Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
This Tennessee. You heard of it, been there once or twice.
(00:03):
You've seen the place, haven't you.
Speaker 2 (00:05):
We got a lot of friends. We've got a lot
of listeners in Memphis. We love them all. Thank you
so much. Is that where you saw your dead body?
I did once see a dead body in the streets
in Memphis. To be fair, It's ain't the only one. No, no,
I mean you for Chicago Orde area. So yeah, you've
seen plenty. The Libs are in a panic because Trump
is trying to help to protect some of the worst
cities in America. Ice and border patrol are rounding people
(00:27):
up in Memphis. Oh yeah, and also thanks for the
help from the Feds. One hundred and one missing children
have now been rescued in Memphis.
Speaker 1 (00:35):
That damn Trump, I swear rescuing children and stuff. Good lord,
Now you know why they hate them guys. That's a
lot of.
Speaker 3 (00:43):
Kids that we're here first at ten tonight, we have
new information when it comes to the Memphis Save task
Force in the city, Tiler, thanks for being with us.
I'm Shay Arthur. Tonight, we have new numbers from the
US Marshall Service who tell us the task force has
located and safely returned more than one hundred children. For
the past forty days, the Missing Child Unit worked alongside
(01:04):
local and state authorities to bring those children home. Officials
call it one of their proudest accomplishments, crediting strong partnerships
and relentless investigation. In October alone, the Memphis Safe Task
Force says it also made more than eighteen hundred arrests.
Speaker 2 (01:18):
All right, so that's a local affiliate WREG in Memphis.
You notice what they don't explicitly say outside out loud.
They're talking about US marshals helping out in Memphis. They're
not going to say it, but it's Trump, that's Trump.
Speaker 1 (01:31):
Well yeah, but they're not mentioning that name.
Speaker 2 (01:33):
The Memphis Safe Task Force cleared over one thousand Memphis
warrants in addition to locating and safely returning over one
hundred missing children. Imagine being one of those parents. Imagine
your little kid or your teenage daughter, whoever it is,
has not been seen in weeks or months, and suddenly
US marshals working with local law enforcement locate your child.
(01:54):
Are you still expected to have Trump derangements after that?
Of course you have to hate it. You wanted your
kid back. Isn't it crazy anyways? Libs right now, they're
so pissed off. Criminals are in jail, drugs are off
the streets, illegal guns out of the hands of thugs,
children being rescued from who knows what horrible fate, and
Democrats are against this.
Speaker 1 (02:16):
They're lowering the crime in all those cities where Trump
is sending help in and they're not appreciating it. As
a matter of fact, they're ramping up violence against ice
and border patrol at police in general of Florida. Situation
is just unfolded down there. Fifteen year old just attacked
(02:40):
a cop car with a cop sitting in it with
a shovel. And it was a girl, Amy is her name,
fifteen years old, cops sitting there in his car. She
hadn't had a word to say one to the cop.
They don't communicate with nothing between. She just walks up.
He's a cop car, has a big old metal shovel,
(03:03):
and just starts pounding on the hood of the police car.
They just, you know, they're just not They're not in
the right mind, these people. No, they're not.
Speaker 2 (03:12):
Do you know who Stephanie Miller is? I assume you
probably don't. She's a liberal talk radio host. She's on
the Talker's one hundred for some reason.
Speaker 1 (03:20):
I don't know why.
Speaker 2 (03:21):
She's very popular radio show. How Stephanie Miller met Texas
lawmaker Jasmine Crockett and when they met, she got down
on her knees and kissed Jasmine Crockett's feet.
Speaker 1 (03:36):
Oh good lord, this.
Speaker 2 (03:37):
Is a white liberal woman met Jasmine Crockett and said,
I'm going to kiss your feet. They are now remember
that they do things like this when they call us
boot liquors. Yeah, it's insanity. Why why would you do?
If I met Trump? I wouldn't kiss his boots? Do
you much less? You know Matt gets or something like.
Speaker 1 (03:58):
This isn't even the exactly It's not like you met
Joe Biden, not like she's Kamala Harris. I mean, oh yeah,
that would be different. Although I think, you know, Jasmine
has a better chance of being president than Kamala does,
and further record is not much of a chance.
Speaker 2 (04:12):
Just because we're making fun of the webs doesn't mean
I agree with everything the Republicans are doing. I don't
like the two thousand dollars stimulus check idea. I hate
that almost as much as I hate the fifty year
mortgage idea.
Speaker 1 (04:22):
Yeah, that fifty year mortgage deal. Uh, that's been some people.
