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November 25, 2025 • 18 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Coming up?

Speaker 2 (00:01):
How much lower can the Bill Belichick and Jordan Hudson
sexed up?

Speaker 1 (00:05):
Saga, sink, it's gonna get silly, ooh more, sokka, it's
a lot of alliteration, it is, really and that was
well done, sir. But first, shall we head off to
Eastern Europe for a moment? Do we have to? Unfortunately,
your money is going there whe her, you don't have
to go follow the money.

Speaker 2 (00:23):
The original twenty eight point plan for peace in Ukraine
was drafted by US Special ENVOYE. Steve Whitkoff and Donald
Trump's son in law Jared Kushner had a secret meeting
with a Kremlin insider in Miami. I'll bet the Kremlin
insider loved going to Miami.

Speaker 1 (00:39):
Yeah, I'm just look, I'm not saying Jared was involved.

Speaker 2 (00:42):
He seems like a nice Jewish boy, but I know
somebody was doing COKEYA and Secretary of State Marco Rubio
probably knew the coke dealer, only learn the full scope
of the proposal once it was leaked. The top diplomat
chief in America wasn't necessarily in on the meeting to
figure out Everyone keep saying this was America's idea. Russia
and Ukraine weren't in on the planning, well, technically Russia was,

(01:06):
America wasn't. The plan, which has since been revised to
nineteen points, initially demanded Ukraine making heavy concessions, including giving
up territory in the east, capping the size of its military,
and obviously you never get to drag Natore while asking
Russia just to kind of stop shooting missiles at pedestrians

(01:27):
and stuff.

Speaker 1 (01:27):
Could you would you mind? And that's pretty much all
that it was asking Russia to do.

Speaker 2 (01:32):
Whit Coffin Kushner started working on the document in October
after Trump test administration officials with hatching a plan to
end the bloodiest fighting in Europe since World War Two.

Speaker 1 (01:42):
That was a good war. People love that World War Two. Man.

Speaker 2 (01:46):
I have a lot of questions. Did they stay on
South Beach? Were they in one of those boutique hotels?
Did they enjoy Cuban food? How many spicy Latinas were
at the afterparty? Sure we need to know. Does de
Tortas does?

Speaker 1 (02:00):
Right? There had to be tortoise. I mean, come on, well,
I don't know, it's Miami. Well there'll be a Cuban sandwich.
Couldn't be called a torta. One thing about Miami. There's
plenty of Latinas around. They're just so much plastic surgery
compared to other Torta is a sandwich, right, Oh okay,
oh yeah, well in that case Cuban food. Now there're
two meanings to the word torta. Brode on Metai and Metay.

Speaker 2 (02:25):
On our comedy show on Saturday night, we taught a
lesson to the audience about what tortas were, and there's
always one guy in the crowd.

Speaker 1 (02:32):
He's like, hell yeah, I like me some fat Latinas.
All right, buddy, we'll feed them up torta. Then maybe
they'll plump up on you. Anyway.

Speaker 2 (02:40):
So we don't know if Ukraine's going to take the deal,
but even conservative right wing news outlets like The New
York Post and The Wall Street Journal are kind of
making it sound like this deal is a little more
enticing to Russia than it will be to Ukraine. Of course,
on the other hand, Ukraine doesn't have any of the
cards right now. They can't keep fighting unless other countries.

Speaker 1 (03:00):
Hey, then they got a little bossy about that giving
up territory though, didn't they sure that billy. They excuse
me for just button right in. But you're talking war.
You know, you got to expect me to, you know,
jump in eventually. Well, we're glad we want you to be.
You get paid to participate, so please barely. Yeah, I
mean we're just barely struggling by. But Trump's gonna fix

(03:21):
that economy him or man, dammy one or the other.
You know, sooner or later, somebody's gonna have to do something,
get it fixed. But uh, where were we a war?
You crank your arm? I said, you know, we can
stop uh blowing up your people and taking more of
your land if you just let us keep the land
that we already took. And no, you can't have that.

