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February 28, 2021 • 61 mins
Marjorie Taylor Greene controversy, AOC lies, "You Big Dummy" and more
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(00:00):
This is the FCB Radio Network,home of the best personalities and where real
Todd lifts online at FCB radio dotcom. Fcbllo. Folks from welcome you

(00:46):
be listening to the Todd Allen Jorianhost Professor Eaton Todd Allen in studio with
Collete de Mark. Lead. Howare you, sir? I am well?
Are you okay tomorrow? How areyou, sir? What's brought off?
Sir? Also, let's go aheadand get rolling, man. There's
a lot of stuff going on thesedays. The political environment is um,

(01:07):
it's a hot message. We havemagic Marjorie Taylor Green as a Republican and
the House of Representative from Georgia fortiethdistrict. Would you say being centered?
What would you say? How wouldyou describe what the House is trying to
do to her? Aleaeum, Iguess what comes to mind? I mean,

(01:34):
they obviously are trying to shift thefocus towards her to paint all of
Trump's supporters as Cook's So they're makingher a poster child for cookery. Um.
And they got the help of themedia. It's nice to have a
media wing when you're the Democrat party. So you ever noticed that the media

(01:57):
never actually has any disagreements with Democratsabout anything, And whenever the Democrats focus
on a particular topic, the mediagoes right along with them. So now
they want to focus on Marjorie TaylorGreen. She's the biggest talk now because
of the quote unquote insurrection and theconspiracy theory that they theorist the theory,

(02:20):
smearing everybody with the label she isnow what everybody's focused on. And so
that's what they're doing. They're makingher and an example of everything that's wrong
with Trump supporters, and they're tryingto also destroy Republicans in the Senate and

(02:43):
the House, and they're trying tobasically kill them as a viable party if
you listen to what these nuts aresaying all over cable news. So yeah,
so that's what they're doing. AndI always go by what people do
versus what they say. This woman, her beliefs are. You know,

(03:04):
they might be a little off guilter, but I'm always amazed that lefties care
more about what people say than whattheir actions are. Joe Biden has signed
about fourteen thousand executive orders over thepast week and a half, and that
doesn't seem to bother them. Eventhough they were jumping up and down for
the past four years about us havinga dictator as a president. Lefties are

(03:30):
frauds. They don't I don't takethem seriously on pretty much any issue,
and they don't care about nineteen percentof the things that they claim that they
care about. So this woman,miss Green, I don't think she's good
for the party simply because Republicans aren'tallowed to have koks. That's cookeres only

(03:58):
for Democrats? Are you are yourthoughts? So you always get me to
follow behind something like that? Yeah, I mean it's pretty clear. You
know what the whole objective is.You gotta remember the House and the Senate,

(04:26):
even though they're in Democratic control,that control is that margin is very
very thin, right, So you'relooking at in the House, it is
the smallest majority in that the Democratshave ever had in like a hundred years,
right, And the Senate is fiftyfifty. The only reason why it's

(04:47):
Democrat controled is because the Democrats havethe White House. So of course you
know they're going to look for anythingto give them any sort of advantage,
and if they can tar the partyas a whole as a bunch of coups.
You know, that's good for thempolitically in their view. Um.

(05:09):
I do think it's unfortunate that MarjorieTaylor Green some of her views are pretty
duddy. Um. But this isa transparent political move, like there's no
there's no principle in it, youknow what I mean. Obviously people are

(05:30):
going to say that it's all aboutprinciple, but it's not. Most of
this stuff never is, you knowwhat I mean. It's it's about it's
about politics. It's about trying togain an advantage for the next election.
So I mean when we talk about, you know, coups or nut bags
or so we're talking about in politics. I mean the Democrats kind of lead

(05:51):
away with that. Elmar In theoac Well, I wouldn't stop there.
I would say that they are allowedto say and believe whatever they want and
there's no consequences. These are thepeople who push Russia conspiracies for four years

(06:13):
now, lecturing others about conspiracy theory. I mean, this is so rich
it's almost I mean, they shiftSchumer. They have pushed nonsense for the
past several years, but now they'rethe arbiters of truth in mental and emotional

(06:33):
stability. I just I find itstunning. Maxine Waters has been yelling for
mob action for the past couple ofyears and yet telling people to harass people
in public. She did, ChuckSchumer threatened Supreme Court justices. They paid

(06:57):
no consequence because they have the mediaon their side. The media are a
bunch of hacks and lapdogs for theDemocrats. That's why they're so powerful where
they have an entire media machine ontheir side to brainwash the public and to
push wherever narrative that they want topush, so people you get the government

(07:18):
you deserve. Well, Darby,I want to want to talk with you
about about something. I mean,you and I were kind of we were
offline and we were kind of lookingat something together, something that you had
sent me. Where we are interms of the political process is that as
a society we have lost total trust, and not only the government, then

(07:43):
also in the media. Would youagree with that, not only the media,
but in institutions period. I sawMarco Rubio had made this point that
one of the problems that we havein our society is that no one can
speak with with any authority about anything. We don't trust anybody that's a huge

(08:05):
problem. And when we look atstuff like, for example, where we're
talking about now, you know thatcontributes to the erosion of public trust.
And it's not just because a lotof people like to say, oh,
well, this is what about ism, right, but it's not necessarily what
about ism to say that the rulesshould apply equally and fairly to everyone,

(08:30):
because when they don't, people losefaith in the process. And when people
lose faith in the process, youcreate more conspiracy theorists, not less.
And it's like these people don't understandthat when you have to have the rules
have to apply to everybody, Whenthe rules don't apply evenly and fairly to

(08:54):
everybody, you erode public trust.When people see you going against one congresswoman
who is a kuk or was acoup or whatever. I don't know what
her what the state, what ourcurrent state of cookery is right now,
so I won't be smarcher. Idon't know what her current state is.

