Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
Donald J. Trump talking about these tariffs. Donald Trump made
an interesting point. Look, I don't like tariffs. I don't
like them. I'm a free market guy. If I was
running the country, I would probably do things a little differently.
But Donald Trump's attempt to use tariffs as a negotiating tool,
as a trade token, it's like nothing we've ever seen before,
(00:21):
nothing we've ever witnessed. And I will begrudgingly admit it
seems to be working. India right now, struggling their economy
because of the tariffs. They're going to have to play
ball and guess what, They're going to stop buying Russian
oil because of Donald Trump. Now today, there is going
to be a Supreme Court hearing, or there is a
Supreme Court hearing happening right now over whether or not
(00:44):
Trump's tariffs are constitutional. And Donald Trump's going to do
something he's never done before. Listen to what he's saying here,
disaster for America.
Speaker 2 (00:53):
That's why I think I'm going to go to the
Supreme Court to watch it. I've not done that, and
I had some pretty big cases. I think it's I
think it's one of the most important cases ever brought
because we will be defenseless against the world.
Speaker 1 (01:09):
Okay, going down to the coat house. Okay, Judge Donald
Trump going to the Supreme Court. He's just gonna sit there.
Do you think he brings a snack? Sure, maybe a
juice boxin't it really you, pri son? Maybe a lunch lunchables.
Speaker 3 (01:30):
Sit there and stab that straw into the box and
stare at kentucy round.
Speaker 1 (01:34):
What's her face while he's doing it? Yeah, I can'd
be hard to eat if you had to look at her. Oh,
here come the judge. He comb the judge. Everybody knows
that he is the judge.
Speaker 3 (01:48):
That that was a pig met huh.
Speaker 1 (01:50):
The pig meat, pig meat, Martin, haven't we been through this?
He's slow to learn. Nineteen sixty eight, they say it
was the first ever rap song ever recorded. Of course,
it was a comedy song about how crazy it would
be if there was a black judge that nuts, that
would be crazy.
Speaker 3 (02:05):
Speaking of nuts and Katanji, you know, the sister of
the Supremes. As you remember, when Joe Biden was picking
a replacement for Ruth, he said she's got to be
a woman, which even though you know some of the
Supreme Court justices don't know what a woman is, and
(02:25):
she's got to be black, got to be I don't
think Joe Biden even picked the smartest black person he
knew who was a lawyer or could be a Supreme
Court judge. She's certainly not I would guess in the
top two thirds of the smartest black lawyers in America.
(02:46):
And yet he picked her for some reason. Perhaps it's
because the Democrats wanted somebody on the Supreme Court that
they could tell how to vote. Because she really didn't
know much about what she's doing, and yesterday she made
that abundantly clear as she tried to explain why black
people still you know, after all these years, my black
(03:08):
people still need special laws and rules that they only
apply to them. And it's because and if I was
a black person, I think i'd be upset. Well, because
black people are disabled. It's a disability.
Speaker 1 (03:24):
That's exactly what she said. Do you remember a while
back the African American Museum, the Smithsonian's African American History Museum,
put out an infograph on the Internet explaining the aspects
and assumptions of white culture. And what they said in
this infograph is that things like being on time and
hard work. Those are symptoms of whiteness. The Protestant work ethic,
(03:47):
respecting authority, wealth equals worth. Your job is who you are.
They said, these are only things that white people think
showing up on time as a symbol of white supremacy.
And racists loved it. Did they ate that up?
Speaker 3 (04:00):
Well?
Speaker 1 (04:00):
Yesterday Katanji affirmative action, Jackson Brown had another one of
these moments where she spoon fed the racists exactly what
they wanted to hear. The Supreme Court was hearing an
argument about whether or not what was this about the
fourteenth and fifteenth the motant especially yep, and about how
black people have a hard time voting. That's what she said, said,
black people are basically disabled. They're to say, like a
(04:23):
crippled person, they need help voting because their skin makes
it hard for them.
