Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Only count Arah, When did we all get this dumb?
Almost only counts in horseshoes, hand grenades, and nuclear warfare.
Speaker 2 (00:12):
I don't see anybodies, so it doesn't count. I'm angry.
I'm the chef. I want to hear one thing. Yes, Chef,
come on, man, here's your brain. The y am Angry
Podcast start now. All right, new day, new podcast. We
(00:44):
are here. It is new day and a new president.
What are what are you thinking about it? How you
guys feeling? This is the chef of the yam Angry Podcast,
Chef Aeron, and we are here in the k Freestyle
Studio in Lovely, Ohio or freeze freezing cold Ohio. I
(01:08):
think it's about It was about two degrees this morning
when I woke up. They're saying wind chill, which I
haven't gone out to even feel. The wind is negative's
negative negative. So today we're gonna get into a few things.
We're gonna give the reaction to the to the actual inauguration,
(01:29):
full reaction. I've kind of go poured over some things
I've watched rewatched the inauguration videos, and I kind of
have the the notes and things that I took from
last night's inaugural balls and the parade and all of that,
which included signing executive orders in a historic way. And uh,
(01:52):
we're gonna have some new things. We've got some time
that we've got to dole out for our ads and
things of that nature. And so we're just we're continuing
on the evolution of our podcast and so this is
this is part of it. So with that being said,
(02:14):
we're going to get into our first ninety second commercial
commercial break. I appreciate you guys all right coming back
(03:30):
from from break here. The big thing for this segment
is we're gonna kind of just go over the uh,
the reaction. So I kind of gave a little bit
of reaction last night around midnight, finally got all of
the coverage kind of scene and went over everything. And
(03:51):
I said, even last night, I said, the feeling I
don't remember one hundred percent about the an inauguration because
I wasn't excited about it. And I understand that, like
I'm not, it's just as historic. It's just it's a
(04:12):
president being inaugurated. And every time we do that, we
we we should be going into it with a kind
of excitement and unknowing. But I said, I felt like
that the the Biden inauguration was was was somber. I
(04:36):
didn't want to go as far as as funeral esque,
but it was somber, like you know, like you were
observing something, I guess, and I think that as as
we go into things or as we see things like that,
you know, you kind of you know there there wasn't
(04:57):
there wasn't energy and I and I felt it said,
I felt like last night there was plenty of energy.
It was it was you know, it was still presidential,
it was still official and all of that, but it
was it was much more. There was much more energy
involved in in the actual ceremony. It felt like there
(05:21):
was a positive energy, a positive and and maybe that's
just honestly, maybe that's just me being you know, more
excited about this president than Biden. And and that's not
to say that I I am. You know, Oh, let's see,
Trump is everything. Trump's the savior. You know, Uh, Trump
(05:41):
can can usher in just as much uh biblical prophecy
and and End Times movement as as anyone else. I mean,
we could go. You know a lot of the End
Times prophecies are are are delving into you know, the
currency and social awareness of the age, and uh, I
(06:08):
don't think. I don't know that he pushes back on
that as much as people think. Now, you know, he
has pushed back a little bit on the balance of
power and things of that nature, and we'll kind of
get into that. So, but I just wanted to kind
of kind of give more of an overall highlights things
(06:33):
that I observed. And so, you know, just just in
in the beginning, you know, just looking over some of
the the uh, you know, talking heads and what they're
what they're saying, as you know, some of the the
left left end side talking heads have said that, you know,
(06:56):
all there was a miskiss and and there were you know,
a cappella from Carrie Underwood, which you know, I commend
her like greatly for being able to like just pull
out an a cappella version of you know, God Bless
America or I can't even remember which which songs she sang,
(07:17):
but or America the Beautiful and you know, just being
able to do it an a cappella version off the
cuff is tough to do because you're you're preparing for
certain you know, cues from the song to remind you
of certain lyrics or certain cues to to continue, you know,
(07:39):
keep your tempo going, and to be able to do
it all yourself. That's that is uh, that's huge. So
I you know, I I didn't see a lot of
negative and you know other you know, Trump, you know,
was very Trump. He was you know, he came out
(08:01):
and he spoke about all his wins. He spoke about
is you know, he's a very transactional person. He wants
to you know, in in in his interaction with people,
he wants to win the transaction. And so that makes
(08:21):
him abrasive, that makes him brash, that makes him you know,
overconfident to some and over over zealous or pompous to some.
And so you know, I could I can see where
like him coming out and telling you know, his stats,
you know that we won this we want This was
a victory speech, This was a victory run. This was
(08:44):
you know, he is being victorious. And honestly, I think
we need to show that sometimes a little more in uh,
in our president. I mean, our president needs to be
a world leader and he needs to be able to
wield his power and be able to walk in you know,
(09:04):
his reputation should precede him he's a president, you know,
he has he has as much or more power than
anyone in the world. And so, you know, without being
a dictator, with just with wielding the country and the countries.
For one, the one thing that I think that we
(09:25):
didn't that I didn't think about Trump, you know that
I didn't think about a president wielding is the power
of our purchasing as a as a company, as a country.
We are a consumer country. We consume as many goods
(09:45):
and services as countries like China, who have a billion people.
We have somewhere around three hundred twenty five, three hundred
and fifty million people. Which was funny that Trump was
said something about that we don't even know how many
people we've got because of of the growing issue at
(10:07):
the border and stuff like that, how many people have
come in and and things of that nature. So but
we we have that power and he and he talked
a lot about wielding that power of consumerism. You know,
TikTok was turned off on Saturday night and turned back
(10:28):
on Sunday, And you know, he talked about even using
the world, his his approval as kind of a tool
to become, you know, to to set up a joint
(10:49):
deal with TikTok, whether it's you know, and and he
didn't seem and and I don't think he knows exactly
how that would work, because I don't think anyone knows
exactly how that would work. But he's talking about, you know,
he's talking personally some about the US owning fifty percent
(11:09):
of TikTok because if if, if he doesn't approve TikTok,
then it's not worth anything, which is true and not true.