(09:15):
But at least who was a coup? But you have someone who slept with
a Chinese spy? And it's stillwhat is he on Homeland security or the
Intelligence committee? Wanted to two?Yeah he's on the Intelligence Committee. Yeah,
people. People see that, peoplesee that that stuff that not even

(09:35):
a story. It's not even astory. That's what I found. None
of the stuff is a story.They're not right, right, that stuff
that those things he rolled public trust, you know what I mean. It's
the it's the dishonesty. There arepeople who may be ignorant about a lot
of stuff, but everybody ain't stupid, you know what I'm saying. They

(09:58):
say they see, they can see, you know what I mean. So,
yeah, it does it. Thesekind of things do more damage to
public trust than anything else you canthink of. One of the things that
lead grew up. We heard,Dario. You may not have ever heard
this, but we were always toldsticks and stones may break your bones,

(10:20):
but words may never hurt you.Yeah, I've heard that. I'm not
that young. I was. Iwas, I was trying to ignore your
gray hair. But anyway, oursociety has been flipped upside on his head.

(10:41):
Now it's not always Now it's notsticks and stones that hurt you,
but there are words that that theyhurt you because their hords will will cause
you to be labeled to cook.If a person doesn't if a person cannot
argue your ideas or proper discourse withyour ideas. They want to label you
a racist or label you a coupThey'll label you something that you that that

(11:05):
now, I mean, you're you'rearguing with a drunk person trying to defend
yourself. Uh, there's some thingsthat you just can't you know, they
just can't defend some labels now thatyou just cannot defend yourself from. Are
we gone so far? I mean, what's the next step? I mean,
where do you see? You know, we only got you know,
a couple of minutes, and Iguess we'll carry this over to the next

(11:26):
segment. But what do you seeour future? Oh? Lord, you're
gonna ask him that this is goingto be depressing. I see us,
I see us turning into basically Mexico. Um. I think that more people
are going to not vote. Peopleare gonna just give up on voting.

(11:52):
They're gonna be completely cynical. Theysee all the strange and utter astonishing a
knowledge that took place in this lastelection, and you're going to see people
lose interest in the political process andlose faith in it completely because they're gonna
say, look, what's the point, Because they're just gonna do what they

(12:13):
want to do. We're gonna voteone way, They're gonna do what they
want to do. I think you'regoing to see the government continue to shovel
money at people, because that's whatworks every time you do it. You
said another precedent, Let's see howmuch you know we can bribe the American
people with, you know, morestimulus checks and this kind of check and
that kind of check. Is you'veyou've ruined the next two generations already,

(12:39):
Let's see. Let's talk more aboutthat. On the break, you're listening
to the rows the assessment. Doyou feel like everyone is yelling at each
other, but no one is listeningto each other or themselves. I'm Cura
Davis post of Just Listen to Yourself, a weekly exercise and critical thinking and

(13:00):
drawing our talking points all the wayout to their logical conclusions, because I
believe when we take the time toexamine our own talking points, we can
realize we're not always saying what wethink we're saying. Download Just Listen to
Yourself with Kia Davis on iHeartRadio,Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.

(13:22):
The Todd Allen Show on the FCBRadio Network. Welcome back folkus for
listening to The Todd Allen Show.How can I listens? Follow you at
D the King crint on all socialmedia platforms D T, H U,
K, I U, G P, I am please Kaleid tomorrow on Facebook.
I won't I won't promote the otherplatforms The Dodd Allen Show on Facebook.

(13:45):
He's going to keep the other platformthose we control. But continue,
well, you know, c thankyou for that rendition of such a you
know, Rosie outlook politics. Um, but I want to go to you,
Darvo, because again you're you're alittle bit younger, uh and but
you're not that generals, those twolost generations that Khalid just talked about.

(14:07):
And I we we we've discussed beforeabout the idea of these conspiracy theories.
There teem to be more of themnow, Yeah, why is that?
I mean, I mean the Democratswere you know, we wanted to talk
about conspiracy theories, Russian conspiracy theoriesand in every conspiracy theory since day one

(14:31):
when former forty five took took theoffice. Now you know, it ain't
no fun when the rabbit has agun, as you always said. Yeah,
but of distrust. The level ofdistrust, it's just incredible. Talk
about the distrust. And if youlook at it from a psychological perspective that

(14:54):
let me let me put on minebecause that was part of my degree,
you know, that was one ofmy emphasis. So when you look at
it from a psychological perspective, oneof the things that breed that are fertile
breeding ground for conspiracy theories is lackof trusting institutions. Right, So if
you don't trust the government, youdon't trust the media, you don't trust

