Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:05):
Hello friends, you have a moment so that we may
discuss our Lord and Savior minarchy. No, seriously, I'm just kidding.
Speaker 2 (00:14):
Hi.
Speaker 1 (00:14):
My name is Rick Robinson. I am the general manager
of Klrnradio dot com. We are probably the largest independent
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(00:58):
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Speaker 3 (01:08):
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Speaker 4 (01:50):
My God is really.
Speaker 1 (01:51):
Really special and I love my dad Lack.
Speaker 4 (01:57):
I'm proud of him, and even he is in here
with us. But he died as a true hero.
Speaker 5 (02:06):
How much everything about.
Speaker 6 (02:08):
Him and the moment that the officers and I had
to come see the children, my biggest reaction was, I
don't have seven arms. I have seven children who just
lost their father, and I don't have seven arms to
wrap around them.
Speaker 7 (02:24):
I'm Frank Cla, chairman of the steven Sila Tunnel to
Tawis Foundation.
Speaker 8 (02:28):
Our foundation is committed.
Speaker 7 (02:29):
To delivering mortgage free homes for gold Star families and
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Speaker 5 (02:35):
To not have to worry financially is a huge peace
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Speaker 9 (02:38):
The thought of what in the world will I possibly
do to pay the bills? How will I possibly let
the children have a life that feels normal.
Speaker 5 (02:46):
I don't want them to have to quit their piano
lessons or their basketball.
Speaker 9 (02:49):
I don't want them to feel that we have to
move into a little apartment and struggle financially.
Speaker 5 (02:54):
In addition to the emotional weight.
Speaker 10 (02:56):
There are over one thousand families that need our help.
Tunnel to taois honoring those heroes that risk their lives
by providing them with mortgage free homes.
Speaker 9 (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.
Speaker 5 (03:19):
Because it has when you lose a parent in the line.
Speaker 9 (03:21):
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a peace of mind that I can't believe you can
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Speaker 5 (03:29):
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Speaker 10 (03:30):
I'd like to ask you to contribute eleven dollars a
month to support their efforts.
Speaker 8 (03:35):
Please donate eleven dollars a month by calling one eighth
four four Bravest or visit Tunnel to Towers dot Org.
Speaker 11 (03:55):
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
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makes possible the good to which we aspire. Hillsdale College
pursuing truth and defending liberty since eighteen forty four.
Speaker 1 (05:01):
Ready to learn some medieval combat.
Speaker 12 (05:02):
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Speaker 2 (05:40):
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Speaker 16 (06:54):
The following program contains course language and adult themes. Listener
and just Crashed.
Speaker 9 (07:00):
Is it High?
Speaker 17 (07:13):
From the Red Third rolls through the capital of the
steps who makes calling on the truth, don't temper regrets.
He's got fire in his voice and facts in his hand, talking.
Speaker 18 (07:22):
Says to the people all across this land.
Speaker 12 (07:24):
The rain robbers on showers that high.
Speaker 17 (07:27):
And don't spend no scripts of the eagle in the
sky and they see it so so and Okay, see
he's calling.
Speaker 12 (07:33):
It out and I'm like, get o this in a
whole lot of cloud.
Speaker 17 (07:37):
This is on the radio, real dude, his freak cup
and feel what we feel. He's freaking down the noise,
He's cutting through the lies. Shot in the light where
the shadow hides, with guts on.
Speaker 19 (07:54):
The line and cold is on deck. Keep the voice
of the folks.
Speaker 18 (08:33):
Guess what day it is, anybody?
Speaker 11 (08:36):
It is Wednesday in My Days.
Speaker 1 (08:39):
Otherwise known as Chat Lives Matter Day right here live
on Kaylor Radio dot com. We'll be back tonight as well,
starting a seven pm Eastern four America Off the Rails,
followed as far as I know, by the Conservative Commudgeon
Radio show, followed by our friends over behind the eway
Lines Radio, followed by myself an ordinance packer doing the
Rick and Orty Show. Then back around the more do
(09:00):
our Edge of Liberty friend, our Sean Lewis Coast of
Edge of Liberty with SHR Media. Then we will have
our closing act busy show from last night over at
SHR Media. And I'm here, I'm live. It's been a minute.
I don't know, I haven't I'm so anyway, for those
(09:20):
of you that are new around here. I took quite
a bit of the summer off, well sort of. I
didn't do a lot of my show stuff. I still
showed up for everybody else's, but I had to do
all kinds of crazy things to make that happen. And
then now I'm trying to get used to doing all
the work that I was doing before, you know, in
between getting sick and then my house trying to kill me,
not once but twice, and it's been hard to get
(09:42):
back into the swing of it. I was almost there,
and then I wound up getting an extra day off
on Sunday that I wasn't expecting, and then I just
kind of fell asleep and stayed asleep off and on
for a couple of days. So then woke up yesterday
realized I was supposed to be doing a show, and
I'm like, I don't even know what's going on, and
then realized I would. As you can hear, I have
(10:03):
a bit of a scratch still going on in my throat.
It's that time of year, though, so we get hay
fever twice in Oklahoma, usually at the beginning of spring summer,
and then towards the end when you know they start
clearing out all the hay and stuff because yeah, So anyway,
I'm here and there's no shortage of things to talk about,
although I feel like we're talking about the same five
(10:25):
topics over and over and over again. So I guess
you guys will be the judge of whether we are
or not. But lately it kind of seems that way.
So there have been lots of things going on while
I've been on a couple of days worth of a break.
One of them, so one of them is this. I
(10:47):
just saw this, and we're gonna find this out together,
because apparently the House Committee has withdrawn a subpoena for
Robert muellers i health concerns from family. The former FBI
director has been diagnosed with Parkinson's disease. House Committee on
Oversight and Government Reform kicked off its series of high
profile subpoena hearings last month with former Attorney General Bill Barr,
who investigated the suspicious death of Jeffrey Epstein. Tuesday, However,
(11:10):
former FBI Director Robert Mueller's hearing ran into an unexpected hitch,
leading to its cancelation. Mueller, who became the FBI director
shortly after the September eleven attacks and resigned in twenty thirteen.
Was reportedly diagnosed with parkins Parkinson's disease four years ago.
So the AP reported that the committee withdrew at subpoena
of Mueller citing the state of his health. We've learned
(11:33):
that mister Muller has health issues that preclude him from
being able to testify. The committee has withdrawn at subpoena
a committee, he told CBS News earlier this week. Okay,
so I'm not going to go too much more into
that because it's I hadn't seen it and I wanted
to see why they withdrew the subpoena. But you can
find more information over at the Blaze, and I will
(11:55):
be probably posting that out in just a moment because
I'm starting to try to get in the habit of
sharing out the things that I use for sourcing so
you guys can come back and find them later should
you decide to do so. So, since that was the
first one we'll get that pushed out, did I mention
(12:15):
this is gonna be one of those days where there's
just not enough coffee in the world again either, just
so you know. Okay, So, while I'm getting caught up
on news. This one caught my eye as well. So
apparently this is from Bob hoj over at Red State.
I guess the White House used LinkedIn somehow for some
sort of a troll. Let's find out together. Former Biden
(12:38):
and Obama White House staffers are sure to be freaking
out as they visit their LinkedIn profiles Wednesday, only to
find Donald Trump's staring back at them. You see the
White House change their profile pick too, you guessed it,
the current commander in chief, Donald J. Trump. The results
are downright hysterical. The White House on LinkedIn has changed
their profile picture to Donald Trump. So even the people
who worked for Biden from twenty twenty one to twenty
(13:00):
twenty five have Trump's face in their profile and liberals
are absolutely hating it. So, in a quote from a post,
if you worked for the White House in the past
and it's on your profile, people see Trump's face, White
House spokesperson Stephen Schung said, that's the point. I mean,
imagine former President Barack Obama's face when he goes to
(13:20):
update his LinkedIn only to find Donald giving him the
old mugshot. Stink guy. Am I the only one. So look,
I get it that this is you know, part of
what we've been saying we need to do is learn
to fight the way that they fight. But am am
I the only one that feels like this probably shouldn't
(13:42):
have been made into such a big deal. Hey, we
have an inm sighting in the chat. Thank you for
stopping in, sir. By the way, we do have all
of our chats are open, we have feeds on x twice.
We have mine outright of ex seventy three. We have
at KLARM Radio. We have YouTube, we have Rumble, we
have Facebook, and you can usually find the show within
a few hours after airing over on all of our
(14:04):
podcast sites as well in audio format. And I so anyway,
So but yeah, so am I the only one who,
while this is funny, kind of feels like we have
bigger issues. Maybe it's just me. Maybe it's just me. Also,
(14:24):
breaks will be a little off for the first hour
because we got a lead start thanks to Grimlins again,
because I hadn't worked in a couple of days and
came in and start starting to fire everything up and
it was working then it wasn't so go figure, But
I'm gonna since I'm trying to get into the habit
of doing this again. Where did it go? Put this
(14:51):
one out as well, And I guess I've been mispronouncing
his last name this entire time. I guess it's pronounced Hoague.
He even took the time to put it in his
(15:12):
writer's profile. I guess because everybody gets it wrong. Oh okay,
So anyway, they say, masterful troll, I say, I don't know.
But so here we go. Let's see what else is
going on. All right, So let's talk about this because,
(15:45):
of course this is one of the biggest talking point
things that everybody's talking about right now is the fact
that Donald Trump is talking about taking troops into Chicago.
And of course Governor Pritzker is not a fan, but
apparently he may have said something. Anyway, let's watch this.
Speaker 20 (16:08):
You're going to hear people, especially pat this past weekend
fifty four shot seven dad. Yeah, they're going to say
the city's not safe. Would you ask your friends to
ride the l after midnight or after nine o'clock at night,
even to come down to the city from O'Hare.
Speaker 21 (16:25):
Look, big cities have crime, there's no doubt about it.
But let's just pay attention to what President Trump is
doing targeting Shaw, he's overlooking red states that have much
higher crime rates.