It is true partially because the US is is, like
I said, the one of the largest consumer countries in
the world. Because we're we're we're a developed nation. You know,
(11:34):
we don't have a group or a part of society
that you know is developing, you know, other than you
know you you would joke that maybe parts of Montana
are not as developed or something like that, or you know,
something like that. But the word the US as a
(11:54):
whole are you know, is fairly technologically developed. I mean,
we've got internet pretty much everywhere. We you know, we
have access to the modern technologies, you know, the plumbings
and stuff like that, and uh and power electricity and
(12:17):
things that you know, there aren't there aren't bush people
all living off the grid because there's no grid there.
It's if you're living off the grid, you have taken
yourself off the grid, or you're you're you're living in
an area that you know the grid is not as
strong there maybe, but it's not that there isn't a grid.
(12:39):
You know, there are parts of Australia that that you know,
you live in the bush and there's no grid. There
are parts of Africa and China even that you know,
those people are are still in in development. You know,
there is you know, and not as it as people,
but as in as in modern society. You know, they
(13:00):
they have a digital currency in China, but they can't
have a complete digital currency because there are people who
live in an area that don't. They don't they don't
have internet like that. Uh, maybe they have some cell
service or maybe they have some phone service or some
some ties to modern society, but they don't have the
(13:25):
full gambit of of modern modern equipment. So you know,
that's that's kind of of where where we're going is
that you know, he's he's deciding whether or not you know,
he's trying to figure out how to monetize the US
(13:45):
people and and as good as as as bad as
that sounds. It's a different way of thinking about the country.
And it honestly, it kind of harkens back to the
way that we used to do things. I mean, it's
not it's not exactly the same, and it is different,
(14:06):
very different, because we used to think of of us
as of our people as a philanthropic group, as a
as a power of good and and that and and
he's he's using our country as a power for you know,
(14:29):
to bring in economic stability to our people, to bring
in uh, physical stability and you know with the with
the wall stuff and uh, next segment, we'll talk about
all of the executive orders that he signed. But it
was just it was just an interesting, interesting time for
(14:50):
the inauguration. You know, during the parade, he stopped at
the you know, in the Capitol too, to sign a
few executive orders on stage and that was and I
thought that was kind of just interesting. You know, then
they announced all the executive orders they signed up, people cheered,
you know, he threw pens in the crowd. You know,
(15:12):
it was just energized, like like anything that he does
seems to be but uh, you know, it just it
just had energy But then the one thing that you know,
I kept having my wife. We were we were trying
to get the two year old down, we were trying
to get some dinner things of that nature. And you know,
(15:33):
this was a historic event. I mean we we didn't
watch the national Championship. I end up watching the highlights
of the natural National Championship because I watched this because
this seemed like it was more important to see than
to just you know, read the highlights later. Plus, you know,
(15:56):
Notre Dame and that other team, they're both rivals to
my team. You know, they're both they're they're they're I
was having troubles figuring out who I even wanted to
sit down and watch and root for. So glad the
money came comes back to to the Big ten. Glad
(16:18):
that uh, you know, as a big as the Big
Ten can celebrate the championship. Here starts another year of
hearing about national championships for me. But anyhow, the night
was was just energetic and things and so we just
(16:41):
you know, we we stopped it often and just sat
there and just you know, I even told my wife
as as he's signing these executive orders of like, no,
no one's done this. You know, this wasn't something that
that Biden actually showed you, and you know, it just
(17:01):
it just was was exciting and and I think that
we're going, we're gonna you know, he harkened back to
a golden age of of the U. S. And and
I think even even some of the speeches from other people,
you know, went went back to that we we had that.
The Congressional Medal of Honor winner came up in the
(17:25):
in here, the Commander in Chief ball and talked about
you know that you know, he started out with his
his warriors have missed him and he he and he
talked kind of extensively about how these these you know,
(17:46):
as American soldiers, you are the embodiment, the ambassador of
the American fighting spirit. And I think that that is
a really neat, a really good way to you know,
just be proud, have pride in the fact that you
know you are you know, if you're if you're a soldier,
(18:06):
now you are the current fighting spirit. And that that
spirit of you know, World War champions, you know, liberators
of our country in the in seventeen seventy seven, seventeen
(18:28):
seventy eight, that you just you know, those people you know,
fought for something that was beyond themselves. And I think
that you know, as as we, you know, embrace a
different mindset of trying to make America great again and
things of that nature, that that we we realize that
(18:48):
there is is pride to living here and whether that
means whether that's a privilege that we don't deserve because
we didn't do anything to be here or not, that
that pride should be coming up, should be welling up
inside you. And so so just just a a super
(19:11):
feeling of of of pride as you as we watched it,
a feeling of his historical measure and h and that
so coming up here on another break, we'll try to
do a little bit better. I forgot to do the
countdown on it. Remember to you know, follow, I can
(19:32):
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(19:54):
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(20:14):
you can't support financially. We are so so appreciative of followers,
likes and shares, and we really appreciate that. Right here
(21:39):
we are back after the break. Here, let me get
a few buttons, twist a few numbs, get a few
more of these sliders, and get this back in order.
So there were there the one thing I did, I
(22:00):
guess say or went through that there was thank you.
There was a a lot of executive orders. So there
were executive orders flying on both sides all all day
really And the one thing you'll hear about from Trump,
(22:24):
or you'll hear if you saw there. You go saw
the speeches at the inaugural ball or during the parade
that you know, Biden pardoned everybody, and here a lot
of the pardons didn't come until like literally they didn't
(22:48):
drop until the last second. And so he wanted to
comment on that ahead of time or during the inaugurals
beach and they said, you know, no, this is a
time for unity. And I think that that's that's one
of the differences between last time and this time, is
(23:10):
that maybe he has a little more a little a
little better advisory panel around him, just even with you
know guys, you know Vice President Jadie Vance. I you know,
I I think he's got a voice, and I think
(23:31):
he's got a an ability to use that voice. He's
one of those guys that he's not afraid to to
say what he thinks. And I think he's not afraid
also to just get out, you know, just to to
give his opinion on on how things are and how
(23:53):
how he want, how that he sees things. And uh,
I just I even said to my wife, I said,
I cannot believe that that we got JD. Vance as
a vice president And she said, well, you know what
(24:14):
what is you know, what can he do? He's vice president?
You know, what does the vice president do anymore? Like
what does the vice president do? You know? We can't
you know, he does? You do? They just they just
don't seem to have that much power. And I think
I think she's right in in one is that they
(24:35):
don't wield as much executive power like you know, like
the president does. Or or what you you know, what
you would see as out outright power. But I think
they do. They do hold a a a power that
that we we just don't we don't see in the background.
