Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
I will say this, even when our listeners are occasionally wrong,
they're still very polite. The listener that sent me the
email that said that marijuana is more dangerous than heroin
actually wrote a follow up email and she said, I
heard your commentary. Even when I don't agree with it,
I still enjoy it. I was like, well, now I
just feel awful about it, but still somebody needed to
(00:21):
say something.
Speaker 2 (00:21):
Aren't I just a garbage human being?
Speaker 3 (00:23):
Aren't you? Though?
Speaker 2 (00:24):
But she's still very sweet.
Speaker 1 (00:25):
I won't say her name on the radio because we
basically just roast crucified her. But ma'am, I don't wish
any harm on your daughter if she's having problems with drugs,
even if it's just marijuana, I have sympathy for you.
I just don't think that hyperbole is going to solve
the problem. It's like saying that a bullet is more
dangerous than a nuclear bomb.
Speaker 2 (00:42):
It's not the same thing, you know.
Speaker 1 (00:45):
I'm sure we all agree we wouldn't want to get
shot with a gun, but I think a nuclear bomb
would be infinitely worse.
Speaker 4 (00:49):
It bends on whether the bullet is flying towards you
at a high rate of speed and the nuclear bomb
is just sitting quietly and it's a little silo and
not going off fair point you'd just been whether it's
in action or not. The New York This from an email.
The New York Times has decided that that pretty little
(01:10):
Ukrainian gal that got a murdered in North Carolina really
sad story. That's because of what they refer to as
maga messaging. It's not the black guy's fault that stabbed
her multiple times and killed her. It's maga messaging that
(01:31):
caused her death. And they looked at it and they
compared the two stories the Ukrainian girl has had so far,
two stories in the New York Times. The Daniel Penny
situation up in New York a while back had one
hundred stories written about him.
Speaker 1 (01:49):
You know, it's an interesting point to be made here, Billy,
and I'm glad you brought this up. Generally, I don't
get offended by language.
Speaker 2 (01:55):
I don't.
Speaker 1 (01:55):
I don't use the N word personally, but if someone
said it out loud like whatever, I wasn't raised to
create engine cower and fear in the fetal position when
I hear a word, I don't care, you know, but
something that does offend me is when people tell you
that crime, stopping crime is political. No, it's not supposed
to be political. It shouldn't be political. That's crazy, right.
And here's the other thing that piss me off. They'll
(02:15):
tell you this guy that attacked that woman on that train,
he was just suffering from a mental health episode. No,
he's evil, Yeah he's evil. Stop dismissing. Stop writing off evil.
Is saying, oh, it's just a mental health crisis. No evil,
Evil's evil, I don't care.
Speaker 5 (02:30):
What.
Speaker 1 (02:31):
Of course, you're crazy. If you're evil, evil is crazy.
That doesn't dismiss it. And then the thing that pisses
me off more than any of that, of all the
stupid things they're telling you right now, is that this
is somehow just going to help Trump. Like what, that's
the thing you took from this? Finally, I hope it does.
I hope this influence is the next election, you losers.
Speaker 4 (02:50):
Remember what Trump's trying to do. Trump's trying to stop crime.
Democrats don't want him to stop crime. And if this
crime is so hatou and severe, the backlash means that
they're gonna try harder to stop crime.
Speaker 3 (03:05):
Oh well, then that's just good for Trump.
Speaker 2 (03:07):
Everybody's seeing this video. It's on the screen right now.
Speaker 1 (03:09):
Do you notice there's the white lady cowering fear, there's
the black suspect, and then the three people on the
left there witnessing it. Innocent by the way, but witnesses,
would you describe them?
Speaker 3 (03:17):
What did you just see? They were blurred?
Speaker 2 (03:19):
Okay, but they were black?
Speaker 3 (03:20):
Right?
Speaker 2 (03:20):
Would you agree?
Speaker 3 (03:21):
I didn't even notice.
Speaker 1 (03:22):
I want you to swap the races of everyone in
that picture. I want you to pretend that all three
of those witnesses are white people. I want you to
pretend the victim's black, and I want you to pretend
the stabber's white.
Speaker 2 (03:31):
Charlotte would be.
Speaker 1 (03:32):
On fire, right, Yeah, absolutely, Charlotte would look like the
Gaza strip.
