Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
Arah, 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.
Speaker 2 (00:14):
I'm angry. I'm the chef.
Speaker 1 (00:17):
I want to hear one thing. Yes, chef, Come on, man,
here's your brain. The y am Angry Podcast start now.
All right, everything moves slow today. That is what today is.
It's everything moves slow day. This is the ym Angry Podcast.
This is the chef. I am here in the Freestyle
(00:40):
Man Cave Studio in Lovely, Ohio. So we are or
I guess I'm coming on here live tonight by myself.
I'm kind of a little behind here. Just spilled my
root beer as I was hitting the button to go live.
Speaker 2 (01:00):
If you are.
Speaker 1 (01:03):
On anything or on X or anything, we can't go
live on X right now, so we do put a
link on X so that you know you can get.
Speaker 2 (01:13):
To our podcast live.
Speaker 1 (01:15):
We go live on Wednesdays at five, just Wednesdays at eight.
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(01:35):
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(02:21):
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(02:41):
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(03:01):
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(03:44):
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(04:31):
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hit that button. But you know, enter them in the
comments I get. Most of them come straight to me
and right into the broadcasting studio here, especially the ones
on Twitch and YouTube. Let's see looks like, yeah, we
got Facebook going for some reason. There it is there,
it is. Facebook's always a little bit slower, but they always,
(04:54):
you know, they all come straight to me. The ones
on Rumble, why can see. I just can't always see them.
So if you do hit me up on Rumble, give
me a second to uh to respond and uh and.
Speaker 2 (05:10):
All of that.
Speaker 1 (05:12):
So I do shoot everyone from X to Rumble.
Speaker 2 (05:17):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (05:17):
It is kind of where we get the most following.
So that's you know, that's where I'm at on that.
Plus they they do help with it. You know, they
do monetize our podcast so that we get a few
more dollars and uh, you know, every little little bit help.
All right, there we go, So that into into the
meat and potatoes here. It is, like I said, it
has been a slow day day of just like everybody
(05:38):
getting on your nerves, getting in your way, just some
things like that. Let me it so in the news,
big news from Israel, kind of anyone, what you what
you believe about Israel and what's going on on the
wrong one right it They actually somebody killed one of
the Hamas leaders today. They took credit for one of
(06:01):
the leaders being killed. One of the leaders being killed
in in the in Ga in Lebanon, I think it
was the other day. But they have not taken credit
yet for the one that was killed in Beirut last night.
Top political leader outside of Gaza, Ishmael Anaye probably killed
(06:22):
his name, was killed in Tehran, according to separate statement
from Iran and Hamas. Israel has not commented on it
yet and they still at the time that I checked
it that was this morning, and they still hadn't commented
this afternoon yet on it. They did say, I mean
they have warned Israel warned that there was going to
(06:44):
be a high price page if there was an attack
like this. I mean there they they've always you know,
and I don't know that Israel, and I've ever heard
of Israel lying about an attack like this. You know
that they were going to that there was going to
be anything. But you know, a force met with force.
(07:10):
So when this, you know, when you start to see
high level Hamas leaders start to die, you know that
this is you know this, this is this is the retaliation,
this is you know, all of that other stuff is
to stop the war from happening later, to keep their
(07:32):
people safe, all of that. When they start killing off.
When when high level Hamas leaders die and you're like, hm,
it could be Israel. This last one, they shot a
rocket into the room and blew it up. He's dead,
(07:55):
that's Israel. They could have probably shot a you know
type around in there and he died. He would have died,
Nobody would have known, nobody would have had to say anything.
But they blew up the room. They're they're sending a message,
and they did it in Tehran, So there isn't like
(08:20):
you know, obviously that you know, they may not say
that they were there and killed them. They may never
admit one hundred percent because they can't admit that they
were on another sovereign country's property. They were operating their
military or their massad or CIA whatever they whatever they're
(08:41):
calling it these days, but they can't say that they
were on another another country's you know, property, in operating
in another country's borders without then saying that they that
they didn't respect that country's borders to prosecute a somebody
(09:05):
that they wanted to prosecute. So if they were a
known terrorist, then they couldn't operate on in in their borders.
They would have to go to that country. I mean,
that's the proper protocol. And they would have to go
to that country that that that country's leadership, and they
would have to set up, you know, set up a meeting,
(09:28):
set up a tradition, they'd have to arrest the guy.
With all of that stuff. That's not the war that
Israel is gonna fight. They're fighting the war that they're fighting.
The fight, the war that they're gonna fight is they're
gonna they're gonna establish a new, a new Israel, Israeli
(09:48):
state in Gaza. Uh it'll be less Palestinian, obviously, some
Palestinians will stay, and uh there will be a safer
place for Israelis and there will not be a chance,
(10:10):
or there will be less of a chance that come
Os rises up again and kills thousands of their of
their people. And so that's you know, that's what they're
doing here. That's the war. But all of this other stuff,
I mean, you're starting to see top level come Os
(10:33):
leaders go down. That is that that that's the retribution.
So I mean, that's that's and they you know, and honestly,
(10:53):
that's probably what Benjamin net and Yahoo is best at,
is the politics of you know, we killed your dude,
but we're not going to say anything about it. And
he's going to be the one that sits there in
the room and doesn't flinch when they ask him, did
you you know, are you committing war crimes?
Speaker 3 (11:15):
Good?
Speaker 1 (11:15):
Bad or indifferent? Anti Semitic you know, talk or whatever
you want to do, you do, but this is, you know,
this is the truth about how Israel operates. And we
shouldn't be surprised. I mean, you should have known, and
I think I even said you should you know the
second that that the strike on Israel happened that one
(11:39):
day may not be today, may not be that that day,
but one day there's going to be there's going to
start to be strikes. You know, it may be a
one day thing where all of the leadership goes down,
and it may be you know, individual as they get him.
(12:00):
But don't think this is just going to be Hamas
the whois are going down the you know Hamas hesba
Llah is gonna take it. And and honestly, I wouldn't
be surprised if you see some top level Iranian diplomat
(12:23):
or somebody take take a shot to. Somebody that from
Iran that's been funding it or knew about it, or
has been has been up in it, is gonna is
gonna take, is going to take a fall to And
that's and that's when Iran has to really decide do
(12:45):
you want to take a shot do you want to
actually start a war with Israel? Because from what I
was looking at, it didn't look like they had very
much standing in the area because.
Speaker 2 (13:01):
They already.
