Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Yeah, all right.
Speaker 2 (00:01):
Secretary Kennedy says, we are returning the CDC back to
a science institution. And now what you're thinking, what has
it been this whole time? Oh, we'll tell you a
political institution.
Speaker 3 (00:11):
We're completely transparent everything that we do. We're telling people
what we know and what we don't know. And I
was not true of the CDC in the past. It
made assurance is about things that you know, if they
put masks on babies two year old, babies three years
they told us it was science based.
Speaker 2 (00:29):
Do you remember how many videos did we watch of
a mother getting kicked off of a plane because she
didn't mask her baby.
Speaker 1 (00:35):
It's a baby. It's not gonna wear a mask, you know,
and it doesn't need to no it neither did we.
But still, yeah, I know, right, I mean, you know,
who needs to wear a mask. Somebody that's sick. That's it.
There's nobody else that needs to wear a mask.
Speaker 2 (00:49):
Okay, maybe if you're around somebody that's a MUNO colleague,
if you're visiting kids in a cancer ward, you might
put a mask on. These are extreme situations just wearing
a mask and you're healthy and you're around other people
that are seemingly healthy. He didn't make any sense during
the pandemic. It made no difference.
Speaker 1 (01:06):
Nope. And the doctors that didn't want to lie to
you and the ones who just wanted to speak. You know,
common sense would tell you. That regular mask that everybody
was forced to wear it did nothing to stop that
little microscopic virus. It would just shoot right through it,
in and out. It would just come and go as
(01:28):
it please, like shooting a BB gun at a chain
link fence, right through it.
Speaker 2 (01:34):
Nothing that Secretary Kennedy is doing is that controversial. Some
people may have forgotten except his voice. Okay, fine, some
people may have forgotten about this. But back before the pandemic,
in twenty nineteen, Secretary Kennedy toured around the state of
California with Governor Gavin Newsom, explaining to people why vaccine
mandates for children were unnecessary and immoral. A year later,
(01:56):
Gavin Newsom wouldn't pick up the phone if Secretary Kennedy
called to give him a bill.
Speaker 1 (02:00):
Oh no, because you know he's awful. Now he's helping
Trump make America grade again. They're making that DC grade again.
And literally not just the people that the Democrat politicians
in d C are coming out and they saying, yeah, yeah,
the report is, you know, crime is down. People are
going out more than going out to restaurants. That's why
(02:22):
Trump went to a restaurant last night, just to show you.
The number of people in DC who feel safe enough
now to go out after dark and do regular things
has gone way up, like forty percent increase in restaurant
business since Trump brought in the National Guard and you know,
made things. And the Democrat politicians are telling you that
(02:46):
he's literally hitler for doing it. How dare you make
crime go down? Sir?
Speaker 2 (02:53):
And that's just awful and that shouldn't be controversial. It
shouldn't be controversial to make crime. If you're suggesting that
stopping crime is political, that would suggest that there's another
side to it, that there's a group of people that
want more crime.
Speaker 1 (03:05):
They also want to make it racist. Of course, yes,
by saying it's racist to stop crime, yeah, aren't they
kind of alluding to who it is or whom is
doing the crime.
Speaker 2 (03:17):
They said it was racist to call out violence in
black communities in Chicago. They said it was racist to
call out the murder of a white person on a
light rail in Charlotte, this isn't controversial. I will tell
you something that I think is a little controversial, and
I don't quite know how I feel about it yet.
I think we all agree that the pharmaceutical industry has
(03:37):
a grip on the media. Right back during the pandemic,
you couldn't get honest information about the COVID vaccines because
everything you watched on the news was sponsored by Pfizer.
Speaker 1 (03:46):
Yep. Well, now yesterday, Donald Trump and Secretary Kennedy are
issuing an executive order a very historic change in the
way that pharmaceutical advertising is done on TV. And I'm
sure we're all thinking the same thing. Well, I don't
necessarily want a suppress free speech. I never want to
hear this again. I have typew diabetes, but I manage
it well. It's a little kill with a big story
(04:09):
to tell. I take one's daily chardy.
Speaker 2 (04:13):
Oh, is there anything worse than the fat girl and
the Jardian skirl?
Speaker 1 (04:16):
Even if you see just peering it on the radio,
I still see that fat girl dancing around, and they've
got multiple The first fat girl, I don't know if
she was too fat or just too annoying. They replaced
her with somebody just as annoying, just as fat.
Speaker 2 (04:29):
Yeah, they had one Jardian's girl and then they replaced
her with another one. Then they were like, what about
a black gay guy? Now the new Jardiance commercial is
a very feminine, chubby black man, and I just I
don't need it.