Speaker 1 (16:41):
So here we go back to this troope again. So
let's break it down, shall we, because somebody's got to
do it. So, yes, there are crime issues in red
states too. But the interesting part about that is normally
in those red states, the highest crime areas are in
blue cities where the mayor's a Democrat, the city councils
are Democrats, and they have local district attorneys and everything
else where they're following the Democratic playbook, which is at
(17:03):
crime doesn't matter, so go ahead and just kick them loose,
make a revolving door, bails unfair because poor people can't
afford to pay it, blah blah blah, YadA, YadA YadA.
And so here we sit with all of this huge
crime stuff going on. Now, I'm going to be honest,
I think Donald Trump should be taking a different tack.
And I've talked about this a lot lately, because there
(17:25):
are five red states with larger blue cities that have
a huge crime problem because of those larger blue cities. So,
in my opinion, since he's getting all these pushback from
the Democratic governors, Donald Trump should be going to the
governor's friendly to him and saying, hey, why don't you
authorize the use of the National Guard to come in
and help bolster this city's policing problem, and let's get
(17:47):
some of this shoplifting and murder and everything else under control,
because that's just it. Everybody wants to talk about the
big ticket crime like the murders. One of the things
that's slowly killing our economy is the fact that nobody
does anything about petty ars anymore. Nobody does anything about shoplifting.
I mean, hell, you've seen it over and over again
in places like California, always felled it with a k
(18:07):
hair as I call it commi Fornia, where they talk
about it over and over and over again, where you
can basically walk out with a shopping cart full of
stuff and as long as it's below a certain market value,
even if they call the police, all you're gonna get is,
isn't what they call on the East Coast an appearance
ticket or a desk ticket, And that's it. And it's
nuts to me. It reminds me, you know, while I was,
(18:30):
you know, trying to get to the point where I
felt better because again I think I managed to catch
a little bit of a bug from spending like fourteen
hours on a hospital. We could go yesterday because I
haven't felt right for a few days since starting to
try to kick it. Hopefully that's that's gonna be working.
I couldn't couldn't figure out if it was that or
the hay fever, so I just started treating for both.
(18:51):
But you know, I've been saying this for a long time.
Let's focus where we have in roads, because you're already
seeing it. While the main I'm sorry, the governor of Illinois, who,
as I lovingly call him, that's JB. That's no Moon,
that's my ass. Pritzker is telling, oh, you know, we
(19:14):
have a crime problem, but it's not as bad as
Donald Trump wants you to think it is. And then
they're interviewing people on the streets going can we please
do something about this, because again, it's not just about
the big ticket crime. Our economies are being destroyed, our
businesses are being destroyed. You have all these people complaining
that they can't get fresh produce and everything else in
(19:37):
all these areas that are typically dense blue areas. But
it's because anytime anybody tries to do the right thing
and put something in there to help them, it gets destroyed.
So how much are you going to be willing to do?
How much are you going to be willing to invest
when you know that no matter what you do, you're
(19:58):
going to lose money. So again I want to point
this out this past weekend where he's said, well, look
at the red states with the crime problems. Fifty four
people shot in a weekend, seven dead in a weekend,
and instead of saying, okay, maybe we need some help
(20:21):
for a while, he's going to do the party line bullshit.
So this is Abigail Jackson responding it is what it is.
Is not the right response for a leader when asked
about violent crime in their city. To all, Chicagoan's President
Trump has proven that it doesn't have to be this way,
(20:42):
and she's not wrong. Further, Pritzker, like California Governor Gavin Newsom,
conveniently leaves out that in the red states they reference
that do have crime issues, usually it's because of big
blue cities in those particular states that are doing their thing. So,
speaking of one, this is something that I wanted to
(21:03):
talk about today anyway. So let's get this cute up
because this is one of those very places that they're
talking about, and it's in Tennessee. You know. Downtown Memphis,
you know, used to be like a shining beacon on
a hill for people, especially if they wanted to get
in to either the blues, the jazz or country music scenes.
(21:25):
And now it's this because this happened over the weekend.
There's no audio on this, but watch what's going on.
This is in the middle of downtown Memphis, the middle
(22:13):
of downtown Memphis on a holiday weekend, and this is
what people are having to deal with now. I mean, really, really,
let's just keep watching this, and you don't see anybody,
(22:36):
as far as I can tell, calling nine one one.
You got a bunch of people walking around with their
cell phones out, trying to capture the moment so they
can become social media famous. Near as I can tell,
nobody's calling the popo, nobody's trying to break it up.
They're just all having a melee right in the middle
of I don't know if that's inside of a restaurant.
(22:57):
It looks like it's inside of a restaurant, but there's
just all these people that be pouring in and more
and more people trying to kick the crap out of
each other. I mean, you guys remember, and it was
I think it was early twenty tens. Remember the whole
(23:20):
flash mob craze when people would set things up to
where suddenly, you know, they would start dancing and singing
and stuff in the middle of a public place. I
thought that was retarded. I miss those days because now
we just have mob mobs popping off in the middle
of public spaces. Fun times, right, fun times? Oh all right,
(23:51):
So I think this is probably looped at least once
by now. Sorry, I was kind of enthralled watching it.
So let's move on, because I don't know, never really
thought about doing the anthropology thing. Kind of wish I
had now, because I'd probably understand this behavior a little
bit more if I did. At some point, I may
see if I can have agion to try to explain
what's going on, because she actually did the anthropology thing,
(24:13):
because there's got to be a logical reason why this
is happening somewhere, even if it doesn't make sense to us.
There has to be some sort of a logical underpinning.
Is what's causing all of this to happen. So I
don't know anyway, but yeah, so all that's going on,
the US military has basically decided that help with inter addiction,
(24:36):
we're gonna nuque. So the US military has sunk a
Venezuelan drug runner. A lot of people on the left
are why didn't we just interdict them the way we
normally do, because that isn't working, that isn't scaring people off,
that isn't making them stop. There's a historical note to
this that I feel like we need to get into, though,
because everybody keeps talking about the fact that all of
(24:57):
these precursors for the for a first fentanyl and ol,
these nihilasines that they're talking about, which is news to me.
But I haven't really been in that type of the
business for a long time other than trying to keep
up with it in the news, and I couldn't find
anybody talking about that all this weekend. All that stuff's
coming from China. Everybody seems to forget what we tried
(25:17):
to do with China. It's interesting that everything that they
keep trying to send back to US is either an
opioid or a synthetic opiate derivative. Because of what we
stared to do to them, and everybody seems to forget
about that part because we did our level best to
(25:38):
get the Chinese hooked on opiates. So I'm not saying
this is any kind of karmic retribution or anything, but
I do say that anybody who understands history knows why
China is pushing to have this happen as hard as
they are, and it's because we did it to them first.
Now I don't I haven't gone back far enough to
(25:59):
find out what it was that China may have done
to spark us doing this, but I do know that
it was a thing. So this is part of their
one hundred year solution.
Speaker 2 (26:07):
Though.
Speaker 1 (26:08):
They want to take over the planet and they're willing
to do whatever it takes to make sure that happens,
including and a lot of you are just starting to
figure this out, the willingness to infect an entire planet
with a virus. And if you don't think they did
so willingly, I would like to remind you of what
they did once they found out what was happening in
(26:29):
Muhan Province. They restricted anybody within the province or outside
of the province to travel into or out of the province,
but they allowed people within the province to leave the country.
Speaker 16 (26:40):
Hmm.
Speaker 1 (26:42):
So you tell me, even if it wasn't even if
it wasn't on purpose, once they knew what was happening,
they definitely did what the Chinese do. They took the
word crisis and turned it into an opportunity. Just pointing
that out. So for those so it is back to
(27:02):
school season. So for those of you that just cut
those tuition checks for your little kiddos, what if I
told you that college students actually can take a class
to learn how to steal and we're helping to pay
for it. So college students can take a class to
learn how to steal? Yes, really, this is Katie Djerkovic
over at Red State New York City College. Students at
(27:25):
a four year University of Manhattan can now take a
course titled how to Steal, which promises to look at
radical ethics around the theft. Yes, you read that correctly.
Students at Eugene Laying College of the worl Arts can
take the four credit class that will cost students upwards
of ten thou forty dollars to look at things like
the esthetics of theft in a world where accumulation is sacred.
(27:48):
According to The New York Post, the report noted the
insanity of the course description and it reads as follows.
This field based seminar explores the politics, ethics, and aesthetics
of theft in a world where accumulation is sacred, dispossession
is routine, and the line between private property and public
good is drawn in blood. Students will critically examine what
(28:10):
it means to steal, steal from whom, for whom, and
why through site visits and field work in places where
capital is hoarded and value is contested corporate storefronts, grocery chains, museums, libraries, banks,
and cultural institutions. The one part that really stood out
was the part about how the course will ask the
question is it possible to steal back what was already stolen?
(28:34):
What does it look like under capitalism, colonialism? In everyday life?
When is the survival, protest or care? And when is
it violent? When is it violence, appropriation or harm? The
course catalog concluded by pointing out that the class is
not a course in petty crime, It is a study
in moral ambiguity, radical ethics, and imaginative justice. The irony
(28:59):
of teaching a class blue state like New York, where
criminals can shop lift less than a thousand dollars worth
of goods and face nothing more than a misdemeanor is
not lost. California was also a place where the craziness
ruled today, allowing people to just steal and face and
face little consequences before residents said enough was enough, passing
Proposition thirty six. As red State reported previously, the New
(29:22):
York City College's move is just the latest by university
to push vote courses and one's on diversity, equity, and inclusion,
despite President Donald Trump's announcement that this insanity is going
to end. So yeah, they're trying to give you the
justifications as to why it's okay to steal from people exactly. Ill,
(29:44):
good morning, Sarah, thank you for coming into the chat.
