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October 8, 2025 120 mins
A week after a blatant political assassination, the Left has changed nothing.  If anything the rhetoric has gotten louder 
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Yeah the love, but blow and bring the gates loved.

Speaker 2 (00:32):
I love so long to see a rebel shune sun
and load and bring the gate to loud love subd

(00:56):
to bring a rebel shone.

Speaker 3 (00:59):
Sun, how nonasting mel freed of.

Speaker 4 (01:09):
And the spur of over come.

Speaker 3 (01:15):
My God's not dead, he's surely locked. He's sleeping in
on me in sad rolling like and die on.

Speaker 5 (01:23):
God's not dead, surely laugh, He's living on the inside.

Speaker 6 (01:28):
Roll So.

Speaker 1 (01:38):
The whole boys made the darkness highlight this girl.

Speaker 7 (01:48):
I need a resurrect shot sunhow.

Speaker 3 (01:54):
No nasty meal freeed off.

Speaker 8 (02:01):
And this word.

Speaker 3 (02:04):
O, my God's not dead, he surely all he's said,
and on the.

Speaker 6 (02:12):
Inside Gonda surely a lie say.

Speaker 5 (02:19):
And on the inside I can die.

Speaker 9 (02:24):
Sh the heavy.

Speaker 3 (02:36):
And five fall, come shake the ground with the sound
of the.

Speaker 5 (02:44):
Viable the brble.

Speaker 4 (02:50):
And five.

Speaker 8 (02:54):
Come shake the ground with the.

Speaker 5 (02:57):
Sound of the river, comes said.

Speaker 4 (03:11):
With bring.

Speaker 5 (03:17):
Guys days.

Speaker 4 (03:19):
Sure he's laid and.

Speaker 5 (03:22):
On the inside.

Speaker 6 (03:25):
God's not damn surely he stay inside. Gods not sory
heave and on the inside like a gods sully and
he slave and lay inside and.

Speaker 4 (03:46):
Like a l s.

Speaker 8 (03:50):
S line.

Speaker 7 (04:30):
The reason why I stand the answer lessen you.

Speaker 10 (04:37):
You hard to make me strong, though my praise was few.
We're afoot to bring a name down that I have
found in you harm the police for gearness, replacing mony's thoughts.

Speaker 5 (04:55):
Of painful memories.

Speaker 7 (05:02):
Your responsible.

Speaker 9 (05:16):
Hello, friends, you have a moment so that we may
discuss our Lord and savior minarchy. No, seriously, I'm just kidding.

Speaker 11 (05:25):
Hi.

Speaker 9 (05:25):
My name is Rick Robinson. I am the general manager
of klr and radio dot com. We are probably the
largest art independent podcast not but you've never heard. We
have a little bit of everything and body that. What
I need to tell you is we have news, pop, cultures,
special events, your attainment, true crime, mental health shows, drama production.

(05:47):
I'm pretty much everything went between. So if you're looking
for a new podcast home to grab a little bit
of everything that you love all in one place, come
check us out. You can find us on x under
at KLARM radio. You can find us on our Rumble
and are you two channels under the same name, and
also find this kailr and radio dot com and pretty
much every podcast got you your name, so again again,

(06:08):
feel free to come check us out. Check us out
Temulimla at I l R l R N Radio.

Speaker 12 (06:14):
You are listening to k l r N Radio, where
liberty and reason still range.

Speaker 13 (06:23):
The following program contains course language and adult themes. Listener
and discretion is advised.

Speaker 14 (06:42):
The host through the capital of the steps its calling
up the truth, don't tumble regrets, Scott say, your reader's
voice and facts in his hands, and says to the
people all across this last show your glass and don't
spend no scripts of.

Speaker 3 (06:56):
The needle in the sty sands.

Speaker 4 (06:58):
Also okay, see he's.

Speaker 3 (07:01):
Calling it out and I'm like, you know, they say
in a whole lot of clouds.

Speaker 4 (07:05):
Well, this is called.

Speaker 8 (07:09):
The freaking up and free them what we feel.

Speaker 3 (07:16):
She's breaking down the noise.

Speaker 7 (07:18):
He's getting through the light.

Speaker 3 (07:19):
Shot in the light where the shadow hides shadow guests on.

Speaker 4 (07:22):
The line, the colors arsat came the voice from the goal.

Speaker 8 (07:26):
Tend to forget the.

Speaker 3 (07:29):
White mine knows the back or the break based on
the Boss of.

Speaker 5 (07:34):
The sayings.

Speaker 6 (07:44):
Everybody his dope to get them through the stone the
ball set.

Speaker 9 (07:57):
One of these days, I'm gonna remember any change the
color of that hot button, because it's the same color
as the extra intro runway that I used, And that
has been some doorable timing lately, so I have apologized.
But it is Wednesday, so we're gonna try to get
back the role here. Hang on a second. We're working

(08:18):
on it slowly. Hang on, helps if I remember to
fix the sliders?

Speaker 4 (08:26):
Though?

Speaker 9 (08:29):
Did I mention we're trying to get back in the role?
I mean, I know from me normal has always been
a relative term. But still, oh, guess what day it is?

Speaker 7 (08:38):
Guess what day it is?

Speaker 3 (08:40):
Anybody?

Speaker 5 (08:41):
It is Wednesday in my Deans.

Speaker 9 (08:47):
Otherwise known as Chat Lives Matter Day right here live
on Calorn Radio back home. It wasn't a week ago
today that I'm afraid the American political landscape may have
been changed for her forever. And I have a little
bit more venting to do about that. Today. I'm gonna
try to do some of the normal things we do
on this show too, and talk about some of the
other news and stuff. And the first thing I gotta

(09:09):
talk about, oh boy, the first thing I gotta talk about.
Hang on, You're gonna have to bear with me for
a second while I clean something up so that needs
to be moved. And I really should have done this
on a different screen other than the main one. But
we'll worry about that tomorrow anyway. So okay, so hang on,
where did you? Why can I know I can get

(09:31):
of you one way or the other. I can get
rid of you eventually. There's more than one way to
do this. I just gotta get it the babe, all right.
I know some of you were like, dude, leave kirkup
piece hotter than you. I don't want to hear that. Man.
That's not nice. That's not nice anyway. Look, I freely
admit face made for radio, voice, made for print. And

(09:52):
yet here we are. So while I was busy ranting
and raving yesterday, our current Attorney General kind of stepped
in it all over the place, started talking about this
crazy idea, which, if you'll notice, is what Britain has
right now, is this thing called hate speech. Now, look,

(10:12):
I will be the first one to admit to you
that in certain circumstances, while there may not necessarily need
to be any legal ramifications for the thing that you say,
there should be some sort of consequence. And these people
are finding that out all on their own. For anybody
who calls me hypocritical, et cetera, I would like to
remind you this is not my given name. I didn't

(10:35):
use my given name when I first started getting into
politics and political discussions, even on Facebook, because I was
warned by a friend of mine who happened to be
the HR guy at the original company that I worked
for in every other one since then, that if they
find out you're making political commentary and they don't agree
with it, you can have anything happen to you for
being written up, suspended, or eventually even terminy. So, yes,

(11:00):
that was a long time ago. I officially retired from
any type of private sector work other than what I
do now almost what two years ago now, yeah, twenty
twenty three. It'll be two years in about four days,
I think, if I remember right, I think the twenty
Actually I think we're there now because if I remember right, yeah,

(11:22):
I had two weeks of vacation time, So yeah, tomorrow,
two years tomorrow. And I've been doing this full time
ever since, and a lot of people have asked me, well,
now that you don't have to worry about people getting
you fired, why do you still use the name that
you created to protect yourself In two thousand and nine,
two thousand tennish? Actually what it was twenty eleven, because

(11:43):
I was using QTSI names and stuff before then, before
I got serious about it, and simply put, I talked
to a few brand consultants and they're like, dude, this
name is just as much a part of your stick
now as everything else. You might as well stick with it.
So I don't hide the fact that this is my
given name anymore. But I use that as a huge

(12:05):
example to point all these people going, oh my god,
these people are gonna do no, no, no no. They're
the ones who started all of this. And for all
the left leaning folks that are screaming about cancel culture,
I would like to remind you of something I said yesterday.
Cancel culture is realizing that the internet is forever and
finding out that because you said something completely crazy when

(12:27):
you were thirteen years old, and now that you're thirty,
somebody found it seventeen years later. It's like, oh, he
deserves to be fired for this. Now. These are the
same people who look at folks like Joe Biden and go, well,
he is not racist anymore. Okay, so what's up with that?

(12:48):
But this is why what was said yesterday by our
Attorney General is so terrifying, because there is as far
as the first Amendment is concerned, there's no such thing
as hate speech. There's ugly speech, there's terrible speech, there's
growth speech, but there's no such thing as hate speech.
And there never really ever should be anything such as

(13:10):
hate speech. It shouldn't exist because it doesn't exist. Now,
that doesn't mean that because you have a First Amendment
rights to say whatever you want whenever you want to
do it, as far as the government is concerned, that
you shouldn't still face natural consequences, and that can happen.
You have a First Amendment right to say whatever you want.
If you piss the wrong person off, they have the ability,

(13:32):
not necessarily the right, and they may face consequences of
their own, to sock you in your job. Or you
have the ability to say whatever you'd like, but if
your employer finds out, there's a chance that you might
be you know, anywhere from written up to terminated, depending
on the egregiousness and what it is that you say.
The scariest part about today is we have become so

(13:55):
disconnected from one another that these people are willing to
I mean, it used to be that they would create
anonymous accounts and be nameless and faceless and that's the
other thing. I can't really say much anymore because my
face is all over my account. So it's not like
people couldn't figure out who I was if they wanted to.
I don't really care. Well, it was until I made
a caricature of myself, but still it's pretty easy to

(14:17):
tell who I am. I don't care, but that's just it.
The most vile, hateful things used to come from people
that were hiding behind anonymous accounts. Now they record them
for everybody to see. So instead of us having an
Attorney General who's talking about hate speech, which shouldn't be
a thing, never has been a thing, never should be
a thing, we should start talking about the fact that

(14:42):
we have people that are just willing to let their
freak flag fr fly, so to speak. So I'm getting
tongue tied. Today we have an Aggie sighting in the chat.
Good morning, ma'am. I figured you'd still be getting your
royal fix on, But as she just put in the chat,
as we like to say, your first amendment right stops

(15:03):
at my front door. And that is the first completely
truth belle of the day. Because I know JD uses
that as an an appropriate bell, but I decided to
hijack it and make it something else. But yeah, I
mean that's pretty well spot on. So yeah, your first
Amendment right ends at my front door. And the funny

(15:23):
thing is, when I was a kid, I used to
try to make this argument with my parents all the time.
We live in a free country. You can't make me
do this in my parent my mom and at one point,
even when my dad was the home, he pointed out
that his house is not a democracy, it is a theocracy,
and he is God in his home. Now, you know,

(15:46):
looking back on that years later, I was like, it
was kind of blasphemous, but I kind of got his
point because I had to say similar things to my kids.
You know, I didn't never go so far as saying
it was a theocracy, but I did point out that
it's basically a monarchy and I have absolute rules and
it's not you know, a man's home is his castle.

(16:06):
No matter the size of the home, it's still a castle.
So there's that. But no, I mean, Pam Bondy just
this is what the second or third time that she
just absolutely stepped in it. And I really have been
trying to give her the benefit of the doubt and
let her kind of try to grow into the role.
But when you want to start talking about hate speech,
and then I get it. Donald Trump was likely being

(16:29):
tongue in cheek yesterday when I asked the question, because
they were like, what did you think about Pam Bondy
saying this about hate speech? Well, we'd probably use it
to go after folks like you. I was like, did
he really?