Speaker 1 (13:05):
They already kind of wore out there welcome. So Jordan
is upset with Israel, but they're still playing nice. Lebanon's
not coming in because they don't have the military might
to take on Israel. You know, Iraq once to is
you know, wants to kind of stay out and kind
(13:27):
of stay out of the fray a little bit. So
I don't, you know, I just I you know, Egypt's
not gonna get in it serious, you know, they're they're
they're dealing with their own uproar in their country, upheaval,
(13:48):
and so I don't I don't see how. I just
don't see how it's going to to play out well
for Iran. And I think they're gonna have to They're
gonna have to end up unless unless they really unless
before the end of his term, Uncle Joe gets all
this money sent over to Iran, kind of like you know,
(14:09):
the whole Barack Obama sending trying to send it one
hundred and eighty eight ninety eight million dollars or whatever
that whatever whatever he was trying to send in his
last executive order to Iran. Unless that gets does that
gets rolled out, you know, it's Iran's future is based
(14:33):
on who becomes president next and you know, we can,
we can, we can kind of hold our breath about
that with the open borders at them at the moment,
with them being able to send out whoever, you know,
send whoever they want to our country, and that person
(14:56):
probably can get a voter registration card in certain states
that do not care whether you are an actual citizen
of our country and you know, pay your taxes and
follow the laws and things of that nature, and they
(15:19):
can probably get get in and vote you know, a
couple couple million million votes. You know, we can get
a couple million votes out of them. And if you don't,
if you think that's crazy and far fetched, then I
don't know what to tell you. I mean, an old
(15:40):
guy that they put in his in his basement so
that he didn't continue to gab on and make mistakes,
was sitting, you know, won the presidency and got more
votes than a super popular Barack Obama. Now maybe they
(16:05):
didn't stuff hundreds of millions of ballots.
Speaker 2 (16:08):
Maybe they didn't.
Speaker 1 (16:09):
They didn't. They worked really well, really hard on on
organizing and you know, just get harvesting those votes legally
and in all all fairness. But you know, I don't know,
I don't know, but that that kind of brings me
(16:33):
to the next The next thing we're going to talk
about is over the last few weeks. I mean, we're
small potatoes, and I know that I can say some
stupid stuff and rub people the wrong way. But we
posted a post on Facebook. Let me let me work
(16:53):
the interwebs here and show you what we posted because
it it got got taken down, So let me hit
the button. Okay, so if you're watching this live, we
(17:17):
we got hit for a false information, and uh, we
can hit the see why button and the see why
it says independent fact check checkers say this information has
no basis in fact. You can choose whether to see it.
The same false information was checked in another post by
(17:39):
fact checkers. There may be small differences see the fact
check and this is uh politic. PolitiFact checked that one
hundred million ballots have not been pre filled with wrong name.
So I posted that that post. That is me watching
(18:03):
the left realize the one hundred million ballots they pre
filled now have the wrong name on them, and it's
got oh, what's his name, man, uh oh, Leonardo DiCaprio
on it, laughing, he's got that drink. It's it's one
hundred percent of meme. It's this is not news, it
is not fake news, this is this is a joke.
(18:23):
This is a meme. Yeah, we have to fact check
memes now, which so I posted that, uh, you know,
the shared photo shared a photo independent fact checkers and
I and I you know, I'm I've gotten in my
feelings a little bit here and it said if you
thought this was news and this convinced you that the
(18:47):
Democrats were cheating, I'm sorry or I'm not sorry. Sarcastm
is so hard to figure out these days, you know
it just you know, when did we become so dumb?
And I mean, if you haven't been on our Facebook page,
we we post all.
Speaker 2 (19:06):
Kinds of crazy things.
Speaker 1 (19:07):
There's a video from an Idaho farmer that him and
his grandma and brothers post all the time, and this
time they were posting about how the Green New Deal
uh from Biden was not allowing them to or had
told them to shut down shut down their water to
(19:29):
not water their crops over the summer. And it said
that you know they were they were running out of water,
the country was running out of water, and that you know,
they needed to do their part and save conserve water
and they put they they said that they were you know,
their their water supply, their wells are higher than they've
(19:53):
ever been or at least then they've been in their lifetime.
And I think she's like, you know, high sixties or something.
And with that, with that being said, they you know,
so they make a joke about, you know, they started
a rebel rebel farmer's co op, you know, get on,
(20:18):
get your t shirts whatever, support them, and they you know,
at the end of it, they turn on the water
and they and they even said in their in their podcast,
you know, get the facts, like because they're not going
to tell you that on TV. And so that's that's
kind of kind of what you know, what I'm here
(20:38):
with this is like, you know, if we're getting our
facts off of dumb memes off of Facebook. You know,
Facebook isn't news. It's not a news organization. It's not
where you go to get your news. Now, if if
someone posts a link to a news organization and you
go to that for your news, that's what a If
(21:00):
your news organization is lying to you, that's that's fake news,
you know, And and and that's where you should be.
That's where we should be fact checking. We shouldn't be
fact checking memes. You know what, I what if I what?
What if I went to somebody's somebody's Facebook page and
(21:21):
put happy birthday. What's not and it's not their birthday?
Well it's not facts.
Speaker 2 (21:26):
Let's fact check it. Ope, it's not his birthday. Take
it down.
Speaker 1 (21:30):
We got people wasting their time doing that. I mean,
I got a little in my feelings today, and so
I I fact checked three or four people. If you're
if you're uh you know, left leaning, and you made
memes against Christianity today that were false, and you're a
(21:51):
part and you're one of my friends.
Speaker 2 (21:53):
I'm sorry.
Speaker 1 (21:54):
I you know, I hit you up with a a
fact check and uh reported you because as much as
I normally just you know, let it go and let
you let you be, are you whoever you are, and uh,
you know, agree to disagree and let you you know,
you know who I am. You know I'm a Christian.
(22:16):
You know that I that I believe in Christ with
all my heart and that you know all of that stuff.
You know where I stand, and so you know, obviously
I'm not here to beat you down about you know,
if you know sins that you've committed or sins that
(22:37):
you know or anything like that. I'm not here to
judge because that's not for me. I'm not allowed to
do that. Bible says that one hundred percent, and so
you know. But at the same time, I'm tired of
getting getting censored and shut down, and I'm tired of
(23:12):
I'm tired of getting shut down and censored, and there's
no there's no catch. On the other side. You can
post any crappy lie you want about Christianity or or whatever,
or or even any other religion except for except for Muslims.
(23:33):
Don't say anything about Mohammed because they're they're crazy. But
you can say whatever you want about about Christianity and
lie all you want about it. But there's there's no
you know, well, you should be loving it says in
your ten Commandments, no one. It just says I can't
(23:55):
kill you and I can't hate you. Well, I can
still fight back a little. I can still live my
life in my space, which is sad that Facebook is
one made has made me want to go back to
my space, where you just throw a music on there,
(24:16):
you do your thing. You have funny you know, cat
meme or whatever, and you don't, you know, you don't
look at it as news. Plus you had to go
to the people's pages so that you know, so that
you actually, you know, could see what they were doing.
(24:40):
Their stupid crap didn't just normally pop up on your page.
I mean, you can post something dumb like we let
the Christian zelotz run the world at one point it
was called the rug the Dark Ages. No, we let
a little bunch of nepotus kings run the world during
(25:03):
the Dark Ages. There were some Christian crusades during that
time that fought back Muslim rule. You're welcome, and maybe
at some time, because they were they were fighting for that,
people got to zealous and one of the power. And
(25:29):
that's not Christianity. That's people being human. That's people were
living in their flesh. There's people taking taking advantage of power.
