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July 19, 2024 93 mins
It had to to be couldn't be anything else trump was shot and getting ready for his speach at the RNC. His nomination is in and Aaron The Chef and Payton Figure it all out.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
(00:27):
Right, when did we all getthis dump? Almost only counts in horseshoes,
hand grenades, and nuclear warfare.I don't see anybody, so it
doesn't count. I'm the chef.I want to hear one thing. Yes,
chef, come on, man,here's your brain. The Why I'm

(00:49):
Angry podcast start now. I guessI didn't set that up so awesome Why
I'm Angry podcast it starts now.I think, Uh, this is the
chef I'm checking in here. Uh, we've got some pretty good news to

(01:14):
talk about, or at least alot of news and some pretty good topics.
I don't know whether it's good news, but uh, you know,
make sure that if you want tokeep hearing, you know, topics like
this and and everything that's uh youknow it's called uh, it's called helping
share us look at uh at youknow following and get on our website.

(01:42):
It's whymanngry dot com. Get onthere and uh and just help us out,
get to get the get the wordout more than anything. And uh,
then we can keep going on anddoing this and helping you think critically
and freely and all that good stuff. Peyton here in the in the studio,

(02:07):
how's it going what you're thinking,got got uh, lots lots of
of news in there. We justtalked to like Bob Newhart died, Lou
Dobbs. We've got, i mean, just a ton of people just yeah,

(02:27):
and just a lot of people thatyou know, you're you're, you're
you're realizing that there's there's a goldenage of people that are are no longer
going to be with us very soon. And that's not just you know,
that's not just our actors. That'syou know, it's unfortunately, it's it.
You know, it's it was mygrandparents and and those who fought in

(02:51):
World War Two are pretty much gone. And uh, you know, honestly,
Vietnam and Korean War vets are aregoing to be gone fairly shortly too.
And we talked a little bit aboutI think we talked a little bit
about it last week. You know, the the advance in generations. You

(03:12):
know, once you get so farfrom the last generation who have fought a
major war, or the last generationor the generation who started things, that's
when your dynasty starts to kind offall apart. And uh, you know,
we talked about that just last week. Is you know, how close

(03:35):
are we to our dynasty falling apartbecause we've you know, our our generations
now know nothing about defending our countryand patriotism. A lot of good stories,
that's for sure, and they're not. Yeah, and then and that's
it, and they're not getting taughtthat in our in our public education,

(03:59):
in our regular education, because becauseyeah, because my pastor walked up to
me and was like, you know, everybody knows that story, right,
He said something from the pulpit aboutabout this like whatever whatever it was,
I don't even remember. And Isaid, no, they don't teach that
in in school anymore. They don't. They don't teach American history or even

(04:20):
world history half the time. Butnow I was like, that's that that
that is not taught anymore. Andhe's like, oh, a lot of
blank faces, a lot of blankfaces when I said that when you so,
But yeah, it is. AndI think they World War two stuff

(04:42):
that which I mean, in thegrand scheme of thing, world War two
really was not that long ago.And uh, and we're we've got a
whole generation that really didn't even understandwhat fascism is well, and we and
we have a generation that never meta World War two soldier. Mm hmm,
that's what's that's that's the part that'sthat's almost almost scary. Yeah,

(05:09):
there was a when I was yearsago, I used to I used to
frequent an eating establishment around here andthe bar, and one time me and
a girlfriend decided that we were gonnago over and talk to him, and

(05:30):
he was shoot, he was probablyin his nineties then eighties or nineties,
but he introduced himself as Lee andwe got to talking and uh, this
was about the time when you rememberBand of Brothers at the movie series.
It was about that time when thatwas that was released, the History Channel

(05:53):
had released it, and he said, you know that that mini series that's
on right now, band of BrothersAnd I say yeah, he said,
well, I was one of thoseguys, and uh right, absolutely floored
me. And he was telling hewould he told me stories about the Battle
of the Bulge, about the stormingof Normandy, all these neat stories,

(06:17):
and I just I would go backfor a couple of weeks after that just
to hear his stories. It wasfascinating. Well, that's that was when
we when me and Jay Boots wereon the road by an Antiques and Collectibles
That's probably what kept kept me onthe road longer, or or at least

(06:39):
kept me mentality wise on the roadmore is that, you know, we
we talked to all these veterans thatyou know, they were trying to sell
their memorabilia. Their children had nowant for any of their World War two
stuff, and we joked, youknow, at that time, we walked

(07:00):
a lot about you know that thatGermany went to war for power, England
went to war for honor, andthe US went to war for souvenirs because
there were a ton of them outthere. But in that we got to
hear a lot of stories. Andit's kind of like you said, we
you know, I have got guysthat talked about they they jumped in.