Speaker 1 (04:40):
I don't want your Jardians. I don't care. I never
want to see that while I'm eating my breakfast taco again.
Was he one of the Minnesota Vikings cheerleaders? Gotta be?
I think so he did the commercial before he got
the cheerleading job. If it's not the same guy, then
they hang out their friends, you can't tell the difference
they know each other anyway.
Speaker 2 (04:58):
Yesterday Secretary Ketty, he was explaining there are going to
be some changes to how TV advertising for the pharmaceutical
industry works.
Speaker 3 (05:05):
President just sign an executive order that it's an historic
change and the way that a pharmaceutical advertising is done
on television.
Speaker 2 (05:14):
I know everyone hates this, but guys, this is really
important stuff.
Speaker 1 (05:18):
Can we get AI to read what he's saying? Hey,
I can do just met anything now. I mean, it's
putting people out of work, lift and right, why don't
we just let AI read what he said. Okay, it'll
be much easier to listen to.
Speaker 2 (05:34):
The directive seeks to roll back a nineteen ninety seven
policy that allowed drug companies to promote products with abbreviated
risk information in broadcast ads. The memorandum instructs the Department
of Health and Human Services and the FDA Food and
Drug Administration to take appropriate action to ensure that drug
advertising provides fair, balanced, and complete information for the American consumers.
Speaker 1 (05:55):
You know, you're here in a drug ad when they
tell you the side effects, but I would wonder is
that enough? Are they even being honest and not really
Plus they write them down in very small print at
the bottom often times, and they feel like they don't
really have to scream it out loud. I saw that
just yesterday, just had that TV on. It was a
nice you know, background noise and there was some ad
(06:18):
on and it caught my attention because they were going
through the side effects and whatever the ad was for
toenail fungus or something hardly life threatening at all. Sure
than the the side effects included a you know, like dementia,
kidney failure, heart attack and always there's that, oh and
(06:39):
possibly death and possibly death. Would you really trade your
during your toenail fungus for you know, the opportunity to
maybe get dementia much sooner than you might have otherwise.
Speaker 2 (06:50):
I would do anything to get rid of my tonenail fungus,
eve even die. Hey, you know, but I get your
point though. I think as an American, as a liberty
minded American, I think we should able to buy and
sell almost anything with one caveat right, you should have
to adhere to truth and advertising. It never bothered me
that the cigarette companies had to explain on the sign,
(07:11):
you know, don't smoke this. If you're pregnant, this can
cause cancer. Fine, you make the choice, and then you
should be allowed to smoke menthol cigarettes. Weirdly, Joe Biden
doesn't think so. He thinks black people need a nanny state.
They need the government.
Speaker 1 (07:23):
Somebody got to tell them how to be because otherwise
they just don't know what to do.
Speaker 2 (07:26):
And Joe Biden in his administration, they told black people
you can't smoke menthols anymore.
Speaker 1 (07:31):
Oh, and they can't get a driver's license to save
their lives. Well there's that.
Speaker 2 (07:34):
But then Lieutenant Governor Dan Patrick came along and He
told all the people in Texas, you know, these vape pens,
you shouldn't be allowed to buy and sell them in
Texas anymore.
Speaker 1 (07:43):
You could still own one, right.
Speaker 2 (07:45):
But you got to go to New Mexico, Oklahoma, or
Louisiana to buy.
Speaker 1 (07:49):
It, leave the state, and then come back.
Speaker 2 (07:52):
If it's that dangerous, why are you allowed to have
it in the first place. What we're just going to
send more commerce to Louisiana and Oklahoma.
Speaker 1 (07:58):
I don't get the point of that. We already do
it with gambling and probably some other things that they
just don't want you to have here. But they know
you're going to have it. All right.
Speaker 2 (08:08):
You could do it if you want, but give the
money to our neighbors. We don't want it here. It's immoral.
Speaker 1 (08:12):
I'm assuming you're probably not going to be real happy
with the Governor of Texas this whole THCHC regulation thing,
since it sounds like you're not for regulating anything. The
governor said, since the THC regulation and or ban and
all that kind of stuff, it's just not flying, you know,
(08:35):
through the Congress the way it should. It looks like
he will just go ahead and issue in a statewide
executive order so that they can regulate it. Yeah, I
saw this late yesterday, and it's interesting because I published
an op ed yesterday morning about how I thought we
won the fight here.