Speaker 7 (16:41):
Yeah?

Speaker 9 (16:42):
I mean, look, I get it. I'm not really anybody.
I'm not really looking for anybody on our side to
you know, call for calmer heads, cooling the temperatures good,
because we didn't start any of this. But I would
say we probably need to go out of our waiting
not to try to make it any worse, maybe while
we're trying to figure out where we go from here.
I mean, unless we're just ready to flip the switch.

(17:02):
I mean, if you guys are ready to flip the switch,
just tell me and I'll shut up about it. We
can just flip the switch and get it over with.
I just I, for one, still think that if I mean,
Charlie would not be wanting us to be discussing Civil
War two point zero right now, not in the way
that we are and there are plenty of people. Now
there's people on the left screaming that they're ready for

(17:22):
it too, that they need to remember that they have
the Second Amendment and they have this and they have that.
And then you've got this idiot used to be a
Twitch streamer or something using what happened with Charlie Kirk
is an excuse to whine about, you know, Elon Musk
getting him banned from Twitch. Turns out dude was banned
from Twitch like two three, four years ago, and it
is just using it as you know, hyperbolic. Oh look,

(17:43):
notice me, notice me, And I will admit I kind
of fell for it because I didn't know who they were.
And then somebody point out there like, you know he
was banned in like twenty twenty one, right, I'm like,
actually I didn't, but thanks for letting me know. But no,
it's just you know, while I'm not again, I I
don't want us to be the ones trying to bring
the temperature down because we didn't raise it. And what's

(18:06):
pissing me off more and more is that everybody's response
to all of this, like there's this there's this text
chain that was right into evidence yesterday and all the
reporters are like, oh my god, this is like a
love story. What is wrong with you? What is wrong
with you? I mean, over and over and over again

(18:27):
on all the leftist leaning networks, this is a love story.
I mean, look, I've got a clip about it right here.
Hang on, I'm gonna get a cute up here, because
I haven't done it yet.

Speaker 15 (18:43):
I've seen an alleged murder with such specific text messages
about the alleged murder weapon, where it was hidden, how
it was placed, what was on it. But also it
was very touching in a way that I think many
of us didn't expect, a very intimate portrait into the
relationship between the suspect's roommate and the suspect himself, with

(19:05):
him repeatedly calling his roommate, who was transitioning h calling
him my love and I want to protect you, my love.
So it was this duality of someone who the attorney said,
not only jeopardized the life of Charlie Kirk and the crowd,
but was doing it in front of children, which is
one of the aggravating circumstances of this case. And on
the other hand, he was, you know, speaking so lovingly

(19:26):
about his partner, so very interesting and as Pierre said,
riveting press conference, David.

Speaker 2 (19:30):
It was.

Speaker 9 (19:34):
Okay. So I told you guys, I was going to
try to work on my language, and I meant every
word of it when I said it. But I can't
really what the fuck.

Speaker 2 (19:49):
I mean?

Speaker 9 (19:49):
Dude, Do you have a you have a thing for ferries?
Bro kind of seems like you have a thing for ferraries?

Speaker 2 (19:54):
Bro.

Speaker 9 (19:54):
Did did did that? Did that touch you in your
nether regions in a way that you weren't expecting? Because
I kind of sounds like that touched you in your
other regions in a way that you weren't expecting. And
look again, if you're yeah, I'm gonna get in a
lot of trouble for what I'm about to say.

Speaker 3 (20:09):
But this is this is a This was a common saying.

Speaker 9 (20:12):
It's like was growing up. If you're free, free, white
and over twenty one, I don't really care what you
do until you start hurting other people. I know somebody
you're That was hate speech. It was a joke speaking
of which there's a leftist like completely having it melt
down right now because Charlie Kirk made a joke recently

(20:33):
about you know how he used to tell gay people,
what do you Why would you go to Gaza when
they're gonna, you know, throw you off of a tall building,
he said, But now they don't have any tall buildings,
and everybody saying, this is the guy that you sitting dude,
it's a joke for one and for two.

Speaker 14 (20:53):
Eh.

Speaker 2 (20:54):
Eh.

Speaker 9 (20:56):
They're the ones that keep attacking people over and over
and over again. So I don't care. I don't care.
Did I mention I'm not in the mood to lower
the temperature. I don't really want to see the temperature
raised anymore than it's already been. But I'm not in
the mood to lower the temperature. I'm just really not
because there's so much of this that's going on everywhere,

(21:20):
with the just overall hate everywhere, And I'm sorry Hamas
has made themselves the butt of so many jokes on
purpose that I don't care anymore, nor should you. These
are Islamic terrorists. It's one thing when it's people within

(21:41):
our own country that are making fun of the other
side and talking crap about the other's side and saying
how evil the other side is. But if we can't
even understand that, you know, these people are taking advantage
of their own citizens and murdering their own citizens because
we keep wanting to believe all the leftist bs about
what's happening in Gaza.

Speaker 16 (22:00):
I refuse to do that.

Speaker 9 (22:02):
And if it takes making a crash joke here and
there to bring people's attention to what's going on in Gaza,
then I'm kind of okay with it. Not to mention
the fact that I know people, including myself, that have
kind of made very similar jokes, and the truth of
it is, all of these gays for Palestine folks really
would be taken somewhere in the Middle East and chunked
off of a building once they didn't serve any useful

(22:24):
purpose anymore. Because they don't like you. You keep complaining
that we want you dead. We don't want you dead,
we don't care that you're gay, we don't care that
you're trans. And I said this to somebody who had
identified themselves as trans during a very long thread conversation
on Sunday, I don't want you dead. I don't care

(22:45):
about people that are trans. I don't When I started
caring was when I realized that they were going after
kids as early as young as eight years old who
were expressing the fact that they don't feel like they
were in the right body to start having a hormone
suppression therapy is done to make sure they didn't enter puberty.
It's one thing when you go after sixteen, seventeen, eighteen

(23:08):
year olds. I'll even give you sixteen. By then, they're
able to legally work by then, they can drive, by
then they start being allowed to make some decisions on
their own. But don't come after eight nine year olds
and then expect me to be okay with it. I'm
honestly not really even okay with sixteen and seventeen year olds.
I have been one of the people advocating for the
longest time that I think we need to make the

(23:29):
age of majority for everything across the board twenty five
years old, because that is typically the average age to
where your prefrontal cortex actually starts functioning. But the reason
they won't do that is because they know they lose
seven years worth of time where they can get kids
to join the military, get them to spend all this
money on school before they really understand what it is

(23:51):
that they're doing. And they know that they've known that
for a while. This is why I keep telling you,
when it comes right down to it, nobody is really
your friend when it comes to things like getting you
to go to getting you to go to college, or
getting you to join the military. Nobody's really trying to
be your friend. They're just trying to meet a quota
of some kind. And this is part of what we

(24:13):
need to start coming to terms with. We have these
people that we have put into these positions that give
them this power that a lot of times they wind
up abusing all because they're worried about getting bonuses or this,
that and the other. This is terrible. So I am
one and I've been saying this now for about three
four years. I'm on record saying it. Once we started

(24:35):
under once we had science that backed up the fact
that people really start changing how they make decisions once
their prefrontal cortex kicks in, then we probably need to
start rethinking what we consider our age of majority, especially
now with the age that everybody lives to. I mean,
think about this for a second. When the age of

(24:56):
majority was set at eighteen, that was middle age on
it average, people typically lived to between being thirty six
and forty years old, so they were already basically middle
aged when people started throwing them out of the house.
There's a reason why even earlier in history, being considered

(25:16):
an adult was typically anywhere between the ages of thirteen
to fifteen, depending on what society you lived in, because again,
people were living to be twenty six, twenty seven, twenty eight,
twenty nine, thirty years old tops when they set retirement age.
When they started salesial security at sixty five, the average
male lifespan was sixty two. They knew what they were doing.

Speaker 17 (25:42):
That.

Speaker 9 (25:42):
This is my point. Society has grown and changed over time.
The one thing that we have never really looked at
is what it means when we're allowing eighteen year old
children who don't have access to a fully developed prefrontal
cortex yet making decisions about whether they're going to go
off to war, what kind of car they're going to buy,

(26:04):
how much debt they're willing to go into, to go
to school to get some underwater basket weaving degree, because
somebody's told them the only path in life is to
go to college, when in reality nothing could be further
from the truth. There are plenty of people that learn
better by teaching that by learning themselves. Charlie Kirk was

(26:25):
one of them. Another good friend of mine who goes
by the moniker BZ is one of them too. It's
what's called an autodideck. For those of you who don't
know what that means, that means they like to self teach.
They learn better on their own. Charlie Kirk was somebody
who as somebody who loves to read and voraciously reads
articles and stuff every single day because they're gonna have

(26:48):
to for what I do. Charlie Kirk saying on a
during a speech one time that he reads one hundred
books a year. I don't know how he finds the time.
That's an average of three days a book. I don't
know how he finds the time. I wish I had
the time, because I would love to be able to

(27:10):
devote that much time to being able to read again.
I used to love to read when I was a kid,
But that was easy then I didn't have anything else
I had to do. I went to school. I mean,
I've already told you guys my story. I had a
good enough memory that I could figure things out on
my own, so I never did my homework because I

(27:33):
could pass all my test and I still managed to,
you know, usually wind up with a C. The only
time that was really different, which didn't really start until
junior high in high school, but the only time that
was really different was in fourth grade when my parents
got divorced. I just phoned in everything. I still managed
to pass with a D, which is technically still passing,
or was when I was in school, and my mom

(27:53):
still said, no, you're going through the fourth grade again
because I know you've phoned it in, and I'm like, fine, whatever,
But yeah, I literally just said I don't care anymore.
I mean, half the time, I'd be waiting till the
morning of and just scribbling a bunch of stuff, pretending
it was cursive because that was when they were starting
to teach us to write cursive, and I would just
scribble a bunch of lines because I didn't care, because

(28:15):
you know, my world was different than it was. And
for those of you who are wondering why I'm still
on this subject, that's pretty much who I've always been.
When something changes my world that drastically, it takes me
a long time to process it. So I've already gotten
some messages from folksmen like dude, it's a week and
you're still talking about this. Yeah, And I probably will

(28:35):
be off and on for a while. If you don't
like it, there are other shows you can tune into,
come back later or not. I'm not trying to tell
you what to do with your time, and I'm gonna
I Like I said, We're still gonna be talking about
the news. But to me, this is a very important
thing because I saw it again today. Tim Russ, who
played tuloc On Voyager, put on a post the other

(28:57):
day with a picture of young Williams at and Air,
addressed in his Captain Kirk uniform and basically with the caption,
this is the only Kirk that matters. That hurts because
Star Trek used to be something that could bring everybody together.
Because even those of us who understood that, you know,

(29:18):
there's no way for this socialist utopia to work with
the way things currently are, it doesn't mean that some
of us still didn't want to try to figure out
a way to make it happen that didn't didn't involve
having to murder millions of people. But seeing him post that,
after being a diehard Trekie for as long as I
have been alive, and that being because of different reasons.