Speaker 2 (03:37):
It wouldn't exist. It would be Stalingrad.
Speaker 4 (03:40):
Yesterday, when they came out with the news that it
has now been upped to a federal crime because he
was all in you know, mass transportation or whatever, and
now he could receive the death penalty or at least
life in prison. They also reported that this same man
that was looming over and girl and stabbing her had
(04:02):
fourteen at least maybe more fourteen prior arrests that they
know of, and yet he was free to wonder about
the city and ride the train and do all the
rest of that. When that news came out that they
upped the charges to federal right, the media and the
Democrats all instantly displayed of outrage, of mp of pity
(04:27):
for the murderer.
Speaker 1 (04:29):
It's crazy, right, You know what it reminds me of.
You remember this story from earlier this year Austin Metcalf.
Seventeen year old kids stabbed to death at a track
meet in Frisco, Texas. White kids stabbed by black guy,
Carmelo Anthony, and he's been charged with first degree murder.
Speaker 2 (04:44):
That shouldn't be political.
Speaker 1 (04:45):
Nobody should look at that and think, like, as this
proves a point about whatever.
Speaker 2 (04:49):
It doesn't. It proves that this kid was violent.
Speaker 1 (04:52):
He brought a knife to school, he stabs someone to death,
He belongs in prison. Oddly, liberals looked at that and
they thought, well, that white kid must have don on
something racist. What did he do to deserve to get stabbed?
Of course we better figure that out. What did this
woman do to deserve to get stabbed?
Speaker 4 (05:07):
She's being white and maybe pretty just that that's enough
to just outrage this guy so that he could took care.
I think, what are the statements after he was arrested, was, well,
he took care of that white lady. Yeah, this is
going to be the next great civil rights issue?
Speaker 3 (05:24):
Right?
Speaker 1 (05:24):
Can you? Is it okay to be mad when a
white person is just innocently murdered in public? Right? Remember
they told us, wow, looky, you have to say black
lives matter. Well, we do think black lives matter. We
think all lives matter. And they told us that's offensive.
Why is it offensive?
Speaker 3 (05:39):
Where are the black lives matter people now? Aren't they
upset that?
Speaker 4 (05:43):
I think it was a Muslim that killed a black
woman and threw her off.
Speaker 3 (05:46):
Of a bridge.
Speaker 2 (05:47):
Doesn't matter.
Speaker 3 (05:48):
But that's not the.
Speaker 4 (05:49):
Kind of news that we want to report, so it
just doesn't get looked at, kind of like the North
Carolina situation.
Speaker 1 (05:56):
If you criticize the criminality in Chicago, which is black people,
you're racist. If you criminize the criminality on the light
rail and Charlotte, you're also racist because that involved a
white victim and a black perpetrator. I'm just curious, like,
why can't we say all lives matter?
Speaker 2 (06:11):
Hell?
Speaker 1 (06:11):
Why can't we say, white lives matter. This guy at
the track meet earlier this year, it looks like he
got murdered because he was white. This woman on the
train definitely got murdered because she was white. He said
so right after. Now, I look, I happen to think
black lives matter. I happen to think all lives matter.
I think I happen to think white lives matter. Black
lives matter more than other lives. I guess the only
lives that matter more. I don't know if any lives
(06:34):
matter more, but some matter less. Pedophiles. I don't care
if you look. If a pedophile dies, I'm not gonna
get sad about it. What's another one, you know? Human smugglers,
human traffickers. If a coyote at the border that's bringing
could swale over and you just raped her out in
the desert, and now he's going to force her into
intensured servitude or her family back in El Salvador gets murdered.
Speaker 2 (06:55):
Yeah, I don't care if he dies.
Speaker 4 (06:56):
I don't really care well about those people that opened
up the blue ice cream in the grocery store and
then licked it and then.
Speaker 3 (07:03):
Put it back.
Speaker 1 (07:04):
I'm not wishing harm on them. But it's pretty bad though.
But if something happened to them, it wouldn't upset I mean,
I don't. I'm not saying attack them.
Speaker 4 (07:11):
Well about politicians that directly are indirectly steal money from
people who have been endangered or injured in some way,
because I see this happening all the time. But this
is a bigge. There's a a it could be a
big story if if it wasn't California, Do.
Speaker 2 (07:33):
Tell what happened.