And that's that's not what Christianity is. The religious zelots
killed Jesus. That's not Christianity. That's being a religious zealot.
(25:57):
That's being beyond what you're actually supposed to be. So so,
like I said, I got in my feelings. I shut
(26:18):
some people's Facebook if Facebook posts down because they posted
junk and uh, you know, I apologize if if I
shut your your your post down or got a fact
checked or or whatever, but you know, it's it. It's
(26:41):
honestly kind of I kind of got you know, I
gotta check. So they've been talking about this comment that
that uh Trump made saying that, and when I heard it,
I thought, they're gonna jump on this, and if they
don't jump on this, they're probably stupid, which we know
(27:06):
probably the case in the long run anyway, But there's
a comment that President Trump said about that all of
these migrants are coming in and taking black and Hispanic
and Hispanic jobs. Well, he could have gone one step
(27:28):
farther and said they're also taking you know, first first
time kids, you know, younger people, miners' jobs from the
first time. You know, people that should be doing dishes
and things like that they could you know, and working
for lawn care, all of these jobs that a lot
(27:50):
of times paying cash under the table that you know,
these migrants can get without having a green card or
a Social Security number or you know, until they can
get those at the uh you know, Mexican restaurant in
(28:10):
the back back table. You know, that's you know, they
can they take those jobs? And they do, they do.
They take all of everybody's jobs. And and so, you know,
the problem is is that we're not getting our youth
(28:32):
these jobs. We're not getting people who need to work
a part time job, or need to get a side hustle,
or need just a few hours or need you know,
a menial job, you know right now, because my wife
(28:53):
is makes a decent amount of a decent wage and
I can take care of our daughter. But to to
cover some of the side expenses, I need to take
a a a menial job, something that that doesn't really
make it make, you know, make any difference in the
(29:14):
grand scheme of things. And I don't have to think
about it too much. And I can work a couple
hours a week or so and make okay money on
it and just you know, cover some of the some
of the bills, like honestly, are streaming you know, the
streaming TV or the internet or I try to cover
(29:36):
the you know, we I cover the podcast expenses because
podcasting isn't free. And if you want to help out,
you know, you can get on our our link here
and you know, help us out. But and I'll put
(29:59):
that link in our comments just shame shameful plug. But uh,
you know, beyond that, beyond that, they are taking our job,
they are taking jobs. And I watched on ABC News
(30:21):
today cancer copy link. I watched on on ABC News
today a couple of the reporters talking about how just
(30:44):
disrespectful and how racist it was. And okay, he did
only mention those races, but that he was talking about
how he was at a Black Writers Association meeting. Uh,
they invited him to come and talk to them, and
(31:05):
he just he was there talking about that subject. They
came out and asked him that right off the bat.
You know, obviously he's not going to shut it down
and walk out on the first question, and then they
get the the optics of him being and angry whatever.
But his answer is that is that you know that
(31:31):
the the the His answer is that if you're.
Speaker 2 (31:49):
I'm just sucking him.
Speaker 1 (31:51):
His answer is that if if illegal people are taking
jobs from anybody, it's not great. If if they're taking
(32:12):
jobs from one person, then they're taking jobs that one
person in the US who's who's here, who who who is,
whether they fought in the military or anything else, has
fought to be here. They're they're they're alive, they've survived,
you know, anything else in life, and they're here, whether
(32:36):
they whether you consider it you won the lottery for
being born in the US, which you're blessed to be here.
But at the same point, you know, you're you're here
and you were here legally. Now if if you, you know,
(32:58):
if you came here illegal and you fought to become legal,
good on you. I you know, I applaud you finally
getting to you know, going through the through the the
the rigman role it takes to become a naturalized citizen.
(33:19):
So you know, so it just it's just one of
those deals where it's it's it's it's it's it's what
they're saying, and it's it's how it's how you uh,
it's how that it works. You catch him in in
(33:40):
talking about the people who are there, catch him in
talking to the you know you guys, and uh, then
you can say, oh, he just he literally just talked
down to the black people because he said, you know,
you guys should be upset because they're taking your jobs. Well, yeah,
(34:01):
I'm pissed off that they're taking our jobs. And you know,
if you're not upset that they're taking our jobs or
your jobs. Then you know, maybe you should start questioning
your patriotism a little bit because you're not you're not
you're not worried about this country. You know there there
(34:24):
needs to be some let you know, if you want
to raise the wages, don't raise the wages with a
fake a fake high minimum wage. Just the best way
(34:50):
to do it is to the way to do it
is just it is to have too many jobs, too
many jobs available, so people start raising their rates, so
they get people from other companies, or they get people
(35:13):
instead of going to other companies. I mean, that's economics
one o one. If you can't get people, it's because
you're paying too little, or your compensation package, the whole
package is too is too small, or you're just a
bunch of idiots, and you've got a bad reputation for
being just a bunch of idiots. One of the companies
(35:34):
around here, Fuya, just got raided by Homeland Security for
acting like a bunch of idiots, for working their people
too hard.
Speaker 2 (35:48):
I mean they're working them.
Speaker 1 (35:49):
Like Japanese workers, and if you're not part of the
Japanese worker group, they're treating you worse than that because
I don't know if you know how Asian culture works,
if you're not the Asian culture that's in charge, you're
the Asian culture that's being being moved to slavery. Now
(36:13):
you can fact check that if you want. But the
Asians are the biggest minority group or ethnicity in slavery
as of today. What in America we would have thought
(36:35):
it was the African Americans or Africans that are the
biggest group of slaves in the world. Nah, not even close,
not even I mean just the only people who take
Africans slaves anymore is Africans. Mind blown fact check get
(37:01):
on there and check your facts. Asians are the top,
top tier. They will take the take other Asians as
slaves in a second. And and and we you know,
as a as a world, as a country, as that
(37:25):
is a big world player. We've started wars over over countries.
Who who take other groups mhm and yah make them slaves,
Who who use genocide? And it just we're we're we're
(37:51):
not standing up and why because we're too we're too
worried about the fact that we can't kill our own baby.
We're too worried about the fact that we got. You know,
we want two hundred million people to twenty million people
(38:12):
to enter our country illegally so that we can get
the votes we want. We're too worried as a country
to keep our job as a congress person without doing
anything that actually helps the country, to keep the power.
(38:34):
That we won't do anything that upsets anybody. We're you know,
we're too worried as a country that people will will
see what's going on and stand up against it. That
(38:54):
the news organizations we pay as a country as politicians,
they pay billions of dollars in contracts and speakings and
just having the ear being able to get exclusivity to
(39:15):
these guys and sound bites and stuff like that that
they don't even fact check before they post their sound bites.
But they pay, they get paid to just shut up
(39:35):
and not report the actual news. They don't report the
Asian slave issue. They don't report that our population of
people are being sold into slavery and they're being taken
in sex trafficking. They don't report that that has become
(40:05):
a huge industry. That Epstein, you know, Epstein's Island was nothing.
It was it didn't even it didn't even cause a
ripple in the industry.
