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August 29, 2025 • 120 mins
Facebook pulled the feed during the bonus edition of America Off the Rails because Rick dared to talk about the shooter and the shooting in MN the way Leftists don't like, with complete candor and honesty. So he did it again.

Also, for a dictator, Trump sure likes to follow court rulings; that's a bit odd, no?
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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:06):
Hello friends, we have a moment so that we may
discuss our Lord and Savior minarchy. No, seriously, I'm just kidding.

Speaker 2 (00:15):
Hi.

Speaker 1 (00:15):
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 (00:25):
We have a little bit of everything, and by that
what I mean to tell you is we have news, pop, cultures,
special events, conspere attainment, true crime, mental health shows, drama.

Speaker 1 (00:36):
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. 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.
You can also find us at klr and radio dot
com and pretty much every podcast catcher known demand. So again,

(00:58):
feel free to come check us out anytime you lie
at KLRN Radio.

Speaker 4 (01:09):
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Speaker 5 (01:50):
My dad is really.

Speaker 6 (01:51):
Really special and I love my dad Lack.

Speaker 7 (01:58):
I'm proud of him, even though he is in here
with us.

Speaker 1 (02:02):
But he died as a true hero.

Speaker 8 (02:07):
How much everything about him and the.

Speaker 9 (02:11):
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 10 (02:25):
I'm Frank Cla, chairman of the steven Sila Tunnel to
Talis Foundation. Our foundation is committed to delivering mortgage free
homes for gold Star families and fall and first respond
to families.

Speaker 5 (02:36):
To not have to worry financially is a huge peace
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possibly let the children have a life that feels normal.
I don't want them to have to quit their piano
lessons or their basketball. I don't want them to feel
that we have to move into a little apartment and
struggle financially. In addition to the emotional weight.

Speaker 11 (02:56):
There are over one thousand families that need our help.
Of Towers is honoring those heroes that risk their lives
by providing them with mortgage free homes.

Speaker 5 (03:05):
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

(03:27):
a peace of mind that I can't believe you can
get for eleven dollars a month.

Speaker 11 (03:31):
I'd like to ask you to contribute eleven dollars a
month to support their efforts.

Speaker 10 (03:35):
Please donate eleven dollars a month by calling one eighth
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Speaker 12 (03:56):
Independent. With that declaration, America was born inspired by a
belief in the god given rights of every human being,
that among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.

(04:18):
Our government was established to secure these rights and for
the good that comes from exercising them. Well, this is
why the founders of our great nation chose independence, as
do we. Hillsdale College accepts no government funding because independence

(04:42):
makes possible the good to which we aspire. Hillsdale College
pursuing truth and defending liberty since eighteen forty four.

Speaker 13 (05:01):
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(05:51):
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Speaker 14 (05:55):
Council shows and episodes. You can find good pods on

(06:26):
the web or download the app Happy Listening.

Speaker 15 (06:33):
KLRN Radio has advertising rates available. We have rates to
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Speaker 7 (06:51):
The following program contains course language and adult themes. Listener
and discretion is advised.

Speaker 16 (07:13):
From the red Bird rolls through the Capitol steps. He's
calling up the truth. Don't tomper regrets. He's got start.
You're in his voice and facts in his hand, talking
says to the people all across this land, the.

Speaker 13 (07:25):
Ray Robbinson, show what your guts high.

Speaker 17 (07:27):
And don't spend no script to the egle in the
sky and he seeing so so and okay see he's
calling it out and I'm like, get on this in
a whole lot of clouds. This is Parlaryo Reildun.

Speaker 16 (07:41):
His freak up and feel what we feel. He's freaking
down the noise. He's cutting through the lies.

Speaker 17 (07:51):
Shot in the light where the shadow hides, with guests
on the line and color.

Speaker 8 (07:55):
Is on deck.

Speaker 16 (07:56):
Keep the voice of the folks. DC tends us to
get your pumping all the white news.

Speaker 17 (08:05):
Stop the boss of the.

Speaker 13 (08:18):
People's Talks, and welcome in.

Speaker 1 (08:29):
To the Friday edition of the Rick Robinson. You're right here,
live from the Heartland, just south of Oklahoma City or
I actually spent most of my childhood and adulthood in
Midwest City, but we moved. I got out. I got
the hell out for reasons or reasons anyway. So we're here,

(08:50):
We're live. I hope everybody's having a great Thursday. I
got busy already hanging out in the chat. I can't
see the x numbers again, And before any of my
tech savvy friends in the chat asks me, ask me,
because I know at some point you guys are going
to start popping in and making this joke.

Speaker 13 (09:03):
Have you tried turning it on and off again?

Speaker 1 (09:06):
Yes, as a matter of fact, I have. It seems
to be a glitch on the restream side. So what
I'm asking for is your additional help to push the
numbers as far as possible. So if you would be
so kind for those of you that are starting to listen,
because I can see the numbers when I leave the
studio area, make sure you're sharing out the feeds. Also,
I would like to give a womp womp to Facebook

(09:28):
because they pulled our feed last night because I was
telling the truth about the shooter and they didn't like it. Somehow,
telling you guys the truth about the asshole got my
feed pulled from Facebook last night. So I'm back there
again doing it again, just to see if it happens again,
because if it does, I'll pull everything off of Facebook.
I don't even care. Because Mark zuckernerd made a promise

(09:50):
to President elect Trump that he was going to be
less of an asshole. He's not going to keep his promise.
I'm not going to put my work there, not to
mention the fact that we've been so far buried under
Facebook's algorithms for so long nobody can really see us
there anyway. So I don't really care because I've pissed
Facebook off for years because I said, I said true

(10:10):
things that we now can see have made it into
the mainstream regarding COVID and everything else, and somehow I
was ostracized for being one of the first people to
listen to folks like doctor Drew. Thanks to my friends
Stacy Lennox and You're trying to get the truth out.
She did it through PJ Media. We did it through
over here, and eventually everything just got buried because you know,

(10:33):
it didn't fit the narrative and Busy You're already technically
on it, sir, Just so you know, just so you know,
I'm sorry, I'm responding to him in the chat. He's like,
I would like to be on the Kale Radio ad Council.
By the way, I'm like, technically you kind of already are.
But anyway, so where are we going to go today?

(10:55):
So my rant for this hour and there may be
another one next hour, is I would like to point
out that for a supposed dictator, Donald Trump is doing
the exact opposite of what dictators do. As a matter
of fact, a retarded federal judge just denied an appeal
to well they didn't deny the appeal because the appeal
hasn't been had yet, but there was an addendum to

(11:16):
the appeal if the Trump administration asked the judge to
allow what we call gator get moll around here, because
alligator acatras to do fucking long to remain in operation
pending the appeal that was denied. So the same people
that keep trying to convince you that Donald Trump is
a dictator and he's just going to do whatever the
hell he wants to do. Is listening to the judges

(11:39):
more than Joe Biden did, who, according to him, wasn't
a dictator, because I'm pretty sure if a judge told
Joe Biden to shut something down here just done what
he did when the Supreme Court said, yeah, no, you
can't really do that. Oh I'm gonna find a way
to do it anyway. That's what a dictator does. But
the funny thing is when their side does it, actually
does it, and you could see them do it, they're

(12:01):
fine with it, but they're terrified that our side is
going to do it, and they're assuming Donald Trump has
already done it. One of the funniest things I saw
yesterday was Gavin Newsom starting to beat the drum that
there actually will not be any midterm elections and there
will not be in a presidential election in twenty twenty eight.
Then what are you running for? Because your exact argument

(12:25):
you just made defeats the purpose of your campaign. So
I guess this. I guess it helps that you know,
not very many people are giving you money. You are
the most popular Democratic candidate right now, but that's like
being the only chick at the problem that ain't got herbies. Bro,
that's not really that's not really the flex that you
think it is. That's not really the flex that you

(12:48):
think it is. I mean to him, it is, because
you know he keeps trying to tell everybody I'm not
copying Trump, I'm trolling him. Again, if you have to
explain the bit it ain't landing. Yeah, I mean, sadly,
I wish what I'm about to put on the screen

(13:09):
was not a true statement. I don't know how to
fix the mess that we're currently in, because the only
way to fix the mess that we're currently in is
to become that which they say we already are, because
we would have to basically take full control of everything
and then eventually figure out how to give that control back,
and once we did, I don't know if anybody actually
ever would. It's kind of like everything else that we
see happen with the government. Anytime they start a program,

(13:31):
even with the best of intentions, that program never goes
away and usually gets twisted into some form of control.
Please see food stamps, section eight, housing, and all the above,
because now once they get you on those things, they
don't want you off and they do everything they can
to make sure that you don't get off. And then
when you've got politicians in the coming to office and say, hey,
you know, these things are supposed to be springboards and

(13:53):
stay in safety nets, not spiderwebs. We need to start
putting things in place to make sure that people who
are on these programs who can work are either going
to school so they can eventually find work, or maybe
finding a part time job so they get used to
the idea of having to keep a schedule, this, that,
and the other. You're just evil. You want them to work,

(14:15):
you guys. That's the part I don't get. The Left
is supposedly the compassionate ones, but they want everybody on
their side to basically be lumps. But I think I
finally understand it, though, because if nobody's working, then when
you put out the clarion call to say, hey, we'll
pay you one hundred and fifty dollars a day for
seven days to come protest, everybody that wants to can answer.