(03:42):
Well we already kind of already took it. Well, still
they just want to keep fighting. I guess they still
got a little fight left in them. Maybe the people
rise up and decide that Zelensky character who's keeping them
involved in the war. Maybe they had to do something
about that. Yeah, at least there is one positive to

(04:05):
all of this. We can't blame racism.

Speaker 2 (04:08):
Those Eastern European people all look exactly the same.

Speaker 1 (04:11):
Yeah, this was like the Civil War in America. You know,
you can't tell who to shoot. Yeah, they're all the
same to me. You all look the same to me.
Do they at least have different colored uniforms like you
know we did North and South, you know, the blues
and the gray's and that sort of thing. What they
got in Ukraine and the Russians I'm assuming Russians are,

(04:31):
you know, wearing some very thick, heavy wool clothing of
some kind, because I think it's all they ever wear.

Speaker 2 (04:38):
All right, Maybe, in true Donald Trump fashion, we need
to start adding some details to the peace negotiation to
not only make it more enticing to end the war,
but also funnier for those of us that actually don't
have a horse in this race.

Speaker 1 (04:52):
Okay, follow me for a minute. I got no horses anywhere.
Maybe we tell Russia and Ukraine, if you guys won't
stop fighting, then you have to agree to wear American
Civil War uniforms for the rest of the fight. I
like that. If you don't, we go to war with
both of you. America, We'll start launching at Ukraine and Russia.
We'll put the hammer down on top of you. How
about that. We don't care who's.

Speaker 2 (05:13):
Who you guys want to be the Union, you want
to be the Confederates.

Speaker 1 (05:16):
I don't care.

Speaker 2 (05:16):
But if I got to watch this on CNN and
Fox News, I want to see a Civil War reenactment.

Speaker 1 (05:21):
I like it. They actually might be able to fund
that a little bit, you know, social sponsorships or whatever.

Speaker 2 (05:27):
Yeah, exactly, I would think it's sponsored by Johnny Walker
that kind of thing.

Speaker 1 (05:30):
Well, yeah, or who's going to be the North, who's
going to be the South? Now, you're honest something here.

Speaker 2 (05:35):
See because you assume, okay, well, if one side picks
the Confederates, obviously they have to lose, not necessarily, it
might change history.

Speaker 1 (05:42):
We never know.

Speaker 2 (05:43):
And then also, how about this, since we're paying Ukraine, right,
we're giving them all the money.

Speaker 1 (05:47):
I think some corporate sponsorships are necessary here straight at
the very least, like put on some on the back
of your uniforms. I want to see Lockheed Martin. I
want to see Boeing out there. I want people to
know who's involved. Maybe some phone companies, you know, get
some phone companies in the at that T Mobile. They're
real proud of that Starlink thing they hooked up with.

Speaker 2 (06:06):
And I'll say, you got to figure if they're gonna
have corporate sponsorships on the uniform. It's gotta be stuff
that wouldn't the stigma of being involved in the war
wouldn't hurt the brand. So probably junk food, like the
kind of pigs that are sitting around eating snickers all day.
They're not gonna care if it says, you know, Hershey
Bars on the back of the Ukrainian You know, I
don't care, like Mars Bars or Dorito's or that kind

(06:26):
of thing.

Speaker 1 (06:27):
Yeah, I think guys, the Lenz gate to look good.

Speaker 2 (06:29):
At Dorito's cool ranch written across his chest.

Speaker 1 (06:32):
There probably gonna be pulling for him then, and.

Speaker 2 (06:34):
Then think of the genius of this. Then it costs
us less money as taxpayers. Fine, keep fighting, but I want,
you know, call a publicist. I want to see an
advertising agency get involved here. Let's get creative to fund
this war.

