Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:02):
Right, when did we all get this dump? Almost only
counts in horseshoes, hand grenades, and nuclear warfare. I don't
see anybody, so it doesn't count. I'm the chef. I
want to hear one thing, Yes, chef, Come on, man,
here's your brain The Why I'm Angry podcast start now?
(02:28):
Oh finally here all right, we are live here tonight.
It is the ym Angry Podcast. I am the chef
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(05:29):
need to be able to upgrade cameras, upgrade different things
without you know, without everything coming out of our pocket.
We can also get in get some some more people
on who can interact and things like that. I was
actually out at one of our local fairs this week
(05:51):
and was talking to one of the guys in Ohio
here that he is running for the state legislature, and uh,
you know, just had a good conversation with him and
uh there we go, got that set up, and so
(06:13):
just had a good conversation with him and talked about
you know what what he what his thoughts were, what
is what his opinions are. His name is Jonathan Newman,
and you know, I I think that you know, his
his ideas are good. If you go to elect Jonathan
(06:35):
Newman dot com. That is uh, I think it's dot com.
I just said, yep, dot com. That's where you'll get
the information about him. Again, if if you take just
my endorsement, then that's just that's just silly. So go
on elect Jonathanneuman dot com. Get some information about him
(07:00):
and get get his get his information and just you know,
search it out, figure it out for yourself. I like
on his on his thing or on his advertisement deal
he gives he you know, he kind of he kind
of lays it out. He once to say he's a
courageous defender of and then he lists it out. In
(07:23):
the unborn even through issues, even though Issue one pass,
he'll never stop working to protect the unborn, and in
abortion never child safety, girls sports, a boy must not
be allowed to take a girl's place on girls teams
and threaten their their safety on an uneven playing field.
(07:47):
And we've talked about this a little bit and and
and again. It was highlighted in the Olympics where you know,
a boxer a a a female boxer, ish you know it,
and and it's one of those gray areas that you've
got to we've got to figure out. But you know,
(08:09):
she was allowed to and and I use that as
as as I can, but it is a situation where
you know, I've heard it a little little here and
there that you know, obviously they tried to make and
make it a trans deal. And then I heard that
you know, maybe has that hermaphroditism, that she has both
(08:38):
genitalia when she's born or he's born or whatever, and
that they you know, decide which way they're going to
go with that. And girl is easier genitalia wise to
to work to fix because there's no there's no real
(09:01):
like prosthetics. It's it's more just uh, you know, plastic
surgery type thing, you know, fixing it up to make it,
you know, the way it's supposed to be. But that
being said, this this person had it has a Y
chromosome which gets them into a level of hormones uh,
(09:24):
you know hg H human growth hormone, home hormones that
you know just isn't isn't matched by any kind of woman.
And and we've seen it over and over again. You know,
Venus and Serena Williams playing the two hundredth you know,
best tennis player in the world, two hundred and something
(09:47):
and getting and getting and getting wiped out like they
were just nobody's And you know, the US women's national
team playing Wrexham, who is a third ranked, third rate
team at the moment, moving up, moving nothing, no shade,
but they are in the you know, second or third
(10:14):
tier of the English Premier League at the time and
and then and they got beat like six or seven
or I don't even remember. The score was pretty high.
And you know, so so when it when it comes
to women playing men biologically in sports, it it's just
(10:42):
not fair. And that's what it is is it's more
than you know, more than caring about the person who
you know, whether they've you know, you know, whether it's
it's more about more about the being fair in the sport,
then it is caring about how that person is living
(11:04):
their life. You know, I don't care. Like, here's the deal.
If you if you want to be a lesbian, you
want to be whoever you want to be, that's fine.
You know I love you and uh you know all
of that. You know my stance as a Christian on it,
and uh, you know we can be friends. And as
(11:25):
long as you're not shoving it down my throat, I
don't care. You know, I'm not going to push Christianity
down your throat because that's not how you make friends
and influence people. That's not how you show got the gospel.
The Gospel is shown by having by living a life
(11:47):
that is an example of Christ. And so you know
not that you know not that I support it not
that or anything like that where you know, I'm not
going to you know, I'm not gonna support you by
going to your wedding and and things like that, but
(12:07):
you know I will support you in in in being
a human being and being a you know, being part
of your life. But if you you know, you want
to step in the pulpit and preach, that's I'm not supporting.
I'm not supporting that because you're not living a sanctified
or a lifestyle that exemplifies Christ. So so there's there's
(12:32):
the soapbox on that. But you know it, it is
it is a fairness issue. I mean, this this this person,
you know, club this girl from Japan in the face
had ten seconds into the fight and she just she
just crumpled. And this is one of you know, this
is this is this Japanese lady is one of one
of the top fifty fighters in the world in in
(12:54):
her weight class, I'm sure, and you know, so it's just,
you know, it's just one of those deals. It's a
fairness issue. You know, there's a reason that you know,
trans women are winning women's sports, are you know, if
(13:17):
they weren't, if they weren't Number one all the time.
Then we wouldn't talk about it. It wouldn't be a it
wouldn't be a thing. But because we I mean, because
they are, it is a thing. You know, Is it fair?
You know, it's it's like you know, it's like having
(13:39):
it's like taking steroids. Is that fair? You know, the
guys that took steroids in baseball they hit fifty to
seventy some home runs, eighty home runs, where your standard
everyday guy would hit forty and be a king. I
(14:02):
mean he was. That was great and that was part
of the great ness of being of being a baseball
player at that time, that if you could do ten
or twelve great years at around forty, you'd hit five
hundred home runs. And that's why you would go to
(14:23):
the Hall of Fame? Is you I mean you just
that was your That was a level to get to.
At one time. Up into the nineties, there had only
been like a half a dozen people hit five hundred
home runs. And you go past that. You know, baseball
is trying to save itself from the cocaine era and
(14:44):
all of that kind of stuff, and so you know,
they thought, well we'll let a few a few slide
and let a few guys get you know, fifty home
runs or sixty home run, you know, get close to
the record or break the record, and so you know,
it's that's what it is is. It's it's it's making
(15:07):
people who are who are normal, good people who are good,
great people who are great. It's making them gods. It's
making them Hall of Famers. It's making them the bigger,
bigger and better than life. And so so that's that's
just that's kind of the the ADHD rabbit trail. You know,
(15:32):
my wife went on a rabbit trail the other day
in our Bible study and she said, you know, and
I can't even remember what the what the what it
was about, but it was literally like she said, well,
isn't it cool how God does blah blah blah, And
she goes, that's my bunny trail. And I'm like, that
(15:52):
didn't seem like that seemed like more of a lookout
stop off, you know, like like this is the this
is the turn out for you know, if you look
out ridge or something where you just you know, you
just pull off this side of the road and park
and then and that's you know, that's the trail. It
didn't seem like much of a bunny trail to me.
(16:13):
But that's that's you know. On the other things, uh
Second Amendment, the right for people to keep in bear
arms should not be infringed. I will oppose the attempt
to do so. Growing business is gonna He will not
stop fighting for endless regulation of big government out overreach
(16:35):
so that Ohio businesses can do what they do best.