Speaker 2 (40:28):
Yep.
Speaker 1 (40:31):
But we're going to report that jd Vance said some
things about Trump that he won't take back thirty years ago,
twenty years ago.
Speaker 2 (40:45):
I don't know how many years ago.
Speaker 1 (40:47):
He doesn't seem that old, so it's got to be
only like twenty or ten or fifteen years ago. I
just I think he's only forty six or something like that.
And Trump really has only been in the political scene
for the last what like eight eight years, ten years
maybe maybe maybe a couple more years than that. But
(41:08):
and so but we we whines. I like, who cares
anybody on on the conservative side this voting for Trump?
And jd Vance don't care that he didn't he was
(41:29):
he didn't like Trump as a candidate. No one cares.
Like I said, there there there's something that I can't
put my finger on it about him, and maybe it
will and maybe it won't come out, and uh and whatever,
(41:50):
but that's not it. I don't care if you didn't
like Trump personally. Trump is a favorite person either. He
you know, honestly, he's not conservative enough for me. He
(42:10):
doesn't follow the Constitution quite tight enough for me. But
in this time he gets the job done because he's
not bought and paid for. If he gets if he
can get the Congresses, and the Congress can actually you know,
(42:36):
actually decides to do something because it doesn't help to
have the Republican side anymore.
Speaker 2 (42:50):
There's about.
Speaker 1 (42:52):
I'm going to be optimistic, even though today has not
been an optimistic day, and be optimistic and say about
three or maybe two thirds are still fighting for the
good of the country. At least they're trying to work
hard enough to keep their jobs fairly and get the
(43:17):
votes that they need to keep their jobs. But I'm
also going to say that I I don't think that
(43:46):
it matters anymore. There's there's a group, a big enough
group of Republicans that are bought and paid for, that
are that are working the other side, that are not
doing what's best for the country.
Speaker 2 (44:03):
And they're.
Speaker 1 (44:12):
You know, they're just not They're just they're just not
doing what's best for the country.
Speaker 2 (44:16):
And so.
Speaker 1 (44:19):
We're you know, we're we're sitting here.
Speaker 2 (44:30):
And we're uh.
Speaker 1 (44:40):
And and we're wondering what we can do. So we
you know, that's why why the the name of the
podcast today is the name of the podcast today is
(45:06):
that we need we need to look and see. We
need to see that. You know, Facebook is not a
a news organization. And when they start to censor you
because you post a comical meme, then you realize that
(45:28):
you can't even be a comedian. You can't, you know,
because comedians are just observing things and then satiing it
into you know, Mark Twain would have been censored m
(45:50):
and in in that censorship, you're there.
Speaker 2 (45:58):
You don't have.
Speaker 1 (45:58):
A voice, you have you you are powerless because right
now Facebook they can they can censor anything they want
because they are a private organization. And because they're a
private organization, they don't they don't have to abide by
First Amendment rules. And unfortunately, because the country doesn't doesn't
(46:27):
have an open public you know, forum that the country
wants to run or whatever, and and not unfortunately but
not unfortunately, but you know, honestly, there there isn't a
public forum online. You can go online, you can post
(46:50):
something and and they can you know, they can censor
you there too. The only place you have the ability
to actually control what you say is in your pillow
at night. You go out front, you say something that
(47:13):
somebody gets offended about, and you call and they call
it hates speech, and the police can come and take
you away.
Speaker 2 (47:25):
I have.
Speaker 1 (47:28):
George Carlin did hate both sides. You're right, and I have.
You know, I have a truck. It's a nineteen ninety
Ford Ranger. You can draw your conclusions from that that
it's probably not the nicest truck, but it hauls trash,
It fights against the weeds in my yard. It hauls
anything I needed to haul, and I don't need a
(47:52):
giant truck, and I enjoy driving it. And so I
had it parked out of the way for Christmas lights,
and I hadn't really moved it since because I need
to put a new ulterinator in it. And honestly, until
(48:14):
until you know, the podcast gets moving, until you know,
my gig job makes you know, has more and more
gigs and stuff like that, I uh, you know, I
don't have the money.
Speaker 2 (48:26):
To fix it. And so.
Speaker 1 (48:31):
I parked it in in that I left it in
that bush and the bushes kind of grew up around
the back end. It's still movable, honestly, because somebody called
on me, called the police on me, and I had
a sheriff pull up to my house and tell me
I had to move my truck or they would tow it.
In America, you can't park a truck. And he told
(48:55):
me that, right, I make sure that my truck has
no no electronics, so they can't shut me down. But
anyhow they you know, in America, they can call that
(49:15):
they will not allow you to park a junk vehicle
on the street because it hurts property values. So in
the name of property values not being too low, I
charged up the truck and I made sure that everybody
in the neighborhood heard my truck pull forty five feet
(49:41):
up the street and park up the street in front
of my house, so that you know, so I had
done my my civic duty. And property values are back
to what they were supposed to be and they are
safe and.
Speaker 2 (50:04):
Whatever.
Speaker 1 (50:08):
So it's and and honestly, I don't so honestly, i'man
I don't care.
Speaker 2 (50:30):
That it's.
Speaker 1 (50:34):
It's about property values or whatever that's you know, it
can it can be whatever it is it's about. But
when it comes to somebody telling you you have to
do something, or somebody telling you that you can't do
something with a property that you know, I purchased this property,
I own this property. I'm not renting this property. I
(50:56):
don't you know, other than I told everything I said
the other day. You know, you're not if you own
your home, you don't own your home. Even if you
own your home outright from you know, from the bank
and everything, you're still you still leasing your home. You're
still on a lifetime lease of your house that you
(51:19):
may be able to transfer to your kids someday or whatever.
But the country, the actual property.
Speaker 2 (51:30):
Is owned by the government.
Speaker 1 (51:33):
And if you don't believe that that's what they see,
then look at imminent domain. Look at you know, anybody
that you know lives next to the highway where they
just keep encroaching out more, adding more and more lanes,
taking more and more easement. You know, you lease your
(51:55):
land from the government because you live in this country. Now,
some countries, you know, I don't know right off the
top of my head, but I do know some island
nations you can own your property and they can't. They can't,
you know, they they cannot. Add they can't be on
(52:16):
your property if you if you call them all there's
other countries where you know they'll come in, knock down
your knock your door down, shoot you and the eye
on the spot and take your property. But so anyhow,
like I said, you don't, you don't. You don't own
your property. You don't own that, you know anything. And
so if you think that you have freedom, until you
start standing up for it anymore, you know, they've chipped
(52:37):
and chipped and chipped and chipped away at it, and
it's you know, it is slipping. And right now it's time.
I don't know if it's too late, because I don't
know what they can do about winning this election. And honestly,
you know, I don't I care about who becomes president,
(52:59):
but I don't care as much about who becomes president
as that we need to start voting out some of
these old cronies in in Congress. I don't you know
(53:20):
either side, honestly, they they both need to go. You know,
some of these guys, you know, Mitch McConnell, some of
those guys, they they they need to be out there.
