Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Good day, and God loves you. It's Friday. Thanks for
tuning in today to the Walton Johnson Radio Network. I
like the part about Friday especially. That's nice more than
the part about your creator loving you. Eh, you know
that's okay too. But it's Friday. Well, God made it Friday.
Thank God, it's Friday. Thank God. It's a standard issue.
Speaker 2 (00:18):
You know.
Speaker 1 (00:19):
I'll give it to you. Okay. How are you doing,
my man? What do you got going on?
Speaker 2 (00:22):
This? Feeling good? I'm looking forward to the weekend. Yeah,
and maybe sleeping in a little bit in the morning.
That'll be fun.
Speaker 1 (00:29):
I am as well. Sorry, I'll be in Waco tomorrow
night for our comedy show. We may give away tickets
today if anybody wants them. Stick around for that. And
we have a lot of exciting news. We have polling
data about the upcoming primaries. Now a common topic of
discussion the liberal media is finding ways to marginalize Donald
Trump's new peace deal. Speaking of we have a winner
(00:52):
for the Nobel Peace Prize. How interesting that they announced
this hours after the Israel Gaza peace deal was reached.
The Nobel Peace Prize was awarded over the past twenty
four hours, so it comes. First of all, better luck
next year, Mark Sanchez. We'll start with that. The winner
(01:13):
is the minority leader of the Venezuelan Opposition Party, Trump
no Venezuela. Trump was the leader of the Venezuelan Party. What. No,
he's not getting the Nobel Peace Prize? Is he shocking?
And did you think he was? No?
Speaker 2 (01:28):
Her name is Maria Corina Machado.
Speaker 1 (01:32):
Apparently she was already gonna get it. They were already
gonna make the announcement just as Trump was negotiating the
peace deal. And I don't know if that's true or not.
I have no idea, but it's almost like a movie,
right likes And then right as the thing you've been
watching the whole movie happen for amazingly, this other thing
coincides with it moments later, right as he reached the
(01:54):
peace deal, they were already gonna make the announcement. I
don't know. I just find that amazing. They call her
the iron Lady. I thought I thought somebody else was
the iron Lady. When't that Margaret Thatcher. We can how
many iron ladies are there? Apparently too, she was the
iron lady of her country, This iron Lady of this country,
So a different country. Does that mean that we can
(02:16):
award somebody the iron lady of this country? Yeah? I
would think so. All right, England's taken Venezuela. That's done.
How many more countries do we got to go? Oh,
we've got a number, yeah, a pretty good number. All right.
Obviously Somalia we give to Ilhan Omar. She's the iron
lady of that. That's a no, she's their congress woman.
Speaker 2 (02:32):
It is interesting that they gave the Peace Prize to
this missus Machado for fighting for democracy in Venezuela. I
thought that was out. I thought socialism was the hot
new thing that every country wanted, right.
Speaker 1 (02:47):
My favorite thing about this is that she is the
person that's fighting against socialism, and the global is that
run the Nobel Peace Prize are giving her an award
for it, while simultaneously telling everybody, Hey, you know who'd
make a great mayor in New York City, Zorhan Mamdani.
Wait a second, Uh yeah, why would you want socialism
(03:09):
in New York City if it's so bad for Venezuela.
Speaker 2 (03:11):
Well, that's the bad socialism. You haven't tried it the
American way yet. This is the good socialism.
Speaker 1 (03:18):
You bet you what if I told you it's all
the same socialism, like, no, no, no, we're selling this differently.
Well so did they. They did the same thing. They said,
now it's gonna be different this time. Will create the utopia.
We will create the people's utopias. Trust them, they know
what they're doing. Sure, I've noticed every time you guys
(03:38):
create a utopia that uh, six to twenty years later,
we're all eating zoo animals and people are the streets
are on fire, and there's poverty everywhere you look. Nobody
wants to live in Venezuela. What is with all these
migrants at our border? Why are they?
Speaker 2 (03:56):
Maybe that's this peace prize, but this is all about
real estate. She got the Peace prize. We should go back.
Let's get back to Venezuela as quick as we can.
It looks like things are on the on the way
up there.
Speaker 1 (04:06):
As you know. Jorgan wanting a freedness is the chair
of the Norwegian Nobel Committee. Everyone else, and he says,
the Nobel Prize of twenty twenty five goes to a
brave and committed champion of peace, to a woman who
keeps the flame of democracy glowing amid a growing darkness.
Alexandria Conzio Cortez, congratulations, No, that's not true. No, it
(04:28):
was the Marina Corrina Machado, Signora Mucato. She does. Let's
see here she's wearing like whenever I see a photo her,
she's got athletic apparel on. I think that's just a coincidence. Oh,
here she is in a suit. Okay, she looked pretty. Okay,
I think somebody is Venezuelan grandma. That's what she looks like. Yeah,
there's no were you were you hoping shit be sexy?
