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August 27, 2025 120 mins
The Democratic Party may be in disarray, but they just flipped a state house seat in Iowa, and a lot of small government types like Rick are observing Trump lately. Wary of the stock purchases. While not outright socialism, it could become an incrementalist problem later. 

All of this is dicussed and more on The Chat Lives Matter Day edition 
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:07):
Hello friends, we have a moment so that we may
discuss our Lord and Savior miniarchy. No, seriously, I'm just kidding.

Speaker 2 (00:16):
Hi.

Speaker 1 (00:16):
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.

Speaker 3 (00:26):
We have a little bit of everything, and by that
what I mean to tell you is we have news,
pop cultures, special events, conspire, attainment, true crime, mental health shows,
drama productions, 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.

Speaker 1 (00:45):
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 to come check out
anytime you like at KLRN Radio.

Speaker 4 (01:10):
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takes you on an interstellar adventure to explore the mysteries
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(01:33):
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Speaker 5 (01:51):
My God is really.

Speaker 6 (01:52):
Really special and I love my dad Lack. I'm proud
of him and that even though he is in here
with us, but he died as a true hero.

Speaker 1 (02:08):
How much everything about.

Speaker 7 (02:09):
Him 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 around them.

Speaker 8 (02:26):
I'm Frank Cla, chairman of the steven Sila Tunnel to
Tawis Foundation. Our foundation is committed to delivering mortgage free
homes for gold Star families and fall and first respond
to families.

Speaker 9 (02:37):
To not have to worry financially is a huge peace
of mind. The thought of what in the world will
I possibly do to pay the bills? How will I
possibly let the children have a life that feels normal.
I don't want them to have to quit their piano
lessons or their basketball. I don't want them to feel
that we have to move into a little apartment and
struggle financially.

Speaker 10 (02:55):
In addition to the emotional weight.

Speaker 11 (02:57):
There are over one thousand families that need our help.
Tunels of Towers is honoring those heroes that risk their
lives by providing them with mortgage free homes.

Speaker 9 (03:06):
Those who serve us and then lay down their lives
protecting our freedoms and our safety. The least we can
do is eleven dollars a month to give them that
piece of always knowing there's a home. There's that sanctuary
when life feels like it's been tipped upside down, because
it has when you lose a parent in the line
of duty, to know you can go home, you can
be safe, there's no risk of losing your home. That's

(03:28):
a peace of mind that I can't believe you can
get for eleven.

Speaker 10 (03:31):
Dollars a month.

Speaker 11 (03:32):
I'd like to ask you to contribute eleven dollars a
month to support their efforts.

Speaker 8 (03:36):
Please donate eleven dollars a month by calling one eighth
four four bravest or visit Tunnel to Towers dot Org.

Speaker 12 (03:57):
Independent With that declaration, America was born.

Speaker 13 (04:05):
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,

(04:27):
this is why the founders of our great nation chose independence,
as do we. Hillsdale College accepts no government funding because
independence makes possible the good to which we aspire. Hillsdale

(04:47):
College pursuing truth and defending liberty since eighteen forty four.

Speaker 1 (05:02):
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Speaker 14 (05:04):
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Speaker 15 (05:11):
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Speaker 1 (05:18):
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Speaker 15 (05:26):
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Halbards bringing families together, one medieval battle at a time.

Speaker 16 (05:51):
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Speaker 17 (06:04):
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Speaker 18 (06:40):
The following program contains course language and adult themes. Listener
and discretion is advised.

Speaker 19 (07:00):
A capital steps who makes calling on the truth, don't
toper regrets.

Speaker 5 (07:03):
He's got fire in his voice and facts in his hand,
talking says to the people all across this lands the.

Speaker 14 (07:09):
Ring Robinson show, what's your glass high?

Speaker 20 (07:11):
And don't spend no script.

Speaker 19 (07:13):
To the needle in the sky and he see tels
and okay, see he's calling it.

Speaker 21 (07:18):
Out with them.

Speaker 5 (07:18):
I get on this in a whole lot of clouds.

Speaker 19 (07:22):
This is car Lar Radio real dude, his freak up
and feel what we feel.

Speaker 5 (07:33):
He's breaking down the noise, He's cutting through the lies.

Speaker 19 (07:36):
Shot in the light where the shadow hides with guts
on the line and code is on deck.

Speaker 5 (07:41):
Keep the voice of the folks DC.

Speaker 19 (07:42):
He tends us to get your puffy raps up. Just
say it's all the white fight news with the back
bone voice of.

Speaker 5 (07:48):
The Free Way. Stop the valse of Democra saying it's a.

Speaker 14 (07:52):
Ray brother Son show Bull on the way.

Speaker 19 (07:54):
Truth talks up like a rising ray from the planet
stud the powers speaking in loud with my damn that
is I don't that you, proud lot of people.

Speaker 10 (08:07):
What we feel.

Speaker 1 (08:32):
And welcome into the chat lives batter day as you
know the Rick Robinson Show. Technically it's my Monday because
I took the day off to help somebody yesterday. I'm
only getting into much of that though, because it was
not a fun way to spend my day anyway. So
we're back, We're live. Restream is broken today, so I
had to go look to find out if anybody's who
I'm paying attention because it's not showing the numbers. Got

(08:53):
quite a few of you paying attention already, So if
you can hear me or see me. Please make sure
you're sharing out the feeds because restream is being dumb today.
But we're here, we're live, and it is that day.
You know what day it is? Do you know what
day it is? Do you do ya do?

Speaker 4 (09:07):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (09:08):
Well, I didn't load it, so it'll take me a
second because I've already did that already did I mention
I was out of sorts today? I know it's kind
of a recurring theme lately, but what are you gonna do?

Speaker 20 (09:18):
All right, but it is that day?

Speaker 1 (09:19):
So without further ado, well, maybe hang on helps if
I set things up the right way.

Speaker 22 (09:33):
Oh oh, guess what day it is?

Speaker 4 (09:36):
Guess what day it is?

Speaker 20 (09:38):
Anybody?

Speaker 13 (09:40):
It is Wednesday, myde.

Speaker 1 (09:46):
Otherwise I know to chat lives matter day here on
Klerin Radio and Zelda. I would prefer the booze, you know, honest.
But for those of you who are paying attention to
the chat, what that QR code is actually for us?
For anybody who wants to help support us and help
keep our lights on, you can scan that code and
send a little donation in. It doesn't actually send boasts.
I kind of wish it did, but it doesn't. So

(10:07):
it's a word play because I didn't realize it at
the time, because I saw all these podcasters with this
link up that said buy me a coffee. I didn't
realize there was actually a website that was used to
support podcasters and vid streamers that could do that. So
I was making a joke about there buying me a
coffee thing and made my owns send boosts. Anyway, so
we're here, we're live, and I'm not even exactly sure

(10:30):
where to start because I haven't done a show other
than of course, the Conspiracyment Show since Friday, as far
as political stuff, and there's been a lot of stuff happening,
so I'm not sure where I want to start. I
will say this, I'm not a huge fan of what's
happening right now with the government suddenly deciding to start

(10:52):
buying stakes and companies. And for anybody who's like, that's
not communism, because when communists tried to do it, they
try to seize control all at once. So let me
explain to you, because this is what I'm hearing given
from folks on my side of my side of the
aisle is well, it's only it's only small stakes, and
at least now instead of the government just giving money

(11:12):
away to companies the people might actually get a return
on their investment. You guys, realize this is how China
does business with foreign companies, right, And how long do
they keep it at ten percent before they just start,
you know, buying up as much as they can. And
even if Donald Trump and this administration and even hopefully

(11:34):
Jdvans to come after him for another eight years, don't
buy up any more than ten percent. What happens when
the people that actually want to be socialist and communists
get a turn to start smacking up and just buying
up companies all over the place. What do you think
is actually going to happen? Just saying, just saying, But anyway,

(11:55):
so that that's kind of where I'm starting today. It's
a mixed bag for me with Trump. I like some
of what he's doing. I don't really like some of
the other stuff that he's doing. And I told you guys,
I'm gonna try to be as down the middle as possible. Now,
for those of you who've been paying attention, there was
a special election last night in I think it was Iowa,
and they actually flipped the state house seat from red
to blue. So of course, everybody on the left, it's like,

(12:16):
oh my god, we're gonna we're gonna kill him in
the midterms. Look, odds were already on that we were
gonna lose seats in the midterms anyway, because that's usually
how this works. I'm not even trying to be you know,
optimistic about that or be like, oh, we're gonna we're
gonna buck the trend. I'm not sure because the GOP
seems to love to just coast when and everybody's giving

(12:38):
them all this positive news coverage. So they're just coasting
right now. I mean, look at what's going on with
Virginia with win some sears, so the supporter of the
other side was basically holding up a sign talking about
bring segregation back if you can't, if we can't put
have boys go into girls bathrooms, and vice versa. And
the Democrats still ahead in the polls there. So if

(13:02):
the GOP is not very careful, they are going to
snatch defeat yet again from the jaws of victory when
it comes to these midterms. And there will be nobody
to blame this time but Trump himself because he's the
head of the party. He's not mobilizing the GOP as
he should be to make sure that these things go
our way, and if he doesn't, we're screwed. And this
is exactly what I've been afraid of, because it seems

(13:26):
like the GOP only cares about the every four year elections.
They don't give a shit about the midterms unless they're
the party, unless they're the party that's already on, unless
they're the party that's behind, unless unless they're they're the
I can't think of the word that I'm looking for today,
But unless they're the party with least seats, and I
know they're the minority party, that's the word I was looking.

(13:47):
I don't know why I couldn't find it. Unless they're
the minority party, they don't give a crap about the midterms.
They just coast through them. All the time. Donald Trump
is banging his chest about the money coming in from tariffs,
banging his chest about the GOP fundraise, and yet there's
already been one special election lost, and right now it
looks like when some Seers might actually lose in Virginia,
and if she loses in Virginia, Virginia's gone because her

(14:09):
candidate wants open borders and everything else that we've been fighting.
If that isn't enough for the GOP to get motivated
and to put everything they can into this, I mean,
this is an important election, it really is, whether anybody
wants to admit it or not, And for some reason
the GOP doesn't want to seem to think that it is.
And I don't know why. One of the folks I

(14:30):
work with, who runs Twitchy, has been banging this drum
now for weeks about if this goes the way of
the Democrats, Virginia's done, and right now, for all intents
and purposes, it looks like it will. So where's the GOP.
What are they doing? Doing what they always do, sitting
on their asses. This is why I'm not a member

(14:52):
of the GOP anymore. Now. It doesn't do me any
favors that I'm currently a member of the Libertarian Party,
which are absolutely nuts. I consider myself a little L libertarian,
not a big L libertarian, because I do want as
least government as possible, and I want the government out
of our lives as much as possible, which is why
I have a huge problem with some of the things

(15:13):
that are happening within the Trump administration right now. We
should not be buying up shairs of stock in companies,
because now all you're doing is instead of outright season
control of the company, you're going to start doing it
through incrementalism. And even if I said it a minute ago,
even if while Gop is in charge, that doesn't happen.
What do you think is gonna happen when the Democrats
are in charge all of a sudden they've got fifty

(15:36):
two control and then just keep forcing them out a
little by a little bit by bit. This is the
frog and the pot version of socialism and eventually communism.
This is bad. This is one of the reasons why
I've told everybody for the longest time. Trump may have
an R behind his name, but he's not actually a Republican.