(15:18):
the education system, you don't trusthealthcare officials, you don't trust any of
the pillars that make a civil societycivils. If you lose trust in those
institutions, it becomes breeding ground forthe acceptance of conspiracy theories. And the

(15:39):
reason being is that because you don'tbelieve that anyone is telling you the truth.
So if you find a flashy,well produced video on YouTube, you
will watch someone convince you that themoon landing took place in the student you
will watch right because well, well, and that again, that goes back

(16:03):
to the point that I was makingbefore of why this stuff is so corrosive
and why this is a bigger dealthan people think, because when you're not
honest, when the rules do notapply fairly and equally to everyone, you
create more folks going to crazytown.That's that is the mind. Of course,

(16:26):
you have people who are just nutty, we know that. But when
you have like you know, Kalitold us a story once about running into
someone who was who seemed very normal, was a very pleasant and normal person
until they started, you know,going down crazytown and they didn't seem like
a type of person that would godown crazytown. Well, when you see
that, those are the type ofpeople again who have lost faith in all

(16:51):
institutions. And we have an inherentneed for what we perceive to be the
truth. We have an inherent desireto go somewhere to someone to be able
to trust something that it's factual,accurate, and truth. When we don't
have that, our brains will stillgo look for that in other places.

(17:14):
And that's how you end up incrazytown. I mean, we can no
longer search for truth using the internetbecause the powers that be, I don't
know, is this is this aconspiracy theory? You can help me out
with it. Because the powers thatbe, the people that control the Internet
and and and search engines purposefully keepyou away from certain types of information or

(17:41):
certain word phrases or what have youthat you can't find that that's not that's
not a conspiracy theory. That's aconspiracy. Like that's real, like that
that's that's real. And again againthis is these are the type of things
that they It's so dangerous because ifyou really truly care these these people who

(18:06):
talk about conspiracy theories and want tofight conspiracy theory, if you really care
about conspiracy theories as much as yousay you do, then you would want
people to have more information, notless. You would want people to be
able to get more knowledge, notless. Because when you it's it's like
in the eighties, remember when TipperGore and all of them was going against

(18:30):
rap and the heavy metal and hardrock because of all the profanity and all
of that. As soon as youslap a label on it, what happened.
It made people want to go buyit more, you know what I
mean? It made as soon asyou told people, hey, you shouldn't
listen to this, this is bad, Yeah, that's going to buy more
of it. I think that's whenthe phrase the saying came out says,

(18:53):
I don't know what porn is,but I know when I see it.
Right, that was a Supreme Courtcase. I don't remember if that was
the same that it was before that. Yeah, that was seventies, rightfully.
That was the seven that was doingthe obscenity cases in the seventies.
In the seventies, correct. Sowhat I'm talking about is when Timpergore Algoris

(19:15):
then wife the Parents Music Resource Center, Yes, led the crusade to UM
put these parental advisory stickers on onrap music and heavy metal and hard rock
that had a lot of profanity init. And basically what ended up happening
is the albums with the stickers onit, those their sales went up.

(19:38):
And not only that, but Imean people started putting parental advisory stickers on
their shirts and on clothing and all, because it's it's human nature. Once
you tell people something is bad,it makes them want to get more of
it. So you know this,When you restrict information, it just makes
people want to go searching more.And when you do that, when people

(20:00):
feel like you're not telling them thetruth. When people feel like information is
being restricted, that's how they endup in the welcoming arms of crazy Town.
Well, I mean, but Ithink that you made the distinction.
Eli, there's a difference between conspiracytheory and a conspiracy. So that's a
difference between So there's a difference betweensomeone that is talking about a true conspiracy

(20:23):
and a coup. Yes, yes, but it's a it's a line.
It is. Well, and butwhat happens is because of course power wants
to concentrate itself. So what thepowers that be and I don't mean to
sound conspiracy, but what what whatpeople in charge like to do is to

(20:47):
make anything that's not mainstream information aconspiracy theory because it gives them, because
it gives them the power to wipeit away. A perfect example, it
was an cospiracy theory that the governmentwas spying and infiltrating on civil rights groups
until it wasn't right, until cointelprohappened and we all got we all saw

(21:11):
the reports of what happened there,it was a conspiracy. I ran contrat
was a conspiracy theory until it wasn't. Fast and Furious was a conspiracy theory
until it wasn't. So so whenyou have these things again, this is
these are the things that he rolledpublic trust. When you don't tell people
the truth, people go to lookfor the truth in any way, shape
or form that they can, andsometimes that leads them to people who are

(21:36):
not telling them true, to peoplewho are perpetuating conspiracy theories. That is
how conspiracy theories get perpetuated, whenpeople don't believe that you're telling them the
truth. And speaking of not tellingthe truth, we have a person in
the House of Representatives at who doeswho lies? Wait? That is that
not? Is that a conspiracy theory? Or is that the truth? Who?