(07:27):
They they uh, we're part ofthat group that were just dropped over Germany,
over near Hitler's vacation chalets up inthe north in northern Germany. And
he goes. The one guy goes, I literally I was just they they
they shot me out of a outof a plane and they we were getting

(07:49):
shot at, so they just kindof you know, wherever you jumped out
of is where where you were going. And and he goes, he goes
I was an engineer. I wasin He was supposed to be shooting at
anybody or doing anything like that,he goes, I was just supposed to
be there building a bridge. Andwe were building this bridge because we blew

(08:09):
it up, and so once wetook it, we needed to build it
again. And he goes, Ispent two and a half weeks in civies
walking around Germany trying to figure outwhere I was going. And it was
just, you know, it's juststories like that, where like, we
had a guy that he said hewas in Pittsburgh, and he said that

(08:30):
he grew up as a and Imet him in Georgia and he grew up
and joined the army at sixteen.Told him he was eighteen because he was
a street kid who had been abandoned, and three cots and three or a
cot and three hots sounded really goodto him. It was a better deal

(08:54):
than what he was getting sitting onthe street. And so, you know,
he joined. He joined the WorldWar Two at sixteen, and he
ended up in Normandy, like youwere saying, he ended up like he
ended up on the beach, andsomehow at seventeen or whatever. By the
time he got through everything, survivedand came back and ended up becoming He

(09:20):
was pretty high up in the militaryand ended up when he got back though
he didn't know anything about the US. He was gone for so many years
and he had he when he whenthe war was over, he stayed as
part of the rebuilding efforts and stufflike that in the US military, and

(09:43):
so he had never really lived inthe US. He'd lived twenty some years
in Germany and only sixteen of hisyears in the US. So just interesting
things like that where yeah, andhe's like, he goes, I had
to ask a buddy where to live, and the guy's like, well,
there's good fishing here in northern Georgia. So he ended up in Georgia.

(10:07):
But but yeah, but I guesshe's still had he still had some invitation
to stay at the resort in Germanywhere Hitler had his his vacation, Chalet.
It's now a resort and because hehelped liberate them after being in Normandy.

(10:28):
Yeah, the second Airborne and thatwas the guys guy. Yeah,
he said they they gave him freereign of the resort anytime he wanted up
there, and they still knew him. It's it's now I'm flatter orgasted how
grateful France still is, Yeah,for what happened. It's uh, that's

(10:54):
a testimony he really is well.And and it's and it's surprising that like
kind of here, we didn't fight, we didn't fight for our own freedom
in World War two or or inKorea or Vietnam, we weren't here,
you know. And so I've hadeven I've had people that asked, well,
you know, why do we evengo to these wars? Well,

(11:18):
we go to these wars a lotof times so that we don't end up
fighting for our freedoms here, sothat we don't have to fight a war
on our own soil. Now,I mean, there's you know, been
quoted a lot of times lately,the or I've seen on a lot of
TikTok memes, you know, thequote from the Japanese general that says,

(11:39):
you know, we won't we won'tattack America because they've got a gun behind
every blade, even though even thoughthey did. But yeah, so,
yeah, California a couple of places, right, right, But yeah,

(12:03):
so yeah, that's just a lotof a lot of the history is kind
of starting to fall away. Andand we're seeing, you know, like,
what what happened this week? Youknow, Trump's doing a doing a
just a regular old stump. He'sout there just trying to get to rally

(12:24):
in his troops. And what's funnyis me and Jay Boots were actually having
having dinner. My wife was ata at a birthday party, and I
was I didn't need to be there, luckily, and we looked up at
the TV at Buffalo Wild Wings foras as the Craziest Thing, which we're

(12:45):
not we're not sponsored by, butif we could be, we need take
it. I love it. They'resolid, solid. But yeah, so
we were sitting there and having somewings and stuff, and I looked up
and I'm like, WHOA, what'sgoing on at the rally? And uh

(13:07):
because they somehow they had ABC onand uh they played it out like we
couldn't hear anything. I mean obviouslythey didn't put the the audio on or
anything like that, but we sawsaw something was going on. So we
both got out our phones and we'reyou know, we did the real American
thing and googled it and uh,the what was what was what was really

(13:33):
telling to me was CNN had noclue what was going on. But instead
of of of of reporting what seemedlike the news, they said, oh,
Trump fell, yeah, I didsee that. The article the first
article I read was Trump fell,Yeah, loud noise, trump fell,

(13:54):
Yeah, Trump fell or something.And uh, I was like, well,
like way to like way to likemiss out miss it completely, Like
in the eighties, had you missedit that bad, you wouldn't be a
news organization anymore. M So.But that was that was the biggest telling.

(14:20):
And that's and that's the question Ihave for you. Would you rather
be in the eighties or nineties whereyou had Walter Cronkite and he says this
is the news, whether he's rightwrong lying to you or not, because
we obviously think that something else happenedduring the jfk assassination. But would you

(14:45):
rather that? Or would you ratherknow that they're just straight being rechards and
lying to you and they have aspin on it and everything and and all
of that. Would you red ratherred pill or blue pill? Would you'll
rather have ignorance and not knowing thatthere's some kind of agenda that's not that

(15:05):
you that you didn't know about,or would you would you rather have it
like right now, where there's youjust know that everybody's probably lying to you.
See, I would rather have itlike it was, and even then,
at least you know, I know, I know they were lying or

(15:28):
withholding, let's put that way.They were probably withholding a lot more information
than they were than they were lying. They're just straight lying now. They
don't even care. Cat's out.I don't care so everything. I don't
even turn on the local news anylonger because it's always it's a narrative or
an agenda. They don't look intothe story. They'll give you three or

(15:50):
four bits of the story, andthey won't give you the full story.
I can't tell you how many timesI've watched the local news, or even
lately it's been the now national newsand walked away with questions. And if
you're a news organization, your customersshould not be walking away with questions.
That's just crazy, that's right.And that's that's how we get conspiracy theories

(16:14):
because no one can trust the informationthat they're getting. No one can can
trust the that that whoever's giving methis information does not have an agenda.
So you know, I'm just gonnalogically think it through and come up with
some scenarios that I think is thebest way. It probably happened, even
though it may not be the truth. It may be the truth. Who