(29:43):
You know, one of the only things that my dad
and I were able to do together, the way that
he wanted us to be able to do things together,
was to sit down and watch things like Star Trek.
That was a real bonding moment for us. We didn't
have very many of those because I wasn't good at sports.
I didn't enjoy fishing when I was a kid. I

(30:04):
thought I was boring. I didn't like to go hunting.
I mean, I'm a gun enthusiast now, but I don't
like the idea of killing things just to kill them.
I never have, So there wasn't much for my dad
and I to bond with. That was one of them.
And then watching over the years so many of the
people that were part of that, that were part of

(30:27):
my childhood, that greatly shaved how I viewed the world
to come out and basically just say things that were
completely just dumb. I mean, George to Kua basically still
just yesterday proved he hasn't learned anything. Tim Russ hasn't
learned anything. I can't even look at Jerry Ryan's X

(30:50):
feet anymore. Thanks for that one. I wish I didn't know.
She was that nuts. But I just I can't with
these people anymore. And look, it was one thing when
it was political disagreement. Now that's one thing. When you
believe politically, when you believe things different differently when it

(31:13):
comes to politics than I do, that's one thing. But
when I realize that by cheering this death, you would
likely be cheering mine when I would be mourning yours
if the shoe was on the other foot, that hurts.
That hurts in a way that I can't even express.

(31:36):
And the scariest thing about all of this is thinking
about the fact that Tim Ross played a Vulcan or
anybody remember of Vulcan's big thing, the edict infinite diversity
and infinite combinations. By basically saying one group of people
doesn't deserve to exist because you disagree with them, you're

(32:00):
cutting off one of those infinite combinations. Now again, I'm
not talking about people that violently murder people. I'm not
talking about people that pull the sword to your throat
and say you're either gonna worship this or else. That's
a different that's a different thing. But when you're talking
about just political ideology and you're willing to admit that

(32:23):
that side scares you enough that you want them dead.
I don't want Democrats dead. Hell, I want as many
Democrats out saying they're stupid shit as can say they're
stupid shit, so that everybody can finally see who they are.
I'm watching what's happening in New York City in such
a way that I never thought I would see this.

(32:43):
The governor of New York just bowed a need of
Communism and basically said she's voting for She's endorsing him
because she wants somebody who's gonna stand up with her
against Donald Trump. Stand up against Donald Trump for what?
What is Donald Trump doing that is so terrible other
than trying to make the country stronger again, other than
trying to make us solvents again, other than trying to

(33:07):
bring back the American dream. Because nobody wants to talk
about the unintended consequences of there being somewhere between twenty
five to thirty million illegal aliens in this country. I
said what I said because it's been eleven million for
as long as I've been alive. That's the number that
they've been throwing around from basically the day that I
started getting involved in politics and probably even before. And

(33:30):
we know for a fact that under Joe Biden at
least at least that number came through in four years.
So if we take into account that we were probably
four or five million ahead of that curve to begin with,
that puts us to somewhere between twenty five and thirty
million people in this country that shouldn't be here, that
don't actually have a right to be here, that are

(33:51):
taking jobs and housing and everything else. So how much
better could our lives be if we didn't have a
housing shortage? How much? Because that's what and that's part
of what's driving up the prices. We let so many
people in that construction for housing can't keep up, So
the less housing there is, the more expensive it gets.

(34:12):
We're talking about the fact that now, for the first
time since the first time in a long time, we
have more unemployed people more jobs than we have unemployed people.
Why do you suppose that is? Why is it so
many people are refusing to go to work? Could it
be that they've gotten used to you giving them whatever
they want whenever they ask for it, so they don't

(34:33):
really feel like they have to go to work anymore.
I mean, I don't show up on those roles because
I work for myself, but I still work. How many
people have gone into the gig economy that Biden was
trying to destroy. Maybe that's another reason why the unemployment
numbers seems so low, or the unemployment numbers seem so high,

(34:58):
because there are people that And this happens a lot
when a Republican takes office because they have a lot
of pro business policies and the economy starts strying to
grow and everything else. So a lot of people will
find Okay, this is the time I can finally get
out and do my own thing. And maybe that's what's
going on. I don't know. It'll be a while before
we can see the numbers. But what I know is

(35:21):
we have so many different things that are all happening
all at once, all the time, and it's just terrifying
to watch all of these people that are just convinced
that no matter what they have to stop Donald Trump,
doesn't matter what it is, doesn't matter what he says,
doesn't matter what he does. The man could come out
tomorrow and say, Hey, our CDC has finally found a

(35:42):
cure for cancer, and this is what we're going to
be able to do and it wouldn't matter because they
would hate it because it was him that announced it.
You know, as somebody who has friends that are afflicted
with this, I started thinking about something. So I started
doing some research with everything that's coming out with stem
cell research, you know, because I started seeing these cases
in I think it one is in I think one

(36:05):
is in Japan, where they've basically gone in and re
engineered the fact that apparently we have a third row
of teeth that we didn't know about. So they've triggered
the gene to start allowing those to come forward in
the event that people, you know, are losing what are
supposed to be their adult teeth. I don't know whether
that's true or not as far as us having the
third row or if they've genetically changed these people somehow,

(36:28):
but you know that that's something that's being talked about.
Also because of stem cell research, there was a study
in China where they've managed to basically duplicate the functionality
of a pancreas, so for the first time in forever,
a person that could not produce insulin is producing insulin.
So I started doing some other research because I know

(36:48):
people that are afflicted with things like cerebral palsy. I
was like, could this stem cell research be used to
try to do something to help those people? Unbeknownst to me,
since twenty ten, they've already been working on stuff like that.
I haven't heard anything about it. There's been no news
stories about it that I've been able to see. While
they haven't been able to completely reverse the effects, they
have made it to where people that you know, especially

(37:11):
the ones that are more heavily afflicted with ambulatory issues
because of where the damage is located, they've been able
to use them cells to basically correct those pathways, so
people are able to get around better than they were before,
they don't have as many muscle crams. And to me,
I mean, we're living in what could be one of
the most amazing times on earth, but we're too busy

(37:34):
fighting with one another to even be able to see it.
And it kind of makes you wonder why that is?
Why do they want us fighting with each other? And
I know what you're gonna ask is who is they?
But I'm gonna say this again, there have always been
behind the scenes, this group of elites that have been

(37:54):
trying to do everything they can to tear this country
apart from a moment of its inception. So you have
to ask yourself today who benefits from us fighting with
one another as much as we are right now? Because
I understand the anger. Believe me, I do. I've been
angry for a week. I've random I've vacillated between being

(38:15):
grief stricken and so angry that I couldn't see straight.
Shut up, I know what some of you were thinking.
You can't see straight anyway. You're not supposed to know that.
Remember I used to do this show off camera. But no, seriously,
who benefits from us fighting this much? I mean, I'm

(38:38):
gonna I'm gonna play a clip here in a second
that I want you to see. And I keep asking
myself this question. Who benefits from us fighting this much?
And I don't know the answer to the question, but
I think we need to find out. I don't think
that's the right one. I thought it was, but it's

(38:58):
not right.

Speaker 18 (39:00):
Here we go, Definitely, that's like crucifying for that. You're right,
it's just total theater, Senator. I'm dying to get your
reaction to something else. Because we talked about those text
messages between the suspect and Kirk's murder and his roommate
slash romantic partner.

Speaker 9 (39:16):
Now here's how one.

Speaker 18 (39:18):
Reporter at ABC is describing them.

Speaker 9 (39:21):
Watch this.

Speaker 15 (39:22):
It was very touching in a way that I think
many of us didn't expect, a very intimate portrait into
this relationship between the suspect's roommate and the suspect himself,
with him repeatedly calling his roommate, who is transitioning, calling
him my love, and I want to protect you, my love.

Speaker 19 (39:42):
Senator Kennedy, once again, some people need a shot. Callar touching.
The god just murdered another human being, he just and
he's talking about it to his love interest. I mean it,

(40:06):
it reminded me of something my dog would bring up.
Touching the god murdered a human being. You know, I
try to be tolerant of other points of view, I
really do. But that wasn't touching, and no fair minded
person can call it touching.

Speaker 18 (40:28):
Yes, they spent years dehumanizing Trump and dehumanizing his supporters
and boosters like Charlie Kirk, but they humanize the assassin
and his roommate touching it intimate.

Speaker 19 (40:43):
It's this, and and some of this is the fault
of the media. A lot of it is the fault
of social media, or in my opinion, I mean, let's
face it, social media has lowered the cost of being
an a hole. People do things on social media that
they would never do to each other's face, and it's

(41:06):
become just rage bait. I don't have a solution to
it yet. We can talk about that another time, but
that's a big part of the problem.

Speaker 18 (41:14):
Senator, thank you very much, congratulations on the new book.

Speaker 9 (41:20):
You know, Aggie just made a hell of a point
in the chat, and I'm sorry I'm just now seeing it.
But when I was talking about the whole thing that
you know, Donald Trump could hang out wrung button, when
Donald Trump could, you know, say that they've cured cancer
and nobody would care. We saw it in real time
because with the COVID vaccines, nobody wanted them under Trump,

(41:40):
which was probably the better decision now, but still under Biden,
everybody rushed towards it. Now, part of it was because
Biden made it mandatory. I actually avoided it for as
long as I could and was basically told, you know,
two weeks before the Supreme Court said hey, you can't
do that, that I had two weeks to report to

(42:03):
get the vaccine or they were going to start the
process to terminate my employment. So I was actually starting
the process to try to retire then, even though I
wouldn't have been at the ten year mark and there
would have been a lot of things that would have
gone differently, but I nobe was going to do it anyway.

(42:24):
And then they said, oh no, no, no, no, no,
We're not going to make you do it anymore, the
Supreme Court, and that was a no no. So but yeah,
for everybody who doesn't know this, I worked for from
two thousand and what was it, twenty thirteen to twenty
twenty three for the University of Oklahoma. So yeah, talk
about a conservative in alliance. Then holy crap. Anyway, So

(42:48):
there's one more of these, you know, Kirk related clips
that I want to play in this, and then there's
some other stuff that we have to get to because
I because this is kind of a clip heavy show,
I haven't really worried about taking a break. I don't
know if I'm going to might take one an hour
or two right now, I don't know yet, But I
do want to talk about this cause, uh, you know,

(43:10):
Kimmel probably the next one to wind up on the
chopping block if we're lucky, said this just the other
night and is now getting all kinds of crap for it.

Speaker 20 (43:21):
We hit some new lows over the weekend with the
Magga Gang desperately trying to characterize this kid who murdered
Charlie Kirk as anything other than one of them and
do everything they can to score political points from it.
In between the finger pointing, there was grieving. On Friday,
the White House flew the flags at half staff, which
got some criticism, but on a human level, you can

(43:43):
see how hard the President is taking this back.

Speaker 4 (43:46):
Indulge is out a lot.

Speaker 9 (43:47):
Finger friend Charlie Kirk asked, sir personally, how are you
holding up for the last day and a half served?

Speaker 4 (43:52):
I think very good. And by the way, right there,
you see all the trucks. They just started construction of
the new Bowl Road for the White.

Speaker 8 (43:59):
House, which is.

Speaker 3 (44:00):
Something they've been trying.

Speaker 9 (44:01):
To get, as you know, for about one hundred and
fifty years, and it's going to be.

Speaker 20 (44:05):
A beauty got He's at the fourth stage of grief construction,
the demolition.

Speaker 7 (44:14):
Construction.

Speaker 20 (44:16):
This is not how an adult griefs the murder of
somebody called a friend. This is how a four year
old more, it's a goldfish.

