Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:04):
Right, when did we all get this dump?
Speaker 2 (00:09):
Almost only counts in horseshoes, hand grenades, and nuclear warfare.
Speaker 3 (00:14):
I don't see anybody, so it doesn't count.
Speaker 1 (00:17):
I'm I'm the chef.
Speaker 3 (00:20):
I want to hear one thing, Yes, chef, Come on, man,
here's your brain.
Speaker 1 (00:26):
The wym Angry Podcast start now.
Speaker 3 (00:37):
All right, it's the y am Angry podcast working on
getting a little message sent out to everybody. If you
want to support us, click the link in the comments
being sent out right now. Gonna be about a half
an hour tonight, and then if you guys want to
(01:00):
get on and find the rest of it, the rest
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Speaker 1 (01:15):
You'll get to listen to.
Speaker 3 (01:16):
What I do here on the show, and then you'll
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rest of what I have to say.
Speaker 1 (01:31):
Before I go any farther.
Speaker 3 (01:33):
This is Aaron, I'm the chef, and we're here in
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Speaker 1 (03:19):
So get on.
Speaker 3 (03:22):
Listen to this and then uh then we'll have the
rest of it on the on the podcast and you
can listen to it there. And uh you know, uh
sometime I lost my oh there we go, lost my
background here. But uh yeah, so two weeks till the
(03:42):
election here, I thought i'd get on. I found a
couple of good cheat sheets and I'll add those also
to the comments so you can kind of follow along.
This pretty decent website talks about, you know, kind of conservatism,
where we're, where we're at, who we're fighting, and how
(04:03):
how we're ooops, that was not the right yeap, wrong,
wrong website for some reason, you brought up my support page.
There we go copy, go and paste this in here,
all right, pasting it in there, there we go, send
(04:25):
it out to the message, send the message to the wrong,
wrong place. Let me get on on X here, send out.
Speaker 1 (04:36):
A paste and then we're also going to.
Speaker 3 (04:45):
So so yeah, get on, get on this this little
cheat sheet I've got out there, and uh, you know,
all of that that'll help you kind of know what's
going on, how's it going, all that kind of thing.
And from there, so that you can be the most informed.
(05:11):
And that's and that's really honestly what we're what we're
working on here is to to make you guys the
most informed you can be. And as long as you
can can make the right decisions. You know, as long
as you make an informed decision, I don't I don't
think you go wrong, even if it's you know, one
(05:32):
of those deals where we don't we don't agree. If
we don't, you know, no big deal if we don't agree, again,
what is going on here? No big deal if we
if we don't agree. But at the same point, if
you made an in in informed, well invested decision where
(05:57):
you where you went on and you you you figured
it out for yourself, then then I have no you know,
I have no quorums.
Speaker 1 (06:08):
I have no problems with you, you know.
Speaker 3 (06:12):
But if you just went on and you know, voted
the party line, or you just went on and and
listened to everyone else that's trying to sway you one
way or another, then then.
Speaker 1 (06:25):
You know there's an issue.
Speaker 3 (06:27):
So tonight we're going to kind of go over some
of the different states. I know, I've got people that
listen from from kind of all over. I looked at
the at the map, and India is even I don't
know what your elections look like. I'm sorry, but you
can hear and listen to what we're looking at and
find it from there. So so fifty one elections, which
(06:53):
is fifty states in the district of Columbia. I did
see on the others that Puerto Rico has a are
asking the residents whether they would prefer statehood or independence
or the third path. I would figure that the third
path is to stay a not state, just a district
(07:18):
or a a territory of the United States. Honestly, right now,
other than not having a vote, they got a pretty
good deal.
Speaker 1 (07:30):
You know.
Speaker 3 (07:30):
I don't know the exact what's what's it's and and
who's its of.
Speaker 1 (07:34):
Of their their deal.
Speaker 3 (07:35):
I'd have to look it up, but you know they're
getting covered under US, under the United States for protection
they have. They get some some subsidies and stuff like that.
When there's a natural disaster, we send aid and help
and what you know, send the National Guard and FEMA
and all that good stuff to them.
Speaker 1 (07:56):
But they don't have to deal with all of.
Speaker 3 (07:58):
The the other stuff, uh statehood stuff. They can kind
of run themselves. The way they want to run themselves
as long as it follows under the constitution. So I
don't see, you know, I don't see where I would
want to be any more than that, but let me
(08:20):
uh yeah. So so that's that's one interesting interesting path.
On the others, kind of uh West Virginia is has
an amendment one on prohibiting uh, physician assisted suicide. So
(08:48):
I kinda I kind kind of wonder, you know, is
that not been the case?
Speaker 1 (08:57):
Have we, you know, have we been.
Speaker 3 (08:58):
Allowing physical assisted suicides in West Virginia. I know that
that was a big thing maybe ten fifteen years ago.
There was a doctor, doctor Kavorkian, who I think in
the Ohio Kentucky area, was allowing it was helping and
(09:19):
doing assisted suicides for elderly people who wore, people who
were on you know, they just they were terminally terminal,
terminally ill. That was tough to say for some reason.
But you know, I think that you know, when they
(09:40):
finally you know, tamped down on the laws and they
finally arrested him and things and just pushed on him,
that kind of subsided. Missouri is legalizing sports betting. They
have an amendment to do that. Maine is trying to
in light a new flag, which is kind of cool.
(10:04):
I guess if you didn't like the original main flag.
Colorado is trying to bad band slaughterhouses in Denver and
the manufacturing of set and sale of for products. They're
going vegan, guys. Denver is going vegan. Colorado in general,
(10:29):
he is trying to ban trophy hunting in the state.
I was just talking to my uh, my stepfather, and
uh he was actually saying that the state of Ohio,
because of the drought, Uh, there was there's a larva
that they were getting that the deer were getting and
(10:52):
is killing hundreds of deer.
Speaker 1 (10:54):
They said.
Speaker 3 (10:55):
In the in the two small counties that they are
in that he hunts in, there was close to a
little over one hundred deer that have died in the
last just like month or two here where he where
he hunts. They were they were saying that at least
a dozen we're dead in in the in the herd
(11:15):
that they they manage. And there's a live, you know,
live herd that can go wherever.
Speaker 1 (11:22):
It wants to go.
Speaker 3 (11:23):
It just happens to live on the property on the
so many acre property that him and his uh his friends,
his lifelong friends have have hunted and that, and so
they responsibly wise, they're not going to hunt the the
property a lot of big bucks where it went down,
(11:45):
and uh so they're you know, they're they're managing it.
And I think that's honestly where you know, even even
trophy hunting, you know where you go and you hunt,
hunt elker, you hunt, you know, you get on a
property and you hunt big, big, big deer or something
like that. Most of those people who manage those properties,
(12:07):
they manage the herd. You know, they they raise so
many they they put so many more out there. That
kind of thing that is, it's it's almost gotten to
the point where it's it's a lot like cattle. They
(12:28):
just go out there and hunt them. They you know,
it's like it's like workout cattle or something like that.
You know, you go out and you work out and
you get it. You hunt it, hunt them for sport.
And not that I you know, not that I think
that's the best way to do it. I mean, obviously,
if I'm out there and I'm hunting for sport, I'm
also hunting for food and hopefully that you know, I
(12:52):
get something because I'm gonna enjoy the hunt, and I'm
also going to enjoy the food that I eat afterwards.
So I think that's you know, that's where where that's
a better way to do it. But you know, I
think also that you know, if you're managing it, it
(13:14):
kind of doesn't matter as much, you know, why you're hunting,
because you know, you may be you know, if you're
if you're trophy hunting or you're hunting for sport, you
you may be thinning, helping thin the.
Speaker 1 (13:26):
Herd, or you may be you know that kind of thing.
Speaker 3 (13:28):
So, UH, California and this is all the odd other topics.