(15:58):
He never really has been. He's middle of the road
in a lot of ways. And I get it that
he's trying to do something different and he's trying to
help the country not go broke, but assuming control of
industry is not really the way to do that for
the long term. Police Eve Venezuela for any examples and
any questions that you have about how this usually works.

(16:19):
When at some point the shark gets jumped and they
buy everything up that they can and start running it
into the ground. When is the last time you saw
the government run anything efficiently? Anything, local, state, federal, anything.

(16:42):
I can't think of anything either, as a matter of fact,
that this is pretty much where we are with all
of that, because I can't think of anything either because
they never run anything. Well, No, it doesn't matter which
side's in charge, because there's too much bureaucracy, has been
for a long time now. Donald Trump is doing everything

(17:02):
he can to try to cut some of that away.
But the question is how much is he going to
be able to do in about three and a half
years at this point, assuming we can maintain control of
the House on the Senate when it comes to the midterms.
And I use the term we loosely because I'm conservative
but not Republican. But here's the problem with all of this.

(17:28):
No matter what all the good is that Trump is doing,
none of the mainstream media is really talking about it.
As a matter of fact. They're framing it the other way.
They're telling you that he's being authoritarian. They're telling you
that he wants to be a dictator. They're telling you
that he's a Nazi, that he's literally Hitler. As a
matter of fact, the National Guard in DC, they have
already said this is exactly how Adolf Hitler formed his

(17:49):
Brown Shirts, except it's not. And the thing about it
is with Republicans, they get mad on the surface about things,
right like this whole cracker barrel thing, which is the
next thing I want to get into. They're all mad
about the logo change. They am paying attention to the
fact that for the longest time the company's been investing

(18:12):
in alphabet mafia's stuff, moving more and more to the
woke side and everything else. But there's something about this
that nobody wants to talk about, and it's the corporate
takeover of America. Everybody complains about what the restaurants look
like now, right like McDonald's doesn't look like McDonald's anymore,

(18:32):
Pizza huts, the new ones don't look like Pizza out anymore.
The reason they were wanting to streamline the logo is
because they eventually wanted to start making cracker barrels that
looked about like the rest of the restaurants do nowadays.
And there's a reason because what happens and nobody talks
about this part is once a franchise is being built somewhere,

(18:53):
the company that actually leases them the franchise rights, usually
owns the land underneath. So if a restaurant doesn't make it,
if it looks like McDonald's, or if it looks like
what Pizza Hut used to look like, or it looks
like what Long John Silvers used to look like, or
even Taco Belt used to look like, it was almost
impossible to turn it into anything else. So the reason
restaurants look like middle aged men now, like all pissed

(19:16):
off and depressed in gray and same shape and everything
looks the same and utilitarian is because if if a
Pizza Hut goes out of business, it looks like one
of those places. You can put a check cashing place
in there. You can put a vape shop in there.
You can even put a fucking medical marijuana place in there,
and nobody's gonna go, oh, I think that used to
because that's what happens now. You throw some I mean,

(19:37):
there's a check cashing place in Dell City that used
to be a taco bell, and everybody talks about it
is like, oh, you want me to go to the
place that used to be the taco bell? Right there,
that's a check cashing place now. Yeah, because it's a
pain in the ass to get things replaced when they
don't look the same. Not to mention the fact that
all these people are getting supplies to build these buildings
and everywhere else from the same place, so it makes

(19:58):
it more uniform and easier to replace things and everything else.
So that's the reason why everything looks the same inside
and outside now, no matter where you go, doesn't matter
what restaurant it is anymore, they're all starting to look
the same. Even Golden Corral, if you look at it,
looks like it's old, depressed, middle aged man now if
you go inside and even outside, because it makes it

(20:18):
easier for whoever owns the buildings and actually owns the
land underneath, who sell it should the restaurant fail. This
isn't about anything other than corporate bottom line. That's what
happened with Cracker Barrel. Their bottom line was already suffering.

(20:39):
They couldn't figure out what to do, so they started
trying to do what they do to everything else. Let's
streamline it. Let's get rid of all the chotsky stuff,
Let's get rid of the weird logo, and that's that
way we can. When we start building new locations, we
can make them all look the same, so if it
doesn't work, we can just sell them and move on.
That's exactly what happened. It's not. I mean, for a

(21:02):
lot of folks it became about go woke, go broke.
But for the corporate shareholders and for the people that
were in charge, it became about their bottom lines. And
you can thank the Supreme Court for that, by the way,
because the Supreme Court ruled a long time ago that
corporations were, in fact beholding to their shareholders even more
than anything else. So that's why everything became about the
corporate bottom line. That's the Supreme Court's fault. That's something

(21:26):
else that we need to be changing. We're not talking
about that though, Because you want America back, you got
to get the corporations out of every fucking thing. The
corporations are in everything, doesn't matter what side it is,
the corporations are in everything. You've got lobbyist groups that
spend millions of dollars a year to go lobby for

(21:46):
stuff in the middle of Washington, DC. You know, one
of the easiest ways to make that stop, or at
least make it a lot harder is to decentralize where
they have to go to browbeat these people in this omission.
It's one of the reasons for the longest time that
I have been for Congress critters to spend eighty percent
of their time at least in their home districts so

(22:08):
one they can go back to work again, so we
don't have to pay them these exorbitance these exorbit salaries.
That's the biggest thing. Well, if we take their salaries
the way, they're just going to be more beholden to
lobbyists because they spend ninety percent of their time in Washington,
d C. It that just makes you a moron if
you think that's a good idea. No, what we do

(22:29):
is we do what we used to do. We don't
pay them a salary. We say, hey, you are supposed
to be a citizen servant, which means when you're not
in DC, you should be in your home state running
your job, whatever it was, and dealing with your constituency.
And then if you want us to have DC for
doing the special shit, fine, sure, you want them to

(22:50):
come in for State of the Union share, you want
them to come in for the signing ceremonies after they
browbeat everything else into submission. Sure, that's fine, let them
do that. I don't care. But this whole idea that
we now have this political class that lives in one
place that we're paying for, by the way, all of it,
they're extra houses, all of their stuff. Trust me, it's

(23:10):
it's your money and my money that's paying for that. Meanwhile,
these people are committing mortgage fraud left and right to
be able to get to be able to save money
on these things because they know if it ever came
out that they were going to get hammered for the
fact that we're helping to pay for them to live
in two different houses. They've got a I mean, look
at Jasmine Crockett, who, luckily Slavey Crockett's district is apparently

(23:33):
being dissolved after these these maps get redone or at
least redrawn in a way that likely she won't be returning,
which is good for everybody in my opinion, because that's
what that's what we have right now. We don't have
politicians anymore. We have people that want to pretend to
be politicians while they're figuring out how to be podcasters
and social media influencers. Just look at Given newskimp. Yeah,

(23:57):
it was a typo. Today I've decided to lean into it.
I think I'm just gonna start calling him Given because
he's literally given California a bad name and dragging them
back to the Middle Ages, whether whether they want to
be there or not, because we have a plague case
in California because of the explosion of homelessness there and

(24:18):
the explosion of the rat population and everything else. The
funny thing is there have been doctors screaming about that
for years, and nobody wanted to listen to them. So
fun times. Fun times. But you know, like I said,
what are we gonna do? All right, so let's see
what kind of trouble we can get into before we
start taking the first break. Hang on, I gotta get

(24:40):
into my bookmarks here. Oh yeah, so this is a
little interesting. I've got a couple of clips that I
definitely want to play in the first part of the
show because reasons. But hang on, Oh I grabbed the

(25:03):
wrong one. I was like, what's going on? But hang on,
I can fix that. I grabbed the wrong Let me
fix that anyway, because it's not in the right positioning.
Any ride either close enough all right, So I thought

(25:27):
this was interesting. I'm just gonna let this play and
then talk about it afterwards.

Speaker 21 (25:33):
So last night I attended an underground secret meeting with
our neighbors in a neighborhood in North Georgia, a large
neighborhood about fifteen hundred people, Red state, Red town, and
about sixty of our neighbors had a secret meeting, I'm

(25:57):
not exaggerating secret. It was pasted one by one to
people that are against this dictator Trump and all the
corruption that's going on in this country. And we met
a half an hour away from our neighborhood, so none
of our neighbors would know them. Most of them, we guess,

(26:17):
are for Trump. That we were actually having this secret meeting.
I happened to speak at the meeting for a few minutes,
and I suggested that we form a club and we
meet at our clubhouse. We have a huge forty thousand
plus square foot clubhouse in this neighborhood, and we have
lots of room, and I said, why don't we meet
there and try to expand the group. And the look

(26:39):
of fear on the faces of my neighbors. Average age
sixty five.

Speaker 23 (26:46):
Seventy so older people, right, They looked terrified of this,
and basically it was shot down and most of them said, no,
we can't meet at the clubhouse.

Speaker 24 (26:58):
Because our neighbors will find out. And if they find
out we're against Trump, we'll be blackballed from every event,
every pickleball and every tennis and every club in our neighborhood,
which is very active neighborhood, super active neighborhood, and we'll
be ostracized.

Speaker 21 (27:17):
We have to meet secretly.

Speaker 24 (27:20):
And I've been thinking about it all night, dreaming about
this all night.

Speaker 21 (27:25):
People are terrified to talk to their neighbors. This is
the United States of America. I don't know how old
you are, but I promise you I'm sixty years old.
This is not the country I grew up in. This
is not the country I grew up in. It's become
a place of fear of our own neighbors. Scary times,

(27:51):
sad times in America.

Speaker 1 (27:56):
Okay, so was I the only one who noticed it?
Dude was slur and like really really hard for one.
This was a drunk scree put out on video. I
would like to point out that of fifteen hundred people,
sixty apparently showed up at this meeting, and dude was
thinking about it and dreaming about it all night because

(28:19):
he's now afraid of his country. What exactly is it
you're afraid of. I'm confused because last I checked, getting
people out of the country that aren't supposed to be
here legally is a good thing. Nobody wants to talk
about the economic impact if we remove what is approxibly
now at this point, whether anybody wants to admit it
or not, thirty to thirty five million people that are

(28:40):
here illegally. And before you look at me like I'm crazy,
I would like to remind you that for the last
twenty years they've used the same number eleven million illegal immigrants.
There is no way, with as wide open as our
borders have been under so many different administrations, that that
number stays the same. Then you take into the account
that Joe Biden basically just said, fuck it, We're going
to open up all the doors. Just let them all in.