(22:00):
Who is that? Too? Well? I mean, let'sten, let's
just define conspiracy. So conspiracies whenwhen when? What is it? Uh
r and more people or you know, get together to do harm? Yeah,
And so there are things that areuh that have happened that we know

(22:26):
that their fact. I mean,we know that, uh, Lincoln's assassination
was carried out by multiple people whowere all executed. Uh. We we
know that, uh. We knowthat there are certain people who carried out
the the kidn of the assassination,but only one person you know, paid
for it? But or is itor is leaves blamed for it? Uh?

(22:48):
We know that multiple people get togetherand do bath all the time.
Um, but here is where themedia is smearing anything with that label.
Well, there's just conspiracy theories.I mean it's like, first of all,
wrongdoing happens a lot in this countrywithout people coming together to do corruption.

(23:14):
And this is what a lot ofthe genus is on Facebook. Don't
understand. We have fifty separate stateelections. We have house races in the
house districts all of the country.We have Senate races. So corruption that
takes place, it's always taking placeon the state level. The Feds can

(23:34):
do very little when it comes tocorrupting a race. It's all done on
state level. We know that Lincolnnot Lincoln, I'm sorry. We know
that Kennedy got in office because thehelp of the mob who stole votes and
a lot of their rural distries theycontrol. That's a fact. Even historians
acknowledge that they stole that. Yeah, that happens. We know that Norm

(23:57):
Coleman and Al Franken a race inMinnesota a decade or so ago. Uh,
there was some cheating in that race. So we have fifty state elections.
Stuff goes on on the state level. It's not a quote conspiracy theory.
It happens people, people cheat,So now they're dismissing any challenge to

(24:19):
anything as or just a conspiracy theory. And it gets to the point when
people throw these words around to wherethey're watered down and don't mean anything.
So alc Alec is a liar andshe's she's she's not well, Uh,
this woman made up a story.Remember she took pictures outside of down near

(24:41):
the border US, like stage photographsor her crying at the gate or down
down of the border. That wasall staged, you know. And now
she's lying and saying, you knowwhere she was during the Capitol quote unquote
insurrection that people was trying to murderher. These people are hysterics and they

(25:02):
do this for the benefit of thepublic, and they have the airwaves and
they can push whatever theory they want. They can tell you Donald Trump is
a Russian agent, he's a Russianbot, he's Putin's boy, and it's
not considered conspiracy theory. It's notconsidered anything other than the truth, you
know. So it's like, Idon't, I don't listen to I don't.

(25:22):
The best thing has ever happened inrecent months for me is that I
didn't hook my television up. Thething that that that's bothersome argo is that
people can can say things or andspout them as truth with no facts to
support them, right and well.And yet on the other hand, people

(25:47):
can be shown facts and it's fact. They've taken the vaccine against facts and
they just and they're immune to it. Thing the thing that bothers me is
when people lie or when people dothings that are improper, whether you have
any consequences or not. It appearsthat it depends on on what side of

(26:10):
the political lure on which is which. Again, that's another thing that it
rolls puzzlic trust. But I alsothink too just with the general public.
And we were actually kind of talkingabout this briefly before the show started about
a story that my show have beena part of that we're going to go
back and address because some new informationcame out that contradicts some of the previous

(26:34):
information and it's important in my viewto address that. But what happens is
people people don't Charlie Mayne says thisall the time. People like like the
lie because it's more entertaining than thetruth. People will listen to people will

(26:56):
will reject the truth when the lieis more entertaining. And that's what it
is. People are accepting what they'rebeing told without actually looking at Yeah,
look deeper at anything. Yeah.People are general or lazy though, because
people don't first of all, theydon't know how, they don't know how
to research the anymore, because youcan't just go simply go to Google.

(27:19):
Hey, can we we gotta goto break real quick? Can we carry
this over a little bit? Sureto listen to hot topics, celebrity news,
in depth interviews, and a wholelot more. It's The Outlaws Radio
Show. Listen on the iHeart Radioapp or wherever you get your podcast today.

(27:40):
That's the Outlaws Radio Show, TheTodd Allen Show on the FCB Radio
Network. Welcome back, fulction listeningto the Dodd Allen Show. What I
would saying before we left for Breakis that in general, as a population,
we are you become very lazy,and we even see it in our

(28:03):
media. Our media has become verylazy because no one wants to do the
research to basically find the facts tosupport the truth. They will much rather
found find a sound bite taken outof context and add that to whatever it
is that they're doing so that theycan get ratings. UM, and they
call that journalism. That's not journalism. And in general, as a population,

(28:26):
we can't just go to Google andexpect to be able to find all
of the things that that give usthe truth we have. We have lost
our ability to seek the truth,to recognize the truth when we see it
in terms of facts, and thento use those facts to support our different

(28:48):
different arguments. Your thoughts on naturally, Well, what's happening is, um,
you have a an agenda that beingpushed, and the agenda is coming
from so many different directions that peopleactually don't even recognize what truth is because

(29:11):
they have more news and not necessaryinformation news. What information is just you
know, you're just you're just you'rejust getting nothing. A lot of people
get it. I have to tellpeople all the time, Hey, that's
that's really not true. You know, there are people who I really respect
who believe in this pizza gate sextrafficking stuff, which has maybe a five

(29:33):
percent grain or truth than it.And so it's really kind of tragic that
in information age, people have lessinformation, accurate accurate information, accurate information
in the information age, so Uh. In the media itself, there's some

(29:56):
good sources of information out there,but the mainstream press, I think our
agenda driven. I don't think alot of them are too particularly bright,
and I think that they are dishonestand they're corrupt. And that's uh,
that's my media bashing for the day. Your thoughts, it's real, goodly,

(30:17):
I did I need a cigarette?So, um, I think to
be fair to the to the generalpublic. Of course, there is some
you know, aspect of laziness andI want to do research or whatever.
But I also believe that the phenomenonof information overload is real. Um.