And as I'll just pointed out on the screen, hang on,
I was trying to put in a ticket over the
stats missing from x now on our dashboard. Apparently there's
a reason why they've done that. We'll see if that
gets fixed. So, as Al just pointed out the result
of Democrat policies of watlessness and disorder, which leads into
(30:08):
a segue, I wasn't planning on taking it, but we're
gonna go ahead and talk about it now. So I
heard Zora and Mundami, the Kami making his case to
raise New York City's minimum wage from I believe it's
somewhere around fifteen dollars per hour right now to thirty
dollars per hour. First, I just want to let that
(30:29):
sink in for a second. He wants to double New
York City minimum wage basically overnight. So those of you
who have run businesses before, I will wait for your
sphincter to unclinch before I continue. I'm just saying now.
What I thought was the most humorous about this entire
(30:49):
thing is his response, when you know the reporter asked him,
was like, so, what do you expect is gonna happen
with everybody else's wages when minimum wage goes up to
thirty dollars an hour? Well, I would expect everyone's wages
to likely double, because if I was making thirty dollars
per hour before, I would just go to my boss
(31:10):
and ask for sixty because since I was making double
the minimum wage before, there's no reason I shouldn't be
making double the minimum wage now. Okay, I'm gonna give
you guys their own businesses a second to unclinch again.
Three two one Yeah what seriously you just think you
(31:35):
think it's it? Well, since minimum wage has gone up,
I expect my wages to double, boss Man. These the
people not understand the razor thin edge that a lot
of our economy runs on, especially for the smaller businesses,
because that's just it. For the corporate giants. Sure, they're
(31:56):
gonna be able to figure out a way to do it.
They'll probably kick something. They'll probably kick somebody who was
you know, thirty before. They may kick them a dollar
or so more and be like, hey, you're not making
a minimum wage anymore.
Speaker 19 (32:08):
Woo.
Speaker 1 (32:11):
But to be able to think, to be so unattached
for reality, to think that you can just walk into
your boss's office and be like, I want my pay
double because minimum wage just went up, and to think
that's going to be able to happen, to think they're
going to just say, oh, yeah, cool, we can do that.
(32:32):
Are you kidding me? Again? This is going to put
a lot of the bodigas and everything else out of
business in New York City, which I suspect is part
of what he's trying to do because the funny thing is,
as much as the Left screams and yells about corporate America,
almost every policy they put in place supports corporate America
(32:55):
because it strangles small businesses. It strangles people that are
barely making ends meet trying to build something because they're
having to go into Like for me, when I was
running my security agency, when we first got started, I
had to go in and undercut people to be able
to get my foot in the door. But I never
realized how hard well I was. Like, I can undercut
(33:16):
them for a year or so, show them that we
can do a good job, and then come back in
and try to get a raise. That didn't work. That
didn't work out very well for me. It didn't because
it didn't matter how good of a job we were doing.
The fact that they'd managed to find somebody that did
a really good job for cheap was something that they
wanted to hang on to. So it was really hard
(33:36):
to come back in and say, well, now that we've
shown you what we can do and how much we're
really worth, I think we deserve more than we're like, eah,
but we can't really afford more. That's why we took
you in the first place, and it happened over and
over and over again. So this whole idea that the
economy can just instantly adjust to the idea where you
have to pay somebody a minimum of thirty dollars an hour. Now,
(34:01):
keep in mind, the other thing that's happening is a
high school and college aged children are high school and cottwell,
high school kids and college age adults, let me fix
that are being frozen out of the entry level job
market with every time that these minimum wage increases happen.
Because people don't want to hire high school kids and
(34:23):
pay them thirty dollars an hour, twenty dollars an hour.
They're looking for adults that they know have a track
record of at least some form of responsibility. So that's
the other thing that's happening. You guys, realize that while
we're talking about an average unemployment rate right now of
like four point I think it's what four point one
four point two percent last time I looked, which sounds
really good on paper, until you realize, even under this administration,
(34:45):
how many things are pulling out to make the numbers
look that low. And I'm not blaming the administration for that.
That's been practiced for a long time. But you know
how I know it's much worse than that. Look at
the sixteen to twenty one age demographic for child for kid,
it's entering the workforce, they have a twenty They have
an average unemployment rate right now of twenty one percent,
(35:07):
which means the people that we're expecting to be able
to run things when we die off are getting no
entry level experience, none, because they can't get a job
anywhere because nobody wants to pay a pay a dumb
kid fifteen sixteen seventeen dollars an hour to work in
fast food. So what Mandami's actually gonna end up doing is,
(35:31):
you know, now that AI is becoming a thing and
robots are starting to become a thing, it will be
only a short time until we've priced ourselves out of
the workforce altogether. And then what are we gonna do?
Because that's the part of this equation that I can't
get anybody to talk about, because you know what, I'm
gonna be honest, I wish we lived in a society
where I could just do what I wanted to do
(35:53):
all day, every day and basically not have to grind
sixteen seventeen eighteen hours a day to make sure that
I'm getting my bills paid, because I would love to just,
you know, do a show a couple times a week,
write some articles, you know, go do a public speaking
event here and there, and have enough money to pay
all my bills. But that's not how this works. That's
(36:15):
not how any of this works. So what happens when
we start pricing ourselves out of the job market because
it's too expensive to pay us what we think we
deserve to be paid to be able to live instead of,
you know, realizing that minimum wage exists for a reason.
I don't agree with it, but it does exist for
a reason because I don't think there should be a
(36:36):
minimum wage. I think the market should always be able
to dictate what you're paid. Because if we got minimum
wage out of the equation, people would be being paid more.
To begin with, we saw this with Donald Trump. We're
seeing it again. Average media and blue collar income is
on the rise. When is the last time you guys
saw that other than the first Trump term. Nobody wants
to talk about that part. We've got gas prices are falling,
(36:59):
average blue average blue collar income is rising. So those
two things alone are helping to offset some of these
things that they're screaming about from a little bit here
and there, that we are getting hit with the tariff
crunch because of the companies that don't want to abdorb
the costs, and some companies can't because they're too small.
A lot of the bigger companies are taking the brunt
of it, some of the some of the countries are
(37:19):
even paying a lot of it, which nobody's really talking about,
because they want you scared to death about tariffs. They
want you scared to death about all these different things,
because if you're scared, you're not spending. If you're scared,
you're you're not doing anything they need you in a
fight or flight response. And the funniest thing about this,
and I heard I heard this the other day, is
(37:40):
that I guess Walmart is starting to put in lights
that work on a certain spectrum that actually amplify your
fight or flight response so that one you're not in
the store is long, and two you're not making rational decisions,
so you just start going through and grabbing what you
think you need to get in the hell out. If
that's the case, Walmart deserves to die in a fire
(38:03):
because that's not cool. But this is exactly what I'm
talking about, because this is how things work. We've talked
about this before, whether it's by happenstance or whether it's
because they know what it did to make nicotine more addictive.
A lot of the people that are now now no
longer in the cigarette game are in the fast food game,
(38:25):
and a lot of those things that they've determined made
nicotine more addictive or now suddenly winding up in a
lot of our fast food, like our Twinkies and our
DGNT dogs and our potato gyps and all those things,
because they figured out how to trigger your pleasure centers
so when you eat them, you always want more. And
I've talked about this before as a test, and I
wish I hadn't done this to myself, but I wanted
to find out if it were true, because now I'm
(38:45):
trying to kick it again. But as a test, I
gave up pretty much all junk food for like a month,
complete month, you know, didn't eat you know, cereal from boxes,
tried to eat as little prepared food for a little
process as food as possible. And then I went back
and was like, it's been about a month. Let's see
(39:07):
what happens. Tried to have a bowl of cereal. Next thing,
I know, I wanted four or five bowls of cereal.
Didn't eat all of them, but I wanted them. I
wanted them because they're figuring out how to trigger your
response is so that you will purchase things. And it's
(39:29):
been this way for a while. The problem is they're
now figuring out how to do it with technology. So
it was one thing to trigger it in your brain, right.
So you remember the old school lad campaigns. Everybody was smoking,
all the cool people were doing it, so everybody else
wanted to smoke. Hell, for the longest time, it was
on every TV show, there were ashtrays in every restaurant.
I remember when McDonald's had the little tinfoil, well not
(39:51):
tenfoil with the little ten ashtrays with the McDonald's logo
on them. Hell, more than one of those wound up
on my grandmother's out. But now they're figuring out how
to do the same thing using technology and making it
a million times worse. And I don't know about you,
but that thought kind of terrifies me, especially now that
we're dealing with all this AI stuff. There was an
(40:13):
interesting story regarding the AI stuff that we'll be getting
to after we take the musical interview, because we were
actually past that point, so we're going to get that
done real quick. But because yeah, I find it interesting
that AI, left to its own devices, usually starts trying
(40:33):
to figure out how to wipe us off the map,
even on the small scale. And I don't know why
that doesn't terrify everybody else. But here we are. Since
this is a safe since this is my long day,
this one felt appropriate. We'll be right back. Stay tuned.
Speaker 12 (41:08):
Anful medal. Ain't your running today?
Speaker 22 (41:11):
The boy in a Jantle comic, It's a damn good
time City Tuesday. I run the nation people. Oh it's
all say Jason. If I'm stable to table because I'm.
Speaker 23 (41:28):
Gay money, I'm taking.
Speaker 12 (41:32):
Say, who are at the top looking.
Speaker 18 (41:34):
On the bar?
Speaker 12 (41:34):
The reason the boys had the gun talking in it live.
Speaker 19 (41:41):
Chells like.
Speaker 12 (41:47):
Another play, another train, another bottle, and then another curling
another time.
Speaker 22 (41:51):
Oh my crazy, you're fuck he's got us old about
the bucket the boss.
Speaker 12 (41:58):
Give run the old doors along the time, shouts going
down on the way, the.
Speaker 14 (42:08):
Rocks, the Jays in the back of the teaching the whole.
Speaker 12 (42:13):
Money is Wade broke through the parrot.
Speaker 23 (42:17):
Let my ride.
Speaker 12 (42:27):
No say show Frockler, No say show Brooker.
Speaker 22 (42:37):
The line it's notting this man said, yeah, you know
the man.
Speaker 12 (42:43):
The us look come on like a love, a love
to live with all the problems.