Speaker 9 (44:22):
Okay, So more about the first part than the second part,
because I haven't seen that clip and I don't know
if it was taken out of context or what happened.
But the part about them trying to say that it
was one of us, and I've seen this everywhere, right,
So that's that's one of the biggest talking points from

(44:43):
the left, is that this kid was some sort of
what they call a fuintes groper and that we need
they wanted to be left out of our petty squabbles,
And yeah, I don't think that means what you think
it means apparently, because yeah, but anyway, I will say,

(45:03):
that does seem like an odd transition. So I'm gonna
have to go see if I can find that clip
and find out exactly what happened there, because that does
seem a little weird. So let's see if maybe it
explains it in the article. I haven't really read through
the article yet either. I gotta find it. Though. First,
where did he go? Which one was that? I have

(45:25):
too many clips tabs open, I don't remember where I was. Okay,
So that wasn't it. Oh, So this I thought was

(45:46):
interesting yesterday. This is from Guy Benson. This is from
town Hall. So you remember the old guy who kept,
you know, who was basically being arrested and kept saying, well,
I have the right to remain silent. I have the
right to remain silent. Turns out he decided he wanted
to be a distraction. So everybody was like, how the
you know, because when the description of the shooter came

(46:08):
out and all the pictures started coming out, everybody was like,
how in the world did they mistake this guy for
the shooter? And it turns out the following it happened
in the initial melee that followed the assassination from Charlie
Kirk at Utah Valley University one week ago, the school
announced that a suspect had been taken into custody. Images
circulated on social media of an older man with a

(46:29):
mostly bald head, white hair, and a blue shirt and handcuffs.
A video then emerged of him seeming to urge police
officers to shoot him. It very much looked like a confession.
Within a few hours, however, authorities clarified that the individual
in question was not, in fact the shooter. Why was
he detained in the first place? Why did he make
that death wish outburst? Those questions crossed many minds, I imagine,

(46:53):
but other horrific events and developments quickly overtook the somewhat
tangential curiosity. This week we have learned the chilling backstory
about this bazaar and now quite disturbing element of that
terrible day. The mistakenly identified shooter did not pull the trigger,
but he instantly decided to do whatever he could to

(47:15):
try to help the person who did. The first man
arrested in connection and I quote with the deadly shooting
of Charlie Kirk yealed I shot him, now shoot me
immediately immediately after the shooting, in an attempt to help
the shooter escape. According to newly filed documents, George Zen
seventy one was taken into custody following the shooting, but
he was later cleared on having any direct involvement with

(47:38):
the shooting. He was arrested on suspicion of obstruction of justice.
According to the affidavit of probable cause that was filed today.
Immediately after the shooting, Zen allegedly walked up to a
police officer and started yelling, I shot him, Now shoot me.
The officer could not see a weapon in his hands
and placed him in handcuffs. The officer asked him where
the gun was and reportedly he said, I Am not

(48:00):
going to tell you. As he was transported to Ubu
Police department, he allegedly continued to say that he shot
Kirk and to just shoot him. At the police department,
Zen was advised of his rights and asked for a lawyer.
According to the affidavit, after he asked for a lawyer
without being asked and he questions my investigators, he stated
that he did not shoot Kirk and that he said

(48:21):
he did what he did to draw attention away from
the real shooter. Zen was later taken to the hospital
because of a medical condition and reportedly told the officer
that he was glad he said he shot the individual
so the real suspect could get away. You know, I
put something on social media today that a lot of

(48:43):
people probably saw him there, wondering if I'm going to
regret it. It's time to start removing these monsters from
polite society. Not in the way they want us removed,
but it's time to start doing something because when you're
broken enough that not only do you supper what happened,
but you start trying to be a smoke screen for
the guy who did it in the hopes that they're

(49:05):
going to be able to get away. How broken are we?
That's the question that I keep coming back to you
every time I start trying to do show prep lately,
when I'm looking at everything that's going on and everybody
that's screaming and yelling, and you know, everybody's talking about
the Texas student that was expelled, because that's a violation

(49:25):
of the Constitution and a violation of free speech. Pretty sure,
she was charged with three separate assault charges, which has
absolutely nothing to do with speech, nothing, none, nothing. I
just I can't with these people anymore. I still don't

(49:46):
know where that damn Kimmel piece went. I hate it
when that happens. Wait, there it is. I don't know
why I wasn't showing up when I was a second ago.

(50:16):
So let's take a look at that, because it does
actually go into this a little bit.

Speaker 17 (50:19):
So.

Speaker 9 (50:20):
According to the article, Kimmel also tried to attract President
Donald Trump in that segment. This is not how an
adult grieves. The murder of somebody he called a friend.
This is how a four year old morns a goldfish. Now,
I'm not sure that Trump fully heard the question. If
you listen to the actual exchange, there were multiple questions
and a lot of helicopter noises. So let's look at
this together because I'm interested. Now, I'm invested in finding

(50:46):
the answers. Now I.

Speaker 4 (50:55):
Think very good.

Speaker 14 (50:56):
And by the way, right there you see all the
Trump the art construction at the new ball for the
White House, which is something I've been trying to.

Speaker 1 (51:04):
Get, as you know, for about one hundred and fifty years,
and it's going to be a beauty.

Speaker 8 (51:08):
It'll be an.

Speaker 4 (51:09):
Absolute and defient construction.

Speaker 21 (51:12):
And I guess all the trucks were just started, so
it'll get done very nicely and it'll be one of
the best anywhere in the world.

Speaker 2 (51:20):
Actually, So.

Speaker 9 (51:25):
Okay, So seeing and hearing the uncut version, I can
kind of understand why he might not have heard the question.
Probably that was pretty loud and annoying. I'm just saying, so, yeah,

(51:46):
I think there may have been some miscommunication happening there.
But you know, I wasn't there, so I don't know.
All right, So let's see what another trouble we can
get into. In the last ten minutes of the broadcast,
there was something else that I wanted to talk about,
and I had it in my notes, and now I

(52:06):
can't find it. Okay, So just for fun while I'm
looking for this, I don't know what this is. From
Leah Berkhawkes. I always pronounce her name. One of these
days I'm going to figure out how to pronounce it
for real. But according to her, this is from about
eight thirty this morning. Mike Pence apparently has a new job,
so let's find this out together. Former Vice President Mike
Pence is joining George Mason University's shar School. I don't

(52:32):
know what that is of policy government. As a distinguished
Professor of Practice, GMU said in an announcement on Tuesday.
Pence brings decades of public service, executive leadership, and policy
experience in under the classroom, University said, pointing to his
roles as vice presidents, the fiftieth governor of Indiana, and

(52:52):
as a former US Congress critter. Congress critter was my word,
not the authors, and I quote from the piece that
they're pulling from. As a professor of practice, why do
they have to make all these weird titles anyway? Pinceviell
contribute to undergraduate courses beginning in spring of twenty twenty six,

(53:12):
and in public facing seminars that explore the intersection of politics, leadership,
and national governance. His insights into legislative negotiation executives but
I think they mean legislative caving. Oh sorry, Executive decision
making and crisis management, shaped during a time of global pandemic,
domestic unrest, and international uncertainty, will offer students an uncommon

(53:35):
vantage point into recent history and contemporary challenges. He's also
expected to share lessons drawn from his experience on a
campaign shail in the West Wing and as president of
the US Senate. Yeah, I don't think I'm reading any
more of that. I thought it was gonna be something cool.
I gnify that he was doing, you know, donkey shows
in Tijuana or something. But I know I'm not going

(53:57):
to read anymore of that, all right, So we do
got to talk about though, because this broke last night,
and I thought this was kind of huge. So remember
there was going to be a Georgia Supreme Court decision
regarding Miss Fanny Willis. I know that's not how she
pronounces her name. I don't care. Apparently the Supreme Court spend.

(54:18):
So this is from our friends at twitgy. This was
put out by Brett T. We haven't heard from Fanny
Willison quite a while, and it looks like it's going
to stay that way. Back in December, it was reported
that the Georgia Court of Appeals had officially disqualified Fulton
County District Attorney Fanny spank me spent me hard Willis
from prosecuting President elect Donald Trump and his remaining co

(54:41):
defendants in the twenty twenty election interference case. On Tuesday,
we learned that the Georgia Supreme Court has agreed and
Willis is off the case. Don dune, done dune, all right?
So of course there were lots of reactions to this.

(55:03):
We're gonna go through some of them real quick. So
this is from Phil Holloway, breaking news, the Fanny Willis
fiasco is finally over. The Georgia Supreme Court has ruled
She's finally and officially off the Fulton Trump re co case.
This is from Nick Sorder breaking the Georgia Supreme Court
has just barred Fanny Willis from prosecuting President Trump and Georgia.

(55:25):
A massive loss for Big fat Fanny. Okay, so I'm
a little happier about that one. I'm kind of upset
that nobody so far has used the fact that she
got spanked. But anyway, maybe a little shop later breaking
in a brutal loss. Fulton County DA, Fanny Willis was
just permanently disqualified from prosecuting President Trump and his allies
for the twenty twenty election interference case by the Georgia's

(55:48):
Supreme Court. Again I feel let down by that one.
So this is Phil Holloway. What does this mean for
the indictment. The indictment is still pending, but it has
no prosecutor in Georgia, a small state age and see
the prosecuting attorney's counsel will decide whether to A assign
the case to a different DA, B, prosecute the case itself,
ce dismiss it. I for one vote for dismiss it.

(56:10):
This is again from Pille Holloy. What will be prosecuting
attorney's counsel Georgia do? The case is virtually certain to
be dismissed. No other Georgia prosecutors, including pac wants the
case because they would essentially have to start over to
clean up the mess left by Willis. And since no
other DA has willis budget or nor her appetite for lawfair,

(56:34):
pac is going to dismiss the indictment. This is from
Alicia Nace. It is a great day, particularly here in Georgia.
Dread pirate Robert's prison for Fanny Willis for political prosecution
coming around at any point? Question Mark Gunter Engelman, Gunter Englman.
However the hell you say his name? Trump wins again.

(56:58):
And this is from an a out known as ktidious Kid.
I don't know, Titus Kid. She needs her law license
pulled permanently. Kathy the Braves girl. She had one job
and she failed miserably, thankfully May Monday, Monday two. I

(57:23):
don't know. Finally, any six year old could see how
unethically she conducted herself and the case, and how and
why is she still the DA? That actually is a
really good question. This is from Emilia Henderson. Hear dis
qualifications strips the left of their star prosecutor, collapsing years

(57:44):
of scheming into ash, whil Trump's momentum only builds. Trump
just keeps winning. They tried so hard to put him
in prison before the twenty twenty four election, but they
failed on all fronts. Done dune. Still nobody said anything
about her being spanked.

Speaker 16 (58:01):
Why why?

Speaker 9 (58:04):
I mean, I know it's a juvenile thing to say,
but I can't have been the only one who saw
it and thought they should have been there. Maybe it
was just me, Maybe it was just me. All right,
we're gonna take the top of the hour break. My
name is Rick Robinson. This is my show. Our one
is in the books, Our two underway on the other side.

(58:24):
Stay tuned.

Speaker 4 (59:00):
Do't what.

Speaker 21 (59:22):
You I sing?

Speaker 16 (59:24):
But some have love. I waste my breath with everysome
I bring an umpty voice.

Speaker 1 (59:32):
A hog noise.

Speaker 16 (59:34):
If I speak with the silver tongue, convince the crowd.
But don't have love. I leave a bit of taste
with every I say.

Speaker 4 (59:49):
So love, love, be the proof, the proof of your love.
Look like you and watch you made up, how you love,
how you died, love the sacrifice.

Speaker 3 (01:00:07):
So let my love me the proof the proof of
your love.

Speaker 7 (01:00:25):
If not you, it's to me.