He stands for low taxes, out of control, spending is checked,
and the family, free family flourishes when more money stays
in their pocket. Farm families. And this is a big
one that we've been we've been fighting against as a government,
(17:00):
as a country, we've been fighting against the farm family,
farm life. And I even mentioned, you know, the the
guys with the the video social media set up out
in Idaho that started the Rebel Farmer's co Op and
so they you know, they talked about, you know, they
(17:22):
that the Biden administration wanted them to shut down their
watering operation which would kill their farm. And they've talked
about in Kansas, one of one of our We've got
family in Kansas that has giant corn fields and stuff
like that, and they haven't had they haven't had rain
(17:42):
for they had pretty much drought all summer and with
that they they don't have any corn. And so you know,
with the new regulations and things like that, they can't
water as much use as much water, and they you know,
they've lost their crop. And so what what happens there
(18:06):
is either you know, their farm go you know, could
has the possibility to go under, or the government comes
in and subsidizes them. And we say, oh, great job
government for for keeping farms going. But if the government
hadn't put regulations in place that killed the farm, they
(18:28):
wouldn't have to you know, put put they wouldn't have
to support that farm. So so I think it. I
think if if more more people, more politicians, more more
of us stood up and uh and really and really
showed that, uh, you know, what we believe in, then
(18:53):
we've been in a lot better place. And he's also
a defender of first responders, ensuring that people who respond
have the support and the resources that they need. And
so you know, and and and so you know, I
think all of that's that's good stuff. Get on. Make
sure that you know that he you know, his values,
(19:15):
his things, you know, line up with yours. But I
commend him for doing what I've been telling you guys
to do. Stand up, say something, do something. You know,
I'm not saying if you see something, say something. I'm
saying now that you see something, because we're all woke up.
(19:36):
We all see the writing on the wall. We all
see the violence inherent in the system. We all see
the control, the uh, the power that they've grabbed or
or that's been grabbed in the system. And with that,
you know, we need people to stand up and educate themselves,
(20:03):
get out there and do things. You know. That's why
why we ask for support, is we we try to
be a voice in the darkness. We try to be
a voice, you know, just lifting things, lifting it up
and getting you out there and getting you educated. But
(20:24):
we can't, you know, we can't be the only education
and we can't be the only people. If I'm the
only one out here shouting, you know, I'm just a
crazy bear shouting in the woods. And you know, there's
no no consequence or anything like that. But if you know,
(20:44):
a hundred of you guys start shouting the same thing
I'm shouting, we become a movement. We become you know,
we become a group of like minded individuals trying to
push the agenda of trying to push you know, what
we believe out there, you're trying to make the world
(21:05):
a better place on that. So that's why I keep
telling you guys, get out there, get get your get
your stuff in order, and uh, you know, make the
make the word, make the world different, make a make
a make a difference out there. And uh you know
with that, you know you you then you then show
(21:31):
you You then exemplify, like I was just saying, you
then exemplify the traits that you want to be. So
if you're a Christian, you exemplify Christianity. If if you're not,
and you're you're you're on something else. You know, you're
you're exemplifying you know, something else. But you know, everybody
(21:55):
believes something. And it was, it was it was interesting.
I didn't I'd never I had thought about it, but
it just came back up. I guess our pastors said
this week, you know there there are no good people,
and it and it hit me. You know, he's right,
(22:17):
and yes, there are people who are trying to do good,
and there are are people who have have lived a
life of servitude. But in the grand scheme of things.
You know, there are no people who are good enough
(22:37):
to get to Heaven on their own, so that means
there are no good people. You know, everybody has has
things that they fall short on, and so without Christ,
no one, no one makes it. You know, this guy,
Jonathan Newman's a pastor for twenty five years. It was
(22:57):
funny because when I met him, he actually, uh, we said,
we just started chatting a little bit. We talked about,
you know, I got a podcast. Well after we're chatted
with him a little bit and saw what he you know,
kind of what he was believing in. I kind of said,
you know, well we'll put it out there for people
to get on and check out. And you know, then
(23:18):
we you know, we got you know, said he we
got a podcast and all of that, and and he goes, oh,
a couple of my buddies, you know, a couple of
guys on my church have a podcast youth pastor and stuff.
And I, you know, I said, you know, I, you know,
I'm also a youth pastor. And he goes, oh, yeah,
what church is it? And we said, you know, this
is Elevation Point Church. And he goes, ah, we're coinos right,
(23:39):
it right, next to the door, right next door in
the same building. So you know, our churches actually you know,
I have a wall that separated each other. But that's
but that's it, and it's not because and this is
and this is the thing. A lot of a lot
of churches are are separated because they they believe that
(24:00):
they're there, you know, they're different or better than other churches.
And honestly, we we we don't separate yourselves from that
church because we're different, because we're better. We we just
we are. We We have a message for some some
people that maybe that church doesn't have. We have a
(24:20):
unique message. And everybody has a unique message because we
all made as individuals, we're all made differently. So so yeah,
so it was it was an interesting meeting that you know,
we we I had I had seen him in passing
and we had you know, we had talked to him
here and there about you know, needing parking lot space
(24:44):
or or things like that, and uh so we you know,
we had done done some of the business talking, but
we had never really talked as you know, people back
and forth about you know, likes and differences and things
like that, not saying that our likes and differences. You know,
we had argument, you know, we were you know, we
(25:05):
were vindictive or anything to him, but just you know
that we just had never talked about those kind of things.
So so another thing, just as I was preparing, I
got an Ohio or I got a uh a survey,
a political survey, and it came to in my text
(25:27):
to political survey. So I thought that would be an
interesting thing too. This is this is things, this is
it's called an Ohio opinion survey, but uh it's it's
supposed to be about issues that Ohioan's face. So first
question was, we are We're conducting a brief survey about
(25:51):
political issues in Ohio, asking if I like like and
they would like my opinion. My responses are anonymous, blah
blah blah. And they're not selling anything to me, so
at least they let me know that, you know, they're
not going to whatever. So just the normal, you know,
(26:16):
how my age, you know, my my gender, which I
always put is none of their boo. No, I'm just joking.
It's you know, all right. So now thinking about the
upcoming elections, and I kind of talked to you guys
about you know, I did this couple couple of weeks
back with the whole who do you think you know?
(26:36):
Who would you vote for? Are you set on your
voting and stuff like that? So I thought this was
would be interesting to actually do it while we were
going through here. So, now thinking about coming upcoming election
in November twenty twenty four, which method of voting are
you most likely to choose? Vote in person at your
(26:56):
polling on election day, vote by mail, mailing in your ballot,
absentee ballot, or vote early by casting your ballot in
person at your county's early voting location. So I'm I'm
an old school guy. I want to vote in person
at my polling place on election day. I know that
(27:20):
a lot of people are are are starting to push
just voting ahead of time, voting early, get those votes
in because you don't know what could happen on election day,
blah blah blah. But you know, I heck, if I
(27:40):
had COVID and it was election day, I'm walking in
and and I'm I'm voting still. You know, if you
if you're a voting person, you know, if you're one
of the pole workers, I'll wear a mask for you,
just keep you, keep you safe or safer or if
(28:02):
you whatever you believe keep you not as safe or
not you know, not care about you one bit because
I'm out with COVID. But uh, you know, I will
go go out and vote no matter what, you know,
broken leg leg missing, you know, sorry, honesty, I'm going
(28:24):
out to vote. This is uh, this one is a
super important one. All elections are important because and this
is and this and like like with the Jonathan Newman one,
you know, it's a state election. But Jenna pal is
who he's who he's trying to replace. And Jenna Pal
has been a stick in the side, not even just
(28:46):
a thorn, a stick in the side of Democrats trying
to push an agenda. And they've they've done a good job,
even with a Republican governor and and things like that.