(16:37):
knows. And that's one hundred percent. Like what we've even been talking about
the last couple of weeks is youknow, I know three weeks ago,
I was on by myself and Isaid, listen, if I'm the only
reason that you vote for Trump orBiden, you're an idiot. You didn't
you didn't go educate yourself. Imay be as super genius or or not,

(17:00):
but if you're just listening to me, then then you're part of the
problem. Yeah, because it wasalways meant to be an educated voter,
but they couldn't. They'd actually didn'ttrust us to be an educated voter,
which is why they had the electoralcollege. Like people two hundred and some

(17:21):
years ago realized that we were toodumb to actually educate ourselves, like didn't
trust us to educate ourselves, andmade it a republic as opposed to a
directed democracy. I mean, yes, yes, and no. And I

(17:47):
think a lot of it has todo with population disbursement. A lot of
it has to do with because Imean, if if we if you if
you remember, the only ones thatwere allowed to vote when it started,
we're property owners, property owners,and uh and of course property owners excluded

(18:08):
most women, all slaves. Youknow, there there was a very minority
of people that were actually doing thevoting. So so I don't know.
I yeah, I do agree onthe premise of your argument. I think
there was a lot more to itthen than that there was. There was,

(18:29):
but there was that actual argument aboutwas the was the was was there
an education enough for people out theretoo? That were they going to be
educated to vote? Educated enough onon whatever was out there to vote on.
So, but I'll tell you what, right now, chef, it

(18:52):
can be argued that voters back then, or even non voters back then,
were less educated than our kids arecoming out with right now, or are
more educated than what our kids arecoming out with right now. Well,
and and and that argument can bemade especially because you you can, you

(19:17):
can, you can because I believeback then they had a stance on things.
I don't think kids right now,if they have a stance on something,
it's not their stance. It's notit's not because they believe something.
It's because someone's either told them tobelieve that way, and you and you
and you get that a lot becauseyou're like, oh, I'm gonna go

(19:38):
talk to my dad about what Ishould be voting for, or I'm gonna,
you know, talk to you know, I gotta go look on TikTok
tiktoks me how to value right.Yeah, No one when we were talking
about this earlier before the show started, no one knows how to critically think
any longer. That's it, Andno one has their own opinion. You

(20:00):
know. That's the individualism of thecountry is that you had your own opinion
and I wasn't going to take thataway from you. Instead, you know,
if I don't like your opinion,I'm going to cancel you. That's
it. That's It's not it's notwe're gonna agree to disagree, or we're
gonna you know, we're just gonnapart ways, or or you know,
we can still be you know,friends, we just have a differing opinion

(20:22):
or whatever. It's now I'm goingto cancel you, or we're not you
know, you're you're just not gonnawe're we're not going to exist together,
and one of you, one ofus is not going to exist, and
it's definitely not. I'm not goingto make myself not exist. Yeah,
but uh yeah, So in inthat or in in this this instance where

(20:49):
you know, we've seen what happened. Now, Trump was shot, he
was graysed at least, you know, I want to still see him with
the the bullets producing. You know, they've got those ear rings that look
like a bullet went through your earand so I want to I want to
see that. Give me time.But you know what something what's that all

(21:18):
joking aside? Do you have youI don't know, have you been watching
a lot of the r n Cwhen Trump comes out and Trump the first
day? Did you see the firstday? No? I didn't, I
I I honestly, I haven't beenable to to stay on it, and
very much. I've been pretty busylast couple of days here. So the
r NC convention is going on rightnow. And on Sunday, the day

(21:41):
after he was shot, he went, he went walked out onto the floor
and he actually every night since thenbecause he comes out about eight o'clock every
night. There is a difference tothat guy, you know, I mean,
and just just kind of watching hisdemeanor, it seems like there's a

(22:03):
lot of humility and a lot ofgratitude there and in this And I'm speaking
of a guy that just gotten shotnot but week ago, so right,
and I mean you and you,but but you think about it, I
mean, you have a brush withdeath because honestly, half an inch to
the to the left or had youknow or whatever you know, he was,
he was out. He was gonemm hm. And uh, you

(22:27):
know when it's when it's that close, you know, it's it's kind of
like I talked with my brother,well with honest abe, when he lost
his leg that you know, itwas the same type of deal. You
know, a foot to the right, foot to the left and he's over
his bike into the back end ofa truck and not you know, not

(22:49):
just flying across the grassy area andlosing more than just his foot. So
well, the point of the pointof what I was saying is I wonder,
I wonder if this is going tobe a different presidency because well and
and and maybe maybe this is thisis what, this is what he needed

(23:10):
to just you know, become amore powerful, more more just introspective Trump
and just you know, yeah,we're gonna win, win, win,
no matter what. But at thesame time, we're going to uh you
know, it's going to be moremore humbly when win win, no matter
what. We're gonna make America greatand enjoy it type deal instead of just

(23:36):
take it for granted that, uh, you know, we made it great.
So I would, I mean,I I would honestly just I would
welcome it. You know, II didn't. I didn't think there was
major you know, I I knowthat he's brash and whatever. But at
the same time, some of hisbrashness probably kept us kept us out of

(24:03):
battle, out of fighting. Imean, I can I can say that
that most likely Russia didn't attack Ukrainewhile Trump was president because Trump came in
and told NATO that they needed tobring, you know, bring their money
to the table. He came inand told the United Nations, bring bring

(24:26):
your money to the table, becausewe're not funding this thing all by ourselves
anymore. And you know, andwhen and when I met him. If
if I'm if I'm the leader ofa of a of a crackpot third world
country and America has this crazy guythat I have no idea what he's gonna

(24:49):
do, I am going to beon my best behavior. And I think
I think from here on out,we should always have crazy guys as our
president keep us out of a lotof trouble. Yeah, I just I
think that we uh when we whenwe had generals as presidents. Maybe our

(25:18):
economy wasn't always the greatest, maybe, but we were safe here at home.
You know, we didn't. Wedidn't. We didn't get into a
ton of battles. And you know, if we did, we were well
run machines. So my camera's gonnago out here in half a second.