(29:02):
I guarantee you right now we're sitting at about thirty million.
And you know how I know because we had fifty
five million active visa applicants and or people that were
already here on visas that have been paused. So I
guarantee you at least fifty percent worth of that number,
which is fifty five million, probably closer to fifty five percent,

(29:24):
is at least here illegally, because that's the lie that
they've bought into. It is impossible to come here legally anymore.
So therefore you might as well just come across the border.
If it's impossible to come here legally, then how the
hell do we have one seventh of the US population
amount that we have recorded here on visas or awaiting
approval for visas if it's impossible to come here legally. Now,

(29:49):
I'm not saying the the legal immigration system doesn't need
some sort of tweaking. I'm not. I am saying, though,
that the idea that the left has basically ingrained in
everybody's brain about how nobody wants anybody to come here
anymore's no further He's no further from the truth that
that is impossible because we are, in fact a country

(30:10):
of immigrants. We are not a country of migrants. We
have expectations that people that come here are going to
do what they can to add to the vibrant tastestry
that has become America, not detract from it, which is
why and this is getting a lot of flak from
me on next today, I don't really care, which is

(30:31):
why point blank said today, if you are somebody who
is still screaming for reparations hundreds of years later, not
taking into account that all the free slaves actually got preparations,
then whatever hyphenated homeland you identify with, we should give
you a free ticket so you can go back to it,

(30:51):
because if you're not here to make America a better place,
we don't need you here. That's the truth of it.
Wants to talk about the economic impact of all of
this stuff, of all of the people that can't get jobs,
because these corporations, even on the left, and I've talked
about this before, even the ones that support the left,

(31:12):
are like, well, we want a living ways the corporations
and all the small businesses are like, but what do
we do when you guys are wanting twenty dollars an hour?
We can't afford that. It's not sustainable for us. Oh no, no, no,
that's fine. We have open borders, So we're just going
to create this second class group of citizens to come
in and basically vote for us, even though they're really

(31:33):
not supposed to, and come to work for you for
super cheap because they don't have a choice. The same
people that are screaming and yelling about reparations are the
same people that are fine with modern day slavery. All
I want is for anybody who doesn't want to be
here to find kindly find a way to get out.

(31:55):
All I want is for the people that came here
illegally to kindly find their way out. And if you're smart,
if you are here illegally and you want to be here,
you will self deport and then start trying to figure
out how to come back legally so that you have
that option. But this idea that people get deported and
they're allowed to come back in fifteen, sixteen, seventeen, eighteen, nineteen,

(32:16):
twenty times before somebody finally does something about it, and
god forbid, who knows how many crimes they've committed. Did
you know that it's alleged? Now that you remember the driver,
the illegal truck driver in Florida, you know they got
a CDL, even though almost every state requires that in
order to get a CDL, you have to be a citizen,
not an actual not an actual driver's license. That's been

(32:40):
a that's been different for a while. But for CDL
you have to be able to prove that you're a
citizen if you want one issue through the United States
of America. Pretty much every state requires that, which means
this guy never should have gotten one of the first places.
But guess what now, not only did he allegedly kill
what is it three people in this most recent U
turn incident, they're now stating that he may have actually

(33:03):
been the one responsible for a bridge collapse that happened
several years ago. What do these people have to do
to get thrown out of here? That's my question? What
do these people have to do to get thrown out
of here? Because I would really like to know the
answer because I am just as pro immigration as everybody else.

(33:24):
I want people that want to be here to come here.
I want people that want to be here to find
ways to come here that are legal. But we can't
even talk about fixing the system until we get rid
of what's broken with the system first, because we fell
for that lie once before. You guys want to know
when the lack of civility started. Blame the Democrats, because

(33:48):
that's when the lack of civility started because Ronald Reagan
took everybody in face value, even on the left, because
he came from there. And you if you don't believe me,
just go look. You can find a quote from him
talking about Chip or Gore and how Tipper and he
might go go at odds to everybody or go it
odds with each other from like what did he say
eight to five? But then at five o'clock they could

(34:10):
go have a beer together, kind of like Sam and
Ralph from the old Looney Tunes commercial or cartoon. But
that's what happened. The Democrats said, hey, you want you
want to fix immigration, Let's make it easy. Let's clear
the boards and then we'll work together to fix it.
Just give everybody amnesty that's already here, and then we'll

(34:31):
work together, both parties do what we got to do
to fix it, roll up our sleeves and get it done. Reagan,
believe them. I'm sorry, I said Tip Tipper Gore. It
was Tip O'Neil. I don't know why I said Tipper
Gore anyway, tip O'Neil, not Tipper Gore. But yeah, he
took them at face value, and he's like, yeah, let's
do this thing, and then they're like, just kidding, thanks

(34:53):
for playing though. That's when the civility stopped being a thing,
and it's just it's just amazing to me. And nobody
wants to talk about that part. All right, we're long
on the break. Musical interlude, so no commercial my name?

Speaker 20 (35:10):
Oops, I did it again?

Speaker 1 (35:14):
Whoop, so I did it again. I'm meant to press
this button. All right, We're gonna take a break. We'll
be right back. Stay tuned. All right, we're having a

(35:53):
technical issue, so I'm gonna have to figure something else out.
Something ain't working like it usually does. Welcome to Live
Radio one moment. Please come on, come on, come on,

(36:20):
come on.

Speaker 25 (36:30):
Oh though Saturdays with kids go out playing you What
was something in my proof?

Speaker 20 (36:34):
I left the stuffy yo play what's it?

Speaker 26 (36:37):
Tain?

Speaker 20 (36:37):
Its is the kid with the band in the band
and the bigger man to nation all this?

Speaker 11 (36:42):
I said.

Speaker 20 (36:44):
Again, tail.

Speaker 25 (36:47):
Break take it hotail, I'm overdi play the stuff on
the radio. Put put it coming.

Speaker 20 (37:01):
Down with the new style. Didn't know what about? Why
could put it? Whoa my mama, Brady, go stay ship
talk mom and day ship. We didn't see the devastation.

Speaker 27 (37:13):
See I didn't see, said to Sun said, what the

(37:41):
hell is wrong with me?

Speaker 20 (37:43):
My mama tad more perfect? Stay you don't hear no
crime as mentioned for me? What seems to be. I'll
neverbody see that such a sad that react from that?

Speaker 27 (37:53):
I yall that loma minute.

Speaker 20 (37:55):
I can't show you something in a jack. It'll be quick,
quick coup of town on the stepping coming on the radio.
Quick crick poll, look up.

Speaker 25 (38:11):
To town with the new style and knowing about why
cuck cucko lo on my ready go station ship, talk
about the nation ship. Wait not to sing the demastation.

Speaker 20 (38:22):
Whiled up by why not go.

Speaker 14 (38:31):
From and we make it to me?

Speaker 20 (38:37):
Weird crowd quick quick Chris, quick crito clear clear, little

(39:11):
sat dudes. Some kids go up playing what was up
my broom?

Speaker 25 (39:14):
I let stiry go plasil Saturdays when kids go out place,
I was up my broom.

Speaker 20 (39:19):
I let the story up. It's solid side, it's sound
inside up. It's solid inside up me. It's so inside
up my head and solid inside up. It's coming double bad.
It's solid inside up its sound and click down on

(39:52):
the stey bring me on the radio, put put it
coming down with the.

Speaker 10 (39:57):
No Stand.

Speaker 1 (40:44):
And welcome back into the set Labs Meta day edition
of The Brick Robinson Show live right on cay On
Radio back I'm Not Forgett'll be back tonight pushing buttons
first for the Inquiry crew, then the Conservative corom Ntion
radio show that will be over with our behind them
the Lines guys starting at nine pm Eastern. Then Amah
and I will be your closing act here on the
Kalarm radio side ten pm Eastern. Then we'll head over

(41:05):
to our estates our media crew. If Sean is live,
we'll be over there first. Then we do have Z's
replayed from last night. I was off last night and
my plan was to come home and run BUZ because
as far as I know, we didn't do a toxic
last night. But by the time I got home last night,
after dealing with everything I was in was I didn't
have time to get it ready. So we're gonna get
the night instead. So yeah, I'll be working until sometime

(41:27):
around two to three Eastern time, depending on how much
content we have available because I'm insane. Also hoping to
get some articles put out later today, tomorrow and throughout
the rest of the week. Because I haven't been able
to do much of that this week either, and I'm
trying to get back into this wing of doing everything
all at once, all the time because it's my job.
But so before we get into anything else, I want

(41:48):
to stay in the whole Gavin being an idiot mode.
I feel like a certain you know, state critter called
him out fairly. Well, so we're gonna talk about this
right now, because yeah, you can see it in the clip.
This is basically the question that was asked by a
California as Simbly member. But here's three minutes of gloriousness.

(42:08):
So here you go. Well, hang on, let me fix
it first. That's not the right things are okay, Now
let's play that three minutes of gloriousness. Did I mention
it's been one of those days again.

Speaker 5 (42:32):
We're not allowing props today, mister DeMaio.

Speaker 28 (42:34):
Then why have you become props to Governor Gavin Newsom's
presidential campaign? That is what SBW eighty is an unnecessary
special election at a cost of a quarter billion dollars.
Why because his campaign for president has been going down
in flames and he needs something.

Speaker 2 (42:54):
To prop up his chances. Make no mistake about it.

Speaker 28 (43:00):
This is a political stunt, an unnecessary, costly special election,
because Gavin Newsom.

Speaker 2 (43:07):
Needs chum in the water for political attention.

Speaker 28 (43:12):
You know it, and I know it, and you're allowing
state taxpayer money to be used for it because you
have no problem spending precious, scarce state tax dollars in
the middle of a budget crisis.

Speaker 2 (43:26):
Say that we have to defend.

Speaker 28 (43:28):
Dollars for California, but you have wantonly wasted money. For example,
giving free health care to illegal immigrants at the cost
of ten billion dollars in counting two hundred fifty million
dollars applied to our state budget may not make up
for your multi billion dollar deficit, but it's a start.

(43:49):
You know what two hundred fifty million dollars would do.
It would fully fund Prop thirty six so that we
could give power and tools to the prosecutor, prosecutors and
the law enforce agencies.

Speaker 2 (44:01):
To arrest and punish criminals.

Speaker 28 (44:03):
Voters voted for Prop thirty six, but you refuse to
fund it from the party that says, let the voters
decide and let's do what the voters want.

Speaker 2 (44:13):
Beloney, You do what you want might makes right and.

Speaker 28 (44:18):
That's exactly what you've done for the last seventy two
hours by trampling over constitutional provisions and violating House rules.

Speaker 2 (44:26):
And you talk about a fair election.

Speaker 28 (44:29):
SB two eighty shortens the timeline necessary for an election.
But because you have an urgency clause there might makes right.

Speaker 2 (44:39):
You change election law.

Speaker 28 (44:41):
And now you're going to slap a misleading ballot title
on You can't even.

Speaker 2 (44:45):
Win based on the truth.

Speaker 28 (44:47):
You say you trust the voters, but you don't trust
them enough to tell them the truth because your ballot
measured title. Because we've seen it, we've seen your polling
that the D tripleC or someone paid for retain the
Independent Citizens Redistricting Commission. Are you proud of yourselves retains
the Independent Citizens Redistricting Commission. You are eviscerating that commission.

(45:10):
You are nullifying that commission. You are suspending the voice
of the citizens and what they decided. To grab the
power back for yourself. And don't for a moment call
it temporary. You know darn well that this is permanent.
You will never give the power back to the people
once you.