They have really really been kind of kind of you know,
(29:06):
they've gotten some things done that shouldn't have gotten done.
And so yeah, so you know, just just that kind
of thing where you know, getting out there, getting it
started at a low level. The more that we can
(29:27):
control at low levels, the better things go, the higher
the more control we got. And like I said, like
I said about the no labels, if no if this
guy could come in as a no labels and you know,
garner some support, get some get some money out there.
(29:47):
They could they could probably get get this seat with
you know, ten fifteen dollars at most, and you know
that would be that would be where you would start
if you were starting a third party. And and honestly,
we probably don't need that third party with with this,
(30:08):
but if if we were to look at vulnerable seats
where they continue to run the same old crony rhino Republican,
then you know, that would that would be where you know,
where you would where you would start to insert yourself,
you know, find somebody, you know, like I mean, I
(30:29):
can't believe still that John Fetterman won over doctor Oz
because he has such a high profile, you know, with
some money and some following, you know, you would think
that you know, he would be able to get himself elected.
(30:49):
But you know, at the same time they got the
voting machines, they got the voting machines set up, so
we don't know. I did see an article about each
(31:11):
of the election campaigns being hacked and they said they
thought it was Iran, which is interesting that it's Iran
not Russia or something like that where they normally push Russia.
I'm sure that they're pushing Iran because they're Iran has
(31:32):
been attacking, whether it's hesblah or or you know, Iran
has been attacking our ships out at sea pretty pretty
pretty heavily over the last so many months, six months
or so. They're also attacking attacking us in the fact,
(31:55):
we've got sixty seven or so little bases all over
the Middle East, and they're getting attacked. And some of
them are just you know, they're just sitting ducks. And
some of them are are getting attacked as you know,
just heavily fortified attacks. So that's that's also been an
(32:18):
issue as of late. They're being they're just being these attacks.
So all right, so think again about the general election
in November. Please tell me which statement aligns with your
view regarding absentee and early in person voting. I don't
know if I know enough about the process for voting
(32:40):
absentee by mail or casting my ballot early in person
to change how I vote it. It's easy. They send
you out, you know, for an absentee, they send you
out a it's not a postcard, but a you know,
a letter like an envelope with all of the voting
(33:02):
ballots to cast, and you just literally just you know,
squiggle it in with a pencil like you did at
the voting place, and then you put it back in
the self addressed envelope that they send you and send
it out. I don't even think you have to put
a stamp on it, or at least at one point
(33:23):
you didn't have to put a stamp on it. You
do have to fill out like your name and stuff,
but you didn't have to send an idea or anything.
There is some kind of like suppose like Social Security
thing to get the package sent out to you, but
(33:46):
you know that kind of thing, so it's not that
I don't know about it. Casting your ballot early, you
just go down to the county seat, walk in, and
they give you basically what you get for voting on
(34:06):
day day of and hand it back to him. So
says an option two would be, I'd be interested in
casting in my ballot early, either absentee or in person.
I only or mostly vote early in person, I only
or mostly vote absent tee. I don't trust absentee voting
(34:26):
by mail. I only vote on election day or mostly
vote on election day, So I'm gonna put that I
only or most I have. I have voted absent te
one time because I was in college. And I also
(34:47):
think we voted absentee the year I lived in Atlanta,
because when we moved it was early in the in
the summer or late in the summer, and then the
election was in November, and I don't think we got
our stuff around in time to go to a place
and vote. So, all right, now we read a list
(35:13):
of political figures in the state. After you read each one,
please indicate if you have a favorable or unfavorable impression
of that individual. If you read one that you have
never heard of, just indicate or just indicate and move
on the next question. Sweet deal. All right, do you
(35:35):
have an unfavorable or favorable opinion of Bernie Moreno? So
I like Bernie Moreno. As you know, he's a businessman.
He's built himself up. Everybody's got their skeletons in the closet.
His don't seem terrible. He's made some questionable vote, questionable
(35:57):
votes at certain times when he's you know, or decisions,
I guess, But I have a favorable, you know, opinion
of him. I do think that he's in trouble going
against shared Brown. I do think that when it comes
(36:25):
down to it, you know, I was hoping there was
another there was another person on the list who's been
I think as attorney general or one of one or
the other. And I was hoping that he would be
chosen because I felt like he had a higher profile.
(36:45):
And at this point, you can't buy profile. You know,
if if it weren't for if it weren't for Trump,
you would probably see DeSantis. And he has a huge
high profile. He just isn't a billionaire. He doesn't have
he didn't have that, you know. But I think that
(37:10):
when the next election comes along, and his military training
and stuff like that, you can, you know, he can
he can lean on that and that he's been there,
that he's done this, that he knows how to lead people.
He's led Florida, all of that stuff. He just has
to keep in the media. And honestly, I think that's
(37:32):
kind of why jd. Vance was chosen, is because he's
just going to keep in the media. You know, he's
just going to keep doing interviews. He's done interviews, He's
he does them. You know, he's done them for the
book that he wrote. He does them for being a
(37:53):
congress person, and uh, you know, I think that that's
you know, he he's going to keep keep things going.
Do you have a do you have an unfavorable or
favorable opinion of Mike Twine. I will never vote for
the Mike Dwine again, with how he he worked out COVID. Yeah,
(38:24):
I just I don't. I just don't. I don't trust him.
I don't like him. I don't think he's even a
full on Republican. And he may be the Republican the
new Republican Party, but now I'm out on him. I'm done,
which is fine because I think he's I don't know.
I think this is his last run anyway, and you
know as Ohio governor, but if he ran in my
(38:46):
area as a Senator, I would figure out someone else
to vote for. It would be tough because you know,
it would probably be against shared Brown, which I think
is going to end up unfortunately beating uh Bernie Moreno.
I hope he doesn't. But you know, so excuse me. So,
(39:24):
you know, I just his handling of COVID and shutting
down Ohio and stuff. If I had a business at
that time, we would have been suing. I didn't. I
was considered a essential worker, I guess, and so we
(39:50):
worked straight through COVID. Uh. But just you know, it
just it's just it's what what he said was lies,
and how he how he's dealt with, you know, the
adversity in Ohio when when things went down, when he
when he was working on things, it's it's been lies.
(40:13):
I mean it's been it's been an issue after issue
that he didn't he didn't pay, he didn't work it
out the right That's why he didn't work it out
the right way. And with that being said, like there
we go and uh, in that it was like the train,
(40:38):
the train crash. You know, they're saying, oh, the water
is gonna be is it's fine. We burnt the thing.