Speaker 16 (01:00:28):
So don't have love the news, for it seems all
the goody is founding me.

Speaker 4 (01:00:37):
So love my love me the proof, the proof of
your not love looking like you.

Speaker 8 (01:00:48):
And watch your make.

Speaker 4 (01:00:51):
You live how you died. Love the sacrifice, So love
my love me for what's the proof of your love?

Speaker 8 (01:01:06):
Where Saturday when we sat here for your son.

Speaker 4 (01:01:15):
I love.

Speaker 8 (01:01:18):
Only love them.

Speaker 16 (01:01:34):
My lap, prove.

Speaker 8 (01:01:37):
The proof of you, look like you, what you make.
I love how you die.

Speaker 4 (01:01:49):
The sacrifica is, so.

Speaker 8 (01:01:54):
Be the drills, the.

Speaker 4 (01:01:56):
Proof of your.

Speaker 9 (01:02:36):
I'm job.

Speaker 7 (01:02:42):
Building myom king job.

Speaker 14 (01:02:49):
No more.

Speaker 7 (01:02:55):
Seeking worth as idol.

Speaker 8 (01:03:02):
Like sheep.

Speaker 7 (01:03:04):
We have all gone straight. We must choose this day
who we will serve. As from me.

Speaker 8 (01:03:18):
And my house, we will serve the Lord. We will
serve the Lord.

Speaker 4 (01:03:28):
Hide who's ras, tell him downs, We will serve the Lord.

Speaker 8 (01:03:38):
We will serve the Lord.

Speaker 7 (01:03:41):
To vaunting me about town. As from me and.

Speaker 22 (01:03:46):
My house, we will only serve the Lord, a job.

Speaker 7 (01:04:07):
With power less religion.

Speaker 16 (01:04:15):
No more.

Speaker 7 (01:04:21):
Living in deception.

Speaker 10 (01:04:28):
Like shame.

Speaker 5 (01:04:30):
We have all gone stream.

Speaker 7 (01:04:33):
We must choose this day.

Speaker 8 (01:04:37):
We served that's for me.

Speaker 5 (01:04:44):
And we will serve her.

Speaker 22 (01:04:51):
We live, sir.

Speaker 9 (01:04:59):
Hello friends, you have a moment so that we may
discuss our Lord and savior miner team. No, seriously, I'm
just kidding, Hi, Robinson, I am the gentle managerial klr
and Radio dot com. We are probably the largest large
ended podcast network you have never heard, ever heard. We
have a little bit of everything and that what I

(01:05:21):
need to tell you is you. We have the news, pop, cultures,
special events, a little bit your attainment, true crime, crime,
mental health, show, health show, drama, pretty drama, pretty much
every adn't one between. So if you're looking for a
new podcast home to grab a little bit of everything
that you enroll in one place, come check us out.
You can find us on x under at KLR and
Radio r. You can find us on our rumble and

(01:05:43):
our YouTube channels under the same name. You can also
find this at klr and radio dot com and pretty
much every podcast catcher and your nail. So again, goe
free to come check us out, check and tell me
like tell me At k l R l r N Radio.

Speaker 12 (01:05:58):
You are listening to k l R and Radio. We're
Liberty and Reason still range.

Speaker 13 (01:06:06):
The following program contains course language and adult themes. Listener
and discretion is advised.

Speaker 22 (01:06:29):
The focus to the capital of the steps.

Speaker 14 (01:06:32):
He's calling not the truth, don't temper regrets, He's got,
He's not, You're real his voice and facts and talking,
says to.

Speaker 6 (01:06:38):
The people all across this land, the ring episode showing
you that's high.

Speaker 14 (01:06:42):
And don't spend no scripts as the ego in the sky,
they say it tells and okay, see he's.

Speaker 6 (01:06:48):
Calling it out with at vision in a whole, not
a cloud.

Speaker 22 (01:06:53):
This is many real, dude.

Speaker 4 (01:06:56):
They speak of and feel what we feel.

Speaker 3 (01:07:04):
He's freaking tell the noise he's cutting.

Speaker 6 (01:07:06):
Through the live shot the light where the shadow hides,
and the guests on the line called his on.

Speaker 4 (01:07:11):
Zack became a voice so the.

Speaker 6 (01:07:13):
Folks because he tending the stops something like a.

Speaker 4 (01:07:31):
H guess what day is.

Speaker 3 (01:07:43):
Anybody?

Speaker 9 (01:07:44):
It is Wednesday in my days, otherwise known as Chat
Lives Matter Day right here live on Haylo right now
dot com. Don't forget come back tonight starting at seven
pm Eastern. We have the every two weekend issue of
the America Off the Reel Show. So usually it's every
other Monday, every other Wednesday because they leave and I'm

(01:08:09):
burnt out. So I was trying to do reels every Monday,
and I was like, but then I have to do
it on a Wednesday. I don't know how I feel
about that. So anyway, lately it's kind of been every
other Monday and every other Wednesday. That kicks off seven
pm Eastern, followed by the conservative Coromudgeon radio show at
eight pm Eastern. As far as I know, behind them,
I meligned should be back to night nine pm Eastern,
the Rick and Aldi Show at ten pm Eastern, followed

(01:08:29):
by our visit over into the realm of our friends
over at s h R Media, first with the Edge
of Liberty hosted by none other than Sean Lewis, or
as I call him, the Boston Passage, and then I
make up episode for us of Bez's Berserk Bobcastle and
from last night. So I'll be with you in pushing
buttons and either on the boards or behind a mic

(01:08:52):
starting at about seven pm Eastern about two in the morning,
because I'm insane anyway. So we're back, We're live, and
it's Wednesday, and pardon me while I do some housekeeping
real quick, because I got to clear this up. I'm
not really worried about the stop sharing, because I can
just fix that in a minute, but I do need

(01:09:13):
to make this go. They really need to set up
away for me to do this. While I'm not actively
on the scenes, I'm gonna put in a ticket for
that and be like, is there anyway you guys can
make it to where we can adjust the stuff that's
on the scenes without people being able to see it.
But anyway, so all right, anyway, So yeah, for those
of you that picked up a bit of an echo,
that's kind of because I was jamming out and I

(01:09:35):
had the volume up a little too loud, so it
was actually bleeding in through my headphones, I think. But anyway, yeah, so,
you know, normally I play ads. Lately I've just kind
of been like, Eh, I don't know, I don't know,
so changing how we do things up a little bit.
But you know, along that vein, we still have lots

(01:10:03):
of things to talk about. So we talked about the
first guy that you know, basically decided to be cannon
fodder for the dude who did shoot Charlie Kirgan, was
hoping that that would help him get away. It almost worked.
I mean, you can even see from the text exchanges,
which a lot of folks so I guess I'm gonna
talk about that in this hour because a lot of
folks are drawing, you know, drawing concerns for that text

(01:10:28):
exchange because to them it doesn't sound like a natural conversation.
That's because we're normal people. Though not to mention the
fact it is pretty common anymore for people to use
lingo that would have once been reserved for folks like
law enforcement, et cetera, because they're exposed to it all
the time. I mean, you know, I am somebody that

(01:10:51):
used to wear a badge and carry a gun, and
I never used to use phrases like likely or not likely,
not likely when it came to somebody's passing and during
radio traffic. But I use it now because it's become
common parlance. For you know, the New York cop shows,
they use it all the time. So because it's kind
of a shorthand kind of thing, I even caught myself

(01:11:12):
using it the other day when I was telling people
in a work chat about the shooting in Annapolis and
how you know the victim was not likely meaning not
likely to die. I even found myself doing the same
thing with Charlie Kirk the same time the same day,
because in that one I said that he was likely
meaning he was likely to die. So this is a

(01:11:34):
common thing. There are parts of language that get absorbed
by other things because of their saturation within pop culture.
So some of the things, because that's one of the
first things that I kept. Well, people don't say squad
car and people don't say this, and people, yeah, they
kind of do. If you've watched enough cop shows, you
start picking up the lingo. So I mean, does it

(01:12:00):
seemed like a natural flow of a conversation. No, not really,
but we're talking about two people that were apparently rather
mentally ill. I mean, again, I know this hurts for
a lot of people to hear, but gender dysphoria is
actually in the book as a mental illness, and I
know some of you are well until you know, until

(01:12:20):
nineteen ninety something, and so with homosexuality, and I submit
that it should still be there. And I've said that
to people, are said that in front of people that
I know they're gay, because I know we use sex
for pleasure now, but the primary reason for sex is
for procreation. If you're doing something that is, you know,
antithetical to that, then there's probably a valid psychological reason.

(01:12:46):
And the funny thing is, because I'm one of those people.
If I say it, if I say it in a
room you're not in before you hear from somebody else
I'm going to say it to you. And I've actually
said this to people that I know that are gay,
and they're like, hey, I will probably the first one
to tell you that I think part of what made
me same sex attracted was this point of abuse that

(01:13:07):
I went through as a child, or there was this reason,
or there was this reason. So I think in some
ways those are that are willing to have a rational
conversation about it do admit that there is a bit
of a mental component to this one way or the other. Now, again,
I don't care. As long as you're not trying to
do anything to hurt anybody else, and you're not trying
to do anything with kids, then I don't care. You

(01:13:30):
can do whatever you want to do to whomever you
want to do it to in your bedroom. I just
don't want to see it every day. I don't need
to see it every day, and before anybody well, what
about how the what about all the heterosexual stuff on
all the TV shows? You know what? As far as
I'm concerned, that can go away too. We don't need

(01:13:51):
that everywhere all the time. That's one of the biggest
problems that we're fighting today is this over ampleification of
everything to do with physicality. There's so much more to
our lives than the physical aspect of it, and we've
turned ourselves completely off of it. Now. Everybody's talking about
how more interconnected we are, when in reality we're interconnected

(01:14:14):
through electronic devices. But we're more disconnected than we've ever been,
and that's just been proven by what we've watched play
out for the last week. People are perfectly fine with
posting things under their real names that ten years ago
they would have never thought about doing. Not because they

(01:14:36):
were afraid, they were afraid of the backlash, not because
they were afraid they were gonna get in trouble, but
because they would have never thought about reveling in somebody
else's death. Now I get it. I talked about this earlier.
There's a clip going around at Charlie Kirk at a
talk not too long ago where he was making the

(01:14:58):
joke about how you know, you can't really say anything
anymore about if you if gay people go to Gaza,
they're going to throw them off tall buildings because they
don't have any tall buildings anymore. Was it a crass
thing to say?

Speaker 2 (01:15:09):
Yes?

Speaker 9 (01:15:10):
Should it be used as a justification for what happened
to him. No, because it was a joke. These people
that are celebrating his death, they're not making jokes, not
in the way that that was, not to mention the
fact that it's true. These That's one of the things

(01:15:32):
that I've never been able to understand for these people
that are same sex attracted to be you know, I
side with isis really because they want to kill you?

Speaker 8 (01:15:43):
How?

Speaker 9 (01:15:44):
Why does that even make sense? How does it make sense?
And then You've got this side of the equation, and
I know, I'm back to this again, but it's because
it's what's what's pretty much still all over the news cycles.
So according to an MSNBC reporter, which I thought they

(01:16:05):
were supposed to be changing their name by now, I yeah,
maybe that's maybe maybe they announced it too soon and
they figured out it was a horrible, terrible, no good,
very bad idea. I don't really know, but that that's
gonna make me sad because I had plans for that name.
I had already lined out what I was gonna start
calling them on a daily basis. So if they pulled

(01:16:27):
the trigger too soon as a test just to see
what would happen about people making fun of it. I'm
sad that I apparently may have helped them change their minds.
But also I know I've talked about this before, but
I had no idea that the MS stood for Microsoft
until the other day when they made the announcement that
they were changing the name. So I'm like, anyway, I.