(04:49):
Is that it? Marina waives two supporters during a rally
in Caracas, Venezuela, August seven. I'm reading it in the
post here. Anyway, there was talk of giving it to Trump,
but to be fair, they had less than twenty four
hours to do that, so it's possible he'll get it
next year. But if they gave this thing to Donald Trump,
people would have lost their ever loving minds too.
Speaker 2 (05:09):
They were already losing their minds. Maybe they couldn't take it.
That'd be too much, they would.
Speaker 1 (05:14):
You never know. Anyway, So we'll be talking about Israel today.
Not much else to say about the Nobel Peace Prize.
By the way, Venezuela is still a hellhole of dumpster fire.
It's as okay, I'm glad you're the minority leader of
that country. But it's not like sheep, say Venezuela from anything.
She needs to kick it in a little bit. Yeah,
maybe get a little spicy with them. Government shut down continues,
(05:35):
Russian Ukraine war continues, poverty and death in the streets
of Chicago continues, and meanwhile, the Illinois governor is on
Jimmy Kimmel Live doing sketch comedy or that's what's important,
is that he get the comedy bits recorded. But you
know what they used to say, if a bear farts
in the woods and no one's there to smell it, yeah,
(05:57):
nobody's watching. Jimmy Kimmel returned to TV over a week ago.
It got some ratings, and then immediately that was the
end of that. Right. By the way, today has been
one month since the assassination of Charlie k on the tenth. Yeah, yeah, well, anyway,
today we do remember Charlie Kirk christ in peace to somebody.
Actually maybe posthumously should have deserved the Nobel Peace Prize
(06:21):
more than anyone.
Speaker 2 (06:21):
Maybe I have to. I just want to read you
a short headline as we go into the break. Maybe
you can just dwell on it for a couple of
minutes while whatever's happening on your end happens. Just the
headline is all I needed. This is not a Babylon
beat joke. This is the real news. Pope Leo, you
(06:42):
know your your pope.
Speaker 1 (06:43):
There from Chicago. He likes deep dish, and he likes
the White Sox.
Speaker 2 (06:46):
He has officially condemned economies that marginalize the poor while
the wealthy live in a bubble of luxury. Did he
just condemn the Vatican? It does sound like I think
he condemned his own way of life. He's a gilded home.
Speaker 1 (07:04):
What what does Donald Trump's penthouse apartment in Manhattan and
the Vatican have in common? The decor, it turns out,
bubble of luxury. This will never end. What are you
talking about? You know this week? This week? You don't
know what day it is? Do you tell me?
Speaker 2 (07:21):
It is Friday morning, early Friday morning, Walton and Johnson
Radio Network.
Speaker 1 (07:27):
I don't know what happened. We were watching did we
mute that? We did? We were watching Scott Presler on
Fox News. Yea, and he was educating. Kenny was letting
me know who he was.
Speaker 2 (07:36):
I just see this, uh you know, longhaired guy up
there talking to Fox News in a New Jersey cafe.
Speaker 1 (07:43):
Scott Presler has been on My afternoon show. He's a
he's a very nice person. He's a very unlikely Republican.
He's kind of a well he's a gay guy, and
he's kind of a feminine or you know so. But
he's a hardcore, devoted maga activist who goes out and campaigns.
It'd be a little bit like having mister Ketto out
on the streets of Pennsylvania telling you why you showed
(08:03):
or shouldn't vote for.
Speaker 2 (08:04):
I think the news really enjoys finding the unlikely Trump supporters,
the gays, the blacks, you know, all these people that
were told that he is he's mean to they don't
seem to feel that way.
Speaker 1 (08:18):
You know. And to your point, although black women are
still the exception, black men are no longer an unlikely
Trump supporter or Republican.
Speaker 2 (08:25):
But you're still told that he is a horrible racist
and a misogynist and a sexist and homophobe, all those things.
So they find women, black women, black men, gay men
who don't have a problem with him, and that underscores
his I guess his powers From the presidency.
Speaker 1 (08:48):
There seems to be a real movement of people that
used to be traditionally associated with a live to no
longer want to.
Speaker 2 (08:54):
And I think that's more about the left running them
off than the right maybe attracting them complainly.
Speaker 1 (09:00):
And one group of people you could describe as being
unlikely Republicans would be the gays. Governor Abbott has been
ordered to remove a Montrose rainbow crosswalk or he's ordered Yeah,
he's already in the state now. I want to point
something out here for those that don't know. To our listeners,
Montrose is the gay neighborhood in Houston. Most of our
(09:20):
listeners in Southeast Texas know that.
Speaker 2 (09:22):
Well, it used to be, is it still Well, it's
not solely gay, it's not just you know, only gay.
