organ, but it truly is,
and it affects everything. A friend of mine was burned
about sixty percent from an accident a long time ago,
and he did not survive. You know, that's slightly over half, which,
when you think of it, is a massive amount of

(01:07:28):
damage to the skin and to the body. I just
I've done that too, maybe only once or twice. You know,
you and I both look at that and well, number one,
we're not equipped, which is neither here nor there. We
don't have all the cool shit that they do. But
then again, there are firefighters that say, hey, running toward bullets,

(01:07:53):
are you nuts? I spoke to many racers who said
that as a cop on the street, having to run
Code three or in pursuit on open street with so
many variables in your way is nuts. What I do

(01:08:14):
is nuts, but we make it as controlled as humanly possible,
and the same for any Code three responder as well.

Speaker 1 (01:08:23):
Yeah, I mean that is true, but I mean, dude,
the driver, I mean it's probably even worse now. The
driver training they put you through to be able to
do that kind of stuff is insane.

Speaker 21 (01:08:34):
So I used to be proud of the fact. Well
I still am proud of the fact that I was
in charge of two series of domains of education and
learning that killed cops, guns and cars, Cars and guns,
guns and cars. They kill cops and they hurt people,
and I was lucky enough to be in charge of

(01:08:56):
both as being the supervisor to EVOC and also being
the department's range master for a while, in charge of
everything that goes boom and bang. And then I was
part of I was part of EOD until I realized,
you know, I went to ah God Redstone and after
that I came back and I went to a couple

(01:09:16):
of calls. Number one, I'm not a well, oh shit,
I wasn't a really big guy at the time. I'm
about five to nine and I was in shape, you know,
around his shape then. But you have to carry a
ninety five pound bomb suit. I'm guessing they're probably a
little heavier now. And that's after working a couple of
calls at EOD. I didn't want to be called stumpy,
so I thought, do the smart thing, go back to

(01:09:40):
doing what you were in detectives and let the guys
who really, really, really know what's going on handle that shit.
There was a semi friend I guess, whom I met
during a tactical expo in Las Vegas. And the guy's
name was Arley mc and at the time he was

(01:10:01):
one of the most acknowledged bomb techs in the entire
United States. He worked for L A.

Speaker 2 (01:10:07):
P D.

Speaker 21 (01:10:08):
And we were in Las Vegas. He was demoing the
breaching of doors, debt cord, that sort of thing. About
a week after that, Arley McCree was killed from a
pipe bomb, the most what EOD experts considered to be
one of the most basic foundational devices that you encounter.

(01:10:32):
And again emphasizing to me that you know, dude, do
what you're best at this ship will snap up and
bite you very soon. It did him.

Speaker 1 (01:10:48):
That's that's terrible. When you first started saying ar Le,
I was like, don't tell me you're about the name
drop Arle Army.

Speaker 21 (01:10:55):
No, no, no one knows who he is.

Speaker 6 (01:10:58):
Now.

Speaker 2 (01:10:59):
That was the eighties.

Speaker 21 (01:11:00):
As a matter of fact, I went to Las Vegas
the day the Columbia the Challenger exploded, So that was
that was a weird Kuwaki.

Speaker 1 (01:11:16):
Dick January twenty something of eighty seven.

Speaker 21 (01:11:20):
I believe, yeah, right around in there, I'm old.

Speaker 1 (01:11:25):
Yeah, I am that old well redwood.

Speaker 21 (01:11:28):
You have to slice me in the middle and count
my rings.

Speaker 1 (01:11:31):
Not to add to that, but we found out the
Challenger exploded when I was on a school bus coming
back from a field trip in sixth grade.

Speaker 21 (01:11:42):
Sure, thanks dude.

Speaker 1 (01:11:46):
It was terrible though, because all the so the bus
driver says it, and all the kids thought she was joking,
so they started making fun of it and laughing and pointing,
and the bus driver like slammed on the brakes and
the like lost her shit.

Speaker 3 (01:11:59):
Huh.

Speaker 1 (01:12:00):
She slammed on the brakes, pulled over and just started screaming,
listend you little shits. Something that it was not a joke.
These people just blew up while you guys were in
there doing your science museum stuff. And all the kids
when they realized what had happened. I mean there were
there were there were girls that were laughing one second
and balling like hysterically the next. And I'm like, oh,

(01:12:20):
this is gonna suck the longest. Well, let's ride home.

Speaker 21 (01:12:24):
I do have some history from bad stuff like that.
When Krakatoa blew up and covered the earth with debris,
I got let out of school. That was seventeen something
or other, and so it was sufficiently bad. They kicked
us out of school and sent us home.

Speaker 1 (01:12:42):
Yes, so well that had to be bad because back
then they didn't do those kinds of things. That's what
I've been talking about that because you know, when I
was a kid's second grade that we watched President Reagan
be shot on national TV. We didn't get sitt home.
Nobody could broad in counselors. The teacher was like, okay, kids,
time for you spelling test. I'm like, we just just

(01:13:02):
watched the dude get shot. You want to do spelling now?

Speaker 2 (01:13:06):
Really? In truth?

Speaker 21 (01:13:10):
On November twenty second, nineteen sixty three, I was at
another grade school. No, what's elementary? No, you're not in
high school yet. No, however, whatever school you're in when
you're thirteen, Okay, they closed the school and send us
all home on buses. I remember us being in a bus.

Speaker 18 (01:13:31):
Now.

Speaker 21 (01:13:31):
They arranged for seventeen, five hundred and twenty three kids
from the San Juan Unified School District to go home
on a bus.

Speaker 2 (01:13:40):
I have no idea.

Speaker 21 (01:13:41):
Again that sounds don't tell anybody.

Speaker 1 (01:13:46):
I'll be honest. Until you told me, I had no
idea how old you were. I honestly thought. I mean,
I knew you were older than me, but I was
honestly thinking early mid sixties. I didn't realize you were.
I think you're actually a year older than my dad.

Speaker 21 (01:13:58):
Jesus fuck.

Speaker 1 (01:14:01):
But then again, my parents started popping out kids early.
My dad was twenty when he well just turned twenty
one when I was born. So there's like there's like
twenty one years and twenty two days between me and
my dad because he was born in the beginning of
the same month that I was born in twenty one
years later.

Speaker 21 (01:14:25):
Okay, thanks for that, You're welcome, go ahead laugh. Hey,
I'm still here. Okay, I've been through so much shit.
It ain't funny. Cancer three times, still have it, shot at,

(01:14:45):
shot back, blah blah blah, blah blah blah. Of all
the people who are infinitely better than I, tons of
them are dead and gone, Why the hell am I
still here? Don't tell me that. I don't think about that.

Speaker 24 (01:15:00):
In the words of my father, pure honreiness, I've I've
done such incredibly stupid shit in my life, still here.

Speaker 21 (01:15:11):
Don't know why?

Speaker 1 (01:15:12):
Got to figure it out because you're helping people understand
that not to do the same stupid shit that you did.
Probably oh boy, But yeah, my dad is another one
of these people that you know, with medical situations and
everything else, probably should have been dead two or three
times over. And when anybody asks him, you know, how
the hell are you still here, He's like, because I'm
too fucking honored to die. Yeah, I can't say I

(01:15:34):
love people. I could, but it would be a lie.
I mean you could, I mean, dude, even. And the
funny thing is it's worse as I get older. I
am seriously getting to the point where and I think
it's gotten even worse now that I live out in
the country because I don't have to deal with people
that much. So there are days when I'm literally looking
at my children, going, we got to go. It's entirely

(01:15:55):
two people out here. And I used to make fun
and I used to make fun of people that were
that way, and now I become one.

Speaker 2 (01:16:02):
I am.

Speaker 21 (01:16:03):
I was disabused of being in places with lots of
people a long time ago. Like I said, I worked
for the FBI. Well, if working for the fbis like
we're working for for CHP, You're going to go to
the academy, you're gonna get through, you're gonna be the youngest,

(01:16:25):
and you're gonna get dumped in the worst shit pile
you possibly can. Well, at the time, it was either
New York City, Yeah, I went there, or WMFO, which
was called at the time Washington Metro Field Office. And
that's when I realized that, you know, it's it's the

(01:16:45):
white kid from California always fell with a K trying
to understand what language these people are talking and why
are they screaming at me all the time?

Speaker 2 (01:16:57):
No, I I'm not going to do that.

Speaker 21 (01:17:01):
I'm about ready to alienate probably fifty percent of your
audience who lives in the Northeast. So I'm not going
to do that. But anyway, I didn't like New York.
I didn't like Washington. It turns out I didn't like
the FBI. Turns out that I thought, oh, I know,
I'll go to the US marshalls. They're cool, they kick ass,
they drive planes. And know what happens when you're just

(01:17:26):
in the marshall is you get your ass sat in
a district court wearing a red blazer being a bailiff.
So I thought, you know, this entirely fed this whole
federal thing well and truly does suck. So I think
I'll go back to a place where I hated New
York City. Oh my god, I hated New York City.

(01:17:49):
Did I tell you that I hated New York City.

Speaker 1 (01:17:51):
I like DC.

Speaker 2 (01:17:52):
At the time.

Speaker 21 (01:17:53):
DC was fairly coolus on days off, I got to
look at or all sorts of cool place is you know,
everyone in their life, if they're an American. I recommend
doing two things, if nothing else, you know, for a
bucket list trip, go see Pearl Harbor. Go to the

(01:18:16):
Pearl Harbor Memorial and sit there and soak that environment
in and listen to what these people are saying. The
second one is go to d C and look at
our origins and learn about the founding fathers, learn about
the Constitution, learn about the Bill of Rights. Because everything

(01:18:39):
outside the memorials is fake bullshit. It's it's absolute nothing
but naked hatred and backstabbing twenty four to seven. And
these days, I'm well, my whole thing is is politics.
But that's one of the reasons I do polic But

(01:19:00):
Pearl Harbor, Yeah, you really need to go and DC
just to see the memorials. You know you'll find out
when you go in there, because the scale of these
two monuments blew me away because you cannot accurately convey
this scale until you're there. One of them was the
Ewo Jima Memorials, as you see it displayed in video

(01:19:25):
or on cams. That thing is huge. And the second
is when you walk into the Lincoln Memorial. Holy Mother
of God, I've heard a scale that truly astounding.

Speaker 1 (01:19:45):
I've been to d C twice in my life and
I've never made it to go see any of that crap,
and I'm mad at myself for it's one of these days,
I'm gonna figure it out. Both times have been that well.
One one was a school relatedship, and the other was
we were doing something else, and the other was during
a convention I went to. Well, actually, I guess I've
been in the DC area three times now, Seapack twice,
and then uh, for school, I moved around a lot.

(01:20:08):
So when I was a kid in Delaware, my science teacher,
you know, speaking of the challenger, actually won the CHRISTA
mcculliff Awards. So really, now we we got a satellite.
We got a satellite dish for our schools so that
we could always, you know, watch the launches as they
were live. And then he got a portable one where
we could go to other schools in the area they

(01:20:29):
didn't have the satellite, so they could see the launches.
And I was actually part of the team that got
to go and be the ambassador from the school. And
so that that was weird for me because growing up
in a ginormous state like Oklahoma and then moving this
to Washington State, which was kind of big too. Moving
into Delaware was kind of weird because for the first
time in my life, we went on a field trip
where I crossed three state lines and came back in

(01:20:50):
time for dinner.

Speaker 21 (01:20:51):
Yeah, Stamp, I knew it could.

Speaker 1 (01:20:56):
That was new for me. But yeah, that that was
a really interesting experience because I got to ask go
out of the school a few times, and I was
part of the team that helped set up the satellite
dish and help figure out how to get it oriented
and all that stuff. And that's that's when I that's
when I fully embraced the fact that I was a
tech NERD.

Speaker 21 (01:21:10):
So Air and Space Smithsonian. If you don't see anything
in DC for whatever reason, I don't have time for nothing,
go see the Air and Space Smithsonian.

Speaker 1 (01:21:23):
Incredible. Yeah, no, I definitely want to do that, all right.
So there, so I want to I want to get
to a couple of things before Brad comes in because
I'm trying to save most of the new stuff until
he's here. So we've got more stuff to talk about. Okay,
I got to talk to you about this one though.
I don't know if you've heard about this one yet
or seen it. Hang on, let me fix it so
it's not looking weird. But uh, mister Carlson has kind

(01:21:46):
of stepped in some shit again. Oh no, now what Well, actually,
let's just watch together and I want to get your reactions. Okay,
I don't think you've seen this yet.