They they're not they're not making votes. They're bought and
paid for there, they're taken care of. They they it's
(53:40):
time it's time to to look at that. It's time
to see that we're we're not we we don't have
the power. And what's that is is we're two hundred
million strong again, you know, to the fact of of
(54:04):
a couple hundred people. And I'm not saying let's get
a you know, get out and fight it. But you
know you can fight it with your votes. You can't,
you know, you can. You know, there's a lot of
ways to get to you know, fighting for your freedom
before you have to get out guns or get out
you know, weaponry and just start you know, trying to
you know, throw some lead. You know, we we can
(54:27):
get out and vote. We can at you know, on
the on the congressional level, you can have a third party.
You can run a strong third party and we need
you know. But to do that, you can't just show
up one day and say I'm going to run for Congress.
You have to you have to build an infrastructure like
(54:50):
with what What always has has boggled my mind is
that the Republican or the Conservative Party, because they want
to keep government small or they want to keep things,
you know, to to their level, they they they don't organize,
(55:13):
they don't have a bureaucracy. And unfortunately, because the Democrats
don't care about anybody, they're going to take all the
money they want. They're going to organize it one hundred percent.
They're going to use every ounce of technology and what
else not to send out the message that this is
(55:36):
what they want you to say, this is this is
how they're going to you know, this is how they're
going to push the message. And they want you to
push that message for them. And you do it freely
because you get a you get it. They send you
an email every every day or or they send you
(55:58):
you know, they send you talking points are there on
on your news channel telling you what to say, and
and you know they're teaching you, you know, and so
they're they're like the best group of evangelists, you know,
they're they're they're probably better than the Mormons at getting
(56:19):
their message out and getting you indoctrinated to teach the
message to other people. I mean, I I it's been
fifteen seventeen years. You know, I met up with a
lady at a just a public you know, talk like
a Pirate Day or something like that food truck rally,
(56:39):
and you know she's out there, you know, asking me
this and they're talking about when AIG was bought by
the by the government or bailed out by the government,
and then the government you know, which was part of
the going down of the of of country prior to
(57:02):
starting bad precedence that she know. She's like, oh, I
don't you know as a country, I don't want to
to buy an insurance company because Bush bailed out AIG.
And I'm like, but you you do want nationalized healthcare right? Well, yeah,
(57:28):
that would be great. That would that would help you know,
then we would have the country to to bring down costs. No,
that that doesn't That's not what happens. What happens is
is that when the country is the only, only, only
name or only person who writes the checks, they decide
(57:49):
the prices, and people decide that that price isn't worthwhile.
Why do you think that you know there there has
been a shortage of penicillin. Why do you think that
is because they put a cap on how much they
(58:10):
can charge for penicillin, Whether whether the price has gone up,
whether you know logistics have come have gone up, whether
you you know anything like that. Well, if it's not
worth making because the price is so low, then you won't.
That's the reason I don't want to run a food
(58:30):
truck again. I don't. I don't honestly want to work
that hard in the restaurant industry because selling a nine
hundred ninety nine dollars burger, how many do I have
to sell to make nine ninety thousand dollars a year? Well,
I got to sell a heck more a ton more
(58:53):
than ten thousand of them because I got all these
costs on top of just paying me money. So you
think about you have to sell nine, ten fifteen any
and then you look at the way that the food
(59:13):
industry is anymore, and you wonder, oh, that's why Taco
Bell now charges twelve dollars. You know, my meal at
Taco Bell went from twelve dollars to twenty two. Me
and my wife used to be able to eat at
Taco Bell just a quicksing that, you know, just a
couple of tacos, couple burrita, you know, you know, just
get full, not buy anything crazy twelve fifteen bucks. It
(59:39):
was like twenty seven dollars the other night, and I
got two things, and one of them was a Taco Supreme,
which used to be seventy nine cents. I mean that's
a long time ago, but used to be seventy nine cents,
So you know, it's it And and that's and that's
(01:00:02):
the that's that's the truth. That's that's economics. If something's
not worth making, nobody's going to make it for the
good or not very many people will make it for
the good. And so if not very many companies are
making it for the good of the people because they
(01:00:24):
just they just love the people, and that you know,
fifty dollars one hundred dollars penicillin that you can get,
they're just they're just taking a loss on it. Well,
there aren't that many companies that can take the loss
on it. And unless the government is going to mandate
(01:00:45):
companies that sell drugs to make every kind of drug
or that kind of drug, then they're not making it.
And that's going to happen far beyond on just the penicillin,
and that's going to happen in all kinds of drugs.
And being one of the leaders of making of producing
(01:01:08):
drugs in the world, we're going to as a country
lose that, you know, that's going to we're going to
lose that status. And then where we're going to get
our drugs from. They got to come from somewhere where
we're going to get them from China or from wherever,
and then we're going to be in this situation where
(01:01:29):
we tell China that they sent us an epidemic and
they say, no, we're pissed off that you keep telling it,
telling people that it's a Chinese virus, and they're going
to stop sending us us the antidote.
Speaker 2 (01:01:48):
And that's that.
Speaker 1 (01:01:51):
And that's that's controlling the power. That's that's that's what
we're seeing here. That's what that's what I'm saying is
that if you don't see that, it's it's it's all
about power. It's not about money money. Nobody cares about money.
(01:02:14):
Money can be power, and making money can give you
a level of of control over your finances, which is power.
But no one can you know, no one cares about
(01:02:36):
the actual or making money, making money for stuff. If
if you're if you and that's what silly is is
the the you know, the generations coming up, they're making
money for stuff. I want to buy this car, I
want to get this house. I want to But it's
it's not about, you know, making a lot of money
(01:02:58):
isn't about making a lot of money. It's about it's
about having the power to control your future, control your destiny.
It's about having the the the money to to live
a fulfilled life, to feel like you're fulfilled, like you're successful.
It's also about having the ability to you know, to
(01:03:22):
pay the bills and be.
Speaker 2 (01:03:25):
Secure. And that's and that's it.
Speaker 1 (01:03:30):
You know, once your security is is fulfilled, the rest
of the money is for power is to control, is
to be able to to to uh, you know, keep
on going. And some people use that power for good,
you know, they're you know, I'm not saying that. You know,
(01:03:51):
if you if you make a ton of money and
you start you start a company so that people have jobs,
that that power is a bad thing.
Speaker 2 (01:04:01):
You know.
Speaker 1 (01:04:01):
Power is not always a bad thing. It can't you know,
it can be a good thing. It can you know,
it can help people. But governmental power never been a
good thing it ever. And that's even what the founding
father said, you know, George Washington. You know, they fought
(01:04:24):
in the continent of Congress. What about about creating a
congress and a per you know, a king or a
president or a whatever. And they thought about it because
they were just leaving King George, who had most of
the power at the time to be able to decide
things and stuff like that he wasn't just a figureheaded yet,
(01:04:46):
and while being able to decide those things, you know,
he was being kind of a tyrant. He was not
allowing us any kind of representation for our to pay,
you know, to figure out what our taxes would be
and stuff like that. And so they, you know, they
(01:05:08):
even had the argument that why would we want to
give up a tyrant three thousand miles away for three
hundred tyrants two miles away, And the answer is, you wouldn't.