(14:38):
So I guess it kind of makes sense when your
entire when your entire raison detra as far as your
party is concerned anymore, is adjutive by pay by pay
for play. Then I guess you're kind of getting what
you want. And that's the other side of it. Bes's
making a great point in the chat. He's here early,

(15:02):
I'm sor usually he shows up towards the about another
twenty minutes or so, so he's been waiting on me today.
I think he's mad at me because he tried to
get up early on Tuesday and I couldn't do the
show because I was taking a friend of the hospital.
So in the chat, it's too clouded, too convoluted, too
corrupted by personal ambition, powermongering, insular bs from the bottom

(15:24):
to the top and back again. And he's not wrong.
I wish I could say that he was, but he's not.
So you're saying my show is your show? Prep. No,
I'm just kidding, just kidding, dude, that sounded a lot
like rush. I should probably not do that again. That
was kind of conceited. I probably shouldn't do that again

(15:47):
because that was one of his taglines for forever is
we are the rest of the mainstream media show Prep.
I remember that, dude. I missed that. Man. Actually, I
think I have a clip of him that I found
them the other day. That kind of would fit, I think,
but we're gonna start somewhere else first. I know we
didn't talk about it much last night, but we're getting

(16:08):
close to the twenty well, I said, the rest of
the crew didn't. I did because I wanted because the
left was already starting to see he had racist stuff
on his magazines that means he had to have been
a right wing extremist. Nope, it does not. You guys
don't seem to understand, and for some reason, history and

(16:31):
academia have helped you push this narrative. Lie. You guys
are the ones that hate people, and you prove it
over and over and over again. We just want to
be left alone and want people to understand that, yes,
bad things happened in our history, but we can't keep
living in those moments. Before I get to this clip,
there's something else that is pissing me off right now,

(16:54):
and that is trying to explain to people that just
because you recognize history and you understand that even though
that sometimes good things do happen out of terrible things,
like for the fact that a lot of the people
that are complaining about America today that have a certain
skin color are Honestly, if they had been born a

(17:15):
generation earlier, probably or their ancestors had been born a
generation earlier, they probably wouldn't be here. Because what used
to happen is these tribes used to go to war
with one another, and then they would kill off any
men and then take the women for their own. And
then eventually they figured out, oh, we can put that,
we can put these people in cages, and we can

(17:35):
trade with these strangers, and they give us these things
and we give them the peoples that we don't want anyway,
And yes, it's terrible. No, I am not a fan
of human trafficking. I've had that asked to be today.
But I do have this question, why is it? Because
it is impossible to reliigate the past, so why is
it that so many people choose to live there in

(17:58):
those painful moments and where that trauma as if it
is a second skin, when it doesn't belong to you.
It doesn't belong to you. You guys don't understand as
long as you are looking backwards, especially with the intensity
of which you are with which you are looking backwards,
you are going to be stuck in that moment because

(18:22):
it's all you can see, because you have wrapped yourself
in that trauma, and you have wrapped yourself and I
can't believe this happened, and I can't believe that we
allowed this to happen. You know what, We didn't allow
it to happen. That's your first mistake. We weren't involved
in it. We weren't there, We didn't make any of
those choices. I can't tell you what would have happened
if we were there, because the mindset of the day

(18:43):
would have shaped how we approached it. But I can
tell you this, our mindset is completely different than that now.
So why are you still choosing to live in that moment? This,
in and of itself is becoming a form of mental
illness when you are choosing to embrace trauma, when you bear,
when you burrow into it and you wrap it around

(19:04):
you like it's some sort of coat of armor because
it makes you feel better, because oh, I'm more in
touch with how bad things are for you, folks. No
you're not. No, you're not. You have found a way
to try to make yourself feel better about something that
you have no coping skills for. That is all that is.

(19:26):
And it's terrible that so many of you choose to
live in this moment, something that the rest of us
are trying to move past, something that we had started
started to move past until race Bait, Inc. Came on
the scene in the seventies, we had TV shows about
this stuff where we made fun of one another to

(19:48):
make each other laugh so that we could move past
the trauma of the moment and start the process to heal.
And all of that has been stripped away. One of
the most poignant moments in TV history is something that
unfortunately I only got to see in syndication because I
wasn't old enough. Is the one of the last lines.
I think it was one of the last lines of
The Jeffersons Pilot, when the Jefferson's Maid is I think

(20:15):
it was. It was towards the end. So the lady
who eventually became the Jefferson's Maid is coming up the
elevator to interview for the position, and she gets into
the elevator and there's a mixed race couple there, and
she looks at the woman and says, you guys live here,
And she's like, yeah, why didn't anybody tell me that

(20:36):
we made it by choosing to live in these moments.
You are denigrating everyone who came before you, who did
everything they could to get us past these moments. And I,
for one, won't stand for it anymore. I refuse to
sit idly by and be told that I'm the one

(20:57):
that has the problem, because I'm trying to move you
in passed our scars, not dwelling them. This is terrible,
the fact that so many people have figured out how
to carve out their little niche and make all of
this money off of pain and suffering, and then wearing

(21:18):
it like it's a badge of honor while they tell
you I understand your pain more than you ever will,
when in reality it shouldn't be any of your pain.
And that is a hard statement, and I understand that,
but it's the truth of it. This pain doesn't belong
to you.

Speaker 13 (21:37):
Let it go.

Speaker 1 (21:40):
Yes, bad things happened in our history, but if we
dwell on them, if we focus on only those, we
lose track of the good things. Western civilization has reshaped
the world. We have brought freedom to places that never
knew it, to understand the ability to be free, to
not be under some but he's thumb. And now the

(22:02):
same civilization that brought that to everyone is trying to
take it away because we're so busy wrapped up in
the pain of the past and how terrible we were
to people hundreds of years ago, and how terrible we
were to people even a half century ago. But the
funny thing is, as soon as they slap a d
behind their name, y'all forgive everything. Joe Biden was one

(22:25):
of the biggest segregationists of our lifetime, and he's fine now.
Doesn't matter that he's never actually changed his opinion, doesn't
matter that he never stopped being a lying asshole. It
just mattered that, Oh, he's a Democrat and you guys
are evil, so we're gonna vote for him. But going
back to my original point, if Donald Trump is such

(22:46):
a dictator, why are they not still shipping people in
Alligator Alcatraz. They're following the order of the judge who
denied their ability to leave it open pending appeal. That's
not what a dick does. And for all of you
people that are wrapping yourself in other people's pain and

(23:06):
wearing it like a badge of honor, that is not
what you're supposed to be doing either. So busy, says
I was having a brief argument with a black racist
yesterday over reparations. I told him that he owed me
reparations because my family fought for the North in the
Civil War. He got really pissed. Imagine that, Hey, we

(23:28):
got a Denny in the chat. We have an owl
in the chat. I think it's because you're doing it wrong.
I don't know how it works, because sometimes when I
do it from my phone, I get credit for it,
and other times when I don't do it. For when
I do it elsewhere, I don't so I and then
sometimes even when I do it for my phone, I
don't get credit for it, but you always get credit
for it. In my heart, sir, so thank you, thank you.

(23:52):
But look, I didn't actually mean to keep this rant
going as long as it is. But I'm not done yet.
I wish I could say that I was.

Speaker 16 (24:00):
I'm just I'm so.

Speaker 1 (24:01):
Sick of it, like even somebody today when I pointed
out you know that, you know, these people that eventually
became our slaves, even the ones of color, was usually
because they lost some sort of a conflict in their
home country. But again, before that happened, these people were
being slaughtered because they lost so I'm gonna ask the

(24:24):
same question I asked yesterday.

Speaker 13 (24:25):
Has anyone ever asked.

Speaker 1 (24:31):
These people that are all you know, oh my god,
racism is terrible and slavery is terrible, and you will
us money. Does anybody ever ask them if they would
have preferred that their ancestors were slaughtered on their homeland.
I meant, put them in a Marty McFly moment. Assume
for a moment history was changed and you were never

(24:51):
your ancestors were never so slold into slavery. But since
they lost a war, what do you think would happen
to them? Because what that does, if you can get
them to listen to you, that disengages the emotional center
of our brain and has them start using the logic
center of the brain. And this is where our problem is.

(25:13):
Too many people today lead with emotions and not logic.
Because I can look at our history, and I can
look at the things that happened there, and I can say, logically,
I wish those things had never happened. But I can
also say I'm very glad that my ancestors helped us
not have to be delivering that way anymore.

Speaker 16 (25:32):
Again.

Speaker 1 (25:33):
We were past all this stuff. I was born in
nineteen seventy three, I paid zero attention to skin color.

Speaker 16 (25:40):
Zero.

Speaker 1 (25:42):
Now, I'm not saying things were perfect, and I have
a story from my own childhood to let you know
that things actually still weren't perfect, but they were a
hell of a lot better than they were in eighteen
seventy three. But I remember when I was a kid.
You know, they had those and it used to be
a card. I don't know, I don't know what it
is now, but it used to be this card and
basically they the school would send it home with you
and your parents would fill it out for you. And

(26:05):
I think back then it had three choices White, Indian, Black,
or or Mexican. I think that's literally what was on
the card, if I'm remembering right, because there was none
of this political correctness shit yet. And I remember hearing
my parents arguing with each other because I didn't know
this until shit, probably about fifteen twenty years ago. My

(26:29):
grandfather let it slip that my great grandmother was full
blooded Sue on my paternal side. Also, according to my grandmother,
on my maternal side, my great grandmother over that, well,
great great grandmother over there, not great, but great great
grandmother over there. It was also part of a native tribe.

(26:49):
I didn't know any of this, which once I heard it,
made the argument that I was remembering once I found
this out much make much more sense. Because my parents
were arguing about whether they should check the white box
or the Native box. And my dad looked at my
mom and said, ain't nobody gonna know that we're part,
that we're part Indian or white, because back then it

(27:15):
was better to be white. There's no denying that fact.
That was a part of our history. It was better
for a lot of folks if you had pale skin
in the seventies and and even in the sixties. There's
no denying that fact.

Speaker 18 (27:31):
But we moved past all of that, We moved past
all of that, and somehow we got dragged right back
into it again.