Speaker 25 (01:21:57):
And it started when I read a book by Diana West,
who would be good if you interviewed her, and it
was it's this all revisionist history of World War Two,
and you go, well, why would you want to read that? Well,
it turns out I think the story we got about
World War Two is all wrong.

Speaker 1 (01:22:11):
Yeah, I think that's right.

Speaker 25 (01:22:13):
And then I read about FDR and FDR's right hand
man was a Soviet spy, was right, and then firm
confirmed we should have been One can make the argument
we should have sided with Hitler and fought Stalin. Patton
said that so, and maybe there wouldn't have been a Holocaust, right,
you know, there's a but. But but Stalin was awful

(01:22:33):
by any metric, and we weren't his ally. The story
is that there were a few missing American soldiers at
the end of World War Two in Russian territory. Knew
fifteen to twenty thousand were missing, and we left them there.
And then you read about Pearl Harbor. We all sort
of know the Pearl Harbor stories now what we're told.

(01:22:53):
But I dug into that and you find out that
we knew to the morning that Pearl Harbor was going
to get tech Stalin. It was going to be act.
He wanted us to take the Japanese office flank, and
fiftyr's right hand man was okay with that because he
was a Soviet spy. Right then, I read about AFDR
in the Great Depression.

Speaker 1 (01:23:09):
Find out that.

Speaker 25 (01:23:10):
Every single penny he spent trying to help the forgot
Amity schlays the forgotten Man was spent to buy votes,
every last penny. He was a sociopath, and the only
thing he could do is lie. He was a compulsive liar.
His inner circle had to constantly cover for his line.

Speaker 1 (01:23:31):
So I do want to say that some of what
that man said is accurate, but I cannot believe as
a host chucker Crlson when dude said maybe we should
have signed it with Hitler, that would have been what
I've been like, Yeah, dude, you gotta go. I can't
talk to you anymore.

Speaker 21 (01:23:49):
No, it's so easy to be a revisionist now. Still
and all, there's a lot about history that we won't know,
and probably we'll never know. I've said this time and again.
I was an absolutely shitty student, always, always, always didn't

(01:24:09):
like to sit down. My butt in a class and
try to attempt to learn things that I couldn't have
cared less about, and I just switched that stuff off
to ignore mode, didn't study, didn't do homework. How I
passed any form of school is beyond me. But one
thing I did do when I was in high school
is I went through the school library. We had a

(01:24:32):
great school library. I read every book on World War
II and World War One and the Revolutionary war that
there was. I was an autodidact with regard to that.
Now you can revise history. People can look back and say,
you know, I believe there is a certain percentile of

(01:24:54):
truth in terms of FDR sensed that there was probably
to be a specific attack, And yes, I believe that
to a degree. FDR thought that we probably should enter
World War two. But to say that someone is as

(01:25:17):
execrably cruel as to posit. FDR wanted us to get
into World War two and allowed those Americans to be
killed in terms of hoping to do so. What you
learned from history is that there are so many elements
that are going on at the time, and it's so

(01:25:40):
easy to discount many of those elements to recraft history
in terms of what you want it to be today.
No one's going to want to hear this, but one
of the best things we did in World War two
is dropped two nuclear weapons on Japan, Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

(01:26:01):
Fat Boy, fat Man and Little Boy. And the reason
I say that is Operation Overlord. The theory was if
we had to do more island hopping and eventually end
up on Hanshu what is today called CQB a close
quarter battle, people were saying that we'd have to we'd

(01:26:23):
probably lose close to a million people invading the Japanese homeland.
Because if your homeland is invaded in and of yourself,
and to have to go house to house, house to house,
building to building under CQB conditions, it would have been

(01:26:46):
you wouldn't have seen a percentile a fraction of American
soldiers coming back because you have to think of we
just had ve Day, which is victory in Europe, and
all those soldiers that fought in the European theater would
somehow the logistics of this were staggering to think that

(01:27:06):
if that happened, if we were gonna have to island
hop if for whatever reason, the Manhattan Project failed terribly,
you were going to have to lift ship. I should say,
all those weapons, all those soldiers over to a brand
new theater and install them into the heinous conditions that
the other soldiers who were there from day one in

(01:27:27):
the Pacific Theater, they were worn out, they already had
their asses kicked. Now they were going to send them
and insert them into a separate theater.

Speaker 18 (01:27:38):
This is.

Speaker 21 (01:27:41):
It would have been terrible for all persons we at
the time corralled. I guess you could say the damage
to those two cities in Japan, and then we ended up.
Japan ended up issuing the emperor kazoom Tite, and things

(01:28:04):
changed radically for Japan. And then meantime back in Europe,
the Marshall Plan went on, and there was an historical
Oh my god, did I just say that?

Speaker 1 (01:28:17):
Yeah?

Speaker 21 (01:28:18):
And historical? That's something you rail about?

Speaker 2 (01:28:22):
Is that historical?

Speaker 1 (01:28:24):
I don't know why that bothered me so much, but
it does. But I'd also like to point out that
for somebody who says they didn't like to be a student,
you just dropped a twenty five dollars word in my chat.

Speaker 2 (01:28:33):
Oh what was that?

Speaker 1 (01:28:35):
During the show? I actually put it. I actually took
the time to explain it for, you know, the folks,
because I was like, I don't even think they're going
to know what that word means. So yeah, when you
were suddenly dropping out of a diadact, I'm like, I
don't even think they're going to know what that means.

Speaker 21 (01:28:52):
Okay, all right, okay, good point. I'm looking at chat
and Am the Great said Paton did not want to
side with Hitler. He wanted to go on into Russia. Well, Patten,
Patten was a unique cat. Uh, there's a large If
you've ever seen the movie Pattern with George C. Scott,

(01:29:15):
a good percentage of what's in that movie is true.
The guy believed he was bred for war, and he
believed in reincarnation. I'm I'm kind of a weird dude
about reading biographies of Patten and Howard Hughes. Now why
those separately and collectively amuse me?

Speaker 3 (01:29:37):
Do I amuse you?

Speaker 2 (01:29:40):
But but they do.

Speaker 21 (01:29:41):
Patten got to know the Germans because Patten was used
like a bad cotex by Eisenhower and Patten Patten was
built for war. And when when Patten wasn't uncertain, well

(01:30:02):
they used Patten as a ploy because the German general
said something similar to. You know, they say, Patten isn't
there Wait a minute, that's really stupid. Patten is their
best general. Well we know that's a lie, So okay,
we're all in. We're a whole hog on that. And
Patten was a war fighter. Patten's one of his biggest

(01:30:25):
mistake is slapping somebody with what we'd call PTSD today.
And from that point on he was a persona non
grata with Eisenhower, who is the sack or the supreme
Allied commander of all of Europe. But Patten was right.
Patten in was placed in charge of kind of rebuilding

(01:30:48):
Germany and got to know the Germans and said, you know,
I kind of like these people. It turns out he
I could say hate. He despised Russians, and he said,
you know what we should have done. One of the
biggest things we should have done when we had all
of our shit right there is go right onto Russia

(01:31:12):
and roll these fuckers over our treads. You know, kind
of like the IDF tank did with the guy with
the RPG that I played last night you played earlier, the.

Speaker 1 (01:31:22):
Treads the tank goes squish, squish, squeeze, squeeze.

Speaker 21 (01:31:26):
So Patten was right, and then Schwarzenegger was right as well,
because Schwarzenegger also was a student of military history.

Speaker 1 (01:31:36):
Yeah, well, and that's just it. Patten didn't want to
side with Hitler. He had felt that our partnership with
Russia for the war had served as usefulness and we
needed to take care of them next. Yeah, and he wasn't.

Speaker 21 (01:31:48):
Wrong, Oh no, he wasn't. He had a job to
do and he was allowed to do it. When he
was allowed to do it. He won when he was withheld,
when he was held back then not winning, not so bueno.
But he understood the German people, and he understand he
understood Stalin, and he understood later on. Well, no, his god,

(01:32:14):
Patten's death was a very strange and dark day.

Speaker 1 (01:32:21):
If you haven't yet, you should go back and check
out the juxtaposition episode we've done on that, because yeah,
there's a whole conspiracy theory around that one.

Speaker 21 (01:32:29):
But it was just one of those points in history
where all of the things together in totality, like a
lot of things today, you say to yourselfself, that's just
too weird to believe, and a lot of the factors
in history end up moving and then that exact same way.

(01:32:54):
But history math, Holy fuck, I'm a blithering baboon history.
I love history. If you understand military history, you understand
the history of the planet. Yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:33:10):
Well, so interesting story there, because I also love history
and was even though I understood a lot of math,
Like when you started what did I what just happened?

Speaker 19 (01:33:21):
That was weird?

Speaker 1 (01:33:22):
Anyway? I had changed something that was weird anyway, I
clicked the wrong button, confused myself. But so it wasn't
that I wasn't good at math, or at least I
didn't think so. It was when you started at when
you started trying to put the alphabet into math, That's
when my brain went eh. But turns out I was
a lot better at math than I thought I was.
But it was only after I made it to where

(01:33:43):
I couldn't eat for a month when I realized I
could do math really quickly in my head and actually
get it right. There was we were working an emergency contract,
so it was one of those things where I had
to have the contract ready to go when we signed,
we inked it and then basically I had to cut
the checks and do all the invoicing myself. So I did,
and then I went and handed in the invoice, and

(01:34:04):
they handed me the check, and I got home with
the check and we deposited it, and I realized that
I'd made a three thousand dollars mistake on the invoice
in their favor. So I made a fund the contract
to pay everybody and to keep the lights on. But
for an entire month, I had almost no money ever
since then, it was like rain Man with the match sticks.

(01:34:28):
Once the brain realized that I screwed up so bad
that I almost destroyed my entire business, which Obama helped
me do much much later. Unfortunately. Yeah, it was like
rain Man with the magch sticks.

Speaker 21 (01:34:40):
Here's a weird thing. I hated math, and the great
says arithmetic and math are different. Well, I'd like to
know the difference from that, because being a non math
guy wouldn't understand.

Speaker 3 (01:34:53):
But I was.

Speaker 21 (01:34:54):
I was sufficiently lucky to have a father that I
never appreciated until after my mother passed away, and then
I began to understand just who it is my father
was and what incredible things he'd done for me, not
expecting any recognition whatsoever. I never got told in my family,
oh I love you.

Speaker 2 (01:35:11):
We didn't get.

Speaker 21 (01:35:12):
Hugs, oh I love you it, I'll give you a hug.
No fuck that that never happened. But one of the
things my dad did was we looked back when there
were newspapers. In certain portions of the newspaper, there'd be
a huge series of pages at least too with little
many numbers on them. And Dad and I, when I

(01:35:32):
was a child, started picking out stocks, and I started
to understand the stock market, and we got what were
first called penny stocks, and then we got other stocks.
And these are little pieces of paper that some of
which I still have today, picking and choosing, getting to
understand the stock market, getting to understand how the economy occurred,

(01:35:54):
and then holding on to those stocks to the point
where I it changed my entire view. And if it
weren't for him, I know this is going to sound
so bizarre. When I was before I got my final

(01:36:15):
lengthy job with the Sheriff's department in California, I always
spell it with a K, and I bounced around a
couple of other departments, got into my critical incident, my
lovely little shooting and whatnot, and then went to the Feds.
It wasn't until I got a an American Express card,

(01:36:37):
which at the time. I have no idea what that was.
I never carried over any debt from about nineteen eighty on.
That is to say, if I couldn't pay off my
credit card that month, whatever it was, I didn't buy it. Now, initially,

(01:36:58):
you know, all my friends were you know, they had
great houses in swimming pools and toys and my motorcycles
and what you'd call an ATV today, But we're really
serious injury prone mistakes in boats and empty holes that
you poured money into in the water. And they had

(01:37:18):
all the toys and I didn't. I needn't have had
no toys, man, when I was growing up. But that's
the smartest thing I ever did. I haven't carried over
debt from one month to the next since about nineteen
eighty nineteen eighty one, and that was one of the
best lessons I ever learned. There's a lot of shit
I didn't have, and I got fleeced. In my starter marriage.

(01:37:41):
I carried sixty thousand dollars of and in eighty seven money,
sixty thousand dollars in jewelry debt that I had no
inkling existed. So I got a divorce. She decided that
she was going to go for the cute doctor with

(01:38:02):
the van that my neighbor across the street said, Hey,
why is this guy in this really nice van parking
in front of your house when you're gone? Thanks, dude,
appreciate it. Nice. Okay, but well I handle money. I'm
shitty at math, but I handle money.