Speaker 3 (07:34):
You remember that big.
Speaker 4 (07:35):
Concert they had, the big star studded benefit, Firefaster, Billie Eilish, Firefair,
Lady Guy, got a bunch of big names. They raised
about one hundred million dollars for the victims of the
Los Angeles wildfires. That was back in January.
Speaker 1 (07:52):
That probably helped out all the working class, blue collar
and middle class people so far, the folks who suffered
from the fire.
Speaker 4 (07:59):
So they have yet to say dime of that money
in eight months, but the money has been distributed a
lot of it.
Speaker 3 (08:07):
They've doled out some.
Speaker 4 (08:10):
Of a portion of the hundred million dollars to one
hundred and ninety seven different charities, most of them focused
on Woke and DEEI causes money for the actual victims,
not a dime directly to One of the charities was
focused on buying uniforms for kids choirs.
Speaker 3 (08:32):
One of the some of.
Speaker 4 (08:35):
The money, two hundred and fifty thousand dollars was offered
for pet health care, pet health het health care. People's
entire lives were just destroyed. Homes, all their possessions, all
their memorabilia, picture, all it just gone in a flash boom.
And the organizers of the benefit made one hundred million
(08:58):
dollars helping victims.
Speaker 3 (09:01):
With it at all.
Speaker 2 (09:02):
You know, it's a good reminder, folks.
Speaker 1 (09:04):
A lot of charities, unfortunately, a lot of charities out
there aren't actually that helpful. You would be shocked to
learn how many times you've donated to a nonprofit and
the money didn't go towards the cause. You ever been
at the checkout at a grocery store and they go, hey,
would you like to give five dollars to something something?
And you say no, which is a logical answer if
you haven't done a background check.
Speaker 3 (09:24):
Oh, the people look up at you like you don't
want to help the people.
Speaker 1 (09:28):
I took my sister's shopping I don't know, like a
year or two ago in the mall down the street,
and I remember she was buying clothes, and my sister's
a school teacher and you know, so I was like, hey,
let me take your shopping get ready for the new
school year. So we're there and at the checkout line,
they're like, what's would you like to donate? Blah blah blah.
I was like, what's the charity? And then there's some
LGBTQ thing.
Speaker 2 (09:45):
I was like, no, not.
Speaker 1 (09:46):
Really, and the woman's like, you don't want to donate?
I said, And I asked her, not even getting into
the gay rights thing, because I don't want to give
money to that. I said, what what percentage of this
money goes to the charity?
Speaker 2 (09:56):
And she goes all of it?
Speaker 1 (09:57):
And I said, did you know that that isn't really
true for any charity, right? All of it is almost
never accurate. You don't know what percentage she goes. Now,
I don't actually know where's the charity based out of
I don't know. So how do you know they're getting
all the money?
Speaker 2 (10:09):
You liar? You? You you fold clothes for a living.
Speaker 1 (10:12):
Don't tell me what charities are righteous and ethical and
which ones aren't?
Speaker 4 (10:16):
All right, this isn't funny, But I'm reading through the
audit that they did. They audit these charities to see
where they sent their money. Right, and beneficiaries ranged from
the Buddhist Zouchi Foundation to a group they don't even name.
Speaker 3 (10:32):
The group, a group that.
Speaker 2 (10:33):
Makes podcasts about wildfires. Huh yeah.
Speaker 4 (10:39):
Grants went to nonprofits that focal focused on political advocacy
for minorities.
Speaker 1 (10:45):
Wait, wait, back up to the one two ones. That
means we can get some of the money. Do you
know what we're doing right now podcasting about fires? Oh yeah,
where's my cut?
Speaker 4 (10:54):
Minority groups got money, including the NAACP Pasadena, the Los
Angeles Black Workers Sent Wait, my Tribe Rise, and California
Native Vote Project, which conducts voter registration for Indians.
Speaker 1 (11:09):
Okay, I questioned for you. There you mentioned the n DOUBLEACP. Now,
I hate to be the one bring it up. Didn't
this fire happen in Malibu? Has anybody here real quick showhands?
Has anybody here ever been to Malibu? I'll be in
mister O walk kick me out. You know you're the
right guy to talk about down the road. But I
was DWB and they said you got to go.
Speaker 2 (11:29):
I actually believe you.