(30:38):
There are so many different things thatare attacking people's attention, trying to get
them to pay attention to whatever itis that is, you know, making
the case that people get It's it'shard. It's so hard to find out

(30:59):
what the truth is. That peoplejust get to a point where they're just
like, screw it. You know, we have never lived at a time
where there have been more things fightingfor our attention. Right There are you
know, two thousand TV networks.There's a bunch of different video on demand

(31:22):
stuff. There's people saying, youknow, watch my watch my YouTube listen
to my this, watch my that. Get on this platform, get on
that platform. Read my website.No, don't read this website, read
that website. No, if youreally want truth, you come to hear
you know what I mean. Like, there's so many different things that is

(31:44):
fighting for the average person's attention,not to mention that they still have regular
life to deal with that it makesit very very difficult to find the truth,
especially in a daylight today where likeLeed said, like in this day
and age, if you you can'tjust go to one news source to get

(32:05):
the whole truth, you have toactually do some more work. You have
to go to different news sources.You have to go read read the actual
information where they got the story fromall those sorts of things that take a
lot of time, a lot ofeffort, and a lot of work.
And it's a lot, Like it'sit's a lot. It's a lot on
the average person, especially because there'sso many different things trying to fight for

(32:30):
people's attention, more than more thanthey've ever been. I mean, when
you guys were kids, what wehad what two channels, right, right?
So I mean it's just there's peopleare on information overlall yeah, good

(32:54):
stuff. Guys, um clean.Do you have a really for it?
Yes? I do. Let's let'sgo into that segment really really all right,
so people can call this racist toall they want. Oh boy,

(33:20):
when I saw this story, Iknew this was a black man. I'm
sorry, so angry maskless man deniedfood service returns with gun to steal fried
chicken and waffles. You're so racist. That is a black man you're looking

(33:45):
for. I'm sorry. That wasKhaleed Tomorrow. Ladies and gentlemen who said,
yeah, so a man who wasin night service for not wearing a
man as at a fried chicken restaurantas allegedly returned with a gun and held

(34:05):
up the kitchen before robbing them offried chicken and waffles. Wasn't this Rosco's
College. Yes. They occurred atapproximately five thirty seven at Rosco's House of
Chicken and Waffles in Pasadena, California, California, KBC said. According to

(34:25):
police and restaurant officials, the suspectof NUS she walked into Rosco's to a
food but was denied service by thestaff because he was not wearing a mask.
Employees informed him that he could notreturn that he was sorry, that
he could return to get food oncehe was wearing one. The man then
left the restaurant and didn't be returned. But this time he showed up with
the back of these in the backof the establishment with a gun. He

(34:50):
comes straightforward me with a gun,pointing at me and saying, put all
the chicken in the bag. Oh, my lord, said, said said
cook Robert Gonzalez, who was workingin the kitchen when the suspect walked in.

(35:10):
Oh Latino working in a black friedchicken joint. Anyway, god.
A manager Angela Prieto said he didn'ttake or demand any cash from the restaurant,
only chicken and waffles. Did heget syrup? And where where did

(35:30):
he put the syrup? He didn't. He didn't take any cash. Manager
Andrew Rachel said he actually took chickenand before he walked out the door,
he took sirrup for his chicken,chicken and waffles without sirup. I'm sorry,

(35:53):
I'm sorry. He didn't want anymoney, but he said, put
all the chicken in the bag.Ah that chicken, my god. So
it says listen. They were feelingscared, especially my cashier. Preachel said
she was very, very scared.When I first talked to her, she
basically was hysterical, But after awhile she calmed down and started laughing about

(36:15):
it because she realized all he didwas take some chicken. In an ironic
twist, surveillance cameras able to captureimages of the man's face due to the
fact that he was not wearing wasn'twearing a mask? Idiot and the most
shocking part of the story. Accordingto the La Times, A suspect it

(36:37):
described as a black man in histhirties and forties with a thin building,
black curly hair. Of course thiswas did you need to know this?
I hate you so much so racistsput all the chicken in the bag.