Speaker 1 (01:38:22):
Well. I think the point that it might have been
trying to make earlier is I think I think money
might be a little bit different than math. It takes
math to be able to work the monies. But there's
something about when you accident, when you have when you're
getting into your pocketbook that makes you understand math much
better because reality. But yeah, well all I can say

(01:38:43):
about that is, at least your neighbor told you I
am now out of I am out of I am
out of my starter marriage and out of what I
thought was going to be my forever marriage and was
cheated on both times and never knew un till it
was too late. So that's fun.

Speaker 21 (01:39:00):
I got told I'm God, I don't know if this
is a time for this. Basically, I got I should
have seen this coming, but I didn't see this coming,
So it was you know, the five pound iron skillet
being slammed into the side of your head. One of

(01:39:21):
the smartest things I did with regard to that is
my starter wife said, I want you out. I want
to think about all of this, so you need to
leave the house do which I replied, I'm just telling
you if I leave this house, if I'm not fit
to be in this house that you and I co owned,
and I'm not fit to come back. If I leave,

(01:39:42):
I'm not returned. I just need you to leave. I
need my time. So I left and I never came back.
And she was gobsmacked, I tell you gobsmacked because I
have her memory, at least I did at the time,
I would have gotten raped and as fucked with a
white hot piece of rebar, had I not remembered certain
retirement and pensions that she had already worked for, to

(01:40:05):
which I said, as she was attempting to scrape mine,
Oh well, if you want part of mine, then I'd
like part of yours for Kaiser and blah and the
state of California and bla.

Speaker 1 (01:40:16):
So okay, Bi, yeah, so funny how that words?

Speaker 21 (01:40:21):
Yeah amazing. The other cool thing was we didn't have
any kids.

Speaker 1 (01:40:27):
That's a blessing and I'm dealing with that a blessing
because that makes.

Speaker 21 (01:40:32):
It was So she went her way and I went mine,
and you don't God bless her. How she's doing well today?

Speaker 1 (01:40:40):
Yeah? No, crazy, crazy times, but yeah that's you know, Well,
I take it back, because again there were there were
a couple of things. But this so speaking of neighbors, right,
So after I decided I was leaving my first wife,
I lived in the same neighborhood and with my aunts
and my grandmother. My my my coal aunt and my

(01:41:01):
maternal grandmother lived a street over from me or street
behind me. So after I left, well, I don't know
how you didn't know all this was going on. She
was throwing parties every night you were at work.

Speaker 21 (01:41:15):
Yeah yeah, parenthesis, Hey, thanks for telling me.

Speaker 1 (01:41:22):
I'm like, hello, would have been nice to know.

Speaker 21 (01:41:28):
You know, it was shaken bake. You fucking didn't help.

Speaker 1 (01:41:34):
Dude, I made my starter marriage was crazy and because
I married the real life version of Pig Bundy, Like,
I worked all the time and then I came home
and cooked and cleaned and dealt with the kids all
the time. I don't know what I was thinking other
than I was young and I wanted somewhere to stick something.

Speaker 2 (01:41:54):
I guess.

Speaker 21 (01:41:56):
I have to admit, you know, it was fifty to fifty.
We were kids, and we had no idea how to
handle a relationship. And when you're married, it takes work,
actual work in elbow grease to keep those tank treads rolling.

(01:42:16):
And they're not just lubed from some guy with an RPG.
They're lubed by yourself. And if you don't keep working
on those things, then they fall apart. And we were
both kids. We were both we were not interested much
in sacrifice. We were selfish to a big degree. I
still am. I never had kids. I told her at

(01:42:38):
the beginning, Hey, look I don't want kids, and oh
I don't either. Well until she worked for Kaiser and
then she got involved in labor and delivery, and then
all of a sudden it was I want kids. Oh God,
that's a story for another day. Oh Jesus. The places
that I should have gone right there but just decided

(01:42:59):
not to. And Rada, I just I'll just drop it
at this. We were both stupid. I got screwed around
on and I got told at the last second. Here's
a poignant scene. Imagine BZ. Probably I don't know, one
hundred and fifty to two hundred pounds lighter on the
house that he had just purchased, which had a five
year note call, which he had bought at thirteen percent

(01:43:23):
with two points and a five year call on the
note and twenty percent down. And he's sitting on his
new driveway. And the only time I cried was at
night on that driveway and my little cat, Yamato, comes
up to me and starts rubbing me on my legs.

Speaker 5 (01:43:42):
And.

Speaker 21 (01:43:44):
I cried like a baby. That was the only time
I cried because of that. And then I put my
my D for drive into the transmission and just you
had to fucking I had to fucking drive on, man,
just drive on.

Speaker 1 (01:44:00):
So while was so, since we've kind of been talking
about something, you know, kind of in the realms of education,
I thought about this today and tried and then tried
to turn it into a funny. So things they should
teach in school that they don't anymore. One financial literacy,
which we're kind of working outside history because they don't
really teach that anymore, Civics because they're not the same thing.

(01:44:23):
And then there's this one that is an adult you
will have to spend the rest of your life deciding
what's for dinner. Okay, they don't prepare you for life anymore, dude,
I do so. And that is one thing that I
had to admit. I took for granted with my second
marriage because my second wife loved to cook, so most

(01:44:44):
of the time I didn't have to worry about it. Well,
I have two from my first marriage I have I had,
we had two kids together, and she had one from
somebody else, and then second marriage, she had one already
and then we had one together. Well, my two middle
kids involved in the scenario are both special kids for
reasons that I didn't understand at the time, like my

(01:45:05):
wife wasn't taking care of them while I was at work,
and because they weren't getting fed properly. They have tody
so they still live with me. And so now I
have a kid who turns twenty nine tomorrow, a daughter
who just turned thirty one last month, and now, because
they don't think about things like that, I have to

(01:45:27):
be the one that pretty much decides what we're having
for dinner every single day, seven days a week. This
is not this is something they should have prepared me
for in life, because you don't think about it. When
you're a kid, you just come home and your mom
or your dad says, hey, this is what's for dinner,
or you're a latchkey kid and you're just you know,
eating up freaking hot dogs in a microwave and being
happy about it because you got hot dogs. Because that

(01:45:50):
was part of my life too. But yeah, the whole,
the whole, you know, go having to figure out dinner
every single day, and then you talk to the people
that live in the house with you. You got any
ideas on what you want for dinner?

Speaker 21 (01:45:59):
No, no, really, we do that every night. You want
to talk about irony, let's talk about irony and not
just the skill that I got hit with. But you
mentioned dinners, and oh my god, this is how it happened,
Just like this. I was in the living room of
the old house that I used to you know, I

(01:46:19):
walked away with about I don't know, thirty five cents
of equity in and I said, distinctly to this day,
I remember, I said, hey, honey, what's for dinner? Came
into the living room and said I want a divorce.
So how shades of bizarre is that that you mentioned? Hey,

(01:46:44):
let's figure out what's for dinner? And I said something
similar to, hey, what's for dinner? I want a divorce.
Get your ass out. That's weird, that's just weird.

Speaker 1 (01:46:57):
Who wouldn't love this guy?

Speaker 21 (01:46:58):
Who wouldn't love a fat obese you know, bobosity unrestrained.
While I had to work long and hard, I didn't
always look like this, dude.

Speaker 1 (01:47:07):
Well, I mean you've seen pictures of me. I didn't
used to look like this either. But then again, you know,
I used to be out and you know, working properties
and chasing bad guys, and even when I was doing
the private sector stuff, and you know, having to wear
forty pounds of gear a day, so it was like
I had my I didn't have to. Everybody's like, why
don't you ever go to the gym? I'm like, do
you see what I do for a living?

Speaker 10 (01:47:27):
Right?

Speaker 1 (01:47:27):
I carry this shit on my back and on my
waist fourteen hours a day. I don't need to go
to the gym. But anyway, and then I took a
job where I sat down all the time, and then
I exploded.

Speaker 21 (01:47:42):
Detectives were the reason that I look like this today.

Speaker 2 (01:47:47):
That and.

Speaker 21 (01:47:49):
And steroids for certain diseases. But hey, I own it. Okay,
I own it. But it's one of those freud things
where at my age, you know, I have a vast
amount of don't give a fuck in my system because
I've seen and done just about Everything's been to three

(01:48:09):
World's Fairs in seventy five thousand, goat fucks and whatnot.
And if I pass tomorrow, I'm okay, I'm jiggy with it.
I've seen things and done things that people would describe
as as heinous impossible. I used to tell my trainees,
you're going to see things. You're going to see depravity
that you had no idea was in motion or existed

(01:48:32):
in the world, on the planet, And I told them
there isn't anything that you're that you're going to see
him or whoever it was, whatever, trainee, there isn't anything
that you're going to see that hasn't been done for
the ages to humans against humans, and they were even
much more barbaric then than they are now. And still
you're going to wonder at the at the end of

(01:48:54):
a shift, what the fuck did I just do? What
the hell did I just see? But I said, be
prepared for it.

Speaker 24 (01:49:01):
All.

Speaker 21 (01:49:02):
You're going to see things that you can describe to them.
You know, people used to say, you'd go out, and
you know, if you associated with other civilians not on
the job, invariably they would ask you tell me a
cop story. And I you know, each time some person
said tell me a cop story, I thought, you want

(01:49:25):
a cop story. Okay, here comes a cop story. How
about the time that I found a thirty five year
old man with a penis in an infant's vagina. Hey,
that was fun, wasn't it. I have more cop stories
just like that. What do you want to hear? Let's
line them up, Let's go for it. I got stories

(01:49:45):
that would make you And it's about that time that
people say, Okay, that's enough, that's just enough. Okay, do
my fucking job, motherfucker.

Speaker 1 (01:49:54):
Yeah. I usually just try to fund it because I
got asked that a lot too, So I usually just
talk about the funny and like I was talking about
I think it was one of the last times I
was on your show. One of my favorite calls ever,
is I do a routine traffic stop outside of an
apartment complex where known gang activity dude's doing like forty
five and a thirty. So I'm gonna be cool with it.

(01:50:14):
Because in the middle of the night, I'm like, dude,
I am not gonna write him a ticket for this shit.
I'm just gonna let you, dude, you need to slow down.
So but then he starts, you know, gotting the whole
sweating thing going on, eyes dart and so I'm like, okay, dude,
just go ahead and come on, get out of the
car for me. I'm like, is in you know, I'm
always I'm one of those people where I'm always trying
to make light of a situation because normally how they

(01:50:34):
react to it is, lets you know what kind of
situation you're going to be in. So I'm like, okay,
so I'm gonna search you, but before I do, I
need to know is there anything in here that's gonna
poke me, prick me, stick me, make me bleed, you know, knives, guns,
hand grenades, rocket launchers. And dude didn't even not not
even like a chortal, just not even not even a
nervous lab just standing there. So I start patting him

(01:50:55):
down and I find in each pocket a dime bag
of weed. First thing, dude says, those are my roommates pants.

Speaker 21 (01:51:04):
They're not mine, and that's not my pocket.

Speaker 1 (01:51:09):
These are my roommates pants. Whatever's in them isn't mine, brother,
you're wearing them. What is that thing they say about
possession being because guess what, you're now guilty of possession?

Speaker 21 (01:51:20):
Remember the God? Maybe this states me because I haven't
worn jeans in literally decades. And there used to be
in Levi's if I'm not mistaken, this little teeny pocket,
which was part of the right pocket. But it was
this little teeny pocket like that, and we called that

(01:51:41):
the crank pocket because anytime we search somebody, we'd find
crank in the crank pocket. Yeah, and then we'd get
the same thing that you got. Is that's not my
crank pocket, that's not my pants, Those aren't my legs,
this isn't my body.

Speaker 2 (01:51:56):
I'm not here.

Speaker 21 (01:51:56):
I'm still asleep in my bunk in San Bernardino. What
about you? How did you stop me? I don't get it. God,
you're big. What happened? Why is there air?

Speaker 1 (01:52:08):
But yeah? Uh so, Yeah, that little pocket you're talking about,
that was the male equivalent of a change purse. That's
where we were supposed to originally put like our coinage
and stuff, back when people.

Speaker 2 (01:52:17):
Didn't expect you to carey much.

Speaker 1 (01:52:19):
Then did they No, I guess not. But then again,
working class folks didn't used to carry much back to anything.
But at least that that was the understanding from what
I was told. When I asked the same question, They're like,
that's where you're supposed to put like your pennies and
nickels and quarters. I'm like, how many am I supposed
to beople who ad in there?