You just put chemicals into the ground. You just burnt
chemicals into you know, you want to talk about the
green new Deal or the green you know, being a
green advocate or whatever or working on that kind of stuff,
(40:59):
and you know, we burnt the chemicals off of that,
off that train, and uh, you know, we let them
seep into the ground whatever was left and and things
like that in the in the Ohio River, watershed, Like
I don't. I'm not sure if you realize this, but
the Hio River runs all the way to the Mississippi
(41:21):
from Pittsburgh from the area that you basically burnt off.
And I mean that's close to a thousand miles. I
mean that's a couple maybe maybe six seven hundred miles.
If it's not a thousand miles, it's it's pretty close.
And all of that feeds different tributaries all the way down,
(41:46):
you know. So, and then it feeds into the Mississippi,
which feeds down to the Ocean, to the Gulf of Mexico,
sorry not the Ocean, then from the Golf of Mexico
into the ocean. But so I think, you know, that's
(42:10):
that's my issues there with him. He just you know,
I don't. I just don't think he do. He dealt
with things right. And when he did that, he's like, well, yeah,
if I live down there, I drink the water and
blah blah. Sure, then come on down and hang out
for a month and drink the water. But you you know, again,
you can't put your money where your mouth is. And
(42:37):
so with that, oh my goodness, cameras are killing me tonight.
So there we go green screen. Got to see the
green screen for a second if you were on the
live broadcast. So anyhow, So, yes, Mike the wine, although
(43:01):
he is a Republican, this is where I cut ties
with it. This is why I say I'm not always
a Republican. I don't always vote with the Republican, just
most of the time. In a two party system, they're
the lesser of two evils, two evils. So you know
(43:21):
we go from there, shared Brown unfavorable. I mean, he
talks crazy out of out of both sides of his mouth,
which is how you talk on a regular basis. But
you know it's just on one hand he'll say, oh,
the border is an issue, and then the next time
he says, look, we fixed the border. So you know,
(43:46):
you can't, you can't. You can't follow everything he says
because he's just trying to get it reelected. He's always
just trying to get reelected. He's not getting anything done.
He's not he's not putting in real consequential votes. He's
not adding new legislation that can actually do anything. He's
(44:07):
not taking away old legislation that you know, prohibits things. Uh, oh,
you know, prohibits trade or or businesses, or prohibits his
his people from getting from being free or from doing
things in in in our country. But he just he
(44:31):
just he's just there and he's not you know, he's
he's telling you a story that you want to hear
so that you reelect him. And most of the time
that story is not true. So do I have a
favorable or unfavorable opinion of Donald Trump? And this is
(44:55):
funny because they put very favorable, somewhat for favorable at
the top on Shared Brown it was very unfavorable, somewhat
unfavorable at the top, And so it's like, are you
are you leading me to do you know, to do something?
Is this? So with this, I'm gonna put it somewhat favorable.
(45:16):
I like Donald Trump as a an executive branch member.
Do I love him so much that I would follow
him into a fire? I don't know. Depends on who's
in the fire, what we're doing, you know type thing.
It's not just a blind follow here. Do I like
(45:42):
him because he's a Republican? No, he is a new
era a pro Republican, more of a centralist, more of
a populist. And I'm not as much you know, a populist.
I want, I want the people to to have representation
and rule, but I want to stay close to that
constitution because the constitution is there to hold back the government,
(46:08):
and the bigger and bigger we get in the government,
those five hundred people in Congress, they're ruling things. They're
they're in charge, and you know, the only thing that
keeps them bound is that it's five hundred people. And
(46:29):
we've got some people in there that are still good people.
So so, you know, I really like him. I think
I think he's a good executive leader because he does
he does fight for America, and he is you know,
(46:52):
and from what I have seen since he's been shot,
you know, I've seen a little more humble. I haven't
seen him over the last week or two here, but
I think he does he is making he's making conscious
decisions that are supposed to be good for the country. JD. Vance,
I think was a conscious decision. He probably could have
(47:13):
gotten Ramaswami or man that the one woman. He could
have gotten one of those people to run as his
running mate and probably gotten a more favorable uh h
position on it. But I think at the same time,
(47:38):
you know, Biden was not out yet, and I don't
know that he knew he needed it. So I mean
I leaned towards towards very favorable. Again, if he were
if his personality was more of just a gracious, humble guy,
(48:03):
and he just you know, but some of his bragging,
extra bragging and stuff like that, or extra extra personality
just you know, it's it's cool. It's gotten him where
he needs to be. It's gotten him where he is.
It's probably for him as the president. It's probably good
(48:23):
because it will help disarm or or hold back people
who are not you know, who would not normally who
would normally just run over a lesser personality. But there's that.
So do you have a unfavorable or favorable opinion of
(48:47):
Kamala Harris? And this is one of that's the very
unfavorable is at the top again and so obviously I
hit very unfavorable. I you know, I just I can't
listen to her. She doesn't say anything with any substance.
Anything she does say, twenty minutes later, she's going to
(49:10):
say the opposite, and thirty minutes later she's going to
stay the opposite. So okay, So that's all the people.
So now thinking about the issues specifically impacting the state.
Which of the following do you consider the most important
issue facing the state of Ohio. Improving infrastructure and roads,
(49:32):
Addressing social issues like religion or abortion. Abortion has now
become a social issue. Protecting the Second Amendment, combating the
OPIOORID crisis drugs, improving homelessness with medicaid, Reforming social security medicare,
(49:54):
Providing school choice with parents' rights, Approving or improving crime,
increasing safety, improving education, political leadership and integrity, decrease, decrease
government gridlock and corruption, energy independence, secure the border, immigration,
(50:17):
protecting the climate and environment, reducing work or reducing wokeism
and cancel culture prove improving health care access, decreasing the
national debt and deficit, decreasing taxes, reducing inflation, strengthening the economy,
(50:39):
and protecting jobs where I don't know or refuse. So
this is an interesting question because they want you to
they want you to put one most important issue and
where you know, obviously it's it's nice to drive on
(51:00):
good roads and stuff like that. And improving the infrastructure
is something that I've actually said that you know, we
as a country, our infrastructure lacks pretty heavily because we
don't have you know, the internet set up. We don't
(51:21):
improve we're not improving anything like roads or transportation across
the country. We are one of the largest countries in
you know, in size in the world. Now, I do
know China is larger, Russia can be you know, post miles.
(51:45):
But when you start to talk about it, you know, Russia, China,
you know, Australia fits somewhere around the same size. And
that's a full continent. And so when it when when
you know, you start talking about that, Yes, we're one
of the larger countries, but we we fall behind other
(52:10):
countries like Korea, England, you know, all of those countries
when it comes to infrastructure, like you know, having you know,
high speed data, having you know different you know, the
trains and things like that that can get across country quickly.