UH has a pretty complicated one. It restricts AIDS Healthcare
Foundation and how they can spend its money, largely in
a bid by the landlord lobby to kneecap and organization
(13:50):
that's pushed for rent control and resisted some of the
developmental products. Basically, it sounds like that it is a
a retaliatory proposition for the aid soalth Care Foundation not
allowing some developments to come through, you know, land developments
(14:14):
and resisting rent control. I don't know why they would,
but maybe it's because that their population, their people, they're
their lobbying for the people.
Speaker 1 (14:28):
That they use it.
Speaker 3 (14:31):
So you know, you never you know, you never know
where it's going to come from, but you do know
that it's going to be shady dealings. So so to
get into the real medium potatoes, the Senate Democrats are
(14:52):
likely to hold it, says. Democrats are likely to hold
forty two seats and the GOP seems like it's going
to hold forty six seats. If you think about that,
that's not quite one hundred seats, which there are one
hundred one hundred seats in the in the Senate, so that, uh,
(15:17):
you know, that gives you about what eight other twelve
seats that need to be kind of accounted for. So
on that list, there are about nine seats one from Arizona, Michigan, Maryland,
(15:40):
Montana to Nevada, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Wisconsin, and West Virginia that
are Democrat held. We are fighting a long held Democratic
seat in Ohio, and I think he's gonna hold it.
Speaker 1 (15:58):
He's he's he's got a good, a.
Speaker 3 (16:01):
Good following, he's got a strong campaign, he's got all
the dollars behind him, and uh, the the guy that
they ran against him is a good guy, Bernie Moreno
like the guy he talks. He's very intelligent guy. He uh,
he's run his own business, all kinds of things like that.
(16:23):
But they've just they've run a good campaign against him, honestly,
and unfortunately he hasn't gotten out in our area. And
maybe that's because he's got a good idea that he's
gonna he's gonna get the votes because one he's a
Republican and we're a very conservative area.
Speaker 1 (16:45):
But he I just.
Speaker 3 (16:49):
I just don't see where he where he takes out
the the incumbent, but you know, and where he just
beats Shared Brown. I just don't see where he gets
where he gets the vote, the population vote in the
(17:13):
major populations. Sheer Brown's been here almost fifty years and
it's time for him to go. Really, But I don't
think they're gonna beat him. I just don't, not because
he's so great, but because I don't think Bernie Marino
was was a strong enough candidate. You know, they they
(17:34):
needed that, you know, almost doctor Oz style candidate, that
somebody that had had some some for following to them before.
You know, they went into the primary and they had
one one guy that you know could have probably you know,
(17:56):
had that backing. He just didn't get the backing in
the primary. And I don't know, maybe didn't run very well.
I just I didn't see I didn't follow the primary
enough I guess to know exactly. I mean, we talked
to some guys on the on the ground and stuff,
and you know, they they liked us, They like Bernie Marina.
(18:18):
So maybe he's got the money because he uses his
own money in the campaign. That's one thing I think
that the the Republicans need to do better is that
on these kind of on these kind of campaigns where
you know it's tight.
Speaker 1 (18:33):
Or where we could you know, we could get a.
Speaker 3 (18:36):
Big, a big upset, they don't.
Speaker 1 (18:41):
They don't throw tons of money at it.
Speaker 3 (18:43):
And I don't know why they. You know, they let
the Democrats throw tons of money at it, but and
then they don't do it. But yeah, so those are
kind of the nine big you know holdovers that we
could you know, we could win and would Basically, you know,
(19:03):
it's a two for one deal. You switch out one,
you get two spots. So at you know, if we
had if we have forty six seats and we get
one of these spots, you know, that's forty seven seats,
but that's one seat less that they have also, So
that's that's you know, it's a it's a two it's
(19:26):
a two point deal. But so the I don't I
don't know a ton about the other ones. But GOP
held spots Florida, Nebraska, Texas. We can get into into
more about about those seats later, but just know if
(19:48):
you're in Arizona, Michigan, Maryland, Montana, and Nevada, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Wisconsin,
and West Virginia, those those are big, those are those
are big election spots. It that we could gain seats
we you know, as a conservative, we can gain footholds,
and that that helps us get things done. If you're
(20:10):
in Florida, Nebraska, or Texas, you know, keep out to
get out there, super important to keep those keep those seats.
We can see what you know, a deadlocked or or
even a small majority does. It doesn't do anything. You know,
we haven't we haven't pushed or or done done much
of anything. So make sure that that you're out doing
(20:33):
those you know, getting the getting those votes in and
and keeping keeping the the dream alive. I guess so
us House, there's a couple of things. Basically, a seat
is included if rate in this in this deal, if
(20:55):
it's rated unsafe by one of uh, the kind of
outside polling areas. So like, I guess it's cook or
crystal Ball or inside elections. It's funny that crystal Ball
does stuff with the elections also because they do a
lot with the recruiting process in college football and college
(21:19):
sports and stuff. So all the Democrat held districts carried
by Donald Trump in twenty twenty, you got the Arkansas
al you got the Main District two, you got in
North Carolina District six, North Carolina District thirteen, and North
(21:41):
Carolina District fourteen. You got Ohio District nine. And then
you've got Pennsylvania District eight and Washington District three.
Speaker 1 (21:55):
And those those are the ones that are kind of.
Speaker 3 (22:03):
Those are the ones that Donald Trump held in twenty twenty,
but now have a Democrat holding them. So then we
have Democrat held districts that were carried by Joe Biden
in twenty twenty. But these are these are competitive battles.
(22:27):
So we've got the California District nine, California forty seven,
California forty nine, Colorado eight, Connecticut five, Florida nine, Illinois seventeen,
Indiana one, Kansas, UH three, Maryland six, Michigan three, Michigan seven,
(22:48):
Michigan eight, So seven to eight, Minnesota two, Nevada one,
Nevada three, Nevada four, New Hampshire one two, New New
Mexico two, North Carolina one, North New York. So a
lot of seats, the Ohio three, Hio one and thirteen,
(23:15):
a couple others New York three and eighteen, Oregon four
and six, and might as well just finish it out,
Pennsylvania seven and seventeen, Texas twenty eight and thirty two,
and the Washington eight. These are all seats that are competitive.
So they were held by Joe Biden in twenty twenty,
but now they're competitive. There's an actual election going and
(23:38):
they're actually you know, they're actually close races, or they're
at least competitive races, whether it looks like they're gonna
lose or they're gonna win.
Speaker 1 (23:47):
You know who's gonna win. You know, those are the
it are it?
Speaker 3 (23:51):
And then we've got all GOP held districts carried by
Joe Biden. So there's another you know about fifteen or
so more and then competitive GOP held districts carried by Trump,
(24:13):
and there's another about twelve or fifteen that are up
for grabs. Nothing in Ohio that were held by Trump
that are up for grabs, Nothing in Ohio that was
up for grabs by Joe Biden. So congressional wise, that's
(24:36):
kind of your congressional rundown. You know, if you have
if you have a congressional race going on and you're
you know, which you should have at least one person
that's that's running, then you know, make sure that you
know who you are, who you're you're voting for, and
(24:58):
and that. So right now, the race for two seventy
for the president, it looks like Harris is likely to
win two hundred and twenty five electoral votes and Trump
is looking at about two nineteen is what they're what
(25:20):
they're polling right now. And that's that's before that's before
the eight eight swing states are counted. So they're saying
(25:40):
that you will get they're saying that most likely Harris
gets Michigan, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, which is another forty four votes,
So that would put her at one sixty nine or
(26:04):
two sixty nine and then they're saying that Arizona, Georgia, Nevada,
North Carolina probably probably Trump, but.
Speaker 1 (26:18):
With that would be then.