Speaker 1 (45:31):
He's not wrong, because that's their biggest thing is well,
this is only temporary we're gonna turn it back over
to the redistricting board in twenty thirty. No they won't. No,
they won't. Anytime government has ever seized power of anything,
they never give it back. This is why I don't
have This is why I have a huge issue with
all these stock buys that are being talked about, because, yeah,

(45:51):
it's only ten percent, it's a minority stake, it's not
that big a deal. Rick, You don't understand. We've been
taking in on the nose because the government's been given
all these companies all this money, and we're not seeing
anything when you return on our investment. So why not
just stop the subsidies. Let the market decide. I don't
need a market. If there's a ten percent market share
in something from the government, what do you think is

(46:13):
going to happen. The government is going to be in
there cheerleading for that company to survive. Intel is one
of the worst defenders and everything that Donald Trump says
that he had, that he has, that he hates, and
yet we're buying it. We're buying a ten percent steak
in the company for the country. Again, even if you're
fine with a ten percent stake, let's suspend my problem

(46:36):
with it because I've already given it to you. But
let's say he goes goes ahead and starts buying ten
percent stakes and all these companies that we've been giving
all these subsidies to. What happens when the other side
gets a turn and a ten percent stake becomes a
thirty percent stake, and a thirty percent stake becomes a
forty nine percent stake, and then eventually if forty nine
percent stake becomes a fifty one percent stake, and then

(46:58):
suddenly the government has control interest in all these different
companies and has people from the government sitting on the boards.
Is this what we want? Is this what we want?
Because remember, they sold us this idea and him is
kind of talking about this in the chat right now.

(47:18):
They sold us this idea of toll roads back when
I was still tiny, but they sold us this idea
of toll roads. Well, what we're gonna do is, instead
of your tax dollars paying for it, we're gonna charge
you guys to be on these roads until they're bought,
until they're built and paid for it, and then we're

(47:38):
gonna make them free access roads. I'd like to remind
you that I'm fifty two, so that's at least fifty
two years worth of lies, because I think it was
six I think it was sixties. I think it was
around the same time that they started trying to do
all the interstate stuff. It was either sixties or seventies.
I don't remember exactly, because, like I said, I was

(48:00):
a seventy three. But that has been a lifelong lie.
Is Well, we're gonna charge you for now, but once
we get everything looking good and pretty and we got
all the roads where we want them, at that point,
we'll just stop charging tolls and then the tax dollars
will go to keep knowing. What they did was they
created a private company to basically regulate those roads in

(48:21):
each individual state, kind of like the FED is technically
a private company. That's why they're having fits right now
over Donald Trump trying to fire one of the FED
chairs because they're like, we're an independent we're an independent bank. Well,
then you shouldn't have the word federal in your name.
Take it away. If the guy in charge of the

(48:42):
federal government doesn't have the authority to fire anyone inside
that bank, then they don't deserve to have the word federal.
On them remove it, because there is no such thing
as a federal reserve. It is not a government branch,
It is not a part of any existing government a branch.
It is a separate banking system wrapped in a flag

(49:05):
which most of the people of the time were diametrically
opposed to. Interestingly enough, two of those people, two of
the biggest people that were, you know, huge detractors from
the idea, actually died in the sinking of the Titanic.
This isn't our conspiracainment show, but I do encourage you

(49:26):
to go back and listen to that one sometime so
that you might be able to understand why that happened,
because we've actually talked about that on juxtaposition, Because if
you're living in today's reality at this point, you must
understand that, especially with the speed of information now, most
of the time, it's about six weeks from conspiracy to fact.

(49:50):
I mean, I mean, I'm still spitting it out. Golden
Gate bridge tolls to pay off building, then during the
summer to pay for maintenance. When I left California, the
toll was five dollars funding public transportation. But yeah, those
things never go away. The only time we ever got

(50:13):
rid of the income tax was after the Civil War,
and then what happened the Democrats who kept going to
the Republicans say, wasn't it nice when we didn't have
to go back to the American people all the time
to get more funding for stuff, or we weren't relying
on tariffs or this, that and the other to get
things funded, because that's how we used to raise money
was tariffs. And then if there wasn't enough money in

(50:34):
the general fund based on the tariffs that we were collecting,
they would Congress would pass the pass the law, and
then they would go to the American people and say, well,
since you voted for us, and we're voting for this
and we passed it, we need your help. And then
people would buy treasury bills, so if you didn't like
what was being done, you didn't have to support it.

(50:55):
It was one of it was one of the most
republican ways to govern ever, because while Congress had control
of the purse strings, we had control all of the
deposits lips, and they took it away. They then made
us the batteries of everything that we're now trying to fight.
And it's been that way ever since, which is why

(51:16):
anytime in a state makes a new tax, it never
really goes away. Now, this may be one of the
first times in my lifetime I can honestly say that
that may not be the case, because interestingly enough, Texas
did away with its state income tax quite some time ago.
They're now talking about doing away with their property taxes. Now,

(51:36):
I haven't looked that much into it because I don't
live in Texas, and I'll be honest, I don't necessarily
have an issue with property taxes when you're still paying
your mortgage. I do have an issue with then having
to lease the land from the government after your house
and land are supposed to be paid for, which is
basically what the property taxes become once your note is yours,
free and clear. That I have a problem with, and

(52:00):
this idea that they can reassess your property value all
the time and raise your property taxes. No, it should
be forever and permanently tied to whatever the value was
of the property at the time that you bought it.
That's it. None of this, Oh, because we've built up
all this stuff around you. Now we're assessing your properties
worth five hundred million dollars and your property tax just
went and then people lose their houses because they can't

(52:21):
afford to pay the new note because of the property taxes,
which is another way that the government steals from you
over and over and over again, because it's what they do.
Government is never, never the solution. In ninety nine point
nine percent of the time, it is, in fact the problem.
This is why I don't like some of what's happening

(52:42):
with Donald Trump right now, because whatever problems he's solving
through government overreach are eventually going to become separate problems
that are going to be even bigger to clean up.
And nobody wants to talk about that fact. And that
is born out through history over and over and over
again if you pay attention, but they don't want you
paying attention. So yeah, I'm probably gonna get a lot

(53:02):
of flak for today's episode because I am not a
Trump cheerleader all the time. Now, when he gets things right,
I will tell you, But as far as I'm concerned
right now, he's overstepping a lot of stuff, and he
really is, because I don't I now. Again, on the
face of it, I have a huge issue with him
sending the National Guard into other cities and other states.
DC was a different thing. It was a clear cut case.

(53:25):
That is a federal territory. He has the ability to
do it now, depending on how they're doing it and
what the final legal framework for that decides to be.
I may or may not change my I may or
may not change my opinion on it once one it
actually starts happening, and two we get a look at
the legal framework they used to do it. But even
if it's legal, that doesn't necessarily mean in my opinion,
that it's right. I've said this before. What he needs

(53:50):
to do is go into these red states with blue
cities that are being run into the ground, get permission
from the red state governors to go in and clean
up those blue states that are killing the red state
stats when it comes to everything, and then look at
and then let all the blue states and blue cities
that are elsewhere look at this, going oh, we want
some of that. We want to be able to walk
down the street, we want things to be clean, we

(54:12):
want this, we want that. But the thing about it is,
ladies and gentlemen, and this is something that I have
had to come to terms with over the years. When
the Soviet Union was the Soviet Union. The streets were cleaned,
the trains ran, and there was no graffiti. There was
nothing as far as the stuff that you could see,
as far as the public stuff, but what was happening

(54:34):
below the surface. This is why law and order being
taken too far can still be a scary thing because
at some point it cannon may become authoritarianism, especially because,
in my estimation, based on the limited information that I

(54:54):
have right now, I believe that Donald Trump will be
overstepping his authority to send groups into Chicago and everywhere else. Now,
if red state governors are okay with it, and they
want those cities cleaned up, then that's exactly where you
should start. Because if the governors authorize the use of
the National Guard, then he's not stepping on anybody, and
there's not much the cities can do. If the governors say, hey,

(55:18):
your crime is out of control. We have a president
that wants to help you take care of that, so
we're going to let him do that, Because then you're
leading by example. You're doing it in the states that
you control, with the cities that have the biggest issues,
and you're showing the rest of the country that you're
not going to be a tenpot dictator and showing them
exactly what your plan is to clean up the rest
of the states, because I guarantee you at that point

(55:40):
people would probably start clamoring for it to be done.
But it's all about sending a message, and in my opinion,
not necessarily the right message. Yeah, well, that's probably the

(56:00):
only thing they'd gotten. But that's probably the only thing
they've gotten right off, that's past because yeah, that's that's
not the way it.

Speaker 15 (56:07):
Is here.

Speaker 1 (56:10):
Anyway. All Right, So, speaking of Chicago, you know that
whole narrative of there's not a problem in Chicago, we
don't need the president there, blah blah, blah blah blah. Well,
apparently a certain woman in Chicago has a different take
on that, and this is from our friends at town Hall.

Speaker 20 (56:31):
My first reaction was, this is a good thing.

Speaker 29 (56:35):
I think that the governor as well as the mayor
should be on board with it, just so we can
get a bit more of security in Chicago the way
do we need.

Speaker 9 (56:44):
The crime has dropped since twenty twenty four.

Speaker 10 (56:46):
Do you feel like the city it feels safer? No,
not at all. No, especially with the police being defunded.

Speaker 1 (56:55):
I would like to point out that is not an
awful that is not an affluent white female liberal, that
is not that is a person of color of the
female persuasion saying no, I don't feel any safer. But
there's a and we talked about this on this show
so many times. There's a reason the crime numbers are

(57:16):
going down. They're either refusing to charge, they're downgrading the charges,
or they don't even file reports at all. We talked
about this the other day. There was an incident where
and I don't remember what it was, it was like
a break in or something, and the police didn't even
because it got downgraded to just an incident. The police
didn't even take a report on it, so it never

(57:37):
went anywhere because of the cops were like, well, we're
now going to be able to press charges, we don't
need to take a report. And that's how they're cooking
the numbers. And they've been doing it for a while.
This isn't a new thing, especially in the leftist cities.
And that's the part that Gavin Newsom every time he

(57:58):
talks about, well, the five biggest stays with murder problems
are actually red. Yeah, but you're not talking about the
fact that in those deep red states are deep blue
pockets of citydom that run everything into the ground because
the blue cities and the blue states never worked for long.