(25:40):
So I'll still be on on voice, but I won't have my camera for
a second. I need to getit, get a phone court. I
didn't realize I had left my courtoff of it, So get it charged
back up. But yeah, sowe would be okay, we would be

(26:04):
you know, we would we wouldhave a plan and stuff and right now,
like you know, the last youknow, even with Obama, you
know, as as as great aseveryone wants to say he was, he
didn't do anything away from home.He was here doing whatever he could to

(26:26):
like smash and grab and uh,you know outside of I mean he let
pretty much let everything go outside outsideof here. You know, we just
okay whatever. Yeah, but yeah, no, I just I do.

(27:02):
I I would definitely, you know, I would, I would welcome in
with open arms if he was youknow, if he's going to be a
more humble I don't think you gothrough a life life threatening thing, whether
it's cancer or or a brush withwith being shot or anything like that without
it's at least giving you some kindof retrospective. I mean maybe unless you're

(27:25):
like a US Navy seal or somethinglike that that's kind of used to it.
You know, maybe the first setor second time that that's the case,
but then then maybe the third orfourth time you're like a you know
whatever. Cool, But yeah,I don't think you go you go through
something like that. And and especiallyjust you know, I mean he's a

(27:45):
businessman. He hasn't gone to war, he hasn't been in battle. He
doesn't you know, that's not thatthat wasn't that's not his forte. So
I I could definitely see him,you know, the instincts he had to
stand up, raise his fists andyou'll fight, right, don't it's it's

(28:10):
it was. It was definitely adivine moment as far as he the bullet
not hitting him at all or well, grazing his ear well and then and
and and if you like to watchthe video, it looks like he's just
swatting a bee or something like thatuntil he sees like, oh, that's

(28:32):
that's real. And then he thenyou see him drop. But it was
like, but you know, it'slike it's like, can't you know at
the same point him standing up,we were just we were talking about this,
like how soft is Secret Service nowadaysthat you let the guy, you

(28:55):
let the president who's been like ifRonald Reagan had stood up after being shot,
he'd be dead because they would haveshot him a second time, like
the sniper would have been there shootinghim a second time. But so there
was seven or eight bullets that rangout from the shooter. Yeah, only

(29:18):
one of them came close to Trump. Well, that's what I was wondering
too. I don't know whether itwas seven or eight from the shooter or
or it was one or two fromthe shooter and then return fire from Secret
Service. Because if you watch somethere there are some videos. There's actually
a guy who was on BBC Americafirst. He was like within an hour

(29:42):
or two BBC America had him inlike a studio van. Yeah, having
a conversation where he's like, look, we you know, we have video
of we were telling Secret Service andthe local police that he's on the on
top of the the building with agun, like where we got a video

(30:02):
of him with a gun on there. Yeah, and uh, you know
which, I wonder how long itis before he's gone. But you know,
well, actually they came out todaythat that they were aware of the
guy for almost an hour prior tothis all taking place. They were looking

(30:26):
for a guy with a range finderand they they had they had a picture
of him. A couple of thelocal police had taken a picture because he
looked suspicious milling around that building.There's a lot coming out that. It's
like it's getting worse now. It'sso when it first happened, everybody the
whole quest how in the heck didthis happen from there? And now the

(30:51):
questions are there's getting more and morequestions. It's almost getting to the point
to where you can't deny the factthat it was it was absolutely on purpose,
right right? Yeah? No,I I I I kind of wondered
that too, if I mean,like and and I and I did see
one one article where they talked aboutthe Secret Service was so was so loose,

(31:17):
they didn't have enough Secret Service agentsand and so they've had to loosen
and enlighten their their prospects, andso they've they're hiring more people that probably
wouldn't get it, wouldn't have gottenin back in the day, and you
know that, And and so theywere trying to blame part of that on

(31:38):
how they howl how kind of laissezfaire they treated this guy. And it's
like, but but like any youyou would have in any given like you
would like you would have cleared thatbuilding, like no one should have been

(32:00):
able to get on that that buildingshould have been a target point, like
you should have had snipers on thatbuilding. Well, I mean it was
a five degree slope. I meanright right, right, right, right
right right, nobody, that's whyhe missed. That's why he missed.
He didn't. You know, I'lltell you what coriolis effect. And uh,

(32:23):
you know, the whole not beinga flat earth thing really uh really
got so really, I mean theycould have put Pete booda judge up there,
and it would have been better thanwhat they had up there right,
the fact that everything we every oneof our agencies are so overbloated, especially

(32:45):
the regulate regulated or the regulatory agenciessuch as E p A. You know,
I could, I could go on. I know Ice is not loaded,
but all these these huge beer creditagen The RS is a big one.
Didn't We hire a bunch of IR. S Agents and we give

(33:05):
those guys guns. So we havethose guys and we train those guys to
shoot. So those guys maybe theyshould start coming to the rallies. Yeah,
maybe they should. They should getin charge of running the presidents.
The the argument I heard was itwas de I. It seems to be
a big because this this Kimberly Cheetleor what is that her name is it