Speaker 21 (01:52:36):
Yeah? Like one of each.

Speaker 2 (01:52:37):
Maybe that's about it.

Speaker 21 (01:52:38):
But em the great and chat said cop brother uh said,
think of the most disgusting thing you can there is
someone who gets off on it. Oh abs a fucking lutely.
Oh my god. Yes, the stories like, well, actually I
kind of expected you to say, hey, let me tell
you about some of my cop stories. And then I
would say, okay, I'll tell you some of my cop stories.

(01:52:59):
Or you would say, hey, tell me about some of
the things that you did when you were still thinking
about growing up, thinking about growing it is still thinking
about being a cop or being a cop, And and
to a degree, Busy says, I'm kind of glad you
didn't go there because I would have answered your questions
and it's too early in the morning to talk about

(01:53:21):
that stuff. I would talk about it at night.

Speaker 1 (01:53:25):
I well, I mean, as somebody who's done that kind
of work, I understand how annoying you gets sometimes when
people are like, tell me your worst call, tell me this,
tell me that. I'm like, dude, you don't want to know.
But m that's actually a good point. And I think
the only reason that I was never told that is
because by then nobody was really doing pocket watches anymore.
But that probably does make much more sense for that
tiny little pocket.

Speaker 21 (01:53:43):
Yeah, well, it's usually where we found the drugs.

Speaker 1 (01:53:47):
No, not my pocket, mean, it's it's everybody's. It's it's
not their fault, man. But think about think about it.
If society hadn't started, hadn't stopped carrying pocket watches, they
wouldn't have a pocket to put their crank in. So
there's that.

Speaker 21 (01:54:01):
That's true.

Speaker 1 (01:54:02):
That's true.

Speaker 21 (01:54:02):
I used to carry a pocket watch and I used
to smoke a pipe, both things that my dad did.

Speaker 1 (01:54:09):
All right, So we're gonna take the top of the
hour of the top of the hour break, Brad Slagers
already waiting in the wings. You staying for hour three?

Speaker 21 (01:54:15):
I hope, Hey, why not?

Speaker 1 (01:54:16):
All right? So, because we didn't do it, and I'm
gonna do it because it's the day we always do this.
Instead of usual commercials, usual intros, outros, We're just gonna
roll with the military tributes and we'll be right back.
So don't go too far, ladies and gentlemen, because we'll
be back in just a couple of minutes.

Speaker 16 (01:55:03):
I start to fight us the song from the Stars.

Speaker 11 (01:55:38):
They say they.

Speaker 19 (01:55:57):
Amon as handy for.

Speaker 16 (01:56:06):
The call some time to stand.

Speaker 19 (01:56:15):
Shot and Hill.

Speaker 16 (01:56:21):
Second time it sais.

Speaker 2 (01:56:33):
It's not.

Speaker 16 (01:56:48):
The sun.

Speaker 19 (01:56:50):
Here like casting about things.

Speaker 11 (01:57:12):
Sound son.

Speaker 16 (01:57:29):
To the shows to said things, and welcome back in

(01:58:51):
for our three ladies and gentlemen, the one we lovingly
call the Weekend News Roundup because I'm making it its
own separate podcast for iHeart Never Reels now as well
because it's.

Speaker 1 (01:59:03):
Part of the show but a little bit different. I
am joined by none other than Brad Slager from town Hall,
Red State as well as right here from KLIN Radio.
We are also joined by our very own friend of
the show from shr Media. BZ is with us and
he's decided to hang out for the News Roundup. So
so it's not like there's a shortage of news. It

(01:59:26):
seems like lately there's never a shortage of news, So
how are you jents house things?

Speaker 21 (01:59:31):
Well, there's no shortage of ball caps here either.

Speaker 1 (01:59:34):
Well you know that's because if I don't have a
ball cap on, I have what's called a backlight because
you don't want to look under here.

Speaker 2 (01:59:44):
I opted for this just so I didn't have to
do my hair. I'm out of.

Speaker 21 (01:59:47):
Product exactly, thank you.

Speaker 1 (01:59:51):
So wait for once you are not the well quaffed Brad.
How is that possible?

Speaker 2 (01:59:56):
Oh no, I'm not replicating Governor bro Cream this morn.
So I had to go with the head gear just
to cover up my mop.

Speaker 21 (02:00:04):
A little dabble. Do you wax on? Wax off?

Speaker 1 (02:00:08):
Show me sun the floor? So, speaking of Governor Bill Kream,
I felt like we got to kind of got to
start there because what I love is over the last
week about what I've come to call the DNC debit card,
crowd has been mobilized to try to edge imicate the
people that he's not copying Trump, he's trolling Trump. If
you have to explain the bit it didn't land quit?

Speaker 2 (02:00:32):
Fuck yeah, Well have you seen the duo that they highlighted?
Like the media is just falling over themselves praising these
two millennial gen z account runners that he's got going.
One is your prototypical leftist female with blue hair and
the other one is a bow tie beta male. It's

(02:00:56):
just you couldn't draw better caricatures, and they came up
with actual people that do this and.

Speaker 21 (02:01:02):
Bow tie a bow tie and he's not a member
of the white Nation of Islam.

Speaker 2 (02:01:08):
Yeah well, I mean, yeah, you go back about five
ten years ago, anybody wearing a bow tie would be
mocked as being a conservative hack. Look at Tucker Carlson
and all these other things. Now apparently it's something to
squeek over if you're in the media. Yeah.

Speaker 1 (02:01:25):
So, speaking of Tucker Beezy and I watched a clip earlier.
I'm not going to replay it, but I thought it
was absolutely amazing that he had a guest on who's like,
you know, hindsight being everything it was. We probably should
have hid it with We probably should have sided with Hitler.
And at that very moment, Tucker didn't stop the show
and say excuse me what, he just let him keep talking.
I'm like, no, no, no, no no. So now he's
being called out for it, and he's like, just to

(02:01:47):
be fair, nobody sided with Hitler. Yeah, remember silence is violence,
So yeah, you kind of did.

Speaker 21 (02:01:54):
Henry Ford was right.

Speaker 2 (02:01:57):
Yeah, Tucker kind of went off the reservation in the
last I don't know, six months or a year he's
been off the chain from Fox, and he just completely
wandered off instead of becoming a bigger media figure like
I thought he.

Speaker 1 (02:02:12):
Was going to be, Well, everybody kind of everybody kind
of forgot where he got to start.

Speaker 21 (02:02:18):
CNN, if I'm not mistaken, Yes, no, sir, Oh no, okay.

Speaker 1 (02:02:22):
He started it was what is now being called MS
or MS now.

Speaker 21 (02:02:27):
Oh god, really I thought it was CNN, MSNBC.

Speaker 2 (02:02:31):
Same diff Wasn't he also on a PBS for period?

Speaker 1 (02:02:35):
Well, I mean where I started, where I started noticing
his name cropping up was on PMS. Now, as I'm
going to be calling it from now on. They did
not think this through. For as much as that network
name already got made fun of, they did, they really
did not think this through.

Speaker 21 (02:02:52):
Yeah, multiple sclerosis now.

Speaker 2 (02:02:55):
Well, I was just laughing on the morning when they
made the announcement, the big reveal of here's our new
logo and our new attitude, And they tried selling this
as like a positive, and you could just tell they
were just, Yeah, isn't this fantastic our new thing? Yeah
crack no cracker, no barrel, cut ledge Fast. Didn't even

(02:03:20):
know that MS stood for Microsoft at one point.

Speaker 3 (02:03:25):
I did.

Speaker 1 (02:03:25):
I didn't know that either. I never made the connection
until they were talking about that, And the funny thing
is I don't. So The interesting thing about that, though,
is I guess Microsoft divested what was it two thousand
and five ish, but they still kept the MS part.
So NBC divest and they're like, you can keep BMS,
you got to drop the rest.

Speaker 2 (02:03:43):
Bitch on a NBC has kicked them to the curb entirely.

Speaker 1 (02:03:48):
It's power Microsoft that'd be fighting to get those letters
taken off too.

Speaker 2 (02:03:51):
When they said that, you know, we're starting this new
ventures cold versant, but NBC is like, listen, you got
to pick a side. You're gonna be on that network
or ours. You can't do both. Then they told MSNBC
at the end of August, I think they have to
get out of the studio. They can't broadcast from the
NBC headquarters any longer. Gott to drop NBC, gotta drop

(02:04:14):
the peacock. I mean, it is basically listen, you're eighteen,
get the hell out of the house.

Speaker 6 (02:04:19):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (02:04:19):
Yeah, for me, it was a little bit different. I
was I was actually allowed to stay in the house
after eighteen, but only as long as I was enrolled
in college. So when mom figured out I had dropped out,
She's like, get the fuck out. So yeah, she kept
her word, though, she told me, if I ever find
out you're not going to school anywhere, you got to
get the hell out of my house. And that was
when I had figured out that everything I thought I
was going to do with my life absolutely terrified me
because I was I honestly, for like most of my life,

(02:04:43):
I had no real idea what I wanted to do.
I mean, I had this all the things that kids
talk about, you know, I'm gonna be I'm gonna you know,
watching TV, you know, like Rampart and uh what was
the Doctor show back then, Marcus Welby, I think, and
then you know Chips. So it was always I want
to be a doctor, I want to be a firefighter,
I want to be a cop, and so. But at
some point along the way, it never really dawned on

(02:05:04):
me that at some point I had to pick one
of those things. And figure out what I was going
to do. So then, even though my parents weren't really religious,
my parents always made me go to church, and then
on Sundays, even though it was a bus that came
and picked me up and they stayed home, and also
on vacation Bible school. So I got more and more
into that, they got less and less into it, And

(02:05:26):
at one point I felt like I was being called
into the ministry. So I started doing all the stuff
to go to college prep classes and everything else, and
then I got into I started looking at stuff and
somehow that it never connected. You know, you're gonna have
to talk in front of people to do this, sir,
and which is weird because it never used to bother me.

(02:05:47):
And then as I got older, I got more self
conscious about a few things. I think it's because when
we started moving around, and we moved around a lot.
From the kid who basically was in the same school
from kindergarten through fifth grade, to then go from being
in ad diferent school from sixth grade, seventh grade, eighth grade,
ninth and then coming back home and starting high school.
And so sixth, seventh, eighth, and ninth, every single one

(02:06:09):
of those years. I was in a different school and
I so and every time I moved, I was being
made fun of for the way I talked because I
was in a different part of the country, or they're like, oh,
you talk funny. I'm like, yeah, you guys don't understand
that you have an accent to the rest of the country.
Doesn't say big dumb ass. We say back, but you
don't recognize it because that's but yeah. So anyway, so

(02:06:30):
I got really really self conscious. So first year of
college was awesome. I was I got some of the
pre wrecks out of the way because I was going
to go to OBU and get my ministry's degree. And
then second year of college was when I realized that
I have to take public speaking to be able to
start the transition process, and it's cheaper to do it
at the community college I was going to than OBU.

(02:06:53):
So it was like, well, we better get that out
of the way. The day that it was, the first
day I was supposed to go to the class, I
couldn't even get out of bed. I was absolutely terrified
about tips speaking in front of people. I'm like, how
in the hell am I thinking I'm gonna be a minister,
and I can't even go into a class where they
even going to be discussing public speaking. This was before

(02:07:14):
before you anything was a sign that, you know, we're
gonna be talking.

Speaker 2 (02:07:18):
I did.

Speaker 1 (02:07:18):
I never even went to the class, and it's just
so it was just this vapor lock for me. So yeah,
I withdrew, tried to hide it from my mom. She
found out. She's like, yeah, you gotta go. I told
you you're in school, you can stay at my house.
You're not. You gotta go. So I couched her for
a while. And then then most of you guys know
the rest of the story because I eventually went back

(02:07:39):
to school, got my associates. I said, don't have a
four year degree. I'm close. I'm close, and I will
probably finish at some point. But and then went into
law enforcement, then private security and everything else. But yeah,
so it's just funny because and everybody laughs, They're like, dude,
you have a fear of public speaking and you do
this how many hours a day? Well, you know, And

(02:08:00):
the funny thing is I have more people even right
now with the numbers sucking because of the algorithm, I
have more people paying attention to me right now than
I probably ever would have had in that public speaking
class because it was a class of thirty five people.

Speaker 2 (02:08:13):
Well there you go. Now you're you've expanded your flock.
How about that?

