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April 22, 2025 • 18 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
You know, probably the greatest policy political strategist of our
time is sitting in the White House right now. And
it's not Donald Trump, although I do like Trump. It's
Stephen Miller. Stephen Miller was on Newsmax yesterday talking about
birthright citizenship. Billy d that's another word.

Speaker 2 (00:16):
For what you called him.

Speaker 3 (00:18):
Babies, anchor babies, anchor babies, splash splatter.

Speaker 2 (00:22):
The thing about anchor babies is they.

Speaker 3 (00:24):
Just immigranting along the road. There they crossed the border.
Squeeze holding in, holding in across the border. Now just
drop it on the trail. Heep a cow patty.

Speaker 1 (00:34):
People really hate when we play the anchor baby sound effect,
but I just want to remind everybody it's just a
sound effect. No baby was heard in the creation of
this sound effect. It's not even technically a real baby.
It's a so sound. It's a synthesizer and a person's wall. Anyway,

(00:54):
So Stephen Miller yesterday, I was talking about what.

Speaker 2 (00:57):
The who is this guy? Was his job?

Speaker 1 (00:59):
Well, He'snald Trump's top political strategist. He's the policy he's
the mind behind Trump. He's the guy that comes up
with kind of like what Carl Rove was to George W.
Bush or what was her name, not Lois Lerner? What
was the Valerie Jarrett? The one that Roseanne said was
Planet of the Apes. Yeah, we don't both think that,
by the way, just Roseanne, she thinks that, well, is

(01:22):
this person does that for Donald Trump?

Speaker 4 (01:24):
Birthright citizenship is the biggest costliest scam in financial history.
An illegal alien can come here nine months pregnant or
on a tourist visa nine months pregnant, have a baby,
that baby's that declared an automatic citizen, which then entitles
the entire family to come here and live here, and every.

Speaker 2 (01:45):
One of the best welfare.

Speaker 4 (01:48):
Get a limited welfare applying as the custodian of this
citizen so called child. The biggest financial ripoff of Americans
in history. Not to mention the fact that there's a
number one magnet for legal immigration and invasion, and it
is used by foreign governments to conduct espionage against the

(02:10):
United States. Because now see, we can keep out a
foreign spy who has a visa is trying to get
permission to board an airplane. But what happens when a
foreign government uses this ridiculous birthright scam in order to
create automatic citizens who then grow up as assets of
a foreign government.

Speaker 2 (02:29):
There's a major national security press sleepers.

Speaker 4 (02:32):
The Fourteenth Amendment, the provisions in question were ratified for
the children of freed slaves.

Speaker 2 (02:40):
You can go read the minutes, dude. I'm gonna pausit
right there. Even though there's some more good stuff in this.

Speaker 3 (02:44):
That's where it should stop right there. That was all
it was for. But they just want to reimagine it now.
And let's extrapolate on the idea of what they wanted.

Speaker 1 (02:55):
The point he's making about exploiting the birthright citizenship for
for foreign spying. Have you ever thought of that? Because
he's absolutely right, that's it's very possible. In fact, there
seems to be evidence that it's taken place, and yet
nobody talks about that. It's a national security thread. It's
not just some woman named Consuela taking advantage of our
welfare system. It's Chinese foreign spies putting your family in danger.

Speaker 2 (03:20):
I think these people are.

Speaker 1 (03:20):
Out buying up farmland surrounding military bases right now.

Speaker 3 (03:24):
Doesn't that coincidence? I'm sure that they just all happen
to be within walking distance of military bases.

Speaker 2 (03:30):
Oh that's the best part.

Speaker 1 (03:31):
It's like Why is it always by the military base,
just you know, it's the best.

Speaker 2 (03:34):
Place for irrigation. Sure.

Speaker 3 (03:36):
Yeah, the military like that for a reason, and same
reason we like it.

Speaker 1 (03:41):
I think it's because you're doing something that's going to
hurt people. I think you're a bad person.

Speaker 2 (03:46):
Do you think Marjorie Taylor Green is a bad person
for what she said about the Pope? I don't know.

Speaker 3 (03:52):
I don't know what she said, you are or suggesting
that she was celebrating the Pope's death. She wrote on
x I guess today there were major shifts in global leadership.
Evil is being defeated by the hand of God.