Speaker 1 (06:45):
If Ukraine hadn't figured out yet, they're not gonna beat Russia.
Maybe they're just slowing them down, holding them off a
little bit, and maybe Russia's not even trying that hard,
kind of like when people play the Saints, you know,
in the first first half. I'm guessing it don't really
bust ass, right, I mean, if they have to kick
it in a little bit to go ahead and win,

(07:07):
they will, But yeah, chances are it's just like kind
of a day off. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (07:12):
So, just to sum this up, a new version of
a peace plan hammered out between Senior and Washington and
Kiev delegation is proving.

Speaker 1 (07:21):
More palatable your Ukrainians and would remove several positions that
were previously described by US officials as maximalist demands by Moscow.
So the little blond lady already said that the peace
plan doesn't favor Russia. I mean that's the word from
the White House. So you have to believe that. Well,
you know, I don't care. I'm not one of those guys.
I don't care if it favors Russia. I just want

(07:43):
to stop paying for it. If that land, remember this
was not a trade partner that was important to us.
If that land by Crimea or in eastern Ukraine, if
that suddenly becomes Russian territory. Bill Yet, how does that
affect some guy right now drives a truck in Waco,
beats a hill out of me. How does that affect
somebody He's Russian, right or something it could be.

Speaker 2 (08:01):
How does that affect the life is some plumber in
Fort Smith, Arkansas. If you live in Rome, Georgia right
now and everybody's talking about who's going to replace Marjorie
Taylor Green, and you find out that the border between
Russia and Ukraine is now suddenly more Russian than Ukrainian,
what how does that affect the way you voted the
next election?

Speaker 1 (08:19):
Glad you brought up Marjorie. We've had our time with
her where we spent some chat time on the phone,
and we haven't agreed with everything she's done, but over
the years we found a few things that we like.
She was most of it. She's pretty feisty, you know.
But her timing on this registration is a little will

(08:39):
a little weird because her house seat, her seat can't
be filled. I bet it cut can't be filled by
a point month. They have to have a special election election. Sure,
I know what you mean. In the meantime, she is
resigning two days after she qualifies for a pension, for

(09:01):
a lifetime pension. Yeah, she ain't looking out for her constituents.
She ain't worried about the Republican Party if it hurts
them or supporters nationwide. She's making sure that she's taken
care of wasn't an interesting though it might be all
she ever got in. Therefore, wow sometime and wait until

(09:22):
the date.

Speaker 2 (09:23):
And how does that make her any different than anyone
else I know? But as far as the pension goes,
I don't blame her for taking it or quitting when
she is.

Speaker 1 (09:29):
I don't.

Speaker 2 (09:30):
My question is, why is it you can be in
government for such a short amount of time and qualify
for a lifetime pension?

Speaker 1 (09:36):
Exactly? Marjorie Taylor Green hasn't been on the scene for decades.
Didn't she basically show up around COVID So if she
wasn't around in you know, twenty sixteen or you know,
for Obama era of government, which she certainly wasn't, I don't.
I'm just old enough that that doesn't feel like it
was that long ago to me. No, if somebody worked
at this radio station for eight years or whatever, would

(09:57):
they get a pension for the rest of their life?
Why we're here eighty years. You ain't gonna get no benches.

Speaker 2 (10:03):
Well, that's what I'm talking about, right, And it's like,
all right, So that's how the private set.