(37:00):
Oh my lord, I'm sorry.This is a great it'll watch you.
But you know what, you knowwhat, And I know they're not a
page sponsor, but that Rosco ischicken is some good chicken. It's good,
Yes, sir, yes, sir. You know if you over a

(37:21):
bag of cash, it's got tobe some good chicken. Have you have
you had Rosco league? I havenot. I hear a lot about it.
It's it's world famous and it'll bemore famous now. I might have
to myself at least nobody, atleast nobody dying over it, like like

(37:46):
doing some other chicken joint over somesandwiches, you know. Yeah, yeah,
I heard about that, Like peoplewas getting fights for Popeye sandwiching.
The guy was conscious enough to getsome syrup on his way out the door.
And then the idiot. Because Iwas thinking about that right before you

(38:09):
read it, I'm like, werethey gonna find this fool because he didn't
have a mask on? Like thatwas the whole damn. So now it's
easier for them to find your assbecause you didn't have a mask. One
nobody but a black man. Let'sgo Robert Chicken Joy, it's still a
bunch of chicken. No money,Yeah, yeah, he didn't take the

(38:32):
money. So so so here's aquestion were target with It's a good question.
That's a good question. Yeah.Robbery, Yeah, armed robbery.
But then is there a different degreewhen it comes to you have to figure

(38:53):
out what the dollar amount is?Right? Yeah? The chicken. Yeah.
Well, well here's the thing.If he says, hey, I
was hungry and us in California,you didn't get all California we're talking about.
This is California, where what kald, where all stupid ideas originate.

(39:19):
Go to break time, We'll beVACU listen to the Todd I was sure,
Oh man, here we go againof yelling at three am, my
enemy another friend energy. I letyou take it. Then to make it
even Stephen on the weekend, you'regonna buy me things be love w just
to get arranged where you desturb mybalance. That's a thing. So is

(39:42):
it worth it? It's Aaron Leikhere check out my new single worth it,
and don't forget to following me everywhereon all social media platforms and streaming
platforms to hear my new music rightwhen it drops. It's gonna say we
deserve this, you know, soit's worth it. I really wanted sometimes
the Todd Alan Show on the fcBE Radio network. Welcome, I function
listening to to Todd Allen Joe seethat was a very interesting really right,

(40:10):
No, it was not racist.It was prejudicial. But I think you
have more, don't you. ButI'd like to take this time to go
into a segment that when you haven'treally done in a long time, that
you're very admitted this but it's calledsomebody's watching me and I have no privacy,

(40:37):
okay. Um, So basically there'sbeen a lot of concern about mobile
devices and lack of privacy, spyand so forth over the last several years.
Well, there's a story in theWall Street Journal which I've read a
couple of weeks back where, accordingto this article, spy agency money tered

(41:00):
movements of US phones without warrants anda new documented public Friday, the nation's
top military intelligence agency knowledge monitoring thelocation of US based mobile phone devices without
a warrant through location data from ordinarysmartphone apps. The Divis Intelligence Agency to

(41:21):
a congressional investigations that the agency hasaccess to commercially available geolocation metadata aggregated from
smartphones from both the US and abroad. It said it had carried its database
or qualities database to look at thelocation information of US based smartphones five times
that the last two and a halfyears as part of the authorized investigations.

(41:45):
Such data is typically drawn from smartphoneapps such as weather games and other apps
that get user provision to access thephones' GPS location. A robust commercial market
exists for such data for advertising othercommercial purposes. The world last year that
numerous US government agencies were also buyingaccess to the data from commercial brokers without

(42:06):
a warrant, raising questions about whetherthose agencies were adequately safeguarding the privacy and
civil liberties of Americans. The abilityof US intelligence agencies to access data on
Americans for intelligence purposes is typically circumscribed. A warrant from the Secret to Force
Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court is required formost kinds of surveillance. However, the

(42:27):
Defense Intelligence Agency told Congress that itdidn't believe it needed any sort of authorization
to acquire commercial data for foreign intelligenceor national security purposes. This echoes a
position taken by numerous other US governmentagencies in recent years, as the amount
of data on individuals using computer,smartphones, and tablets has exploded. The
Department of Homeland Security is buying asimilar data product and is using it for

(42:52):
warrantless tracking as part of its Bordersecurity Immigration mission. The Internal Revenue Service
also purchased access to cell phone dataas part of his law enforcement mission All
Claim All Claim. Because the datais purchased on the open markets, no
court order is required. Wow.So this is what people have been warning

(43:13):
about for years, where cell phonecompanies collect data on US marketers, Amazon,
they collect data on us and thenthey sell us to big tech I
mean to not big tech government agencies. And this isn't a front page story
because we remember the fires a chordfor under the Bush administration, that was

(43:38):
the talk of the whole country,warrant less wiretapping. Remember that. Yeah,
Now it's it's happening to the pointwhere it's not even a whisper.
Now that they're collecting all this dataon us and they're selling it. That's

(44:00):
frightening. So this is yeah,it's it's especially frightening because it appears that
they found a legal loophole. Obviously, if they were to get this through
the legal channels, they would haveto you know, get a Warren and
stuff like that. But if theycould just go to these companies and just
buy it. Yeah, yeah,you know, back in the day,

(44:22):
in the eights, I worked ata Brokensh firm, a small Brokensh firm,
and you know, you did yourcold calling, You remember those days,
and you they do. They justbought phone lists. You could just
buy phone list and you can youcan you can call people now. I

(44:43):
was in a horse and buggy.Then now you can buy all this other
data and the agent government, Imean, because there's so much available.
Like, for instance, I'm alwaysamazed at how when I go to a
store, I got my phone andthen when le the store, I'll get
a text that says how was Chipotle? Or how was you know, because

(45:07):
it knows where you go, itknows what we buy, uh, it
knows what we shop for, whatwe search for, and everything about us
is on these faults. Yeah,it's like, wow, you know,