Speaker 22 (42:52):
The TV shows the cassy hole, get out of the place,
tucks to the girl from here way, you know, before
I get to sleep because upper Rocker is putty.
Speaker 12 (43:05):
Eight days a week.
Speaker 18 (43:10):
No slay to.
Speaker 12 (43:16):
No so first, no slip so Brocly.
Speaker 24 (43:26):
No no sleep by J Broply brother no, no slave brother.
Speaker 12 (43:56):
No.
Speaker 1 (44:47):
And welcome back into the program, ladies and gentlemen again.
My name is Rick Robinson. It is Chat Lives Matter
Day right here live on Caline. Ready you don't forget
to come back to and four Chat Lives Matter Night
starting to at seven pm Eastern, we'll be on all
programming expected to be on and we'll be That means
I'll be working from about seven Eastern to night until
(45:08):
about two in the morning and then be back to
do this again because I've insane anyway. So we're back,
We're live. We do have a new before the week.
We'll be playing that at the top of the hour
because it gets into the whole you know, CBS apparently
didn't learn their lesson after all, after having to settle
the lawsuit with President Trump. But we'll get into that,
and of course they're standing by their usual argument. We'll
(45:29):
we released the entire transcripts, blah blah blah. Nobody reads
those unless you do what I do. Nobody reads those.
Come on, man, and you know it, and you know it.
This is this, this is the whole thing of Well,
if we get it wrong, we'll just put a retraction
now two or three days later, which you know, page one,
you know, is where all the wrong stuff goes, and
the retraction goes on page twenty three b under the
(45:51):
fold to use the old paper terms because almost nobody
notices the retractions. So it doesn't matter because you've still
gotten your message out and you can still stand by
the fact, well, we didn't really do anything wrong, because
it's something we knew, we messed up, we fixed it.
Did you though, did you really? Because you knew you
shouldn't have said it the first place. That's the problem.
That's one of the things that drives me absolutely nuts
(46:13):
about you know, the media business. Anymore. They used to
care about getting it right, not just being first, and
they really don't anymore. And that's happening on both sides
more and more. All right, So apparently Been Shapiro has
pissed some people off. So we're gonna be talking about that.
Let me fix that real quick though, because I have
(46:35):
the wrong thing on your still. I thought I fixed it.
Apparently I did not. All right, So here we go.
When you're talking about hold on, when you're talking about
the government pay, you're talking about Social Security, which is
people's money.
Speaker 25 (46:47):
Well it is, Well, it's not the money, it's the
system that they pay.
Speaker 2 (46:52):
Well, yes, believe me, I.
Speaker 1 (46:58):
Promise you.
Speaker 25 (46:58):
The amount of the amount that people are taking is
not the amount that is going in, which is why
we are going bankrupt.
Speaker 1 (47:02):
Okay, But it's not the government just heading out a
blank check.
Speaker 2 (47:06):
No, it's been borrowing money to pay.
Speaker 25 (47:08):
Well, you pay in X dollars and then you get
multiple times X dollars when you retire. That is how
the system works. It is not a lockbox, is what
al Gore was arguing about in two thousands.
Speaker 1 (47:24):
All right, So, according to Ben Shapiro, nobody should be
retiring at sixty five years of age. I saw so
from his premise, the one that he's making, especially about
this whole idea that you know, social Security is something
that should be being paid into and nobody touches it
until they needed YadA, YadA, YadA. So since we did
(47:45):
never do that, even though that was kind of how
they sold the previous generations on Social Security to begin with,
is well, it'll be it'll be money that's there when
you need it. We're not going to touch it for anything.
What was it Barnham said about suckers anyway? So so
(48:05):
in what he's talking about, I agree with his premise
to a point, but I also don't agree with you.
I mean, think about this for a second. What is it?
What did you know? You know what? Instead of me
just spinballing it, let's do something real quick. So let's
(48:31):
fire up the old Rock machine for a second. Average
lifespan in US, So, according to Rock, based on the
most recent data, the average lifespan in US is seventy
seven point five years. So let's look at this from
(48:59):
a logical perspective for a moment. Most of us start
working at somewhere between around the ages of fourteen on
some of us started working much younger because we were
out mowing people's yards and stuff, starting at like age ten.
So what you're telling me is that we should work
(49:22):
pretty much our entire lives. Let's just use let's even
just start at eighteen, eighteen to sixty five is how
many years. That's forty seven years of full time work
(49:42):
until you're even hitting the point where you can consider
taking full retirement from something like social Security for you
to on average manage to squeak out another twelve or
thirteen years. Really, you're telling me that on the richest,
(50:12):
most in the richest, supposedly most well off country in
the world, that's the best that we can do. And
I know, don't you start talking about socialism. I swear
to God, I'll turn this off. That's not what I'm
talking about. Start giving the people the freedom to invest
the money that they're putting into the retirement however they
see fit. Let them roll the dice man, let them
(50:36):
take responsibility for themselves instead of us bolstering our expenses.
That's the thing everybody thought this was gonna and the
thing about it is, so let me look at let
me look up something else real quick. So because I
have another point I'm trying to make so and I
(51:46):
knew this, I just wanted to have the numbers in
front of me. So the Social Security Act was signed
into law in nineteen thirty five by Franklin D. Roosevelt.
At its inception, the fullest time age to collect Solid
Security benefits was set at sixty five, so it hasn't
(52:06):
really changed that much since its inception. But what has changed,
and this is the part that I think you guys,
if you didn't know this, you're about to be pissed.
In nineteen thirty five, when the Solid Security Act was signed,
the average life expectancy at birth in the US was
approximately sixty one point seven years, so around fifty nine
point nine years for men sixty three point nine years
(52:29):
for women, based on historical data from sources like the
CDC and demographic studies. This was notably lower than the
inner Social Security retirement age of sixty five, meaning many
people did not even live long enough to collect the benefits,
and it was set up that way by design. I
(52:49):
love how they say many people, because at the time,
the only people that were even eligible for Social Security
benefits were people that were working. Who was working in
nineteen thirty five, so you had one hundred percent participation
of the workforce and about a ten percent draw if
you were lucky, especially if you remove the female age
(53:14):
from the equation. Now, can't can't remove them completely because
you know, widowed females can could and still can get
the benefits of their spouses as far as social security
is concerned. So can't remove them completely. But if you
don't understand why we keep screaming and yelling that if
(53:38):
social security is going to be the indoll and b
all of how we take care of our old people,
then we're going to have to increase the age because
there's too many people that are that are so there
used to be a lot of people pulling the wagon
and almost nobody in it. Now there's too many people
in it, not enough people pulling it, so there's no
way for us to get it from point A to
point B anymore. So this is why people like Ben
(53:59):
Shapiro and other conservatives are like, if this is all
we're gonna do, then we need to consider increasing the
retirement age, which sucks. Which sucks. But then again, if
they were teaching financial literacy and investment strategies and everything
(54:20):
else like they should be. Most of us would be
able to retire comfortably at fifty five or so, if
not earlier, and just work if we still wanted to.
Now I'm sort of kind of there now, but I'm
still having to work a lot to make the ends
meet because we're still undoing the damage from Biden's economy.
(54:41):
I'm hoping that changes soon. But as unpopular as that
position is, everybody seems to forget that men weren't even
living to sixty on average when they set the retirement
age at sixty five. Technology has gotten better, people are
(55:05):
living longer. That average is continuing to go up now.
There is a difference between length of life and quality
of life, and one can make the argument that in
some cases, people are living longer because we've created a
machinery that can prolong their life, but it doesn't necessarily
mean that it's enhancing the quality of their life, just
the quantity of it. But it still doesn't change the
(55:26):
fact that those averages are changing every single day. Those
numbers are changing every single day, and because there have
been other things that have been created from those that
original Social Security Act, more money is coming out of
it than anybody ever really anticipated, which is why I
(55:48):
for one, have been fine with the idea of actually
letting us. I mean, they do it with health care, now,
why not do it with SoCal security. You have the
ability now instead of you know, taking traditional insurance, you
can basically have money deducted into put into a health
account so that if you need it, you have it.
Because people are figuring things out, We're going to talk
about this after the break, before we get into the
(56:09):
before of the week. People are figuring things out. We're
going to talk about a couple that just had a
kid on the other side of the break, and the
differences in the billing when the hospital found out that
they were paying cash. It's all a scheme to bleed
the industries dry all of it, from minimum wage to insurance.
(56:31):
We'll get into that on the other side.
Speaker 3 (56:33):
Of the break.
Speaker 1 (56:33):
Our one is in the books. Our two coming on
the other side. Stay tuned. Hello, friends, you have a
moment so that we may discuss our Lord and Savior minarchy. No, seriously,
(56:56):
I'm just kidding.
Speaker 20 (56:57):
Hi.
Speaker 1 (56:57):
My name is Rick Robinson. I am the general manager
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Independence with that declaration, America was born inspired by a
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From the Rector goes to the Capitol steps.
Speaker 18 (01:04:31):
It's calling up the truth, no temper regrets.
Speaker 12 (01:04:34):
He's got start.
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You're in his voice and facts in his hand, talking.
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Says to the people all across this lands.
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The rain episode show with your glass high, and.
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Tune and speak up and feel them what we feel.
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Stop the vose of the mocra saying there's a.
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Truth talks uping like a rich ray from the plane.
Start the flower speaking in loud with a night dan
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Speaker 19 (01:05:32):
Dance talk for the people.
Speaker 12 (01:05:34):
Talk that's rail the way.
Speaker 18 (01:05:35):
Can the sun show? Let we say what we feel?
Speaker 2 (01:06:06):
Oh, guess what day it is?
Speaker 3 (01:06:09):
Guess what day?
Speaker 18 (01:06:11):
It is anybody.
Speaker 2 (01:06:13):
It is Wednesday in my Dudes.