Speaker 1 (27:45):
And I blame folks like Reverend Al Sharpton for one,
because he figured out how to make money off of
people's pain and he capitalized on it like a sum bitch.
And now you've got the whole ink crowd. I mean,
I'm reminded of Reverend Jeremiah Wright talking about how bad

(28:05):
racism was, and now that we had a black president,
America's chickens were gonna come home to roost. Nobody really
wanted to think about that when he said it, because
we all try to well, it can't be as bad
as it sounds. That dude is a black supremacist. Listen

(28:25):
and look at everything that he's ever said and put
out from his pulpit. Dude is a black supremacist. And
he thought they were finally gonna get theirs is what
he thought. And if you look at a lot of
the people that supported Barack Obama early on, the ones
that are mad at him today, the ones that are
just downright pissed at him today, are the ones that

(28:46):
expected the same thing. They thought they were finally going
to get the pecker woods under their thumb. They thought
they were gonna finally put the crackers under the jail.
It was out. It was their time because they had
been retrained from the nineties forward to relitigate everything that
happened in our history and look at it from a
different lens, and to take pain that didn't belong to

(29:09):
them and wear it like an like a suit of armor.
Because that's what that when you live in those moments,
that is what happens. And I hate to keep driving
that point home. But I have a feeling this is
going to resonate with at least somebody today who may
he may hear this either today or later, even in
the recorded versions, because you need to hear this. You

(29:33):
cannot take the pain of the past and where it
is if it is your own, because a lot of
our mental illness stems from there. You don't believe me,
look at what's happening with this shooter. That shooter obviously
had some sort of bad experience at that school. For
everything that I saw from the drawings and everything else
before they took them all down and the little bit

(29:54):
that I've seen that was still captured, that child had
a major fixation and with that school. And apparently I
didn't know this until I was in the middle of
doing the show. Apparently he attended school there, which may
explain why he decided to make it a target. Yeah. Yeah,

(30:24):
And mister Wright also proclaimed, I cannot believe in a
god who does not hate his enemy, the white man.
That's just it. And we talked about this yesterday. There's
a difference between the God of the Old Testament and
the God of the New Testament, and that is honestly,
one of the things that makes my faith a little hard,
if I'm going to be completely honest with you, because

(30:46):
I can't quite understand when the change happened or how
it happened. What did happen. There was a Reformation when
Christ hit the scene, and everything went from vengeance to
basically doing the Elsha bit from Frozen, and there's a
lot of folks that don't understand that, and there's a
lot of religions that don't have that. So for mister Wright,

(31:06):
I think he's still living in the you know, I
will smite my enemies phase of the Bible, and assuming
that God has the same that he has, the same
enemies that God has, and God has the same enemies
that he has, when in reality, nothing could be further
from the truth, because the only enemy God has is sin.

(31:27):
Once you turn away from that and once you embrace Jesus,
everything else is forgiven. That's the whole point of the Cross.
But people can't live like that. But I also think
that's another reason why having some sort of faith is important,
because it helps you understand that good can come from

(31:47):
bad things and that you don't have to wear the
weight of these things all on your own and bear
the weight of these things all on your own. And
if we got back to that, I think the world
would be a much better place because we don't have
a gun problem in America. We have a heart problem
in America. And I've been saying that for over a decade.

(32:08):
It's not about the weapon. Doesn't matter whether it's a gun,
a knife, a spork, or even a rock. If you
have murder in your heart, Murder's gonna happen. There was
no gun with canaan Abel. I have a theory that
it was the world's first fruitcake, but it wasn't a gun.

(32:29):
Just kidding. That's for Andrew was probably listening and gonna
be texting me in a minute. My fruitcake's better. Yes,
yours is the exception that proves the rule, my friend,
because up until I tasted yours, I thought there was
only one fruitcake that was eternal and was being regifted
around the world because they were terrible. All right, So, uh,

(32:52):
we need to take a music break, but I didn't
plan one, So one moment, do do do? Okay, I

(33:21):
don't know. I'm in an eighties mood today and I'm
in an eighties movies mood more than all. So I
think we're gonna play something a little different for the
break and because I'm having issues with some of the
stuff that I normally use, We're gonna play a video today.
So I may get in trouble with YouTube. I don't
really care. I pulled it from YouTube, so get over it.
All right here we go, get different channel lineups for

(33:44):
every TV lover in your household.

Speaker 7 (33:46):
In one.

Speaker 16 (34:10):
Something dark and sweets the books. If you just the
lad so cool? So came she candy? Want to put yourself?

(34:34):
Do you need thus go?

Speaker 8 (34:43):
Yes?

Speaker 1 (34:45):
Wait, winning.

Speaker 16 (34:57):
S the boy to say.

Speaker 4 (35:10):
No, thanks, no, no thanks, no thanks.

Speaker 9 (35:23):
Y y.

Speaker 1 (35:30):
He m, that's so.

Speaker 16 (37:05):
Dot top of.

Speaker 11 (37:12):
Young man.

Speaker 13 (37:50):
Where welcome back into the program.

Speaker 1 (38:07):
I needed a little bit of motivation. I don't know
a boy, y'all. But it's been a long week, even
though it's been a short work week. It's been a
long week because I've been doing a bunch of other stuff,
speaking of which archives will be caught up tomorrow. Because
of that card that was compromised, I can't move money
over to the place that I usually use to pay
station expenses, so one of the accounts is down until

(38:29):
in the morning. When I get paid from somewhere else,
so gay fun times, fun times having a card get stolen.
It's kind of a bitch fucking cards, gimmers and cards games.
I hate thieves. Did I mention I hate thieves? Anyway,
So yeah, busy your request. I'll find some cars for

(38:50):
the next break at the next bottom of the hour,
because I didn't really think of that at the time.
But yeah, So there's a couple of things that I
normally have that I've paid for to make sure we
don't get ads and stuff when I'm learning things like this.
They're playing music through YouTube. That's something else that I
can't pay for quite yet, so hold of that will
be back to normal by tomorrow morning. Anyway. So we're back,

(39:11):
we're live, and it's been an Like I said, I know,
I'm kind of all over the place today, but it's
just because I'm pissed because we have so many people
that are pushing all these different narratives for all these
different things. And while we're back on the subject, since
we're gonna hopefully close out talking about the shooting in

(39:32):
this hour, because I'd spent quite a bit of time
on it yesterday too, and I don't really want to
spend too much more time on it. But all this
does tie together the idea that thoughts and prayers shouldn't
be enough because these kids were already praying when they
were gunned down. You guys understand they were likely attacked
because of their faith. Remember this person attended that school.

(39:55):
There's a reason he chose that target. And the part
of this that nobody's talking about is the leadership of
the schools in that area sent all kinds of information
to the governor about security weak spots, did nothing with them,
absolutely nothing. So for these people that we should do something.
You know what, the first thing we should do is

(40:15):
get rid of the gun free zone science because the
only people that follow those rules are the ones that
wouldn't be shooting anybody in the first place.

Speaker 16 (40:24):
What good does it do.

Speaker 1 (40:27):
To for the safety of our students. This is a
gun free zone. Guess who that Guess what that means.
It's gun free other than for the person who isn't
gonna follow the rules anyway. That's why this whole idea
of we need to ban guns, Guess what, It's not
gonna work because then it's just gonna move them to
the black market. And somebody's still gonna find a way.

Speaker 17 (40:46):
To get it.

Speaker 1 (40:46):
So so remember I think it was it might be three.
I think where there was they had to basically make
the entire city of New York forgets so that it
turns out that in the torch of the Statue of
Liberty was a neualizer. Unless you've got one of those
on the moon, guns are here to stay. Once the

(41:08):
genie is out of the bottle, you cannot put it
back in. You can do everything you can to try
to regulate it and control it. But I saw something
again today that pisses.

Speaker 13 (41:16):
Me off no end.

Speaker 1 (41:18):
Governor Kathy Hucikoo Totel. This is terrible, and as a
mom and a grandma, I can't believe the two children
have died and so many others are wounded. We need
to remove weapons of war from our streets. Guess what
we have, which I would like to point out, is
technically a direct violation of the Constitution because it ain't
about hunting. But since that's been the most prominent way

(41:41):
that people could convince people not to give up their
gun rights, because it's about hunting, what happens, what happens
if there's a food shortage and you have to go
kill an animal, But that was never what it was about.
The Constitution and the Second of Minimum specifically were designed
so that if we should have to have other revolution,

(42:01):
which our founding fathers expected within the first fifty years,
we would have the ability to defend ourselves from the
government once it became too tyrannical. If not for the
fact of private gun ownership and private canon ownership and
private ship ownership, we would have never defeated Great Britain.

(42:23):
So the idea, well, now that we have a military,
we don't know, yes we do. That's the exact reason
why we need all of those things. And the scariest
thing is with what Gavin Newsom is now starting to
I mean, granted it's subtly, but he's starting to beat
the war drum about it because he's trying to drum

(42:43):
up fear because it gets more people to give him
money because somehow they think that if they donate to
his campaign that, according to him, isn't going to happen
in the first place, that somehow he's going to magically
become president if we do in fact have a dictator.
But again I would like to point out Donald Trump
is making some rather odd decisions. As they supposed dictator.
Why does he keep following the courts? It's not what

(43:04):
a dictator would do. As a matter of fact, I'm
gonna be completely honest, it's probably a good thing I've
never decided to run for president, because if I was
in his position, with as many of these people that
are just doing everything they can to piss me off,
I can't say I wouldn't try to do something to
permanently shut them up. I can't say that. I can't

(43:26):
say that, So I'm not even saying it wouldn't necessarily
be that hard for him to act as a dictator.

Speaker 13 (43:35):
But he's not.