(45:29):
obviously obviously this isn't illegal, butit should be. And again, you
know, this is another example ofCongress not doing stuff that they actually should
be doing. I mean, this, this loophole should not exist. It
should not exist, the fact thatthey're able to get basically, so if

(45:52):
they're able to buy the information,what the hell is the point in them
even having to to go through throughthe courts for any other information. They
can just go buy it exactly exactly. This is this is, this is
it. They know it because mostpeople with these phones, we talk all
over the place exactly on it.You don't need to go through well and

(46:15):
not only that, but we allhave cookies enabled on our phones because our
phones don't function properly if you don't, right, So all those what those
cookies do, they get information onyour behavioral habits, on what you start
from the web, all those sortsof things. Um, there's mailing,
just like you were talking about atthe brokerage firm, UM mailing lists.

(46:37):
Email lists gets sold all the time. That's how you end up with a
bunch of different UM solicitations in theemail that you didn't know where the hell
they came from. You know,That's how all those things end up there.
You have so there is if youever look at the data like a
consumer profile data, they have damnnear everything about you everything. Yeah,

(47:01):
so you know this is this iskind of interesting too because you know a
lot of people will have UM,they will they a lot of people have
credit issues and they want to know, you know how how how do they
have these credit issues? Or howdoes a lot of disinformation get reported?
And a lot of it is becauseof these third party UM parting agencies.

(47:23):
Yeah, as you said, Anda lot of people don't realize that there
are that that you know, thereare some things that maybe on your credit
report that should not be such asmedical medical bills that should not be on
your credit report. But yet youknow, because it's a violation, hippo
loss. But then you know,going behold that information is on there because
those people sell that information to theto the UH to to other parties.

(47:45):
So absolutely, it's it's just,uh, you know, we we've become
less and less free with the morewith the more technology that we have.
I never forget, bro, I'mgoing to cut it off. I'm never
going on an episode. On anepisode of my show The Outlaws, Um,

(48:06):
we were doing this silly story aboutthese uh sex dolls in Japan that
people were selling. I think therewas something like Awful on Wish or something,
and we were talking about it.It was a big gag, you
know, segment whatever. Well,one of the co hosts came back and
was like, Yo, do youknow that ever since we did that segment,

(48:28):
I've been getting ads for those dollspopping up on my phone. Really
yes, And he didn't even lookat He didn't, no one of us
did. I was like, oh, that's some scary bleak breakdown. Man.

(48:52):
Oh wow yeah man, yeah,I mean everything is about selling stuff,
so everything that we deal with thesephones, you know, they even
have some technology now where uh they'regonna make these uh, these apps where
you walk into a grocery store andwhatever you've bought there before, they're gonna

(49:16):
start sending you deals right to yourphone. That's terrifying. Yes, that's
terrifying. I hate one of thosepeople, but that's terrified. Well,
they're even so they've actually had thisbefore. And I think there was a
television commercial that showed this and theytook it off the air, but they're

(49:37):
even There was there was a televisioncommercial that had a person that was in
the store and they were, um, they didn't say put all the chicken
in the bag, but they weregoing through and they were putting uh,
and there was a security guard thatbasically was following them in this uh,
in this advertising. And so thenwhen the person walked out of the store,

(49:58):
right the uh security guard to hey, hey, hey, hold on
a second, and handed them theirreceipt. So the person when they walked
out of the door, they wereactually scanned for the products that they were
trying to steal, and and receiptwas actually because they'd actually demited their account.

(50:20):
Do you remember that, kaleg Yeah, yeah, So we gotta go
I know the technology, so wegotta go to break. But I'm gonna
say this and somebody who grew upin the church, that's not way too
close to the market of beast forme. Um, I go to break.
Olsu right back. You're listening tothe title and show. Do you

(50:42):
feel like everyone is yelling at eachother but no one is listening to each
other or themselves. I'm Curtavis postof just Listen to Yourself, a weekly
exercise and critical speaking and drawing ourtalking points all the way out to their
logical conclusions, because I believe whenwe take the time to exam I'm on
our own talking points, we canrealize we're not always saying what we think

(51:02):
we're saying. Download Just Listen toYourself with Cura Davis on iHeartRadio, Apple
Podcasts, or wherever you get yourpodcasts. The Todd Allen Show on the
FCB Radio Network. Welcome back,folks, to listen to The Todd Allen
Show. Darvi Al. We've cometo a point in the show where we

(51:24):
really like this this segment. Khalidhas done excellent dog with it and it's
called you big Dummy. I'll spellit fight d you M M period stupid.
The reason that bad things happened toyou. It's because you're a dumba.