Speaker 1 (01:06:16):
Otherwise known as Chat Lives Matter Day right here live
on kalnradio dot com. We're into hour two. Remember we
do shorter shows usually on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday night,
with a longer edition on Fridays to get you ready
for the news you need to know for the weekend,
usually with my good friend at Brad Schlager and anybody
else from the news industry that wants to hang out
(01:06:38):
with us for that hour three but for now. So
we used this a little bit, and I thought this
was absolutely astounding the other day when I saw this
news story. So apparently a couple recently had a baby
and they received a bill from the hospital before the
hospital realized that they were planning on paying cash for
nearly thirty thousand dollars for libri and delivery. When they responded,
(01:07:02):
we don't we don't have insurance and we're going to
be paying cash, they were sent back a bill for
nearly three thousand dollars. I don't know about you, but
I think it's time we start doing some maths, because
when the hospital is charging the insurance company thirty thousand
dollars and I've already told you why they do that.
(01:07:27):
The insurance company negotiates with them. Normally they wind up
getting about half of whatever they build the insurance company.
Then they still try to stick you for the original
three thousand dollars because they're trying to do everything they
can to turn a profit, because medicine has become a
for profit business. And I will admit this as as
(01:07:53):
an Avid, as an avid free market capitalist, I still
have a huge problems with this. I feel like in
some ways we have become the Ferengi because everything has
additional costs and fees. Now, I've talked about this before everybody,
so probably one of his one of the only movies
(01:08:14):
of his that I enjoyed as a kid that I
absolutely hate now as Robin Williams was the Popeye movie.
I loved it when I was a kid because it
was you know, he actually did a pretty good job
of portraying Popeye, and I didn't get all the social
commentary that I get from it now. And I have
to admit, now that I'm a little older, i hate
it a little less because one of the things that
(01:08:34):
my you know, the people older than me were always
laughing at was, you know when the tax guy comes
through the town and be like, oh, you get a
convenience fee for this, you get a fee for this,
you get a fee for this, and a fee for this.
And I would like to point out to everyone that
that was supposed to be a comedy movie based on
a cartoon character, not an instruction manual for how to
stick it to the everyday average American, because we have
(01:08:56):
all of those things now. So during COVID, the institute
of this policy of you have to reserve seats for
movie theaters, well, until I figured out nobody was going
to the movies, I would always buy my tickets in
advance to make sure that I got the seats that
I actually wanted, because I'm kind of picky about where,
I said in a movie theater. Not Sheldon from Big
(01:09:18):
Bang Theory picky, but I am kind of picky. And
then I realized that I'm paying an extra three, four
or five dollars by the time I'm done buying tickets
because I do it online, because there's a convenience fee
for processing your ticket purchases online that you don't have
to pay if you go do it in person. I
(01:09:39):
blame the convenience store model, because that's where all the
that's how all this started. There were local markets, and
then there was oh, we'll put this little corner store
in that has kind of the sum of the same
stuff you usually get from a market, but because we're
making it easier for them to get to it, we'll
charge them more. But this whole idea that the couple
(01:10:04):
gets a nearly thirty thousand dollars bill for having a
child and then says, oh, no, we're paying cash, and
then gets one that's a tenth of that. Are you
kidding me? Are you kidding me? This is where this
is where we live now, this is this is the
world we live in now. If you have insurance, because
(01:10:26):
you know, for a while you were required to have insurance,
they make the insurance company pay five times as much,
or no, they try to get them to pay ten
times as much, knowing that they're probably gonna get five.
(01:10:47):
And then they send you this invoices as original bill,
thirty thousand dollars payment through insurance company fifteen thousand dollars
amount U two nine and ninety six dollars and fifty
five cents. They're giving us almost a fifty discount off
of the original bill and only asking us to pay
(01:11:09):
ten percent of what's left. No, they got five times
the amount from the insurance company and still want you
to pay the original amount of the bill. Andrew didn't
see you sneak in, My guy. Glad to see you
(01:11:29):
in a chat room, sir. Hope you're having a great Wednesday,
and hopefully they're not working you too hard, because you know,
having to work for the man sucks anyway. All right,
So I told you we do have a new before
the week. We're gonna get to that probably just about now.
Hang on, get it cute up first, and this this
(01:11:54):
is the best way for me to go into this
whole CBS hasn't learned its lesson thing, because apparently they
haven't because I don't have it in me to be
ranty today. I just don't because I barely have a
voice still. But we're doing this thing anyway, so here
we go.
Speaker 28 (01:12:17):
This individual was a known human smuggler MS thirteen gang member,
an individual who was a wife beater and someone who
was so perverted that he solicited nude photos from miners,
and even his fellow human traffickers told him to knock it.
Speaker 1 (01:12:33):
Off says nothing news.
Speaker 8 (01:12:35):
He had to see the Saints, nothing.
Speaker 24 (01:12:39):
Perica.
Speaker 1 (01:12:39):
Welcome to the ULZI too, do not talk a little.
Speaker 2 (01:12:47):
Hate everybody, and welcome back to this Week in Dumb
Democracy where we showcase some of the dumbest news makers
of the week. We're getting back to normal here, just
like you guys are after a long late day weekend.
I hope you guys enjoyed the summer, and I'm glad
that you're back here with us. Today we're talking about
some more media buffoonery because we're not just getting back
(01:13:10):
to normal, the media is also getting back to normal.
Today's offenders that we're gonna be talking about is CBS. Now,
CBS has been in the news recently. Let's just say
they haven't had the best record with the truth when
it comes to President Trump and his administration. You may
recall back in twenty twenty that sixty minutes interview with
(01:13:30):
Leslie Stole talking about the Biden laptop hunter Biden and
all of that, and how that turned out to be
a lot of misinformation and disinformation.
Speaker 1 (01:13:40):
Flash back.
Speaker 20 (01:13:41):
You know, this is sixty minutes and we can't put
on things we can't.
Speaker 2 (01:13:46):
Be because it's bad for Biden.
Speaker 5 (01:13:48):
We can't put on things we can't verify.
Speaker 8 (01:13:50):
I think it's I think it's one of the biggest
scandals I've ever seen. And you don't got through it.
Speaker 19 (01:13:56):
You want to talk about it because I.
Speaker 2 (01:13:59):
Want to talk about significant things.
Speaker 5 (01:14:01):
I'm telling you, of course.
Speaker 8 (01:14:02):
It can be verified.
Speaker 18 (01:14:03):
Excuse me.
Speaker 17 (01:14:04):
They found the laptop, Leslie, Leslie, verify what can't be verified?
Speaker 1 (01:14:09):
The laptop and a flashback.
Speaker 2 (01:14:12):
More recently, we saw a selective editing during the twenty
twenty four campaign when it came to another sixty minutes
interview with former Vice President Kamala Harris.
Speaker 1 (01:14:21):
But it seems that Prime Minister net and Yah who
is not listening.
Speaker 26 (01:14:26):
Well, Bill, the work that we have done has resulted
in a number of movements in that region by Israel
that were very much prompted by or a result of
many things, including our advocacy for what needs to happen
(01:14:47):
in the region.
Speaker 1 (01:14:47):
But it seems that Prime Minister net and Yah who
is not listening.
Speaker 26 (01:14:52):
We're not going to stop pursuing what is necessary for
the United States to be clear about where we stand
on the need for this war to end.
Speaker 2 (01:15:00):
That resulted in a settlement of sixteen million dollars in
Trump's favor, and now over the weekend, you'd be forgiven
if you didn't watch what Homeland Security Secretary Christy Um
calls a whitewashing of the truth when being questioned about
Kilmar Abrego Garcia and recent news concerning his latest attainment
(01:15:24):
by immigration officials. We're gonna be talking about all that,
and I'm gonna let you guys know, of course, about
our new sponsor, Freedom Chat. But before we get to
all that, I'm gonna ask you guys to please subscribe
to the channel. Hit that notification bell so you don't
miss any other shows. And if you like what you're
seeing here in this or any other video on this channel,
(01:15:44):
smash that thumbs up button like you do normally. Be
sure to like comment, share the show with your friends,
all that really really good stuff, because all that's gonna
help the channel grow thanks to the YouTube algorithm, Missy
ma Homer Security Secretary Christine Nome went on a tirade
after this interview on X talking about how CBS whitewashed
(01:16:11):
the truth and selectively edited her interview about alleged MS
thirteen gang member kil Mar Abrego Garcia. You may know
him as the Maryland man, that Maryland dad that Democrats
like to defend. He's an illegal migrant that the Trump
administration deported to El Salvador earlier this year. They brought
him back. He was brought up on criminal charges in
(01:16:33):
Tennessee concerning trafficking, and he's now back in custody for
Immigration Magazine to be deported. I believe to you Ganda,
of all places. So here's what we're gonna do. We're
gonna look at the broadcast edit of CBS Faced the
Nation concerning this question about Kilmar Abrego Garcia, and then
(01:16:56):
we're gonna look at what Christine nom provided on her
ex account and see how it differs. Face the Nation
does get significant viewership on Sunday mornings, averages over two
million viewers per week. So this is a big deal
when there's an accusation about selectively editing a segment. Let's
(01:17:19):
see what went out for air from CBS.
Speaker 29 (01:17:24):
One of the most high profile examples of someone who's
been rounded up by Ice in recent months is Kilmara
Abrego Garcia, and the fate of his situation is still
up in the air. He's a waiting trial and human
smuggling charges set for January in Tennessee. But your department's
also working to get him deported to Uganda if he
broke the law in this country, as the administration of ledges,
(01:17:48):
shouldn't he be held here and face charges here instead
of being deported.
Speaker 28 (01:17:54):
Will prosecution decisions are always made by the Department of
Justice in pamar Bondi's depart so we will let them
do that. Although this individual does have criminal charges pending,
he has charges pending against him civilly as well. And
the one thing that we will continue to do is
to make sure that he doesn't walk free in the
United States of America.
Speaker 29 (01:18:15):
But I heard you say that we're going to let
the Justice Department do that. Does that mean the push
to deport under ugandas off.
Speaker 28 (01:18:21):
Oh, we will still continue to pursue all options. We
will make sure that he's not released into this country.