Speaker 1 (10:07):
Going into government, din is what you're suggesting? Man? If
we were in government. You know, you know how many
the show has been around for forty two years, you've
been around forty three. Oh, we'd all be billionaires, so
we'd be set for life three times over. We must
be fools. What's wrong with us? I know today show
is gonna be the greatest show. I've got a great

(10:27):
two for Tuesday. It must be two for Tuesday. Yeah,
that two for today special Wolton M. Johnson. There is
no single demographic in America that is more damaging to
our society. Not the Somali Muslims, not the street thugs
of eastern La, not the illegal cartelm thugs at the border,

(10:48):
that are more damaging to our society than white, affluent,
suburban liberal women women. What are we gonna do about them?
We're gonna get rid of them. We're gonna just tell
them to all the Yet, can we deport all the
liberal carings? Can we do that? You know this woman
in California running for governor right now, Katie Porter. You
look at Katie Porter, Sure, whatever you want to Yeah,

(11:11):
which one is actually her name? Now? I don't know,
because everybody calls her porkers, And it could be just
because she's a fat, hideous speed it's porter. But uh,
you can call her whatever you want. I don't care. Ironically,
I would never poork her. Get it, well, look at her?
Who on earth? If you look like? If I was her,
I'd be miserable too if I had to wake up
and look like that every day. There is nothing appealing

(11:33):
about that woman.

Speaker 2 (11:35):
Her appearance is absolutely vile, and the only thing more
disgusting than her appearance is her personality and her opinions.
How is it that you're so physically disgusting and yet
on the inside, I thought, like, fat.

Speaker 1 (11:47):
Chicks are supposed to be sweet. What's your problem? I
think that I think it's out the window. It's been
it's been gone a while, the whole of fat, jolly sweet.
Yeah no, uh huh. Meanwhile, we take you to Nashville.
Do I have to go? You know how people feel
about Nashville. Huh.

Speaker 2 (12:06):
They've got a special election happening right now. Funny you
say that a little foreshadowing there to what we're about
to hear.

Speaker 1 (12:11):
Billy ed. They got a special election happening right now
Tennessee District seven, and one of the nominate, well, the
Democrat nominee is this woman named afton Ben. She's a
blonde lady with a strong jawline. Right, well, yeah, she's
got a kind of a linebacker jaw lot owner.

Speaker 2 (12:29):
There's this audio of her circulating around. I think she's
on a podcast or a radio show. I don't quite
know what the origin is of this, but Greg Price
has just published it.

Speaker 1 (12:37):
A very respected journalist friend of mine. I know this guy. Well.

Speaker 2 (12:40):
I would stand by the legitimacy of this recording. And
it's been widely reported on, so it's not like there's
any speculation that this isn't real. And aften Ben is
just really driving into the fact that she hates Nashville.

Speaker 1 (12:53):
She hates the people.

Speaker 2 (12:54):
She hates the bachelorette parties and the music and the
culture's been.

Speaker 3 (12:59):
Heavily involved with is the Nashville mayoral race.

Speaker 1 (13:03):
Because I hate the city.

Speaker 3 (13:04):
I hate the bachelorettes, I hate the pedal taverns, I
hate country music, I hate all of the things that
make Nashville fairly city to the.

Speaker 1 (13:11):
Rest of the country.

Speaker 3 (13:14):
Girl at the airport that all these bachelorettes are giddy
walking out there.

Speaker 1 (13:17):
And they're two toned colored Pantown peak shirts and they
walk out and I'm like, oh, I do Nason. Huh.
She kind of went high pitched there.

Speaker 2 (13:28):
She was making fun of the white women that come
to Nashville for bachelor at parties. If you hate a
place so ef and much, why would you be the
representative of it?

Speaker 1 (13:38):
Is that her area Nashville, I mean this particular district.
I yes, don't know Tennessee well enough to know what
the seventh Congressional District encompasses. Yes it is, Bill, Yeah,
that's why I'm playing it.

Speaker 2 (13:53):
Yes, this insufferable, repugnant, white liberal woman wants to be
the wants the people of the community to give her fame,
power and money. And she openly admits out loud, I
hate y'all. I hate this place. I think it sucks.