(51:47):
Okay, that's great. So allright, so we know that we
have done a lot of stories aboutFlorida, all right, and we're not
we're not we're not picking on thesepeople, but they just have a disproportion.
They had a number of dummies.So, um, Florida, Florida

(52:15):
is too dummy? Segments what Cubais the baseball pitchers, they have given
us some great ones. So thisman, we know people call nine one
one for all sorts of reasons,right, so follow this story. So
this Florida man, he called nineone one to ask for a ride home

(52:39):
a couple of times. He claimshe didn't have any money for taxis,
so he called nine on one.So I'm gonna save the best for lasting,
Okay, So this man repeatedly callednine one one Florida man Pasco Countie,
Florida, and asked for a ridehome because he didn't have money for
a taxi. Twenty two year oldmap Th Leatham of Hudson called nine one

(53:01):
one four times between three seventeen amand four twenty two Sunday to ask for
a ride home. Oh boy,cold. I'm trying to find a ride
home. I'm blanked up. I'mtrying to find a blank and ride.
Yeah, he laughed at times,and seeing to not know exactly where he
was, he said, even drinkinga little bit. I've been out here

(53:22):
for like an hour. I thoughtI'd tried to call for ride home or
what like a lift or an uber, but I ain't got none yet,
Leatham said. In a call,he claimed he called the wrong number,
but then called back a second time. A three two three am record show
I ain't able to call a liftright now. I'm up. It's only
letting me call this number. SoI figured, blank, I'll call this
number and I'll pick up a lift. Operator told nine one for emergencies only,

(53:46):
ended the call only after Leatham no, no, they I'm sorry.
The operator told nine nine one onewas for emergencies only and ended the call,
only for Leatham to dial back almostimmediately after three at three twenty five
am. So they got a copyof the call here, I mean,
at least the auto transcript. Hesaid. Hi, I'm able to blank

(54:07):
call a taxi or some blank.I ain't able to call a taxi.
I'm trying to call a taxi.So after so many calls, they arrested
this moron right and Deputy's met himon US Highway nineteen in Poort Richie and
once again he said he needed toride home. When the depute offered to
call him a taxi, they didn'thave any money to pay for one,

(54:27):
so lethal wal for his home.He called nine one one for fourth time.
Oh my god, are you there? Yeah? Good, okay,
so he called for a fourth timeand after six minutes until the final call,
deputy can be heard in the backgroundspeaking with Betham. So they arrested

(54:50):
this fool, okay, and he'sfacing charges of missuse of nine one one
system and possession of marijuanda under twentygrams because they found some weed on the
fools. Shocking really, But whatreally caught my attention about this story is
this guy. His mug shot,he has a map of the state of

(55:12):
Florida tattooed on his forehead. OhLord, which which personifies think about this
segment in Florida. Man, He'sgot a map of the state of Florida
tattooed on his forehead, which basicallyhe is the poster child for dumb Florida.

(55:35):
Man. Oh my goodness. HeI mean he's got who has a
stap, who has a tattoo ofFlorida on their forehead. I mean this
guy is like b Florida Man,but he didn't know where he was,

(56:00):
no telling you this. This isFlorida Man personify. Well, clearly he
is clearly like the poster child.He is the guy that when you look

(56:22):
up Florida Man in the dictionary yousee a picture of his face. This
with with with matt Yeah, ohmy lord, yeah, oh my lord.
So Matthew Leatham here, dummy,aluis so how many all together?

(56:45):
How many times did he call?Uh? Nine one one six? Six
times? Wow? Good lord?So now that's a crime inte of itself,
right, Yes, abuse, abuseof nine one one and he had

(57:07):
rub so he got So what didhe get charged with? Again? Of
course the marijuana, that's obvious.Yeah, abuse of nine on one privileges
and uh, the marijuana charge.So he was called called six times asking

(57:28):
for a ride. What he thoughtthey were just gonna send them, send
them a cop card and take himto his house. Well, yeah,
unfort he just go ahead. Unfortunatelyhe couldn't been with the guy. That's

(57:50):
told all the chicken from Roscos.I mean, un least she could have
came down off his high well.And that sounds to me. And y'all
tell me. That sounds me likethat might be a little morning weed.
Uh, there's a mixture of things. I'm sure this system. Yes,
yes, there is no doubt inmy mind. But clearly he definitely was

(58:17):
on was on the weed. Ohmy god, I'm gonna see you all
this picture, uh, with thisbig Florida tattoo on his forehead. It's
it's the dumbest looking thing, butit is so symbolic of Florida man.

(58:40):
I mean that is if you're goingto do a Florida man story, that
is the absolute most perfect way.Of course he has a Florida math.
We yeah, come, Stephen,what we we really? That's right,

(59:15):
Stephen h just before we got tired. Yes, sure, just I just
wanted to send a message, justjust have to let this we know,
we go. Oh yeah, soweed he last words, colleague, Yes,

(59:46):
um um, I basically want tosay that, you know, God
bless them. Marty Schotenheimer, formerBrowns coach who is in hospital and not
long for the world. But Marty, he brought us some great teams in
Cleveland nineteenies. And uh, youknow to say God bless to uh Marty

(01:00:07):
Schottenheimer and his families and his family. Uh he was one of the great
Browns coaches, right Darby any lastwords, UM, I would like to
second that absolutely and also do wego yeah? And I just want to

(01:00:29):
give again a quote the late greatMuhammad Ali. He said, I've done
wrestled with an alligator. I've beentussled with the whale, handcuffed, lightning,
throw thunder in jail. Only lastweek, I murdered the rock into
the stone, hospitalized the brick.I'm so mean, I make medicine sick.
Wellhammad, you in your grades.That's it until next time. B

(01:01:20):
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