So regardless of that, yes, absolutely, he's not an American
citizen and he shouldn't be here, and especially because of
his dangerous criminal activities, we should ensure that we leave
every avenue on the table.
Speaker 3 (01:18:38):
Got it.
Speaker 2 (01:18:39):
So without seeing what was quote unquote left out, we
really can't tell if something's been whitewashed or not right.
So what we're going to have to do is compare
this to whatever Christy nom has to show what the
difference is. And our friends at the Meeting Research Center
(01:19:01):
sort of spliced everything together to show exactly what was
cut out in its proper context. It might feel like
deja vu for a little bit, but I think you're
going to see the difference at as we look at
the I guess we'll call it the raw cut of
this CBS Faced the Nation Interview.
Speaker 29 (01:19:24):
One of the most high profile examples of someone who's
been rounded up by ICE in recent months is Kilmara
Abrego Garcia, and the fate of his situation is still
up in the air. He's a waiting trial and human
smuggling charges set for January in Tennessee. But your department's
also working to get him deported to Uganda if he
broke the law in this country, as the administration alleges,
(01:19:47):
shouldn't he be held here and face charges here instead
of being deported.
Speaker 28 (01:19:54):
Well, prosecution decisions are always made by the Department of
Justice in Pam Bondi's department, so we will let them
do that. Although this individual does have criminal charges pending.
He has charges pending against him civilly as well, and
the one thing that we will continue to do is
to make sure that he doesn't walk free in the
United States of America. This individual was a known human smuggler,
(01:20:17):
a MS thirteen gang member, an individual who is a
wife beater, and someone who was so perverted that he
solicited nude photos from minors and even his fellow human
traffickers told him to knock it off. He was so
sick in what he was doing and how he was
treating small children. So he needs to never be in
the United States of America, and our administration is making
(01:20:39):
sure we're doing all that we can to bring him
to justice.
Speaker 29 (01:20:41):
But I heard you say that we're going to let
the Justice Department do that. Does that mean the push
to deport himder ugandas off?
Speaker 28 (01:20:48):
Oh, we will still continue to pursue all options, but
we will make sure that he's not released into this country.
So regardless of that, yes, absolutely, he's not an American
citizen and he shouldn't be here, and especially because of
his day Duris criminal activities, we should ensure that we
leave every avenue on the table.
Speaker 3 (01:21:05):
Got it?
Speaker 2 (01:21:05):
Oh? Yeah, I think we got it. Clearly NOME was
cut off from giving proper context to why kill Mar
Brigo Garcia needs to be deported? That part was totally
cut off. In fact, looking at the quote unquote raw
cut here provided by NOME as interspersed into the clip
by Media Research Center, you can kind of see where
(01:21:28):
that cut was made. It was made when she was
talking about kill mar Abrigo Garcia is really really bad
acts that landed him in trouble with immigration officials. How
he's a known smuggler of people. How he's a reputed
gang member of MS thirteen. How is an individual who
has the history of domestic violence and some really really
(01:21:49):
bad stuff about kids that I'm not gonna repeat here.
Why why would you do this now? CBS did go
on to say in a response to the post from
an unnamed rep that quote Secretary Gnomes Face the Nation
interview was edited for time and met all CBS news standards.
(01:22:13):
The entire interview is publicly available on YouTube, and the
full transcript was posted early Sunday morning at cbsnews dot com.
Is that good enough? Let's talk about that as well
as what we know about media hacks. Right after the
break like what you see so far, go ahead and
(01:22:36):
smash that thumbs up button. Also, leave us a comment
and tell us what you're thinking, and don't forget to
subscribe so you never miss another show. Before we get
to some more analysis of this video, I want to
talk to everybody about freedom Chat. Freedom Chat is a
next generation messaging app that keeps your conversations private.
Speaker 1 (01:22:57):
Now.
Speaker 2 (01:22:57):
I know a lot of people out there say the
same thing, but at freedom Chat they actually mean it.
Freedom Chat does not track your data, they don't sell
your data, they don't allow people to screenshot. There's no
link devices. It's just total freedom and security the way
it should be. Freedom Chat features end to end encryption,
(01:23:19):
no storage of messages on any server, and no commercial
use of your data. Now, if you're anything like me
and you're surfing the web all the time, those are
pretty important things because I see whatever I click on
a web page, I see it shows up in my
social media as an ad later on, and it just
is a reminder to me that I'm getting tracked all
(01:23:41):
the time. Freedom Chat doesn't do that. That's why I've
partnered with freedom Chat to create a Buffoon of the
Week channel on there where you'll not only get behind
the scenes stuff from all the shows we produce, but
we get to create a community that is away from
the prying eyes of big data and all of the
(01:24:02):
things that come with it. So, folks, get on your
phones right now. Download the freedom Chat ap app. It's
available right now for iPhone and Android. Trust me, you
won't regret it, and don't forget to subscribe to Before
of the Week on freedom Chat. We have a lot
of fun on there. I'm looking forward to interacting with
you there as well. Go to freedomchat dot com for
(01:24:23):
more information about their end to end encryption and all
the nerdy and wonky stuff you ever wanted to know
about cybersecurity. It's a new day dawning for your messaging,
and freedom Chat is leading the way. Whenever we talk
about media hackery like this, I always like to bring
up that there's a whole chapter about it in my
(01:24:43):
book Schnuckskirts, Lies the Scoundrels, A Field Guide to Identifying
political buffoons that's available right now on Amazon, at Barnes
and Noble and other online bookstores. This guy is a grifter,
so one of the things I did in the book
was create little scientific names for each type of buffoon
that we identify, sort of like the species name that
(01:25:05):
we give the scientific name for animals and stuff in
true field guide fashion. So the media hack is buffoonicus
ad nusium. They're willing to disregard the journalists ethos by
purposely skewing their own reporting in favor of a partisan view,
(01:25:26):
an esthetic fallacy, as it were, a beautiful narrative, whereby
they put themselves into the story, They make themselves the
news themselves, like CBS has been doing here, and whereby
they cater to their audience to tell them what they
want to hear. CBS News knows that they're two and
a half million viewers. Don't want a regurgitation of all
(01:25:50):
the bad things that kilmar Abrego Garcia has done. They
want him to be that marilynd Man that is being
persecuted by the Trump administration, as being hounded by immigration officials,
that's being wronged by society. That's the aesthetic fallacy, the
beautiful narrative they want to push by Christin nom going
(01:26:11):
on CBS Face the Nation and putting it all out there,
talking about his history of domestic virns, his history of
human trafficking, his history of being a gang member, his
history of doing really really icky discussing things visa VI children.
Nobody on that side of the aisle opposite Donald Trump
(01:26:32):
wants to hear about that. So therefore they cut it
for time in order to fit the interview into their narrative.
That's what's going on here. This is pure narrative control.
Now the question becomes who at CBS is responsible for
this edit. Is it Ed O'Keeffe himself, the person who
(01:26:53):
was doing the interviewing. Is it some other producer of
Face the Nation. I don't know, But here's what I
do know. By Christine Nome putting this out on the
same day but later in the afternoon on Sunday, she
was able to get a lot of eyes on this
selective editing, this whitewash of the truth. Christine Nomes's post
(01:27:18):
got as the filming of this video four point seven
million views on x alone. That's not to say all
the other views by people like me picking it up
and aggregating it and signal boosting it. It could be
well into the multiples of millions from there. Meanwhile, the
(01:27:40):
YouTube clip of the segment here, it's gotten about eighty
eight eighty nine thousand views as of the creation of
this video. So Gnome kind of gets the w here
when you think about it. She was able to get
this selective edit issue out into the public more so
(01:28:03):
than the original broadcast of about two point five million
on average. For CBS has faced the nation. She got
it out there more on social media then CBS has
gotten it out on social media. And this is now
another black eye for CBS in their news division.
Speaker 1 (01:28:19):
Oh no, we suck again.
Speaker 2 (01:28:23):
Why is CBS so allergic to the truth. Why does
CBS want to force a narrative down everybody's throats. I
think CBS and other agencies like it, other news agencies
like it. They need to come to a hard realization here,
and that is, after what is almost a decade now
(01:28:45):
of the Trump era, We're onto the game. We're all
onto the game. It started out with a lot of
media savvy people on social media is kind of screaming
into the wind. And as people like James o'keee and
others got out there exposing the narrative, exposing the incestuous
(01:29:05):
relationship between government and media, exposing these hacks for who
they are, I think the worms started to turn momentum
started to shift, and we saw from I guess the
Biden error because people were so upset that Trump lost,
that the pushback increased exponentially over time. People got tired
(01:29:29):
of the woke narratives, People got tired of narratives in general,
and now we're at the point where narrative busting has
become a near regular occurrence.
Speaker 19 (01:29:40):
Busting makes me feel good.
Speaker 2 (01:29:42):
CBS News just went through a whole situation where they
were sued over selective editing and they had to pay
a hefty sum for it. And now here they are
again supposedly turning over a new leaf, and they're getting
a hand caught in the cookie are one more time.
Bravo to Christine Noman for catching them again. Bravo for
(01:30:07):
the people on social media for challenging out there, and
bravo the people like you who are signal boosting it
and getting it out beyond the bounds of social media
and getting into print media and other digital media out
(01:30:27):
there so that it goes far and wide. That the
days of media controlled narratives is hopefully coming to an end.
But hey, listen, that's just my opinion on this whole situation.
I want to know what you think about this latest
example of media hackery exposed by the Trump administration. Do
(01:30:48):
you guys think that the momentum is now on the
side of I guess you want to call it the right.
I like to call it the side of the angels,
the people who are standing for truth in broadcasting, truth
in media. Has that momentum shifted to the other side?
Or is this just another example of the momentum continuing
to shift but we're not quite there yet. Hit me
(01:31:11):
up in the comments. Let's discuss this video as well
as all the other shnanigans in buffoonery that happened every
day this week. He was dumb mocracy.
Speaker 8 (01:31:36):
I'll views an opinion express here, not necessarily of mainstream media.