Speaker 3 (26:22):
Thirty forty seven more votes. So forty seven more votes
would give him one sixty six or two sixty six,
and that would probably you know, So right now they're
basically saying that they're dead dead. Even Nebraska's second district
(26:48):
might give You could give Kamala Harris one vote, which
would give her the two seventy but uh, you know,
so there there, I mean, that's it's it's that tight.
This isn't the you know, if you haven't voted, if
you haven't gone out and voted before, this is the
election to go out and vote. Every vote is the
(27:13):
most important election that we've ever been through, you know,
So every vote, every every election cycle is is for
our future. So every every election cycle. So it's silly
to say this is the most important vote we've ever had.
Well obviously, because we're putting the leader in of the
of the free world into a seat for four more years,
(27:37):
four years into the future, which you know, if they
were to get elected twice, isn't it is a generation
you know, eight years you know, would be you know
they would basically see the end out of of a
generation and see the the coming of a of a
new generation. So so make sure that you're getting out
(28:01):
and voting big governor races we've got. We've got a
lot of GOP government governors out.
Speaker 1 (28:11):
There right now.
Speaker 3 (28:12):
Indiana, Missouri, Montana, New Hampshire, North Dakota, Utah, Vermont, West
Virginia all uh all all GOP held governors. So you know,
make sure you're getting out there holding holding the line.
And we can we can, we can, we can stand
(28:33):
to get uh Delaware, North Carolina, and Washington they're all
Democrats UH held right now.
Speaker 1 (28:42):
I could not.
Speaker 3 (28:43):
I just I don't see Washington ever coming to the
Republican or conservative side.
Speaker 1 (28:52):
But you know, you never know.
Speaker 3 (28:55):
If you're in Washington and UH and you think that
there's a chance, then you know, hit me up and
let me know what the chance is. So North Carolina
not a bad chance, not a bad chance. And then
Delaware again, it's a it's it's a lot of it's
(29:16):
a lot of Democrats held area. So we're you know,
most likely, well we you know, we have a chance
to pick up a one. Most likely we you know,
we stay this way, or you know, somebody's somebody's slides.
West Virginia is always a good swing. You know, they
got a lot of Democrats held congress congressional seats, so
(29:43):
they you know, they can always be kind of swung.
But normally in West Virginia, your your Democrats are more
more conservative. So so there's some big, big, big seats
that that could flip in in your legislative chambers. The Arizona,
(30:10):
Arizona Senate and an Arizona House could flip to Democrat.
They've kind of been showing their hand over the last
few years. New Hampshire's House and Senate also could and
that would be a big, big, strange one to me.
Pennsylvania Senate, Wisconsin House and Senate, those all kind of
(30:33):
came over with the with Trump as he took some
of these states that you wouldn't have thought there was
a good, good run for him for them, and they're
kind of sliding back to old ways.
Speaker 1 (30:50):
So there are a few.
Speaker 3 (30:54):
Democratic ones that could could slide. Maine, Maine could slide.
Maine is kind of its own weird cosm.
Speaker 1 (31:05):
Maine is.
Speaker 3 (31:05):
You know, some of some of the people in Maine
are the nicest people you'd ever meet and then but
for some reason when they vote, they vote old school Democrat.
They haven't realized, they haven't one hundred percent, or they're
they're coming around to the fact that, you know, the
(31:26):
Democrats of old are not the Democrats of old, and
it's becoming younger, and so you're seeing a change in
the Democrats. But there's also some good old, good old
home values there and so you're seeing some some changes
in Maine, Michigan, you're seeing some fed up people, some
(31:48):
people like, you know, you see what's going on in Detroit,
the resurgence of power, resurgence of strength and stuff in Detroit,
And that's not that's not because you know, the Democrats
have taken your guns and taken your power. That's some
that's some fed up people deciding they're going to do
(32:09):
something about it. So Minnesota both stayed in the House.
I don't know about that one. They I don't know Nevada. Pennsylvania. Again,
it would be interesting to see it flip both ways,
one one to the other. But I feel like it's more,
(32:32):
you know, flip from the GOP to the Democrats. On
on in Pennsylvania, they just they don't have enough area
or enough population.
Speaker 1 (32:41):
That just holds it.
Speaker 3 (32:43):
So there are a couple Democrats supermajorities that they could
get California, they could win a super majority there, Delaware, Nevada,
Vermont all really super liberal states. GOP super majorities could
(33:04):
come into play in Kansas, Montana, Nebraska, and North Carolina.
And uh for Kansas, Montana and North Carolina could be
in both House and Senate, Nebraska just the Senate. So
(33:27):
so let's see key this is get They have a
list of key legislative districts, and we kind of went
over like where they were and stuff like that. Let's
look and see if this is This is gonna be
too much, too much reading, so I'm gonna I'm gonna
(33:50):
leave you leave you up to it.
Speaker 1 (33:53):
And then.
Speaker 3 (33:59):
So so then there was some other interesting just referendums.
So I went on to they have some some lists,
you know, some some titles of different referendums like what
they're about and stuff like stuff like that, and uh,
you know, the first one I got into.
Speaker 1 (34:22):
What was abortion.
Speaker 3 (34:30):
And if you've been around a while, you understand you
know where we're at on it. But it was interesting
to see what, you know, what states were.
Speaker 1 (34:41):
Doing what.
Speaker 3 (34:43):
Arizona is establishing a right to abortion access Prop one
thirty nine if you're there, so that would that would
establish the right to have abortion. San Francisco UH Prop
Prop o is shoring up local protections for abortion rights
(35:06):
again making sure you have access to abortions. Colorado is
establishing a right to abortion access. Florida Amendment four would
be establishing a right to abortion access and that would
overturn a six week abortion ban. Maryland their Question one
(35:30):
is also establishing the right to reproductive freedom, including abortion access.
Missouri establishing the right to abortion access and this would
also overturn a state ban. This is kind of what
happened in Ohio. Ohio put through a I think it
(35:52):
was a six or eight week ban ordeal on abortions
and and uh with that, they also, you know, so
the Ohio State Congress or a house.
Speaker 1 (36:22):
Wanted to wanted to make it harder for them to
do it.
Speaker 3 (36:27):
They put forth a an amendment issue to amendment to make
it a super majority.
Speaker 1 (36:36):
That failed.
Speaker 3 (36:38):
They won with about fifty six percent, so that super
majority bill would have would have covered it. But you know,
that's what's happening right now, is that they're now establishing
all right to abortion. And although we don't you know,
(36:58):
we don't believe in it or or anything like that,
you know, it was sent from from the federal government,
which we you know, believe the closer it gets to you,
the better, the better chance you have of of really,
you know, making sure that this thing gets decided in
(37:21):
your way, in the way that you feel is the
most So, you know, so that's you know, that's that's
that's just that's just part of it. And so it
looks like as you go down through, most of it's
about abortion access. Established rights to abortion in Nebraska, Nevada,
(37:44):
New York, protecting people from discrimination on a number of grounds,
including ethnicity, sexual orientation, and reproductive health. So if you've
now had a reproductive health, oh, like, how do you
(38:06):
know somebody's reproductive? Like how can you anyhow?
Speaker 1 (38:13):
Uh?
Speaker 3 (38:14):
South Dakota again establishing abortion access.
Speaker 1 (38:18):
And the only one that.
Speaker 3 (38:19):
I saw was was Texas. Amarillo, Texas is trying to
ban people from traveling out of state for abortion.
Speaker 1 (38:29):
So I think.
Speaker 3 (38:32):
That, honestly, I don't know that I'm for the you know,
the travel of abortion and stuff like that, Like you
can't travel to get an abortion, blah blah blah. But
I do think that you know, again, as you kind
of as you kind of go through these things that.
Speaker 1 (38:57):
You know, you you decided here and.