Speaker 1 (43:37):
You know, who are acting as if they're part of
their own personal vivitoms all of the people that Donald
Trump is trying to get rid of. This one happened.
I think it was yesterday. So the White House announced
on Wednesday that it had fired Susan Manarez, less than
a month after she was sworn in as the new
director for the Centers for Disease Control. I do have

(43:59):
a problem with that because how bad was the vetting
that she barely made it a month anyway, So she
was sworn in as the Centers for Disease Control Director
and for Disease Control and Prevention. Sorry, I'm all over
the place. The move reportedly came after she refused to
step down over vaccine policy disagreements with Health and Human
Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy. Junior Cush Desai, a spokesperson

(44:24):
for the for President Trump, said in a statement that
Manaras was not aligned with the President's agenda for making
America healthy again. Shouldn't we have found it out a
month ago, pointing that out. Since Susan Minara has refused
to resign despite informing HHS leadership of her intent to
do so, the White House has terminated Manaras from her
position with the CDC. Desai added, and I quote. The

(44:49):
clash between mister Kennedy and doctor Manarres, which had been
brewing for days, burst into public view on Wednesday. That afternoon,
the Department of Health and Human Services announced on x
that doctor manar was no longer director of the CDC,
Without elaborating, the agency thanked her for her dedicated service
to the American people, adding that mister Kennedy has full
confidence in his team at CDC dot Gov, who will

(45:12):
continue to be vigilant in protecting Americans against infectious diseases
at home and abroad. Hours later, her attorneys, you may
recognize this person. Mister Abby Lowell and mister Mark Zaide
disputed the department's account, saying doctor Manares has neither resigned

(45:33):
nor received notification from the White House that she has
been fired, and as a person of integrity and devoted
to science, she will not resign. Lawyers argued Manars was
targeted because she refused to rubber stamp unscientific, reckless directives
and fire dedicated health experts, choosing instead to protect the

(45:53):
public overserving a political agenda. On social media, Zaide rejected
the termination, saying it could only legitly be done by
the President himself, which is when Donald Trump should have
just gone on truth social and posted out you're fired.
I'm just saying, as a presidential appointees, Senate confirmed officer,
only the President himself can fire her. He said. For

(46:14):
this reason, we reject notification doctor Manares has received as
legally deficient, and she remains as CDC director. We have
notified the White House Counsel of our position. You said position.
Manara's ouster wasn't the only news out of the CDC
On Wednesday, Four other high level officials that the agency
quit resignations that came amid an FDA decision to put

(46:35):
further restrictions on updated COVID vaccines. You know, I love
how they're couching all this stuff. You know this is
for the greater good of America. No, it's for the
greater good of your fucking stock portfolio. Don't you fucking
lie to me. The COVID vaccine didn't do a damn
thing they said it was gonna do. Remember, we were told, well,

(46:56):
and some of this was even during Trump's term, you know,
Operation Warp Speed, We're gonna bring you a vaccine that's
gonna make sure you don't ever get COVID. And then
that lie was continued under Biden and actually amplified under
Biden to the point where they then started forcing people
to take it, whether they want to do or not.
You know what they're doing. They're taking that They're they're

(47:16):
making sure that can't ever happen again. They're taking the
Emergency Use Declaration away, which means they don't have the
authority anymore to say you're gonna take this or else,
which is good because they never should have had that
authority in the first place, because, despite what everybody tells you,
these aren't vaccines. Things that rewrite your DNA are not

(47:38):
vaccines when you're using mRNA and I love that. Well,
it's only supposed to do this one little thing, and
it's supposed to be temporary. Guess what they've discovered. It
ain't so temporary for the people that are willing to look.
That's another reason why they're doing this, because there have
been unintended consequences of rushing a fairly new product off

(48:04):
onto the shelves. And if we can't be honest with
ourselves about what we're doing to ourselves, how are we
ever expected to survive? The agencies that are supposed to
be making sure that you and I are okay haven't
been doing that for a long time because of control.

(48:31):
Have you ever thought about the fact that, in reality,
because all these things are kind of tied in together,
they want you as sick as possible so that you
can still function, but that you don't really feel like
doing anything other than going to work and going home
because you don't have any energy all the time. It's
hard as hell to get out of bed, you have
to go to work, otherwise your lives get shut off,

(48:51):
or you don't have a house to live in. And then,
to top it all off, they're either intentionally or unintentionally
put some of the same ingredients that have been shown
to have made tobacco one thousand percent more addictive into
our junk foods now by some of the same people.
You're telling me that's a coincidence. You're telling me that's

(49:17):
a coincidence. I don't think so. First of all, I
don't believe in coincidences, haven't it for a long time,
because there's no such thing. There's always some sort of
underlying thing that you can't see that has put that
position or that circumstance in place. It's not a coincidence,
and that's just the truth of it. And again, I

(49:39):
still don't trust the government, which is why I'm happy
that we keep making noise about trying to shrink it
a little bit. I don't care who's in charge of it.

Speaker 16 (49:48):
I don't trust it.

Speaker 1 (49:52):
Because they have done some terrible things. And while I
don't want to live in the past of those terrible moments,
we do need to understand them. But as long as
we are wrapping ourselves in the pain of them, we
cannot understand them. Need I remind you, guys of what
happened with the native populations on the Indian Reservation medical centers.

(50:12):
Women were being sterilized against their will. They didn't even
know what was happening. So, yes, there are black marks
in our history. But this idea that now we should
trust the FDA, we should trust the CDC, we should
trust everybody, No, we shouldn't. They have to earn that trust.
Trust isn't given, it is earned, and they haven't earned it,

(50:36):
and they've gone a long way towards losing it with
everything that's happened between twenty sixteen and today. They have
to earn that back. And the fact that all of
these people are wrapping themselves in the flag and for
good in country, I am resigning, and for good and
for good in country, I'm keeping my job even though
I've been told I've been fired. No, you're not. You're

(50:59):
trying to do for the good of your pocketbook, and
anybody who tells you otherwise is lying, because that's all
this is. This is a money grab. It's a power
graph that always has been. It's one of the things
that pissed me off about the Leprechaun of the Potomac
because granted it was an off book use. I'm not

(51:22):
gonna say it because I'm trying not to get the
feed pulled from Facebook today, but there was a medication
that we all know the name of that has an
off book use of working really good on COVID viruses,
works really well on it. The guy who told us
it would do that is the same guy who eventually

(51:44):
told us, oh, you can't do that, it won't work.
You need this, which was a four thousand dollars per
dose treatment. Now nobody cared at the time because the
government was picking up the tab. But you think about
the millions of people that took those those treatments and
how how many doses did they have to take it
four thousand dollars a pot when in reality there was

(52:05):
about thirty five dollars worth of over the counter stuff.
It probably would have had them over this crap in
about two weeks, and we know that we knew it.
Then we were told to shut the fuck up because
while this was a novel version of a covid virus,
COVID viruses aren't new Now, did you guys notice they're

(52:30):
beating that drum again. They've tried a couple of different times.
It doesn't seem like it's taking as well this time
because China tried to sound an alarm a couple months
ago about how you know, there's a new strain of COVID,
there's this, there's that, blah blah blah, YadA, YadA YadA. Yeah,
and my idea, I don't care anymore. I don't care.

(52:54):
It's not that I don't care about the carns that
they caused. It's not that I don't it's not that
it's that I don't care fair enough to basically shut
my life down again on the whim of our government
and then basically be told that we can't do things
like congregating churches, We can't even have outdoor meetings, can't
go to beaches, when one of the first things that

(53:18):
we understood that even they told us was accurate was
that sunshine kills COVID. They should have been making everybody
go outside. But that's why this stuff is as bad
as it is, because it they keep telling you you

(53:40):
have to trust us, you have to trust us, you
have to trust us but then they do something completely
contrary to that being able to earn that trust? Am
I the only one who gets frustrated with all of this?

Speaker 5 (53:52):
Is it just me?

Speaker 1 (53:53):
Maybe it is just me, but I just I can't
look at all this stuff, especially with what's going on
with CDC and everything else, and then not looking at
this going There's got to be another reason.

Speaker 4 (54:08):
I mean, I know.

Speaker 1 (54:11):
That there's been there's been a drastic uptick and autism
in this country. Nobody can seem to tell me why
that's happened. And then of course you've got the folks
with the educational degrees and the folks that have gone
through the educational studies as to why autism is more
prevalent now. And it's supposedly not because there's more of it,

(54:33):
it's just because we're more attuned to it now. I
don't think so, though, because I don't I don't remember.
I mean, especially in the seventies and the eighties, I
never saw anybody who was that, you know, just completely
out of touch with everything. And maybe it was because

(54:55):
they got their asses kicked at home, so eventually they
learned how to mimic human behavior. I don't mean human
as if they're in human I just mean normal sociological cues,
because it's never made sense to me for them to
claim that the reason we have we're noticing more of
it now is not because there is more of it,

(55:16):
but because it's always been there and our criteria is different.
And yeah, yeah, I don't think so, because now it
literally is everywhere where it was almost nowhere before. So
that dog won't hunt with me. I'm just saying, oh,
so this is interesting. We may come back to this

(55:38):
in a little bit more detail after the top of
the hour break, but you know after you know, Mayor,
that's not a space station, it's my ass. And also
the mayor of or Yeah, the governor, that's not a
space station, that's my ass. And the mayor of Chicago

(56:00):
or we're screaming, don't come to Chicago. Apparently there's some
folks that now are wanting Trump to come to Chicago.
So this is from our friends at Red State, Chase Jennings.
Is it too much to ask for major American cities
across the country to be a safe place for both
residents and visitors. Obviously President Trump doesn't think so, which
is why he sent the National Guard into the crime

(56:20):
Briton District of Columbia. Now citizens of another major city
are crying out for the same thing they want safety.
Chicago residents have taken notice of these significant drop in
crime currently taking place in Washington, d c. All thanks
to President Trump's decision to send in the guard. Now,
crime and homicide seem to be taking a break from

(56:40):
their usual ownership of the city. Here is the truth.
We cracked the code a long time ago when it
comes to keeping the cities safe. But these major blue
cities and states have pulled funding from law enforcement agencies
and meant the knee to unsafe policies that hurt their citizens.
One policy is basically the law local version of catch

(57:01):
and release that we've seen at the border. Law enforcement
officers put their lives on the line in these dangerous cities,
only to have the criminals released by city authorities. On
Fox and Friends Thursday morning, Chicago resident and director of
the Community Roundtable Kata Trust said, clearly, we're not safe.
We don't feel like our police department is doing enough.

(57:22):
And whether it's because of the resources or the amount
of money that the city is spending or has to
spend on violence prevention, I'm sure that more money would help,
but I'm not even sure if I want to see
more money come here considering the misuse of the money
that this government has had thus far. Chicago has been
a hotbed of crime for decades. Yeah, that is true.

