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September 10, 2025 15 mins
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
All right, President Trump says Epstein is a dead issue.
Although I get it did it's not really clear if
the issue actually killed itself trying to be funny.

Speaker 2 (00:13):
No, well I was, but I just hadn't delivered the punchline.
Yet the issue killed it too. There was a punchline coming,
that's funny. That was already funny.

Speaker 3 (00:20):
You tap danced on it. No, it was already funny.
You didn't even have to finish it. It was funny.

Speaker 2 (00:25):
All right.

Speaker 1 (00:25):
Well, anyway, Trump says, Epstein's a dead issue. And now
there's this birthday thing out the birthday Kenny, I'm taking
up for you. By the way, thanks mister Kenna. They
don't feel like you're helping, but okay. Anyway, Trump has
weighed in on whether or not that Epstein birthday book
thing was real. He spoke about it yesterday at a
restaurant in Washington, d C. Which apparently people couldn't eat

(00:46):
at before because it was too violent. But now forty
five percent drop in violent crime. You can go out again.

Speaker 3 (00:52):
Three two way to go, Trump, good jobs.

Speaker 4 (00:57):
My signature, and it's not the way I speak. And
anybody that's covered me for a long time, No, that's
not my language. It's nonsense, and frankly, you're wasting your time.
All you do is trying to get off the great
success of DC and about two hundred other things we've
done that is so success.

Speaker 1 (01:13):
Okay, some people will hear this and they will think, ah,
Trump's trying to deflect from the Epstein controversy. And other
people will say, Democrats only want to talk about this
because they're trying to deflect from what Trump's doing right now.
And here's the bitter truth, guys, Probably both of those
things at the same time are accurate. Suddenly the Epstein
thing isn't making look Trump look good because it would

(01:33):
appear at I would say, probably it's associated with some
of his close allies.

Speaker 2 (01:38):
I would bet more than anything.

Speaker 1 (01:39):
It's not so much Trump's association with Epstein that's causing
this to get brushed under the rug, but like very
powerful political donors. Sorry, that's what I think, That's what
my instincts tell me. But also don't forget the Democrats
never cared about this for years until five minutes ago
when they suddenly thought it made Trump look bad.

Speaker 3 (01:56):
It is amazing to me that the Democrats can go
on camera with a straight faith and tell you how
awful Trump is for lowering the crime. They will go
over the facts and the figures, this and that, but
they'll just tell you that that's not true. It's just
whatever you're seeing, whatever you're hearing, it's just not true.
Just know Trump is still hitler and he's trying to

(02:21):
take over the country like a dictator.

Speaker 1 (02:23):
And it's also interesting to think how many people just
assume at face value that birthday book's real.

Speaker 2 (02:28):
Maybe it's real, maybe it's not.

Speaker 1 (02:30):
But if you believe it's possible that Epstein was murdered
in a prison cell and somebody altered the prison cell footage,
the security camera footage, and they like either told the
guards to go to sleep or they gave them some drugs,
and then they changed the book around where people check
in and check out. Then why wouldn't you think they'd
also fake the birthday book?

Speaker 2 (02:50):
Could they do something like that? Now? Would they ever
get away with something like that? I don't see it.

Speaker 1 (02:55):
There are people on the internet trying to analyze whether
the signature is real, and there's just as many people
saying it's real as saying it's not. Like, no, it's
not really what his signature looks like and then other
people say, well, signature's changed over the years. It's like, well,
probably hasn't changed that much, right, hopefully not. Also, it's
one of the most famous signatures in the world. It's
probably not that hard to fake it because a lot
of people know what it's supposed to look like.

Speaker 2 (03:16):
It's a weird box thing with these sharp lines in it.

Speaker 3 (03:20):
Mike emailed us at Walter Johnson dot com, not about
the crime thing so much, but Mike says, if Trump
were able to end all wars tomorrow, right, the Liberals
would find a judge out there somewhere who would block
it by tomorrow afternoon, because I want to see those
wars keep going.

Speaker 1 (03:37):
Yeah, the next time we have to drone bomb a
boat filled with trend A Aragua gang members, do you
want us to send a public defender out there first
to issue them due process or can we just go
ahead and attack the people that are clearly attacking us.

Speaker 2 (03:50):
You kind of interrupted me because it wasn't through reading
an email yet, but I'll let it go.