Speaker 4 (04:28):
Kind of paradigmatic example of this is something like the
Ada Congress passed the Americans with Disabilities Act against the
backdrop of a world that was generally not accessible to
people with disabilities, and so it was discriminatory in effect
because these folks were not able to access these buildings,
(04:51):
and it didn't matter whether the person who built the
building or the person who owned the building intended for
them to be exclusionary. That's irrelevant. Congress said, the facilities
have to be made equally open to people with disabilities,
if readily possible. Okay, I guess I don't understand why
(05:12):
that's not what's happening here. The idea in section two
is that we are responding to current day manifestations of
past and present decisions that disadvantage minorities and make it
so that they don't have equal access to the voting system.
(05:33):
Right they're disabled?
Speaker 3 (05:34):
Is that poor black votes? I have no idea, bro.
Do you know how crazy that sound bite is? Like, again,
and you're a white guy. She's not even talking about you.
Imagine if she was saying you are so disabled that
you can't really do anything in your life. You can't
accomplish anything without white people's help because you're disabled.
Speaker 1 (05:57):
That's what she's saying. She's saying being black makes it
harder to vote. Absent from that long diatribe she just
went on, was any actual evidence of how it's harder
for black people to vote? Oh? No, no evidence at all.
She never actually explained that. You know what this reminded
me of. This is probably the second most embarrassing thing
she ever did. Okay, yeah, you remember a year ago?
(06:19):
I have no idea where we're going. Oh I was
hoping you would ask, do you remember a year ago
the first ever Supreme Court justice on Broadway?
Speaker 4 (06:25):
Femail encowerment.
Speaker 1 (06:29):
Complness? I don't want to remember.
Speaker 3 (06:33):
Sick.
Speaker 1 (06:34):
I like it too.
Speaker 4 (06:36):
I think what I like about it is that I
am having a very strongly negative reactions.
Speaker 1 (06:40):
One year ago, Donald Trump had just won the presidency,
which was even a year ago. It's November, and every
liberal in America was screaming Hitler and Nazis and the
sky is falling. But Katanji Brown Jackson was busy, too
busy to scream about the apocalypse, because she was debut
in the first ever Broadway show to feature a Supreme
(07:02):
Court justice.
Speaker 3 (07:03):
And that's the most important thing. And what a weird
little person she is. She's like a hobbit. She is
an odd person.
Speaker 1 (07:10):
You don't notice that when they're on TV. How short
she is. If you just.
Speaker 3 (07:15):
Google her search engine whatever you want, you get different results,
different engines. But google Katanji Brown. It turns out it's
not the first time she has displayed her inability to
understand the Constitution.
Speaker 1 (07:30):
Here's a story from a year and a half ago.
Speaker 3 (07:32):
Katanji Brown Jackson does not understand the First Amendment. And
this was back when they were trying to get her
to protect professors who were being fired for some of
the horrible, hateful things they were saying on campus, you know,
in front of students at protests and whatnot. And she,
just like the Fourteenth, she tried to explain the First
(07:54):
Amendment to people too, and it did not go well.
Speaker 1 (07:57):
She's not smart. Yeah, an incident over the pasture. I
forget what the Supreme Court ruling was about. But for
the first time in decades or as far as I
that I could ever remember, a Supreme Court justice Katanji
Brown Jackson wasn't going to be voting on or ruling
on a case because she didn't understand the legal argument
and everybody else on the court understood it except for her.
(08:19):
This wasn't like a left wing versus right wing thing.
It was just embarrassing. And I might remind you she
was hired specifically because of her race and her gender.
That's what Joe Biden said. I don't like that. I
don't like that that stigma exists for her, I think
that's unfortunate, but that's what he said.
Speaker 3 (08:36):
Did Joe realize he was handy? He was a hiring
the handicapped when.
Speaker 1 (08:40):
He did it. Oh, well, you know, I'm not sure.
Speaker 3 (08:43):
Being black actually makes you disabled, but he thinks so.
But except for her, I think maybe herbie and black
is a disability. So many of these people, almost all
of them that we see, are so poor and they
are so black.
Speaker 1 (09:00):
So if you have a problem figuring out whether you're
Premi or Trump and you ain't black, Walton and Johnson
signs that the nation is healing. I think one of
them is that we have now been in a government
shut down for weeks, over two weeks, and nobody anywhere
seems to give a damn. I keep forgetting that we
have a government shut down. We get emails about it.
Speaker 3 (09:19):
Occasionally people say, well I tried to do this, and
well I didn't realize that the government shut down affected that.