(33:32):
Cheetle whatever, Yeah, Paulo Cheetle, maybe Paula Clart anyway, something like
that. Anyway, that the directoris very DEI oriented and she wants to
increase the the hiring of of womenin in the Secret Service by thirty by

(33:57):
such and such date. And wesaw reflected in Saturday there was ladies that
that could not holster their guns.They weren't tall enough to protect the president.
Right. Just I mean, it'sgetting a shot in the rear.
We're protected. I'm not and I'mnot I'm not saying that that these ladies

(34:19):
can't can't do certain jobs, butthere are certain jobs. When you have
a protectee that's six two six threeand you're only five four five six,
you're not going to be able toprotect them very well. And it's nothing
against you personally, it's the factthat, yes, maybe you can be
a secret Service agent, but youmaybe can't. You can't be in that

(34:44):
spot, that that's not your position. Maybe if we had a five to
nine president, then then maybe youcould. But Mike, Mike the Wine
will never be president. No,thank god. Oh, now that you've
said it, though, he's goingto become president. But uh yeah,

(35:07):
now, a couple of years agoI decided I would never vote for him
again. But and uh I stillhaven't. But but yeah, so anyhow,
but yeah, so you I don't. I'm really not for this d
n I crap. I mean,it's just it's it's junk like if we

(35:30):
if if you're the best candidate,you should get the job. It shouldn't
matter whether you're white, pink,purple blue, one armed, one leg
a woman, man, transitioning intoa pig or a Chinese checker or you
know, Elmo or stay at home. Well, yeah, we we normally

(35:53):
don't make them have jobs anyhow,right, But you know, I m
because you know, if you wantfair, fair is only fair if we
if we don't look at you atall, if we just look at what's
on the paper, We just lookat what you say and we and we

(36:15):
take that. And I feel like, honestly, we were the closest to
that in the nineties. Yeah,we had got kind of that was the
problem. That was the problem becausebecause everybody was you know, everybody shared
their everything about them, and youknow, everything was accepting. And that

(36:37):
was the issue because every become everybodywas becoming united, and communists don't don't
like that. They liked the vision. So we had to bring this new
term in and we're going to callit equity and then and that's it used
to be. It was what wasit? It was equality, So you

(37:00):
know, you're just as equal asme, as as as I'm just as
equal as she. Now it's nowit's equity, and that means that what
you have was stolen from someone elsebecause of your skin color or your ethnicity,
and you need to give that tosomebody else that's less fortunate than you.

(37:22):
It's it's a fact that you didn'tearn this privilege. Yeah, you
were given it to it given toyou by your your color of your skin.
Yeah. And it's it's inherently racist, right, and that and that

(37:43):
and that's one hundred percent. That'swhat I mean. We've talked about that,
I don't know one hundred times andand it's sad. But we've also
said a few a couple of thingsthat I'm sure that will get us kicked
off of some platform again real soon. But we we act like, you

(38:07):
know, like every like every minoritygroup is women, because women really are.
I mean they might even be themajority. There might be more women
than men in the world. Butwe act like that. For African Americans,

(38:28):
we act like that. For Latinos, we act like that. For
the Asians or well, we don'treally act like that. For the Asians.
We just we the Asians are likewe we just we just discriminate against
them. All the countries in theworld pretty much discriminated against Asians. There's
still slaves in most in most Asiancountries, But we act like the African

(38:55):
Americans are are fifty to fifty equal. There's there you know, there's only
there's forty percent African Americans and maybeyou know fifty percent Americans, you know,
white Americans, but it's not thatclose. It's it's fourteen to twenty
percent at most African Americans in thecountry. And not that they should be

(39:16):
marginalized, but that there's just there'sno way to make them fifty percent equity
you know, equity stakeholders in thecountry because they're not there's only twenty percent
of them. I don't even acceptthe farms. I really don't. I
I don't care what color you arelike, I could care less if you

(39:40):
if you can do the job andwhatever you're being asked to do, if
you're able to do it, Ithink you should have it right, you
know, and there are there arebigots on both sides. Exactly. You
weed out the bigots and you ignorethem and work around them. That's right.
The problem is is is when agovernor governing body comes in and says

(40:06):
you have to the problem is thatthe biggots have become the people in charge
of the government that are telling uswhat to do. Right, So the
fascist, the biggots, the bureaucratsand whatever you call them, the bureau
cut politicians and lawyers, writers,what you know whatever. That's the thing

(40:37):
I don't get how they call theycall someone who folks right fascists. Why
no, I'm not gonna I'm notgonna whip your your butt because of what
you think you know, and thatand that, and ultimately that's what a

(41:00):
fascist is. If you if youdon't agree with me, I will beat
you down until you do, orI will kill you right that, and
and that's one hundred percent like that. That's what the you know, fashion
fascism is is like you said,you're you're going to You're gonna take whatever
you want. You're gonna do ithowever you want to do it, and

(41:20):
you don't care what everybody else thinks. And it's it's it's about basically taking
power, and a lot of timesit's about taking power with fear mm hmm.
And so we we bandy about this, this fascism as and when we
say, oh, you're being abully, you're a fascist, that's not

(41:44):
honestly what it is. I'm beinga'm I'm being a bully. And then
and then there's you know, I'mnot you know, I'm not taking your
power along with my power. Youcan have your power back anytime you get
a pair and take me on.Not that i want to be a bully
or not that I'm like saying,let's, you know, let's be bullies
or I'm condoning bullyism, but sorry, I'm also kind of half working on