You're like over the edge right there. That's crazy because
but if you own a bank, that'd be good for
the bank because a thirty year mortgage mainly you pay
an interest to the bank for like the first ten years.
(04:43):
A fifty year mortgage, you'd be paying interest to the
bank probably like interest only for twenty twenty five years.
Speaker 2 (04:49):
I'm looking at a report and right now that claims
a shockingly large number of Americans are buying their first
home in their forties. Now, who's good at math? If
you have a fifty year mortgage in your forties, does
that get paid off?
Speaker 1 (05:01):
But the average American stays in their house twelve years
or less.
Speaker 2 (05:06):
Look, we're at a point here where conservatives are down
with protectionism. I'll solve all this right now using some
economic principles somebody like me probably wouldn't have pushed. You
want to lower the cost of housing. Okay, let's start
with the obvious thing. Get the illegal immigrants out of
here right right away. We don't need them here. Sorry,
they're taking up all the low paying jobs. They're taking
we don't need them. So, okay, that gets rid of
a substantial portion of people. We already seem to be
(05:27):
doing that. But we have two other problems taking place.
One of them's Blackrock. We have this big hedge fund
going around the country buying up houses. Now, if anybody
should have to pay an absurd amount of property taxes,
don't you think it should be them. Some corporation owns
all the houses in Middle America. Now, guess what happens
to supply and demand when one group of people owns
all the prices.
Speaker 1 (05:47):
You know, something tells me maybe Blackrock is just rich
enough and powerful enough.
Speaker 2 (05:52):
To get out all that. Okay, fine, but then it's
not profitable for you. No. I If an average person
pays little to no property tax on their homestead, but
some big corporation pays an absurdly high amount of money
on their property tax, then hedge funds like Blackrock have
to go find another way to make money. Now I'm
pro capitalism very much so, but what they're doing isn't capitalism.
(06:13):
It's cronyism. They're doing this with help from the government.
They're playing with an unfair hand, and we have to
compete with them. That sucks. That's not free market capitalism.
That's corporatism, that's adjacent to socialism. It's bad.
Speaker 1 (06:28):
How many people do you know under let's say sixty
years of age or even fifty sure that when they
bought their home that they're in now, they thought they
would be in it for the rest of their life.
Almost nobody. No, older people like your parents or maybe
your grandparents, depending on your age. Your grandparents bought a house.
(06:50):
They actually thought they might not have stayed there though,
but when they bought it, their intentions just stay there
the rest of the life, raised the kids, me, the grandkids, whatever,
and they'll be there till they die. And a thirty
year mortgage made sense. You could actually pay that often
still be in it. Nobody buys a house anymore thinking
this is this is where I'm going to be forever.
(07:11):
Because your financial situation may change. You may decide to
leave that area and move to another state or neighborhood.
You just you don't know. But twelve years is the average,
which means a lot of people are staying in their
houses four or five years.
Speaker 2 (07:26):
Yeah, the average person stays in their house eleven, eleven
or twelve years.
Speaker 1 (07:29):
ESA basically paid nothing but interest. If you have a
five thousand dollars a month mortgage, four thousand that's probably interest.
Speaker 2 (07:39):
Yeah, if you're only going to be in your house
for a few years, it doesn't make any sense.
Speaker 1 (07:42):
Because it's just renting then, isn't it right?
Speaker 2 (07:44):
Because of things like the closing cost, the interest, you know, commission,
you have to pay it to the seller. You're not
building any equity. You're spending all that money in the
front and the back end. So anything that you earned
or built up in the middle of it goes dissolves immediately.
Speaker 1 (07:59):
But you do get to take it if your taxes
they got that going for So that's that's one thing.
The more interest you pay. If you got a fifty
year mortgage and you pay like ninety five percent interest
in five percent on the house, then that's a huge
deduction you get to take every year.
Speaker 2 (08:16):
Well, it's a lot still money out of your pocket,
still money though. Yeah, in the end, wouldn't it make
more sense to just have affordable housing.
Speaker 1 (08:22):
It'd make more sense if somebody else just paid for
all my stuff. Okay, so that's it would be way better.
Speaker 2 (08:29):
So that gets to the other idea that Trump has
right now that I don't like two thousand dollars stimulus checks.
Speaker 1 (08:35):
What what happens to the cost of things?
Speaker 2 (08:37):
If every loser in America and I'm just talking to
average people or I'm not talking about working people, every
loser in America suddenly has two thousand dollars to spend,
the cost of everything goes up, The cost of everything
goes up, and you haven't solved any problem at all.