Speaker 11 (01:16:49):
Think if you look across media generally, you have seen
a lot of people trying to grapple with Charlie Kirk's
legacy and what that is as a right wing agitator
and as a provocate tour and as you know, a
strategist and the most important GOP figure besides Donald Trump
arguably ever and so or right now, and so there's

(01:17:12):
a lot of grappling to do. But to suggest that
the Internet is cheering for this is just the opposite,
total opposite of what's actually happening.

Speaker 4 (01:17:20):
It is.

Speaker 9 (01:17:27):
What now, So you're saying this isn't happening, We have
hundreds of examples of people doing just that, hundreds of
teachers that are being censured in Texas because of their postings,
professors being removed, kids being kicked out of school, not
just because of what they said, but because of the
actions they were. You know, committing while they were saying them.

(01:17:51):
But yeah, sure, this isn't happening anywhere. It's just not
you know, you guys don't know what you're talking about.
You guys don't know what you're talking about. This isn't happening.
It's the usual thing. It's another it's it's the usual thing.
Don't believe what you're seeing with your own eyes because

(01:18:19):
it's not true. All right, So we got to talk
about this one. So apparently the mayor of Dearborn has
or as I call it now, Dearborn a Stan has
pissed quite a few people off. So hang on, I'm
waiting to see if it's ever gonna low there it goes.

Speaker 3 (01:18:37):
So let's talk about this.

Speaker 9 (01:18:41):
As soon as I remember to hit the rad button.
All right, here we go in just a second.

Speaker 7 (01:18:55):
I mean, has.

Speaker 19 (01:18:58):
You know, bombed up to the end see in Bay
roots and including many Americans.

Speaker 7 (01:19:03):
So I just feel that it's quite inappropriate.

Speaker 21 (01:19:06):
You are in Islamophobe, and although you live here, I
want you to know, asen mayor, you're not welcome here.
And the day you move out of the city. Well
with the day that I launched a parade celebrating the
fact that you moved out of the city because you
are not somebody who believes in coexistence.

Speaker 9 (01:19:22):
Okay, so just see you guys know what's going on.
Apparently there were some folks at a city council meeting
kind of you know, expressing, expressing some concerns about something.
So this is again from just Mindy over at Twitchy.
There is a huge problem in Dearborn, or as I
call it, Dearborn a Stan, Michigan, and it's getting worse

(01:19:42):
by the day. A few weeks ago, we told you
about the cops wearing patches that you know have. Yeah,
we talked about that too, wearing Arabic patches, and now
they are renaming streets after terrorists. So this is from
Ryan Savedra, a very disturbing story out of Dearborn Michigan. Shoppers, diners,

(01:20:05):
and commuters in the Dearborn, Michigan area will now head
to their favorite hotspot on a street named in honor
of Osama Cibylani, an Arab American newspaper publisher who has
advocated for Israel's destruction. Hmm, that seems like a great idea.
So I would like to point out, though, the irony

(01:20:29):
of a Muslim mayor accusing Americans of being the ones
that don't want to co exist. We've allowed you to
come in here, sir. We elected you. Well, I say we.
I don't live in Dearborn, Michigan, but you got elected
to mayor, sir. That that should be proof that people

(01:20:52):
are trying to co exist with you. But for some reason,
you don't think people want to co exist with you.
You know, maybe we have it a having things named
after terrorists. You ever thought about that? Also, while we're
on the subject, since when does a mayor get to
say you're not welcome in my city anymore? You know,

(01:21:16):
it's we don't we don't want you here because you
don't support a terrorist organization. Really, that's the angle that
you're gonna think. Oh so, in case I haven't said
this before, local elections are in some cases and in
most cases, even more important than the ones that get

(01:21:37):
talked about all the time on shows like this one
because national elections are sexy. In national elections or get
people's attention, But when you don't show up to vote,
you get mayors like this ass hat. So maybe we
should fix that for those of you and Dearborn. Maybe
you should fix that. But anyway, and we have a
raptor siding. A raptor is not ever late, sir. A

(01:21:59):
raptor show was up exactly when it's been too dear
Borne has relinquished all ties to our country. This is
what those who wanted to be tolerant get for their trouble.
And that's from Aggie again, and I agree, I think
we have you know, I don't even necessarily know if
it's tolerance as much as it's just you know, afraid

(01:22:22):
to offend, you know, and with as much as what
we're talking about this week, as far as you know,
people that have gone too far with it. You know,
celebrating somebody's death is a terrible thing. I don't care
who they are, well, except for maybe the time we're
all celebrated Osama bin Laden dying for reasons. But I

(01:22:45):
guess that's the point, you know. It's one thing when
we can all come together identify a common enemy, watch
that common enemy be wiped off the face of the earth,
and go whoao. But now we've got half the country
who think we're the enemy. So I kind of understand
why this guy is the mayor is as angry as
he is because to him it probably feels a lot

(01:23:05):
like it feels for us regarding Charlie Kirk, because because
of the fact that Islam has been hijacked, a lot
of people within that religion don't feel safe right now.
The problem is, and that is the common leftist talking
point right is Islam has been hijacked. The problem is
I don't believe that. I don't believe that because if

(01:23:26):
that were true, then the fact that there are supposedly
eleven million Muslims with a million that are actively you know,
jihadis ten million Muslims should be able to clean house,
I would think, but they don't. So you have to
start asking yourself why. And I would like to remind
you that in the Qur'an it is perfectly acceptable for

(01:23:46):
them to lie to you if you are not a believer.
Even have a name for it. It's called takiya. I
think they pronounced it takiya, but I could be wrong.
I've always pronounced it takiya. Let's be at the ketos.
But I'm a fan guy. But yeah, so I kind
of understand why this guy's mad because to him, it

(01:24:07):
probably feels a lot like, well, we're going through with
Charlie Kirk. But in reality it's nowhere near the same
because you guys aren't cleaning your own house Christianity, we
clean our own house all the time. Anybody who remember
the early two thousands, mid two thousands with the Westboro
Baptist Gang was the last time anybody heard about any
of those folks? Anybody bueller? You know why? Because we

(01:24:32):
took care of a mess. Don't talk to me about
not wanting to coexist when you won't take care of
your mess. So the fact that you won't take care
of your mess leads me to believe that you tacitly
support your mess, which is another reason why we don't
want streets in America named after terrorists. If you have
a problem with that, maybe you should leave. But this

(01:24:53):
goes out to all my friends in Dearborn, Michigan, because
we have pretty good numbers around there. I think it's
probably because of our good friend Awl who actually lives
in Michigan. My question to you is, why are you
putting up with this? What are you going to do
to fix it? What are you gonna do? I can
talk about it all day long. He's not my mayor.

(01:25:13):
I can't vote for him. I can't get him out
of office. I can talk about it, I can make
fun of him because he's an ass hat, but there's
not much else that I can do. So what are
you going to do? And no, I'm not advocating for
anything other than getting it rid of him at the
ballot box. But it's time for you, guys, to start
taking your city back. You've let it fall, and before
too much longer, you're going to look a lot like

(01:25:34):
London if you don't wake up, because you have let
your city fall, and a good bit of Michigan has
fallen to the point where we now have senate critters
in Congress, critters that have run for Congress and Senate
from places like Somalia, that do their entire press conferences
in other languages, which means they're not even trying to

(01:25:56):
reach you anymore because they don't care. How much how
much longer are you gonna be okay with things like that?
That's my question, that's my question, all right. So let's

(01:26:21):
see what other trouble we can get into you real quickly.
I think I have a couple of bookmarks I haven't
gotten to. I'm gonna look all right, So This isn't
a very long clip, but if I remember right, it

(01:26:43):
was kind of a poignant one, which is why I
bookmarked it.

Speaker 23 (01:26:46):
So but Canadian in the US right now, and when
Charlie's assassination happened, I genuinely thought, like, am I going
to have to go home? Because this is the type
of major event that you'd think could destabilize society, you know,

(01:27:09):
people hitting the streets and maybe if.

Speaker 17 (01:27:11):
It got real bad, maybe even a civil war.

Speaker 23 (01:27:12):
I think we all thought about it, but I genuinely
remember it hitting me that day, like, no, we don't
have to worry, because it's the people that you have
to worry about that are celebrating right now. And the
people that are pissed off are supporters of Charlie, which
means they have deeply strong morals and they have a God.
So when you piss off the left, they get violent
in the streets and we've seen it and don't act

(01:27:35):
like we haven't. And when you piss off the right,
evidently they hold prayer vigils. Seriously, name one business that's
had to board up their windows, Name one act of violence.
There's been no looting, no maniacs in the streets, and
it's not because we're not pissed off.

Speaker 17 (01:27:53):
It's because we're not the same. And this whole situation
perfectly shows the true concern, and the media has convinced so.

Speaker 23 (01:28:01):
Many people that it's the radical right wing extremists that
you have to worry about.

Speaker 17 (01:28:04):
Okay, where are these people? What are they doing that's
so dangerous?

Speaker 23 (01:28:07):
If I can be really honest, They're in some deep
South small town honestly mining their own business. Okay, These
radicals on the left are out in society among us everywhere,
and not even secretly celebrating the death of Charlie like
being so open about it. These people have no honor,
no integrity, no shame, no morals, And honestly, can you

(01:28:32):
really be that surprised? These are the same people who
have no problems casually castrating children and unliving their babies.
These are the issues they can care the most about.
But if you want to keep believing CNN when they
tell you that it's the right wing lunatics that are
the problem, I guess that's your choice.

Speaker 17 (01:28:48):
And I guess not everyone was meant to wake up
and see the truth, all.

Speaker 9 (01:28:56):
Right, So I think I've flayed that before, But I
wanted to play it for a reason. The dovetails into
what I'm about to talk about right now, and that
is this. If you needed any more proof that January sixth,
twenty twenty one was a psyop, I pointed this past
week because people are more angry about Charlie Kirk being

(01:29:17):
assassinated than they ever were about losing an election, and
yet there's been no rioting, there's been no looting, there's
been no we're going to take our country back bs
that they tried to portray everything as on January sixth.
I'm going to say this again, you need to do
your own research when it comes to January sixth. I've

(01:29:38):
done it. I've looked into it. There are all kinds
of things that have come to light over the last
several months that lead me to believe exactly what I'm
telling you right now.

Speaker 7 (01:29:46):
This was.