Speaker 1 (04:10):
Okay, I don't know. I'm just learning this now for
the first time. Is it possible that's being taken out
of context?

Speaker 2 (04:15):
Oh?

Speaker 3 (04:15):
Most certainly. I mean it came out about nine hours
after the Pope died, and she did not clarify what
she was referring to with the post, So everybody just immediately,
you know, mainstream media and all that, they just jump
on that and say that she was celebrating and was
happy that the Pope had died. Hmm, yeah, I didn't

(04:37):
say that, but that's what they say.

Speaker 2 (04:39):
She said.

Speaker 1 (04:39):
It is a weird thing to say it is. I
don't know. I don't if that's what her point was,
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (04:45):
Whatever. I'd like to hear her clarify what she meant
by that.

Speaker 1 (04:49):
The thing about Pope, for instance, is not obviously not
my favorite pope, but you know he's he's not. I
don't think he's evil, obviously, I don't think that I'm Catholic,
but I disagree with his stance on capitalism.

Speaker 2 (05:00):
I disagree with his But.

Speaker 3 (05:02):
Don't you imagine the Catholic is probably all thinking, maybe
this time, when we get a new pope, maybe he
ought to be Catholic.

Speaker 2 (05:08):
I think, you know, just no, this guy's Catholic, mister.

Speaker 1 (05:13):
I mean, well, okay, but is he of all the pups,
I mean probably of all the popes of our lifetime,
I'm the least ideologically aligned with him. But he still
loved God. I think he had the best intentions. Go ahead,
write your angry emails right now. I know someone is
uh fiercely pro life was against women being priests. I

(05:34):
think that's a good idea. You can't have women in
the confession booth. That would be crazy. Do you ever
think about that? Imagine what would happen if you walked
into the confession booth and you were like, oh lord, no,
you were like mother or whatever you'd say to the
female priest, please forgive me for I have sinned. It's
been you know, one hundred days since my last confession.
And then you go on to start making your confession,
you say something like, well, last night, I uh, last night,

(05:57):
last night I was in bed with a woman, and
then the voice of the other wife, and then the
voice at the other end of the wall says, do
tell you know. Women can't be trusted with that kind
of gossip. You can't. You can't be telling the female
priest about your love life and everybody in the convent
would know about it. Yeah, that's why no, no, Say

(06:19):
what you will about the founders of the Catholic Church,
but they were smart enough to realize only a man
could be trusted in the confessional booth.

Speaker 2 (06:26):
This is Look, it's dangerous stuff, guys.

Speaker 3 (06:28):
Sometimes you just gotta face reality. Things are the way
they are. It ain't hateful or hurt fuller or mean
to say it and call it out. It's just how
do you A bluebird is blue? The ain't gonna change
your colors. That's just how they are. Yeah, that's why
God made them.

Speaker 1 (06:45):
Women are better at expressing their emotions and feelings. Boy,
they can't keep a secret. But they cannot keep a secret,
you know. And it's not I look, I don't want
it to be that way. That's just the way it is.
Didn't Text Perkins have a song about this, never ever
call a woman or something like that? Text Perkins, what
was his name? I don't know who that is? Not
Text Perkins? What was the guy's name? Tech Tex William?

Speaker 3 (07:07):
Sorry, I just I'm wondering where you coming up with
these names of people that I didn't ever heard of.

Speaker 1 (07:11):
I wasn't alive then. It was a long ass time
like that was like nineteen forty So.

Speaker 2 (07:15):
How do you know about the song? Because I uh,
you know, I hate to admit it.

Speaker 3 (07:18):
So you you educated yourself about the song just enough
not to.

Speaker 2 (07:25):
Know the guy's name or sorry? Are you getting mad
at me? Because my knowledge never never trust a woman
was back in nineteen forty seven. This was a song
on the radio. Never I'm be mep cell phones back then?
You know how bad it gets me. Here's the best part.

(07:46):
Wasn't that guy blowing on that horny No, I'm digging out. Yeah,
that's a jam.

Speaker 1 (07:50):
Back in the day, you could just write a song
about how women gossip too much and they would put
it on the radio. You could write a song about
how you like smoking cigarettes or whatever.