Speaker 3 (38:59):
Then you people do you know, people are gonna do
what they're gonna do kind of like you know, we
we we sign all these gun control bills and and
you know, still the bad guys get gun somehow because
they're you know, but anyhow, so well, uh, if you're
if you're watching us live or you're watching this in
(39:22):
in the past, you know afterwards.
Speaker 1 (39:23):
On one of the one of the our sites, Rumble.
Speaker 3 (39:26):
YouTube, Facebook, Twitch, any of those places, I appreciate you
guys checking us out, and uh, you know, this is it.
You know, go find the rest of the podcast at
at our pages, at our podcasting sites, and you can
hear the rest of it live or hear the rest
(39:49):
of it on our podcast starting tomorrow morning at five
a m. Friday mornings at five am is when we go,
when we shoot our podcast out. I appreciate you guys
getting on and checking us out. You know, Unfortunately, right now,
because we don't have a lot of following, we've got
(40:11):
to kind of circle the wagons and bring that in.
So this is a great advertisement for us to to
have some some following. But then we need to shoot
you guys to the places where we get some advertising dollars. Unfortunately,
like I said before, I can't do this all on
my own and right now with me just being here
(40:31):
in the in the studio, and uh, my money is
what's funneling through to keep us going. That's what we
just got to do to get you guys, uh getting
more information and more from us on the places where
we can where we can control it. So come come
(40:52):
get our get our podcast. It's gonna be a full
podcast with everything going on, and uh, you know, we
love you guys, and and uh we'll kick you guys
out and come back. You know, we'll see you on Friday.
Speaker 1 (41:20):
All right.
Speaker 3 (41:20):
If you're still here and uh you're not getting kicked
off the stream right now, then uh, you know, thank you,
thank you for sticking around on the podcast here and
being here with us, and we appreciate you being here.
(41:43):
Follow like and share like normal. Get us, get us,
get out there, get get some information about us, Get
get our information out to the other people, the people
that need it, and get your education. I'm gonna keep
on going on this. So there's some interesting, interesting, different
(42:03):
laws that are coming into two place. We're going to
talk about judges and the different the difference important, the
different importances of those judges being there, and then then
from there we're just going to you know, we're just
going to finish this thing out and figure out where
(42:25):
we're at. So other major major issues drug policies.
Speaker 1 (42:35):
This one was an interesting one.
Speaker 3 (42:38):
So Arkansas, Florida, UH, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota, and
YEP and Dallas, Texas are all working on decriminalizing or
legalizing or regulate and regulating merrila for recreation or medical use.
(43:03):
There was one state that I thought was was interesting. Massachusetts.
Their question for is on legalizing psychedelic substances. Yeah, so
we don't have enough problem, we have drug issues. Now
(43:27):
we want to allow shrooms and things that you know,
make you hallucinate basically LSD, things of that nature.
Speaker 1 (43:38):
But we're gonna allow We're gonna allow those those. That's cool.
That's cool.
Speaker 3 (43:42):
So Massachusetts, which already has a a great, great, uh
you know, following reputation I guess for for their attitudes
and stuff like that, going to uh gonna get gonna
allow you to also uh hallucinate. So I'd like to
(44:08):
see how, like what what the numbers that they used
to say, yeah, we should be able to do this
or what. You know, like, if you're gonna allow hallucinogens,
why aren't why wouldn't you just allow all drugs? You know,
why aren't you just like.
Speaker 1 (44:24):
Let's a little let's allow it all. Let's go, let's go.
Speaker 3 (44:28):
You know, we're just gonna We're just gonna let it,
let it all hang out type deal. So I don't know,
I it just seems seems silly to me on this one.
But whatever, police wise, UH Arizona is ramping up their
(44:49):
involvement in or is is. UH has a proposition that
would significantly ramp up their state involvement in immigration enforcement.
So I don't know, like whether they're you know, they're
setting it up so that they can be more like Texas,
where you know, they have enough enforcement themselves to be
able to you know, even kick the immigration control out
(45:13):
and do it themselves or what. But they also have
a proposition that's going to take crimical criminal convictions and
the fees and stuff from that, they're going to add
a new feeve, and and that'll establish a first responder
(45:35):
death benefit, and then they have three. So basically, they're
going to also threaten localities that don't enforce homelessness bands
with the loss of property tax revenue, so cleaning up,
(45:57):
cleaning things up in Arizona, they're going to uh. In California,
they're working on removing the slavery clause from the state
constitution and ending forced prison labor. So if you're in
(46:20):
prison in California, real soon you can be like anybody
else in California and just sit on the couch. I'm
sure there's a lot of hard working people in California,
but it does seem like there's a lot of just
(46:42):
craziness out there, laziness, craziness, drugs and whatever. But they
are ending the forced prison labor, which I guess forced
prison labor I don't. I mean, you're there to do
something to be you're you're in trouble. You're in prison
and there's there's an issue there, there's something that you've done.
(47:03):
You're you're there for a punitive damage type thing like
give back. I mean, they don't have to have them
pounding rocks or or whatever. But you know, you have
to do your shift, you have to make your money
so that you can stay there.
Speaker 1 (47:24):
So I that that.
Speaker 3 (47:25):
Just there seems like there should be you know, and
and we've talked about this before with with incarcerated times
and stuff like that, is there there should be something
that helps you realize that you're you're incarcerated, or there
should be something that that helps you rehabilitate and you know,
(47:49):
learn that you're whatever you've done is not right and
that you can do something else that that is better,
that it is better for you. So I, when it
comes down to it, you know, I don't. I don't
know that you know, forced labor is the deal, but
(48:19):
I do I do think that you should you should
have to figure out how to pay for your time,
and that we shouldn't, as as taxpayers, be paying for
all of your time because you know, other than the
fact that that's what we pay the government to do.
You know, if we get taxed, the taxes should go
to two things, protecting us here at home and protecting
(48:47):
us abroad. Otherwise, the government, the federal government shouldn't be
doing a whole lot more than that, and the the
state governments shouldn't be doing much more than that either,
other than if they wanted, you know, if they do
some infrastructure things like roads and stuff like that. I
(49:09):
guess that's fine, but I still feel like if it
was a private, private setup, you know, there there would
be some you know, there would be better roads. You know,
you we might have to pay pay to get on
each road. You know, we may just you know, we
may have to have a cash card or a cash
thing or one of those little window things on every road.
(49:33):
You know, our our trip to work might be fifty bucks.
But if we just paid the amount, you know, in
taxes to to run the military and the police in
for the federal government, and then states decided for themselves.
(49:57):
You know, if a state wants to provide all of
the insurance and medical care and stuff like that for
that state, you then have the ability to leave that
state and go to another state that doesn't provide that,
or you have the ability to leave that state and
go or stay in that state and enjoy whatever they have,
(50:23):
free free internet, free colleges, free health care, whatever that is.
But the federal government shouldn't be mandating that. It should
be the state and those people in that state that
want those things, and so that's what they you know,
that's honestly where where we should be in the United
(50:44):
States is it should be United States states that are
held together that do different things. You know, for each
state to have the exact same economy, exact same block.
You know, that doesn't that that isn't what the founding
fathers wanted. They wanted to still be able to follow
(51:08):
their religion the way they wanted to in their state.
You can do in your state what you want to do.