(42:12):
getting my camera back up. ButI'm also but I'm saying, all right,
maybe I could back up here thistime. But that's but that's part
of it is is that you're youknow, as a we're we're just not
using the word, right. Iguess it's we say it as a bad
word because it's a talking point onemails from everyone in there and their mama

(42:37):
make you know, is putting outan emails setting saying this is, this
is this is what we're following.This is what we're saying to this week.
This is this is how we're doingit. And uh, you know,
and the other side or the restof us who think for ourselves,
don't think we need a group ofpeople that think just like us, and

(43:00):
so we think for ourselves instead ofputting out our own you know, group
and and because we all think forourselves. We're like that red Bull commercial
where everybody thinks they think for themselvesand we're just all flying off in the
middle of nowhere saying the same thing. Yeah, yeah, so all right,

(43:27):
well is there so I I didread where and I and I don't
know. And this is part ofa part of it that we just kind
of talked about, is is youknow who was the guy? You know
who you know? Have you haveyou because there's so many news organizations trying

(43:50):
to spin there their their agenda.Like I've I've heard three or four different
kinds of stories. You know,I heard that it was you know,
Iranian you know, dissidence that hadyou know, had come across the border,
that he was he was part of. You know, they're taking credit
for it. I've heard, likeyou know, I think we were talking

(44:14):
before, you know, you knowwhat, what's your what's your take on
it? So, you know,honestly, Chef, I don't know if
we'll ever if we'll ever know whothis this kid really was, or what
is what his motives or intentions were, because after ever after this happens,

(44:37):
especially initially after it happened, Ihuman nature makes me want to look up
that that those answer those questions becauseyou automatically ask why would anybody do this?
And then you get into that everybodytrying to get the news out as

(44:58):
quickly as possible and and they don'teven know if it's true or not.
So you know, as far aswe knew, he had three heads and
and could fly and this, thatand the other. Well, I mean,
I don't fell down because because he'snot fit to be president, so
he felt he fell down and andthat yeah, and that, Yeah,
that was the That was the veryearly the first the first report. But

(45:21):
uh so now that the dust hassettled a little bit, and you know,
well before I start, I gota question for you. Do you
trust? Do you trust the FBIis going to give us all the answers?
No? No, I mean everever since that magic bullet, I

(45:46):
think, uh, I think we'rebeing lied to no matter what. Yeah,
I feel the same way. Soyou don't know what And actually it's
it's still astonished me and I andI tell people that, I you know,
I've said this a million times.I don't know if you you're old
enough to know. Did you watchthe movie Wag the Dog? It was

(46:09):
Dustin Hoffman, and he and he'sand and there's a part in the movie
where he's sitting in a a limoand they're talking to him and they say,
well, you know, we're downso many points, blah blah blah.
And I don't remember whether it's itseems like it was Matt Damon.

(46:35):
I don't remember who it was.Was his his nerdy publicist, fixer person.
And he says, he goes,I got this idea. I think
we just for one news cycle,we create a war. And at that
time, you know, that waslike this, Oh did you see that?

(46:58):
Sensational? That's crazy? What howyou know? And I'm thinking,
and I think I was like thirteenor fourteen at the time, and I'm
like, huh. And they createlike they literally they take video of these
you know, f whatever's at thetime and these MiGs and they just create
this like not even war, butthis skirmish that was that what happened over

(47:23):
near Russian the Russian border, Andfor one news cycle, it completely wipes
out what what was going, youknow, his bad publicity that dropped him
so many points, and I thought, holy crap. And then we get

(47:45):
like five ten years ago, andI said, holy crap, we've been
We're getting wagged the dogs. We'rejust all the time, we're getting wagged.
And so no, I don't,I don't. Well, I mean,
think about it. How much talkdid you hear about Joe Biden stepping
down on Saturday evenings, Aliday,Sunday, Monday, And when it hilts

(48:09):
about today, I started hearing aboutit again. Well, and and that's
and that's and that was part ofyou know, we talked about it,
like right after the debate. Ifyou watched CNN's coverage after the debate,
that was the telling the telling spot. They had I don't know eight of

(48:29):
them out there, nine of them, and they brought in Van Jones,
who hasn't been on you know,hasn't been wagging his finger at us on
TV for a while. And theybrought in a cut you know, one
of his press secretaries and and allof that, and they're like, and
they were, they were you couldtell they were visibly surprised how bad he
had gotten. I mean, duringthe debate, he's literally just staring at

(48:52):
the camera during wal Wald Trump waswas talking. He was just like Doe
I he wasn't even there you cantell he wasn't there and honestly gone.
It was sad. Yeah. Andif you've if you spent any time with

(49:13):
people with dementia or Alzheimer's, that'show they look when they're gone, when
they're not like fully you know,fully lucid, that's how they look.
They're just you know, they justlook at you with that like they don't
know your who you are stare.Yeah, and he just sat there looking
into the screen like I don't knowwhere I'm at. But they told me

(49:37):
to say this, so this iswhat I'm going to say, and the
whole time, and so they theylike after like fifteen minutes afterwards, like,
oh, I can't believe. Andso they had to be they had
to dig up some people who hadn'tbeen, who hadn't seen him in a
while, to even be surprised thathe was so far out of it.