(52:32):
You know, if we if we had a train system
that went from you know, a high speed train system
that went from one side of the country to the other,
it could probably do the whole well, I mean, you
could do the whole country in about fifteen hours. You know,
(52:53):
if we had the the the bullet trains that run
about one hundred one hundred and twenty miles an hour,
and they we're just a straight shot from San Francisco
to d C or San Francisco or d C to
you know, San Diego. You know, you could, you could,
(53:16):
you could cut the time down to fifteen twenty hours
where right now across you know, to drive even from
like our area to you know, Phoenix or so, he's
like a twenty three hour drive and so cutting five
or six hours seems like oh, but at that same time,
(53:38):
you're setting them up on a train system so they
can sleep when they need to, so people can you know,
people aren't driving, and there's you know, it would be
a travel setup. I know we don't respect trains in
our in our in our country, but it is a
(53:59):
way to pull resources. You wouldn't you know, you wouldn't
have you know, a bunch of people driving, and maybe
we would never have a bunch of people driving. But
this also opens the country up to people who haven't
(54:19):
who wouldn't normally travel or wouldn't be able to travel.
It also helps people who can't fly, who are not
able to do you know, flights and stuff like that
because of health issues. It opens the the you know,
the us up and travel up to to elderly people
(54:43):
who wouldn't normally get on an airplane or wouldn't normally
get you know, do the travel like that, and so
you know that kind of that kind of thing opens
that up. But I don't think again, I don't think
this is one of this is one of the biggest
(55:04):
things that the country or even people in my state
are facing right now. I do think that, you know,
abortion is a giant issue, and I do think that
that is you know, being a addressing as addressed as
a social issue like religion or an abortion. I think
(55:24):
those are two major issues. I don't know if they
one hundred percent go hand in hand, but I know
that as a Christian, you know, I obviously don't you know,
support abortion. I don't also judge a person for having
an abortion. Again, is kind of like, you know, your
(55:46):
sins are your sins, and and there is a day
of judgment and those things will be will be adjudicated
by by God someday and I have no authority to
do that. So that's uh, you know again, that's that's
(56:09):
that's not that's that's not for me. But but being
being the other side of you know, the actual act
of doing having an abortion. If it were illegal, obviously
less people would get it because ninety seven percent of
people get an abortion because the pregnancy is inconvenient for
(56:35):
their life. Now, I'm not saying that it's not better
for that person to not have a child, but that's
part of it being inconvenient. So if if you know,
(56:56):
if I know you, you know me, if I know
you know, and I'm saying this, I'm not I'm not
I'm not condemning anybody, but I'm saying that if you
think about it, the root of it is inconvenience. It's
not the right time in your life. You don't have
the income to be able to, you know, take care
of a child. You don't have you know, the resources,
(57:18):
you don't have the mental capacity, you know, things of
that nature. You're not, you're not married, you're not, you know,
you're whatever. It just you know, any of those quite
any of those things. If that's the case, then you
know those are still inconveniences in your life. You know. Obviously,
(57:39):
if you're raped and you have an abortion, you know,
I still believe that, you know, any any child that
is is conceived, that soul that has been created, is
is a miracle and that you know, any person who's made, built,
(58:05):
you know, conceived and and created is there's no mistakes.
I do. I think that, and I'm sure that this
will be met with some resistance, but I I you know,
I think that there is some mindsets that the devil
(58:25):
will play on that will hold you back. So if
you can't get to past that mindset, maybe it's best
for you. But at the same time, the mindset is
(58:48):
it's holding you back. You know, the devil wants to
get in there, create a little bit of doubt and uh,
you know, then you then you you do what you
do and if you've you know, if you've done that
and and you feel condemned for doing that, no condemnation
(59:10):
the you know, the devil will try to hold you
back by it, but uh, you know, get yourself out
out of it, and uh, you know, get get yourself
in the right mindset that you know there there there
aren't There aren't sins that they that that Jesus didn't
die on the cross for some as you're not blaspheming
(59:34):
the whole the holy ghosts or or the or God,
You're you're you're redeemable, and I don't know that you
can put God in a box enough to say, even
if you did those other things that aren't really aren't
(59:56):
supposed to be redeemable, that you come with a trite
heart and repentance, that God doesn't say, Okay, I still
love you as my creation. I still love you. And
so you know, I don't I don't know until the
(01:00:16):
the day of judgment on your life or the last
day of your life that you have that you don't
have the time, and you probably ought to be using
it because that time isn't isn't promised to anybody. So
(01:00:39):
so again it's a very important option. We're gonna put
that on the on the top, you know, right now.
Protecting the Second Amendment is super important. But again in
the grand scheme of things, if they took your guns away,
you'd still be able to, you know, just your religion
(01:01:00):
and things like that. Opioid crisis is big in Ohio,
and I think it's one of those things that even
hit you know, even came to my doorstep. And I
don't say even as in you know, my doorsteps so
high and exalted or anything like that. I just say,
you know, as a in my family it did. It
(01:01:23):
did affect us. And so you know, kind of like
cancer and kind of like everything else is everybody goes
through things and no one's exempt. And even if you
are a Christian or whatever that you know, it's not
it's not rosy days and uh and uh, you know
(01:01:45):
rainbows every day. You're going to go through some things.
And so you know, I do think that, you know,
I do think that's a big one in Ohio, you know,
the Medicare, Medicaid thing, the homelessness and reforming social security. Yeah,
(01:02:06):
I mean, it would be nice to get through that,
but this is also part of the power play that
they hold. You know, they hold this this broken up
system of Medicare and they use it as a talking point.
They they use it as you know, paying into social Security,
we got your back here. We're going to cover you.
(01:02:27):
And honestly, if you just take care of yourself, you know,
if you just get in early and start putting the
money back and stuff like that, it doesn't take a
ton if you start early enough. And uh, you know, no, no, no, no,
nothing against the people who have Medicaid and Social Security
(01:02:48):
and stuff like that, but just and and some people
didn't couldn't or didn't save for them, for their for
their future. And I can I can say I haven't
been the best at it, but you know, just just
you know, looking at you know, the way you track
(01:03:09):
it and the way it's you know, it can build
itself with interest and stuff like that. You know, you
can do it and then you don't have to worry
about social security or or anything like that. So providing
school choice, yes, I mean, I'm honestly worried, you know,
kinda kind of in that right now with Mila getting
(01:03:32):
you know, getting older and stuff and getting ready to
go to and getting to the school age in the
next few years, you know, figuring out that. But at
the same time, they still are allowing you to homeschool
your child, They're still allowing you to move your you know,
you know, open schools and stuff like that. Is a
little tough. But I don't care about political political leadership
(01:03:55):
except for having the integrity, you know, just make sure
that you know, as an intelligent voter. People who have
been voting for Pelosi for years, they're not intelligent voters.
That's it. I'm sorry, you know you're not you know,
if you're voting for you know, for people like that,
(01:04:17):
you're not an intelligent voter. If you've if you've been
voting for Mitch McConnell over the last five years or so,
five to eight years, I guess he had he hasn't
had your back. You can and you can see that
in his leadership, you know, So decreasing governmental gridlock. I mean,
(01:04:42):
that's kind of what I voted for when I when
I tried to vote against the sixty percent supermajority on
on amendment issues is that, you know, make it you know,
if if they if we're going to make it harder
for them to put it in and they can get it,
get get it through, Let's make it easier. Let's make
(01:05:05):
it as easy as we can to repeal it. So
if it does come, then it can go. But if
we make it hard for it to come, you know,
to get there to an amendment, to get there, well
like issue one about abortion here, then we make it
(01:05:25):
hard to get rid of it also. And I know
that that is a a hot take or a stance
that's against stances, but at the same point, it it
gets the thing done, and it makes and it makes
(01:05:47):
the government lighter weight and easier to move you know,
so yes, I want you know, I want to be
you want it to be hard for people to mess
mess things up, but I also want it to be
easy for it to be fixed. So energy independence, that's
(01:06:09):
that would be great, but that's more of an economic thing.