I think they run Congress and you know, a lot
(24:56):
more than than you would think there. I think they're
on on both sides. It is kind of just you know,
pushing back and forth, you know. I think that they
that they also you know, obviously they break the tie
or whatever. And and a lot of times the president
will give the vice president a platform to to work
(25:16):
on and things of that nature, and uh and all
of that. But I think also things that we don't
think about that the vice president, you know, does I
just I just don't think we see all of the
advisory side of what the vice president. I think that JD.
(25:40):
Vance and President Trump have built a kind of a
relationship that you know, he has an advisory spot where
I don't think Pence and him got one hundred percent along.
I don't think it was his pick. I think it
(26:00):
was it was the party's pick. They were they were
not excited about him being the nomination at that time,
and I think that they were they were kind of surprised,
and they were trying to bring in an establishment pick
because they were worried that the establishment wouldn't vote, you know,
(26:22):
the the die hard Republicans that maybe wanted more conservatism,
maybe wanted a stronger Republican history in their nomination, that
maybe they wouldn't vote for Donald Trump. And so Pence
(26:44):
was the nomination. Pence was there was the solid, you know, evangelical,
you know, he was a solid Christian leader that you
know could come in and do something. So that I
think was is the difference to this time also is
(27:05):
that you know, Trump's gotta got a following, but We've
got a group around him that have some some knowledge
that are are you know, are more Trump Trumpian people.
I think before that it was it was a lot
of Republican leaders around him, and this this this, this time,
(27:31):
this election was more that you know, Trump took took power,
he took took control of his destiny and said we're
going to do this my way. We're not going to
get it stolen from us. Uh. They talked about a
lot of it being too big to rig, which I
feel like is a is a is a subtle sleight
(27:51):
of hand, slight, but I think that we we're seeing
that he did it his his his way, and his
way is to you know, maybe not always be the
smartest person in the room. But because he's smart enough
to put the smartest people in the room is the
(28:13):
reason that he's not the smartest person in the room.
And you can argue that, you know, being smart enough
to surround yourself with the other intelligent people or more
intelligent people than you are, to make yourself the least
intelligent person in the room is it's pretty intelligent. So
(28:34):
things executive orders, we're talking about executive orders. Day one,
executive orders signed by Donald Trump. Some of these were
signed as of they've they've finished off about eleven eleven
eleven pm. He kicked everyone out of the Oval Office
and that and that was a crazy thing too, is
(28:55):
you know, you want to get into the how it felt,
how the energy was in the room or in during
this he was he was open and uh, transparent to
to talk in the Oval Office, just a conversation while
(29:16):
he signed executive orders. And it wasn't and it wasn't
softball questions like well, what is your first meal going
to be in the White House? What do you you
know what do you what have you missed about being
in the White House. There were some of those kind
of questions and things of that nature. But but one
one person, actually like one person, kicked back a question.
(29:40):
You know, they talked about he he signed an executive
order pardoning all or staying sentencing of all January sixth rioters,
and some somebody asked him, I mean a good question,
solid question. What what you know we're gonna put, you know,
(30:03):
pardon all those people? What about those people who who
had who who were involved in assaults with officers, with
federal agents, with you know, with all of that. And
he said, look, you've destroyed their lives, you guys, you
(30:27):
guys have effectively put them in jail. They've been in jail,
they've been in prison, they've been wherever for years now,
for four years to to two to four years. Most
of them, you've already effectively destroyed their lives for assaults.
We've we've done less for murder. You know, I've seen
(30:50):
he's you know, he said, I've seen less for murderers.
And these people were protesting for the for their government.
They you know, they were they were honestly, they were
filling fulfilling their civic duty in the Constitution to protest
if your government no longer fulfills its duties, no longer
(31:18):
allows you to feel feel secure that that it is
running under the constitutional controls. And a lot of people
felt like it was not running under the constitutional controls.
They did not, you know, right, raise up arms against
(31:41):
the government, but they did go and protest in a
way that got the government's attention. Maybe maybe not. I
wasn't there, I can't. I mean, Trump alluded to it
again last night that you know, there were you know,
(32:01):
there is evidence of some actors, some bad faith actors
in that that may have accelerated things. Uh, there are
there are there is evidence that the FBI was involved
(32:25):
in it. There are there is evidence that you know,
Antifa was part of it. There is you know, there
there's also the side of you know, there were four
hundred members of the National Guard that we're ready and
(32:47):
waiting that the President made available for that night, and
you know, Speaker Pelosi said they didn't need it. Which
if you if you had any any you know, any
(33:08):
brain any way to you know, to say to say
anything about you know what you know, if you if
you if you could read the room, which I think
is an issue with a lot of people anymore these days.
And we you know, we even saw that with you know, well,
(33:29):
I guess a gesture from Elon Musk. But if you
could read the room and be you know, you would
know that at in January sixth, twenty sixteen, people people
were upset. They didn't they didn't believe or twenty I
guess twenty twenty. Sorry, they didn't believe that their government
(33:54):
was of the people, by the people for the people.
They believed that their government was stolen, the vote was
their their voice had been stolen. And so I think
that that's that's where you you know, that's where we get.
(34:14):
You know that we have to be we have to
be kind of cognizant of that that there there there
has been some hurt on both sides. And I think
that's why he didn't put the stuff about Biden and
some things like that. You'll hear some things, he'll be brash,
(34:38):
but as a as a country, you know, we need,
we need to come together, and I think Martin Luther
king Day was a great day to do it, because
you know, the man preached about his four children being
being able to one day be judged on their content
(34:59):
of their character as opposed to the color of their skin.
And and you know, I think that that that part
of that message needed to be embodied yesterday. And I
and I think that with with that being, you know,
the the unifying factor, you know, Martin Luther King wanted
(35:22):
the country to be unified and unified in the fact
that no matter what was going on, we were we
were a country, you know, almost like brothers and sisters.