(58:19):
My other favorite thing that we're gonna have to take
the break is this new narrative you know that's talking
about well, you know, this idea that if you tax
the ridge, they'll leave is just a misnomer. Have you
seen what's happening in California. Have you seen what's happening
in New York? Also, France would like a word, guys,
remember when they raised I think they raised their top
tax rate to like seventy five percent, and Gerard de

(58:41):
Purdue like moved across the border and was like, if
you how many other people that we didn't know the
name of did the same thing. Because they can and
they will. That's why Gavin Newsom started trying to make
it impossible for people to be able to leave by
passing a law that made it, you know, where they
were still respond I don't even remember what he did,

(59:01):
but I know he tried to pass a law where
something where they were still responsible for paying taxes for
so long in California even after they moved. If I
remember right, But anyway, we are up against the break,
going to have to take it now. Got one more
hour left with you today and then I'll be back
tonight pushing buttons for everybody else before we do the
Rick and Ordy thing at ten pm. And uh again,

(59:22):
I'll be running boards and pushing buttons from about seven
to night until about two or three in the morning,
So make sure you come back for that those times
they were forced eastern, but also make sure you hang
out for the hour. Again, I can't see the numbers,
so make sure you're sharing out the feed because last
I checked, we were doing really good, but I can't
see them. So I want them to keep going up
to make up for the fact that they're not going

(59:43):
to count towards my metrics today because I can't get
them in the system.

Speaker 5 (59:49):
Star at that.

Speaker 1 (59:58):
Hello, friends, you have a moment so that we may
discuss our Lord and Savior minarchy. No, seriously, I'm just kidding.

Speaker 30 (01:00:07):
Hi.

Speaker 1 (01:00:07):
My name is Rick Robinson. I am the general manager
of Klrnradio dot com. We are probably the largest independent
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little bit of everything, and by that, what I mean
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(01:00:29):
pretty much everything in between. So if you're looking for
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and our YouTube channels under the same names. We can
also find us at klrnradio dot com and pretty much
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(01:00:50):
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Speaker 10 (01:02:40):
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Speaker 13 (01:03:56):
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
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Speaker 14 (01:04:16):
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Speaker 12 (01:04:18):
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And they'll spend those scripts of the needle in the style.

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They say, tell something and okay, see he's.

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Calling it out with my gatto.

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This is in a whole lot of clouds. This is
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Dude is freak up and feel what we feel.

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He's breaking Tell the noise, he's cutting through the lights
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We gets on the line and colors on deck keeps
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DC tends us to get the baby coffee rings up
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De Mocra say there's a Ray Brother Sun Show, a
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Truth talks, upping like a wistic Gray from the Plane
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For the people.

Speaker 5 (01:07:48):
Talk that's rail the way, can the Sun show when
we say what we feel?

Speaker 1 (01:08:03):
Well back into Robinson show. You know what though, it
is Chat Lives Matter Day and you know what time
it is?

Speaker 26 (01:08:14):
Guess what day it is?

Speaker 20 (01:08:16):
Ah, anybody, it.

Speaker 13 (01:08:18):
Is Wednesday in my days again.

Speaker 1 (01:08:25):
Also known as Chatlabs Maatterday. Here on kalurradio dot com,
I am Rick Robinson with you for the next hour
before I come back tonight and do this thing all
over again. Started at seven pm Eastern, pushing buttons first
for inquiry, then the Conservative Badger Radio show at eight
pm Eastern, then myself and Amish at nine pm Eastern,
Olympic and already show eleven pm Eastern. We should have
the edge of liberty. Actually, I'm sorry, hang on, I
forgot about somebody. Uh So ten pm Eastern is me

(01:08:48):
and the Amish for nine pm Eastern should be behind them.
Me lines with Jean and Ross, and we'll be over
on the Boon of the Week channel to get that
one done. Then we'll be coming back over here for
Rick and Orty. Then we'll go over to where shr
Media friends and hang out with Sean for an hour
over the Edge of Liberty before we do the replay
of bz's a live show from last night. So our

(01:09:11):
closing act for tonight will of course be Bz's perserve
bobcatsle in one way or the other and make sure
you welly up to the bar. All right anyway, So
I think I've pimped everything I'm supposed to. I think, well, yeah,
because we've got the h the freedom Chat studio thing
is going underneath, so we should probably talk about them
real quick because I having it today. So freedom Chat

(01:09:32):
thinks signal but better. So you have the ability to
make sure that your message is only stay for as
long as you want to set them for. You also
have the ability to set it where nobody can do
screen captures of your messages and it's a completely secure,
private way to do it. Much unlike other social media platforms,
you are not the product that is important because with

(01:09:54):
everything else, you are usually the product in one form
or another with with freedom Chat, they just want to
give you the free them to do exactly that they
want you to get. To give you the freedom to chat,
to build a community of like minded people that you
can converse with, to find people that agree with you
or go along with you, or even people that you
disagree with that are at least being civil about it.
So that's what freedom chat is all about. So if

(01:10:15):
you would like to go check them out, you do
have the ability to do so. We'll make it easy
for you real quick, and just do this right here
as soon as I figure out where I hit it,
because it's been a minute. So you can scan that
little QR code right there if you're watching us live,
and it'll take you straight to their website. Now. It
is at based only for right now, so you can
either put it on your phone, whether you have an

(01:10:35):
Android or an Apple check it out today. We do
have so far. We have a Klin Radio channel, we
have a Rick Robinson Joe channel. I haven't started building
any of the other ones, and I am encouraging my
folks to set up additional channels for shows that they
have there and we'll see what we can do there.
But I do encourage you guys to check it out
because they are kind enough to help us keep things

(01:10:55):
running so that you guys can have content like this
and all the other things that we do. Anyway, so
I do want to talk about this real quick, kind
of as a well, a bit of a fun thing,
because I know I've been ranty a lot lately and
I found this earlier today and I was like, dude,
I actually like this, probably more than I should. But

(01:11:16):
so this is one of those things. It's a real
that I found on Facebook, but also found it on
X because it's easier, So I figured that was going
to happen. Let's watch this together. I'm not even going
to tell you what it is first, I'm just gonna
play it.

Speaker 14 (01:12:00):
D fucking plan.

Speaker 2 (01:12:06):
I hit the sack too long time. Yeah, I'm glad
to be back.

Speaker 31 (01:12:15):
Let loose breaking the news, hanging no bit.

Speaker 17 (01:12:22):
I can't know.

Speaker 20 (01:12:25):
Looking at the.

Speaker 31 (01:12:26):
Sky gives me hat A gets the worst because I
never last can gives abusing everyone for a while, same
brown Backingpat, I'm backeting Impato.

Speaker 1 (01:13:00):
So yeah, try to go back here and hit the
wrong one, all right. Anyway, So yeah, that was what
if A C ADC was a was a funk band.
I found that today, and I will freely admit I
liked that little more than I probably should have because
I don't know it. It was cool. It was cool,

(01:13:23):
so I wanted to share it because I know lately
I've been talking about a bunch of things that are
like cranky. But yeah, so look, I think I think Chicago.
I think the mayor of Chicago, I think the mayor
of Yeah, the governor of Illinois. I think they're out
of touch with their own people. But let's talk about
this together, because this headline caught my attention and I

(01:13:45):
hadn't really paid attention to the article yet. So let's
find out together how I feel about this. So this
is from Leah Burkas over at town Hall. Trump administration
to take control of union stations again, taking control of things.
Not sure how I feel about this. The Trump administration
on Wednesday announced it is taking control over the management

(01:14:06):
of Union Station in Washington, d c amid the crackdown
on crime in the nation's capital. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy's
announcements came as he joined Amtrak leaders to celebrate the
launch of new Accella trains. With these new Asselate train sets,
Amtrak will provide more reliable service and lower prices for
the American people, all while increasing the organization's profitability. There

(01:14:30):
is Amtrak is not profitable, never has been, probably never
will be, Duffy said in a statement. But we're not
stopping there. Instead of being a point of pride, Washington's
Union Station has fallen into disrepair. By reclaiming station management,
we will help make this city safe and beautiful at
a fraction of the cost. So again, I'm not sure

(01:14:50):
how I feel about this. Let's watch this together. I'm
not sure I voted for this. It will take me
a second. Now. If he's right about that, I will
admit I didn't know, and I'll be fact checking it

(01:15:12):
while he's talking, because I don't think you guys were
able to hear this yet. But according to him, Union
Station is owned by a Department of Transportation, So I'll
be fact checking this in a moment. Give me just
a second here, Let's do that ex because it makes

(01:15:36):
it look more normal. And I don't have my name
in the corner, so I should have set that up earlier.

Speaker 30 (01:15:43):
And a station is frankly owned by DOT we are
going to take DOT from our partners back under DOT control,
and we are going to make the investments to make
sure that this station isn't dirty, that we don't have
homelessness in the In Union Station, we want a place
where businesses want to obtain leases and set up shop

(01:16:08):
and serve the community of DC but also the people
that travel into d C via train. But also we
want just if you're out, you want to go for
a great meal, you want to go shopping, you want
to come to Union Station because it's gorgeous, it's beautiful,
it's safe, it's a great experience.

Speaker 2 (01:16:27):
That's what we want to do for Union Station.

Speaker 1 (01:16:30):
So okay, So I did just check. It looks like
the DOT has owned Union Station since the eighties. So
I don't know. I still don't I don't know how
I feel about this. I feel like government seizing things
is bad now. And now I admit this apparently happened

(01:16:53):
in the eighties, and I missed the memo somewhere because
I was like at the minimum seven So you know,
seven to seventeen is the timeframe that I was existing
in the eighties, so it's not a surprise. I didn't
really know the answer till I looked, But I don't know. Again,
Federal District of Columbia completely different animal, So I guess

(01:17:17):
I will have to wait and see. But again, not
really sure how I feel about this. So again today
and well the last few days has been more of
a mixed bag for me. So let's get into the
article a little bit here. I actually think there's another clip.
Hang on, let's do that instead. I didn't realize there
was another one, So sorry, my mouse is being crazy.

(01:17:43):
It keeps trying to make me go forward when I'm
trying to expand the clip. I'm not trying to do that.
I'm just trying to make I'm trying to ebig and
not fast forward.

Speaker 26 (01:17:53):
Stop it, stop it.

Speaker 1 (01:17:56):
Mcglitcherson thop it all right, yeah, yeah, there it goes. Okay,
of course, now you're not gonna play. Why does everything
got to be?

Speaker 15 (01:18:29):
Uh?

Speaker 5 (01:18:30):
You know what can people expect the changes to be?

Speaker 2 (01:18:32):
So?

Speaker 32 (01:18:32):
First off, DOT owns Union Station, and we've had a
lot of partners that we've sub leased.

Speaker 2 (01:18:37):
To or we've leased to.

Speaker 5 (01:18:39):
We're gonna take it back and we're going to drive
out the homelessness.

Speaker 32 (01:18:41):
We're going to drive out the crime and we are
going to I think bring in more retailers. I think
more customers go to be better revenue. And again, this
is our capital city. It should be beautiful. And the
President wants a beautiful capital. I want a beautiful capital.
And so this plan is gonna make Union Station present
the presence vision of what America cannon should look like.

Speaker 5 (01:19:03):
Well, Secretary Jeffy okay.