(57:49):
So it does pain some to see the numbers and
the mergers that take place during holiday weekends across the city.
I can only imagine how demoralizing it has been for
police officers who have seen criminals allowed back on the
same streets time and time again. After initially pushing back
against President Trump's move to bring in the National Guard,
DC Mayor Muriel Bowser has also seen the benefits, and

(58:11):
we we're probably gonna talk about that at the top
of the hour two of this and now understands Trump
made the right move. So we are going to go
ahead and take the break here in just a second.
Wan O re mind everybody. I will be back tonight
first pushing buttons for the disasters and the making crew.
Luckily for Almashie reminded or luckily for me, almost reminded

(58:31):
me last night because I keep forgetting juxtaposition used to
be on the weekends that I did Dad. So since
we did juxtaposition last Saturday. I was like, it's not.
My attorney's like, yeah, just remember we switched. It was
like crap, So I'll be doing that first. Then I
think Jen and I should be live to night ten
pm Eastern, so we'll be the opening act for the

(58:53):
live and select Thursday night edition of bz's Berserk Bobcats
and then when hosted by none other than shr media
conservative Sherpa, who happens to be gracing me with his
presence in my chat this morning, and I greatly appreciate that.
But we're gonna take a break. I need more coffee,
not that there's ever enough of that, I know. Busy, hush,

(59:13):
go get your monster me alone. Well we are back
stay Junes. Hello, friends, we have a moment so that

(59:38):
we may discuss our Lord and Savior Minichy. No, seriously,
I'm just kidding.

Speaker 17 (59:45):
Hi.

Speaker 1 (59:46):
My name is Rick Robinson. I am the general manager
of Klrnradio dot com. We are probably the largest independent
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You can also find us at klrnradio dot com and
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(01:00:28):
feel free to come check us out anytime you like
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Speaker 5 (01:01:21):
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Speaker 8 (01:01:38):
I much everything about him.

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In the moment that the officers and I had to
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Independence.

Speaker 1 (01:03:29):
With that declaration, America was born.

Speaker 12 (01:03:34):
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.

Speaker 5 (01:03:54):
Well.

Speaker 12 (01:03:57):
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Speaker 7 (01:05:49):
The following program contains course language and adult themes. Listener
and discretion is advised.

Speaker 16 (01:06:07):
From the Red Bird rolls through the Capitol steps who
makes calling up the truth?

Speaker 13 (01:06:11):
Don't temper regrets.

Speaker 17 (01:06:12):
He's got fire in his voice and facts in his
hand talking says to the people all across this last
ray Robison, show it your glass out.

Speaker 16 (01:06:20):
And don't spend no script to an eagle in the sky.

Speaker 17 (01:06:23):
He see Tolsa and okay see he's calling it out
with my head on this and a whole lot of clouds.
This is called man radio, real dude, his freak up.

Speaker 16 (01:06:35):
And feel what we feel. He's breaking down the noise.
He's cutting through the lies.

Speaker 17 (01:06:45):
Shot in the light where the shadow hides with guests
on the line and code is on deck.

Speaker 16 (01:06:50):
Keep the voice of the folks. He tends us to
get the dog you coffee rights up.

Speaker 17 (01:06:54):
Fine, just say it's all the white fight news with
the back Poe voice of the free rays up the
boss up, say the sun.

Speaker 16 (01:07:01):
Bow the sun show full on away.

Speaker 17 (01:07:04):
She talk something like a Ricic ray from the play
Sun Power to speaking in loud with a night Dan,
I me this that'll make you crown aass talk lo
people's song gas l the sun show that we.

Speaker 16 (01:07:16):
Say what we feel.

Speaker 1 (01:07:39):
And welcome back into the finally final hour of the
almost Friday edition of The Rick Robinson Show, Live right
here on KLARN Radio and uh SO lots of stuff
to talk about. I find it funny that the mayor
of DC is now suddenly, you know, maybe this wasn't

(01:08:00):
such a bad idea after all. So in other words,
if you hadn't rushed the judgment and hadn't been a
total tool, you'd probably figure out that, you know, maybe
the president's not an asshole after all. Oh, I know
that's a bridge too far for them. They're never going
to see it that way. I just wanted to point
that out because I find out to be one of
the most entertaining things of the week is her suddenly saying, well,

(01:08:23):
it's been helpful, but now I'm wondering if people are
going to respect the MPD as much as they did before?
Did they before? And I'm not even trying to be
an asshole about it, that's that's me actually asking did
they before? Because the MPD was cooking the books? And yeah, anyway,
m M all right. So I do have kind of

(01:08:47):
a funny story, and I have a question for those
in the chat before I start playing this AI or
not AI, because there's a couple of things that have
kind of made me wonder, but if this thing is actual,
if this thing is actually accurate. I kind of want
to get one because I have a puppy who doesn't

(01:09:07):
listen to me very well, not even a puppy anymore.
But I'm trying to break a lot of her bad
happens and happens since she was about three months old,
and she still does most of them. So actually, I
guess it's going to do it over here, all right?
So AI or not? AI? And I just got to
kick out of this. So I kind of want to

(01:09:28):
do this today.

Speaker 13 (01:09:29):
Belly, Come give me a hug.

Speaker 1 (01:09:35):
I think you need to go to the vet today
to get a check up. What do you say?

Speaker 6 (01:09:42):
I have to work.

Speaker 13 (01:09:43):
I'll take you for a walk later.

Speaker 1 (01:09:50):
Who do you love more?

Speaker 13 (01:09:51):
Mommy or daddy? Daddy?

Speaker 16 (01:09:57):
Who do you prefer? Mom or dad?

Speaker 17 (01:10:04):
Hey, Sillah, can I have a kiss?

Speaker 7 (01:10:08):
This thinks really long?

Speaker 16 (01:10:10):
Oh my gosh, Mia, if you love me whole? Hey, Ellie,
can you get me the remote?

Speaker 17 (01:10:20):
Yes?

Speaker 16 (01:10:22):
Zoe ring the bell?

Speaker 17 (01:10:30):
Zoe, go to your bed.

Speaker 1 (01:10:41):
Okay. So my question is, assuming for a moment this
thing is true and accurate and actually works, she wouldn't.
Wouldn't it be better to do it in reverse? So
your dog? But then again, we probably don't want to
know what our dogs are saying. Listen, you asshole, it's
been four hours since I've been let out. I got
to go anyway. I hope not, because that would be

(01:11:05):
a long time. I used to have to have that
discussion with my children all the time when they were little,
because you know, they're the one that we want a dog, okay,
but you have to take care of it. And then
I'm like, okay, so it's been four hours since you've
let the dog outside. When's the last time you went
to the bathroom about five minutes ago? And how long
before that? A couple hours? So you've gone twice in

(01:11:27):
two and you're not figuring out that the dogs probably
need to do at least the same anyway, all right,
So I told you we'd get into this a little
bit more after the break, because again I find this

(01:11:50):
turnaround a little strange even to me. But in case
you haven't heard it yet, I want you to hear
it from her from me because this is surprising to me.
It's almost like they can't hold onto the narrative anymore
because the things that he's doing are actually working, which

(01:12:12):
I think is why Gavin Newsom is starting to beat
the German about.

Speaker 16 (01:12:15):
He's not gonna let us have any more elections.

Speaker 19 (01:12:19):
We greatly appreciate the surge of officers that enhance what
MPD has been able to do in this city. The
most significant thing that we are highlighting today is the

(01:12:39):
area of crime that was most troubling for us in
twenty twenty three. Now we have driven it down over
the last years. But I'm gonna get my glasses so
I can make sure I can see it correctly. But
for carjackings, the difference between this period, this twenty day
PIERO of this federal surge and last year represents a

(01:13:05):
eighty seven percent reduction in carjackings in Washington DC. We
know that when carjackings go down, when the use of
gun goes down, when homicide or robbery go down, neighborhoods
feel safer and are safer. So this surge has been

(01:13:25):
important to us for that reason.

Speaker 1 (01:13:31):
So, yeah, there you have it. The woman who just
a cuple what about a week ago, was like this
is authoritarian is at It's terrible blah blah blah blah
blah blah blah.

Speaker 8 (01:13:40):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (01:13:41):
Yeah, apparently she's not so opposed to this anymore. Gee,
funny how that works. And again before we went to break,
we were talking about the fact that now Chicago is
kind of clamoring for the same thing. But that's why,
in my opinion, this is what Trump should have done.
After things were successfully done in DC the way they were,
you should have started talking to the red state governors,

(01:14:03):
you know, the five states that have the biggest blue
city problems. I mean, like, I want your permission to
go in and clean these cities up and then done it,
because then all of the blue cities and blue states
would be like, we want what they have, and it
would be really hard for governor that's no moon, that's

(01:14:25):
my ass to say no when everybody started clamoring for it.
And I understand Trump is more of an in your
face kind of guy and go into problems head on.
But there are times when tactics and you know, being
a tactician are helpful. I think this would have been

(01:14:46):
one of those times. Yes, you used your authority in DC,
So now go find governors who are friendly to your
cause that have crime problems in certain cities, because then,
guess what, it shuts one of the biggest Democrat arguments
points down, why is he not doing this in the
red states that have big crime problems. Guess what, He's
going to go do that now with the permission of

(01:15:07):
the governors, and he's going to show you what these
blue states that are run by blue mayors and blue
city councils can actually look like. And then you guys decide.
Now again, I'm not exactly sure how I feel about
all of this happening in the way.

Speaker 4 (01:15:24):
That it has.

Speaker 1 (01:15:25):
But there again, Beezy and I were talking about this
in the chat earlier. There really isn't any way to
fix this without some sort of hard reset because everything
is broken. Everything is broken all at once, and it's
impossible to fix. And the American people are fickle because
even with the numbers as far as Trump taking care

(01:15:48):
of crime looking as good as they are, even with
the fact that he's done some amazing things for the
country in the first what is he at one hundred
and twenty days or so? Now I lost count I
guess he's a But he's what eight months now, so
I guess it would be about two forty ish, And

(01:16:09):
you've still every special election since he's been sworn into
office has gone the other way. Individually, they are not
Bellweathers together, they do start presenting a concern, which is
why I don't really understand what the GOP's doing, because
this is when you have the Democratic Party on the ropes.
You've had them on the ropes for months. What are
you doing? I mean, we can either continue to play

(01:16:38):
Marque of Queensbury rules and eventually get our ass kicked again,
and eventually they packed the courts, they get rid of
the filibuster, they do all the things they've been telling
us that they were going to do. They make four
more states and that's it. We're done. Then there will
not be an amicable way to do this, and that's

(01:16:59):
what they want. That's what they want. You may or
may not start hearing some thunder rumbling. Apparently we're gonna
have a goalie washer come through here in about five
minutes or so. So if I disappear, you'll know why.