You know, you can beature, you you can you can
disagree with your brother or sister, sibling or whatever. You
(35:42):
should be able to fight it out about whatever, whatever
dumb thing that you're fighting about, and then know that
they've got your back if someone else says something stupid
about you. That if if if you you know, if
(36:03):
someone were to come at you and say, you know,
they could say that you were stupid. And if a
bully or somebody else said you were stupid, they would
fight them over it. And he would say, well, you
just said it yourself. That doesn't matter. I'm allowed, I'm
I'm the brother, I'm the sister. You know. It's like
if you know, if my brother, you know, someone came
(36:26):
and came against my brother, I'd fight him and the
same thing, you know, at the same at the same point,
my brother could say probably something, I don't know what
he could say, but he could say something, and at
that point I'd want to fight him. And that's just
that's just siblings, that's just that's just the way when
(36:49):
when you when you pledge your allegiance to something, that's
the way you feel. And I feel like we've gotten
away from that over the last decade, that we don't
pledge our allegiance to our country to fight for it
when it's being you know, downgraded or denigrated by other
(37:14):
people or by other countries, and that you know, we're
not here to fight for our country as we would,
you know, as we would fight for our brothers and sisters.
And so I think that you know, as we are,
as we're going through things, as as life is the
(37:38):
way it is, we uh, we you know, we need
to realize we need to re up our pledge to
the country and we need to you know, we need
(38:04):
to need to expect certain things and at the same time,
we need to be more more strong in our resolve
for for the country. So that being said, let's get
into these actual uh, these actual executive orders and kind
(38:27):
of go through them. Some of them I'll just fly
through some of them, I'll kind of talk about why
and what. But yeah, some of them are are just
kind of more more the uh, the just ceremonial type,
the you know, like the restoring names that honor Americans
(38:48):
greatness and I and you know that's just restoring the
names of you know, the honoring part of of things.
You know, different roads that we were taken away, you
know their name because you know we couldn't honor that
person or or you know, if Thomas Jefferson has taken
(39:11):
off the the bill because he had slaves or something
or something like that. You know, these were great leaders
and because they followed the signs of the time. You know,
they are being punished in it or being po they're
(39:32):
they're you know, they're dead. But we do need to
see seek and resolve what is great about our history
and we need to we need to honor that history.
And so, uh, they are the one, one big one
they designate they're designating cartels and other organizations as foreign
(39:56):
terrorists organizations and uh especially designating global tarilet terrorists. So
they're they're just kind of they're creating a level of
terrorism and they are making sure that you know, we
(40:17):
can designate the right kind of of authority against some
of these people. So we're we're just we're signing executive
orders to designate you know, to set that up, which
is which is a lot of you know, stop it.
(40:39):
I said, go over there, and so you know, it's
it's just a it's just a move to to you know,
to get the power that we need to to actually
fight this war. You know, for for far too long,
we fought against cartels with like they were just a
people organed like a gang or something, and we didn't
(41:00):
fight them like they were killing our people, like they
were one of the largest threats to our people in
this country. And so I think that, you know, this
is this is a good step, This is a good move.
This is a power power play. And so I think
(41:22):
that this is one of those things that you know,
you'll look back and say, Okay, we we we gave
the right forces the right power, and we gave the
right you know, we we moved these people into a
much much more severe spot. So reforming the federal hiring
(41:45):
process and restoring merit to government service. This is just
extending out the you know, repeal of the affirmative Action
item items just a few years ago. This is, you know,
just reforming it to you know, the best person available
(42:07):
gets the job. Now that's not to say that it's
it's not still all in who you know, but it's
at least not based on you know, D E and I.
It's not based on you know, your the color of
your skin and how many you know and how many
(42:28):
disabled people or or or how many you know, ethnic
varieties we can have in our at our company. It's
it's based on are you the best candidate? And I
think in some aspects when when they when they put
affirmative action into place, it was supposed to be the
(42:49):
best candidate. But if you had two good candidates that
were equally equally strong, that you would be incentivized to
pick the candidate that was a minority. And that's fine
and all, but you know, it became the fact that
(43:13):
you were incentivized to pick the minority. And as a company,
you could take the hit in quality to to save
the money to get you know, to get that that
tax break or that incentive. So I think and and
it and it became a weapon against against people. The
(43:39):
next one is defending uh ending radical and wasteful, wasteful
government DEI programs and and preferencing. So just kind of
that extension on that is just ending just the wight
(44:02):
the wasteful side of things that because we you know,
because we're we're doing d E and I, We're we're
going to choose this kind of company and because of that,
you know, we just you know, we're just gonna we're
just gonna spend our our money on that instead. So
(44:28):
defending women from gender ideal ideology extremism, and restoring biological
truth to the federal government. I mean, that's just some
of that is is taking out some of the gender
issues in the military. You know. Some of it is
(44:48):
is just making sure that we uh, you know, that
we're fair on things. You know, we've said it a
bunch of times, you know, having a a transperson in sports,
in women's sports, a man biological man playing women's sports,
(45:12):
even if they've transitioned, even you know, it's still just
not fair. You know, if there were some way to
make it a fair competition, I don't know that I
would still you know, I still wouldn't believe in it,
and I still wasn't. I'm still not gonna gonna follow
it as a as a Christian. That's just not it's
just against the beliefs of God's creation. But at the
(45:38):
same point, then then you could you could make a case.
But in no case, if we found that it's it's
it's a fair competition. So establishing and implementing the President's
Department of Government Efficiency is just creating the the uh,
(45:59):
the establishment of do that Elon Musk Ramaswami set up
that they're going to go through, and I guess and
he even explained that, you know, they asked if he
was going to get a Elon Musk was going to
get an office in the West wing, and he said,
he's gonna get not sure if it's going to be
(46:22):
in the West wing, but he's going to get an
office for about twenty people to kind of just pour
over things. You know, see where we're you know, if
we're spending eighty dollars on toilet lid, you know, toilet lids,
and we can spend twenty there, you go, we're gonna
we're gonna do some of that stuff. Not that we
(46:44):
want it as a country become the Walmart. But we
want to make sure that we're not getting taken advantage
of as a government, so that we you know, so
that honestly, part of that's so that we can give
we can put the money back in people hands, you know,
whether it's that we can have the money for your retirement,
(47:05):
social security, or that we can have the money to
lower taxes and still provide a level of security. And
I think that's where he his focus has been great,
is that he's focused on we're going to provide a
level of security that our our mission is to secure
(47:28):
the government. So American First, America First policy Directive to
the Secretary of State protecting the United States from foreign
terrorists and other national security and public safety threats. There's
another one and that one goes towards immigration. So you know,
(47:56):
he he and he talked a lot about the immigration
stuff about you know, making sure that that we you know,
secure the borders, make sure that you know we we
are setting up that you know, a natural born citizen
is is born is born here, and that you're a citizen,
(48:17):
and that you know you're you're born here of two
citizen parents, or you're born here legally to become a
natural born citizen. He talked a lot about unleashing Alaska's
extraordinary resource potential or the black goal beneath our feet,
(48:40):
and then protecting the people against invasion isn't is one
he signed. This one reverses a well, that and the
Black and the Alaska Resources both reverse executive orders from
the Biden administration. And basically it it just revokes four
(49:02):
executive orders signed by Biden that will help you help
the border crisis. You know, they'll they'll they'll be able to,
you know, build the wall if they see fit, or
be able to deport people more immediately. If you're coming
(49:23):
in illegally, you know, there's you can fill out your paperwork,
but you shouldn't have the process to just live here.