Speaker 1 (02:08:18):
But yeah, the sheep, it's just kind of interesting because
you know, I went from thinking I was going to
do one thing to kind of sort of doing the
same thing from a different attack angle. So I'm like,
maybe I just had my wires crossed and it was
a long winding road to get me here. I don't know,
but yeah, I just I always think that's interesting. But yeah,
the whole all of this is just nuts.

Speaker 2 (02:08:42):
Well yeah, and then we have a politico coming out
and praising Gavin Newsom for this, like they're saying he's
at the top of social media. It's like, you realize
most of the people are mocking the guy. You maybe
getting clicks, but they're not adoring him.

Speaker 1 (02:08:58):
Yeah, that they're clicking because most of us are pointing
and laughing. And the funny thing is when we try
to point out that we're pointing and laughing, Oh, don't lie,
you're triggered, Which is gonna be fun because the next
time they say I'm suggered, I'm gonna be like, remember,
you're not supposed to be using that word anymore.

Speaker 2 (02:09:12):
Yeah, Or they're claiming you don't understand the joke. It's like, no,
we understand it perfectly. You just failed at it.

Speaker 21 (02:09:20):
They are the joke Dove Press Office on Twitter, and
just scroll up and down that fucker and you'll see
the same podcast or referenced like seventy five thousand times
as you scroll up and down. Some of the stuff
is okay, kind of funny, But like Rick said, if
you got to explain, if you got to explain that shit, Lucy,

(02:09:42):
then you've already lost the big battle.

Speaker 1 (02:09:45):
As somebody, this.

Speaker 21 (02:09:47):
Is nothing but mister cameleonic barometer wind sock, and the
fucker will tell you you want to hear whenever he
thinks you want.

Speaker 2 (02:09:57):
To hear it.

Speaker 1 (02:09:58):
I would have used a different word in front of wind,
but we'll leave that alone.

Speaker 21 (02:10:02):
Well okay, but no.

Speaker 1 (02:10:04):
So seriously though, as somebody who works with comedians and
actually has a friend who's a comedian has actually done
you know, even though I've never done it professionally, I've
done Open Mic Night a few times. Again, I'm gonna
say this, if you have to explain the bit it
didn't land move on now it's pretty simple or because
that's exactly what happens. You had to explain the bit.

(02:10:27):
You won't let it go. You think you're getting traction
because you're getting you know, impressions, but you don't realize
that you have become the very joke that you were
trying to portray, because now they are the laughing stock.
And I guarantee you Newsome is pissed his hell behind
the scenes, because.

Speaker 21 (02:10:43):
Yeah, that's that's a question that I had Brad on
the show. And welcome Brad. Great to see you again,
thanks for being on the show. Likewise, but I have
a question and you may have answered this already, but
for whatever damn reason, and here in the neuraled confines
of my sculluless, are you in California, Brad?

Speaker 2 (02:11:06):
No, Florida?

Speaker 21 (02:11:10):
Oh okay, all right, well okay, Bezy, that was really stupid.
Choose the furthest point from California and that's where Brad
will be. However, that said, yeah, way to go, Besy. Hey,
let's give yourself a ding.

Speaker 1 (02:11:24):
Yeah, okay, what do I think, Nashan and confusing amish
and bread because from California, what do.

Speaker 21 (02:11:34):
You think I'm positing that November could turn out to
be everything for Gavin Newsom because he's pushing for this
thing in November to redistrict, that that's a whole tale
unto itself. But I'm kind of thinking and I'd be

(02:11:55):
curious about your input in terms of Okay, let's say
that the populace of California always spelled with the Kate
don't like that and they don't go for it. What's
Newsome's political future from that point?

Speaker 2 (02:12:13):
Well, I don't think he's he's gotten near the public
support that he thinks creates because he's he's absolutely buying
into all of the media hype, and the media loves
him because oh, he's attacking Trump, therefore he's great. But
even in California, they're they're kind of opposing him right
now because the problem he's facing. He's he making it

(02:12:34):
sound like I can just go tomorrow and read district
the state. But there's two things in the way of
that effort. One is the California Constitution, which says you
can only redistrict one year after the census, and the
other is that they have an independent third party commission
that's supposed to draw the lines, and he's got to

(02:12:55):
jump both of those. On top of that, they've got
the cs in Washington right now drawing up new lines
for California, so they're not even in the state. They're
over in d C trying to come up with new
redistricting for it, and people are even asking them there,
Like local stations in California were at the capitol questioning

(02:13:18):
these people and saying, well, who did this? Who are
you people? Don't you owe it to the citizens to
tell us who you saw in our lines? And they're like, no,
we're just They just said, well, you know, we're a coalition,
We're we're a bunch of different people. Okay, great, who
are they? Just us and them and the stuff? And
one of the women are connected to planned parenthood out there,

(02:13:42):
and it's just already becoming a clusterfuck of Democrat in
fighting or corruption either or in both possibly. So this
is not going anywhere near as smoothly as Gavin was
intending it to be. It's uh, in all the barking
they're doing about Texas too, nobody does this in the

(02:14:02):
middle of a decade. It's like, well, go look at
their state constitution. They don't have a deadline on this.

Speaker 1 (02:14:08):
Well, so, well, here's the other part that nobody talks about, right,
And I researched it because on in an article I
was writing for Twigy either somebody dropped it and I'm like,
I don't know if that's right or not. So I
went and looked. But did you because you know, everybody
talks about Texas has the right to Succeeed, they technically
don't anymore because when they were when they were invited
back in after the Civil War, that power was removed. However,

(02:14:29):
there was a power that they overlooked. When Texas was
originally brought in to the Union and removed from Mexico,
et cetera, there was a provision in there that with
the approval of the people, should they ever decide to
do so, they could split into five separate states. So
if Gavin Newsom keeps beating this drum, we could just
create eight more sentenceets and he can shut the fuck up. Well,

(02:14:55):
you can't ever really do anything about the four thirty five.
That's a fixed number that's never really going to go anywhere.
The more states you bring in, the more it has
to be reapportioned. Et cetera. So I say, we just
you know, pack the fuck out of the Senate and
create eight more seats, because that's what they want to do.
They act like we're the ones that started this. Remember
this is the same crowd for the last three years
that said they needed to get rid of the filibuster,
they needed to get rid of the electoral College, they

(02:15:17):
needed to pack the courts. And now you've even got
a guy calling for not only the abolition of the
electoral College, but the complete abolition of the Senate anyway,
and making everything about just the House and making us unicamer.

Speaker 2 (02:15:29):
So yeah, they're trying to say the Senate is on Well, yeah,
because you.

Speaker 1 (02:15:34):
Know, you don't understand states like in states like Minnesota
have the exact same senatorial represition is states like California.
That's not fair. You guys don't understand shit. And I'm
telling you right now, repeal the seventeenth that's the first
thing that needs to happen. We need to do everything
we can to pack everything we can before they do it,
and then just figure out how to repeal the seventeen

(02:15:55):
Amendment so the states can be put back in charge
of the Senate again. Because that was the entire point.

Speaker 21 (02:16:00):
They're saying quiet part out loud now, and I think
you're referencing that New York Times article by some guy
whose name I can't pronounce, another guy whose name I can't.

Speaker 2 (02:16:09):
Find and do.

Speaker 21 (02:16:11):
But there is no quiet part anymore. It's simply because
I'm looking at the article abolish the Senate and the
Electoral College, pack the court. Subheader is why the Left
can't win without a new constitution. Now, this dude says, yeah,
eliminate the Senate, and at the same time he says,
you know what we ought to do. We ought to

(02:16:32):
make sure that we bring in Let's see American Samoa
and Guam, the Northern Mariana Islands, Puerto Rico, the US
Virgin Islands, and DC. If I'm not mistaken, because my
math is terrible, that's seven new states. That's fourteen new senators.
Now we'd be okay with the Senate thumbs up to

(02:16:53):
this Senate stuff, that'd be just fine.

Speaker 2 (02:16:56):
Oh No. They always do the shifting standards to fit
whatever their current model is. I mean we see this
all the time where they make some new law, new standard,
and then years later it comes back to bite him
in the ass and then they claim it's unfair. But
even his whole.

Speaker 21 (02:17:12):
Doors, they open doors that every other motherfucker walks through,
and then they're gobsmacked. You walk through the door I opened,
that can't possibly be.

Speaker 1 (02:17:22):
Yeah, exactly like what's happening right now, because you've seen
every leftist lunatic today going, oh my god. When they
did this to Donald Trump, it was lawfair, and now
it's not. I'm like, I don't it may be lawfair,
you know what, I don't give a fuck because we
didn't open that door.

Speaker 2 (02:17:38):
You did.

Speaker 1 (02:17:39):
If it's lawfair, you've earned it. If it's not, they
have a reason to be there either way. I'm not
you know, I would prefer to be somebody other than
John Bolton. But I still have a sneaking suspicion he's
going to be carted off by the MiB because they're
going to figure out that he's actually an alien and
the mustache is what's controlling the rest of the body.
But you know, because yeah, we.

Speaker 2 (02:17:59):
Have another they don't want to address here when it
comes to the redistricting, because it's all hinged on what
the census. Ye, what happened when the census came in
there were all kinds of accounting errors, they called them,
and they all kind of trended in the same direction.
Should have lost the more seats. Florida should have been

(02:18:20):
picked up at least one more representation seat. Texas I
think was supposed to get one or two more. So
you're talking to swing about four or five seats in
Congress right there, just on them doing bad math, which
would be compensated by what Texas picking up five additional seats.
So I mean, you're at break even at best.

Speaker 1 (02:18:42):
Well, not to mention the fact that you know, and
this is something that kind of tied into the same thing,
because so far, at least as far as we can track,
we've already gotten rid of one point five million illegals,
which does drastically shift our population. So since they're counting,
I kind of now understand why Donald Trump is saying, no,

(02:19:03):
we need to get them removed at least, and he's
trying to get them all removed. I'm just fine with
getting the ones removed that we know have been you know,
that have actually been deported already, because that will be
enough of a population shift. But the other thing that
came out the other day, because the left is having
a fit about it. Is Marco Rubio, you know, deciding
they were suspending visas for now until they could review

(02:19:24):
them all and make sure that anybody that was here
hadn't already overstayed, make sure that everybody's been properly better
at everything else. I would like to point out that
I had no idea that we had fifty five million
active visas or visas in the pipeline. For anybody who
doesn't understand that, that is a seventh of our current

(02:19:44):
population waiting to come in now. Granted, some of these
are probably, you know, coming over for vacation for a
couple of weeks, this, that and the other, but even
on the high side, I was thinking twenty five or
thirty fifty five million people. And your entire our argument
is nobody can afford to come to the country legally anymore,
and it's why they're coming over the wall. I think

(02:20:05):
that I think you're I don't think your argument holds
water when there's fifty five million visas active or pending.

Speaker 2 (02:20:12):
Yeah, and we're not supposed to vet them. We're not
supposed to be concerned about who's coming here. For some
reason that's insensitive and racist. It's like, well, no, maybe
we should make sure there's no terrorists coming. I mean,
you know's yeah, now clear that possibly is a small
little filter in means well, not just that.

Speaker 1 (02:20:32):
Think about it from another perspective. They have begun saying
the quiet part out loud and admitting, even though they
didn't realize it at the time, that they had a
potted plant in the White House. So maybe we should
be going back and checking all their work.

Speaker 2 (02:20:45):
Well, I just yeah, love that. Where the uh that
little simp ian Sam's from the Biden administration. Do you
see where he came out now and said I've only
really spoke to the president twice in the last two years.

Speaker 1 (02:20:58):
Yeah, twice face to face, one's over the phone, and
once on a zoom call. So totally four times in
three years, and only two were face to face.

Speaker 2 (02:21:05):
He's on record repeatedly saying I just talked to Joe
Biden today about this issue. And it's like, wait, now
you didn't, okay, yeah, what was running the show? Please exactly?

Speaker 1 (02:21:19):
And you know that's normally by now I'd be like,
you know what we want, I don't care, But with
everything that's coming out from that, we need to keep
digging until we've under uncovered every single bit of it,
because it's just insane because every time we turn around,
we're finding out something new. It's just nuts. And I
mean now they're looking at the you know, now they're
figuring out that almost every single one of those pardons

(02:21:40):
was likely done by an autopin and they don't even
know who was in control of them. Like a story
I saw yesterday was people from dj trying to reach
back out to the President needing clarification as to why
some of these people were being pardoned because there were
absolutely terrible people there. Could we at least get some
guidance from the man And they're like, yeah, we'll get
back to you. Nothing cricket.