Speaker 1 (08:51):
But the sale of video games is gonna go through
the roof. Sure, yeah, you know that, Yeah, of course, right.
Speaker 4 (08:57):
Because democracy basically means governments by the people, off the people,
for the people, but the people are retarded.
Speaker 1 (09:10):
Stay tuned for more Waltman Johnson.
Speaker 2 (09:12):
You see Berkeley, four of the exits for the tp
US USA event were blocked by large crowds of rioters
screaming fu fascist. People were trying to leave the event,
but they couldn't get out because there were so many
extremists nut jobs of masks on you.
Speaker 1 (09:29):
I think that might be kind of illegal to block
the exits. I think it's sort of a form of kidnapping,
isn't it that? In endangerment? You know, what if there
was a fire bro. I don't get to meet these
people enough. I know the other day in the park
wasn't enough for me.
Speaker 2 (09:45):
No, you need you need more. I think I have
a problem. I think my vigilantieisms. You got that monkey
on your back now it's growing. Oh you hooked, Yeah,
you hooked?
Speaker 1 (09:57):
Can't. I just want to go out and fight the comming.
Speaker 2 (10:00):
I see them and I feel like I'm just a
little bigger, and I see them bullying people, and I
think I in it, like cure.
Speaker 1 (10:06):
I want good news. You don't have to travel all
the way to Cuba or China. You knew it right
here at home. Now. Thank goodness, we brought all the
comedies closer by.
Speaker 2 (10:16):
Well. Speaking of comedies, Trump sat down with Laura Ingram
the other day and he was talking about all these
students that come here from communist countries.
Speaker 5 (10:23):
Folks are not thrilled about this idea of hundreds of
thousands of foreign students in the United States. We have
about three hundred and fifty thousand Chinese. One point during
COVID you were going to you know that we'll push
to get them out, but that was pulled back. You've
said as many as six hundred thousand Chinese students could
come to the United States. Why, sir, is that a
pro maga position when so many American kids want to
(10:46):
go to school and there are places not for them,
and these universities are getting rich off Chinese money.
Speaker 6 (10:52):
Sure, never said about China, but we do have a
lot of people coming in from China. We always have China,
and the country is. We also have a massive system
of colleges and universities. And if we were to cut
that in half, which perhaps makes some people happy, you
would have half the colleges in the United States school
out of business.
Speaker 1 (11:13):
Well I would be okay with that. Yeah, so what
I will do? You this though, this is just what
we're told. Have no idea if it's true or not.
China is supposedly just taking our ass in the technology race,
like artificial intelligence, among other things. So maybe the idea
is to kind of like we did with the Germany
(11:36):
in Russia and get some of their scientists and bring
them over here to work for America. Maybe get some
of these Chinese people over here and let them help
us catch up.
Speaker 2 (11:46):
See I'm not I'm not gonna agree with Trump on everything,
and that sound bit against you Eventually, Trump makes the
point I view America as a business, and that right
now is the problem. America is not a business. It's
a nation of people who wants had a shared identity
and shared values rooted in Christian principles. If our policies
don't start to reflect that, we lose our country. And
(12:07):
I think we already are.
Speaker 1 (12:09):
It gets happening right in front of your face.
Speaker 2 (12:11):
I don't care about six hundred thousand Chinese students. Screw them,
go back to China. I don't give it.
Speaker 1 (12:16):
Damn. Oh does that make some.
Speaker 2 (12:17):
Of these universities that are brainwashing our kids go bankrupt?
Speaker 1 (12:21):
Good? See Kenny Warndell, you get feisty when you bring
up comedies. I like JD. Vans.
Speaker 2 (12:26):
I like him, but at the trajectory that things are
moving right now. By the time twenty twenty eight rolls around,
do you think he's going to be tough enough to
replace Trump?
Speaker 1 (12:36):
He's got those soft eyes. Oh, I can believe what
your talking about. His mascara, allegedly, I don't know. I've
never seen the man apply mascara. I don't know if
it's something that was born with or if he had
a tattooed on, or if he applies it daily. I
couldn't tell you because I've never met the man.
Speaker 2 (12:52):
I've never met him either, and I've noticed a lot
of the people that say he wears mascara either hate
him or don't wear makeup, right, But I can't tell.
I don't know. Is that just what is eyes look like?
I have no idea, but his eyes do look like that.