Speaker 3 (03:54):
Okay, what's the rest of its Its just some stuff
about you know, who's paying for it, who's gap who,
who's taken these cases to these judges in the first place.
Are the judges doing it themselves or is somebody bringing
it to the judges and saying, hey, rule against Trump?
Everybody who's doing it. It does kind of look like
the deep state still trying to run this country just

(04:17):
by blocking everything Trump tries to do.

Speaker 1 (04:20):
Where do you put Eric swallow in that? Is he
part of the deep state? Or is he kind of
a different problem all to go? Oh, he's a problem,
but I say deep state. He is a scripted buffoon
and he apparently we almost lost our democracy after this
guy with that, the guy with the buffalo hat stole
a flag. Here is Eric Swalloll two days ago and
then yesterday. You want to hear two sound bites sound

(04:40):
by side. This is pretty interesting.

Speaker 5 (04:42):
What are the three most important dates in American history?
December seventh, nineteen forty one?

Speaker 2 (04:50):
What was that? Go ahead, anybody you don't know? I
mean I do. I'm asking you to. It's a day
that lives an enfamy, right Pearl Harbor? Yeah, thank you? Okay?
September eleven, Oh, what was that?

Speaker 5 (05:02):
In January sixth?

Speaker 2 (05:04):
They still want to try to get away with that,
don't they all? Right, So that was two days ago,
except the last two tomorrow.

Speaker 5 (05:10):
I didn't even have to give you the years Patriots Day,
because they are seared into our memories and because we
saw them with our own eyes.

Speaker 1 (05:21):
And there's three all right, hang on, So that was
him two days ago. Now here he is yesterday eyes.

Speaker 5 (05:25):
And there's three days in American history that are the
most important. December sixth, nineteen forty one, when Pearl Harbor
was born, September eleventh, and January sixth.

Speaker 2 (05:33):
I don't have to tell you the isn't that GREATY
got to the day wrong.

Speaker 3 (05:36):
Yeah, there's a day that we're living in for me,
except in his brain because it's very small.

Speaker 1 (05:40):
Right, And now you probably understand why I asked you.
The first time he said it, he got the date right,
and then he got the date wrong the next day.

Speaker 2 (05:46):
He is not a bright man. Eric Swallow.

Speaker 1 (05:48):
Of course, this is the same guy who once farted
during a live TV interview, actually leaned over in the
chair when he was talking to that what was his name,
the guy that had to tingle up his leg. I
forget what his name is.

Speaker 2 (05:58):
Nobody cares.

Speaker 1 (05:58):
I forgot his name, like Eric Swallow forgot the day
that lived in infamy.

Speaker 2 (06:02):
Yeah, imagine that.

Speaker 1 (06:03):
Well, anyway, he's gay, No, he's not gay. It's actually
the Chinese spy.

Speaker 2 (06:09):
Can we back up.

Speaker 3 (06:10):
For a minute on the politicians and what's going on
in this country as opposed to what's going on in.

Speaker 2 (06:15):
Other parts of the world. Well that is your thing,
Go ahead, Yeah, back up there.

Speaker 3 (06:18):
Because Zach emailed us, and I think he may be
onto something here. I hadn't considered that. I don't trust
this political upheaval in Nepal simply because it's so close
to China. I don't think it happened organically.

Speaker 2 (06:34):
No, it never does.

Speaker 3 (06:35):
How will people benefit from this? If they can get
their people into our institutions on the opposite side of
the planet, then I have zeroed out that they either
cause this or at the very least capitalized on it
as it was happening.

Speaker 2 (06:51):
So if Nepal.

Speaker 3 (06:52):
Ceases to exist, as some people have said, because of
the turmoil that's going on, how does China react to that?
Maybe they started it on purpose, so Nepaul just becomes China.

Speaker 1 (07:05):
And you're not wrong to be suspicious. I mean, I
certainly am, but maybe we should also consider the opposite
at the same time, is it possible that we overthrew
the Nepal government so that we could put our own
guy in power and have a closer base of operation
to China.

Speaker 2 (07:20):
Best way to find out it's a bag watch. Yeah,
see where to go. Well, it's not like the American
CIA would try to overthrow a government's rogue state, and
you're one of our major enemies in an effort to
try to cause a war with them that goes on forever.
Not again.