Speaker 2 (02:22:00):
And they were just they had a flood of them too.
I think I saw one day alone there were something
like fifteen hundred pardons and commutations that issues. Yeah, in January.
I mean they were just auto pen and go running overnight.

Speaker 1 (02:22:15):
It's just nuts. I mean, what what are they going
to run in twenty twenty eight? The autopin and the
teleprompter for president and vice president because that's about what
we've got going on.

Speaker 21 (02:22:23):
Well, who do they have who are they going to run?
That's a that's an excellent question. What are they going
to do in twenty twenty six? And then who are
they actually going to think that is a viable candidate
for twenty twenty eight? Not going to be Biden? Uh Kamela,
I'm sure would love to Newsom, would love to other
than those two. Who else is waiting in the wings

(02:22:46):
that may have a percentile of viability? Oh my god,
I forgot aoc.

Speaker 1 (02:22:52):
Well according well, according to CNN, they don't have any
viable candidates right now. That actually came out the other
day too, and they're like, I have no idea it's
going to happen in twenty twenty eight because we have
nobody that's viable, because you have a governor who's decided
he sucks at being a governor, So now I was
going to try to be a podcast and a social
media influencer instead. And then you've got cam Cam who's

(02:23:12):
money laundering using her book tour as an excuse to
money launder. Did you guys see the price tag for
that shit? Because we talked about that last night on
jinn Rick for a little bit, and then somebody said,
I feel like this is maybe one degree away from
money laundering. I'm like, no, there are no degrees. And
then I heard the pricing and then I realized that
was one thousand percent correct. So even for the balcony
seats in these places, it's over one hundred bucks. You

(02:23:33):
want to be close to her, it's like twenty two
hundred dollars to listen to her speak about her books,
celebrating that's celebrating the historic shortest campaign in history that
you lost, and you lost money. There's one point five
what was a one point five billion dollars supposedly spent
in one hundred and seven days, and they still don't

(02:23:54):
know where like three or four hundred million of it
even is.

Speaker 21 (02:23:58):
But I'll take cut out Ben for five hundred Alex right.

Speaker 2 (02:24:03):
But I was just insane.

Speaker 1 (02:24:04):
I mean, these these people are insane.

Speaker 21 (02:24:06):
Like and the other.

Speaker 1 (02:24:07):
The other day at one of these book events, she
did a fake swearing in ceremony for somebody one of
these book events. It's it's like it was some congress
critter or something for like some I don't know, I
think it was at state level or something for where
she was like the but she did like a fake

(02:24:27):
swearing in ceremony because you know she was going to
be president someday.

Speaker 2 (02:24:32):
It's kind of like they have to put their hand
on her memoir.

Speaker 1 (02:24:35):
What I don't know, I didn't I didn't make that much.
What the hell wait memory anyway? But no, so but
it's it's like, I mean, this is going to turn
into one of those things, you know, like the the
unfortunate pre election post of Hillary Clinton that comes back
around every year and everybody makes fun of her because

(02:24:58):
it keeps showing back up every year when she's on
her birthday. I'd like to wish this future president a
happy birthday, and it's her with her picture as a child.
That was probably the dumbest thing you could put out
because now you've had it rubbed in your face every
for like a decade since because reasons.

Speaker 2 (02:25:19):
I mean, they are that whole party though, is in
they're upside down in a ditch, their wheels up and
don't know what. Did you see the map that came
out this week that showed registration Yeah the country? Yeah yeah, yeah,
thirty twenty states or thirty states I think recognize party

(02:25:40):
affiliation when it comes to registration, and of those, all
of them you see the Democrats losing. Much of it
is people switching parties. It's not you know, GOP's out
there signing up new people at a rapid rate. These
are people switching from Democrats to GOP.

Speaker 1 (02:25:57):
Yeah, they've hemorrhaged three point four million voted.

Speaker 2 (02:26:01):
I mean it's in swing states, it's all over New England,
the northeast, which is just a hotbed of Democrat leftism.
Seize people leaving the party too. I mean, when it
gets to that level, you know that there's just internal
turnal taking place.

Speaker 1 (02:26:16):
Their fund their fundraisings drying up. I mean, how I
see Stephen A. Smith hanging out with Hannity now, for
God's sake, I mean, come on, you've got the rage
in Cajun trying to make the news cycles. Now he
was on with Tucker the other eye, saying, oh no,
I think we'll be fine in twenty twenty six. We're
gonna be pounding and ground and then I'm like, who where?

Speaker 21 (02:26:36):
How?

Speaker 1 (02:26:37):
Why? Now? Don't get me wrong for all you Republicans,
because I'm not one, don't don't take this as an
absolute because your party is really, really good at fucking
shit up at the last minute. Oh god, but you know,
let's try to use the momentum that we have instead
of losing it. But let's not you know, do that
do the end zone dance on the five yard line,

(02:26:58):
because y'all do that a lot, kind of that Hillary
Clinton picture I was just talking about, don't.

Speaker 2 (02:27:02):
Yeah, But I think there's a different attitude now in
the GOP because yeah, they've they've always been that uh,
you know party that would always clam up right in
the eleventh hour and like, you know, we'll just go
out to stantus cloud. But I think Trump has basically
shown that you can have an attitude. I mean, I'm
not an altogether Trump lover, but I do appreciate what

(02:27:27):
he's doing a lot of the time, and it's bucking
the system, telling the swamp to go screw themselves. Look
at all the squealing that's been going on regarding sending
troops into d C. I mean, everybody in the press
hates it, everybody in the Democrat Party hates it. How
dare you fight crime? And Trump's like, don't care doing it?

Speaker 1 (02:27:45):
And then you talk and then you've got people like
that live there that are putting out videos going this
is the first time in three years I've been able
to walk from point A to point B without saying
this and smelling this and dealing with this and this.
This is what I love because one of the what
Alex Cole I think it was, put out a screenshot
of the people that live in DC that were pulled
that diametrically are like opposed to this thing, and it's

(02:28:08):
like seventy nine percent of pose and there's like a
there's like a four percent gap, So I'm guessing there's
probably some undecided there and the rest are the rest approved.
I'm like, well, considering on election Day they were opposed
ninety by, you know, nine to one, he's making some headway.
But the thing that makes no sense to me is

(02:28:30):
these people are now making it a big deal that
somehow it's bad that Donald Trump has made sure there
hasn't been any murder in DC in a week.

Speaker 21 (02:28:38):
Well, I shaw an article just today. I don't remember
where it was, but they interviewed a DC business owner.
I hate this. This is terrible. It's been bad for
my business, said the liquor store owner. Hello, Jue, you know,
I maybe you guys shouldn't help me with this. I
cannot think of any any descripts that are applicable to

(02:29:02):
the to the Demorats right now. Other than especially with
newsome chameleonic, they're absolutely insincere. I was scraping for a word,
and I finally found it inauthentic, shallow and completely one
hundred fucking percent unable to read the room.

Speaker 1 (02:29:25):
You left often parted. Other than that, you're pretty much fun.

Speaker 21 (02:29:28):
On Okay, thank you.

Speaker 2 (02:29:30):
I covered it so much in my column and in
my podcast. Is that the list of things that the
press and the Democrats have opposed this year is astounding.
They don't want lower taxes, they don't want to stop
government waste. They're pro illegal immigration, pro gangster and violent
murderers remaining in the country. They still want men and

(02:29:52):
women's sports. I mean, you go every single eighty twenty issue.
They are firm twenty and loud about it, and the
rest of the nation is like, are you nuts. They're
now opposing Donald Trump getting a peace deal done with
Russia and Ukraine, and now they're opposed to fighting crime
in DC.

Speaker 21 (02:30:10):
Well, we shouldn't have put out a red carpet for Putin.
We shouldn't have shaken his hand. Evil, that evil bastard
Trump that's all you got, Jessica tarlov I am definitely
one hundred percent for releasing that that illegal invader rapist.

Speaker 2 (02:30:30):
That one was hilarious, that story, because I mean, they
just had that. Her comment was that the cruelty is
the intention. That's exactly what Ice is doing. And then
it came out that the guy's a sexual predator and
broke into the country three different times and had a
permanent removal order on his name, and then she's like, well,
you know, Okay, now I'm against it. It's like, well,

(02:30:52):
you're a journalist, shouldn't you one wait for the facts
to come in and not blame DHS for bailing you
out because you just ran with this the moment the
video at the time, though, I mean.

Speaker 1 (02:31:03):
But in her defense, and this is something that I
figured out from Beck because when he left ceeing In
and went to Fox, it was because he got tired of,
you know, having people that would be at odds with
him when they were on camera and then want to
be best friends when they were off camera. And then
he found out the same thing was happening at Fox,
and he's like, I can't do that. And it reminds
me of an abmission. I talk about this all the time,

(02:31:24):
the old Looney Tunes commercial with Sam and I can't
remember it, so the dog in the coyote, I can't
even remember both of their names. Where they're like bullshitting
and talking on the way in. They clock in and
they go nuts and start for each other and then
they clock out, and he's like, I can't do that,
and I kind of get it, because it's not like

(02:31:45):
that anymore. It stopped being able to be like that
when Ronald Reagan took the Democrats at their word when
they said, if you give us amnesty for the people
that are already here, because it'll clean it all up,
then we will help you fix the border and fix
our immigration problem. Took them at their word. They stabbed
him in the back. And it hasn't ever been able
to be the same since, because that's been their playbook

(02:32:06):
ever since. Get them to come to the table, to
tell them whatever they've got to hear to get them
to come to the table, and then we won't do it.
And we weren't the ones that ended the civility they
were when they did that. Just like and we talked
about this earlier, just like, what's going on with the redistricting.
We didn't start this fight, y'all. Did You've been telling
this for eight years that you wanted to pack the courts,

(02:32:28):
that you wanted to get rid of the filibuster, that
you wanted to do all these things because you wanted
to make sure that you got to stay in control.
And then they have the goal to say, well, just
a few years ago they tried to pass a law
to get rid of jerrymandering.

Speaker 2 (02:32:40):
No, you didn't.

Speaker 1 (02:32:41):
You tried to pass a lot of federalized elections. And
I don't care what you think the Constitution says about
congressional authority over elections. Federalization was never the plan, and
it never would have stood up. Then you didn't even
bother to look at the bill that you're talking about,
because there was so much extra shit in there that
there's no wonder no Republican would have voted for it,
because one, there's no way it would have survived judicial
branch too. There was so much bullshit in there, because

(02:33:03):
that's what everybody does anymore, is pack as much in
there as they can. That there was no way anybody
was going to vote for it, and that's what you
wanted because then you were able to go to the
cameras and say, see, we tried to make elections fair
and Republicans wouldn't let us.

Speaker 2 (02:33:15):
Well, I just love getting lectures about, you know, decency
and honor and getting together from people that will call
you a fascist or Nazi just for disagreeing on like
economic policy. It's just it's not something that's realistic in
the least of it. So sorry, if I'm not going
to sit there and bow and cow touted that, well.

Speaker 21 (02:33:37):
That the the Blue States, the Damarats wanted essentially Jerry
Mander the unjareum, the Unjerry manderible.

Speaker 2 (02:33:48):
Just see if you could pull that one off.

Speaker 1 (02:33:50):
Jesus.

Speaker 21 (02:33:51):
Okay, Uh, when you guys play the tape, just you know,
cut that out.

Speaker 2 (02:33:54):
Just did you hurt yourself? Yeah? I did it?

Speaker 21 (02:33:57):
Excuse me, Marmot in my throat anyway, massholes like thirty
six percent Republican, Like no seats, Connecticut, no seats, No
Republican seats. Uh, Maine, no Republican seats, New Mexico, New Hampshire,
Rhode Island, Vermont, Hawaii, Delaware percentile Republican, Sure, no seats,

(02:34:21):
no seats, No seats, Okay, let's Jerrymander the fuck out
of that. Good luck.

Speaker 2 (02:34:27):
Yeah. Well, we saw a couple of weeks ago where
the governor of Massachusetts came out and said, well, we're
gonna play the same game in Jerrymander, and then she
was shown her map that was entirely blue. So pretty
gonna do, honey, you can't go dark blue. I mean,
what do you what's left on your table here? It's
just the they tried to pretend people can't research this

(02:34:51):
and find these things out. It's like, there's evidence out there,
you know, it's it's verifiable. So I'm to the point
now where I just like the let them scream, let
them squeal, because facts are willing. I mean, just go
back to DC and the crime issue that they raged about.
We find out again that no murders in seven days.

Speaker 3 (02:35:13):
Now.

