Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
See what is happening right now.
Speaker 2 (00:01):
Retribution, retaliation, justice for the law fair we experienced from
two thousand and one to roughly two thousand excuse me,
twenty twenty one to twenty twenty four.
Speaker 1 (00:10):
Yeah, and it's back and it's full glory and on display.
So the latest is Senator Mark Kelly.
Speaker 2 (00:17):
Most people probably know out on the West coast, Jerry
Nadler's in some trouble. The Attorney General of New York State,
the head of the FBI, that'd be another good example.
Speaker 1 (00:25):
The former head, that's James Coomy. Well, they're not in
trouble anymore. Trump derangement syndrome took care of that. The
cases against Komy and Letitia James have just been dismissed. Yeah,
I think it's unlikely that it ends that easily.
Speaker 2 (00:39):
But probably not. But that's okay for the time being.
They're not in trouble the second whatever. Here's my question
for you, when this ends, right, when Trump's administration finally
comes to you here, twenty twenty eight will come eventually.
If not, you know that an abysmal midterm next year
for the Republic as if they don't figure out what
(01:01):
to do about this economy right now? Do you think
the Democrats don't retaliate for the retaliation?
Speaker 1 (01:07):
What do you think happens if you had a pretty Well,
they're retaliating now and they're not in power, and you
give them the midterms, they'll have more power. God forbid
the presidency again. One day they'll have all that power.
But yeah, the Trump derangement syndrome continues on through judges,
even if the politicians themselves aren't technically making the rules.
(01:28):
So they found a judge who will just come out
and say that these cases unlawfully appointed prosecutor brought the cases.
So it doesn't matter whether it's true that they lied, there,
they stole, or whatever crime it is that they're supposedly
being brought to justice for. Doesn't matter is the person
(01:50):
that decided to file the case in the first place
should never have been appointed by Trump. He's so bad.
Speaker 2 (01:56):
Uh as a society, the United States of America, I
mean as a society, I'm not even talking about as
a country, but as a culture, he's pretty young compared
to Russia and Ukraine and Eastern Europe.
Speaker 1 (02:07):
It's pretty young compared to the Mid East.
Speaker 2 (02:10):
And when we look at Israel and Palestine or Israel
in the Arab States, or when we look at Eastern
Europe the former Soviet states and we say, oh.
Speaker 1 (02:18):
Look at that. They don't get along with each other.
Speaker 2 (02:21):
They've never gotten along with each other, they've hated each
other for centuries.
Speaker 1 (02:26):
Are we becoming like that?
Speaker 2 (02:28):
Is this a thing where now that this law fair
happened and the retaliation, and then at some point the
Republicans won't control everything again, I predict and I don't
think this makes me no stradamis that when the Republicans
eventually lose power again, which looks like it could happen
soon if they don't figure this economy out, that the
Democrats are going to do what the Republicans tried to
(02:49):
do for the last year, and then what and then
the Republicans will do it again? Does this just become
a country where and then here's the other side of that.
If we live in a society where all elected powerful
officials eventually worry about going to prison, is that it
maybe a good thing.
Speaker 1 (03:06):
Well for both parties, maybe they should all be worried
about it at some point, right, you know what I mean?
Speaker 2 (03:11):
And I don't want that to happen to Trump, necessarily
because he's my guy, But what if it happens to
everyone in both parties? It's like, ah, wait a second, as,
did my black pill just turn into a white pill?
Did you know what I mean?
Speaker 1 (03:24):
Yeah? When we send all of them to prison, can
we do that? Well, it just starts to look more
and more like the Democrat Party is the party of
the third World. They are welcoming all of our third
world visitors who have moved here and seem to hell
bent on changing everything that makes America great so that
(03:44):
it won't be so great anymore. Well, then why bother coming? Yeah?
You came here because America is better than where you were?
Or did you or did you come here to subvert
it from inside? All the rights and privileges and great
things that have always made America the place to go.
Save us America. I got to come run into your shoes.
(04:07):
When you get here you start trying to change all
of those things that made America great. Yeah, and eventually
you're gonna end up right back where you were, and
eventually end up right back where you were.