And economic things will come and go and you can
kind of work them yourself. Strengthening the economy and protecting
jobs is is important, and it's important to me, and
even even as a person who you know, we don't
have a great you know, I don't have a job
(01:06:31):
other than to do this and and I you know,
I work in the ministry and stuff like that and
have other podcasts and creation and stuff like that, and
work for a couple, you know, a couple of companies
doing website development stuff. But you know, strengthening the economy
and protecting jobs is big. Decreasing taxes, reducing inflation. You know,
(01:06:57):
it costs on average, it costs each person, each middle
aged income one thousand dollars more a month to buy food, gas, clothing,
The normal things you buy every month have gone up
about a thousand bucks a months. So you know, that's
(01:07:20):
twelve thousand dollars a year. That's pretty easy math so
unless you got you know, if you were making if
you were making a one hundred thousand dollars a year,
you would have to get a twelve percent raise. I
don't know too many companies out there giving twelve percent raises.
(01:07:42):
You know, if you're making eighty thousand dollars a year, yep,
you're looking at a fifteen percent raise. Off the top
of my head, I went to school. But you know
in that you're I don't know companies that are giving
(01:08:03):
that out. You know, they're not giving inflation inflationary rates out.
And that's not that's not just that's everybody. If you're
making forty thousand dollars a year, you know, that's thirty
percent raise. Nobody gets that. People better be getting a
(01:08:26):
better job, bigger job, faster, you know, learn some skills,
get out of that job, do something, you know, And
that's honestly, that's close to what I was making as
a learning coordinator. You know at CHEWI, I was making
a little better than that, but not much. You gotta
(01:08:50):
have been over twenty percent for me. So reading over
the list, it's a pretty easy pick for me. Obviously.
It's religion and abortion, you know, making sure that those
things are addressed that, you know, like we talked about
with the Olympics and stuff. You know that you know,
(01:09:13):
why are why are Christians upset because you're mocking their God?
You know, if it were if you were mocking Mohammed,
Muslims would have attacked. Like we said, we weren't amused.
And I'm proud of the people who have said that
they weren't amused. Whether whether the person meant two uh
(01:09:37):
two show the the Last Supper or not, it still did.
It still looked like that to us. And so I
think that, you know, it's something that we've got to
we've got to continue to raise our voice and say
(01:10:00):
we're not amused about this. We're not you know, we're
we want something different, you know, and uh, France is France.
France is going to be that way. They're going to
do the weirdest, most avant garde thing there is. But
at the same time, you know, it's that's that's where
(01:10:22):
it's at. You know, if we if we're allowed to
be we're not, we're allowed to not be amused. There
are two point four billion of us out there, and
you know we can we can stand up and say listen,
so at least two point four billion of US. Since
we don't we're not able to count all the you know,
(01:10:43):
Chinese Christians that are underground. So if the November fifth,
twenty twenty four election general election for Congress and other
local state offices were being held today, would you vote
(01:11:05):
for the Republican candet get candidate or the Democrat candidate?
And it says definitely the Republican candidate. Probably the Republican candidate.
Lean towards the Republican candidate, undecided, lean Democrat, probably Democrat,
definitely Democrat. I don't put lean Republican. Most likely it
would come down mostly Republican. But you know, I have
(01:11:33):
voted for an independent before. I have voted for people
who you know, write in candidates and things. And you
can say, well, that's a thrown away vote, and maybe
it is. But if these people don't get votes and encouragement,
then they they don't continue to run. People don't continue
(01:11:55):
to run. That's why we don't have a third party.
It is because at one point there was a third
party and that party split the vote and got the
other party in. But if they continued to run, that
party would get stronger and there would be a three
way run instead of two sides being split, and so
(01:12:20):
you would have you would have more of a right side,
a left side, and a more of a central side,
and you would have people on each side just voting
for whatever. And and that's what even even some of
my friends that our Democrats even have said, if there
(01:12:42):
was a more moderate choice, we'd be a lot happier
with the vote this time. And so if there was
able to be a third party that was more of
a central side of things, I still wouldn't vote for them.
I want to vote for someone who's ultra conservative, who's
(01:13:02):
you know, constitutionalists, who isn't isn't pushing for for for
big government, who's pushing out, you know, pushing the government
out of things, less regulation less, you know, and so
so that's you know, that's where I'm at. But at
the same time, you know, I feel like that the
(01:13:24):
Republican Party is becoming that centralist party and there isn't
there isn't that conservative side of things, or or that
more conservative side, you know, libertarians and things like that.
They just they just don't get the coverage. They don't get,
you know, and that's because the system is only set
(01:13:46):
the system is only set up for two parties, and
that's probably the biggest, biggest issue is if you have
two heads, you can control what's going on. If you
have three or four, there's less likely that somebody at
(01:14:08):
the top or somebody could control a group of people
could control this the group. So now thinking about November
general election for the US president were held today, for
whom would you vote for? Kamala Harris Democrat obviously, Donald Trump, Republican,
(01:14:36):
Robert F. Kennedy Junior Independent or undecided? Prefer not to
say like there's no libertarian, Like there's a libertarian and
a Green Party, so I'm not sure why they don't
have that. But out of these three four options, I
would probably go for the Donald Trump vote. November fifth, again,
(01:15:02):
election has held today. Bernie Moreno Republican or Shared Brown Democrat.
Obviously I'm not a real fan of Shared Brown. Bernie Moreno,
I I you know, like him as well as any candidate,
so you know, take him take him on there. Next,
here are some statements of about why voting in the
(01:15:25):
upcoming election is important. So the only and then you
put somewhat to unsure much less likely, somewhat likely, more
likely much more likely. So, and these statements are statements
(01:15:47):
makes you less are more likely to vote in this election.
So basically this is the why or how you're going.
You know how you're voting, which voting for the only
way to fix the economy, in inflation and secure our
border is ensuring that the take back of the White
(01:16:09):
House and the Senate. It is important too to take
it back for that for those reasons, So that is
somewhat more likely a reason why I will be voting.