Speaker 9 (01:29:48):
What they had hoped would have been a kickoff to
Civil War two point zero, which is what the left wants.
If you don't know that's what the left wants, look
at the language that they're using still today. Dick Durbin,
Chuck Schumer, all of them are still using the same

(01:30:09):
inflammatory language they were using a week ago. I would
like to remind you that eight days ago Senator Murphy
said that we're at war and we must be willing
to do whatever is necessary because we're at war. That
was a Democratic senator the day before Charlie Kirk was assassinated.
And they've been saying things like this for over a decade,

(01:30:35):
and then they want to blame us. We didn't do this,
we don't want this. If we did, this would have
popped it off. But they're still hoping for it. They
can't understand at this point why we're not riding in
the streets. They can't understand at this point why we
haven't started civil war two point zero, because they want

(01:30:57):
us to start it. They need us to started because
then they'll be able to justify everything they've been saying
about Donald Trump for the last nine months and well
last ten years and nine months, because remember, he's supposed
to be the authoritarian, he's supposed to be the Nazi,

(01:31:18):
he's supposed to be Hitler incarnate. They need us to
pop off because then they get to be proven right
what they're struggling with right now, and the reason they
keep trying to spin this harder than a middle aged
mom in a spin class trying to burn off a
few pounds. Is the fact that they are being shown

(01:31:41):
to the world though less that they're not the good
guys in this scenario. They've tried to convince themselves that
they are. They've tried to convince themselves that they're on
the right side of history. But time and time again,
they keep being shown that they're on the wrong side
of history, and every narrative they've ever tried to build
about how they're on the right side of history keeps
collapsing all around them. Look at everything that we now
know about January sixth, one of the key witnesses, which

(01:32:03):
was part of Nancy Pelosi's security detail, said he was
in one part of the capitol witnessing a fight between
two disparate groups, when in reality he was one hundred
yards away in an underground parking structure, with video camera
footage to support that fact. So dudes committed perjury? Where's

(01:32:24):
the charges? We now have video and audio evidence of
police recordings through dispatchers, with officers reporting they were the
ones that started the escalation, not the people that were
there them. They started firing less than lethal rounds into

(01:32:46):
the crowd. Nobody heard an order given, nobody knew who
started doing it, but suddenly it started happening, so everybody
went along with it. For those of you that have
never been in a combat situation, you're gonna look at
this and think that's a little weird, but that's pretty
much how it works. Somebody gets in itt you trigger finger,
and the next thing you know, everybody's gone to war.

(01:33:08):
Luckily for them, the side that supposedly wanted a revolution
didn't bring any guns to the fight, which is again
another reason why the FBI had to conclude this was
not an insurrection of any kind because there were no
will reapons to speak of on our side of the equation.
A couple of flag polls here and there, this that
and the other, but no real weapons to speak of.

(01:33:31):
So you have to ask yourself this question again, why
when we didn't start it, When we didn't murder him,
when we didn't assassinate him, When all we've been telling
people for as long as I've been doing this that
all we really ever wanted to be was left alone.
You heard it from this guy and the clip I

(01:33:53):
just played. Most of these people that they consider extremists,
the ones that actually are extremists, because there are on
both sides, but the difference is our extremists. We beat
the crap out of them, and we beat them back
into darkness because we don't want them on our side
of the equation. We don't want them on our side
of the aisle. So they go off into seclusion somewhere
and just want to be left alone because they got

(01:34:14):
their asses kicked. What does the left do? They celebrate theirs.
They celebrate theirs all the time. They lagged them all
the time. And I had this conversation with somebody on

(01:34:37):
Facebook that lasted like two weeks changes and before I
just gave up. Who you know posted one of these
memes about how you know, women got the right to
vote because the liberals. Men and black men got this
because the liberals. Blah blah blah blah blah. So I just,
first of all, I'm just going to start with your
first point. The Republicans controlled Congress in nineteen nineteen when

(01:35:00):
the women's right to vote was passed on to be
voted on to the states. Well, that was when Republicans
were true liberals. Ask your computer about the party realignment,
since that's obviously where you got your information from. That
is such a lie. That is a lie from the devil.

(01:35:21):
It is a lie straight from the mouths of Democrats
because their plan was to basically take everything, turn it
on its head, and make people vote for them, when
in reality they still want to control everyone. We really
just want to be left alone. That's why you saw
people from my side of the aisle freaking out yesterday
over what Pam Bondi said, because starting to try to

(01:35:42):
craft things like hate speech laws means we're not going
to be left alone. Because what happens when the other
side gets to wheel those laws. You're gonna have what's
happening in Britain right now, You're gonna have what Joe
Biden tried to do in the first place. We're looking
at this is much in the way that Democrats looked

(01:36:02):
at it under Obama. They really thought they were entering
their version of the new Golden Age of America, which
in reality would have been terrible. But they thought Democrats
were going to be ruling forever. And I know this
because people told me as much. They couldn't even understand
how Donald Trump won in twenty seventy. They were looking
on in disbelief. Going after everything that we thought we

(01:36:23):
were able to accomplish. The American people voted it down,
and they did resoundingly because you lied to them over
and over and over again, and it's all you have.
That's the part that frust frustrates me the most about
where we are, because there is still this gin normaless

(01:36:44):
uniparty right smack dab in the middle that really doesn't
do anything but lied to everybody over and over and
over again. I hope they believe it. Then you've got
folks like Charlie Kirk and Donald Trump who do everything
they can to try to wake people up, make them
understand that, you know, this country is an amazing place
despite what folks like Jasmine Crockett tell you, who still

(01:37:05):
is peddling the idea that modern policing was born from
slave hunting groups, which is a lie again straight from
the devil's This is just insanity to me. I cannot
believe this is the moment we find ourselves in when
someone can be shot point blank dead right in front

(01:37:27):
of thousands of people, assassinated in front of their wife
and wife and their children. And I saw an actress
who I honestly don't know who the hell they are,
don't care to know. We'll probably make sure to avoid
anything I ever see them and ever again. Who was
apparently celebrating the fact that Charlie Kirk's three year old
daughter watched him be assassinated. How disconnected from reality do

(01:37:53):
you have to be where you can't even see the
fact that this person, who was an American, who was
one of us, who was a husband and a father
and basically dedicated his life to getting us to start
talking again, was gunned down. Now you can you can

(01:38:15):
not like some of the things that he said. I
don't have a problem with that. You can be pissed
off about the joke about well, they don't have any
buildings to throw anybody off of anymore in Gaza. You
can be pissed off about some of the things that
you've seen and read that have been taken out of context.
I don't care about any of that. I didn't agree
with Charlie Kirk ninety percent of the time, may not

(01:38:38):
are I didn't agree with him hundred percent of the time,
may have at mid There were times when I probably
agree with him sixty forty other times, depending what he
was saying, may have been seventy thirty in certain instances
eighty twenty. But the idea that someone deserves to be
murdered just because of what they said, you know, that's

(01:39:02):
the difference. The joke that you guys are pissed off
about with Charlie Kirk. He's making jokes about people who
murdered thousands of Jews and have been doing everything they
can to wipe Israel off the map. So there comes
a time when it's either you make a joke or
you get angry. And for those of you that have

(01:39:25):
been in combat situations, you know what I'm talking about.
For those of you that have spent any time working
on the streets of America and either first responder, firefighter
or police capacity, you know what I'm talking about. And
the difference is jokes are one thing. I mean. Hell,

(01:39:48):
I had my executive officer on one of the posts
that I usually left in charge at the property while
I was off doing patrol routes and stuff. Was a
Jew technically still is because he's not alive. But he
would get bored at like two and three in the
morning and start calling me on the radio and tell
me some of the like Jewish jokes that I was like,

(01:40:10):
I cannot believe you're saying this to me. But it
was just his coping mechanism because of realizing the history
that hit that hit that he came that he came from,
I mean, one of them. Remember this is this is
this is gonna be taken out of context at some point.

(01:40:30):
It's gonna if my show ever blows up, this will
be the one that everybody says, someday, this is why
they killed him. Remember this was not me saying this though,
And this is one of the jokes that he told
to me on an open frequency one night as I
was driving patrol routes. Why does shower heads have eleven

(01:40:53):
holes because Jews only have ten fingers. That's what I'm saying.
Gallo's humor is a thing. And the fact that you
guys are taking something that Charlie Kirk said as a joke,
which I get it. Some of you think that the

(01:41:13):
people in Hamas are heroes and that Gaza should be
you know, celebrated, when I'm sorry, the people that were
living in Gaza had a choice. Israel left in two
thousand and five. Two thousand and five, they left, said
it yours do.

Speaker 22 (01:41:32):
What you want with it.

Speaker 9 (01:41:33):
I would like to remind you that when Israel basically said,
I mean in this, remind you Israel forcibly removed their
own people from the wrong side of the fence. They
made them leave. Then they supplied the people of Gaza
with water and electricity. I can find no record of

(01:41:54):
them ever requesting and or making those folks pay for
that water and power. I've looked, and they said it's yours,
do what you want with it, and then they spent
the next what fifteen twenty years lobbing rockets at them.

(01:42:19):
Then you hear the most lawyer jokes in law school.
I don't know, well, probably, I don't know. Probably. Second
is you know people that were badges because we weren't
usually fans of you guys, Sien just Scien. Sorry, I
was responding to the chat. All right, So let's see
what else we can get into you real quick, Okay,

(01:42:48):
So that was that's a story that's been made to
look a little differently than where I pulled it from. Originally,
I thought there was some sort of riot over what
was happening in Dearborn, but apparently not. All right, so

(01:43:08):
let's talk about this because of course, CNN is back
in the news, so we got to help them. But
then again, this is more about you know, giving Scott
Jennings attention, not CNN. I like Scott Jennings, don't much
care for CNN.

Speaker 24 (01:43:25):
And here we go, guys, guys, the evidence here is overwhelming,
he said, Charlie Kirk, I can't stand his hate anymore.
I'm going to take him out. He the testimony from him,

(01:43:49):
in the statements of his family, he had become more
or left wing. He etched the statements that are made
by the left about Republicans and conservatives and Charlie Kirk
fascist on the bullet casing.

Speaker 25 (01:44:01):
He made a joke about it in his last text, But.

Speaker 24 (01:44:03):
It doesn't sound like a joke to me because someone's
dead and about to be buried, so it doesn't sound
like a joke to me. So I'm just telling you
there is an effort. There was an effort all weekend
long on the left to try to make this guy
sound like he was a conservative. That failed, That was
passed around all over the weekend. That has now failed.
The evidence has now come out. He was motivated by hate,

(01:44:24):
He was motivated by left wing radicalism. He got mixed
up with some trans ideology in his life. We'll learn
more about that. I'm sure when more evidence and testimony
comes out. We are looking around the edges of this
for something other than.

Speaker 12 (01:44:39):
What's staring us in the face.

Speaker 24 (01:44:41):
Left wing radicalism got this kid.

Speaker 20 (01:44:44):
He went up to a roof and he murdered our friend.

Speaker 9 (01:44:46):
And that's what happens to say. I don't think that
anybody is disputing.

Speaker 11 (01:44:50):
I mean, I'm certainly not disputing it's written there that
he had Montile.

Speaker 22 (01:44:56):
I think it's clearly political.

Speaker 9 (01:44:58):
You can't take politics out of it. First of all,
what the hell happened to Montell Williams. I mean, dude
blocked me like forever ago, so I haven't been been
able to keep up with him. But every time I
think of Montela, I still think he looks like what
he looked back when he was doing his TV show
and then I saw him there, like, dude is old.
I thought Black didn't crack, Yo, what happened? What happened

(01:45:21):
to Black don't crack? All right? So so yeah, this
is the new narrative after the whole he was a
graper thing kind of fell apart. So Montell Williams on
CNN A Thunderdome says the suspect in the Charlie Kirk
assassination was a love torn child, likely in the throes

(01:45:45):
of his first real relationship, and somehow was disparaging the
person he loved and thus not motivated politically. So we're
gonna actually pay attention to that too, because I think
that's actually what this cliff talks about saying on well
except now going to make me do it an X
one second, all right, so you guys should be able

(01:46:11):
to see it now one second while life fix everything.

Speaker 25 (01:46:17):
There are people who are trying to pigeonhole this as
a leftist thing and a right thing. And what we're
really talking about, hear me, because I'm going to throw
you when I say this. We're talking about a love
torn child, a kid, this is probably his first real relationship,
and somebody was disparaging the person that he loved. He
sat on that building for thirty minutes before he took

(01:46:39):
the shot. Why do you wait until the first word
trance came up? Then he took the shot.