Speaker 2 (04:17):
I'm glad I haven't showed you this clip yet or
let anybody listen to it yet. That I'm because I
want to get your fresh take on it. I think
this should be interesting. There's a Tyson Food factory in Lexington,
Nebraska that's about to close. They just announced to the
employees you're all getting laid off, but we're still going
to need you to come into work for the next
sixty days or you won't get your final paychecks. And you're,
(04:38):
you know, whatever it is you're agreed upon in the union. Here,
that sounds pretty bad, right for Americans? Then that sound
pretty bad for Americans. This you're about to get a
double dose of pessimism here. Listen to this white lady
in middle management explain the problem to all these workers
that are about to lose their jobs. And while you're
listening to that, simultaneously listen to while Steve listens to
(05:00):
and looks at the people getting the bad news. All right,
So we're in the Tyson Food factory. There's about to
be an announcement. You're hearing people talking. I don't know
if you've caught on. They're not speaking English, all right.
(05:24):
I don't know if it's immediately obvious what's happening.
Speaker 1 (05:27):
This is just a guy for approximately, Okay, I don't
want to make you guess too much here. Yeah, the
camera is shaky. They're trying to show us some paperwork.
We can't read it. Okay, but you see these people, Steve, this.
Speaker 2 (05:43):
White lady is telling a room full of quote unquote
Americans at a factory that it's closing. I'm sorry, is
this factory in Zimbabwe? It's okay, it's sad that the
economy is crumbling because it looks bad right now. And
it's equally sad all these people are losing their jobs.
But now here's the triple sad part. These jobs didn't
(06:03):
even belong to Americans. They belonged to third worlders, isn't
that crazy? Goo?
Speaker 1 (06:09):
And the Democrat Party says they're more important than you
or any natural born citizen of this country. We got
to make room for them, and we got to make
special things happen just for them.
Speaker 2 (06:20):
A Tyson Foods worker filmed the moment management told employees
they would be laid off but still expected to show
up every day for the next sixty days. The video
leaves open how many Americans from Lexington, Nebraska, were actually
affected by its plant closure. It's kind of incredible as
you listen to this audio. It sounds like the marketplace
in Zimbabwe. They're not even speaking English.
Speaker 1 (06:39):
No, I'm surprised they understood what she said. She told
them they were gonna have to work for sixty more days,
but you're all fired. Okay, I'm not sure she's tell
them they're fired until maybe day fifty eight. You know.
Apparently it was explained to me.
Speaker 2 (06:55):
The reason that you just hear a little English and
then a bunch of gibberish and other language making it
so confusing, is someone's translating for her.
Speaker 1 (07:02):
That makes sense. Yeah, I need translators down at the office,
because you know, a lot of these Americans just don't
speak English.
Speaker 2 (07:08):
In Lexington, Kentucky. And we're not even talking about Guatemala.
These are people from Central Africa. That's how bad it is.
And when you look at the polling data right now, suddenly,
because all the mass deportation and securing the border, this
is suddenly something they say that moderate voters don't care
about anymore. The latest polling data suggests you know that,
(07:29):
and there's a few examples of this. It's not just
one average voters right now don't care about the border.
Suddenly they don't care they're like, oh, we fixed that,
or it's too got they went too far with it.
They claim they don't care about Venezuela and drug boats.
What do they care about? They care about the economy.
Oh now, I looked at my four oh one k today.
This is the first month in months where I didn't
(07:52):
really see any growth. It looks about the same as
it did thirty days ago. My retirement and savings, and.
Speaker 1 (07:57):
It should have looked a little bit better since yesterday
afternoon because the Nasdak closed up over six hundred. It's
almost month, over two and a half percent in a day. Anyways,
you're not invested in any Nasdaq stocks. I am.
Speaker 2 (08:11):
I've got some tech stocks, but you know I've diversified,
right if you look at I ran the numbers on
this last night. Just talking about the last thirty days,
we're not talking about the last six months or the
last year, which isn't necessarily that bad. The NASDAK, the
Dow Jones, and the S and P five hundred are
all down somewhere between like zero point five and two percent,
which isn't so much that it's a crisis. It certainly
(08:34):
doesn't qualify as a recession or anything like that.
Speaker 1 (08:36):
But it isn't good. And the day before or Friday,
you know, the market would have looked a little different,
so right exactly, and it could all change in the
next week. Here, Yeah, it's down, Nasdaq down probably a
good thousand points from where it was a month ago.
Speaker 2 (08:53):
If Trump wants to win next year, and he is
on the ballot, whether they tell you or not, because
if the Republicans lose them mid terms next year, Trump
gets impeached. He might even get removed from office. If
the Senate races Goport, they'll they'll come at him again.