Speaker 1 (01:31:40):
It may have been some listeners, all right, all right,
all right, So that is one of the first buffoons
of the week that's been out for a while, which
is why I wanted to make sure that I play
it today. Make sure and when you have time, if
you haven't done so, you had to go subscribe to
Gen's channel. He'll be live tonight over here on x
as well for us, so you can always go subscri
I'm then that should be at around nine pm Eastern,
(01:32:03):
but we're gonna get ready to take our musical interlude
break again. I don't talk about him as much as
he does because I'm still trying to figure out exactly
what i want to say about him. It doesn't sound
like I'm stealing from him. But we do have the
same sponsors, so Freedom Chat, So their information will be
up for you here in a second if you'd like
to go check them out. We have a QR code
that you can scan to take takes you to their website.
(01:32:24):
They don't they don't have a web based version yet,
so you'll basically I have to decide from there whether
you have an Android or an Apple phone, whichever one
you are, Android or iPhone, whichever one you want to download.
But I do encourage you to check them out. It's
been a fun add to our stuff around here. We've
got the Rick Robbins shoe channel, We've got the KLARM
radio channel, and I'm working on getting others added now
(01:32:46):
that I'm trying to get back into the full time
swing of things. But we are gonna take that break
right now. Enjoy this musical interlude and I'll be back
to close this show out. After this, well, apparently that
plan is not going to work real well, So hang
(01:33:07):
on just a second because something just went wonky.
Speaker 11 (01:33:11):
Mm hmmm.
Speaker 1 (01:33:13):
We'll do.
Speaker 2 (01:33:17):
There.
Speaker 30 (01:33:17):
We rise say this from.
Speaker 12 (01:33:33):
Least behind.
Speaker 30 (01:33:38):
No chance to ride.
Speaker 24 (01:33:40):
Fuck, don't changel, I just leave it colder.
Speaker 30 (01:33:52):
The fields.
Speaker 12 (01:33:57):
Leads to nowhere.
Speaker 24 (01:34:00):
Oh he was not staker, gimb.
Speaker 23 (01:34:10):
Will not, I will show.
Speaker 12 (01:34:19):
I will not, I will.
Speaker 30 (01:34:38):
Eyes. Now the talk is.
Speaker 23 (01:34:42):
Taking it over.
Speaker 19 (01:34:44):
Show me where.
Speaker 12 (01:34:47):
Did fall?
Speaker 8 (01:34:51):
Not to.
Speaker 23 (01:34:53):
A lo staker.
Speaker 30 (01:34:58):
Not gimm.
Speaker 18 (01:35:01):
Will not, will not.
Speaker 19 (01:35:06):
Shop goble b will not.
Speaker 23 (01:35:14):
Go, will get the way.
Speaker 30 (01:35:24):
People to change.
Speaker 23 (01:35:27):
You can dial cop broad complaing, I would shot.
Speaker 30 (01:35:49):
People.
Speaker 12 (01:36:01):
I will not bray, I will shine, will not.
Speaker 30 (01:36:10):
But will not nay, I will tag.
Speaker 12 (01:36:13):
Get brown the wayside.
Speaker 23 (01:36:21):
I got lost the wheel Chidney him, I am compround comb, but.
Speaker 19 (01:36:30):
Will shine the world.
Speaker 1 (01:37:13):
Yeah, That's what I'm going with to Andrew. Tell your fault.
Everything's broken into it because of you. That's my story
and I'm sticking to it. All right. So interesting little
thing going on, because you know, the entire argument that
everybody's been making with you know, because there was a
recent school shooting. Again if you missed it, our folks
over in front porch forensics did a bit of a
(01:37:35):
deep dive on it the other day and actually gave
a practical solution that the station put out I put out.
I tried to put it out everywhere because I don't
know why that stuff isn't in every school yet. But
I will probably pin it to the station account here
in a little bit just to make sure, well, I
don't know, I may repost it again, though I don't
(01:37:55):
know if I'm gonna pin it, because it's actually a
great idea and we may actually talk about that some tomorrow. Anyway,
I haven't decided yet, but it's been something that's been
bugging me for a while. But I do want to
point this out because every time we start talking about
the number of people that either are trans, identify as
(01:38:18):
trans or are suspected to be trans, that have been
involved in mass casualty incidents lately are kind of scary.
And the thing about it is that data supports it.
So if you remove some of the stuff you know about,
you know, the the suicides from shootings and all the
other statistics that they kind of lump in with these things,
because for some reason, sometimes even in mass casualty events,
(01:38:39):
they still try to lump those things in. You realize
that in the last five years or so, over forty
percent of mass shootings have been executed by someone either
who is trans or suspected to be trans. Forty percent.
You would think that would be enough to set are
(01:39:00):
getting people's attention, But instead of getting anybody's attention, we're just,
you know, continuing to well, you're just a bigot. No,
I'm somebody who understands that these people are mentally broken somehow,
and we probably need to be addressing that because and
I have said this two people that I know that
are trans. Because if I'm going to say something about you,
(01:39:20):
I'm damn sure gonna say it to you. Something inside
of you is broken. I'm sorry if that hurts your feelings,
but something inside of you is broken. Because the idea
that you could be born into the wrong body and
are willing to mutilate yourself just so that you can
supposedly feel better about yourself is insane to me. And
(01:39:41):
the fact that so many people after doing it realized
this didn't help tells us everything we need to know.
There are a growing number of people that are detransitioning
that were some of the first round of people to
go through all this stuff and they realized it didn't
help fix anything. I still feel just as broken. So
(01:40:01):
they're going through the process of going back to, as
the left just put it, their birth assigned gender, because
you know, it's a decision as you pop out of
the womb, you're picking your gender. Never mind the fact
that they can you know that they can see this
stuff usually well in advance. Now anyway, all right, so
(01:40:34):
let's see what else, what other trouble we can get
into as we get ready to close out the show here.
All right, So we talked about this a little bit
last week, but the Winsome series campaign in Virginia is
(01:40:57):
getting some attention because of a bunch of racist people.
Oh all right, so let's show this. I guess this
is the newest ad that's being put out by the
Winsome campaign. Are the Seers campaign not winsom All right?
(01:41:26):
Here we go.
Speaker 31 (01:41:31):
How liberal is Abigail Spanburger. She voted to allow men
in girls' sports bathrooms and locker rooms. Spanburger believes this
woman has a right to undress next to young girls.
Speaker 14 (01:41:43):
For LGBTQ neighbors have the same legal rights as anyone else.
Speaker 31 (01:41:47):
And if a child secretly identifies as transgender at school,
she says the parents shouldn't be told. That's insane. Spamburger
is for they them, not for us. Vote Winsome Earl
series for governor for common sense.
Speaker 1 (01:42:01):
Okay, so I don't usually comment much on political ads,
but that, again was a thirty second spot and it
was kind of fire. I don't live in the state,
so I won't be voting for her. I couldn't even
if I wanted to. But I think a lot of
I think a lot of folks that live there have
had enough because you've seen what was a dark blue
(01:42:24):
state turning more and more purple for quite some time.
But you know, I wanted to play that before we
got back into this because I just want to give
you the actual statistics here. So, after the recent shooting
at an Annunciation Catholic school in Minneapolis, Minnesota, so all
the media attentions finally dying out for obvious reasons, because
the shooter was transgender, hated Trump, hated everyone, really, and
(01:42:48):
it doesn't fit the narrative that media likes to keep
such a story on repeat. For the shooter, they mentioned
his name, I'm not going to shot and killed two
kids and injured seventeen more in August twenty seven during
a mass it was commemorating the start of the start
of the new school year. It seems like there have
been scores of mass shootings committed by transgender individuals. Western
(01:43:09):
Journal did an analysis showing that since twenty twenty, forty
percent of mass shooters or would be mass shooters have
been identified as transgender or suspected of being as such. So,
and I quote from the report, once you cut through
the gang violence, Revenge, Romance, Gone Bad, Noise, GROC, and
GPG both give an estimate of forty percent of school
(01:43:29):
shooters would be shooters since twenty twenty have been trans
or suspected to be trans The media silence on this
matter is actually deafening, and it doesn't really surprise me.
It should piss everybody off, but it doesn't surprise me
because they're the new protected class. There always has to
be one. Have you noticed that there always has to
(01:43:50):
be one? They weren't able. They weren't so now that
we're deporting everybody that they were expecting to be their
new boat, new voter base because they expected a re
heat of the eighties is what happened. So they thought
they were gonna be able to do what they did
to Ring, and they were going to be able to
stack the deck, get as many people in here as
they could, and then say, Okay, now we're ready to
fix it, but first we want amnesty and citizenship for
(01:44:13):
all the people that are here. Because it worked the
first time, they expect you to work again because that's
how they work. They do it. Look at their game plan.
They beat the same drums over and over and over
and over and over and over and over, and for
the longest time, it's been working. But I think they've
been beating them a little too long now because everybody's
(01:44:35):
kind of deaf to the noise. It's like Pritzker, and
for everybody who lives in Chicago, especially if you're willing
to be honest about it, I encourage you to follow
his advice. He recently put out a post earlier to
I think it was I think it was yesterday, saying
that authoritarians rely on your silence and depend on your silence,
So record what's actually happening in your neighborhoods and put
(01:44:56):
it out on social media. Please do, please do, but
don't whitewash. It either don't do what he did and
go out walking along the river bank with his detail
at six in the morning showing mostly empty, peaceful streets.
Of course they're gonna it's the governor, for God's sake.
They probably swept the area before I even went down there.
(01:45:18):
If I was the head of a security detail, if
I didn't do that, I deserve to be fired, then
probably shot because of where he's the governor of. Look,
I don't want martial law anymore than the next person,
and my love or oh my god, I'm so afraid
Trump's gonna declare martial law m A R S H
A L L. But supposedly we're the illiterates who can't spell.