Speaker 2 (02:35:13):
Not only has that rarely happened in DZ, but happen
in summer. Is absolutely stunning because summer is basically blood
lighting season in the nation's capital. And on top of that, now,
a couple of days ago, the stats came in that
since they sent troops in, it's across the board murders, robberies, carjacking, assaults,

(02:35:34):
everything is dropping statistically, and it's not something you can
politicize because that came from the DC Police Union.

Speaker 21 (02:35:43):
So repressive, oppressive, terrible, horrible, Oh Jerry, you stop us
from committing crimes and shit.

Speaker 2 (02:35:52):
I just love the people that are posting videos where
they're you know, they're walking down the streets like I
can't believe I'm looking at soldiers right now, and Blitzery
yesterday posted a photo. It's like I'm going to work
and I have to look at a hum vy parked
in that part of the Capitol. Every one of these
videos and pictures, there's one thing missing, and that's crime. Yeah,

(02:36:14):
prove it out that it's working.

Speaker 1 (02:36:17):
And that's so that's the other part of this argument
that pisses me off, because the other side of this
story is you've got all these people going, well, the
DC Police Department could have done their job if Donald
Trump hadn't severely cut their budget. They were trying to
cut their own fucking budget. Talk to me about this,
and they were one of the first ones on the
on board with the defund the police crap.

Speaker 2 (02:36:38):
I was gonna say, Trump didn't run his campaign on
defunding the police. I'm pretty sure that was on a
local level.

Speaker 1 (02:36:44):
Thanks well, apparently one of the during some of these
I guess one of these cuts was supposedly like money
that they took away from the DC Police Department. But
if you're trying, if you're trying not to use it anyway,
why should we let you have it. What are you
gonna do with it. You're not putting more cops on
the streets. Why do you need the money? And I
think that's exactly what happened, because it's just dumb. But

(02:37:04):
there's just so much that has led to this waste, fraud,
and abuse thing. And I went through this all the
time when I worked for the University of Oklahoma because
it was always right before the end of the fiscal year.
All of a sudden, they were doing some sort of
an upgrade or they were getting new computers, and they
were doing this. They're like, well, if we don't use
this money, we're gonna lose it. So we got to
use it. Well, I'm looking at an.

Speaker 21 (02:37:25):
Article from the Gazette, I think it was in Colorado,
how DC Democrats hollowed out the Capitol's police force since
twenty nineteen. More MPTY officers have retired resigner left the
force for other reasons such as termination, death, or disability,
than the department has been able to recruit. To date,
separations cumulatively surpass enlistments by almost one thousand officers. So

(02:37:49):
over the past seven years, the Metro Police Department has
seen two and eighty nine officers leave the force and
they can't keep up with it. Resignations just resignations were
close to a thousand.

Speaker 1 (02:38:05):
I wonder why.

Speaker 21 (02:38:06):
Yeah, I can't figure that shit out.

Speaker 1 (02:38:09):
I mean, but but but here's the other here's the
other part of that, which I think is absolutely funny,
because nobody wants to go to work for ICE. Nobody
wants to be a Nazi. They're trying to hire ten
thousand people. They have hundred thousand applications submitted.

Speaker 2 (02:38:21):
Yeah, and did you see the video that came out.
I think it was a press conference they called right
when they were sending the troops in, and city officials
and such were there, and the chief of Police is
answering questions and they asked her, Okay, when the troops
come in, what do you what are you envision is
going to be the chain of command of the authority
and she said to the reporter, what does that mean?

(02:38:46):
You really did not understand the phrase chain of command?
And she's one name the police department.

Speaker 21 (02:38:54):
Yeah, that chief was the DEI officer for the entire
department before she got installed as chief by by Barker.
Bow Wow, I can't hear the word Bowser and not
think dog.

Speaker 1 (02:39:07):
She's Chief Quimby with boobs.

Speaker 2 (02:39:09):
Yeah, DEI didn't earn it. I mean, it's just uh,
it's just prime example right there. And as soon as
she said that, you saw the mayor just kind of
step forward and ease her aside. It's like, let me
let me take it.

Speaker 1 (02:39:24):
Excuse me while I push you asale. Yeah, I kind
of I kind of feel like, you know, having a
mayor with the last name Bowser for anybody that's ever
played Mario probably should have been a giveaway.

Speaker 2 (02:39:35):
But I mean it says a lot too that as
soon as Donald Trump made this call, she fell right
in line. I did not hear the usual and the
expected Democrat oppositions like this is violating a constitution and
our sanctity as a district. And she was just like, no, yes, sir,
we'll help you out.

Speaker 1 (02:39:54):
Well not well at least not until the AG stepped
then and started trying to soup, which is weird to
me because if it's a federal dis jake, why the
hell do they have a separate AG from the actual
federal AG. I know understand, well.

Speaker 2 (02:40:07):
You'll know, Enkindle, they've had that kind of creeping authoritarianism
come into They're they're trying so desperately to make d
C its own entity, and it's, uh, they're just doing
it bit by bit, and they want to make it
a state, and they keep running into one small, little
niggling problem, and that's the constitution.

Speaker 3 (02:40:28):
The law.

Speaker 21 (02:40:30):
Yeah, it's like cast Sunstein, Nudge, read the book Nudge
by cast Sunstein, And that's how you understand how bad
we got here?

Speaker 2 (02:40:37):
Mm hmm.

Speaker 1 (02:40:38):
Well, it's not really not understanding how we got here
is just why the hell does does one a a
city which is technically not even really supposed to be
that because it's a federal territory. How the hell does
it rate inn ag of its own when it's you know,
it's it's under the federal purview. And I haven't I
haven't understood a lot of what they've done. But what

(02:40:58):
I think is funny. And the only reason that I
have I've been harping louder about, you know, making the
Mayrigo away and the city council will away is the
fact that when you can use the fact that they've
been in charge for fifty years to make AI understand
that the Democrats aren't the good guys, that's when you
know you've got a tool. Because Groc and I spent
probably two or three hours arguing one night because you know,

(02:41:19):
all of his consistence, consensus engine crap. So I started
looking at it as like a microcosm. I'm like, okay,
so let's start talking about Democrats cities. What's one of
the worst Democrat cities in the country world, Washington, d C.
How long have they been in charge, GROC fifty years?
So in the fifty years that the party is telling you,
the party that you're saying is the one that's supposed
to be looking out for the little guy and taking

(02:41:40):
care of all the things, why has nothing changed? And
eventually the damn thing broke because it couldn't reconcile it
anymore because there's.

Speaker 21 (02:41:49):
Housing in Baltimore since the nineteen sixty eight riots that
nothing has happened to them, they're row houses. They have
not been either demolished or placed. That's that's clearly indicative.
I mean, media, for fuck's sake has been making fun
of CompStat for almost twenty five years because it's a

(02:42:15):
jiggering of stats. I took stat classes in college. Any
moron can fudge stats, and now they're finally getting investigated
for it.

Speaker 2 (02:42:25):
Well, they had that episode two a few years ago
where there was a police shooting in Baltimore, and you know,
the initial cry, of course, was this is racism, this
is targeting black people. Every single member of law enforcement
in Baltimore is black. Well, and so the officers involved
the authorities of the police department everybody was black, And

(02:42:49):
then they had to come up with, well, there's systemic
racism that is leached into law enforcements, so that the
black officers are actually being racist because of what influence
what their.

Speaker 24 (02:43:02):
Brains have been fouled with white carbon, their own their
uncle Tom's Brad.

Speaker 1 (02:43:07):
Don't you know that by now?

Speaker 2 (02:43:09):
Yeah, but the original Tom has died off because they
haven't been in power for five decades. So how exactly
are contemporary police officers influenced by whiteness in law enforcement.
I mean, yeah, that's my pragmatism creeping into the discussion. Sorry, guys,
I don't have the emotional racial outrage built into me.

(02:43:31):
I just look at facts and details. Sorry, now ask you.

Speaker 21 (02:43:35):
Guys, what do you think happened on that Bolton raid today?
How come why? Four?

Speaker 18 (02:43:40):
Uh?

Speaker 1 (02:43:41):
Well, there was a there was an investigation that was
quashed by biden as being reopened so they were able
to get Sabenas to start thinking up again.

Speaker 21 (02:43:47):
Because Cash Pattel sent a tweet out that said, no
one is above the law period. I don't know, I
think that's kind of a cube. But John Bolton, oh
my god, no, not John.

Speaker 2 (02:44:01):
Well, this is the same guy that was cheering when
Donald Trump got rated for documents. So he's getting rated
for having documents. I mean, it's all Ptel's the one
is basically applying their logics. It's like, well, it was
okay when you did it, so we're doing it.

Speaker 1 (02:44:18):
But here's the thing, though, the thing that drove me
absolutely crazy about this entire thing is the press. So
and this happened after nine to eleven because there were
parts of the White House that were considered skiff, and
there were parts that were not considered skiff. But after
nine to eleven, w was pretty much working around the clock,
so they they made it possible, even if it was

(02:44:41):
announcing it into thin air, for him to say I'm
declassifying these documents because then he could take them into
the residents and continue working as he was getting ready
for bed. So literally, the president at this point can
technically declassify anything, even to an empty room. And even
if you don't know when he says, yeah, I had
to classify this, then they go back and they fix
it later. Joe Biden didn't have to have that power

(02:45:03):
at all when he was a senator. No to classification
powers at all, even the stuff that he they found
when he was vice president. Guess what, a vice president
can only declassify the things that they were involved in
it that they signed. What what do classification power does
the angry mustachio have?

Speaker 21 (02:45:18):
Would you just stop with the sense stop that shit?
Good God, So they raided the cool thing was they
raided his house and they raided his office. Oh shad.

Speaker 1 (02:45:30):
Again.

Speaker 2 (02:45:31):
Well yeah, and they can't even claim that there's no
basis for this because he actually wrote about this stuff
and the evidence he's not supposed to have he published.
See seems kind of on par with it.

Speaker 1 (02:45:48):
Kind of like, you know, for a big tish. The
campaign slogan I'm gonna get you sucker was probably a
bad idea, great movie, bad campaign slogan. Just pointing that
out because it was really hard for her to claim
she wasn't biased when the judges like, you're in tied
campaign slogan was I'm gonna get you suck up.

Speaker 2 (02:46:04):
Well, I threw it at Kendlanian this morning because he was,
you know, pounding his fists on the desk too. It's like, well,
the only reason Donald Trump wasn't arrested because of his
being the president, Like great Ken, Now do Biden and
what what happened there? Ken? And it's it's so pathetic
that the media has to change the rules on the

(02:46:27):
fly because their own rules now are flying in their face.
It's just amusing and diet admitted.

Speaker 21 (02:46:33):
And I think most everybody is tacitly on board, either
overtly or slightly covertly, but not nearly as much as
they were from that New York Times article which said, hey,
everything's got to be thrown out the window, bathwater baby, everything,
kill the Constitution, kill the foundational precepts of the nation.

(02:46:56):
Let's just start fucking over. It's got to be done.
The interesting thing, I want to make this comment because
I know we got to wrap it up, but I
want to get this one thing inserted in there. I
talked on my show a long time ago in a
galaxy far far away, around twenty seventeen, when I went
to Freedom Fest in Las Vegas, which is a conclave
of libertarians, and I'm at this dude there that was

(02:47:18):
very interesting. His name was Ralph Benko, and I thought, okay, well,
all right, we would at shr we would talk to
anybody there. So Ralph, come in, sit down and talk
to me. What are you? Who are you? I'm in
charge of the Olenski Institute.

Speaker 1 (02:47:32):
Oh okay, I know that.

Speaker 21 (02:47:35):
One of the first questions out of his mouth was rightly, so, hey,
do you think rules for radicals only apply to one side?
I wonder, why aren't you guys pointing at me Conservatives, libertarians, Republicans.
Why aren't you guys using this stuff. It's there, it's

(02:47:55):
in the book, it's available to be used. I never
understood why you didn't even get the concept. The concept
was there And the other funny thing that was weird
is Saul Alinsky was a big supporter of the Second Amendment,
to which I first thought, bullshit, what a bunch of
shit he was, how weird? But the rules are there

(02:48:16):
there to be applied against anyone by anyone. Hello.

Speaker 1 (02:48:21):
There's a common sociological theory that kind of explains why
we never took that approach because, for some reason, for
the left, violence is a dial, so they can kind
of turn it up and turn it down as ac fit.
You kind of use it as a tool. For us,
it's kind of an end all be Also, it was
like a switch on that once that bitch gets flipped,
it's all it's all on. And that's exactly what they're
finding out now because we're done with their shit, and

(02:48:43):
we watched them tell us for decades what they were
going to do when they took power, and Donald Trump
was the I mean Donald, I will say this right now,
Donald Trump winning in twenty seventeen is the only thing
that probably finished finished that kept us from being pushed
off the cliff and and getting back in was nearly
enough to have done it again. That's why all the
economic indicators that they're screaming about about how bad they are.