Speaker 2 (01:05:28):
But we have now.
Speaker 1 (01:05:31):
Because there is no there is no timeframe on how
long you can be a senator or a congress person
or a House representatives. So Congress kind of takes over
is the Senate and the House representatives, and so there's
no there's no time limit. So once you get in,
(01:05:56):
your time limit is as long as you can keep
your name recognition high enough so that people continue to
vote for you. As long as you keep yourself out
of the news as one of those guys, then most
likely you'll get voted for again as the incumbent. And
(01:06:20):
so you continue to use your power. But can you
use your power sparingly and only when it either doesn't
show you in a bad light or when you get
to when you get to do it without any recognition
(01:06:40):
at all, because if you do it with recognition, one
side is going to be upset with you. Now, if
you live in a place that is strongly to one
side or another, then obviously you can do more to
Chever's side. That is, you can kind of pander to
(01:07:04):
the larger constituency. But that's what's happened is on the
Republican side, a lot of people have started to pander
to the larger constituency, which is now Democrat And so
you're seeing that, and maybe there's more of those people
(01:07:32):
out there, and maybe that's that's the way the people
want this country to go. I obviously am not one
of those people that want you to want the country
to go that way, because I can see you can
see it in other countries. How it doesn't help. You know,
if if we just allowed if we just took regulations
(01:07:53):
off of things like farming, if we took the regulations
off of farming and we allowed the farmers to start
setting prices that actually made sense, food costs would go
through the roof, which is fine if you also take
(01:08:15):
the reggulations off of workers and and like wages and
things of that nature. So if if farmers could pay
a lower wage to high school kids, because they're high
school kids, they don't need a living wage, they need
some money to you know, get their car gas, whatever.
(01:08:42):
And you know they paid a lower they were allowed
to pay a lower wage for kids or for whoever's working,
you know, in a menial job, then they would be
able to recycle their workforce through they're going to teach
(01:09:04):
good habits. I mean it's honestly, you know, throwing hey
teaches you a hard day's work, and so you know,
we're going to train up a group of people who
know at least have seen a hard day as work.
Right now, we're training up a group of people who
go to college without ever having had a job, and
(01:09:29):
so when they get out of college, they think that
they're owed something. And honestly, I can't say that I
was a ton, I was a full ton different, But
I can say that I at least knew what a
hard day's work was. I knew that I need a
new job, I need the money coming in to be
(01:09:49):
able to pay the bills and things of that nature.
Speaker 2 (01:09:51):
And I wasn't going to be given anything.
Speaker 1 (01:09:55):
Yes, they had told me in the interviews for the
college that you know, you can make one hundred thousand
dollars as a as an executive chef. And they're not
lying one percent, but they're not. Everybody's making hundreds of
thousands of dollars as a as an executive chef. And
(01:10:16):
not everybody's making hundreds of thousands, you know, not everybody's
a celebrity chef, nobody, Not everybody's getting on the Food Network.
You know, a couple hundred chefs at most get on
the Food Network work every year. And so it's not
that that they're really lying, but they are. But they
(01:10:40):
are telling kids who have no way to know any different.
They're selling them a bag, a bill of goods that
probably won't happen. And so we're doing a lot of times.
(01:11:02):
And you know, I came out of the out of
out of college and then you know, at that time,
minimum wage was like, I don't know, six fifty or
six seventy five or something like that. And I think
they gave me seven fifty for the for my internship
and they had offered me eleven and they said all
the company standard is just seven fifty, and so I
(01:11:23):
was like, all right, for four months, I can do
seven fifty, but I need to get to the you know,
eleven twelve dollars mark so that I can get an
apartment things of that nature. So when I got out
of the externship, they gave me eight fifty. And you
know that that wasn't that wasn't a living wage. But
I wasn't working a menial job, you know, I was.
(01:11:44):
I was actually running the banquet section of the Marriotte.
Speaker 2 (01:11:48):
In Dayton, and.
Speaker 1 (01:11:52):
You know, doing other you know, basically you know, managing
certain things, certain aspects, and you know, I'm getting you know,
I'm getting a paid a a you know, starter base salary,
and I understood that I would have to take some lumps,
but I wasn't you know again, I wasn't asking for
(01:12:15):
a chef's salary. I was just asking for enough that
you know, my car didn't have to run on water
and get an oil and gasoline. At the same time,
you know that I didn't have to have a you know,
a blown head gas get to get to work every day.
So you know, I understand that, you know, starting out
(01:12:38):
it is is rough, and you don't want to start
out that way, but you know how many thousands, you know,
to be a great whatever you got you're going to be,
you've got to put in the thousands of hours to
become the expert. And that's the difference between you know,
the expert and the guy that just got just learned it.
(01:12:59):
You know, I piled thousands and thousands of six ounce
pasta bags into a cooler for.
Speaker 2 (01:13:09):
A year.
Speaker 1 (01:13:11):
I cut thousands of pounds of sausage into little rounds
for a year or two, you know, getting things ready,
prep you know, cutting onions, cutting potatoes, cut it. You know,
you know, I you know, talk about you know, the
base of my My cooking started in a kitchen where
(01:13:32):
I made twenty five gallons of French onion soup almost
every week, and we made twelve pans of full hotel
pans of mac and cheese, you know, every other day.
And so you know, or I was, you know, when
I was a baking assistant, we made you know, ninety
(01:13:55):
dozen cookies you know, at you know, Ducane University, and
we made eight pans up to twelve pans of rice
krispy treats that were going to be cut and individually
packaged as three dozen per pan for the same university.
(01:14:18):
And so you know, it's all about you know, the
volume and what you do. And so when you get
out of college right now, if you have no work ethic,
then you're going to come in and say, well that's
I have a degree. Well, at this point in life,
everyone that is over forty has some kind of degree.
(01:14:44):
Anyone coming out of college, anyone, you know, anyone at
twenty seven years old has has come out of college
and has a degree. You're not any better than anybody else.
And yet they've told you, with the the school system
that you are going you got to go to college
to get better than everybody else. But you're not going
(01:15:06):
to college to be better than everybody else. You're going
to college to be as good as anybody else. You
haven't differentiated yourself from anybody else. You didn't, you know,
And so now you've got you've got to go, you know,
two more years to get your masters, or or a
year to get your masters in another year to get
(01:15:26):
your doctorate, to be anything.
Speaker 2 (01:15:30):
I mean, my.