Speaker 1 (09:28):
He's allowed. It's partially gay, artistic.
Speaker 2 (09:33):
It's an old neighborhood and you know, there's a lot
of people that aren't gay that live there, but I
think they embrace that lifestyle still.
Speaker 1 (09:40):
Sure, but also the idea of the gaborhood in a
big Blue city. It's kind of an antiquated idea. I mean,
thirty or forty years ago, you could be gay in
any neighborhood in Houston. It wasn't like it was one
hundred years ago or eighty years ago. If there was
a gay person in this neighborhood, they wouldn't be in
any danger. Even though this is considered prominently a more
conservative part of town. Right nobody cares anyway. So there's
(10:04):
this gay neighborhood and they had a gay crosswalk and
they painted They claimed they painted the intersection the rainbow
colors because some gay guy got hitten by a car
there once it died, But I don't actually think that
had anything to do with it. And Governor Abbott caught
wind of this, not completely, but largely because of our
listeners people on social media, many of whom were our listeners,
(10:28):
pointing out that we were supposed to get rid of this.
Sean Duffy, the Transportation Secretary, urged all states to comply
with the Safe Roads Initiative. It's a federal guideline that
doesn't actually say anything about gay stuff. It just requires
crosswalks and road markings to remain free of political messaging.
Speaker 2 (10:44):
You're not supposed to paint over or change the signs,
whether the signs are standing up on poles or on
the street itself. And so the general rule is you
don't get to do that. And I also wonder only
the gaze paint intersections. Well, where's the where's the straight
(11:06):
people's intersection? Where's the Charles Charlie Kirk intersection?
Speaker 1 (11:10):
Right? There's not one, Right, it doesn't exist. This is
the they assume me to be the only group of
people that do this.
Speaker 2 (11:14):
It probably is a Black Lives Matter intersection. There's probably
an Antifa intersection, But where's where's my intersection?
Speaker 1 (11:21):
I just want my intersection. Minnesota has the the B
L M Square or whatever they called it, and then
George Floyd Square I forgot how and a mural and
all that in defense of the gaborhood here that did this.
A lot of people weren't complaining that taxpayer money shouldn't
have gone towards paying this tech. Technically it didn't. It
(11:41):
was funded by Houston Pride, which is a nonprofit group
that you get what it is if they fund the
parade or whatever. Sure, but still, what do we need
it for? What? Why? Why does that need to be this, sir,
it's serving no purpose.
Speaker 2 (11:53):
It's not Pride Month. I mean they get a whole
month already and they want to take more. Stay in
your lane. Literally, you do wonder though.
Speaker 1 (12:01):
One of our listeners said that no child should ever
get monkey pocks just from crossing the street. And he's right.
One of our listeners said that Carnificus Maximus, Yeah, he
was at the comedy show. He's a cool guy on it.
That's funny, Carnifex Maximus, I said it right, okay.
Speaker 2 (12:16):
In other news, on the other side of the world,
where peace reigns throughout the Middle East, now it has
come to some people's attention that they are still fighting
on the ground while the peace is being celebrated. The
Israeli Defense has carried out an air strike in Gaza
City as the Cabinet meets to approve the ceasefire deal.
(12:39):
They hit a hamas Sell, they say, which was posing
a threat to troops. Four Palestinians killed, forty trapped under rubble.
But you know it's peace time, Yeah, it's peacetime. Feels
like it, right, I feel like, well until they actually vote,
and you know, after the civil war ended here slaves
(13:02):
were free if you got around to letting them know.
You know, it takes a little while to get the
news out.
Speaker 1 (13:09):
So I've read into this before, like, why is it
that in America there's no native American terrorism? Why is
it that you know, what happened to the IRA in
Ireland and you know, and why does it continue in Israel?
The minority group or whatever that was once occupying it
that no longer is. And the short answer is a
lot of researchers think that after two generations, the uprising
(13:32):
of the of the old culture generally tends to go away.
So in the case of Israel and Palestine, you do
wonder in another fifty years or so, once you've passed
one hundred years of Israel existing, right, because I've been
there since what the fifties, the forties? When did Israel
really pop up? Late forties? What am I google here?
You are you gonna pick my Google brain? I don't know.
(13:52):
It was Phil I should know, but I don't. Post
World War two is the short answer? Right, once we
get I mean, okay, so what is it in another
twenty five years here this should finally wind down?
Speaker 2 (14:02):
By sure, sure, sure, they've been saying that for what
two thousand years now.
Speaker 1 (14:05):
Three and then president President Baron Trump will be able
to celebrate that. I like that. Yeah, I'm ready for
the weekend. It's gonna be a banging party guy. There's
a lot of drinking involved. I'm a party funny Bunny
Bunny Walton and Johnson Radio Network