The only way to secure our border and decrease inflation
is to vote out radical Democrats like Shared Brown, Biden,
(01:16:32):
and Harris. That is one of the main reasons why
you you need to vote this time is you need
your your voice to be heard now. If you're voting,
if you if you think that radical democrats like Shared
Brown and Biden, Biden Harris administration are great, then get
your voice out there. If if you think that's the
(01:16:56):
best for the country, get that out there. I have
no no qualms against you. I do not agree with you, obviously,
but you know, if that's your thinking, fine. Kamala Harris
showed poor judgment as a leader by picking Tom tim
Walls as their Vice president candidate, a man who repeatedly
lied about his military record falsely portrayed himself as a
(01:17:18):
combat veteran of the war in Afghanistan. Yeah. No, the
guy actually retired or left his group when they went
when they got you know, spun up, and you know,
you can be who you are, but you're showing your
(01:17:39):
colors here on that share, Brown voted with Biden harris
agenda over ninety seven percent of the time. That's why
I said, he's not he's he's not helping and you know,
he's just keeping the vote going. If Kamala Harris wins
(01:18:02):
the White House, the only thing keeping her from ramming
through her California liberal policies in the in the United
States is the Senate. Yeah, I mean, that's that's part
of the reason to vote. But at the same time,
you know, really the Senate is the power. You know,
the House and the Senate are are the power. Stroke
(01:18:22):
They're they're they're the ones creating these laws and stuff
like that. Now the president decides whether he's going to
execute those laws. But at the same time, the more
and more that they create those laws, someone's going to
execute them. Democrats want to pack the Supreme Court with
liberal justices to tip the balance of in their favor.
If shared Brown and the radical Democrats blah blah blah,
(01:18:44):
they will trample the Supreme Court. They probably will, And honestly,
that's probably one of one of the main reasons is
to continue to keep the constitutional set up alive, even
though that Republicans back in the day added to the
Supreme Court to kind of do what they're doing now.
(01:19:08):
I have a few more questions knowing the following, which
statement would make you most likely to vote absentee early
voting absenty is safe and secure military if yeah, if
I were. If the military votes the absent tee, you
can too. You can vote your absentee ballot early in
(01:19:31):
person and avoid long lines on election day. Voting early
in in person is almost the same as voting in
person on the day, Like I mean, I guess the
the reason to do it is because you know, it's
(01:19:51):
just like voting regularly. But which of the following political
parties do you consider yourself a part of? I mean,
I'm not one hundred percent a a libertarian. Sometimes I
go beyond them a little bit. Green Party definitely not
part of that. I'm more of an independence or no preference.
(01:20:20):
I do align myself with the conservative side of the
Republican Party because it's more conservative obviously. But all right,
that's the end of the survey. So just you know,
so I guess that's kind of kind of the where
I stand on elections at this point is you know,
(01:20:42):
like I just kind of said, is I'm kind of
you know, the presidential election is important, but at the
same time, you know, the elections that are really more
important are the congressional ones and honestly the local ones
where you know, you can stand up, you can get
(01:21:03):
your your name heard. This This guy, Jonathan Newman just
had a had a tent and uh just started you know,
he was given out Trump signs and taking pictures with
cardboard Trump and things of that nature. And you know,
you can get your you know, he can get his
name out, get his get his word out. And so
(01:21:25):
I think I think with that, with that, it was
you know, it was a smart idea to do it
the way he did it. And uh, you know, he's
he's he's getting he's getting out there and doing something.
So all right, that's where I'm at. So let's end
the podcast on a completely unpolitical noe and go back
(01:21:51):
to the Florida band, get back to the basics of
a great Why I'm Angry podcast. And so it was
funny because I went to the Florida Man you know
later lately, what's going on in Florida Man, and you get,
you know, unfortunately, you get a bunch of those you know,
Florida Man killed a guy, or Florida Man did this,
(01:22:12):
or you know, a Florida man named Santa claus Is,
you know, gets in trouble for child pornography or something
like that, and so some of those things. But it
was interesting to me that there were two Florida Man
stories where the guy was accused of posing as a veterinarian.
(01:22:36):
And in one of the stories, the guy posed as
a veterinarian and performed surgery on a pregnant dog. He
performed a cesarean section a C section on HuaHua, who
(01:22:59):
later died of multiple complications from the surgery. So they've
arrested him because he doesn't have obviously a medical license
for pets or for dogs or for animals, and so
ended up killing this dog. But yeah, so he was
(01:23:23):
accused of posing as a veterinarian, and that was on
August fourteenth of last year and July. In July fourth
of this year, Florida man who posed as a veterinarian
has been charged with grand theft. Offered his services on
(01:23:46):
social media and claimed to make medicine for pets. So
I mean, snake oil salesman and things from the past
are not always all gone. You know, nothing new under
the sun here. But can you see that Florida man
poses as a veterinarian of all things, Like normally you
(01:24:11):
wouldn't think of of veterinarian as the thing to start
doping people. But you know, the pet industry is a
giant industry in in the in the world, and so
you know, market share on the pet industry is three
(01:24:34):
one hundred and three billion dollars as of last year,
which is up sixteen percent from the year before. So
the more you think about that, the more you think
about how people don't want to have children or don't
want to have the responsibility of children, yet they you know,
they love their pets like children. And how you know
(01:24:58):
we've replaced you know, even even as you know we've
retired and things like people have retired and things like
that that you know, they've you know, gotten pets to
kind of stay at you know, be a companion when
their children are gone, and things of that nature. Have
gone out to do whatever they do and things of that. So,
(01:25:20):
you know, I understand. It's just it's just kind of
an interesting, you know, way to uh to play the
game and uh, to get get one over on people
is you know, by uh you know, just going out
and uh yeah, as a veterinarian. So this, uh, the
(01:25:46):
next one is a half naked Florida man crashes car
into a jail. Let me hit the button on the
video here so I don't continue to have to fight that. Okay.
So Florida man is in jail after crashing his car
into jail. A Martin County Sheriff's office said Jeff Leedy,
(01:26:11):
forty was, who was half naked and acting erratically, also
made some alarming statements. Video captured the moments when Leedy
drove his car from the jail parking lot, up the
walkway and then through the glass lobby doors of the
(01:26:33):
facility in Jupiter. So I was wondering how he got
through security, how he got past the I mean normally
they have like a barbed wire or a razor wire
on top of a fence, and they have a fence.
Some of them have you know, barriers and things like
that that make them less of a soft target, you know,
(01:26:56):
especially around the you know, the workout areas and the
outside areas and stuff like that. So of course, the
cameras and our correctional officers inside saw the vehicle enter
the lobby. They came out, they were confronted by the suspect,
the chief deputy said. He said, after crashing through the doors,
(01:27:20):
Leady through rubber snakes and cell phones onto the ground
and doused his vehicle with motor oil, all while being
half naked from the waist down. I was gonna say,
if he just had had his shirt off, then he's
not really a naked half naked Florida man. He's just
(01:27:42):
a Florida man. But having his pants off, you know,
waist down nakedness, that's that's different. Lady also reported making
homicidal statements and comments about former President Donald Trump, because
when you're running your car into jail, you know, definitely
(01:28:03):
you know, threaten the president or the exit of the
the former president. He just talked about his hatred for
former President Donald Trump. He also emphasized that the devil
told him to kill as many people as possible. If
that's the case, why is he running into a jail.
(01:28:25):
You gotta think these people who say the devil made
me do it, you know, how intelligent are those people are?
You know, if they're following the devil, if the devil,
you know, has has told them to do something, and
they're they're like, oh, yeah, that seems like an intelligent
(01:28:45):
thing to do. Maybe their intelligent level or there their
mastery of decision making is not at its highest level,
so maybe, uh, you know, maybe that should be checked.