Speaker 1 (11:30):
While you were in Malibu, did you see a lot
of other people that looked like you?
Speaker 3 (11:34):
Uh?
Speaker 2 (11:35):
No, guys, I've been to Malibu. It's like going to Austin.
Speaker 1 (11:37):
It's one of the whitest places in a state that's
supposed to have black people. Where's all the black people?
There's no black people in Malibu. Why's the N DOUBLEACP
getting a cut? What does that have to do with it?
Speaker 4 (11:48):
Missing from the audit list was any name of any
person who's house burned down. One group got five hundred
thousand dollars so they could see the earned forests with
restorative fung guy and bacteria. Another half million dollars went
(12:08):
to a group that provides mental health care for musicians.
Speaker 3 (12:14):
Can I the musicians raised.
Speaker 4 (12:16):
The money, and then they got half a million dollars
for musicians.
Speaker 1 (12:21):
Kenny, can I just point out here, Oh my god,
we don't claim to be saving the world. We don't
claim to be the smartest guys on the red. I
think we're clever. I don't know if we're smart, but
we're clever, and I you know, we're not just noticed
st though. But when we tell our listeners, when we
tell our friends or our advertisers or whatever that there's
a charity we want to support. There's a reason why
we got behind them. We raise money for wheelchairs for warriors.
Speaker 3 (12:41):
Every year.
Speaker 2 (12:42):
We have a comedy show. Every year.
Speaker 1 (12:43):
The comedy show might raise ten twenty thirty thousand dollars
and guess how much of that money goes towards paying
for the wheelchair?
Speaker 2 (12:50):
Almost all of it, we almost all.
Speaker 1 (12:52):
We might have had to rent a stage or something,
but like, none of it goes to us. No, we
don't get a dollar out of it. Clearly, No, we've
rented like chairs before. Thing is like, all right, there's
a few hundred bucks there, and then the rest of
the money went towards paying for and we're very transparent
about that. And the reason we know that's true, the
reason we know the money actually went towards a wheelchair
is because we met the guy and we saw his wheelchair.
(13:12):
We raised just enough to pay for a wheelchair. They're expensive, dude.
This is cost ten fifteen thousand dollars. There's not just
you know, off the rack, as they say. These are
all customized for that individual warriors needs.
Speaker 2 (13:25):
And they needed it right.
Speaker 1 (13:26):
So anyway, all that said, we have an event coming
up October fifth at Bad Astronaut Brewing Company. Chad Prather's
going to headline this year. Jesse Pitton's going to feature
me and Steve Johnson will host. There might be some
other guests comedians. I bet I guarantee you pretty guarantee
there will be. And if you want to attend it,
all you got to do is go to Wheelchairs for
Warriors dot org.
Speaker 2 (13:46):
Click that link at the top.
Speaker 3 (13:48):
There.
Speaker 1 (13:48):
It's got me and Jesse's beautiful handsome faces on it,
it's got the Walton and Johnson logo.
Speaker 2 (13:53):
Tickets start at twenty five bucks.
Speaker 4 (13:54):
That's a donation. It's not a charge or a p price.
You could give more, and if you wanted to pay
one hundred dollars a ticket, that's your choice.
Speaker 3 (14:05):
Because it's all for charity.
Speaker 1 (14:06):
It's a pretty awesome thing, and I appreciate you explaining
that it's tax deductible. Wheelchairs for Warriors dot Org Sunday,
October fifth show. The doors are at five. I think
the shows at six. We're gonna meet in tacos, drinking beer,
cracking jokes. It's a red pilled based Pro America stand
up comedy show is PG thirteen at best, probably more
like rated R Chad Pray through Jesse Payton the.
Speaker 2 (14:28):
Walton and Johnson Show, and that sound like a good cause.
Speaker 3 (14:30):
It does.
Speaker 4 (14:31):
I've found some victims of the fire that were helped.
Woodcraft Rangers is a group that got one hundred thousand
dollars for trauma informed camping trips thirteen victims.
Speaker 3 (14:45):
We were doing DEI before it was cool. You're listening
to the Walton and Johnson Show.
Speaker 4 (14:49):
So the coverage of the Ukrainian woman a the email,
we just got to set it out for me. He says,
Daniel Penny is somebody who stopped another person from killing someone.