Speaker 9 (01:46:44):
You think he could hear I think he could hear it.

Speaker 25 (01:46:46):
I think he also. I don't believe he was motivated politically.
I think this was motivated emotionally. I think this was
an emotionally stunded person who literally say this way, just
hear me, tried to defend his significant other, not trying
to defend some ideology.

Speaker 9 (01:47:08):
Okay, so.

Speaker 25 (01:47:11):
There are people who.

Speaker 9 (01:47:12):
Are trying to.

Speaker 25 (01:47:15):
And we're really talking.

Speaker 9 (01:47:16):
Okay, so let me get off of that real quick. Okay.
So this may surprise some of you, but I think
Montell might be about forty five percent right here. I
think this was emotionally motivated. You heard it, you well
you saw it, or you heard it as you were
listening to the DA read back the text messages yesterday.

(01:47:38):
They were being injured into evidence. This man was full
of too much hate. Some hate can't be negotiated away.
So I'll give Montel a little bit of this, but
to say that it wasn't politically motivated at the same time,
even if it wasn't, it doesn't matter anymore because the

(01:48:01):
Left made it politically motivated as soon as they started
grave dancing. The left made it politically motivated once they
started saying, oh, look, it wasn't even us leave us alone,
when it was y'all and everybody knew it was y'all.
You guys are the ones that have been screaming and
yelling that we're hitler, that we're a fascist, that we're
Nazis for the last ten years. I said this to

(01:48:21):
somebody who basically made the same kind of comment on
Facebook to me yesterday. Who's the they, I'm gonna say
it again. The they is the leaders of the Democratic
Party that have been screaming and saying things like you know,
now Speaker Emeritis, formerly Speaker of the House at the time,
Nancy Pelosi saying things like I can't believe there aren't
uprisings in the streets, Maxine Waters saying if you see

(01:48:44):
members of Trump's cabinet in the city, you know, get
in their faces, if you see them at the gas pumps,
get in their faces. People within the Democratic leadership saying,
don't let people in, don't let people that believe that
what these people believe into the same restaurants as you
are you kidding me right now, And you want to

(01:49:06):
say that at least some of this wasn't politically motivated.
Of course it was. You guys have been telling people
for ten years that Donald Trump is hitler, that people
that vote for him are Nazis. Think about this from
another perspective. If you're hearing over and over and over
again from people of authority, people that you align with,

(01:49:30):
that the people they're telling you about are the bad
guys that are akin to people that tried to take
over the world. What happens when you take that to
the point where you completely believe it and you decide
to do something about it, Because, again, in the shooter's
own words, some hate can't be negotiated away. What was hateful?

(01:49:58):
I never heard Charlie Chirton, Charlie Kirk say anybody couldn't
be trands if they wanted to be. But don't expect
us to live in your delusion. Some of us have
evolved our opinion about that over time. And I'll be
honest with you. I used to be of the mind
that I didn't care, you know, one way or the other.
Once a man, always a man, Once a woman, always

(01:50:21):
a woman. You know you're born that way. But you
know what, and I my opinion on that has evolved
a little bit. And I started, you know, saying, once
you are completely committed to the bit, once you've done
all the things so that your outside matches what you
think your inside is supposed to be. I will call
you whatever name you wish, I will use whatever gender

(01:50:42):
you wish, because at that point you're so committed to
it that you basically are what you said you wanted
to be. If not, don't come at me with your
delusional ish because I don't want to hear it. But
at the same time, to say that some hate can't
be negotiated away. Again, where was Charlie Kirk ever hateful?

(01:51:03):
Charlie Kirk spent his whole life, from the time he
was eighteen until he was thirty one, doing everything he
could do foster dialogue and inspire communication. Even if you
disagreed with what he said, you can't deny the fact
that he was trying to communicate. And it wasn't just
in Gatcha moments either. That's the part that drives me

(01:51:24):
the most insane, if I'm being completely honest, because ninety
nine times out of one hundred anymore, we don't communicate
to relay ideas. We communicate to score points. That wasn't
Charlie Kirk. He gave people that completely disagreed with him.

(01:51:44):
There were the antithesis of everything that he believed. Microphones
for hours at a time, and even when his own
people within the crowds would shout them down, he would
be the first one to say, let them talk, let
them talk. This is the irony of where we find
ourselves today, because now you have the Democratic leadership again

(01:52:10):
talking about how Donald Trump should be uniting everyone and
get everybody to start talking again. We're not the ones
who broke the discourse. This is the part that needs
to start being driven home to the point where they
can't ignore it anymore. We did not break the discourse
in this country. You did with a bullet. You allowed

(01:52:36):
it to happen, You celebrated the fact that it happened,
and then you tried to what about is in your
way out of it behind microphones with folks like Schumer
and I keep wanting to say book Corey Booker, but
that's not him. Keem Jeffries, who said, you know, this
is a terrible time for America blah blah blah, YadA,

(01:52:59):
YadA YadA, but Donald Trump should be doing everything he
can to lower the temperature. Really, what are you doing
to lower the temperature. You're still the heads of your party.
What are you doing to lower the temperature? Absolutely nothing.
It was set again today and yesterday over the looming

(01:53:22):
budget crisis. Republicans are being told not to negotiate with
us because we don't fucking negotiate with Terris. Why should
we negotiate anything with you. You've celebrated the death of someone,
not a foreign combatant, not somebody who was trying to
destroy the nation, but somebody that was trying to bring

(01:53:42):
the nation together. And y'all are grave dancing, right, And
that's why I said, I'll give him maybe forty five
percent of it. But you can't. You can't get past
somebody scratching, scrawling onto a bullet. Hey fascist catch that's

(01:54:03):
that's pretty well a political statement, just pointing that out.
Good morning, he says. I mean, I know it's early
for you, but come on, you come strolling in like
seven minutes before my show ins, six minutes before my
show ins. No, I'm just kidding. Thank you for even
showing up at all, because I it was early for you. Sorry,
I didn't anybody remember the Boston Bass, did ye? I

(01:54:26):
was talking about earlier? He just showed up on my
chatro anyway, But yeah, no, I mean, so like I said,
I will, I will give you know Montella less than
passing grade, because he's not completely wrong. The shooter probably
was motivated some by emotion. But okay, so we got

(01:54:48):
to talk about this real quick, and I may actually
look into this a little bit more on rails tonight
because this just came across my feed and it's a
little weird. So this is from Eli Sheppard over at
Red State. Apparently there were two men found hanging in Mississippi.
According to authorities, there's no foul play evident. But so

(01:55:10):
let's talk about this real wick. Two men, two trees,
two hangings within hours of each other in Mississippi, and
the official line, no evidence of foul play. That's the
word from authorities after a young college student and an
unidentified homeless man were both discovered hanging from trees in
separate locations this week. The first case hit especially hard.

(01:55:32):
De Marchre von trey Reid, a twenty one year old
student at Delta State University, was found hanging from a
tree near the campus pickleball courts. I told you, guys,
pickleball was evil. Nobody wants to believe me. Around seven
am Monday morning, police quickly moved to calm fear saying
the campus was safe and that there was no sign
of a crime at the scene. Just hours later, in

(01:55:56):
an unrelated case, a homeless man was also found hanging
from a Officials again said there was no sign of
foul play. Details remained scarce on his identity or the
exact circumstances. Let's be honest. In America, when a black
man is found hanging from a tree, history cast along
shadow from any The immediate thought is lynching, aide crime,
or racial violence. It doesn't matter how quickly police declare

(01:56:18):
nothing to see here. The optics are chilling and the
questions are inevitable. This is from Ben Crump at Attorney Crump.
We've been retained by the family of Demarchra Von trey Reid,
the twenty one year old Delta State University student whose
body was found hanging from a tree. Trey was a
young man, full of promise and warm, deeply loved and

(01:56:39):
respected by all knew him, his family and the campus.
And it goes on, but I'm not going to click
on it. Of course, there will be those who have
already determined san's evidence that this was a full on
haid crime. This is from somebody's ex account who I'm
not going to give a name, fascism and Jim Crow
never died, It simply evolved. Blah blah blah. Law enforcement

(01:57:01):
has promised transparency. Autopsy results are pending in Read's case,
and the university has rolled out grief counseling for students
while insisting the community is safe. But Americans have every
right to demand answers, not vague assurances. After all, it
would learn too many times by institutions that tell us
trust us, only to find out later that our trust

(01:57:21):
was misplaced. The facts on the ground right now are
these two men were found hanging from trees in Mississippi
and separate incidents in the same day. Both cases are
being investigated by police and currently treating them as suicide
or non criminal deaths. No evidence of foul play has
been presented publicly, though autopsies are not yet completed. Here's

(01:57:41):
the problem, according to the author, if these tragedies truly
are suicides, that deserves just as much attention. Young men,
especially young Black men, are facing skyrocketing suicide rates, and
the mental health crisis is very real. But there's more
to the story. If there is more to the story,
bearing another or no foul play. Headlines only fuels disbelief

(01:58:02):
either way. The people deserve full transparency. Anything less than
these deaths will forever sit under a cloud of suspicion.
All right, So that was written by I didn't know
who this was. I'm just gonna read his bio real
quick because we're almost done anyway. This was written by
Eli Shephard, kind of on the nose for his career
path because he's a pastor, speaker, and unapologetic culture commentator

(01:58:26):
with a passion for truth and a heart for people.
Blending biblical conviction with straight talk, he challenges believers to
stand firm and faith while navigating a world that is
losing its way. When he's not writing, Eli leads his
local church, mentors young leaders, and fuels his day or
fuels his days with strong coffee and stronger convictions. Okay,

(01:58:46):
that's actually a pretty good bio. Not even gonna lie.
All right, folks, we are pretty much out of time.
Don't forget come back tonight starting at seven pm Eastern
four America off followed by the Conservative Curmudgeon, followed by
our friends are behind the enemy lines. That are more
assuredly behind the enemy lines. These days, since it looks

(01:59:08):
like there's gonna be a comedy running New York City soon.
And then we come back for Rick and Ordy finish
off the night first first trip over to HR Media
Edge of Liberty hosted by Sean Lewis, or as I
lovingly call him, the Boston Bastage, and following that will
be our closing act for the evening Belly Up for
the Bar, last call Bez's Bersert Bobcats Alone. Keep in

(01:59:31):
mind that one is a replay he ran in live
last night. We run it the next day because we
have a programming conflict. Enjoy the rest of your Wednesday
as best you can, ladies and gentlemen. We'll see you
later tonight.

Speaker 3 (01:59:56):
Over nothing is over until we decided this was it.

Speaker 4 (02:00:03):
Over when the driving's bomb Pearl Horner, Hello.

Speaker 3 (02:00:09):
Closing time, Open all the doors and let you out
into the over night.

Speaker 9 (02:00:20):
Closing time.

Speaker 6 (02:00:21):
That's Great's just fucking great, man, How what the fuck
are we supposed to do?

Speaker 8 (02:00:27):
Game over?

Speaker 4 (02:00:27):
Man?

Speaker 8 (02:00:28):
Game over?

Speaker 5 (02:00:30):
In time time for you to go out to the
places you will be from.

Speaker 17 (02:00:40):
Closing time.

Speaker 9 (02:00:43):
This room won't be open till your brothers are your sisters.

Speaker 8 (02:00:49):
I love your Flahoma. What a great crowd. I love you.

Speaker 9 (02:00:53):
Say good night, Gracie,
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