You know, you should be put on the other side
of the border. And I know there's extenuating circumstances and
we can go through those and and and we can
talk about that. But if our law is that you're
(49:45):
coming in illegally, and and that and you know, we've
talked talked about this before. You know, can can the
US take in everybody? Maybe? But there should be some
sort of process to to be able to to take
those people in. And they shouldn't be just getting paid
(50:06):
to just leave their country. You know, they shouldn't be
dumped on us because they're you know, and and and
this may or may not be this, but because they're
from you know, they're they're a jailer of another country,
you know, because they're a criminal from another country, or
they're they're they're unable to control or to to keep
(50:32):
that person in line, you know, whether they're in the
psychiatric issues or or things like that. So, uh, we're
coming up against another break again, follow like a sheriff's
This is the ym Angry podcast. You're in the Freestyle
Man Camp studio. We were published and uh produced by
Freestyle Creative Group and just wanted to you know, to
(50:57):
get get that out and get you guys, you know,
if you want to support us, help us out. Thanks
a lot, and we're going to get into this next
ninety second set. We're back, all right, We're coming back here,
(52:45):
so just continue on where right now we're talking about
the executive orders that were signed. There were a lot
of them, and it was done in a historical fashion
where he just you know, he was signing them. He
was talking about things going on, and we're just gonna
jump right back into it, reevaluating and realigning the United
States Foreign aid. Basically, he's kind of he's going through doge,
(53:09):
you know, he's going through all of that making sure
that we're spending our money in the right spots, that
that we're not getting you know, I said, you know,
he's transaction transactional. He wants to make sure we're not
getting ripped off at every turn, that we're not getting
getting taken advantage of. And he even mentioned, you know,
(53:30):
kind of half jokingly, that there are about two or
three countries that are not making money off of us.
And he's not going to mention him because he doesn't
want him to re establish a better, better deal with us,
but he's going to go after those countries that are
making you know, I've seen a mouse off of us
that are making more money than they should be, or
(53:51):
that that aren't paying their fair share. And he talked
about you know, China pretty extensively. You know. The one
thing that he talked about that was surprising was the
you know, the Panama Canal, and we'll get to that
in a little bit, but he he talked about you know,
China right now is paying paying so so little on
(54:19):
on the World Health Organization that they you know that
they they pay you know, you know, like thirty nine
billion dollars or something like that, and we we pay
you know, five hundred billion dollars to him. And and
why is that? You know, when they have a billion
(54:39):
plus or or just shy of a billion, depending on
what census you go with, and we have like three
hundred and fifty thousand, we have a third of their population,
or three hundred and fifty million, we have about a
third of their population, and we pay you know, one
hundred you know, ten times games fifteen times more than
(55:03):
they do. And it's not because we have the money.
I mean, look at it. Look we owe China, you know,
trillions of dollars in bills, you know, in just payments.
So you know, that's that's one of those deals where
it's just like, you know, we don't think about this daily,
(55:26):
but this is this is what we're gonna start thinking about.
So declaring a National Energy Emergency this was a big
one because it's going to open up the pipelines, open
up a lot of things that Biden has closed down.
We have more natural gas in our country than you know,
(55:49):
three Iraqs have of oil and gas. And you know,
we as a country, if we were an intelligent group,
you know, we would create as much natural gas as
we can and send it overseas. You know, we we
could be the the Iraq, the the Saudi Arabia of
(56:13):
natural gas. And it's a stable, you know, well established
heating supply or cooler or fuel supply that you know,
can be used for all kinds of things, you know,
(56:33):
and and and that's the one thing like that they're
saying about the fight in the Ukraine war is is
that Ukraine is a a hub for natural natural gas.
And that's why they've had so many issues in the
EU and things of that nature, because they're on that
that pipeline and so they've they've shut down all the
(56:54):
natural gas production coming through and so they you know,
the EU last last winter froze and we were sitting
here on a supply that that no one could could imagine,
and Biden's closing it down and shutting you know, making
it illegal to have gas stoves and and and stuff
(57:16):
like that. It's just it's it's stupid, you know, it's
it's it's honestly, it's gaslighting. It's telling us that you know,
it's it's not it's not it's not legal, it's not this,
it's not that you know, it's it's it's not a
good source that we don't have enough of it. We're
we're running out. No, we're not. Like you know, when
(57:37):
I when I first heard it, heard him saying, you know,
my my father in law said something about it, and
I'm like, no, he's no, no, we're not running out
of out of natural gas. I mean, that's just but
that's what they're telling the people that the pipeline can't, can't,
can't give you enough, and we're not getting that's because
(57:57):
we've put a bunch of environmental regulations against being able
to do these things. And what's said is as a country,
we're the most responsible country in our environmental regulations, Like, so,
why shouldn't we be creating the energy that the rest
(58:18):
of the world uses. If we created the energy that
the rest of the world uses, do you think that
we're not more environmentally friendly and more environmentally conscious than
Saudi Arabia, than kutz Aar, than all of these countries
that are you know, then Venezuela, you know, And and
(58:39):
that was one of the questions he actually got while
he was signing, is that. I think there was one
that was said that we're yeah, the energy independence. I
think is when he got that question is you know,
what is what is our relationship with Venezuela going to be?