Speaker 1 (09:26):
But not much. But here's a little more proof that
the nation itself is becoming a better place. And this
is I can't even believe this, but this is true. Apparently,
the trans identification trend among young Americans appears to be
losing momentum. Recent data taken from college campuses shows a
(09:46):
sharp decline in the number of gen Zers identifying as
transgender over the past three years.
Speaker 3 (09:54):
Well, how could it be they said they were trans
and then all of a sudden, now they or not.
Speaker 1 (09:59):
I have a graph of that we could look at
here in the studio. Look at this. The number of
trans people really spiked up right around twenty twenty two
twenty twenty three, but then over the last two years
it declined almost as quickly as it spiked, Like the
percentage of people that were saying, Oh, I'm a cross
dressing weirdo, they just changed their mind.
Speaker 3 (10:17):
Could it be that just seemed trendy at the moment
and they wanted to jump on something that was popular,
and now it turns out it's not so much anymore.
Speaker 1 (10:27):
Trans identification is in a free fall back. In twenty nineteen,
the percentage of trans people on college campuses was like
one percent. Then it shot up to almost nine percent
by twenty twenty three.
Speaker 3 (10:39):
That was different. That was people claiming they were trans,
but they're not.
Speaker 1 (10:44):
But now in twenty twenty five it's shot back down
to two percent. Sexual identity the queer questioning people is
also in a sharp decline. Gay and lesbian numbers are
pretty much stable. Those haven't changed at all. The people
that are like, oh no, I'm a dude, I like
other dudes. That really hasn't changed it all years. The trance thing,
that's what's spiked up and then shot back down again again.
(11:05):
It was a trend.
Speaker 3 (11:06):
People want to jump on board something that's hot and
trendy and fashionable at the moment, and when it's not,
they jump right back off.
Speaker 1 (11:14):
Man, cool, awesome. That means that women's sports are safe.
You're less likely to run into a guy in a
girl's walker room, less likely. But there's still people fighting
for that. Yeah, but I mean versus nine percent in
two years, that's a huge decline. I've got a.
Speaker 3 (11:31):
Text from an unknown number and it says I'm at
the door. Somebody helped me get in. What is that about?
Somebody's locked it? And then I'm go to security cam
and take a look at the front door cameras and
see who's out there.
Speaker 1 (11:46):
I mean, there's only one person that's not here, you guys.
It's it's mister woe is he locked out? Why can't you?
Speaker 3 (11:56):
Oh he's disabled and he can't get in without help.
Well that's what Katanji says. Yeah, apparently this kind of
thing is really catching on quick. Another trend to jump on.
Black people are all disabled now according to the Supreme Court,
or at least one member of the Supreme Court. You
want to go let him in, Well, well let him
in when we I mean, he's probably in no hurry.
Is it possible that he's just saying that to mess
(12:18):
with you? I don't really think that that sounds like something. Yeah,
he's in the building now, but he just got in.
Speaker 1 (12:23):
He's in the hallway. Yeah. I wonder what Clarence Thomas
thinks of Katanji's saying all black people. That's a good question.
Speaker 3 (12:30):
But if you if you get his response, you know
you're just getting the response of the handicapped. Is that
the idea you want? Which one of them up there
wasn't able to tell us what a woman was? That
was Katanji lot So that person she ain't got no
oil in her in her brain pan she she's not.
Speaker 1 (12:50):
A bright person. And it's not because she's black or
because she's a woman. It's because she's a communist. There
you go communists are generally not known for having a
high IQ, and.
Speaker 3 (13:00):
She has also been favored over a good portion of
her legal career because of the color of her skin
and that disability that she talks about. She's been favored
and promoted and advanced through the system most of her
adult life. Yeah, I mean, and now Joe Biden took
(13:20):
that as an opportunity.
Speaker 1 (13:21):
The guy who hired her said that, I mean, that's
an indisputable truth. We don't get to just I don't
like it. I would never say anything like that, but
that's what they say. Yeah. Really sad. Well, speaking of
the judicial system, a Florida judge temporarily blocked the transfer
of prime downtown Miami land for Trump's presidential library. So
far though, if it's Trump, it's got to be blocked.