Speaker 1 (01:15:31):
My my boss wanted or my my wife wanted to
my wife wanted to, you know, get some get work
in the UH, in the mental health field. And because
(01:15:53):
a lot of people go into psychology and get a
psychology degree because not that it's it's not hard, but
it's it's a you know, it's almost a you know,
a medical style degree without having to to go into
the medical field. You do some physiotic, some physiology or
(01:16:14):
anatomy and stuff like that, but you don't have to
do the full on doctor stuff. But to get anything
in that degree that's not entry level, you either have
to go to HR which they're going to want you
to either recruit or you know, you're going to talk,
(01:16:38):
you know, because you have a a knowledge of how
people react to people, at least a base knowledge, and
so they're you know, they're gonna want you to to
go into something like that. But if you don't have
a full degree, like if you don't have a master's
(01:16:58):
or a doctorate, you're you're not going to you're not
going to work in the psychology field. You might get
into some kind of like social working assistant or something
like that, but that's it. You're not you know, your
(01:17:21):
degree isn't any better than anybody else's.
Speaker 2 (01:17:24):
And so.
Speaker 1 (01:17:29):
I think, you know, just it's just the the sad
crux of it anymore, is that they keep telling you this.
And what's even and sadder is is that we've got
kids coming out of college with a home mortgage one
hundred two hundred thousand dollars in just in in bills
(01:17:54):
like already set.
Speaker 3 (01:17:56):
And you how are you going to buy a house
when you already have a house that you have to
pay that called your education?
Speaker 1 (01:18:09):
You know, that's the biggest killer of the American dream
right now, is that you're you just came out of
college not knowing even what you want to do with
your life. I mean, who at fifty, at at eighteen,
other than people who go into the military, which have
no choice because they've gone into the military and they
have to be at least put in their first two years.
(01:18:32):
But other than those people who have a career path
written out for them, know what they want to do
with their life. And you're going to go and spend
one hundred thousand dollars at least to get an education
on something that you may not like, and so you're
(01:18:55):
going to switch and then you're not going to like
you know, you may not like that, and so you
get into three different majors, which then costs you more money,
and you come out of it still without any any actual,
any actual work experience, unless you're smart enough to get
a job. But the way that they run the the
(01:19:19):
academics in a lot of these colleges, you don't have
time to get a job on the side. I mean,
my wife is a superhuman because she worked a full time,
full on job while helping support you know, my dreams
in the food truck and going to school full time
(01:19:42):
to get her bachelor's degree in psychology and so like,
you know, most people don't have that, and so you
know you don't either. You can't get it. I mean,
twelve hours a day she was sleeping in her car.
(01:20:03):
You know, how much do you want it? You know,
sometimes that's what differentiates you from the other person. It's
not your education or that, it's it's who you know
and how much you want it. And if you don't,
you know, if you don't want it enough to sleep
in your car or do you know, then it's not
(01:20:25):
for you. You can just go find another job. Don't spend
the money because you just you literally spent like I
can't emphasize this enough. You literally spent a house payment
or a house amount of money on your education. And
she was smart she went to community college and transferred
(01:20:48):
to a little bit bigger college to get her bachelor's,
a better well, better known college to get her bachelors,
and did it the right way. But we still have bills,
We still have we still have student loans, and you know,
(01:21:17):
and and and honestly, it's a car is worth of
student loans.
Speaker 2 (01:21:24):
You know, it's not.
Speaker 1 (01:21:25):
I mean, it's kind of silly to think of it
that way, but at the same time, it's how you
have to think about it. You know, I could own
a car, or I could have these you know, I
could have an education, and the education should be enough
that it would you know, that you could have a
(01:21:45):
car and an education. But at this point, the way
that the way that you're you know, the amount of
money that you're having to pay on your education. You know,
if if you get a job in your field, you're lucky.
If if you didn't, if you weren't eighteen and decided
(01:22:08):
to go into something like so, so you know, if
you weren't going into film studies or you weren't going
into you know, the studies of whatever culture. I mean,
how many jobs in the world actually study certain ethnic cultures.
(01:22:36):
I mean, it's a great study. It's great to know
all that you can about and I think study, but
how many times is it? How often do.
Speaker 2 (01:22:44):
Those jobs come open?
Speaker 1 (01:22:47):
I mean at certain colleges and certain you know, museums.
So you better know, you better be sleep in your
car excited about this kind of stuff and and and
push into it like that, because otherwise.
Speaker 2 (01:23:10):
You're not.
Speaker 1 (01:23:15):
You know, you're not You're not going to be the
best at it, and you're you're not you're not going
to value it enough too to be that good, good
enough to.
Speaker 2 (01:23:25):
Get a job.
Speaker 1 (01:23:27):
And you're not. You're also not gonna want to take
the tiny, you know, the job that may not be
the top end job. You know, maybe you've got to
you know, sweep the floors at the place, or you've
got to you know, you're the the accepting manager where
you just where you have to accept all of the
shipments and stuff, and you're you're waiting on your your
shot to be the person who actually curates a museum
(01:23:49):
or or something or gets to study you know, the
actual anthropology.
Speaker 2 (01:23:55):
You know.
Speaker 1 (01:23:55):
It's just.
Speaker 2 (01:23:58):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (01:24:01):
So just while I'm talking here, checking out, checking a
few things to try to get get into better news
and you know obviously didn't find it. President Joe Biden
yesterday proposed and I think this is two days old,
so yeah, this is yesterday's yesterday proposed change I set
(01:24:24):
of changes to the US Supreme Court, including creating an
enforceable code of conduct and setting term limits for justices,
a departure from the current lifetime tenure, capping each justice's
term to eighteen years, which could reduce the chances of
(01:24:44):
a single president shaping the country's highest And this is
the this is it.
Speaker 2 (01:24:50):
That's what it is.
Speaker 1 (01:24:52):
They don't want a president to have that much power.
And so a president, yeah, who has no brain left
is going And this is and this is why we
have three branches. This is why we have the three
branches of Congress or of Congress, the judicial, and the executive.
(01:25:15):
And then this is what's silly about it is I
found I was listening to ABC and the reporter on
ABC didn't you know I got a gnat flying around here.
And the reporter from ABC goes, well, you know, we're
trying to we're trying to do our best to to
you know, you know vet these guys is so that
(01:25:36):
you know, you know what they're you know what their
good legislation is going to be. Well, he's the president.
He's not legislating anything. What you know, read your government
book like read read the internet. He's a part of
the executive branch. He's only there to give advice to
(01:26:01):
Congress about how that they can they can form and
and uh put laws into into place so that he
can execute those laws. And then once he executes that
(01:26:24):
that law, the judicial system, a judaicates that law. They
they review the laws and they put forth the the
(01:26:46):
uh the power of the law, and so they they
you know, he executes the law. He doesn't legislate. He
doesn't create the laws. He'll sign. You know, he's got
a check and balance so that he can sign that
(01:27:06):
law in so that there's no there's no crazy laws
that the legislator, the legislative branch doesn't go in and say, well,
the president is just a figurehead, and you know, create
a law that makes the president a figurehead. You know,
he can veto that or he can do like you know,
(01:27:27):
he has the power to pocket veto, which is a
precedented law that he kind of the you know, the
president kind of created as you know, he can put
it in his in in in his desk drawer and
let it expire. Now, Congress has ways of overriding that
(01:27:49):
with you know, supermajorities and things of that nature. But
so instead of allowed you know, and and and that
as part of the Supreme Courts checks and balances, is
that they don't there. You know, as a judge, you're
not supposed to be on a side. You're not supposed
(01:28:10):
to have to look over your shoulder. You know, you're
not supposed to have to play to a a group
of people. This is supposed to be your your best thoughts,
(01:28:33):
you know, the way the way that you you know,
your ethical standing is what comes that is supposed to
be what comes out. You're not supposed to, you know,
play to the to the right or the left, or
play to this, this minority or that to get re elected.