(01:17:21):
But yeah, so anyway, I just I don't I don't
understand what's happening with the GOP because this should have
been when they were all gas, no breaks and just
going after the Democrats like nothing, like nothing. All right,
So it looks like there's been another CDC resignation. I
wonder if this one will be like I was just

(01:17:42):
kidding and I'm gonna I'm gonna keep my job. This
is from Banchie. He looks like it just came out
a little bit ago. So let's talk about that. A
major shakeup is occurring at the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention. On Wednesday, CDC director Susan Manaras was fired.
We went over that earlier, just after a month the job.
It wasn't immediately revealed who led or what led to

(01:18:03):
the move, but various reports indicate that she refused to
fire certain people within the CDC who were standing in
the way of the Trump administration's agenda. Following Manara's ousters,
several CDC leaders turned in their resignations, with one of
them being doctor Dimitri C. Deskaliskiks. That's a name you
might recognize even if you can pronounce it. In fact,

(01:18:27):
the writer of this piece wrote a piece on that
person back in twenty twenty three after he was named
Joe Biden's monkey pox czar. At the time, it was
apparent he was a complete degenerate, more obsessed with pushing
alphabet soup ideology than promoting good health practices and in
case you need the reminder, we had videos. I'm still

(01:18:55):
waiting for him as DNC to change their logo. Did
they change their mind? Are they not going with him
as now? Because that's going to take so many jokes
that are currently sitting in my quiver out of my
quiver if they do, it's going to make me sad.

Speaker 20 (01:19:09):
I work in HIV normally, and I'll tell you that.
You know, I always say that I've never made an
HIV diagnosis, and someone that hasn't somehow related to stigma.
I think mpox is the same. So really, stigma tends
to be a barrier to testing, a barrier to vaccination,
and so you know, really addressing stigma intentionally and making
sure that we get the word out in a way

(01:19:31):
that supports people's joy as opposed to you know, calling
them risky. So I think, you know, one of the
things to think about is that, you know, one person's
idea of risk is another person's idea of a great
festival or Friday night for that matter. So we have
to sort of embrace that with joy and make sure
that folks know how to keep themselves safe.

Speaker 1 (01:19:51):
Monkey pops, Monkey pocks, Monkey pops, Monkey pops, Monkey pops,
monkey pocks, monkey pops, monkey pops, monkey pox. Stop it.
The only people that get offended by a name like
that are the ones that don't want don't really want
you to know what they're doing with their spare time,
just pointing that out because that's just dumb. But anyway,

(01:20:13):
so there's there's a little bit of that guy. Let's
keep going with his article though. Uh Deskalakis, who is
gay like that wasn't obvious and appears to have some
other odd fetishes, spent his time seeking to protect wild
sex orgies as an expression of joy, despite it being
the very behavior that was spreading monkey box. So yeah,

(01:20:34):
that tells you about how valuable his expertise was within
the name the CDC. So we're not going to show
you all of his overwrought resignation letter, but let's hit
a few of the highlights. My resignation letter from CDC.
Dear doctor Howry, I'm writing to formally resign from my position, hey,
he said, position as Director of the National Center for

(01:20:55):
Immunization and Respiratory Diseases at the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention of of August twenty eighth, twenty twenty five
at close of business. I'm unable to serve in an
environment that treat CDC as a tool, because you are
one to generate policies and materials that do not reflect
scientific reality. Kind Of like masks are helpful in COVID

(01:21:18):
and are designed to hurt rather than to improve the
public sealth. Kind Of like keeping us locked up for
two fucking years. The reason changing the adult and children's
immunization schedule threaten the lives of the youngest Americans and
pregnant people? Do they though? Do they really so? Yes,
that's a supposed expert using the phrase scientific reality in
the same paragraph that he that he uses the phrase

(01:21:41):
pregnant people not pregnant women. One of the most ridiculously
unscientific terms to ever be invented by the left is
pregnant people and or birthing person because pregnant people are
women and men cannot become women. Further, a woman who
claims to be a man and does not become a
pregnant person are still a woman. Mentally ill and deluded,

(01:22:04):
they might be, but still female. It's if that's an
indication of Howsky. Yes, I'm making fun of his name
at this point because I cannot pronounce it did his
job and it absolutely is when you look at the
his his history, then he should have been fired long

(01:22:25):
before he had a chance to resign. Not surprisingly, he
was also an open supporter of none other than Kami
Lama Hamasnik. By the way, at the end of his rant,
it is signed off with his preferred pronouns. Thank you

(01:22:47):
once again for the support and guidance I have received
from you and previous CDC leadership throughout my tenure. I
wish the CDC continued success in its vital mission and
then HHS reversed its dangerous course to dismantle public health
as a practice and as an institution. If they continue
the current path, they risk our personal wellbeing and security
of the United States. Sincerely, Dmitri Cska Lacas MD, MPH

(01:23:13):
him or he is him? What the hell? Anyway? In short,
good riddance to bad rubbish. We don't need left wing
kooks running our nation's public health sector anymore, hopefully, desk
Kaca Lacca Cockis is one of the many who end
up on the street, and the fact that he will
still he was still at the CDC eight months into

(01:23:35):
the Trump administration shows there's still a lot of firings
that need to be happening because it's time to clean
the houses. Just pointing that out nuts. All of this
is nuts. Oh oh oh, there's gonna be some liberal

(01:24:00):
heads exploding today. Guess what this just came out. I
just missed it, apparently at the top of the last hour.
So America's GDP is up more than previously expected in
the second quarter of twenty twenty five, despite concerns that
President Trump's tariffs announced on Liberation Day would result in
a recession, the United States GDP grew at a three

(01:24:24):
three point three percent pace from April to June, faster
than earlier the earlier estimates of three point three percent,
according to the Department of Commerce. So here is the
proof in the tape. Liberal heads are gone.

Speaker 2 (01:24:43):
Three percent was our last look. It now jumps up
to three point three percent, but from a comp basis,
that would still be the best quarter since September of
twenty three. Third quarter of twenty three. Consumption always important
in the consumption economy. It remains strong one point four
our first look one point six are modified look. One

(01:25:06):
point six would be the best consumption since the last
quarter of twenty four when it was well above it
was at four percent. Oh, the pricing index. Maybe this
has more relevance considering all the issues of the day,
the presses on with the Fed. Well, it remains at
two percent. No changes there.

Speaker 1 (01:25:26):
Funny how all of these numbers just keep coming up
Trump and then, don't forget the left was having kittens
earlier in the month because Donald Trump was like, Yeah,
if you're gonna put out numbers that I have to
keep having revised over and over and over again, and
not even in a good way, then yeah, you don't

(01:25:46):
need your job. And then they're like, oh, he's going
to stop it. He's going to stop them from being
able to do accurate, accurate reporting on the jobs numbers,
et cetera. No, he's trying to get people to give
you the accurate reporting because it would be much better
off for everybody for us to have the accurate reporting,
even if it's bad, so that we know what it
is that we need to do to fix it. But

(01:26:08):
this whole approach that they had to Biden that apparently
carried over and we're about to take the break for
those of you that are watching on the screen, that
saw a music video pop up. We're about to take
the bottom of the hour break, which is a musical interlude.
But I just wanted to close out this thought first
that when you put out positive numbers just to goose

(01:26:28):
the market, just to quietly revise them downward later, that
is a failure for the American people, the administration, and
most of all for you, because you're lying. If there's
bad news, we need to have it. If there's good news,
we need to have it so that we know what
we're supposed to do. What pisses me off about what's

(01:26:49):
going on with too late Powell is the fact that
he knew about these numbers. He had this data well
before you and I ever did, and he still held
off on trying to stay off of what could have
been a rise in inflation and still may wind up
being a rise in inflation by cutting our rates. And
I would also like to point out that from every
indicator that I've been able to see, we still have

(01:27:10):
one of the highest interest rates of the globe, and
I want to know why that's okay. But we're going
to take the break at request of Bes. We do
have some cars coming at you for the break. This
is drive, We'll be right back.

Speaker 16 (01:27:48):
Who's going to pay any when it's too who's gonna
tell you things aren't so great? You can't go ome

(01:28:15):
dig nothing's wrong. Who's going to drive it home too bad?
Who's gonna pick you.

Speaker 17 (01:28:38):
When you.

Speaker 16 (01:28:46):
Who's gonna hang it up.

Speaker 6 (01:28:50):
When you.

Speaker 16 (01:28:58):
Who's gonna be attention to.

Speaker 21 (01:29:02):
You, to me?

Speaker 16 (01:29:09):
He's going to block the ears when you scream? You
can't go out thinking nothing's wrong? Who's going to joy hard.

Speaker 8 (01:29:36):
Today?

Speaker 16 (01:30:01):
Who's going behold it with you? Who's gonna come around
with you?

Speaker 9 (01:30:19):
Right?

Speaker 16 (01:30:25):
You can't go home again? That's been trouble. Who's going
to drive your hard tonight? You know you can't go on.

Speaker 10 (01:30:48):
Again?

Speaker 16 (01:30:51):
Go Who's going to drive your hard?

Speaker 1 (01:31:00):
General to.

Speaker 22 (01:31:07):
Keep prevented, And we're still trying to get a lot

(01:34:19):
of answers to a ton of questions, but the one
thing is clear. You are dealing with a person who's
trends that was transitioning. Are you going to be examining
it all some of the drugs that are used in
order to make that transition happening to see if it
plays a role. Because we also know there was a
trans shooter in the Tennessee situation.

Speaker 21 (01:34:41):
Yeah, we are doing those kind of studies now at
an age where launching.

Speaker 1 (01:34:49):
Studies on.

Speaker 21 (01:34:51):
Their potential contribution of some of the SSRI drugs and
some of the other the psychiatric drugs that might be
contributing to violence. You know, many of them on there
had black box warnings that weren't of suicidal ideation and

(01:35:14):
homicidal ideation, so we need we can't exclude those as
a culprit. And those are the kind of studies that
were doing.

Speaker 22 (01:35:21):
So I've never seen dead medicine, but you're saying that
if you get it, some of the side effects could
be homicide suicide.

Speaker 21 (01:35:31):
Well, there are black box warnings on some of these
psychiatric drugs that weren't about in their clinical trials that
they saw suicidlent, homicidal ideation. Oh you know, we are
going into that with an open mind.