Speaker 2 (07:59):
No song is about that.

Speaker 1 (08:01):
Anymore when you when you turn on the radio now,
every song is about how we have to have sex
right now because we can't have sex tomorrow because there
is no tomorrow. Because that is such a zoomer way
of thinking. If we don't have sex tonight, we'll never
have sex. That's not true. You can go to bed
now and have sex in the morning.

Speaker 3 (08:17):
It used to be we were scared to think, like uh, tornado's, hurricanes, volcanoes,
and earthquakes. And now people are concerned because the temperature
changed point zero four degrees over the last six years.

Speaker 2 (08:31):
No, my god.

Speaker 1 (08:34):
Kids used to get excited about having measles because it
meant you could just stay them. And now someone has measles.
It's a national crisis.

Speaker 2 (08:41):
Go, you're entering a world of pain. Walton and Johnson
Radio Network.

Speaker 1 (08:46):
This is a This is avant garde indie rock music.
It's that's the voice of Kristen Stewart really from the
Vampire movies, right, she's Oh, it's skinny, little pale face down.
I don't care for her. She does vote calls on
a rock song that's kind of popular right now, and
she just talks like she's in a Quentin Tarantino movie.

(09:06):
In the video, it's her like standing on the side
of the road in the desert's smoking.

Speaker 2 (09:11):
Wow, so up on guard it really is. Yeah, I
don't care for avant Guard. I guess I never liked
Christian Stewart. Wait, wait, back, wait, let me see that.
Is that a pickup truck. It's like an old Chevy
or something. Well, let me see that again, because I
might like that truck.

Speaker 1 (09:28):
Nostalgia care for her for the fifties and the sixties
is kind.

Speaker 3 (09:32):
Of down a payphone, do you see that? Yeah, the
natural phone with a cord attached and everything.

Speaker 1 (09:37):
Young people right now are fascinating, which they're lost. They
want to know what life was like before cell phones.
They're fascinated by like.

Speaker 3 (09:45):
Well, they'll find out when we hit that pulse or
when that pulse's us. Oh yeah, I just don't get it.
I was trying to explain this to people who's like,
you're always talking about that polls, but it never happened. Well,
you can get pulsed a couple of different ways. For one,
you know, China or the Rooskies. They could pulse us
with a little nuke up in about a mile high

(10:06):
above us. Or it could just be the sun. The
Sun can pulse us. I heard last week that we
was gonna have a little electromagnetic wave from the Sun
disturbing things. But it didn't disturb nothing.

Speaker 1 (10:20):
I got now, now, Billy, I why would Russia and
China I want to exploit a very easy vulnerability of
their worst enemies.

Speaker 2 (10:27):
That doesn't make any sense.

Speaker 3 (10:28):
That don't make no sense at all. Yeah, I think
you're crazy. You're crazy.

Speaker 2 (10:31):
Oh, of course I am. You're an insane person.

Speaker 3 (10:35):
In case, it be nice to have an old truck
like that that didn't run by computers, because him computer
chips ain't gonna do nothing for you.

Speaker 2 (10:43):
Steve's got Steve, what's that old truck?

Speaker 3 (10:45):
You got it your place out in the country seventy
two Chevy looked a lot like the one she was
sitting in right there.

Speaker 1 (10:50):
Steve bought this really cool vintage truck. It's an amazing shape.
He bought it so he could use it to do
work on his land out in the country. But it's
so nice that you actually don't it that.

Speaker 3 (11:00):
I put some gas cans in it every now and
then make a make a trip for you know, get
diesel and you know that sort of thing, and then
I wash it and it just sits there and waits
for me for next weekend.

Speaker 1 (11:11):
But it looks like a car you would put in
a car show, So how could you justify using that
to do yard work.

Speaker 3 (11:17):
I don't beat it up or anything, and I'll watch
it off after. But what's great is, like he said,
the the.

Speaker 2 (11:24):
Computer chips are aren't in there. It's a regular.

Speaker 3 (11:27):
Old, you know, carbu rator and all that, so it
should still work after the pulse that's apparently coming.

Speaker 2 (11:36):
According to Billy Ed, if.

Speaker 1 (11:38):
There's no I know, much stuff, if there's no computer
chips anything, how do you connect to the GPS satellite?