He goes, I don't know that we have to have
a relationship with Venezuela. He goes, we don't have to
(59:01):
buy oil from them anymore. And they're like, well, we
we buy so much. He goes, but the problem is
is when we're buying and and this isn't he didn't
explain to all of this, He goes, he just because
he didn't have that much time. He just said, we're
not going to be We're not. We don't have to
buy from them. And I don't think people understood that
(59:22):
we don't have to buy from them means we don't
have to cow tell to a dictatorship. Venezuela is a
terrible human rights dictator. Iran is terrible at you know,
human rights. Saudi Arabia is terrible at with human rights.
(59:45):
And those are the people who control the the oil
supply and they you know, they wanted to talk about bricks. Well,
we're gonna what are we gonna do. We're gonna sanction bricks,
what you know, what's that going to do for us?
And you know, or is that going to raise our prices?
How's that gonna keep stability? And and he said, listen,
(01:00:07):
these countries are adversarial to the US. So what are
we going to do. We're we're going to curtail, We're
going to stop, We're going to slow down anyone who's
adversarial to the US. That is part of national security.
(01:00:33):
These people aren't just adversarial to the US. They want
to they want the US to to die. They want
to kill our people. And so that's where we need
to realize that, you know, why are we giving these
people billions and in some cases trillions of dollars. So
(01:00:57):
it was restore the death penalty to protect and protecting
public safety. And this is just restoring the the rule
of law that your your punishment is going to fit
the crime, and that it's you know, to you know,
(01:01:24):
commit a crime, which I think we've lost is unlawful
and is against the will of the people, and that
if you commit a crime, then you should be punished,
and that if you if you know that the punishment
is great, there's less less shot you're going to or
(01:01:47):
less less reason for you to commit the crime. There's
less upside. You know, if I rob a bank and
I really and I think five years in jail, you know,
if I can, if I can steal ten million dollars,
five years is worth ten million dollars. And I'm not
saying that this is this is the truth. This is
(01:02:07):
just hypothetical. But you know, if I could steal ten
million and only spend and spend five years in jail,
but get that ten million dollars, why wouldn't you you know,
or why you know, if that's if that's your value system,
then you're going to commit that crime. And so that's
(01:02:29):
where we're at with you know, restoring and the protection
of public safety. You know, we're just we're just making
sure that the the you know, the murderers, the people
who kill multiple people, who do it on purpose, know
that their consequences are grave. We're going to secure our borders.
(01:02:54):
We've talked about that, protecting the main the meaning of
the value of American citizenship, and I think that that
comes back to again making sure that you know, immigrants
coming in understand that, you know, what they're what they're
supposed to be, what they're supposed to be doing if
(01:03:15):
they come in here, how to do it illegal? How
to do it legally? Realigning United States Refugee Admission program.
And that's again an immigration thing. You know, we can
we can loosen the immigration policies to accept more people,
(01:03:36):
making it enticing it to be more more legal to
get in, while also extending you know, making it, you know,
making the penalty for coming in illegally more stringent. Not
everybody is this super hard working, you know, just great
(01:03:59):
person that comes in. We've seen a few a few
nationalized and news setups about people who have who have
come in illegally and things of that nature. And you know,
in that we're you know, we've got you know, we've
got issues. But you know a lot of people are
(01:04:24):
are are hardworking, but not everybody, and we need to
make sure that the non hardworking people get punished and
the hardworking people that come in if they want to
be here, they need to follow the rules. You know,
they're they're still doing something illegal to get here. If
they're not you know, if they're not coming in legally
(01:04:46):
if they're if they're sneaking in, so unleashing Americans energy,
clarifying the military's role in protecting the territorial integrity of
the United States. Uh so this also runs on border
border security or is about border security. There were a
(01:05:07):
total of seventy eight Biden executive orders like the unleashing
American energy that it revokes twelve, you know, revokes a lot,
you know, some of them revoke other orders and stuff
like that, so that all of these are kind of
(01:05:31):
just you know, some of them are just rolling back,
some of them are extending out and getting things done,
some of them just rectifying the ship. You know. It's
we're gonna hold former government officials accountable for election interference
and improper disclosure of sensitive government materials. We're gonna store
(01:05:54):
accountability into policy influencing positions within the federal workforce. Basically,
that's a lot of you know, lobbying, bribery, making sure
that the government isn't unfairly getting an advantage or government
(01:06:14):
officials aren't unfairly getting an advantage. And it's also making
sure that you know, we're just you know that that
were holding people accountable that no one is above the law.
You know. Obviously we learned that in the last four
years that Trump was not above the law that he
(01:06:36):
had to he had to come to terms with things.
But we did also learn that certain people were above
the law because Hillary had done the same things that
Trump did the four years before that and nothing came
of it. So we learned that we're a country of
interpretation of the law, not of laws. And we're seeing
(01:06:58):
that with you know, with the institution of marijuana in
states being legal but it's not federally legal. That we're
a country of the interpretation or the institution of laws,
not the actual not the actual law itself, because a
(01:07:23):
lot of times in the country, if we just executed
the laws we have that we would be we'd be
in a much safer, much much more advantageous place. You know,
he's establishing tariffs, which people are like, oh, if there's
a tariff. You know. I saw a meme from somebody
(01:07:45):
that's still followed on my Facebook page for now this said,
people don't understand that these tariffs aren't paid by the company,
They're paid by the people who buy the products. Well, yeah,
the what is a tariff? A tariff is an excise
(01:08:08):
tax for an item that another country produces to bring
into our country to sell. So we want the Chinese
product or whatever product to be more expensive than the
American product, or to be equally as expensive as the
(01:08:31):
American product, because we want the opportunity for you to
buy the American product. I mean, it's crazy to think
that we should protect our American businesses. We should also
incentivize American businesses to be American, to build their products
(01:08:55):
in America so that we employ Americans. I mean, you
would think the common sense part of that is just
is assumed. But you know what happens when you assume. Yeah. So, yeah,
(01:09:19):
we're you know, we're making sure that goods and services
are made here in the US. We're withdrawing from the
United States from the World Health Organization, which is great. Honestly,
he talked about being part of the World Health Organization still,
(01:09:42):
but we need a better deal. We're paying five hundred
billion dollars to the World Health Organization. You know, it
is great to you know, it is advantageous to have
a an organization that is set up to, you know,
kind of help you organize things in time of crisis.