Speaker 1 (01:35:52):
All right, So welcome back, And I apologize I had
a setting off, So let me redo the opening that
I was doing a moment ago, because what I was
doing was setting up this video. So this was Robert F.
Kennedy's junior talking about any potential links between some of
the medications that are given for youths seeking transition to

(01:36:13):
combat what are usually depressive or the depressive issue or disorders,
et cetera, and wondering if maybe there is not some
sort of a link, especially because those things do typically
come with what is called a black box warning. So yeah, yeah,
I figured it out. When I saw him talking, I
was like crap, because for some reason lately, when I
play videos, it tries to bleed through through the mic

(01:36:35):
if I'm playing it through like YouTube or something, so
I always mute so there's not a faint echo. And
then I forgot I muted, so it's my fault. But
we're back. We're working again. You guys didn't really miss much,
just me trying to bloviate. Oh wait, never mind, that's
that's somebody else's thing. Sorry, not trying to step on you.
But anyway, so since we did, since we did, inadvertently,

(01:37:00):
you're back into the lane of the shooting. There's another
clip that I want to play just because it pisses
me off. Hang on, I gotta find it, though, Do
do do do? Where did you go? Where did you

(01:37:22):
come from? Where did you go? Oh?

Speaker 9 (01:37:27):
Man?

Speaker 1 (01:37:27):
I finally found it and then everything reset, So I
gotta go find it again. All right, So this is
being posted by our good friend Brad Seager will be
joining us tomorrow for Friday News Roundup for the final
hour because we do the extended edition on Friday. But
it talks about some of the huh, the weird intentional

(01:37:48):
misinformation about what happened yesterday, So let us discuss it
in one moment.

Speaker 23 (01:38:04):
A three year old Robin Westman was able to leave
what police called a video manifesto that they're now going
through to try and establish motive. We've also been going
through it and can tell you there are crude diagrams
of the church. There are also photos of the weapons,
and they include all sorts of writings, the names of

(01:38:27):
past mass shooters, criticism of Israel, the name of President
Trump written on the guns. There are also racial slurs,
nihilistic statements, all painting the picture of a disturbed individual
who carried out this mass shooting on the first week
of school At the a three year old Robin Westman
was able to leave what police called a video manifesto

(01:38:51):
that they're now going through to try and establish motive.
We've also been going through it and can tell you
there are crude diagrams of the church. There are also
photos of the weapons, and they include all sorts of writings,
the names of past bass shooters, criticism of Israel, the
name of.

Speaker 1 (01:39:13):
My apologies. I didn't realize it was looping. I was
trying to pull up the next thing we were going
to be talking about. So anyway, all right, So the
interesting thing is, as soon as some of this information
started coming out about the racial screens and everything else,
everybody starts talking about, oh, well, obviously he was a

(01:39:36):
right wing extremist. New couldn't I try to spind but new?
All right, Okay, so let's take a look at this
because I just noticed this. So Trump is calling for

(01:39:56):
something a little different for any leftist them might be No,
he's not calling this has been elections. So this is
from Ward Clark. Trump touts big wins, calls for midterm
unconventional convention. We're still more than a year away from
the twenty twenty six midterm elections. But if you look
at the state of affairs today, from fundraising to war
chest a polling, you have to admit that right now

(01:40:18):
Republicans are in a happier place than Democrats. Part of
that is the constant stream of self inflicted stupidity on
the part of Democrats. Their electoral strategy right now appears
to be we will punch ourselves in the face repeatedly
until we went one point of order. I don't think
that's their face they're punching. There's an old aphorism, often
attributed to Sun Zoo that applies when your opponent is

(01:40:40):
making a mistake, don't interfere. On Thursday, President Trump took
to his true social accounts. That's how his administration's successes
give national Democrats a metaphorical poke in the snoot and
call for something that hasn't been done before, a Republican
national convention for the midterms. Hmmm, who wants to go
to a convention anyway. So the Republican Party is doing

(01:41:03):
really well. Millions of people have joined. This is from
the true social account. The Republican Party is doing really well.
Millions of people have joined us in our quest to
make America great again. We won every aspect of the
presidential election, and based on the grand success, we are
having our poise to win big in the midterms. We
have raised far more money than the Democrats and are
having a great time fixing all of the country destroying

(01:41:25):
mistakes made by the Biden administration, and watching the USA
heel and prosper the results are incredible at a record pace.
And in that light, I am thinking of recommending a
national convention to the Republican Party just prior to the midterms.
It has never been done before. Stay tuned. Donald J. Trump,
President of the United States of America, and I'm sad

(01:41:48):
because he didn't close with thank you for your attention
to this matter, which has kind of become a trademark.
So this is an interesting notion. And the funny thing
about this is the Democrats talked about it first because
they were trying to bolster their base, which is really
flagging right now if you don't count the special election midterms,
which again I admit, don't usually count as bell whether

(01:42:10):
turnout is usually abysmal, but the fact that they've won
all of them in recent history does vode not so
well and cause me a bit of concern. But let's
see if we do have a midterm convention, what might
that message look like. So there are some thoughts they

(01:42:36):
get open with. Look at all the jobs. Illegal immigration
is essentially down to zero. Illegal aliens are being sent home.
No more boys and girls sports or in their locker
room for that matter. And while we're at it, no
more gender affirming treatment for minors. Tax cuts, our military
recruiting is back up to pre Biden levels, and did
we mention jobs. These are messages that will resound in
the midterms. But the biggest advantage the Republican Party has

(01:42:59):
right now not being lunatics. Yeah, exactly. The Democrats can't
make their make that claim. A regular joke on the
internets right now is that if President Trump came out
in favor of kittens and puppies, Democrats would immediately call
for the shuddering of every no kill shelter in the country.
It's funny because it's only a slat exaggeration, and one

(01:43:21):
need only look at the public statements of Democrats over
any Trump policy proposal to see that all that's great.
There is one message, though, that I would love to
see every Republican candidate for every office at any level
take too hard, and that is don't get cocky, Yes,
get organized, develop a coherent message that we can all

(01:43:43):
agree on, and sprint to the finish campaign like your
twenty points down in fading fast campaign like the Republic
depends on it, because whether you want to believe it
or not, it actually kind of does. We've got some
time to get this organized, but that's no reason not
to start now. We should have started yesterday. Just pointing

(01:44:04):
that out. We should have started yesterday because in a
lot of ways we are behind, because we are losing
every special election so far. When some Sears is down
in the polls in Virginia, with as unpopular as these
people are, that seems that seems unpossible to me. But

(01:44:25):
here we are. And this is why I keep saying,
and this is just as much to you guys as
it is to the leaders. Don't sit here and coast.
Get a hold of your congress critters, get a hold
of your senators, make them go out and start shaking trees.
Find more voters, find more money, put a message together,

(01:44:46):
get the local messaging on brand, because that's where we're
getting our asses kicked right now. We have to counter
all of this. They can't do it on their own.
Trump may have won the election, but he only wanted
to becase of us. We showed up, We did our parts.
The problem that we have as Republicans and as conservatives

(01:45:07):
is we always think, well, I've done my part to
get into the finish line. The rest of it's up
to you. And that is unfortunately, that's kind of a
side effect of our whole you know, our whole thing,
because we're pull ourselves up by the bootstraps, folks. So
we help until somebody doesn't need to help any more
than we go back about to doing what we're doing.
So once the election's over, we think we're done. The

(01:45:27):
Democrats don't think that way. They keep pushing, they keep calling,
they keep fighting, They scratch, they eat, they find every
ounce of anything they can, even when they're down as
far as they are right now, and sometimes still manage
to snatch victory from the jaws of defeat. There should
be no reason on paper right now that the Democrats
are winning special elections.

Speaker 13 (01:45:46):
None, but they are.

Speaker 1 (01:45:48):
This should be concerning to every single one of you.
Whether you agree with Trump eighty percent of the time
or sixty percent of the time, or even fifty percent
of the time, this should be concerning to every single
one of you. A'mis and I disagreed last night on
the Intel thing. I still don't think our government should
be picking winners on losers. I understand they're on the

(01:46:09):
hook for a lot of money that we've given them
and we're trying to get some of it back, but
we still shouldn't be picking winners on losers. I don't
like that no matter who does it. That's just my
take on it. You guys are allowed to have your
own I don't care. I don't care if we disagree,
especially as long as we can have a coherent discussion
about why we disagree, instead of oh, you're just a

(01:46:30):
moron because that's the leftist thing right now, or some
outlanders thing like, oh, I guess because you were okay
with that happening in our history, you must be okay
with human trafficking. Did I say that? New new and
you're right, busy, Brad's pretty awesome. Don't tell him I

(01:46:51):
said that, though his head gets bigger every time we
compliment him. It's a bad thing. It's a bad thing,
all right, all right, So we got to talk about this.
Our vice president's back in the news. I know some
folks don't like him. Some folks do. I happen to
be a huge fan. So this happened though, so jd Vance,

(01:47:15):
you know, circle Backsaki was making some rather interesting statements yesterday.

Speaker 4 (01:47:20):
JD.

Speaker 1 (01:47:20):
Vance waighed in on those. So former White House Press
Secretary Zen circle Backsaki is and this is not an exaggeration,
a horrible person. On Wednesday, in the wake of the
shooting at the Annunciation Church and School in Minneapolis, where
a shooter killed two children and seventeen other people while
people were at mass, many people offered prayers, but circle

(01:47:40):
Backsaki attacked those talking about prayers. Ain't even used the
moment as an attempt to attack none other than President
Donald Trump. I don't know why anybody's surprised, but sure so,
prayer is not freaking enough. Prayers do not prayers. Prayer,
Prayers does not anyway, I'm going to read it like
she wrote it. Prayers does not end the school shootings.

(01:48:00):
Prayers do not make parents feel safe sending their kids
to school. Prayer does not bring these kids back enough
with the thoughts and prayers. When kids are getting shot
in the peues at a Catholic school mass, and your
crime plan is to have National Guard put mult down
around DC, maybe rethink your strategy. She was absolutely crushed

(01:48:22):
with the backlash on x However, the comments against prayer
were disgusting and frankly, the second comment would make you
think that she was arguing for the National Guard to
be deployed in Minnesota. Trump's playing in DC is working
my all accounts, even according to the Democrat mayor, and
we talked about that earlier. So what does that have
to do with the shooting in Minnesota? Apparently absolutely nothing.