Speaker 5 (07:35):
We have a lot of quarrel about whether his enemy's
list is an enemy's list.

Speaker 2 (07:39):
All of his wild maga behavior. Stay tuned for more.
Waltman Johnson.

Speaker 1 (07:45):
I'll take the blame for that. We were a little
coming back from break there. A listener just emailed me
and said that marijuana is actually worse than heroin. And
I don't know. I sit here and I read these emails,
and I just I can't believe. Sometimes they're people out
there that think things like that. I don't want to
insult the person, but good god, how could you possibly think? Well,

(08:05):
they that smoking a plant is more dangerous than inserting
a needle into your arm.

Speaker 3 (08:11):
They supply any evidence or proof or back up their
their proposition, their hypotheses, if you will.

Speaker 1 (08:19):
I don't want to like make fun of this person,
because this person seems like they have good intentions.

Speaker 2 (08:22):
What the entire email, No, the marijuana's worse than heroin.

Speaker 1 (08:26):
Swimen emailed me and she said, I listened yesterday and
you implied that you smoke bags of pot. That's what
she said. And I think I was telling a joke.
First of all, I just I, look, maybe you exaggerated
a little bit. I love autistic people, but for the record,
there's a group of people out there that don't get
jokes right.

Speaker 2 (08:43):
And it's like, that's.

Speaker 1 (08:44):
True, You'll tell I've look, I've dated these women before.

Speaker 2 (08:47):
Now I'm not dating any of them right.

Speaker 1 (08:48):
Now, but I've dated women before where you tell a
joke and then they repeat the joke back at you
like you were being serious and they're mad, and you're
do I really have to explain that it's a joke.

Speaker 3 (08:57):
I just you just move on, just move along, don't
let their slowness impede your speed.

Speaker 1 (09:05):
But yesterday on the show, we were talking about legal
marijuana in the state of Texas and how the laws
are changing, how Texas is kind of behind the rest
of the country on this and it's because of these
old school Republicans that never went away. And she said,
you know, you live in Texas where the laws are severe.

Speaker 2 (09:21):
She spelled R, just the letter R.

Speaker 1 (09:24):
And then she says, my granddaughter spent six months in
TX jail for one potsigi And if you possess four
hundred grams, which she says is two cups.

Speaker 3 (09:35):
That's probably funny. I don't know how much a graham
is or four hundred of them.

Speaker 1 (09:40):
She says, you get ninety nine years in prisonment. Ma'am,
I don't think that's true, but okay, for a couple reasons.
Number one, you get a better lawyer would be my advice.
Number two, marijuana is not sold by the cup. I
don't think it ever had. Yeah, I'd like three cups
of marijuana please. Number four, we were talking about legal
pot that you could buy it a spencery. We're with

(10:01):
a context lady kunt. The conversation was about the stores
and strip malls.

Speaker 2 (10:07):
You know what.

Speaker 3 (10:07):
The show may just be a little too uh what
they call hobbrow for some of the people that now,
I'd say, keep listening. Maybe we'll bring them in. Maybe we'll,
you know, teach them how things work and maybe they'll
be a better person.

Speaker 2 (10:23):
For it, and may take a couple of years, but
stick around anyway.

Speaker 1 (10:27):
She goes on to say, now she's twenty seven and
she's a pothead. She has been since age thirteen. Mayo
Clinic research says it changes your brain, and ninety nine
percent of people never get off a weed.

Speaker 2 (10:40):
According to what just yeah her, I would think it's
probably the opposite's true.

Speaker 1 (10:46):
Ninety nine percent of people probably try smoking pot at
some point in their life and then don't ever smoke
it again. And even that number is not true, but
it's probably closer to reality than what she's saying. And
then the next line says, worse than heroin she spells
hero and Steve h E R O I n E.
It's worse than the female lead in a woman in
a fantasy novel. Okay, she's maybe she's right, Maybe marijuana

(11:11):
is worse than whatever female lead she was watching in
a show recently. She says, please please pray for my granddaughter.
Only God could save her, and then she sends me
a picture of a mugshot from a mugshot website. Oh boy,
which makes me think that's not really your granddaughter. Now,
I think you're messing with me.

Speaker 2 (11:29):
Is that the only picture she has of her grandbaby? Exactly?
And you know, I do not know what you're thinking. Kenny.
You could fix.