Speaker 3 (11:43):
It's weird. I can't even find the screen. Really, yeah,
it must be in there someway. They hit it, probably
behind some little fake door panel or flips out when
you push a certain button. Did you try to look
it in the glove box or Yeah. I looked in
there that no gloves even really weird.

Speaker 1 (12:00):
I guess they didn't invent them yet didn't have those,
they would have never got oj that's true.

Speaker 3 (12:05):
Yeah, so guy tried to climb Trump Tower yesterday and
it didn't even seem to be a new story.

Speaker 2 (12:10):
Which one which guy?

Speaker 3 (12:12):
No?

Speaker 1 (12:12):
Which Trump Tower? There's one in Chicago and Miami, and this.

Speaker 3 (12:16):
Looks like the one in New York with the escalator
that he came down on and called an escalator. Police
surrounded Trump Tower as what they referred to as an
emotionally disturbed man tried to access the roof. He was
climbing up the side of the building. I don't know
if I mean, I guess the roof was his ultimate goal.

(12:39):
Is when you climb in something, usually you go to
the top of it building swarmed by police, no motive known,
just emotionally disturbed man made it as far as the
fifth floor before law enforcement arrived. Now, isn't law enforcement
already on the scene? If if, if it's Trump Tower,

(13:01):
don't they have people there anyway? The local reporter hostage
negotiators took over as Trump Tower had to be cleared out.

Speaker 2 (13:08):
Oh, I bet that was aggravating.

Speaker 3 (13:10):
Really yeah, uh no, nothing much to come of it
after that.

Speaker 2 (13:15):
Wow.

Speaker 1 (13:15):
That well, I guess that's why I wasn't. Here's the thing.
I know, it seems bad and everything, but if you
if you were to do a news search for crazy
people at Trump Tower, I think one of the things
you would realize is it happens all the times, right.

Speaker 2 (13:27):
It's just it's kind of like.

Speaker 1 (13:28):
Teachers having sexist students or food stamp fraud.

Speaker 2 (13:31):
It's so frequent.

Speaker 3 (13:32):
It's like why sometimes it doesn't even get reported, right,
it doesn't carry from the local news to the national news.
Now Christinomes and Birt snatching that that made news according
to CNN and Newsweek and Associated Press and a lot
of these others. A suspect made off with Christy Nome's purse.

(13:55):
Sometimes they call it a bag. I'm assuming it was
a purse, several personal items, including her driver's license, prescription medication,
her keys to her apartment, a passport, and her access
badge for the Department of Homeland Security, and even worse,
her makeup. Oh no, and three thousand dollars give or

(14:15):
take in cash.

Speaker 1 (14:17):
She see hers kind of more of a Sephora girl
or Alta or where do you think she's getting her
makeup at.

Speaker 3 (14:24):
She's older than she looks. I mean she's a grandma
and thinking she's probably old school.

Speaker 1 (14:30):
You ever go in the Sephara with a friend or
a date or I guess that time the line is insane.

Speaker 2 (14:35):
It's you go in there. I'm right there. I don't know.
This is a month or two back.

Speaker 1 (14:38):
I went in there with somebody and the line in
the store goes around the store, it goes outside.

Speaker 2 (14:43):
That seems more interesting to you than the fact that
Christy nomes purse was stolen while eating in a restaurant.
Where was her security detailed?

Speaker 3 (14:53):
Crime doesn't shock and somebody now has her badge to
access the Department of Homeland Security.

Speaker 1 (14:59):
Well, I think they're going to figure out and it's
not her, probably, but it is to me. It's weird
that people are still going to the mall and waiting
inlying and like, don't you know you could just order
this online?

Speaker 2 (15:08):
What I know? Why are you there are these people?
Say this? Why are they doing that?

Speaker 3 (15:12):
Don't you want the actual real stores to stay open?

Speaker 2 (15:18):
You don't want to have to at some point by
everything of the line, do you?

Speaker 1 (15:21):
I'm not emotionally or financially invested in Sophora.

Speaker 2 (15:24):
But I guess I don't. I mean, I like the
idea of people having jobs. I like a hardware store
to stay open. I like that. Yeah, what's that one?
I like wascom Hardware? You ever go there.