But in our state, we're going to follow our religion,
We're going to follow our economy, We're gonna And that's
honestly where where it became where it became a parent
that we were going to split up in the Civil
(51:30):
War because the Northern States were pushing on the Southern States,
not just for the fact of slavery, but for some
other some other reasons in their economic adventures that that
they just you know, they weren't able to do with
(51:53):
you know, being farmers and stuff like that. You know,
they weren't able to They also didn't have the population
to to get as represented in in the government and things,
and so there were more representation in New York and
some of those areas that were higher population and uh,
(52:15):
you know Atlanta and those those areas had n't gained
in popularity as much, and so there was some some
northern politics that were trying to hold some of those
areas back, and that's where where things went down. And
that's that's honestly where we're at right now. Is a
(52:37):
lot of states, like with Washington and New York and
California and some of those states that want things a
different way are proselytizing to other states or they're they're
trying to mandate that every state follows there, you know,
(52:57):
their green deal or whatever whatever you wanted to you know,
want to call it. And so that's that's where we
have the division. That's where we have have the divide
is that you in your state or you and your
on on my little piece of ground, I can't be
(53:20):
I'm not allowed to be me. I'm not allowed to
control my destiny in that in that short in that
small space. And so that's where that's where people get,
you know, get disenfranchised. That's where they get get get
behind things or get lost on things, and that's where
(53:44):
you get the angst and angry is that you know
there isn't a place for you and your people to
live freely.
Speaker 1 (53:56):
Now you're living freely.
Speaker 3 (53:58):
Is not you know, not I don't follow you. You
know that that living freely most of the time.
Speaker 1 (54:07):
You know, if.
Speaker 3 (54:08):
You, you know, follow whatever the new fad is, then
more power to you. But at the same point, you know,
you're not going to get me to you know, follow
the LGBT, you know, agenda and things of that nature.
(54:28):
You know, I don't you know that that goes against
my beliefs, and so you know, that's the other area
where you know, things things go awry is when you
you try to, you know, make people, you know, follow
against their beliefs. I mean, that's why Shadrack, Meshack and
(54:49):
have been to go ended up in a fiery furnace.
You know, That's why Daniel ended up in an alliance den.
You know that's that you know, that's why the Twelve
Apostles it all ended up crucified somehow, is because they
didn't follow what was going on. So Laws for Labor.
(55:13):
Alaska has a measure on increasing the minimum wage and
setting up a paid sick leave. Arizona is lowering the
tipped minimum wage by twenty five percent, which is interesting.
(55:34):
California is increasing the minimum wage to eighteen dollars Louisiana
New Orleans. New Orleans is adding a worker's Bill of
Rights to the city charter to bolster labor protections. Massachusetts
is allowing ride share drivers to unionize, which is I
(55:57):
think kind of against the whole ride shared because we
were fighting against as ride share drivers and that fighting
against the cab unions and all of that good stuff.
They're also going to increase the tipped minimum wage I
(56:20):
think right now in Ohio it's like three something. Missouri
is increasing the minimum wage to fifteen dollars and then
also mandating paid sick leave as a proposition. A Nebraska
Amendments four thirty six is requiring businesses to offer paid
(56:40):
sick leave to their employees. South Dakota has Amendment f
is on paving the way to work requirements for people
to maintain obtain medicaid. See that's an interesting one. Is
you know, how where where do we you know, where
(57:02):
do we make people earn it? And this is this
is one where the government is trying to make you
earn medicaid. So a lot of times what you can
do is if you're old enough, or you have a
disability or whatever, you can, you can you you can
get medicaid for for whatever reason. If you can show
(57:25):
that you have no uh financial ability to insurance, you
can get on the medicaid program.
Speaker 1 (57:34):
That kind of thing.
Speaker 3 (57:35):
And so that what they're going to try to do
is kind of like what we've talked about with unemployment
benefits or or I guess benefits for welfare make you
actually have to have a job to get you know,
to to require you know, to obtain your medicaid. So
(58:02):
so you have, you know, that kind of thing. So
interesting interesting how states are running. I know, one state
was was lowering the minimum wage. One state was raising
the minimum minimum wage for tipped uh you know, now
tipped employees don't have you know, are on a thing
that they are not paying federal taxes. So there was
(58:26):
some voting voting laws. Also, Ohio has one about redistricting
every every so many, you know, every time a new
new congress or high state congress comes in.
Speaker 1 (58:42):
They call it gerrymandering.
Speaker 3 (58:43):
They set new boundaries and new uh new redistricting for
each of the the congressional districts in Ohio and stuff
it's been going on for years. It's a way to
kind of kind of make it unfair, but make it,
you know, fairer. They have to they have to put
(59:07):
it through some election, uh legal election deal, and the
Supreme Court has to okay it, and all kinds of
things like that. And so for a long time we
were fighting for the districts to be set up the
way that they are now, and this has been a
(59:27):
compromise between between the two sides. And so now they
want to they want to bring an independent redistricting commission
to Ohio as a way to halt jerrymandering. So I'm
going to I'm going to vote no because there are
(59:48):
too many, too many un unmentioned or undecided things in this.
Speaker 1 (59:57):
You know, they they don't.
Speaker 3 (59:59):
We don't get to vote on who's going to be
part of the un you know, independent redistricting commission. We
also can't fire those people, we can't vote them out. So,
you know, yes, maybe it's coming from a position of
there's a problem, we got it, we need to fix it.
(01:00:21):
But at the same time, you know this, this isn't
you know, in a couple of years when we don't
have as we we we we've forgotten how bad germandering was.
We'll then complain about this because we can't get rid
of those people. And if they if they set up,
you know, they do go on their commission and they say, okay, well,
(01:00:45):
you know something like where I'm at, I'm in the
Dayton North Dayton area, Miami County area, and so you know,
the city's you know the three big you know, big
cities or big towns that I live in or near,
and the surrounding area covers about one hundred and fifty
to maybe two hundred thousand people.
Speaker 1 (01:01:08):
Well, if that, if that.
Speaker 3 (01:01:11):
Was just a zone, we'd be a super conservative area.
Well then if you throw a town like Dayton into it,
you know, now that area is over half a million people,
could be closer to six or seven one hundred thousand people.
And you know, the city of Dayton is not an
(01:01:35):
uber conservative area. It is slightly conservative, but it also
has a lot of liberal leanings. And that would that
would throw our votes pretty much pretty much out because
it would be covered by liberal votes. And so you know,
(01:01:57):
you want to get it to the sweet spot where
everybody's kind of of heard and found and and all
of that. But with an independent council. Now, no one,
you know, no one gets to decide if we become
a a liberal state. Then you know, it either doesn't
(01:02:21):
become liberal with the state because you don't decide that,
or it's it doesn't it doesn't slidest fat you know,
it doesn't.
Speaker 1 (01:02:34):
Move with the times and stuff like that.
Speaker 3 (01:02:37):
It doesn't get to where it needs to be. So so, Ohio,
you know, I know a little more about that because
I know of you know, I'm here. There was a
couple couple of strange ones, like in California and Albany,
they're working on lowering the voting age to sixteen and
seventeen on the municipal elections. And I got to sitting
(01:03:01):
back and thinking about that, and uh and honestly, for
municipal elections that might not be too bad sixteen seventeen.
Most of the time in the municipal elections, you're hiring
or you're you're voting for your city council, things of
(01:03:22):
that nature, school boards, all of the but you you know,
you're not voting may the big issues. You may you know,
maybe you're voting attacks for the schools and things of
(01:03:43):
that nature and all that, but you're not really you're
not really getting into the big big issues like you know,
it still would be it was still wouldn't be your
your state issues about abortion and and about judges and
things like that. You just you just be basically city council,
(01:04:05):
school boards, things of that nature. And honestly, it might
be good to teach kids these days because we don't
we don't really teach kids about civics class and about
about things of voting and things of that nature as
well as we used to. And to have to have
kids that could, you know, could go in and vote
(01:04:27):
and actually participate before they have left. I mean, that's
kind of like it's kind of like, you know, let's
let's get these kids in before we kick them out,
and then they don't know how to wash their clothes,
you know, or they don't know how to do you know,
they don't know how to cook their own meal. Let's
teach them how to cook.
Speaker 1 (01:04:45):
Give them a year or.