Speaker 1 (01:19:06):
So again, bearing in mind that apparently the entirety of
Union Station is owned by Department of Francy Predation, I
guess I will be on the fence for this one
for a while. Still really don't know how I feel
about it, if I'm just being honest. So this is
from Eric Doherty on X Breaking. President Trump assumes full

(01:19:28):
control of Washington, DC's Union Station due to safety concerns,
taking it away from Amtrak and extending his authority over
the nation's capital and restoring order. So I don't usually
do this, but since I am a VFP member, let's
take a look at the comments in here and see
what they're thinking. Union Station is a magnificent building in
need of a good cleaning. The cleanup in DC in

(01:19:50):
general and now planned for Union Station brings us to
the elephant in the room the ongoing mental health crisis
in America, which leads to vagrancy, crime, and blight. There
is a tremendous need for an improved mental health system
in this nation. The DC cleanup, along with going after
criminal elements, will bring obvious local benefits, but we need
to stop dancing around this issue and have RFK Junior

(01:20:14):
and his HHS find a new approach to attack the
problems of mental illness and addiction. Okay, so I don't
know so far. From what I could see, most of
the comments were positive. I will say this, and I've
said this for a while as somebody that used to
chase bad guys for a living, I think pretty much
everything as far as illegal substances just need not necessarily legalized,

(01:20:38):
but at least decriminalized so that we can change the
point of attack on these things. We need to be
giving people that have addiction problems away out of them,
not making them live in the shadows, and not making
them ashamed of the fact that they have a different
difference in their physiology than a lot of us do,

(01:20:58):
because that's the truth of it. Now, I admit that
is probably to a lot of you going to sound
a lot like a leftist position, but that is also
why I try to be as minile of the road
as possible. And I say this from personal experience. I've
had family members who have faced addition. I've had family
members that I've had to watch them hit complete rock
bottom and then eventually pull themselves back up again, all

(01:21:20):
because nobody really knew how to help them because of
their addictive personality disorders. And that's a thing. Addiction is
a mental illness. Addiction is a problem. It's not just weakness.
There's something that there's something different with these people's genetics,
and we're not talking about that. And sometimes it's people

(01:21:41):
that have other mental health issues. And I found this
out with one of my family members that they were
self medicating because the pills that the doctors wanted to
put them on had such a stigma attached to them.
They didn't want anybody to know, even though they had
been diagnosed and told if you start taking these, you'll
probably start feeling better. They chose other means to self medicate.

(01:22:02):
And I guarantee you that's probably happening a lot more
than any of us want to admit. Because we have
this huge stigma when it comes to mental health in
this country, and we have for a long time. That's
part of what needs to change. I think I don't
know how to change it. I don't even know the
first part in trying to tackle it because of the
stigma that is with it. You know, Oh, you're off

(01:22:25):
your rocker, Oh you're looney tunes, you're insane. Let's put
them in the rubber room. Where's the Hugby jacket, where's
the net? Those are all things that have all been
talked about with people with mental health issues, and the
fact that we still just expect them to be able
to take it when we don't seem to understand that
part of their processing is broken in some way, so

(01:22:48):
they don't have the coping mechanisms, though a lot of
us have. And it doesn't matter if you throw them
into the deep end of society or not, they're not
going to be able to swim because they don't have
the coping mechanisms. We don't have the ability to laugh
things off, and let's face it, most of us really
don't have that ability anyway we pretend we do to
the outside world, because that's a coping mechanism. Don't let

(01:23:11):
them see that what they said just hurt.

Speaker 8 (01:23:13):
You.

Speaker 1 (01:23:13):
Don't let them see how much you feel inadequate on
the inside, because we all do, and anybody who tells
you they don't, or at least that they haven't in
their lives, is lying to you, because everybody's gone through that.
The first time you stand up and talk in front
of a school class, you're probably feeling rather inadequate, especially

(01:23:34):
if it's the first time you've ever done it. The
first time somebody points out that you have an accent
that's different from theirs, you're probably feeling a little self conscious.
For most of us, we eventually figure out how to
cope with those things whatever. But for some of these people,
they don't have that mechanism that says no, it's just whatever. No.

(01:23:56):
They talk about the guy that I played in the
beginning of the show that was like, I've been thinking
about this, and I've been dreaming about it, and this
is a different kind of American than I grew up in.
If you are constantly ruminating on something, you don't have
the coping mechanisms really to take care of it, because
if you can't put it aside for five minutes, something's wrong.

(01:24:18):
If you can't go, you know, stretch your legs, go
touch grass, whatever you gotta do to get whatever is
vexing you out of your head, then you probably have
a problem. Whether it's a short term problem or a
long term problem, I don't really know. But for this
idea that everybody should be able to get over it,
that doesn't work for everybody. I wish it did. Yeah,

(01:24:46):
that too. I mean there's the option of usually, especially
if it's a kid, sending them to a psychologist or something,
and then it never goes on their record. And unfortunately,
because even sometimes going as a psychologist doesn't really help
because I'll a lot of times the kids that are
going through that stuff, because there is all this negative connotation,
they don't want anybody to know they're going to counseling.
They don't want anybody to know that you know this,

(01:25:08):
that and the other. Not to mention the fact that
if you are actually diagnosed with something like that, you
can't just go to a psychologist at that point, you
have to go to a psychiatrist because psychologists can't subscribe,
ers can't prescribe drugs, and there's this whole, you know,
big negative connotation with psychiatry that this country has had

(01:25:31):
for a very long time, partly because of the former
machoess of our society. And I'm not necessarily saying that
I disagree with that one hundred percent, but I am
saying as a guy. And there's a guy who just
a few short years ago, nearly you know, decided to
blow my head off with a shotgun after I realized

(01:25:52):
my ex wife was leaving me. Mental health is a
big deal, and the only reason I'm still here is
because I am one of those people that was able
to eventually process it get myself through it. And I
was going to counseling for a while until I realized

(01:26:13):
that because I'm usually the one of that counsels everybody
else in my circle, that I was telling that I
was being told the same thing by this counselor that
I've already had trained to tell everybody else. So it's
kind of like, why am I paying you to hear
the things that I tell everybody else. I just need
to get over it and move on, and I did eventually.
It trusts me, some days are still worse than others.
It's been five years our what would have been our

(01:26:34):
twenty second wedding anniversary was yesterday, and I was dreading
it for weeks because every anniversary up till now I've
just felt completely blah. This one sucked, but not nearly
as bad because I realized it's pretty much just another
day now. She's already moved on, she's remarried. I haven't

(01:26:57):
because I have no interest in pursuing anything like that
right now. I've tried a couple of times, it didn't
work out, and I just don't have the interest. I
don't care anymore. I'd rather just focus on everything else
than I'm doing. And that's just pretty much where I'm
going to live for a while. I'm fifty two years old,
I've been married twice, I have kids, I have grandkids.

(01:27:18):
I don't. I don't need somebody in my life like that.
I thought I did because for the long but that's
just it. And that's one of the things that I
was kicking myself about because I was always kind of
a loner when I was a kid, and then I
learned not to be a loner. I'm having to kind
of learn how to do that again because I don't.
I didn't like, you know, having I don't necessarily have

(01:27:39):
an empty house because two of my kids still stay
with me and probably will for until they decided to
figure out how to do things on their own. I'm
not because you know, you guys, some of you know
the stories, some of you don't. But at the same time,
you know there were still times when at the end
of the night, you know, my room is empty, and

(01:27:59):
I don't you know, bed was empty, And I wasn't
used to that anymore after so long, because we were
married for going on eighteen years when she left, and
together for twenty three when she left. Most of my
life I've spent with this person. So trust me when

(01:28:23):
I tell you that even those of us that think
we have our mental health in order can be can
still be thrown a curveball that nearly undoes all of it.
So when you see these people on the streets and
you see these people that are struggling, just remember that
they're but for the grace of God, because that's the
truth of it. And I'm not saying that we have

(01:28:48):
to be bleeding heart liberal hippies about it, but we
need to start figuring out where we're going to spend
our money. Are we going to spend our money to
lock these people into prison, because that's what happens to
me of them. They go into the prison system. And
if you think the prison system anymore is designed for rehabilitation,
I got another thing for you, because it's not. Almost

(01:29:10):
everybody that goes into prison don't ever come out better. Now,
there are exceptions that prove the rule. I'm not saying
there aren't. Well, I have a couple in my own
family that went in for those very things and came
out and figured out how to put their lives back together.
So I'm not saying it's impossible, but I'm saying, shouldn't
there be a different path for these people that we
know have some sort of a mental issue that is

(01:29:32):
causing them to self medicate, or that don't have coping
skills because for whatever reason, their brain can't form those connections.
Because I don't think that the medication that we prescribe
all the time is necessarily the good the best thing either,
because some of those things, once you start taking them,

(01:29:52):
you can't ever stop. And then what's worse is with
our system if it's somebody that's close to falling off
the as far as socioeconomically, and the government is in
charge of making sure they get those medications. There's sometimes two, three,
four five days out of the time that they run
out of the pills, and it takes them forever to
be able to get them back because takes forever for
their prescriptions to be filled. So what happens for those two, three,

(01:30:15):
four five days that their brain is no longer being
chemically regulated by these pills. They go into these spirals
and they deal with all the things. And again, I
am I have some psychological training, but I am not
a psychologist. I am not a psychiatrist, and I don't

(01:30:38):
try to be one. But I do think we need
to spend more time teaching people that don't have them
to have coping skills. And we can't always just do
it the way we used to do it, because how
we used to get talk coping skills was being tossed

(01:30:59):
into the deep end of life and see if we
could swim, how my parents did it, how their parents
did it, how their parents did it. But as mental
health issues apparently are becoming more prevalent, we're going to
have to either figure out what's causing that and address it,
or change how we make sure people have coping skills.

(01:31:20):
For the people that don't have the same regulatory abilities
that some of us have. And that's my mental health
thought for the moment when we come back, since we're
into the final segment, I do have something else that
I want to play, because you know it's again one
of the things that I've put out on XT today
was for anybody who wants to be a hyphenated American

(01:31:41):
and scream about reparations, you should just be requesting a
free ticket back to where you came, where your ancestors
came from, and go see what life's like over there.
That goes for the muzzies too, and I've got a
clip about that on the other side of the break.
So say to them, what is it you la?

Speaker 5 (01:32:29):
What's going on here?

Speaker 12 (01:32:30):
You've got the Sister four total control?

Speaker 20 (01:32:34):
Now is it really?

Speaker 1 (01:32:35):
Everybody out there?

Speaker 20 (01:32:37):
Now watch your suffer because you can't go.

Speaker 2 (01:32:40):
What is it really that is in your head?

Speaker 20 (01:32:44):
What it alive that you hades?

Speaker 27 (01:32:46):
God love me?

Speaker 20 (01:32:48):
No one to taken, no, no, just one.

Speaker 14 (01:32:51):
It's like one world you man got it, No man.

Speaker 2 (01:32:56):
I got.

Speaker 27 (01:33:02):
I got you that day?

Speaker 14 (01:33:07):
What is it really motivate you? The sky or the
sphere stop and you realize you look at the rest
down to your trial.

Speaker 26 (01:33:20):
That was.

Speaker 2 (01:33:24):
You get the side of what your God they were
green shows here.

Speaker 20 (01:33:30):
Now the world know, God, somebody.

Speaker 15 (01:33:38):
Did that day?

Speaker 1 (01:33:44):
The vote.

Speaker 14 (01:33:48):
You stish footish like the world.