There's no end to the Trump derangement syndrome. It is
very strong with the Democrats. He's and here's my concern
(09:13):
by twenty twenty eight. It's not that jd. Vance couldn't win.
Even if we do get our asses handed to us
next year, he might not be tough enough to deal
with what we're about to have to deal with in
this country. I do wonder he's got it's kind of
those soft eyes, you mean, eyeliner.
Speaker 1 (09:28):
Now, just the eyes themselves. Oh yeah, hey, Taco Tuesday,
Walton and Johnson Radio Networks, did you know him? Let
the music Nicole Ritchie's dad did music. Did you know that?
It's kind of a new thing with him. He's trying
it out. He's pretty good at it. I don't sound
gay or nothing, but I think Lionel Richie kicks ass O.
(09:49):
You love Linelchi. He's a man. I do.
Speaker 2 (09:52):
I really I enjoy his music now. He's seventy six
years old. Today's not his birthday.
Speaker 1 (09:56):
Just a cool guy.
Speaker 2 (09:58):
If you put this music on, there's a good chance
you'll forget that the city, the world is burning right now,
or you'll remember immediately, Yeah, oh the world is burning.
That's what it is. Actually, that's a tire fire that's.
Speaker 1 (10:14):
Just outside of the city limits and it's blowing this way. Now.
If you're in in Yemen, you might be smelling something
unusual this morning. That would be the twelve thousand year
old volcano that had been dormant for twelve thousand years
in Ethiopia that just erupted. And there's still a war
(10:36):
happening in Yemen, right, Just so we're clear, there's always
a little a little something going on there.
Speaker 2 (10:42):
Imagine you're being shot at by Islamic terrace, so you
start running and then you encounter hot lava.
Speaker 1 (10:49):
No, I don't even whatever.
Speaker 2 (10:50):
Just kill me, yeah, take me out now, this is
my I'm trying to survive the volcano so i can
live in a proxy war between Iran Saudi Arabia in Israel.
Speaker 1 (11:00):
That sounds like, hell, well, you'll be glad to know
that Greta the world famous environmentalist and you know a peacemaker.
Oh no, Greta has tired of the Hamas deal. She
just got bored, and so they've moved her back. She's
back on the green team now, so instead of worrying
(11:25):
about the war, she's worried about the environment again. And
to show her her worry about the fragility of this environment,
she decided her in her group to venture over to Venice,
Italy and die the Grand Canal green. So they damaged
the environment to show you how delicate it is.
Speaker 2 (11:48):
For some reason, when you started this, I just thought,
is the moron that tried to go to Palestine now
trying to go to Yemen? But that would be crazy,
that would be she found out she has really no
sway in that or with the environment either one. She's useless,
but she's still attempting to get attention. I saw something
I never seen before, you know how they have those
(12:09):
topless feminist protesters and mostly Paris and Berlin. Yeah, wouldn't
you think eventually, with those women in Europe taking out
their jugs all the time, that some guy at some
point would walk up in honk one you would think.
I mean, I'm not either right out, you know, I'm
not encouraging that or anything, of course not.
Speaker 1 (12:29):
That's just childish immature. It could be considered sexual, I
don't know, harassment at least. Yeah, yeah, we don't approve
of that kind of thing.
Speaker 2 (12:39):
But also at the same time, like these women are
getting naked in public all the time in a place
that is slowly becoming overrun with Islams.
Speaker 1 (12:46):
Almost like they're begging for it a little honking every
now and then.
Speaker 2 (12:49):
Yesterday I was looking at a protest from Berlin over
the weekend. It was a bunch of topless chicks with
you know, words scribbled on their jugs with a black marker,
and one of them screaming ah banshee, And all of
a sudden, this this old, this dirty old man just
walks up and just haunks her jug and walks off,
And I was so so finally somebody got got around
(13:09):
to doing so, and just so we're clear, totally against that.
Not okay even if she's naked in public. You know,
this isn't this isn't a Shuria law country. You're not
allowed to sexually assault a woman. But still, my only
point is that it seem like that would have happened
sooner you would think anyway. Yeah, finally, I know they're
ruining feminism.
Speaker 1 (13:28):
Talked about this on Tuesday to Tuesday. Tuesday is another
one of my trigger works. Yeah, I know, I know.
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