If Daniel Penny had been on that train or bus
or whatever that Ukrainian girl was riding on at the time,
and I've seen it reported both ways, That's the reason.
I don't know. Some say train, some say buffs mass transit.
(15:13):
Maybe Daniel Penny would have killed that guy before he
killed that girl, and then he'd still be in trouble,
and he'd still be in trouble. That's it, even if
you had the video of it.
Speaker 1 (15:21):
I just find it remarkable as everybody sits here and
they look at these two news stories this woman gets
plug into death on the light rail and the Phillies, Karen,
that's been making news all week. Oh boy, how similar
those stories are. It's because that's that same kind of
woman with her butch boldie haircut that actually allowed people
like this to be out on the streets. You know
exactly who just looking at that haircut, I know.
Speaker 3 (15:43):
How she voted.
Speaker 1 (15:44):
When I meet someone with a septum piercing and purple
hair and a bob cut and the unbangable bangs that
they get. When a woman tells you she got bangs,
you should be really concerned before you because you know, no,
there's a chance it's fine, but then there's a chance
it looks like that.
Speaker 2 (16:00):
Ugh, yuck?
Speaker 3 (16:01):
Is it?
Speaker 2 (16:02):
I know?
Speaker 1 (16:02):
How hard do you have to work to make yourself
totally unappealing to the opposite sex?
Speaker 2 (16:07):
I know, why is that so important to you?
Speaker 1 (16:09):
And I don't understand the people that watch this and
they think this somehow makes some point about how blacks
are oppressed, Like, no.
Speaker 2 (16:15):
That is exactly the opposite of what's happening here.
Speaker 1 (16:18):
The fact that people aren't more outraged about this proves
that black people are not oppressed.
Speaker 5 (16:22):
One way Black people achieve true liberation, that's by taking
and blood. It has to be blood over the floor.
There has to be bodies on the floor. It has
to be people screaming and crying. That is the reality.
And this is what history shows me. Norm amount of begging,
normount of complaining, nor amount of protesting, not a is
going to get you your liberation until you take it
with blood.
Speaker 2 (16:40):
I have a question, what is he getting liberated from?
Speaker 3 (16:43):
Anwerdang?
Speaker 2 (16:43):
Dude? Question?
Speaker 4 (16:45):
Is he talking about the blood of the Ukrainian girl?
She was twenty three and just recently got here from Ukraine.
I don't think she had anything to do with oppressing
black Americans.
Speaker 1 (16:55):
Yeah, I'm sorry. How does that woman that works at
a pizzeriap pressing you? Did you not get it enough?
Marinara sauce with your crazy bread?
Speaker 2 (17:02):
Like?
Speaker 4 (17:02):
What are you talking about? It almost sounds like this
dude talking about the blood everywhere? Uh kind of missus slavery?
Oh oh, well, don't think about it. Don't think about
it now, listen U. If slavery will still going, oh
they would have a real reason to be bitching and
complaining about how things are going. But in the world
they still want to be a complaint even though they
(17:24):
hain't got nothing back behind it to base it on.
Speaker 1 (17:27):
I get your point, but if that kind of oppression
actually existed, he wouldn't have been allowed to make this.
Speaker 4 (17:31):
Video exactly if you were people that are always complaining
about how they're not allowed to get away with anything
like your white privilege and all, they're getting away with
it by telling you how oppressed they are.
Speaker 1 (17:43):
Here's an uncomfortable question. Have you ever met one of
the women? This isn't the question, Yeah, this is the
pre question. Have you ever met one of those feminists
that dresses up like a Handmaid's tale?
Speaker 3 (17:51):
Wow? Well I've seen them. I don't know them.
Speaker 1 (17:53):
Okay, then you want be able to answer this. But
when you talk to them, I mean, I get the
impression because I've met and interviewed them before, the impression
as I speak to them that they actually want to
be oppressed, like because they're not yea, what they're talking about,
what they're describing this world where like women are second
class citizens who only exist to breed. You're talking about Sharia,
you're talking about Islamism. But they're fine with that, right.
Speaker 4 (18:15):
They just don't like whatever they they're feeling like they're
exposed to in America.
Speaker 5 (18:21):
One way black people achieve true liberation, that's by taking
in blood. It has to be blood over the floor.
There has to be bodies on the floor.