As for the jail itself, the Sheriff's office says they'll
(01:29:07):
be installing extra protection for the future. I mean a
lot of them have like at least a concrete barrier
that you have to kind of walk between the car
couldn't get through to stop them, like to stop them
from being able to drive up a walkway. So I
(01:29:28):
mean it seems pretty pretty inexpensive, and it's pretty effective
most most cars don't. I mean, even your big monster
trucks and stuff like that. You know, hitting a concrete
barrier is it at least slow you down? So so yeah,
(01:29:56):
oh's see if there's anything else for man. Yeah, we
talked about that Florida man. We've talked about the one
that was attempting to cross the Atlantic in a giant
hamster wheel. Florida man shoots out a pool cleaner. I
think we talked about that. Even gator bite, that seems
(01:30:20):
pretty pretty standard. Yep, another gator caught on drone this time. Yep,
we got the Florida man from twenty twenty two that
you know, fought his fought his neighbor's rooster and went
(01:30:43):
to jail for killing his his neighbor's chicken. You know,
that was an interesting that was a fun one. The
guy uh says, uh, chickens are dying every day at
roosters and churches and uh and KFC guys. You know,
not sure why why everybody's up in arms about that.
(01:31:07):
So all right, well let's go look over headlines real quick.
I got we got you know, obviously, Ukraine had to
make a couple moves and incursion back, you know, trying
to take over take back over some of their area.
(01:31:29):
Puerto Rico got hit by a hurricane Ernesto leftover seven
hundred and thirty thousand people with you know, utility customers
in in the dark and you know, lots of damage.
(01:31:57):
So about two hundred and thirty five thousand people have
no water. So that's you know, just being mindful of
being prayful, prayer about that stone. Hinges Central Altar Stone
originated from northern Scotland, roughly four hundred and fifty miles
from Ancient England. From the Ancient England site, over three
(01:32:20):
hundred miles further than previously believed, so, I mean they
thought it was about one hundred and fifty fifty miles
from there. Yes, just four hundred and fifty miles. So
the discovery suggest significant collaboration among Neolithic peoples inhabiting the
(01:32:44):
British Isles over four thousand, six hundred years ago, or
or to save on postage, there was floods, or there
was a glacier that came across or something like that
that moved that stone from its original setting place in Scotland.
(01:33:07):
I mean, there there are other ways that you you know,
they didn't just like throw it on a ups truck
and get it there. So but whatever, let's go back.
(01:33:28):
Starbucks got a new boss. They just got they just
picked up the CEO of Chipotle. So we'll be watching
both of those to see where Chipotle goes from here,
because they have made a major comeback from the whole
Coli set up that they had for pretty much a
(01:33:49):
year or so with the lettuce and then the cilantro
and then the green onions and then you know, they
were just a part of all of that, and that's
that's tough also because it's not just it was all
fresh food vendors, but they just are the kind of
spokesperson for fresh foods. So we'll see. Uh, Starbucks has
(01:34:09):
been in decline for it's d E d N I
d N yeah, d E and I inclusion. Yeah, it's
diversity stands basically that uh you know, just have turn
people off to it. There's enough other coffee companies out there.
(01:34:32):
We have a good regional one around us. It's called Winings.
We also have which is not a sponsor, but if
they want to, I like the Highlander drog lattes. I
know lattes are not supermanly, but I don't care if
you want to come fight, you know, fisticuffs at midnight.
(01:34:57):
But uh, you know, so not not a sponsor, but
we've got some local places we've got just some great
places and and it's easy to replace Starbucks with those
places because Starbucks doesn't always make it super easy to
get in. You know, a coffee shop isn't a way,
(01:35:18):
you know, unless it's got to drive through or something
like that, and some of the Starbucks do. But you know,
let's see empox emergency in Africa. You got Kansas newspaper
raid charge uh formus koh, that's that that was one
(01:35:40):
we we actually talked about. This is the an update
on they formerly former Kansas police chief has been charged
with felony obstruction of justice after last year's raid on
a local newspaper that drew national attention and criticism from
press freedom advocates. So basically, in the story, this newspaper
(01:36:04):
and the writer from the newspaper kind of went against
this sheriff as you know, started questioning some of the arrests,
some of the the things that they were doing, and
(01:36:27):
kind of you know, suspicion uh, suspicious thefts and things
around the area. And the police initially justified the raid
on suspicions of identity theft and computer crimes for the
news for the newspaper staff, which prosecutors concluded was unfounded
(01:36:49):
in any way, and you know, the paper was actively
investigating the police chief for allegedly previous sectional misconduct, and
so he came to the police chief came in and
rated the newspaper and try to try to shut him
down for you know, putting out the news. And you
(01:37:16):
know that's you know, of anything, you know, a newspaper
is putting out the news. So the publisher's ninety eight
year old mother and co owner of the newspaper was
also present during the home raid and appeared visibly upset
(01:37:37):
in the police body camera footage. She died a day
later of a heart attack. But your son attributes to
the distress, which I'm sure he's got. He's got a
pretty decent case on that. I'm not sure how you
prove that or whatever. But you know, there was bodychem
footage of her being excited and upset. So that's that's that.
(01:38:04):
But so yeah, with our podcasts, we're gonna shut her
down now, and any extra thoughts that I have, any
extra words to say, are going to be on you know,
overtime podcasts. Maybe I'll start doing you know, I'm working
(01:38:25):
on trying to do a Monday Tuesday, you know, short
podcast just an update of the weekend and things like that,
and so you know, those things will be on that
two dollars subscription. Get on spreaker, gets in the comments,
hit the button and or hit the link and uh,
(01:38:47):
you know, sign up two dollars a month. If we
can get a couple hundred people that will be able
they can give us some support at two dollars a month,
then we would be able to start upgrading the the studio,
get our word out there, do a little average, a
little more advertising, and start to get sponsorships and things
(01:39:09):
like that, so that, you know, again, it takes the
pressure off of us to be able to create openly
and freely. And you know, it takes the pressure off
of you guys to to get all of the you know,
us asking all the time, hey can you give us
some money and stuff? You know, we This is the
part I hate the most about it. I loved being
(01:39:32):
on here and creating and talking to you guys about
how dumb they the politicians are, or Florida Mann stories
and stuff like that. I like getting on here with
the guys and talking about all the conspiracy theories and
things like that. So you know, that's where I that's
where I want to be, and so we need the help.
(01:39:53):
You know, the subscription right now is two dollars a month,
and that just helps us to kind of push the
agenda a little farther, helps us to be able to
take some more time and you know, be able to
educate ourselves and get ready for the podcast. With more time,
also helps us to be able to bring in more speakers, more, more, more,
(01:40:17):
more talent, because a lot of talent isn't free and
they don't they don't work like me. So and then
hopefully in the next month or so here we'll get
this Jonathan Newman, we've worked with him a little bit.
Would talk to him and try to get him, you know,
at least get a segment out of him and get
(01:40:38):
a few minutes and do something like that. So there's
a lot of things that can be done and a
lot of things coming down the pike with that. But
you know, just get in there, help us out, and
you know, we love you guys, and we appreciate all
the help that you give us. This is the chef
here in the Free Style Man Cave Studio.
Speaker 2 (01:41:00):
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