Speaker 3 (01:04:46):
Two to to do that before we, you know, before
we just kick them out in the real world and
before they have to fight the fight their their way
through this. So so I thought that was actually u
something you know, maybe kind of intelligent, you know, at first,
I thought, well, you know, kids a sixteen seventeen, you know,
(01:05:09):
but even at eighteen, twenty twenty one, you know, have
you experienced your life? No, should you be able to
form intelligent opinions? I mean I would think so, but
maybe not, you know, and so you know that. But
(01:05:34):
this gives you, you know, this gives you an insight,
This gives you. You know, you've done it before. And
I mean we already have low enough sixty or less
percent are actually voting, and then that's just getting that's
just gotten and got gotten more and more, you know,
low gotten lower and lower as time has gone, because
we don't teach citizenship. We don't teach you know, patriotism anymore,
(01:05:59):
and so things have you know, things go go the
way they go because we don't teach it. We don't
build a sense of that. And we wonder why kids
are are just you know, why we're why we're trying
to legalize psychedelic drugs in Massachusetts. So Measure double D
(01:06:21):
in Santa Ana is allowing non citizen residents to vote
in municipal elections. I don't understand why these people, you know,
it's it's not these people are here illegally, they're not citizens.
(01:06:48):
And yes, maybe you've got a green card for you know,
in the fact that there there's a reason why they set.
Speaker 1 (01:07:02):
Up the way the voting the way they did.
Speaker 3 (01:07:05):
Because you're supposed to have some kind of patriotic duty.
If you have a green card, you're still here. You're
you're not here full time. You haven't pledged your alliance
to the country. And maybe you're going to, maybe you're
maybe your whole intent is to, but you're you're not
(01:07:30):
there yet. You know, you've you've got to You've got
to earn something. You've got to earn it. And yes,
you know, maybe maybe because I was born here, I
didn't earn it, but you know, I spent eighteen years
learning about the country, learning about about you know, what
(01:07:52):
it means to live here. And so in that fact,
you know, I I was blessed to be born here.
But at the same point I grew up and earned
the right. You know, I lived eighteen I survived eighteen years.
Speaker 1 (01:08:13):
Of this place.
Speaker 3 (01:08:15):
And so now it's time to vote and do our
civic duty. More than let's just give them the ability
to vote. It's a right, you know, and I guess
it's it's a privileged right in the fact that you know,
you do have to register, you do have to do
(01:08:37):
some things to actually become a voter, and you give
up that privilege if you become a felon or you
you know, that kind of thing. But you know, that's
that's that's the deal is that that's why they put
these these laws in order. They were hoping that they
(01:08:59):
could get an a formed group of people to to vote,
and they were hoping that, you know, it became it
was something that you you fought for, you worked hard
to be able to vote. That you didn't you were
you made You made yourself a fine upstanding you know,
citizen servant of the local area, region.
Speaker 1 (01:09:23):
Of your of your.
Speaker 3 (01:09:24):
People, and that's how you know, then you kept that
as as your intent to vote. So I think that's,
you know, that's where we go. Connecticut's doing a no
no excuse mail in valet Malee in voting letting expanding
(01:09:48):
the right to dis disabled people. Not that I don't
think disabled people should vote, but I think that mentally
handicapped people who would normally not vote because they don't
know what voting is and they don't know the people
they shouldn't be voting. You know, you shouldn't your your
(01:10:09):
caretakers should not write in what what your votes are.
So Nevada is going to is is voting on imposing
voter I D rules. Alaska is repealing the state's open
primary and ranking and ranked choice voting system. Basically Native
(01:10:37):
leaders have mobilized to defend it, but uh, you know
that's that's up for the Bay the vote. Arizona is
requiring partisan primaries and outlawing the ranked choice voting. Arizona
is also setting up a new voting system with open
(01:11:00):
primaries after last after last major election in Arizona had issues.
It looks like, I mean, Arizona's doing a lot of
things this this cycle, and it seems like four years late.
Like it's like, okay, now, why is this going? Why
did it take four more years to get to this?
But some of this stuff takes. It takes time to
(01:11:22):
get get the to get the the legislation written right,
and things of that nature. So Colorado is making Colorado's
you Colorado use open primaries and ranked choice voting for
its elections. So it's going the opposite way.
Speaker 1 (01:11:43):
Florida.
Speaker 3 (01:11:45):
It has an amendment one on making school board elections
partisan in Florida, which here school board elections are kind
of partisan, but they're you know, they're not. What what
gets me that is partisan that shouldn't be is judges. Yes,
you know that a judge is conservative or a judge
is is more liberal, but they shouldn't be affiliated with
(01:12:09):
a a political party or a political candidate.
Speaker 1 (01:12:15):
They're judges.
Speaker 3 (01:12:16):
They're they're completely separate from the legislative branch, and they're
completely separate from the executive branch. And really, honestly, on
the executive side of things, it shouldn't matter whether they're
they're Republican or or or Democrat, because they should be
(01:12:37):
just following the laws, executing the laws. It shouldn't matter what,
you know. The only way that the only thing that
it should matter is is are they going to follow
it strictly to the Constitution or are they going to
follow it with more precedents and stuff like that from
the judges and that. So that kind of thing is
(01:13:03):
where you know, we we shouldn't It shouldn't matter your
political party, shouldn't matter when it comes, you know, but
it does because you know that that gives us a
clear a clear view of of who you are, and uh,
and I guess anymore how you're going to vote, or
(01:13:23):
how you're going to enact, uh, you know, the legislation
as or adjudicate the legislation as a as a judge,
or how you're going to execute the legislation as an
executive branch you know, police or president or you know,
governor or anything.
Speaker 1 (01:13:42):
Of that nature.
Speaker 3 (01:13:44):
So you know, if you want to get into it,
you know, governors, presidents, they don't make laws. You know, yes,
they can execute enact executive orders, which we can argue
all day long if they're legal or if they're you know,
if they have any any precedent of law, and they don't,
(01:14:10):
but you can.
Speaker 1 (01:14:12):
You know, they can do that.
Speaker 3 (01:14:15):
But basically what they're done acting when they do a
precedent or when they do a not a precedent but
a an executive order, is they're telling people how they're
going to execute the laws of the land. And so
far with President Biden, he's he's pretty much told him
he's not going to execute the laws of the land.
He's going to execute his ideas for the laws of
(01:14:38):
the land.
Speaker 1 (01:14:40):
And that that's that's it.
Speaker 3 (01:14:43):
That there's no no, no, happenstance from that. So that's
that that, that's all that's.
Speaker 1 (01:14:52):
Going to happen.
Speaker 3 (01:14:53):
You're not going to get a you know, he's going
to try to make his own rules. He's going to
be the dictator. You know that we want to we
want to argue and we want to cry, and we
want to say, Ah, President Trump's a dictator.
Speaker 1 (01:15:07):
He's a.
Speaker 3 (01:15:10):
The guy worked with the judicial system and the legislative system,
and you know, he didn't he didn't go in and executive.
Speaker 1 (01:15:21):
Order his way through Roe versus Wade.
Speaker 3 (01:15:27):
He went to the Judicial Review Board and he said,
let's review this, Let's see what you know, let's let's
put this in into the hands of the the people
who who.
Speaker 1 (01:15:40):
Adjudicated it before.
Speaker 3 (01:15:42):
And they came back with overturning it, and uh, you know,
setting that legal precedent. Nothing that that Trump did in
it as a personal himself, but as a found of
the people called for you know, his constituents called for
(01:16:05):
him to do something on the abortion rights, and he
decided how you know, he went through the legal channels
the way that they're supposed to be set up, and
he took care of things legally through the actual right
of law. Biden's been trying to to cancel debts that
(01:16:28):
are legal debts for years by just saying Ooga wooga woo,
they're gone. That's not how it works. That's he's not
a he's not a legislator. He's not making a law.