Speaker 2 (08:54):
But anyway, here's what's going to happen. A timeline for
the executive order isn't certain, but Abbott is expected to
direct the Department of State Health Services to establish rules
governing THC. You gotta be twenty one. I don't think
anyone finds that controversial. You gotta check IDs. I'm okay
with that. A distance requirement from schools. You can't sell
THHD products across the street from a school probably shouldn't
(09:14):
matter since you already got to be twenty one.
Speaker 1 (09:16):
Does anyone care? You know, if you could buy beer
next to a school anyway they say you can't. Doesn't
matter if there's a neody bar down the street from
the school, because again they don't just single came. They
don't put a show on through in the window or
out on the sidewalk. You have to actually go in,
pay money and probably show an ID, just like if
(09:37):
you were gonna buy beer before you get to see anything.
But they still don't want them next to a school.
It's just a good excuse for trying to limit how
many there are.
Speaker 2 (09:47):
Right, And you know, nowadays, I think a lot of
these girls graduate, you know, senior year, turn eighteen, they
go get a job there. Why should we make them
walk farther, That's what I say.
Speaker 1 (09:56):
Good question.
Speaker 2 (09:57):
Anyway, you also have to test the products for THHD,
I said, so. I think that's the part of this
that's the most interesting. They said before that there was
really no way of knowing if this low grade THHC
products were actually low grade or if they were selling
you real powerful stuff because no one was checking it. Right,
I don't actually have a problem with any of this stuff.
But then right here, tucked away at the end, fee
(10:18):
increases for businesses.
Speaker 1 (10:20):
Ah, there it is. That's the real reason for all
of these regulations. They make money.
Speaker 2 (10:27):
Fee increases. What do you mean, do you mean a
tax increase? Yeah, we mean a tax increase. Oh so
the Republicans in Texas are for tax increases.
Speaker 1 (10:34):
Well yeah, because the rest of this stuff didn't really
change anything. Right, ID checking, you already had to check id's.
You already had to be twenty one. They're supposed to
check on regular cigarettes for IDs and stuff. When I
was a kid, I could go to the store and
get mama a pack of smoked wasn't no big deal.
I'd be like nine years old, walk down to the
U totem, give me a couple of packs of the
(10:54):
you know whatever. I think she was into that Benson
and hedges or for a while Mama used to this
smoke like a chimney man. Ever do the pall malls
remember Pall Mall? I remember them. We called them Pale Mail,
Paul Mall's, whatever you like. And then there was just
regular marble room, you know. I will add this, isn't
it interesting?
Speaker 2 (11:13):
Much like whenever a liberal that doesn't know how guns
work tries to legislate firearms. They don't know the difference
between a clip and a magazine. If Dan Patrick isn't
willing to smoke a spliff with me, he shouldn't be
allowed to decide what the laws are on marijuana.
Speaker 1 (11:26):
Are you the governor?
Speaker 2 (11:27):
Yeah, you gotta smoke a joint right now, and then
you could tell us which ones are okay and which
ones aren't.
Speaker 1 (11:32):
I don't know. If I smoke, I feel like my
throat's gonna get all, you know, scratchy and then I'm
gonna start talking like RFK Junior. Oh I want that.
Speaker 2 (11:39):
It's fine. Just takes a vasoline and rub it down
the back of your throat. It makes it smoother. It's
an old Dalton john track works great.
Speaker 1 (11:45):
I heard.
Speaker 4 (11:46):
Yeah, we need to talk about the biggest health epidemic
in American history. The real reason so many Americans are
having all these heart attacks, especially males. The reason big
booty Latinas. I mean, oh my god, have you seen
all these big juicy Latina booties makes me want to
have a freaking heart attack. Every single time you put
(12:08):
on a little salsa and out of nowhere AOC shows
up shaking that big juicy booty.
Speaker 1 (12:13):
Walton and Johnson Radio Network think that it's a fun. Okay.
Speaker 2 (12:19):
So Alvin Kamara, the Saints player facing backlash after refusing
to celebrate Pride Month, calling it a woke movement that's
undeserving of celebration.
Speaker 1 (12:30):
You can get his point, right, I mean, seriously, do
we celebrate heterosexual month? No? No, no.
Speaker 2 (12:39):
In fact, now that you mentioned and I noticed, veterans
they get one day. Veterans get one day a year. Mister, Oh,
that's right. And then if I'm not mistaken, don't they?