(50:00):
And I don't know you, I'vesaid this a bunch of times, I
said, since they they they announcedthat they were going to do the debates,
he was gonna make it one debateand then he was either going to
be gone or there wasn't gonna bea second debate. But he was going

(50:20):
to be at one debate and thatwas going to start the conversation of him
going the way of the Buffalo.Yeah, and I said, I you
know, I still think they're gonnaDNC him at the at the which which
is two different and to two differentthings. At the Democratic National Convention,
they're going to bring out the superdelegates and Hillary Clinton wins it or or

(50:45):
you know, they're gonna Bernie Sanders. They're gonna Bernie Sanders him and you
know somebody else is going to comethrough. He's gonna or or he's gonna
they're gonna pull his meds again andhe's gonna say something completely crazy and he's
gonna you know, they remember HowardDean he won, he won, Uh

(51:12):
he won can't uh the Iowa caucusand he won, uh what is it,
Rhode Island or whatever it was,New Hampshire, New Hampshire, and
uh, all of a sudden hecame out with a speech and he's like
and then he was gone, likeit was like one of the first memes
back when memes just started. Andthen he was he went away. But

(51:35):
yeah, I mean he became chairman, but he yeah, he became the
chairman and he and they're like,well, we can't, we can't.
But but that's what's so crazy aboutit is he can have such a terrible
debate and he's not gone. Butdude, you yell do yeha and he's
out. Yeah, that's a goodpoint. But that's what I've said even

(51:58):
about Obama. Obama, you don'tknow where his his actual birth certificate was,
but dude says yeeha, and he'sgone. Difference in time frames here.
Now, Yeah, I think Ithink Biden will be gone before Saturday.
He's this COVID thing is going tobecome a lot worse than we think

(52:21):
it is, and he just willnot be able to service as the candidate
any longer. And he's going topass his delegates onto to Harris. That
is what I think. I thinkthat's how it's gonna go down. I
really hope it's not Harris, butI do think if, if, if
it is Harris, it has tobe because that's the war chest in order

(52:45):
for it to be trans Otherwise itgets transferred to a pack and then it
gets divvied out, so then ithas to get Harris plus the plus the
the Congressional Black Caucus will fall apartthe black voter will will not be there
because they're kind of depending on Thatwas the whole deal with Harris getting nominated

(53:07):
as vice president and then they wouldget the black vote. So they kind
of they're they're in a sticky wicket, someone might say, And I can
see that. I mean, Ithought more of the money would come.
I thought most of the money camefrom the DNC after the convention. That's
when most of the money was actuallydrawn out. And that's how they you

(53:31):
know, that's how he would finishout, or whoever would finish out,
is with the money from the Democraticeven though there was a super pack.
But I don't know. I justdon't they're gonna do something. They I
mean, they can change the rules, right, they don't have to follow
the rules. That's why. That'swhat I've been arguing all along. I

(53:52):
mean, they don't care about rules. I mean, they've proven that with
the student loan, which which Iheard today got got knocked down by a
federal judge that said that the studentloan forgiveness, Yeah, they can't go
forward with that, but that theythe Supreme Court already told him that.

(54:13):
And they don't care so well,and That's what was great is he took
a victory lab all we got thismuch student loan done it And it was
the same student loan program that theyhad already that was already in place.
If you served for a year asa teacher, as a police officer,
as a blah blah blah, thenthen you got so much of your student

(54:34):
loan forgiven that that's already been inplace for like ten or fifteen years.
That's nothing new. Yeah, therewas to inspire people to become teachers and
firefighters, and it's been a lossand yeah, yeah, but yeah,
so and like I went and Ilooked, I was like, oh,

(54:58):
did I get my student loan takenaf And I had actually, but it
was because the school that I wentto was in a class action lawsuit for
predatory predatory lending, and so yeah, so for some reason, uh,
I guess in the in the finaljudgment or whatever, they actually you know,

(55:22):
they signed off all of their debtsto the government and whatever, and
we got our loans. The criteriais that you have to be you have
to be a graduate from Yale,Harvard or Cambridge or Columbia. You have
to be working for the federal government. It's it's like a really select group

(55:43):
of people, and they're very high. They're they're elitist people. I mean,
it's not the common you and mewould have already paid their their debts
off or are in the process ofpaying their debts only because they're just you
know, they're they're paying they're they'reinvesting their money in other things that make

(56:04):
them more money than paying off theirdebt. Yeah. So, I mean,
it's the people who really don't needthe money we are paying off their
debt. I like, l athey throw around forgiveness like it just vanishes.
It's kind of like amnesty. Youknow, these people did come here

(56:27):
illegally, but let's give them amnesty. Let's just give them a free ride.
You know, all those murderers andall of those other people. This
land is your lane, don't youknow the song? That's right? But
I thought this land was my land, and you came here illegally, but
you had your own land somewhere else. Oh, I don't know, I

(56:52):
don't know. But uh so,so what what do you believe the shooter?
You know, is there really likeI mean, I'm reading like,
you know, he's from Pittsburgh andthings of that nature. So it's probably
not an Iranian. Like you know, they're not gonna they're not actually getting

(57:15):
credit for this, unfortunately for them. No, he lived an hour away
from the where the shooting took place. He and this is this is what's
weird for me, is I heardthat his parents called His parents called the
police. And and mind you,this was three o'clock on a Saturday afternoon.