When we when we put judges on election stands, that's
(01:28:54):
when we that's when we see that they're going to
to adjudicate certain styles. You know, that's when you're going
to see stuff like New York where well, we're definitely
we're definitely you know, everybody wants you know, legal marijuana.
So we're not going to uh, you know, we're just
(01:29:17):
we're not we're not going to uh, you know, prosecute
people with you know, under on marijuana charges. Well, the
federal government still says that marijuana is illegal. Your state
and in state supreme court or your state executive branch
has decided that they're not going to to prosecute. So
(01:29:41):
if the national government came in with a law group,
a executive police like the FBI, and wanted to start
executing the law of the country on people and federally
taking people into study and prosecuting them, then they could.
(01:30:09):
And there's not one thing the state could do because
their law is against the constitution or against the law
of the land. And in all honesty, if someone came
to the federal government and said, wow, my state it's legal,
(01:30:30):
No it's not. That's not constitutional. So now we want
to cap these people at eighteen years, which is is
(01:30:50):
a long time. And honestly, probably most of these judges
don't preside over the courts for more than for much
more than that, honestly. Ruth Bader Ginsburg, I think she
was in the court for twenty two years or something
(01:31:13):
like that, and some of those. But she was a
left leaning judge, you know, not that I'm saying that
they you know, they stay.
Speaker 2 (01:31:25):
Longer or whatever.
Speaker 1 (01:31:26):
But also, I mean, you've got judges that have had
mental issues and stuff like that, and I understand if
we're doing it for that for that reason, but you know,
the reason is is because we don't want a president
shaping the country's highest court forever. But they can't, like
(01:31:49):
Biden's been a president, you know, he you know, had
had just had had every chance. You know, if one
of the judges just died, he could have gotten a
judge in there, or one of the judges retires. I mean,
the judges can they do retire? So I don't know.
(01:32:12):
I just it's like I said, it's all about power,
and this wasn't any happier. And the other article I've
got about a kid stabbing you know, two people to
death and injuring eleven is not any happier than that.
Seems like I sent myself something happy. Let's see. Ah,
(01:32:37):
this is the story we're going to end on. For
the Paris Olympics, which we haven't talked about a whole lot.
The opening ceremony was WHOA especially in if you're a Christian,
it was it was pretty pretty blatant that they were
not excited about you. But you know, freedom of speech
(01:33:01):
be freedom of speech right, especially in France. Diva la France. Anyhow,
So this is this story from the Paris Olympics. I
thought it was heartwarming and uplifting. There was an Australian
field hockey player, Matthew Dawson. He actually broke his finger
(01:33:27):
about uh three four weeks ago before the Olympics, and
it was pretty bad.
Speaker 2 (01:33:34):
It was it was like it was it was.
Speaker 1 (01:33:36):
Gonna be something and uh like so bad that when
when they actually untaped it and he showed it to
him at you know, in the locker room, he passed out,
like he just fell over. So, I mean, this is
a field hockey player. This is like a guy that
runs around with a stick getting beaten by other sticks
(01:33:59):
without barely any pads on. And you know it's not
quite rugby, but not far off. So they yeah, they
so they gave him the options. The options were that
it's pretty bad, we could amputate it, or it looks
(01:34:24):
like we have a shot at fixing it, keeping your finger.
The problem is is with this is that you're going
to have like six months to a year of rehab.
Still not guaranteed that it's going to work all the way,
but we're fairly certain that we can save your fingertip.
(01:34:50):
And the guy said, what's the other option? And he's like,
six months puts me way beyond the Olympics, and as
a as a field hockey player, there isn't much that's
going to get me a chance beyond you know, like
(01:35:10):
there's not much bigger stage than the Olympics for field hockey.
There isn't some like, yes, there's a World Championship or whatever.
Speaker 2 (01:35:19):
I mean, they have those kind of tournaments and stuff.
Speaker 1 (01:35:23):
I'm sure, but I'm sure that those those tournaments don't pay.
I mean they're not they're not paying soccer money or
or they're not paying foot you know, NFL money or
or NBA money, or baseball money or any kind of
money you know, golf money or tennis money or you know,
anything like that. They may be paying better than bowling money,
(01:35:47):
but probably not any any more than that. But so dude,
dude said, what's the other option and they said amputation.
He goes, how long is the recovery for that? And
the doctor said, well, if we amputaate your finger, like
ten days and we could have you plan again, he said,
(01:36:10):
sign me up. So instead of keeping his finger, he
decided to go with amputation. And his quote is, with
all the information I had to make the decision in
a pretty short period of time, I still decided to
take it. And I can live. I can still live
(01:36:34):
a pretty good functioning life with just a little less
finger to worry about. So when dawson teammates learned about
his decision, they were stunned, but they weren't surprised. The
captain of the team said, when you've spent a lifetime
(01:36:56):
of choice and sacrifice to come and compete at the
highest level, I think for him it was an easy decision.
The coach said, I'm not sure I would have done it,
but he's done.
Speaker 2 (01:37:10):
It so great.
Speaker 1 (01:37:12):
It's literally his ring finger, and it's just it's it's
literally just a tip. You know, as much fun and
been prodding as you can say about that, it was
just a tip and basically anything after the knuckle is gone.
Speaker 2 (01:37:29):
But the knuckle is still.
Speaker 1 (01:37:30):
There, and he's competing in the Olympics, and he's right,
you only live this life once. And he can still
have a huge, super good quality of life without a
tip of his finger. It's not like he lost a
leg or a hand or you know, an eyeball or
something like that, or he's got concussion issues or anything
(01:37:51):
like that, which they don't say he does.
Speaker 2 (01:37:53):
He could.
Speaker 1 (01:37:55):
Most likely with playing field hockey.
Speaker 2 (01:37:58):
He does. But you know so.
Speaker 1 (01:38:03):
And he said, he said, if taking the top of
my finger was the price I had to pay.
Speaker 2 (01:38:09):
That was what I would do. So feel good.
Speaker 1 (01:38:15):
Story man sacrifices all his finger or actually just the
tip of his finger to make it to the to
the Olympics. And with that, you know, he I haven't
seen what the field hockey had has is up to yet,
(01:38:36):
so I just, you know, I think that, you know,
we all need to root a little bit for the
for the man with a little less finger beyond the
Australian field hockey group. Be excited for them and root
(01:39:00):
for the Australian guy with a little less finger. So
again with that being said, you know, another shameless plug
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(01:39:47):
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Speaker 2 (01:41:05):
With that, you know.
Speaker 1 (01:41:06):
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