Speaker 1 (12:47):
What is it? The the Dad Vats Memorial Day? That's
one day? One day? We get one day for them
President's Day one day? Right. We used to be, you know,
we'd celebrate Lincoln's birthday and Washington's birthday separately, but we
have to group those all together so we could squeeze
somebody else in for a separate holiday. Jesus technically gets
two days, right, But then, really, do we even get
(13:08):
a day off for Easter? Not really, so it's really
one day Christmas. Since Easter, maybe we should get the
Monday or well some people do take the Friday before, Yeah,
the good Friday thing. But really, since it's on a Sunday,
it's not a day off from work.
Speaker 2 (13:22):
But if you're gay, if you're a chicken you like
to scissor, or you're a dude and you like putting
stuff in your buttery or whatever, you get it.
Speaker 1 (13:27):
You get a whole month and the entire nation has
to celebrate it. Football teams, baseball teams, all the all
the athletics, all of the stores, all the internets, they
all have to change to a rainbow thing. It's just ridiculous.
I knock it off. There was a time maybe when
when somebody needed to say, hey, stop being mean to us.
(13:49):
Them days is long gone. Okay, yeah you ever thought of,
you know, just like having gay sex and not making
it everyone else's business.
Speaker 2 (13:56):
I mean, what we're past this right in America? Gays
basically have rights. What is it that you want to
do that we're not letting you do? Talk to my
talk to my kids about gay sex. What is it
you want to do the.
Speaker 1 (14:08):
Same question we'd often asked over the years, what is
it that black people can't do? I mean, we still
hear it to this day that they just don't have
the rights like white people do in this cut What
what is it that any minority in this country can't accomplish?
Can't do if they just now maybe they're not capable
(14:30):
of accomplishing certain things. All of us have our limits,
but the rights and the freedoms are for everybody. All right.
Speaker 2 (14:38):
Well, on that note, we now take you to Aggie
Land College station, where the Texas A and and AND
president has admitted weeks ago to knowing about the transgender
and doctrination at their school. A conservative student was kicked
out of school, kicked out of class, rather because they
didn't want to participate in an early childhood education program
where they taught would be teachers and educators how to
(15:01):
teach little kids as young as three about transgenderism.
Speaker 1 (15:05):
That ain't necessarily it's it's not.
Speaker 2 (15:07):
Education, it's indoctrination anyway, So as you look at what
was taking place here, the student was shocked asked if
he approved of LGBTQ material, and the president snapped back,
there are LGBTQ courses here and we have had them
for a long time.
Speaker 1 (15:22):
This guy needs to go. Well a long time, like
since last year. Well I don't know. That's what they'd say,
was a long time. Well they have, they have gone.
They've been fired. The president of Texas A and M
was fired. No, the instructor of professors or whoever it was,
it was starting all his nonsense, but the professor, but
the president over there was allowing it. Mark Welsh, I,
(15:42):
he's the same guy that fired him.
Speaker 2 (15:44):
Okay, but now he but in this rapport yesterday he
saying that he's excused it and known about it for
a long time. It's you're correct. He fired the English
professor after removing a dean. But still he admitted out loud.
He was allowing this to happen. He only fired him
because of the contents. I mean, I got to think
the president of Texas a and M needs to go.
Or he acknowledged the fact that he was okay with
(16:06):
it right up until it became unpopular.
Speaker 1 (16:08):
Until somebody said, hey, look what that guy's doing. And
if you quit doing it only because somebody found out
you were doing it, and it's not really you know,
good responsibility. Naguac reminds you a lot of the thing
with Leis Lerner earlier, didn't it Yeah, wells Lerner's like, oh,
we don't approve of that. Yeah, but you were approving
of it well sure before, but now that everyone's mad
(16:28):
about it, we don't approve it. Like a bank robber,
Oh he get caught, Oh I just give the money
back then and then you go and you'll know you
don't let that happen. You don't catch a dude, you know,
a drug push, a a guy selling drugs to kids
down at the school, and then tell him, oh, well,
I'll stop doing it. Then if if you don't like it, no,
(16:49):
you did it already. You let it happen, or you
did it, you'll sell and you got to pay that price. Hey,
you want to do sports after this?
Speaker 4 (16:56):
Uh?
Speaker 1 (16:57):
Yeah, baseball is still going on, right all right?
Speaker 5 (16:59):
Hang around, he says, Right, AOC is a big booty latina.
And now that I think about it, Bernie's been a
creep like the entire time. As you know, We've been
on tour from Mam Donnie recently and he's just so
horny like all the time, Like this one time he goes,
why you keep hiding that thing from me? Like excuse me?
(17:21):
And then the other day he's like, I can see
that thing from in front of you, and now clips
are all over Instagram like Wolton M.
Speaker 1 (17:28):
Johnson