He's just saying he's like waving his magic wand saying abracadabra,
(01:16:49):
they're gone. And it doesn't work that way. So but anyhow,
Oregon is a make an Oregon run its federal and
state elections. They're they're voting on using ranked choice voting.
(01:17:12):
Amendment H in South Dakota replaces partisan primaries with an
all party primary, and really, honestly anymore because the Democratic
primary just goes the way that the Democratic Party primary goes,
and it doesn't really matter what the Democratic primary actually
figures out, because they're going to decide however they want. Anyhow,
(01:17:34):
ask Bernie Sanders or or ask anybody who voted in
a primary this year that it didn't really matter because
they then decided that Harris was going to be the
nominee and you had no choice. You want to talk
about dictatorship, You had no choice. You didn't have a
(01:17:55):
choice this time on who on who was going to
be your president presidential nominee? Who was going to represent
you guys for president? And you know, you can thank
the super democratic Democrats that care about your voting rights
(01:18:15):
one hundred percent because they just want to see what
you want done done. They don't care one rat's tushy
about it. They want to see what they want done done,
and that's why they did. The fix was in from
the beginning Biden was going to run up until about
(01:18:35):
three four months before the election, the August August debate.
You knew he was going to crack and burn and
blow up and smash and that was going to be bigger,
bigger explosion than the Hindenburg. Go back to your history,
look at the Hindenburg. But in that you knew that
(01:18:58):
the fix was in. Once he went through that primary,
or once he went through that debate, he was going
to be ripped to shreds and and Van Jones gonna
get on there because he hadn't been around and out on.
Speaker 1 (01:19:10):
The TV as much lately. He could go. I can't
believe it. I can't believe it. He's so far gone.
He it's sad.
Speaker 3 (01:19:22):
This is not the Biden that I knew forty four
years ago. Yeah, if you've been paying attention, if you've
had eyeballs over the last three and a half years,
you've realized that even when he was running for president
last year or last time, that they put him in
a basement, they put he they locked him up so
(01:19:45):
that he didn't you know, so he didn't make anything
dumb in any dumb comments, and Obama went out there
and campaigned his rear off so that Biden could become president.
Speaker 1 (01:20:01):
This time.
Speaker 3 (01:20:02):
Chat GPT did a great job all these you know,
deep fakes and stuff like that coming out of him
speaking well or being excited and in things.
Speaker 1 (01:20:17):
Anyhow.
Speaker 3 (01:20:19):
So but you know in that, you know they're changing
these elections. And you know, honestly, the reason that they're
going away from the partisan is they've already gone away
from the partisan. And this is where I was going
on it is that Democrats a lot of times, instead
(01:20:42):
of voting for their person, they went into the primary
and they elected to be a Republican, and they'll go
in and they'll pick who they think is the weakest candidate,
so that when it comes down to it, you know,
(01:21:03):
they're running weak candidates. Again, we're running weak candidates against
guys like or women like Elizabeth Warren who can't win
their primary, who's an incumbent. So you know, it's just
(01:21:27):
you know, it's it's whatever, and they're going to change
the change the voting because somebody wants, you know, it
helps one side or the other. And then and the
reason that I don't want, you know, major amendment changes
to be a super majority is because then once one
side or the other gets it set, then it's hard
(01:21:50):
to flip it back to the other side when the
other side is in power. And I would rather it
when when the side I'm in gets in power, that
they can switch it to whatever is good for the country.
And if we have to deal with some short term
or long term beatings because we we or where we
(01:22:15):
had it good for for a while, then then so
be it, I guess, because it's better than never having
it good. Having it good for a short time is
better than having it, you know, having it bad forever.
I don't want to be an Israelite in Egypt, you know,
(01:22:35):
getting beat for four hundred years because I came for
the seven years of plenty or the seven years of
famine when they had plenty you know it's not you know,
seven years is not worth the four hundred years are bad.
But you know, I'd like it to be when I
(01:22:56):
took it, when I take over, when my group takes over,
that we get good again. So there's plenty of other things.
Guns is a big one. There's only two referendums on guns,
so we haven't had enough mass shootings this year, which
kind of guy guess goes with the thing that they've
(01:23:16):
been saying that. You know, violent crime is down, which
is probably why California has raised their their penalties for
violent offenders. But anyhow, or are working on raising more
penalties for violent offenders. Uh proposition kk. He is imposing
(01:23:39):
a new tax. This is in Colorado on gun and
AMO sales. They're really like Colorado has really jumped off
the proverbial ledge as it comes to.
Speaker 1 (01:23:55):
Anything. I mean, they become a vegan state.
Speaker 3 (01:23:58):
They're gonna they're gonna they're going to ban slaughterhouses in
the city of Denver, and then they're going to ban
trophy hunting. It's yeah, I mean now they're now they're
going to impose more taxes on your guns and ammo
I mean, uh tennessee, Uh the Memphis area is also
(01:24:20):
going to impose new gun control measures. Obviously, the you know,
the conservative side, the GOP side is going to take
action to block it amid a state culture of preemption. So,
I mean, you're never going to legislate out violence. You're
(01:24:42):
never going to be able to let, you know, legislate
out you know, legislate the law.
Speaker 1 (01:24:46):
I mean, that's just not so wells.
Speaker 3 (01:24:54):
On education, uh, California is working on authorizing ten billion
dollars in bonds for education spending. This is the kind
of this is the state that is going bottoms up,
and uh so they're they're trying to levy anything they
can to keep themselves going. Colorado is adding rights to
(01:25:17):
school choice in the state constitution, defining school choice to
include private schools in charter schools. Honestly, this is probably
one of the better things that they're doing that Colorado's doing,
because you know, it allows tax dollars then to go
into you know, charter schools and private schools. So you
(01:25:38):
would basically get your allotted amount of dollars would go
to you know, those schools, and so hopefully what that'll have,
what what that'll do is that you'll get to. You know,
your tax dollars will then go to the school that
you want to go to instead of or you want
your kids to go to, instead of going to just
(01:26:02):
the public school that you're in, and that might help
or that should help drive tuitions a little lower for
you and for people who are moving into private schools
and stuff.
Speaker 1 (01:26:20):
So whether that really does or not, you know, you
never know. But Denver is.
Speaker 3 (01:26:28):
Nine and seventy five million dollar proposal that is the
biggest bond plan. Denver has asked voters for public school funding.
So Denver is hurting for it too, But I mean,
(01:26:50):
I don't know. Kentucky is allowing public funding for private schools.
Nebraska is voting on whether to keep a program that
funds children to attend private schools. Utahl is voting on
an amendment to end the requirements that Utah spend income
(01:27:14):
tax revenue on its public schools. So it would basically
take take money out of schools, and then Utah's Amendment
B would increase the funding to public schools. So you
can vote A, which takes funding out or B, or
(01:27:36):
vote both of them and then see how they do,
how they figure this thing out.
Speaker 1 (01:27:43):
Let's see, So that's that's kind of the big one.
Speaker 3 (01:27:50):
And then I wanted to get there are the big
ones in referendums, there's some other ones. Go to the
link that I've put it put below in the common
and stuff. If you're on the on the podcast, which
you have to be now to be still listening, get
(01:28:12):
in to go to our Facebook page at ym Angry
podcast or any of our other pages and you'll see
in the comments. You can go on YouTube if you
don't don't love Facebook, And it's also Why I Am
Angry podcast or the Mind of Fanover, which is my
(01:28:32):
personal site that I just post just about everything that
I create. You'll see all kinds of different things. But
get on there and get the link and go to
this site. It's uh, it's boltsmeg dot org and they
just talk about some of the even the local offices,
(01:28:52):
sheriff's office for different counties in Arizona, Florida, prosecutors, election administrators,
local judges, school boards, all kinds of stuff like that.