(02:49:06):
It's not because of Trump. It's it's because of everything
that was still in place under Biden. It's because of
all the things that we're still trying to wade our
way through. You guys are grabbing about a two point
seven percent inflation rate. Trust me, so am I because
to undo the damage we're going to need some negative
inflation for a while. But for some reason, two point
three percent, which is still a gradual climb, is fine
for you guys. But ten percent, fifteen percent, twenty percent

(02:49:29):
in actual numbers under Joe Biden was perfectly acceptable to
you people. And I inboded the pointed it out, was like, well,
you're like, no, no, no, no, you just don't understand.
Remember when when Trump took off as Eggs was in
my area and I have low cost of living compared
to where you guys are, Eggs worth six seven dollars
a dozen for the cheap ones. They're back down to

(02:49:50):
the closer their normal price range. Now, gas prices have
been falling in the summer. When is the last time
either of you remember seeing gas prices either staying level
or falling in the summer.

Speaker 21 (02:50:01):
Well, if for no other reason than summer blend.

Speaker 1 (02:50:04):
Exactly, which which is basically just I mean, granted, supposedly
the blend is more you know, economically friendly in the
summer for whatever reason than the one they were in
the winter, because it's supposed to have to be a
little bit thicker or something, which I never really have understood.
But I still I kind of feel like we're getting
fleeced on that one.

Speaker 21 (02:50:23):
But I worked with people that did regulations of gasoline
in California, al we spell it with a K, and
the summer blend is more expensive, the winter blend is
is less expensive. The refineries won't tell.

Speaker 1 (02:50:37):
You that, Yeah, no, but I just it's just it's
just funny to me because and now the other thing
that I find funny is, you know, for for years
after COVID, everybody was complaining about how expensive fast food
had gotten because it was getting to the point where,
you know, going and grabbing you know, three or four
combos from McDonald's was basically go into a sit down
restaurant and McDonald's. You don't understand what we've had to

(02:50:59):
go through A sudden without much explanation, McDonald's is suddenly
dropping their price, which takes away every argument they've been
making since COVID is so why they had to raise
their prices in the first place. I got nothing.

Speaker 2 (02:51:11):
Yeah, we were kind of kicking it around here around
the house last night because you go shopping now and
it's it's such a divergence of pricing going on, Like
coffee is through the roof right now. Milk though, has plunged,
And it's just amazing to watch this take place, how
different parts of the grocery store are affected in different fashions.

(02:51:31):
I mean, it makes sense because everything from coffee comes
from but.

Speaker 1 (02:51:34):
It shouldn't we make good coffee here, get it from here?

Speaker 2 (02:51:38):
I mean, well we don't. We just don't grow the
beans at any capacity to feed you know, the market.

Speaker 21 (02:51:47):
See Rick, That's why I'm helping. That's why I'm helping.

Speaker 1 (02:51:51):
Uh huh, yeah, mister mister. I don't like coffee. Who
the hell carries a where's a bad We used to
wear a bag. It used to carry a gun. It
doesn't like coffe? What is wrong with you, sir?

Speaker 2 (02:52:02):
It's weird.

Speaker 1 (02:52:03):
As I take a sip of more coffee, all right,
So we're down in the last couple of minutes, so
real quick brad favorite favorite child for the week? What
was your favorite story you wrote up?

Speaker 5 (02:52:13):
Oh?

Speaker 2 (02:52:14):
For the week, it's probably the DC stuff. I've just
been laughing my ass off at the coverage of it,
not so much like Peter Baker over at the New
York Times. He's been uniquely attached to this because he
wanted to come out and say there's no crime and
wrote a number of pieces, no crime in DC, No
crime in DC. And then the troops went in there

(02:52:36):
and he said, well, they're not in the crime areas.
They're going to the wrong places. It's like, I'm sorry, Peter,
you're but my favorite of the week has to be
from NPR with their coverage of the last summit. Yeah,
that big, big breaking story. They found government papers on

(02:52:56):
a printer in the office or area of a hotel
off the lobby, and they were breaking this wide open.
And now the whole world knows that they were serving
crumb brew lay as a dessert or what seating charge
or some stupid shit like that. I've got this and

(02:53:17):
pronunciation of the crimbrewly.

Speaker 1 (02:53:20):
Violates the fire code of the hotel.

Speaker 2 (02:53:25):
It was like a this is a reporter basically admitting
that they're not in the loop with the PR Department,
because this was nothing more than an agenda paper for
the conference that some reporter printed out and forgot. No,
we broke open government, bab.

Speaker 1 (02:53:43):
I know you don't normally write anywhere that I can find,
But what was your favorite story that you covered this
week on your show?

Speaker 21 (02:53:49):
I'd have to say the the one hundred pound mackerel
being slapped upside the face of Judge anarchist black robe
fuck Tardu in Geran, where his uh half a billion,
half a billion dollar fine was turned upside down. So
now you're you're not just a regular anarchist, black robe

(02:54:14):
piece of leftist ship. Now you're an overturned black robe
leftist anarchist piece of shit. Coma motherfucker.

Speaker 1 (02:54:23):
Did you see way to say that? No, not on
this show. That's why I right now. But now did
you see Don Junior's quote tweet from remember the one
that Big Tish put out after the verdict and had
like down to the penny. He quote tweeted it last
night and said, I think you mean zero. Thank you
for your attention to this matter. All right, So for

(02:54:48):
once I actually have a favorite child for the week.
I haven't written as much as I want to do
this week, but I did menaster write some. I think
my favorite story I put out this week was explaining
how the absolute liberal, fucking mora was trying to explain
that circums, not circumcising, but giving va sectomies to male
babies was the future of how we save society. Because

(02:55:13):
I missed that, I'll send you the link in a minute.
But yeah, there's two parts of it. One she explains,
you know, how it would empower women blah blah blah,
and then all the financial savings. What she fails to
mention is the last time they didn't have a study
on long term vseectomies, meaning those lasting for fifteen years
or more, while there was a seventy five percent chance
of somebody actually returning to some form of motility if

(02:55:34):
they had it reversed. In the group that they studied
of the lung of those longer running folks, only thirty
percent of them were able to have children. So she's
basically advocating for the destruction of society.

Speaker 2 (02:55:47):
And you said this was a she, yes, what happened
to my body?

Speaker 1 (02:55:52):
Different because it's that's them, not us, all right, So
busy where can folks find you?

Speaker 14 (02:56:00):
Sir?

Speaker 21 (02:56:01):
Well, I had my show last night, but customarily I'm
on Tuesday and Thursday nights on the SHR Media Network,
and occasionally I'm carried by the lovely guy that's right
over here named Rick Robinson on KLRN, and on those
Tuesday and Thursday nights, the Bulbous One begins at eight
pm Pacific, ten pm Central and eleven pm Eastern, and

(02:56:21):
I talk about all things political, and I make fun
of a lot of people, and I have kind of
semi amusing stuff early on in the show, and sadly,
keep your shell like ears close because everyone's every once
in a while wood with no frequency at all whatsoever.
I may have an effort and s word, but leftists

(02:56:44):
continue to hand themselves over to me on plates and
I cannot help it skewer them, honestly. That's that's the
way it is.

Speaker 1 (02:56:51):
Senator Dude, you inspire me because the segment work that
you do and the work that you put in to
split them splitting them up, that's one of the things
that I've got to trying to figure out because mine's
basically just an entire run on sentence for three hours.

Speaker 21 (02:57:04):
I love doing that shit. I love this show. I
love you guys for doing what you do because we've
continued being conservative for a long time and we haven't
gone away and we haven't been pushed aside, and we're
taking advantage of that now. Of course, the algorithms are
killing the shit out of us.

Speaker 1 (02:57:20):
Again, because yeah, even right now, we we finally broke trips,
we're up at one hundred and thirty three. Before they
did whatever they did to the algorithm again, we would
have had six seven, eight hundred, nine hundred on this
show by the end, and it's it's just not there
anymore now. The night time work is still being a
little bit better. If we're on for longer than an
hour or so, it'll usually pick up me, you know,
somewhere around six seven hundred. But I don't know what

(02:57:43):
they're doing to the algorithm, Especially because all of us
that are able to do this are paying to be
able to do it. You would figure they would be
putting that out in more feeds.

Speaker 21 (02:57:51):
Well, thanks Brad for doing what you do, and thanks
Rick for having me on your show.

Speaker 1 (02:57:55):
You are more than welcome, sir. We will have to
do it again next time. We'll have you on rail,
so you don't have to get up quite so early
because I, oh, I know, but you know, I know
how it is when you're getting up, when you're used
to being late night and you're like looking at the
angry or Skyball going angry range Skyball is angry. So yeah,
I'm better now, all right, And Brad, where can folks

(02:58:17):
find you, sir?

Speaker 2 (02:58:21):
I'm well right here at kale r N. Frequently, just
like Busy, I'm on Thursday nights with a couple entertainment
shows I do between Ordy and Paul young As we
either do bad movies or entertainment. And then Tuesday evenings
I'm here with Aggie Reekin as we give you basically
all kinds of distractions away from the mayhem of political outrage.

(02:58:43):
But you can also see me on a daily basis
town hall dot com, where I've got a media column
there as well as the front page of Red State
on the regular, and I got a twice weekly podcast
called Liable Sources I do. They're just going even deeper
into the muck and meyer of the media and having.

Speaker 1 (02:58:58):
Fun, all right. And well, as as far as for me,
you can see me tonight hanging out with the lovely
Aguarekin for he said, she said. Tomorrow night, I'll be
pushing buttons first for the front Port Forensics Screw, and
then Amish and I have Junxtaposition after that, So that
starts at eight pm Eastern, so I'll be working from
what would it be eight to about midnight Eastern time
Tomorrow night and then Sunday Night back with Koran Nimick

(02:59:20):
both producing and co hosting with Korn's reading Room, Monday
Night America Off the Rails, Tuesday Night back around doing
the Manorama thing, and then Wednesday night Full Boat and
everything pretty much starts over from there. Jenn and Rick
is back, so hopefully that'll be on every week for
a while. So that's ten pm Eastern, right before BZ
and Bzy does get run. Both shows usually unless I

(02:59:43):
have a power issue where I'm sick, but the Tuesday
show usually runs on Wednesday night as a replay, and
then the Thursday show we carried live because we have
content usually on Tuesday nights in his spot. But on
that note, folks, we have got to get out of
here because I've got more work I've got to do today.
Speaking of which, it's time to put out some more
writing content because I took a break from that yesterday
to get the Juxtaposition show ready. But I want to

(03:00:03):
thank everybody for taking the time to hang out with
us today. We did okay. I guess it's not terrible
for a Friday. We broke a hundred, so I'll take
that considering. I used to do backflips anytime we got
more than twenty people paying attention before we went to video,
so I will take that. We'll see you guys again
later tonight for myself and Aguyrekin with he said, She said,

(03:00:24):
And don't forget This hour is now its own standalone
podcast as well known as the Weekend News Roundup, and
that'll be out later today as well. If you're just
out joining us, Bye everybody.

Speaker 21 (03:00:38):
What over to say?

Speaker 13 (03:00:41):
Over?

Speaker 21 (03:00:42):
Nothing is over until we decided it is?

Speaker 17 (03:00:45):
Was it over?

Speaker 21 (03:00:46):
When the German's bomb?

Speaker 22 (03:00:47):
Pearl Horner?

Speaker 7 (03:00:49):
Hello, closing time, Open all the doors and.

Speaker 11 (03:00:57):
Let you out into the over night?

Speaker 1 (03:01:01):
Then closing time.

Speaker 22 (03:01:04):
That's great, let's just fucking gray mast How what the
fuck are the most to do?

Speaker 2 (03:01:09):
Game over?

Speaker 6 (03:01:10):
Man?

Speaker 10 (03:01:10):
Game over.

Speaker 19 (03:01:13):
Time?

Speaker 1 (03:01:15):
Time for you to go out to the places you
will be wrong.

Speaker 19 (03:01:23):
Closing time, This room will be open till your brothers
or your sisters.

Speaker 2 (03:01:31):
I love you, Aklahoma. What a great crowd. I love your.

Speaker 1 (03:01:35):
Say good night, Gracie,
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