Whether it's on purpose or just made that way. You're
telling me, if six hundred thousand students don't come here
from China, Berkeley goes bankrupt. I can't stop those students
(13:14):
fast enough.
Speaker 1 (13:14):
That's right. That'd be a hey, two thumbs up right there.
Speaker 2 (13:18):
Yeah, turn Berkeley into a technical college where we train
plumbers and lumberjacks hvac repairman, and I can go up
north to Oregon and Washington State and be lumberjacks. I mean,
Trump's trying to make the point that we should do
the opposite here, and he's just convincing me even more
that we need to keep moving in the direction we
were already going. Right, I'm sorry, guys. Look, I don't
(13:38):
hate the rest of the world. I just love America more.
Speaker 1 (13:41):
That's sweet. By the way, it's not just Veterans Day,
it's also George Patton's birthday. And I don't think we
need to be waiting until the celebrity birthdays to come
along and mention the great one that Paton Yeah this
day because they got like to fight comedies, didn't he
the fifth bet? Huh? I'm just messing with you, billy. Yeah. Well,
(14:03):
if we're gonna do the celebrity birthdays early, then local
celebrity Holly Cherry is having a birthday today. You know,
the Cherry family. Do you not I officiated her wedding.
That's right, you did. That's really kind of what put
her on the celebrity lists in the first place.
Speaker 2 (14:21):
I was going to a gala a couple of weekends ago,
I mean gala gala. Well, you guys were there too,
so I know, you know. And I was trying to
decide which of my three or four suits that I
own I should wear and I looked in the pocket
at one of them and I found matches from her
wedding in there.
Speaker 1 (14:34):
Oh that's sweet, because that's how often I don't wear
a suit. Yeah, that's less than two years ago was
the wedding. So happy birthday to Holly Cherry this morning,
formerly known as Aggie student Holly Johnson when she was
an Aggie.
Speaker 2 (14:51):
When I officiated her wedding, I said, Zach, do you
take this aggie to be here?
Speaker 1 (14:56):
To be here lawfully wedded? They really enjoyed that. They
really didn't. But it's all so George Patten's birthday, did
I'm internet? Happy birthday at George Patten? Yeah? One? World
War two? That's all you know, general, Oh, blood and
goods and tail. All right, here's my question.
Speaker 2 (15:09):
Have you ever seen George Patten and Holly Cherry in
the same place at the same time.
Speaker 1 (15:14):
Probably won't, since I believe he died in nineteen forty five.
How do you know? Were you there? Yes? He was there?
Speaker 2 (15:22):
Oh well, in that case, the Supreme Court yesterday agreed
to hear a case addressing whether states should be allowed
to count ballots that arrive after election day.
Speaker 1 (15:32):
Now, see I was against this until they were a
little more specific. If it's postmarked by election day, but
the mailman didn't bring it for two or three more days.
That's just a slow mailman. But can't you just lie
with the postmark? No, sure you can. You have to
go get it. You have to get it. If it's
(15:53):
good enough for the irs. You know, April fifteenth, at midnight,
you get your stuff into you know, the post office.
It's still good even if the post office takes their
sweet time getting it into the irs.
Speaker 2 (16:05):
All right, So, the Republican National Committee in the Mississippi
Libertarian Party challenged that state's law permitting the counting of
pallets postmarked by election day and that they should arrive
within five days. The court agreed to hear the matter
after the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals struck down the
law in twenty twenty four. Now, Trump, for his part,
has been a critic of mail in ballots and pointed
(16:27):
to the expansion of practice during the COVID nineteen pandemic.
He said, it sucks. I tend to agree with him.
You know, you can line with a postmark. I can
forge a document.
Speaker 1 (16:36):
Where you can just due away with mail in ballots
all together, except for servicemen and women. Speaking of veterans,
there are plenty of people that live in other parts
of the world but are American citizens and have the
right to vote. Same with some of the politicians that
have ambassadors to foreign lands. Things like that.
Speaker 2 (16:54):
I'm sure we all agree nobody should be able to
mail in their ballot except for military vatue terans, people
on diplomatic missions, the extremely elderly, the disabled, criminals, terrorists,
foreign citizens, and people who hate Trump.
Speaker 1 (17:08):
Everybody with Trump derangement syndrome.
Speaker 4 (17:09):
Sure, right, because democracy basically means government.
Speaker 2 (17:15):
We've already played this line. All right, we can't be
We can't do this, guys, the expectations are higher.
Speaker 1 (17:19):
How do you write women so well? I think of
a man and I take away reason and accountability. Walton M.
Johnson