Get on there, check it out. And then what I
wanted to look at is the state Supreme courts. So
(01:29:15):
in Ohio, Ohio head and I'm just gonna pick them out.
Has an interesting setup or an interesting dilemma.
Speaker 1 (01:29:22):
This year.
Speaker 3 (01:29:23):
This year, right now, it's a four to three majority
Republican how you know, court, And right now there are
three seats open, one.
Speaker 1 (01:29:36):
G OP seat.
Speaker 3 (01:29:39):
Conservative that is uh leaving, he's retired and so and
then there are two Democrat seats held and they are
they're still they're they're going for that seat. So this
(01:30:00):
could very easily flip to a four to three, It
could flip to a you know, five to two. In in
in recent years, you would think that it would go
to we you know, would stay at at least a
(01:30:20):
four to three, if not go to five to two.
But over the last few years here we've seen shifts.
We've seen more liberal leaders in the state of Ohio,
and so you know, this could could very well flip.
The The biggest reason that they're they're worried about at
(01:30:41):
flipping is that the open seat is a GOP seat,
is a Republican seat, and that person has has left
and and the person that has come in into his
spot is even more conservative and has done a good job.
But now that person has to try to keep that seat.
(01:31:04):
So in Texas, there are six seats across two high courts.
So they're they're fighting right now, they're fighting for abortion
rights in Texas, so they have the abortion rights groups
(01:31:25):
have targeted three of the GOP incumbents on the Supreme
Court and at least in your state Supreme Court. And
this isn't a reason not to go out, but it's not.
It's not a lifetime seat. But so you you need
(01:31:47):
to get on here. You need to see what's going
on in your election, and then you need to figure
out whether you're in one of those districts where where
you're where you're voting for a Supreme Court judge or
apellate judge. These things can be super important. You know,
you get you get super liberal judges, and you get
into the appellate system where you know your your super
(01:32:11):
liberal judge decides that he's not going to adjudicate drug
offenders anymore, or people who are non violent, or he's
going to be softer on first time violent offenders or
something like that, and you're going to see a lot
more of these people out on the street reoffending, you know,
(01:32:31):
doing that because they didn't do time, or they didn't
they're not out of out of society. And we can
argue whether you know, whether they're rehabilitated or not. But
we also can say that they're not they're not doing
(01:32:53):
their you know, they're not fulfilling their duty to society.
You know, there's no there's no recompense for doing something bad,
and that shows bad that that shows that the people
who are out there that are are also doing other
things that are that are not legal or that are
doing bad things, that no matter what they do, they're
(01:33:17):
not going to get in trouble for it. They can
continue to do these things. So you know, we just
we we just got to watch those things.
Speaker 1 (01:33:28):
You know, this this.
Speaker 3 (01:33:31):
This whole you know, ah, well, it's just it just matters. No,
you know, if you get in an accident, you fall asleep,
that's on you, that's your responsibility. And so then you know,
they can they can pretty much charge you with you know,
vehicular manslaughter, vehicular homicide. You know, if you had any
(01:33:51):
kind of drug in your system or anything like that,
then come down on you.
Speaker 1 (01:33:57):
And uh, you know that's that's that.
Speaker 3 (01:34:05):
So make sure that you're getting on here, getting on
this deal, checking it out, get to our get to
our social media's find this link. It's boltsmeag dot org
and then they have a your cheat sheet on to
November fifth. I'll probably go over some more of these
(01:34:27):
things next week. We'll we'll do some some election voting,
uh poll, you know, poll the information and some of
that stuff. But we just uh, you know, we want
to get on here. I want to give you the
information and get you there. So get get in there,
(01:34:51):
get get educated. A couple of things news wise, they
were interesting to me Otani's baseball that he hit his
fiftieth home run, so for four point four million already.
Speaker 1 (01:35:02):
This isn't that he hit you know, he.
Speaker 3 (01:35:05):
Didn't hit the record, he didn't hit a record whatever.
This is just he hit fifty home runs. He matched
Babe Ruth's fifty home runs.
Speaker 1 (01:35:19):
He's a historic player. But I think.
Speaker 3 (01:35:24):
I think he's marred in a scandal like betting. I
think he'll go down. He may go down for betting eventually.
You know, as and as much as you want to
be like Pete Rose should be in, can't bet on
your own sport, can't bet on your own games.
Speaker 1 (01:35:46):
And you know.
Speaker 3 (01:35:50):
So. In strange coincidental news, also Fernando Venezuela died. Dodgers
pitching legend dies at sixty three. So you've got a
new pitching legend that is, you know, working to to
try to win a World series and uh, you know
the old pitching legend that.
Speaker 1 (01:36:13):
Dies.
Speaker 3 (01:36:15):
So lots going on with Israel, uh and and that
all that that type deal. A lot of people trying
to condemn them. Right now, Boeing is still in a strike.
(01:36:37):
They can't figure out, they can't come to terms with
each other. You know that people want more money and
they are you know, their hemorrhaging money right now because
they can't they can't continue, you know, they can't prove
that they have they have the quality control under wraps.
(01:36:59):
I mean, lost eight billion dollars. But when you have
multiple planes in a very short time doing the same thing,
I mean, you become you become the joke. It's it's
like a couple other airlines that have you know, build
up to decent, decent sizes and then you know, a
(01:37:22):
plane crash kills the whole company, which if it's under
if it's if it's your fault or whatever, then that's
then then it should but that's your responsibility.
Speaker 1 (01:37:36):
But you know, so.
Speaker 3 (01:37:53):
But anyhow, so just looking through here to uh, you know,
see anything else.
Speaker 1 (01:38:04):
And uh yeah, it.
Speaker 3 (01:38:06):
Looks like Airbnb built a has the Beetlejuice Mansion or
brought the Beetle Juice Mansion to life. And that's that's
pretty much. You know, Hong Kong discovers its first dinosaur fossil.
(01:38:33):
Halloween is next week, so probably won't be on on Thursday.
I'll probably figure out a way to get a podcast
done though, so that it's ready for you guys on Friday.
Remember Friday Mornings five a m. Get you ready for
your weekend. Something to listen to on Saturday, before the
(01:38:55):
before the college football gets up. As you're out in
your garage doing whatever you're doing, get on start listening.
You get your fixed, get your angry, and then take
it out on your college football team as you yell
at them on the field for not throwing to the
tight ends. That's what gets me all the time. Throw
(01:39:16):
to the big tight end. You got a six d
and fifty five foot tall tight end, throw it to him.
Speaker 1 (01:39:23):
Finally, the other day I.
Speaker 3 (01:39:24):
Didn't get to see last week, but Michigan threw to
the tight end and they you know, they ran, they did. Okay,
Minnesota got beat. Now Minnesota not the greatest team. But
at least they finally listened and through to the tight end.
Now I didn't get to see last week. I know
(01:39:44):
that Illinois kind of tore them to shreds.
Speaker 1 (01:39:49):
But this year we won the national title.
Speaker 3 (01:39:53):
We're the champions until the end of the year, and
I'm on basking that glory. And you know, cheating, scandal
or not, we got the trophy. If we cheated better
than the rest of you, too bad on you. We
are taking our lumps, but we're taking our championship with us.
(01:40:14):
So again, follow I can share. If you can support us,
go to the link below. It's in the about section
of all of your podcasts, it's in our comments, it's
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Speaker 1 (01:40:30):
Get on there.
Speaker 3 (01:40:32):
Support us two dollars a month gets you some behind
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(01:40:53):
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The last time I have to do all of the
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(01:41:14):
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(01:41:35):
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(01:41:58):
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Speaker 2 (01:42:09):
Remember to follow, like and share the Why I'm Angry
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Speaker 3 (01:42:19):
The Why I'm Angry Podcast in now