(01:10:03):
For pandemics, and things. But at that same point, you know,
the World Health and Organization, don't get me wrong, is
extremely liberal, extremely vehemently really liberal. I can't think of
(01:10:26):
a good word to be like, it's militantly liberal. And so,
you know, when you didn't follow it, it wanted the
power to shut you down, you know, and not just
shut you down, but shut you down for good if
you're going to question our authority, you know. And I
think that that's a thing that the government the country
(01:10:51):
has to really, you know, think about, really, you know, decide,
is allowing an organization to come in and then to
try to give them the power that they need to
to establish laws or to establish advice advice on us.
(01:11:17):
Is that really something that we need or or do
we have the resources here to do all of that?
So the Application for Protecting Americans from Foreign Adversaries, Controlling
Applications Controlled Applications act to TikTok, there's all. There's and
(01:11:41):
and he's and he mentioned this pretty flippidly. He mentioned
that regulating You know that being upset about TikTok is
is is probably silly because the the Chinese government is
the interference in TikTok, the ability to to glean information
(01:12:04):
off of TikTok is probably just as or just you know,
just as as big as it. You know, they make
all these cell phones, and you don't think they can
put a a reader chip on the cell phones, that
they can put a second processor, a whatever they you know,
(01:12:30):
an app in the cell phone that you know, just
comes with the hardware, comes with the software and and
things of that nature that can't read your information or
listen to your conversations or or anything like that. You know,
if you're buying a Chinese you know company cell phone,
(01:12:51):
that that could be just as as bad or as
you know, invasive as is if you were buying or
you were you were going you're doing tiktoks. And what
was funny is he like he just said his example
was you know where I don't know why he did
need a bunch of kids information. You know, it's like
(01:13:14):
it goes beyond that a little bit. But you know
again and and he's talking about being transactional with them,
you know, making sure that the deal is the best
for us, or or that we're you know, we're making
making money off of the deal. So so we're an
(01:13:35):
initial initial recision of harmful executive orders and acts actions.
It just revokes sixty four or sixty seven executive orders,
just kind of a general revision instead of signing sixty
seven executive orders to to uh resent rescind all of them.
(01:13:58):
Then restoring free of speech, the First Amendment, ending the
weaponization of federal governments, and then putting America first in
international environment and and agreements. And I think that that's
you know, that's what we've been talking about with him
being very transactional, you know, making sure that America is
getting the best deal, that we're not just doing deals
(01:14:21):
because we're America and we're out here to help everyone
else out. We can help everyone else out, but we
also want to make sure that for our people that
we're getting a good deal and that that you know,
we want to talk about how how the government can
give us things. This is this is stability. This is
(01:14:43):
this is the the security that the that the government
can give us. But just you know, just the weaponization,
you know, ending weaponization of the government. I mean, the
last four years, if you're if you're not afraid of
the government, where you're not leery of the government, they
I mean, there has never been a time where they
(01:15:06):
went after a a person and his family as much
as they've gone after you know, President Trump, and they
didn't go after you know, pens. They went after Trump
because he did things that other presidents didn't do. You know,
(01:15:27):
maybe he stepped across the lines of of you know,
decorum and just the the j you know, he stepped
across the lines of the normal political uh status quo.
But we were getting to the point where we needed
to because the normal you know, political status quo wasn't
(01:15:50):
getting us anywhere. But you know, non balanced budgets and
trillions and trillions of dollars in debt as a country,
and we you know, the things that they were doing
for us, social security and things of that nature. You
those things are going down. Those things are are being
(01:16:12):
are being lost. They're they're you know, they're they're not
they're not funded properly, and and the military is not
funded properly or not not followed well, you know that
they're they're just not supported. And so the things that
they're supposed to be doing they're not doing. But in instead,
we're increasing congressional you know, congressional salaries, we're increasing the
(01:16:40):
amount of vacation times, that they get where we're you know,
bringing you know, one of the the abilities signed was
to bring the federal government home or back to back
to the office to take them out. You know that
that you know, no longer can you can you sign
in from work or sign in to work and work
(01:17:02):
a second job that you need to come you know,
you need to come back to the office. That's a
big thing that's been happening in the world these days,
is that you could have three or four online jobs,
sign in, do nothing, get paid, have the job, go
to another job. At the same time, you're double dipping
(01:17:23):
on your jobs. And that's and that's fine at all.
But they you know, if a company is paying you
to work, you know, they you should they should get
some work out of you. And if you can do
two jobs at one's fine whatever. But if you're if
you're if you're cheating the system doing multiple you know,
(01:17:44):
just getting paychecks, then that's that's where they're saying, you know,
get back to the office. So that's kind of the
list that's here. They also he also and I didn't
see on this one. I might have missed it as
I was reading through the withdrawal of the Paris Climate Accords,
(01:18:11):
we're going to withdraw from that. And then we also
wrote a letter to the EU or the United Nations
also saying that we're withdrawing from the Paris Climate Accords
that you know, this it's a terrible deal. It's it's
an environmental disaster. It's it's it's killing our country environmentally
(01:18:37):
because it's just you know, we're just not using any
resources from us. We're buying like it's the opposite of
helping the planet. You know, I'm sure it started out
as as something that we could help the planet, but
you know, it is definitely not. It is definitely one
(01:18:57):
of those things that as we're getting into it, as
we're since we've gotten into it, we're we're you know,
we're relying on other countries to to kind of give us,
give us the energy that we're buying, and and and
(01:19:18):
they're not taking care of the planet the way we
would take the care of the planet with it. So
this is our last break for this this podcast. We're
gonna take a break and then I'll come back and
kind of give you the wrap up on what's going
on again. Follow like a shas comment if you want
to be a part of the podcast. You can comment
(01:19:40):
on whatever site you're listening to this on live. If
you're on the podcast and you want to be part
of the of the podcast, shoot me an email at
ym Angry podcast at gmail dot com and we'll get
your get your comments, get your words of wisdom, all
that kind of stuff in and uh and all of that.
(01:20:01):
So get in on that and uh, you know, we'd
like to see you there all right, guys, getting back
(01:22:41):
from this break took a little hacks For half a second,
I got some information from my wife here and just
I was trying to get some get some more information going.
So just just a kind of an overall this is
this is how it felt. This is how how it was.
(01:23:02):
Like I said in the beginning, felt like it was.