(01:48:44):
Then she was on MSD and C later crying about
the shooting. Sorry, but I think the tears are because
you're trying to clean up the backlash from your earlier comments.
But she continued to attack people for thoughts and prayers,
and then it up with the Democrat narrative that they
always go to it's the guns. She rushes past him
into illness, the suspect thinking he was trans the anti

(01:49:06):
Trump threat or any of the other things, and went
straight to it's the guns. So I agree with her
about one thing. There is always an attempt to shift
the focus, but it's by the Democrats to shift the
focus to let's ban the guns, no matter what the
facts are. She can't explain why we've had guns forever yet.
The school shooting phenomenon is a relatively more recent frequency

(01:49:26):
in our country's history. I believe it's people in power
holding thoughts like hers that are part of the reason
why mental illness has not been seriously addressed when it
appears to impact the matter this matter specifically most of
the time, but even when you're wrong, and even if
you wrongly think that banning guns is the answer. Why

(01:49:46):
this attack on prayer in such a horrid way? Vice
President JD. Vance let the anti Prayer group have it
with both barrels for this despicable take about the point
of prayer and how shocking it is that the left
was attacking it, and I quote from his account, it

(01:50:08):
is shocking to me that so many left wing politicians
attack the idea of prayer in response to a tragedy. Literally,
no one thinks prayer is a substitute for action. We
pray because our hearts are broken and we believe that
God is listening. He then responded directly to circle back.
We pray because our hearts are broken. We pray because

(01:50:29):
we know God listens. We pray because we know that
God works in mysterious ways and can't inspire us to
further action. Why do you feel the need to attack
other people for praying when kids were just killed praying.
He continued with how bizarre this was. Of all the
weird left wing culture wars in the last few years,

(01:50:51):
this is by far the most bizarre. How dare you
pray for innocent people in the midst of tragedy? What
are you even talking about? Vance is, of course exactly right,
talk about an eighty twenty issue. That's how the writer
puts it. I would put this at more of a
ninety ten. This is another bad self owned add to
the list of embracing illegal aliens defending crime. Now we

(01:51:13):
have Democrats attacking prayer after children praying are killed, and
the Democrats wonder why they can't climb out of the
moros that they're sinking into. Frankly, instead of attacking prayer,
they should try it. They might get some help and
inspiration to be better. I don't think they'd be praying
to the right things, so I don't know how much
it would actually help, but they're welcome to try anyway,

(01:51:38):
all right. So one more quick hit on the way
out the door, because I wanted to hit on this
earlier and then got distracted. This is an op ed
from Red State from the Heartland Institute. Beware of NUVAU
New York City Socialists. This was written by Chris Talgo.
Like a lingering rash, Socialism just won't go away. Incredibly

(01:52:00):
by this absolutely historic history of mass death, poverty, misery,
and destruction. It continues to plague the world. Socialism has
even had a presence in the United States for a
very long time. In the early eighteen hundred, social reformers
sought to create collectivist utopian communities modeled on the socialist
ideas emanating in Western Europe. Men like Robert Owen believed

(01:52:22):
they could create perfect communities from scratch. However, most of
these experiments, such as Owen's New Harmony in India, failed
amid internal power squabbles and lack of basic resources like food, clothing,
and housing. After the Communist Manifesto was released in eighteen
forty eight, utopian socialism gave way to scientific socialism. Under

(01:52:44):
scientific socialism, the goal was no longer to create an arbitrary,
subjective utopia. Rather, it was to use science, reason, and
expertise to create a society prededicated upon the philosophy from
each according to his ability, to each according to his need.
In the United States, scientific socialism was adopted by the
Progressive Movement President Woodrow Wilson, although he never formally referred

(01:53:07):
to himself as a socialist, and jailed Socialist Party presidential
candidate Eugene Debs embraced this scientific version of the ideology
after the Progressive Movement lost its luster? Did it though?
Did it? Really? Socialism has continued to resurface in the
United States under a variety a variety of iterations and names.

(01:53:27):
It has had its ups and downs, its ebbs and flows. However,
over the past decade or so, socialism has come back
with a vengeance in the United States. In twenty sixteen,
Senator I've got three houses, but you don't need any.
Bernie Sanders, Independent Vermont introduced the oxymoronic term democratic socialism
into the political oxagon. I think it had been around

(01:53:47):
before then, but maybe I'm misremembering. Is that a certain
thing again? Since then, nuvo socialists like rev Alexandria Alexandria,
Occasional Cortex Cortes Democratic New York have made New York
ground zero for the development and rise of democratic socialism.
AOC makes socialism seem so empathetic. Really, just need to

(01:54:11):
remove the E in the M and in line with
democratic principles. She is superb at sprouting socialist slogans. Make
no mistake. As of now, socialism has gained a foothold
among the left in New York City. Ironic, isn't it?
After all, Columbia University played a vital role in spreading
Marxist philosophy throughout America's institutions of higher learning nearly a

(01:54:32):
century ago. One can't help but cringe when we watched
is are on Mondami, the latest socialist media darling espouse shallow,
stupid and obvious failed policies such as city run grocery
stores as a real response to the affordability crisis new
York City represents and residents face on a daily basis. Sadly,

(01:54:53):
it seems like an avowed communist who has literally called
for seizing the means of production will most likely be
the next one of New York City. But all this
not hunky dory on the left. As socialist momentum builds,
consider the situation in Minneapolis, where another young socialist is
running from mayor, unlike in New York, where Mendami holds

(01:55:13):
a commanding lead and looks like a sheer lock. At
this point, Omar Fete faces an uphill climb. Feedi's controversial
tactics at the nomination convention have sparked outrage among Minnesota
Democrats and Minneapolis the modern Democrats are refusing to kowtow
to Feta and says he's on and they say he's unelectable,
that he's too radical, that his policies will not work.

(01:55:37):
Never thought I would be agreeing with Democrats, but here
we are. The point is that most Americans, especially downtrodden
and working class Americans, still reject socialism. They know it
sounds good on paper, but it doesn't work in reality.
Some of these people have even come to the United
States to escape their poverty riven socialist run homelands. Socialism

(01:55:57):
may be gaining ground among rich colleges white liberals in
places like New York City, but I doubt it will
ultimately resonate among the millions of hard working, freedom loving
Americans in the so called flyover states. In the Heartland,
common sense still reigns supreme, though doesn't really. There's lots

(01:56:18):
of blue footholds in the Heartland now, so I don't sometimes,
I mean, at least until Trump went again, I kind
of felt like the little Dutch Boy with my finger
and the Dyke Kiggity. But now again, as we get

(01:56:38):
close to the midterms, I just I don't know. We
have all of these good things that are happening if
the media would actually report on them, but we know
they won't. All the things that they keep saying are
gonna happen with the tariffs usually wind up not happening
over and over and over again. But they won't tell
you that part either. Now we're talking about, you know,

(01:56:59):
layoffs and everything else from the tariffs. But you know,
chndeers had eight months longer than eight months, he's been
talking about tariffs for the what two two and a
half years he was running officially. Why did they not
start making changes to how they were doing things then?
Just in case this is the part that I'm talking about.

(01:57:21):
We used to be proactive, not reactive. In so many ways,
everyone in this country has become reactionary, non proactive. And
now we have an administration who's trying to be proactive again,
trying to get out in front of things and saying, look,
we don't like the emergency declaration with the COVID vaccine,
so we're going to make that go Oway, it's not
necessary anymore now you've got people inside the seat. Heasy, go.

(01:57:44):
That's terrible. How is it terrible? How is it terrible?
Please explain it to me like I'm five, because I
just don't get it. I would like to say that
I do, but I don't. Unfortunately, though, we've reached the
point in the program where I do have to tell
you this one is just about over, so we'll be
saying goodbye here in just a moment. I would also

(01:58:04):
like to remind you guys that we'll be back tonight again.
I'll be pushing buttons for Brad and Paul for Disasters
in the making with their train wreck Dajore, then back
to Night with Jenn and Rick. We will be the
opening act for the live and select edition of Bez's
Berserk Bobcat Salone, carried on their YouTube channel, the shr
Media X channel, Bez's X channel, Sean's X channel, and

(01:58:27):
our ex channels. So come hang out wherever you're most comfortable.
But if you want to chat, I encourage you to
go to their YouTube because that's where all the people
hang out, even me while I'm running the feed. Bye everybody.
For those of you working for the weekend. You are
nearly there. You on the west, you on the East coast,
it's almost your lunchtime. I would say, put in near

(01:58:48):
butt in and take me with you, but I'm going away.

Speaker 13 (01:58:50):
But for tomorrow.

Speaker 1 (01:58:51):
Make sure you remember to do that so you can
hang out for the News round Up. And don't forget,
the Weekend News Roundup is actually now its own standalone edition,
So if that's the part you want to tune in foremost,
you can find that on all of your favorite podcastchers
coming soon because we're still awaiting approval on a lot
of them. Well we gotta go buy everybody.

Speaker 16 (01:59:15):
Over.

Speaker 2 (01:59:17):
You say over, Nothing is over until we decided this
was it over when the German's bomb Pearl Horner.

Speaker 6 (01:59:25):
Hello, closing time, Open all the doors and let you
out into the.

Speaker 13 (01:59:38):
Closing time.

Speaker 16 (01:59:40):
That's great, Just fucking play man.

Speaker 13 (01:59:43):
How what the fuck are we supposed to do? Game over?

Speaker 18 (01:59:46):
Man?

Speaker 16 (01:59:46):
Game over.

Speaker 13 (01:59:49):
Time? Time for you to go out to the places
you will be closing time. This room will be open
till your brother's.

Speaker 16 (02:00:05):
Or your sisters.

Speaker 13 (02:00:07):
I love you a Flahoma, what a great crowd.

Speaker 16 (02:00:10):
I love you.

Speaker 1 (02:00:11):
Say good night, Gracie.
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