Speaker 1 (14:07):
We're the district now because they redrew them in twenty
twenty two. I guess you can do that when Biden
was president and nobody, no judge jumps up and stops them.
The redistrict that was redrawn includes parts of Nashville. Part
the district line just kind of like goes like a
child through the crown through the city, and this part

(14:30):
is District seven, and that's represented by that. Oh, this
is the same woman who we heard yesterday somebody questioned
her probably doing that same podcast, about wanting to defund
the cops. She's anti police, and you know, naturally, because
that's the Democrat party now, they're pro crime, they like

(14:51):
the crime. They want to keep the criminals in the
streets and don't punish them. But she said, I don't
remember whether I want to defund the police or not.

Speaker 4 (15:03):
Representative. In twenty twenty, you made some tweets that have
since been deleted that were very critical of police. You
said in those since deleted tweets that the men twenty
Nashville police Department should be dissolved. Another shared on a
teachers union saying that defund the police should be a
requirement for school's reopening, and another saying good morning, especially

(15:25):
to the fifty four percent of Americans that believe burning
down a police station is justified. Twenty twenty, it was
obviously a very fraught year. Do you still stand by
those comments and if not, is there anything you want
to clarify.

Speaker 1 (15:39):
Now you're running for office here before we listen to
our answer, billion even if you supported defunding the police
five years ago, you're about to possibly become a congressional official.
What answer would you give, even if you did support it,
if I had said something like that, I think I
would take it back and admit that I was misinformed,
and that, after having given it some thought over the

(16:00):
last five years, I believe that would be the wrong
way to go for the good people of the great
state of tenn not seek same. And in fact, I.

Speaker 2 (16:08):
Might even come up with some political jarg well, the
landscape has shifted, the culture, the zeitgeist, the culture has evolved. No,
this woman's answer is, I don't know what that has
to do with me. I don't know why defunding the
police would even be a question. I'm just here to
talk about my candidacy.

Speaker 1 (16:25):
I'm not going to.

Speaker 3 (16:26):
Engauge in cable news talking points, but what I will
say is that you know, our communities need solutions. We
need local people deciding solving local problems with local solutions,
and that's not the overreach of a federal government or
state government is of what we are dealing with in
Nashville and our cities across the state of Tennessee.

Speaker 2 (16:49):
I'm not going to engage in cable news talking points,
but here's a few real quick We need real solutions,
that's what they We're not politicians.

Speaker 1 (16:58):
When we thought how we would answer the question, we
didn't come up with the idea of just saying gibberish
and not answering the question. That's how a true politician works.
Local people need to solve local problems. Oh well, then
put her in office and let her get to work.

Speaker 2 (17:14):
Okay, Well, you'd be the local representative here for us
to determine how federal funds are allocated to our community.

Speaker 1 (17:19):
Well, I don't want to give anything to the people
in Nashville. Hey hate nash She hates nashal and country music. Yeah,
there's not a lot of country music in Tennessee, is there?

Speaker 2 (17:28):
She says, I don't want to play in the cable
news talking points. Ma'am, this is MSNBC. There is no
network that is friendlier to defund the police candidates than
this one.

Speaker 1 (17:39):
Maybe we need to raise money for her so she
can afford the moving van and send it on over
to her house early next week after the holidays, and
let's get her out of the state. What do you say?

Speaker 2 (17:50):
It is a good point. They did give her a
chance to double down here let's see if she could
just you know, look, obviously you are going to have
to determine how some of this funding is spent on.

Speaker 4 (17:59):
What are your thought so you don't want to clarify
whether you still believe that the police should be defunded.

Speaker 3 (18:07):
Once again, I don't remember these tweets, but I'm what
I'm saying is.

Speaker 4 (18:11):
Is that I'm not asking you if you remember, what
is your position today? How's that on this issue?

Speaker 3 (18:18):
I mean, once again, I'm here to talk about.

Speaker 1 (18:20):
My race, which get that. I'm not here to answer questions.
I'm here to campaign and make promises that I won't
live up to. I'm not here to talk about how
bulldozers work. I'm here to talk about being a construction worker. Yeah. Whatesday,

(18:43):
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