(13:44):
Why don't we just have the presidential library at mar
A Lango. I don't know, people would probably prefer to
go there anyway. Well, good question from the emit.
Speaker 3 (13:52):
Why doesn't a federal judge just rule that this government
shutdown is unconstitutional?
Speaker 1 (13:56):
Let's get these people back to work.
Speaker 3 (13:58):
Because a judge shuts down everything Trump does one way
or another one, don't we just shut.
Speaker 1 (14:04):
Down this too. It does seem like they preside over
things where they have no authority on a regular basis.
Speaker 3 (14:11):
Ure.
Speaker 1 (14:11):
I mean that happens all the time, like daily at
this point anyway. So that's where we're at with that
whole thing. If you have two hours, you can listen
to yesterday's Supreme Court hearing. Oh I know length though, Okay,
well I didn't really carry ei there, let's see. And
then a judge blocked Trump's administration firings during the show.
See there you go.
Speaker 3 (14:31):
They also said Trump doesn't have any legal authority to
blow those drug running ships out of the water. He
just took out number five a couple of days ago,
and the Democrats continue to just, you know, oh my god,
I can't believe he's being rude to visitors to our
country from a foreign land who just want to bring
(14:52):
us drugs, which everybody loves.
Speaker 1 (14:54):
Well, every time he blows up one of those boats,
he saves American lives.
Speaker 2 (14:58):
Well, I don't want to tell you exactly, but we
are certainly looking at land now because we've got the
sea very well under control. We've had a couple of
days where there isn't a boat to be found, and
that view. That is a good thing, not bad thing.
But we had tremendous amounts coming in by boats, by
very expensive boats. You know, they have a lot of money,
very fast, very expensive boats that were pretty big. And
(15:20):
the way you look at it is every boat that
we knock out, we save twenty five.
Speaker 1 (15:23):
Thousand American lives. Wow.
Speaker 2 (15:25):
So every time you see a boat and you feel badly,
you say, wow, that's rough.
Speaker 1 (15:30):
It is rough.
Speaker 2 (15:30):
But if you lose three people and save twenty five
thousand people, these are people that are killing our population, right.
Speaker 1 (15:37):
I mean, you could disagree with what he's saying, but
it's indisputably true. These guys are trafficking fentanyl in every
time one of those boats makes it here, it accounts
for twenty five thousand deaths in the country.
Speaker 3 (15:47):
Right, So four five six guys on these boats and
all of a sudden they just blow them right out
of the water. And the Democrats are very upset.
Speaker 1 (15:55):
So who do you care more about America's middle class?
Speaker 3 (15:58):
Or you called I'm gonna have to have a special seat.
I'm gonna need a handicapped chair of some kind. Uh
uh morning, by the way, if it is morning, I'm
not really sure, because I'm smart enough to tell if
the sun's going up or going down. I had no
way to know because I'm mentally irregular. Some people are
gonna have to the Supreme Court. By the way, that
(16:19):
is working out good for me because I got a
special parking now, mister park right up front.
Speaker 1 (16:25):
Mister row. Some people are gonna think you're being serious.
It sounds like you're mad at Katanji Brown Jackson for
saying all black people are disabled.
Speaker 3 (16:31):
Oh you think she she just came out and announced
the Supreme Court thank black people.
Speaker 1 (16:35):
Retorted, well, that is kind of what she said. Yes,
that's what she said.
Speaker 3 (16:39):
Now she is black, so maybe she was just talking
about herself and the rest of us just gotta suffer
for it.
Speaker 1 (16:47):
Oh, that's a real shame there. That is a shame. Man.
That's too bad.
Speaker 3 (16:50):
But in the meantime, I'm gonna take that parking face
right up front, got a little blue sign on it,
and everything's is reserved for me.
Speaker 1 (16:56):
Yeah, I can't blame yet. You got a nice spot there.
You know, I'd take advantage if I could to as
far as Katanji goes. You know, there's some people that
are dumb, but they're good looking. And then there's some
people that are smart but they're ugly. Then there's that
third group. We call that the Katanji group. Yeah. All
I'm saying is, if you have a boat this summer,
I have a throat.
Speaker 2 (17:16):
Hi.
Speaker 1 (17:17):
Can I rent a boat for the entire summer? Walton
and Johnson