(01:45:50):
The funny thing is, and I saw this the other
day too. I saw somebody pointing out that, you know
that because everybody's putting out all the blue state school
district stats about how few people can read, how few
people can do this, how few people can do that,
And they're like, well, now do red states. Okay, So
you've basically just made the entire case as to why
we shouldn't have centralized national education because when red states
(01:46:14):
suck and blue states suck, and the only common denominator
is the government is in our business telling us how
we have to teach our kids, right right, Marshall Dilon Law,
Oh dude, I just but that's just it. You're you're
making the argument against the very thing that you claim
that we need. Because if nobody's approach is working because
(01:46:38):
the government's heavy hand is all over it, then something's wrong.
You know what is working? And this is funny because
they make fun of this all the time. You know
what is working. Kids that are homeschooled, that have like
ninety percent literacy rates. I wonder if it has anything
to do with the ample amounts of attention and the
(01:47:03):
fact that in most of the I mean even in
Oklahoma City, I think they're up to like forty forty
two kids on average per class. Now should have been
a cowboy. Damn it. Al you put the damn song
in my head and I started singing before I even
knew what I did. Oh, this is why I shouldn't
(01:47:23):
pay attention to the chat when I'm live on the air.
I apologize to everyone's ear drums. Not really, it's his fault.
Blame him anyway. Oh but yeah, this whole argument just
astounds me because again, this is anecdotal evidence, and I
will be completely honest that it was anecdotal evidence. My son,
(01:47:46):
my youngest son, who was on track to graduate from
the same school that I went to for high school
Midwest City when we moved to the country, went from
a C minus student to an A minus within a
matter of months because he went from being crammed into
classrooms with thirty five and forty kids to having classrooms
(01:48:09):
with fifteen to twenty kids. And the funny thing about
country school is a lot of the teachers are guys,
and he was getting more of what he needed from
his male teachers because they weren't taking his shit. Female
teachers those yeah, whatever, you know, male teachers, then don't
put up with your shit. It's kind of like having
(01:48:31):
your dad in a classroom because when he's smart, when
he was anyway, I'm getting into all that he's an adult. Now.
You should see the emails I get from professors in
a high level university. You forget I used to work
for one of those two. So I understand, are you
(01:48:53):
yike singing because of my singing? Because that I'm just kidding,
just kidding, But no, it's just seriously, the whole idea
of what we need to make education better is more money.
We've done nothing but try to throw money at it. Hell,
we legalize gambling in Oklahoma as far as racetracks and
(01:49:16):
Indian casinos and lotteries because we were trying to pour
more money into education. The problem is, and nobody seems
to have figured this out. Every time we passed this
new thing that's supposedly supposed to bring in all this
new money for education, the legislator, the legislature takes the
money that was earmarked for education before and moves it
to something else, so the money funding amount basically stays
(01:49:39):
the same. I was his teasing anyway, but yeah, those dude,
those emails, and I know again I talked about this
on Friday, but please, for the love of God, if
you are still in a corporate work structure, stop hitting
reply all unless your direct supervisor tells you you have to,
(01:50:04):
because holy crap, stop it. Yeah again, I talked about
pet Peeves on Friday night, So if you missed that show,
it's available pretty much everywhere now, and I do encourage
you to go back and listen, because yeah, that is
probably one of My biggest pet peeves that, and don't
especially from somebody who spent when I started working in
(01:50:25):
call centers in what two thousand and nine and then
retired from call center work in twenty twenty three. Dude,
it's just coming up on two years since I retired.
I just realized that that'll be two years in a
couple of weeks because I officially retired at the middle
in the middle of September, and then had two weeks
paid vacation coming. So I just used that as my
two weeks notice, even though I'd already turned in my
(01:50:46):
retirement papers. See, don't even get me started on that
one either. And that's that's kind of what drives me
nuts though, right, because in almost every other business you
are required to supply whatever you need for your job
in almost every other one. My son, who's a mechanic,
(01:51:09):
has paid thousands of dollars for his tools, thousands upon
thousands of dollars for his toolbox and the tools that
go in it. But teachers aren't expected to supply the
things that they need for their classrooms because that's just
not fair. Yeah, exactly. I mean, Al's got all the
(01:51:31):
answers in the chat I should just pull it and
I should just let him do the talking for the
last six minutes or so. But no, he's not wrong
though either. He's pointing out that all of the money
that we keep trying to throw into education goes to
the top heavy unions. Now, as somebody who was raised
by a democratic family, I'm not willing to say that
that unions didn't want to serve a purpose, because they did,
but they've outlived their usefulness because now they have become
(01:51:54):
the very things that they were once trying to fight,
and most of the money that you pour into them
goes towards the top ranking salaries and the nice, big
palatial office buildings that they have and all these things
that they really don't need instead of taking care of you.
And yeah, Andrew back to that, you know, safety gear.
(01:52:18):
I mean, I'll be honest. When I was working for
when I was working in law enforcement, that stuff was
supplied by the departments. A lot of it was like
I had a department issue vesked at the department issue gun,
but if I wanted anything other than the duty rig
that they issued to me, I had to pay for it.
(01:52:42):
So this isn't an uncommon thing. This isn't an uncommon thing,
but for some reason, teachers are put on this weird pedestal.
And this is coming from somebody who had I mean,
one of two of my cousins are teachers. Actually several
of my cousins are teaching. I just realized that. So
I have one that just got his doctorate in education
(01:53:05):
and doctorate in special education for that matter. I have
another who just went into teaching officially three or four
years ago. So it's not that I don't support teachers,
because I do. What I don't support is almost everybody
that goes into that pipeline comes out this liberal, mindless zombie.
And I don't really understand that because it's almost like
(01:53:30):
common sense gets eroded the more education that you get.
Not for everybody, but it seems like a recurring theme.
And I don't really understand how that happens either, because
there are so many things that our children should be
being taught in school. Our children are not being taught
how to survive at all. Most kids, by the time
(01:53:51):
they get graduated from high school, they're like, I don't
even know what I want to do with my life yet.
And of course all they've been hearing the entire time
they're in high school is go to college, go to
colleg Let's go to college, go to college, go to college.
You know what I love now is that paradigm is shifting.
And I've talked I talk to people about this all
the time. I know a kid who just got out
of high school in I guess it was twenty twenty.
(01:54:17):
Took two years of otech in high school for welding,
finished up after he got out of high school's best
so he's been out for three years now. Dude is
officially a millionaire now. Granted he bus he busted his
ass to get there, but he's officially a millionaire because
(01:54:38):
he's a welder and he's gone into a very high
demand area for welding and he's built his own company
around it. Eight years. Dude's been out of high school
for eight years is a millionaire because he went into
the trades. They've been lying to us about what it
(01:55:06):
takes to make it in America. They've been lying to
us on purpose. And if you've been listening to the
show for a while, you're gonna know why. Because thanks
to the Rockefellers, our education system became an indoctrination system.
They actually did studies on it to find out exactly
how long it takes to completely reshape somebody's mind about
(01:55:27):
how they believe believe in things, and it was twelve years.
Once they got all those studies, guess what they did.
They started implementing it through a lot of philanthropy. So
I understand a lot of teachers get into it and
get into that career path for the right reasons. I
(01:55:50):
would encourage every single one of you to start looking
at what's going on behind the scenes, because you all
have to be part of the change too. My name
is Rick rab and this has been my show. This
is the Chat Lives Saturday edition. I'll be back tonight
seven pm Eastern for America Off the Rails, followed by
what should be the conservative comudge and radio show, followed
by a trip behind them to me Lions with our
(01:56:12):
good friends Jean and Ross over at the Baffoon of
the Week channel, and then coming back over here for
Rick and Orty at ten pm Eastern, followed by what
should be hopefully Edge of Liberty at eleven pm Eastern,
and then vz's Preserve Bobcat Saloon at ten at midnight Eastern.
So all things considered an all programming available. I'll be
working with you from about seven to night until two
(01:56:32):
in the morning. Then I get to come back and
do this all over again because I'm insane. Anyway, you guys,
enjoy the rest of your Wednesday. Thank you for the
over two hundred of you that wound up finding your
way to us today. Make sure you are liking, subscribing,
sharing wherever you happen to be finding us at. But
we have reached the point where I do have to
tell you this one is over because I out talked
(01:56:52):
the music bed bye everybody, closing time, open all the doors,
and okay, hang on, I gotta fix that. So I
guess my granddaughter was in here playing with buttons again,
so just kidding, we're not ready to say bye yet
because I guess at some point she hit that one
and it's still preloaded, so no, I gotta let it
(01:57:15):
run all the way through, so we'll actually start at
the beginning. So see, I thought we were done. I
thought we were done. We're not done yet, and I'm
just kind of sitting here going shut up in a cowboy,
just kidding. I won't torture you guys with that, but
damn it. That so I'm still this stuck in my head.
We're gonna have to talk after the SHOWU. That was
not cool, man, That was not cool. Not cool, it
(01:57:38):
all not cool, It all all right. I think we
are officially getting to the point now where we should
be able to say goodbye. Now here we go bye everybody.
Speaker 11 (01:57:50):
But over, say over.
Speaker 17 (01:57:54):
Nothing is over until we decided this was it.
Speaker 12 (01:57:57):
Over with the Shriman's bomb pearl.
Speaker 32 (01:57:59):
Hello, closing time, Open all the doors and let you
out into the woo.
Speaker 12 (01:58:14):
Closing time.
Speaker 18 (01:58:16):
That's great, Just fucking break man.
Speaker 12 (01:58:19):
How what the fuck are we supposed to do? Game over?
Speaker 24 (01:58:22):
Man?
Speaker 19 (01:58:22):
Game over.
Speaker 20 (01:58:25):
Time?
Speaker 12 (01:58:27):
Time for you to go out.
Speaker 32 (01:58:28):
To the places you will be wrong.
Speaker 12 (01:58:34):
Closing time.
Speaker 32 (01:58:37):
This room won't be open till your brothers are your sisters.
Speaker 12 (01:58:43):
I love you a Flahoma, what a great crowd.
Speaker 2 (01:58:46):
I love you.
Speaker 1 (01:58:50):
Say good night, Gracie Casu