Speaker 2 (18:27):
That the bodies or let the bodies you know, Well,
that's true.
Speaker 4 (18:39):
It's party. That's a pretty song you got THERKINI.
Speaker 2 (18:41):
It was a one hit wonder.
Speaker 1 (18:42):
Imagine if you had to perform that song at every
show for the rest of your musical career.
Speaker 3 (18:47):
God, that's the only reason you get paid.
Speaker 1 (18:48):
If you're in drowning Pool, you can't really do an
acoustic night. You know, we wouldn't think it's tonight lying
at the coffee bar. It's drowning Pool unplugged. Let the
bodies hit the floor, Let the bodies HiT's.
Speaker 2 (18:59):
The lounge version of drowning for do it like six
different ways?
Speaker 4 (19:02):
Do the blues version, lounge version, make it a jazz hit,
and just oh, could disco put some disco beat in there?
Speaker 1 (19:09):
Oh my bitches, get your mischetes and let those bodies
hit the floor.
Speaker 2 (19:14):
Yeah, good time, So forget to tap your bar tender, folks,
We'll be back. The nine o'clock Show is totally different
from the seven o'clock show. Yeah, be here all weekend?
Speaker 3 (19:23):
Maybe not all right?
Speaker 2 (19:24):
What else you got?
Speaker 4 (19:25):
I think Rudy, who emailed us a minute ago, well
five minutes ago, Uh, probably wasn't up early at the
start of the show and probably didn't hear the fact
that we already chatted about Miss Lena Hidalgo of Harris County.
He said, So, I noticed Lena had another episode yesterday,
walked out in the middle of some hearing. What a nutcase? Well, Kenny, Uh,
(19:49):
don't you have more to explain her walking out?
Speaker 2 (19:54):
Okay, So most people didn't know this.
Speaker 1 (19:55):
We only know this because I have a little bit
of an inside knowledge about what goes on in Texas
politics from both liberal and conservative journalists. Yesterday, she cut
out of that budget crisis hearing early so that she
could attend a concert of Hans Zimmer at the Toyota Center. Now,
if you don't know who Hans Zimmer is, don't feel bad.
It's basically just elevator music. This is the kind of
(20:17):
thing you hear in the background at the dentist office,
or this sort of music you'd hear in the background
of like a Lifetime movie when the woman finds out
she's never going to meet the love of her life
because because he just got deported by me and old
Donald Trump.
Speaker 4 (20:30):
Or what would be the point of going to a
concert like this where you just hear this sound in
the concert, because if you put the record on just
played it at the house, you'd be the same, wouldn't it.
Speaker 3 (20:43):
I mean, I know, if you want to go see.
Speaker 4 (20:46):
A wild rock band at a show, they actually put
on a show something to see as well as here,
I don't get the feeling when he's playing his music
he's doing any entertaining.
Speaker 1 (20:58):
I don't get it either, because I've seen two concerts
at that same venue recently. I saw Wu Tang Clan
with Run the Jewels and I saw Deftones with Mars Volta,
And I got to tell you, both of those concerts
people were bouncing off of the chairs, jumping through the sky.
Speaker 2 (21:14):
Washing flying, soaring through the air, majestically body surfing. And
then it's the same venue.
Speaker 1 (21:20):
It's like you put on the music that people listen
to when they're climbing inside of a suicide pod in
the state of Oregon.
Speaker 2 (21:27):
This is that's what you're going to watch live. This music.
It sounds like the music of a eugenicist or something.
Speaker 4 (21:33):
So this budget so called crisis that we have in
Harris County and Lena, the best way to fix that
is raised property taxes because it's good for the kiddos.
Nobody ever wants to address the fact that the reason
we have a budget crisis in the first place is
because they misspent the money.
Speaker 3 (21:48):
That we already gave them.
Speaker 1 (21:49):
And also the other reason they're having the budget crisis
is they're trying to give out free child care to
nobody asked for that, right.
Speaker 2 (21:56):
It's like, what I'll tell you, why you don't have
a kid?
Speaker 3 (21:59):
Well, I got a couple, you know, roaming around some more.
Speaker 2 (22:02):
You have ten adults, you have lord, why do they
need child?
Speaker 3 (22:05):
Are you?
Speaker 4 (22:07):
You might kill your grandma?
Speaker 3 (22:08):
Walton v. Johnson