Speaker 1 (11:36):
Her, No, not, but the the person that wrote the
email mugshot lady there, you could fix her. The mugshot
is clearly a picture of a person that just got
arrested for meth. But the email says that marijuana is
worse than heroin. Haroin spelled wrong. She spelled it like
the female lead in a fantasy out. Yeah, and like
I I think, No, here's what I think. I think

(11:58):
buying a drug that you inject into your arm with
a syringe, And people like, don't people get HIV from
doing hara? No one's ever died from marijuana.

Speaker 3 (12:07):
I've heard that maybe you get HIV from you dirty
needles or whatnot, But is that necessarily as.

Speaker 2 (12:15):
Bad as marijuana HIV? Please?

Speaker 1 (12:18):
People are gonna hate when I'm about to say, especially
if you have young kids in your car. But sometimes
the members of this radio show will do a remote
broadcast from Colorado. Oh no, and while we're in Colorado,
I a guy who is into like going off of
ski jumps.

Speaker 2 (12:32):
I'm just okay at it, right? Would you agree with that?

Speaker 1 (12:35):
But I watch these guys go off the ski jumps
because I'm over there doing it too, And some of
these people are amazing athletes. I'll watch them right before
they go off, They'll take a big tug of weed,
then they'll fly. Then they'll soar down the side of
a mountain amazingly, jump off of a thing, do three
flips in the air and land.

Speaker 3 (12:53):
Now some little little metal things they slid over the
brails and stuff.

Speaker 1 (12:58):
Now I ask you, do you think, yeah, yes, do
you think someone could do that if they were on heroin?

Speaker 2 (13:03):
Rail is what blind people read. No rail, they're rail,
she said. Rail. They're they're grinding down a rail. That's
what you're tired. The pole, the pole.

Speaker 3 (13:11):
So that guy was was getting railed the point now
he was being no, he he did some rail?

Speaker 2 (13:18):
How do they? How do they?

Speaker 3 (13:19):
What do you tell the skiers when you're I'm about
to go do that railin? I think we're getting pretty
far away from the point.

Speaker 1 (13:25):
I'm trying to make sure if marijuana is worse than heroin.
My question is do you think a person could shoot
up heroin and then sore down the side of a
mountain and do three flips and a one eighty spin land.

Speaker 3 (13:37):
Well, they could, but probably not on purpose. No, I'd
like to see it, though, probably die well. While we're
talking about drugs, Lisa emailed it well on Johnson dot com.
She said, I know Rand Paul is your big hero,
but he said that Venezuelan boat full of drug runners
that Trump blew up should have received due process. So

(14:00):
the drug runners may have actually been taken that fentanyl
to the Caribbean. Some Intel said it was maybe going
to America could have been bad Intel, and Rand Paul
says that, you know, due process would have been nice
instead of just blowing them up and killing them all.

Speaker 1 (14:19):
I think what some of these libertarians like Rand Paul
and Thomas Massey, that what they don't like is there's
this old rules called posse commentatus, and what it's supposed
to suggest is that you can't use the military to
do police stuff.

Speaker 2 (14:32):
And I get that.

Speaker 1 (14:33):
And frankly, even though Thomas Massey and Ram Paul don't
always agree with Donald Trump, you know they I don't
really even an issue with them. I don't I don't
care it.

Speaker 3 (14:41):
Doesn't make a bit of sense to try to think
that you need to sit every one of those people
on that boat down for a fair trial. First of all,
you know, the Democrats and the lawyers and the judges
are all going to come out and probably tell them,
not only should they not be punished, they probably get citizenship,
uh for having to endure the process of being arrested.

(15:03):
Do you imagine if we did that on a battlefield,
and uh, say somebody on a boat fired a torpedo
at another boat blew it out of the water, Well,
every sailor on that boat now has to go to trial.

Speaker 2 (15:18):
I don't think so. No, it's uh, it'd be complicated.
But whatever. Ran Paul can disagree with Trump once in
a while. I don't really care.

Speaker 1 (15:24):
I don't really care that much about cot posse commentatives,
to be honest.

Speaker 2 (15:28):
I do like that song.

Speaker 6 (15:29):
Thought Jesus, Jesus.

Speaker 2 (15:44):
No offense, But it sounds like that's a comedy gobbledy gook.
Stay tuned for more. Walton and Johnson
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