Speaker 27 (01:34:14):
What is it really when the falling out for farned?

Speaker 20 (01:34:21):
No, I mean I want to take care for now.
This is what it's like when the world can. I
thought you read you then got stuck that day and am.

Speaker 14 (01:34:41):
Ready day.

Speaker 2 (01:34:47):
You got.

Speaker 20 (01:34:50):
That day and the moti.

Speaker 1 (01:35:02):
Yeah, and welcome back into the final segment of the

(01:35:23):
Chatlabs Matter Day Edition otherwise known as hump Day Edition
of the Rick Robinson Show, live right here on klin
Radio dot com. So, speaking of hyphenated Americans, I'm really
getting tired of folks that you know are predominantly propped
up by Islamist members of our communities basically saying that
their people are here not to assimilate but to colonize

(01:35:46):
and somebody else. It looks a lot different than me.
Put a not too fine a point on all of
it right here. So let's watch this. Mohammed gesus, I'm
forgetting to do something. That's what I forgot to do.

(01:36:07):
Oh man, I like this song better. I wish I
would have had that one cut all right anyway, all right,
So back in what I was trying to do before
I got distracted by shiny hang on Shaney, shiny.

Speaker 26 (01:36:21):
Shiny Mohammad, Jesus. Mohammed said, kill the infidel. Jesus said,
love your enemies, Mohammad said. Before he died. Mohammad said,
may Allah, curse the Jews and the Christians. Jesus before
he dies said, Father, forgive them, for they don't know
what they do. Mohammed owned slaves and them. Jesus honored
women and covered them. Mohammad the woman caught an adultery,

(01:36:41):
stone her to death. Jesus the woman caught an adulteres
said neither do I condemn you. Go and see no more.
Mohammad literally commands men that they can beat their wives up.
Jesus commands men to love their wives. So when you
compare the founders, I know you were like, you know,
interpretation of stuff. Forget the Koran, forget the Bible. Let's
compare the founders of the religion. Your Mohammed in a
span of ten years, started seventy three wars in raids.

(01:37:04):
My Jesus in the span of thirty three years his
whole life, not one war was started. In fact, when
his disciples wanted to destroy a city for rejected him,
Jesus rebuked them. When Peter picked up the sword, Jesus said,
those who lived by the sword would die by the swords.
So let's compare founders for a moment. Your founder is
not my founder. My founder is a God of love, peace,
prospective you, we're not the same. The Muslims want Sharia law.

Speaker 33 (01:37:27):
That's the Mowslims wanting Sharia law to reign in the West.
And you can listen to is it called imam's You
can listen to the leaders of brotherhoods saying that we
will not stop until Islam is in every home and
every child. I've heard imams say we don't care about
the parents, but we are coming for the children, and
children will become Muslim.

Speaker 26 (01:37:48):
We're immigrants, like I'm a refugee. I literally we came legally, obviously,
but I love immigration in the right way. When I
moved from Egypt to Australia, I was so grateful for
my country. I love my count We have an Australian
flag in our office. Why we're telling people the country
that accepted me and took me.

Speaker 12 (01:38:05):
And I love it.

Speaker 26 (01:38:06):
I'm grateful for it. I'm blessing it. I'm bringing my
skill here. But what a lot of Muslims do when
they move to America is they don't love the country.
They hate the country. I was literally in an uber
on the way here, and the uber was a Muslim man.
His name is Muhammed, and he was complaining to me
how bad it is to live in America. I'm like,
where you're from? He's like, Pakistan. I'm like, why are
you here? Like why are you complaining about the country

(01:38:28):
that you're in?

Speaker 1 (01:38:28):
Like, it's the thing.

Speaker 26 (01:38:30):
I was like to him, why you're here here? Was like, Oh,
I'm moving with my family for a better future. I'm like, so,
so you're telling me you left Pakistan because you don't
like the way you live there, you don't like Islam there,
and you move to America only to hate America. And
this is the problem. I love immigration, but if you're
going to migrate to a country, you better love your country.
You better bless your country. You better wave the American
flag here, don't go around burning the flag. And I said,

(01:38:51):
differ between an immigrant and an enemy. An immigrant seeks
refuge and enemy wants to destroy the country, all.

Speaker 1 (01:38:58):
Right, So I don't think I could put that any better.
And I know it started out with religious undertones, but
I wondered you guys to hear the whole thing, because
this is the point that I'm trying to make today.
I don't give a shit if you're an American citizen.
If you're screaming for reparations and still talking about how
bad slavery was over two hundred years ago, when we've
done everything we could try to do to end it
and are still trying to make sure that people come

(01:39:18):
here legally and they're not, you know, manipulated and sold,
sold into human trafficking and sold into sex, slaver rings
and everything else, then you need to shut up, and
you need to just go Hey, you know I'm gonna
use the CBP one app. Can I just get it?
Can I get a plane ticket to go back to
Europe or wherever my ancestors were, and see if they'll
give you the free ticket in one thousand dollars and

(01:39:40):
get the hell out. I don't care anymore if you're
not here to make the country a better place. If
you're not here because you love the country. If you're
not here to become part of America's rich tapestry, we
don't want you here, We don't need you here. If
all you're gonna do is focus on all the bad
when in reality, if it wasn't for Western culture, the

(01:40:00):
world would be speaking German right now, or German Japanese
or a combination thereof. Then I got nothing for you
other than contempt. And if you can't understand that, there's
no reason that people that are twenty generations removed from
the end of slavery should be being held accountable for
the people that were slaveholders at the time, especially when

(01:40:22):
there were slaveholders in America of every race, creed, and color.
And they don't talk about that either. Some of the
first slaves that were brought over to the American continent
were white, they were Irish. Nobody talks about that fact.
And you know what, if you're of Irish descent and
you're trying to point that out, they start calling you
racist because, well, you don't understand because it might have

(01:40:43):
happened to you, but it happened on a much bigger
scale to these people. You know why it happened on
a much bigger scale. To these people because they came
from a savage fucking country that everybody there were tribes
of each other that were war with one another, much
like what we found here, and the ones that lost
got put in k Now, everybody in Oklahoma's freaking out
because the guy that's in charge of our education, Ryan Walters,

(01:41:07):
wants everybody listening to some stuff that talks about how
you know, maybe this leaves didn't have it so bad
after all, well, considering the options they had were either
to be raped and murdered by the tribes that captured them,
or to be put in cages and sent over here,
or eventually their ancestors had a much better life than
they did. I'm sorry if that hurts your feelings, but

(01:41:28):
is anybody is anybody ever bothered to ask the descendants
of these people that were enslaved? Would you have preferred
that your ancestors were raped and murdered? Not that it
didn't happen here, But think about this from another perspective.
How many people that are here right now in America

(01:41:50):
wouldn't even exist today because you know, and this is
coming from somebody who has friends that I have known
that have come from Africa and they find it so
humorous when they come here and they hear about on
the news media. African Americans. Why do they call themselves

(01:42:11):
that they're not from Africa, They're from here. You know
what we call our ancestors at home losers because they
lost and we ship them out of the country. This
is the point that I'm trying to make. Sometimes the
truth hurts your feelings, and that is just that. That's

(01:42:33):
just how it is. Sometimes the truth hurts your feelings.
I have been through things in my life that make
me different than other people. I have an eye that
doesn't pay attention to what I wanted to pay attention to.
Half the time, it's hard for me to walk. I
have nerve damage, I have all these things that cause
me pain every single day. But I have still toughed
it out every single day. And I have worked almost

(01:42:55):
every day in my life in one form or another,
in some cases harder than other people have had to
work because of my issues. And I could complain about it,
I could whine about it. I could bitch that life
isn't fair. What good would that serve? What difference would

(01:43:15):
that make? And that's just it. There's this entire outrage
culture that we've built in this country that has now
become a pay for play situation. Outrage ink is a thing.
There are people of color that have built their entire persona,

(01:43:39):
their entire livelihood out of the idea that they're going
to make things better for modern day people of color,
because there's still odd things from things that happened twenty
even as much as two or three generations ago. Had
somebody point out earlier today, well you're talking about this,
but Jim Crow stopped in the sixties, So what how

(01:44:00):
many years ago was that we're headed towards half a
century from that stuff being stopped. How long are we
going to keep holding people accountable for these things, especially
when most of the people that were involved in it
aren't even alive anymore. You guys don't hold Joe Biden
accountable for his love of Jim Crow. You voted for him,
for God's sake. Dude was an original segregationist. I quote.

(01:44:23):
I don't want my children being having to go to
school in a racial jungle. That does not sound like
somebody who's enlightened but Rick, but Rick he changed, he grew.
So you're telling me that in sixty years, most of
the rest of us didn't do that too. I mean,

(01:44:44):
I'm not gonna lie. My dad and granddad were kind
of racist. I didn't know it at the time. When
I was a kid, I had no idea, especially my granddad,
because that was how he grew up. I didn't pay
attention to it. When I was a kid. He's going
around talking about koons, this, that, and the other. I'm
thinking raccoons. I didn't know what he was talking about.

(01:45:06):
But when my granddad passed away, oh what seven eight
years ago, he was almost one hundred years old. He
grew up at an entirely different time. We have tried
to put these things behind us. We have tried to
move past them. It is rage, ink that is not
letting it happen because they need you guys mad, They

(01:45:27):
need you upset about what happened, when in reality, it's
been mostly us trying to get rid of the crap.
They tell you it's them. But again, for anybody who
may be listening to me, that's of the leftist persuasion.
I would like to remind you that the Democrats have
run the city of DC for over fifty years. Did

(01:45:54):
they make anything better for the people of color? Their
Have they done anything to fix the housing situation? Have
they learned anything to get rid of one of the
highest wage gaps in the country between whites and bipocs.
Because they haven't in over fifty years. They've made a
lot of lip service to it. They've passed laws that
were supposed to do it. But we kind of got

(01:46:15):
to the secret of that when we played the clip
from the California House earlier today. They listen to the
voters to get things passed, and then they don't fund
them because they don't really want them. The same people
that are telling you your voice matters, the same people
that are telling you that we should be doing everything

(01:46:37):
by the popular vote. The same people that are telling
you that they want to give you a voice are
the same ones that give you a voice on the
front end and take it away on the back end,
over and over and over again. Meanwhile, we're the ones
trying to clean up the mess over and over and
over again. But because of the fickleness of the American
people and because of the vast left leaning media army,

(01:47:02):
we usually get it. We usually get a shot to
do it at about two years at a time. And
because the Republicans still haven't figured out how to message
well enough. Based on what I'm seeing right now, there's
a decent chance they may lose in the midterms again,
because there is no way with Democrats in Congress being
as unpopular as they are, that the person that's running

(01:47:25):
against Winsome Seers for governor should be ahead of the
polls right now.

Speaker 15 (01:47:29):
Now.