Speaker 3 (15:33):
That's a good place. That's a cool place. You can
walk into those kind of hardware stores the old school can. Yeah,
the small town hardware stores are the best. You walk
in there, you don't even have You're not there for anything.
I don't need anything. And then you just walk up
and down the aisles and go, oh my god, I
need that. I didn't know they even made that.

Speaker 2 (15:52):
I have to have it. Now, need that, or I
need three of those? Give me somebody.

Speaker 3 (15:55):
Next thing you're out there, you're you walking out with
a whole basket full of stuff.

Speaker 1 (15:58):
I like when you're in an all hardware store in
a small town and it's like a hybrid store, like
usually you can get food in there too, right, Like
it's a hardware store and then it's a Kolatchi shop,
Like what do you guys doing?

Speaker 3 (16:09):
Jerky? All kinds of jerky. I love jerky's. I could
that's a that's a meal for me. I'm sorry you're
not interested in my story. But the Secret Service looked
at the security footage and it was an unknown white
male and a medical mask, stole a bag and walked
right out of the restaurant.

Speaker 1 (16:27):
The pandemic gave them everything they want. Oh yeah, and
it's still giving them everything they want. It wasn't socially
acceptable to walk around in a medical mask in twenty nineteen.
Now you can just do that. You can walk around
with your face covered all day long. You can light
things on.

Speaker 2 (16:40):
Fire, and we're all the bank's rules on this, now,
do we know?

Speaker 3 (16:43):
Because you know, before the pandemic they would even make
you take your hat off in the bank so they
could see it. Yeah, because security cameras is usually up
high looking down at you, and if you have a
hot little bit of a brimo, you know, you keep
your head down like that. They said, oh yeah, you're
gonna have to remove your hat and hoodie, you know,
all that kind of stuff. Then along cold COVID and

(17:04):
everybody's like, well, now I can wear a bandit's mask
into the bank, just stand around all day.

Speaker 2 (17:09):
That's handy. See, I'm like going to the mall.

Speaker 1 (17:11):
I still like going to the bank because I like
to see my money, and I bring Milton with me,
and he's a big hit.

Speaker 2 (17:16):
Would I bring Milton in there? I walk him in there.

Speaker 1 (17:19):
Every every woman behind the counter wants to walk around
and pet him and give him a snack. And he's
just a popular guy. And that's the easiest way to
steal money.

Speaker 2 (17:26):
You know, absolutely, do what now? Never mind? The point
I'm getting at is you know a bank we're do you?

Speaker 4 (17:32):
No?

Speaker 2 (17:32):
Probably not seems unlikely.

Speaker 1 (17:34):
Okay, So if anybody has heard Nancy Mace drop the
word trainy bomb.

Speaker 2 (17:41):
At a protest yesterday.

Speaker 3 (17:42):
Well, I really think she's one of our best and
brightest by any.

Speaker 2 (17:47):
Means, Nancy May's I don't. You're just a big fan.
You don't like her? Why not? I just don't. It's
a feeling about her. I don't. I don't think she's
some I.

Speaker 1 (17:55):
Get I get why you would say that, because some
people think she's insincere. Several years ago, wasn't she an
anti Trumper? And now she's fervently pro Trump. She just
doesn't seem that uh smart. But have you seen the
pictures of her in a jacuzzie?

Speaker 2 (18:09):
See that's the thing.

Speaker 3 (18:10):
I'm not affected by that the way you guys are.
So I'm looking at her without being distracted by her
her you know body shots. Well, if you will, let's see.
I do think that she replied properly to that man
that was accosting her in the store.

Speaker 2 (18:30):
Yeah. Well, let's let's see if other people agree. Here, uh,
Billy d let me look at it. Let me look
at her.

Speaker 1 (18:36):
And here's a picture of her in a jacuzzi. Here,
take a look at Oh hell yeah, she looks. She
looks like she knows what she's doing. Does she looks
like a good congresswoman?

Speaker 2 (18:43):
Absolutely? See, mister Kenneth, vote you're wrong. Vote where she lives.
It's a Carolina, South Carolina. Now you can vote anywhere.
It's America. Yeah, go ahead, just sure, Yeah, I have
you're uttering a world of pain. Walton and Johnson Radio
Network
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