It was there was an energy, There was an energy
about the the whole night, and it was and it
felt positive. It felt like there was a pride to
being you know, to being an American, to being to
to seeing him him elected, to to seeing all of
(01:23:26):
that stuff. And I think that that that was part
of part of the the excitement of it. The extra
energy is that you know, it was very presidential and
and I and I think we've we lost that we
didn't we don't like as a as a society, I
(01:23:47):
don't think we understand what that means is that, you know,
there were things that George Washington did with the parade,
the the different presidential things that he did, he established
that he didn't believe in them as he needed them
(01:24:09):
to feel like a president, but he believed that they
were necessary because we needed to show that kind of
pomp and circumstance to the world that we we ran
on an excellence level that was second to none, that
(01:24:33):
no one, no one could or need, you know, no
one needed to to uh to worry about that we
were we were big enough to do these things that
when we got into the when we got into the fray,
that we were big enough to do, you know, to
have all of the things that any of the other
(01:24:56):
big countries had at that time. And so I think
I think that that's that's honestly where we where we
needed to be last night, is we needed to re
establish ourselves as the dominance in in great countries. We
needed to show the opulence we could have. We had
(01:25:17):
three inaugural balls because we couldn't, you know, we couldn't
fit enough people into one. We had we had too
many people for it, and so we needed to do that.
We needed to make you know, he sat down and
signed executive orders while taking questions from the media. He
(01:25:43):
did more media time in the in the eight to
ten hours after his his inauguration and the speech and
everything than Biden did in the last four years in
his entire presidency. And he didn't have somebody, you know,
he didn't look over and go, can I say that
(01:26:07):
to anybody. He may have looked over and said something
to somebody like they were talking about the drones, and
he said, let's get on that, let's figure out what
that is, let's tell the people what it is, and
and he he, uh, you know, things like that, but
(01:26:27):
he didn't look over and say, can I say that,
because he basically said during his inaugural speech, he listened
to the advice, uh, and kept a few paragraphs and
a few senses out that he really wanted to say,
mainly about the Biden family being pardoned looking very spaspiciously guilty.
(01:26:50):
And you know, I mean he pardoned his wife Joe.
I mean, like, if you don't want to be considered
the Biden crime family, you know, you just pardoned your
whole family, including your uncle and or your brother and
your you know, your sons, your wife, your you know,
(01:27:13):
pretty much anybody you knew and and anyone you you
you didn't know that maybe was connected to you. So
but it just, you know, it needed to have that opulence,
that that that you know, you know, they had a
crab cake, they had a steak, they had you know,
(01:27:33):
that's that's you know, their dinner, the the actual meal
and stuff was was that opulence. And they went and
danced and did their did did their thing and and
maybe that's you know, that's so formal and outdated, but
it shows the history. It shows the richness of the country,
and it shows that, you know, we still follow a
(01:27:56):
certain decorum too to being a great country. And I
don't think I don't think we see that as much
as we used to. I think we've we've torn down
statues of his, of historical events and historical people because
we don't want to we don't want to remember our history.
And I think if we don't remember our history, we're
doomed to repeat it. And I think we have repeated
(01:28:19):
you know, in the last four or even the last
you know, the eight years before Trump's first you know,
we've we've repeated, we we've we've dropped back to repeating
a lot of these civil rights issues that we were
so close to eradicating in the late nineties, early two thousands.
(01:28:43):
You know, I don't know that I I I guess
because I grew up in it. I didn't realize how
how united, how you know, amazing, how close we were
at that time, you know, to being this great just
(01:29:06):
you know, non racial country. And yes there were still problems,
but the problems weren't systematic. They were there wasn't a
system of racism at that point there. It was. It
was people. There was a group here and somebody there
is this guy over there, and most of those people
were persecuted by people who were against racism, and so
(01:29:29):
we were on our way of pushing those people out.
But I feel like, and this may be an overreaching statement.
I may, you know, maybe someday have to reattract this
statement because of of over you know, just being too much.
But it feels like the the Democratic Party saw that
(01:29:52):
they could they could they could control people by by
instilling fear by you know, and that this was a
way that they could instill fear. Is that by because
a certain group of people is a different color, or
(01:30:12):
there are so many more of them that you create
fear in those people. And honestly, you know, it's it's
a it's a bugs Lafe style movie going on right now.
Is that you know, oh, we can't do that, or
or the others will crush us because you know, but
(01:30:34):
but there's there's more of the ants and just because
they're they're different, just because the others are are bigger,
or they're they're stronger, or whatever, it doesn't you know,
we should all, you know, we should all actually live equally.
And the way we live equally is we take away
the privilege of anyone. You know this is you know
(01:30:57):
you've got a level playing field, and you you use
your level playing field to the best of your ability
to make whatever you can out of it. And obviously
you know it's it's you know, not everybody gets the
same million dollars or the same amount of financial stability,
(01:31:21):
but at least you have, you know, at least, if
if it's fair and and uncontrolled, at least you have
the same amount of of promise of ability to raise
your circumstance, and I felt, and i've you know, I've
honestly felt over the last twelve or or sixteen years
(01:31:45):
that you know, that that chance to to raise your
your circumstance, to to raise your social status has been gone.
Maybe it is gone. Maybe there is no no ability
to take yourself from the middle class to the upper class,
(01:32:07):
to the lower class, to the middle class to you know,
maybe that's that's the case, But I still think that
there's some level of that in the country. You know,
Elon Musk didn't come from you know, something, something bigger
than you know, he didn't come from the the a
(01:32:30):
family of billionaires, and neither did you know Zuckerberg. You know,
he made millions, He made millions and billions. You know
Bill Gates didn't you know, he started out in a garage.
And maybe they had opportunities that others didn't have because
(01:32:51):
of intelligence, or maybe they had opportunities the others didn't
have because they their parents, you knowed them up or something.
But you know, I think this is still a great country.
I think that we still have too to watch what
is going on and watch that we're not you know,
(01:33:15):
blindsided by a that we're not blindsided by you know,
biblical prophecy. But I think that you know, the next
four years have a very at least economically and security wise,
(01:33:37):
have a very positive look to them. And as you know,
the the conspiracy theorist inside of me is shouting look
for you know, look around, look around the look around
the mirrors, look look through the smoke. But you know,
(01:34:00):
I hope that that that side of me is wrong.
So so again, love you guys. Great to be back
podcasting with you guys. Great to be back in the
studio giving you my opinions and things and all of
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(01:34:22):
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overreaching a bigger format. We're you know, I've got some
(01:34:45):
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