Speaker 1 (01:47:29):
Is it gonna stay that way? I don't know. But
it also there's no reason that the Iowa House shouldn't
have lost it super majority last night, but it did.
Didn't lose its majority, but it did lose its super majority,
but it happened. So I don't know. So all I

(01:47:50):
can tell all I can tell you guys. Even though
for me this week and the week before have been
a mixed bag, I still would prefer the guys that
are in charge right now to remain in charge, especially
if we can keep getting the ball moved in the
right direction. The problem with our side is they want
to move it in inches. We want to move it
one hundred yards at a time with Hill Mary's and
just get it all done. That can't always work, and

(01:48:13):
it doesn't work, not every time, So we need to
be serious start picking up the phone. Call your congress critters,
call your senators and be like, why are we not
working on this? Why are we not working on this?
Why are we not working on this? Call it the
head of the GOP and whatever state you live in,

(01:48:34):
and be like, whatever midterm elections we've got coming up,
are you guys funding them? How are you funding them?
Where can we see it? How can we help do
the same thing at the national level. What are you
guys doing for some of these campaigns that we're already
seeing start to slip the other way? Where's your funding?
Where's your ground game? How can we help? You can't

(01:48:55):
just assume that they're going to do the right thing
all the time. For those those of you who are parents,
you should understand exactly what I'm talking about, because if
you just kick your kids loose every day and don't
keep up with what they're doing, eventually life is going
to buy them and you and the butt. Same thing
with the GOP. Even if you agree with him ninety
nine percent of the time, you still better repairing attention,

(01:49:15):
and you still better stay on top of them. That's
just the truth of it, all right. So we've got
one more story that I want to get into. Well, actually,
I take that back. The news cycle has hit me again,

(01:49:35):
so there's something else that I have to go over
instead of the other story that I wanted to get into.
But when it happens, we kind of have to happen,
have to do it, So hang on, all right. So

(01:50:10):
we have a breaking news update. Apparently there was an
active shooter opening fire at a Minneapolis church, hitting multiple victims.
Most recent update shows about twenty victims have been reported
so far, but no official numbers on fatalities. Shooter was
confirmed dead of a self and inflicted gunshot wound, according
to law enforcement. FBI Director Cash Ptel responded to the
school shooting, FBI agents our own scene, and we ask

(01:50:31):
everyone to keep potential victims, civilians or law enforcement and
harm's way in your prayers. President Donald Trump, at a
post on truth Social said he had been fully briefed
on the tragic shooting in Minneapolis, Minnesota. The White House
will continue to monitor the terrible situation. He added. So, yeah,
so this happened apparently at around eight thirty am Eastern time,

(01:50:54):
I guess, and somehow I completely missed it. So that's
why we're doing the update on it. I don't know, Hi,
I missed because I had like four different news channels on,
so that's surprising to me. But yeah, so, so just
wanted to go over that real quick. There's been an
update to the Minneapolis church shooting and so far there
are at least twenty victims. More information available when we

(01:51:15):
have it here at KLARM Radio as well as the
digital beak in US news. All right, so let's take
a look at one other thing. Is there a two
state solution in California? Honestly, I think it should be
a four state solution. But Leah Burkis asked this question

(01:51:35):
in response to Democrats' plans to redraw congressional maps in California.
The state's top Republican in the Assembly is expected to
propose a two state solution during the Wednesday press conference.
The people of inland California have been overlooked for too
long Assembly when James Gallagher is said in a statement,
it's time for a two state solution. The proposed map
would split California between the coastal democratic areas from a

(01:51:59):
public leaning inland parts of the state. Gallagher's resolution responds
to Sacramento's attempt to permanently redraw California congressional maps and
act he says would silence rule votes and rigged the
political system forever, according to the press release, So that's
the question of the day is this is not the
first time efforts have been undertaken to divide this date,

(01:52:22):
as the San Francisco Standard reports from Southern California as
eighteen fifty secession attempt, to the nineteen forty one State
of Jefferson movement, to venture capitalist Tim Drape six California
Plan in twenty thirteen, the collapse of CAL three initiative
in twenty eighteen, to the short lived New California movement
the same year. Golden state partition schemes have a long

(01:52:46):
track record of spectacular failure. And it's funny because Almos
brought this one up the other day, the plan of
the Jefferson State Plan of nineteen forty one. It's funny,
how is that one was picking up momentum and everybody
thought it was going to happen all of a sudden
where it or now? I don't know how many states

(01:53:09):
it should be, but I do firmly believe that one
California is way too damn big. I've always thought that
there is absolutely no reason that one state should take
up that much geography, especially when they're doing everything they
can to stifle everybody else but the Blue cities. That's
that's just wrong, in my opinion, absolutely one wrong. So

(01:53:36):
I do firmly believe that this should be a thing.
But yeah, should there be what do you guys think
in the chat or on X? Should there be a
two state solution in California? Just at me, at Rowdy
Rick or the network. I came on radio. Even if
you're listening later, I will respond to a later time,
even if it happens after the broadcast is over, I'll
usually usually I respond to X as much as I can.

(01:54:02):
All right, there was Oh yeah, let's take a look
at this. Hang on, all right, hang on fighting with

(01:54:29):
the system here. It's not a very long clip, but
we're gonna play it first and then discuss. So hang on.

Speaker 29 (01:54:48):
We have seen this before, and that's why my European
friends told me before Trump was elected not to make
fun of what was happening, to take very serious what
was happening, because they've had recent skirmishes with fascism. They
know the impact of fascism, and this guy is definitely

(01:55:10):
a fascist and embraces that and will sew divisions in
this country that we can will take a long time
to mend.

Speaker 1 (01:55:23):
All Right, So, for those of you who don't know,
that's the FED chair that Donald Trump fired and is
refusing to leave. Wonder why. So this will be an
interesting thing because I expect this to wind up going
to the Supreme Court for them to ultimately decide whether
the Chief Executive has the ability to fire people that

(01:55:45):
are part of the Federal Reserve governing border, even the
FED Chair. If they say no, this removes the federal
guys of all of this from the equation, in my opinion,
and we need to start acting a awordingly because the
Federal Reserve has always been a terrible idea. Look at

(01:56:05):
what's happened to our money since we've established it. Now,
I will admit, in today's climate, we are still one
of the most prosperous countries on the planet. But I
remember when our money was worth something. As a matter
of fact, in the sixties, when minimum wage was a
dollar and a quarter an hour, if you were paid

(01:56:27):
in five silver quarters in today's money, you were being
paid thirty one in today's money. Based on the silver
value of those coins alone, you were getting thirty one
dollars a ninety cents an hour. We don't have a
wage problem in this country. We have a money problem
in this country because our money isn't worth anything anymore.

(01:56:49):
And they did it on purpose. This is part of
what I still have not been able to make anybody understand.
If you look at a genda twenty one and then
eventually what became imagenda twenty thirty, these people are wanting
to devalue everything because it makes it easier for them
to swoop in and clean it up. When everything collapses,

(01:57:10):
the folks that want to take everything over can step in,
be the saviors and be like, well, this didn't work,
so we're going to do this instead. Then they're going
to try to centralize everything. That's that's why central banking
is a bad idea. That's why central education is a
bad idea. That's why the new communist buzzword of central
planning is a terrible idea. That's why, in my estimation,

(01:57:30):
a Republican president scooping up ten percent of companies is
a bad idea, because at some point somebody's gonna want
more than ten percent, and then what happens. But we
can't talk about that part because he's on our side.
And if we talk about that, we're not being fair

(01:57:51):
state owned. Anything is bad. Please seepbs. They have had
the ability to be profitable now for decades through their
merchant and everything else that they do. And yet as
soon as somebody said, oh, we're gonna do away with
that three percent of your budget, all of a sudden,
the CB is the corporation and public broadcastings like, yeah,

(01:58:12):
we're probably gonna go out of business. If a three
percent pay cut hurts you that badly, you have them
been managing your money, right. Shoot, if I could get
one piece of our merchandise to explode the way you
guys have gotten things to explode, you'd never I'm the
QR codes and all of it would be gone overnight
because I wouldn't need it anymore anyway. All right, So

(01:58:36):
we're gonna get out of here, folks, don't forget come
back tonight starting seven pm Eastern four inquiry. I do
believe we will have a special guest inquisitor again, if
memory serves, And I'll find out for sure in a
minute and then we should have the Conservative Commudge and
radio show tonight at eight pm Eastern, followed by our
good friends over Behind Any Enemy Lines Radio at nine
pm Eastern, myself and the Amish one at Rick and

(01:58:58):
Orty Eastern, and then back over for shr Media's Edge
of Liberty at eleven pm Eastern, and then Bez's Berserve
Bobcat Saloon at midnight ish Eastern. Because you know, work, yay,
fun times. All right, we gotta go enjoy the rest
of your day. Thank you so much for hanging out
with me. I have no idea what the final numbers are,

(01:59:20):
so I would give you a shout out about them
if I could see them, but I can't because the
system is not working. I know we were over three
hundred when I looked a minute ago, I think, so
thank you for that, especially in the middle of the week.
But we got stick go.

Speaker 20 (01:59:41):
Over.

Speaker 5 (01:59:42):
You say over. Nothing is over until we decided it is.

Speaker 11 (01:59:47):
Was it over?

Speaker 20 (01:59:48):
When the driver's bond pearl?

Speaker 14 (01:59:49):
Honor?

Speaker 22 (01:59:51):
Hello, closing time, Open all the doors and glad you
out into the wood.

Speaker 20 (02:00:04):
Closing time.

Speaker 1 (02:00:06):
That's great, just fucking great.

Speaker 8 (02:00:08):
Man.

Speaker 5 (02:00:09):
How what the fuck are we supposed to do?

Speaker 20 (02:00:11):
Game over?

Speaker 28 (02:00:12):
Man?

Speaker 5 (02:00:12):
Game over.

Speaker 31 (02:00:14):
Me time.

Speaker 20 (02:00:17):
Time for you to go out to the places.

Speaker 5 (02:00:20):
You will be from.

Speaker 20 (02:00:24):
Closing time. This room won't be open.

Speaker 27 (02:00:29):
Until your brothers.

Speaker 20 (02:00:30):
Are your sisters.

Speaker 14 (02:00:33):
I love you, O Flahoma, what a great crowd.

Speaker 2 (02:00:36):
I love you.

Speaker 1 (02:00:38):
Say good night, Gracie.
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My Favorite Murder with Karen Kilgariff and Georgia Hardstark

My Favorite Murder with Karen Kilgariff and Georgia Hardstark

My Favorite Murder is a true crime comedy podcast hosted by Karen Kilgariff and Georgia Hardstark. Each week, Karen and Georgia share compelling true crimes and hometown stories from friends and listeners. Since MFM launched in January of 2016, Karen and Georgia have shared their lifelong interest in true crime and have covered stories of infamous serial killers like the Night Stalker, mysterious cold cases, captivating cults, incredible survivor stories and important events from history like the Tulsa race massacre of 1921. My Favorite Murder is part of the Exactly Right podcast network that provides a platform for bold, creative voices to bring to life provocative, entertaining and relatable stories for audiences everywhere. The Exactly Right roster of podcasts covers a variety of topics including historic true crime, comedic interviews and news, science, pop culture and more. Podcasts on the network include Buried Bones with Kate Winkler Dawson and Paul Holes, That's Messed Up: An SVU Podcast, This Podcast Will Kill You, Bananas and more.

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