(57:36):
His parents called U called the policeand said that their son hadn't returned
home today. They were worried thathe hadn't returned home. Now, what
why would you call the police?I have And this is a twenty year
old kid we're speaking of. Ihave. I have a twenty two year
old. If it's Saturday and he'snot home, I'm not calling until forty

(57:57):
forty eight to seventy two hours later. And I heard from it the same
day. So that was kind ofan odd report that I heard. Well,
they don't they don't want to goto jail like those guys from Michigan.
Yeah, that's exactly cya C whya, That's exactly what I thought of,
because you know, we know thathe he donated fifteen dollars to act

(58:22):
Blue, which is a far leftliberal organization. Right, he's registered Republican,
which we know that the Democrats liketo play games with our primaries,
and they will do they will registeras a Republican so that they can get

(58:43):
help kind of usher in a candidatethat they think they can be and happened
to be. I I think iswhat Joe Biden has thought he could beat
Donald From the Kid, the kid, it sounds like he was just you
know, he's a typical kid.And that's the problem is that there he
was a kid in a home thatwas void of God, a lot of

(59:07):
video games, a lot of alot of time, you know, and
he just got he got influenced bywhat sounds like and this is and I
don't like I said early on inthe show, I don't know how much
of this is true and how muchof it is is misleading. But he's

(59:30):
just a misled kid. He didn'tknow God, and so he has no
moral compass and decided to make hismark in the world. So and not
to go to conspiracy theorist. Butwhat's not to say that the US government

(59:51):
doesn't have a group of video gameplaying whatever's on chat rooms, weing,
we know one and there is noconspiracy behind this that they absolutely set up
an operation and the FBI was wasthe one that motivated the people to to

(01:00:15):
kidnap Gretchen Whitmer, which is thethe Michigan governor. And and that kind
of fell apart on him because thetwo the two FBI agents were very we're
idiots, so to speak. Butbut yeah, they do it. They
do it all the time. That'sno secret. So I mean, yeah,

(01:00:36):
they could absolutely have done it thisway too. They could have pulled
the kid aside. They said,you know what, you if you want
this that and the other, youwant your family taken care of, you
know, we want you to dothis for us and and we won't hurt
you. We'll put you into secretprotection after you're done, you know,
and and everything will be okay.And you know, he probab. I

(01:01:00):
thought, I'm I'm going to beliving my life and the rest of my
life and the lap of luxury detectivecountry custody in some some toel in Florida.
Yeah, and that's why I said, I said, they shooted that
kid. They literally they told herthey sold in no veg of goods.
They said, you're going to bea patriot, blah blah blah. And

(01:01:22):
this kid like, okay, cool, I'm gonna set my family up.
I'm gonna you know whatever, Andand they used him as a scapegoat.
He wasn't even part of the FBI. Yeah, yep. I mean in
the twenty years ago, I wouldhave said, you're crazy, chef.

(01:01:42):
That is just nutty thinking. Buttoday that is an absolute valid thought process
because we've seen it recently, andand and as much as I don't as
much as we're not a third worldcountry or we're not a know, a
developing nation. If you see thesethings in other countries happening there one percent

(01:02:06):
happening here. We've just developed thembetter. We're just using a more covert
secret, you know way to doit. You know, here's the deal
of Franz Ferdinand. Here we goright here. He almost became it.
Yeah, that's absolutely And that wasone of the things I heard is like,

(01:02:30):
had they had they missed, howmuch different would the country be today
or in you know, in thedays after, you know, how much
more of a powder cake would thathave have let off? I mean the
minute, the minute I saw thatit was happening, there was adrenaline running
for me. Right, And I'mnot quick too, I'm not quick to

(01:02:54):
do stuff like that. But butit was just like all the alarm bells
were going off. I was,you know, I was ready to whatever.
Right'm uk the the the guns thatI lost in in the pond in
the horrible boating accidents, where arethose at? Where's the AMMO that I

(01:03:15):
had allegedly had in that pond inthat boat also? Where? You know?
Yeah, and just you know,just the thought of just, you
know, are are we are weprepared for this because we've talked about it
over the last few weeks, youknow, even with the conspiracy theory,

(01:03:38):
we you know, my brother evenasked like, will we ever go to
the barter system? Will we?You know, no, we we don't
have a population set for that.But there will be there will be groups
of people who have skills, whohave built certain skills together and have realized
that we are going to need eachother eventually, and so they've looked,

(01:04:00):
they've networked out and found people withskills that they don't have to create a
society that can sustain you know,if if for for some reason we get
attacked, or if for some reason, you know the country goes into civil
war? Where will you get yourboiled peanuts? You know? Where where

(01:04:28):
will you get your seafood from?You know, will you be able to
sustain with you know what you've got? And and it's not that I grow
a garden that that has enough foodfor me, but it's it's it's part
of Okay, this garden could bereplicated in three times the size. This

(01:04:49):
the ability to grow something I youknow, I know I have that and
so if I need to grow cornor green means or you know, I'm
not doing such a good job rightnow, but you know I can grow
more of them, and you know, just per capita, I'm gonna make
it. Oh, I've got almostan acre at my house, so I

(01:05:14):
can. I'll fight them deer off. But yeah, so it's just it's
just getting you know, and andand I know that there are you know,
you know, I've got a spotin a group. I guess I
don't. I haven't really talked tohim a ton, but my stepdad says,
we got a spot. So butthey've got provisions. They're looking for

(01:05:41):
people who have skills, and they'vegot a doctor and you know, some
other things, and so they youknow, that's that that will be,
that will be what the US doesin that kind of situation. You know,
there will be some people who willactually fight. And honestly, the

(01:06:03):
the Declaration of Independence, the Constitutioncalls for it. Yeah that if if
at one point a group of peoplebecomes so oppressive in our own country,
it's time to step up. Andyou know, the tree of liberty needs
water with the blood patriots. Sodo I believe that we have the generations

(01:06:31):
to do it? Maybe? Imean, I think I think there are
a few generations still around that havethe patriotism, but I think in the
next five to ten years we'll belosing those. I like this, uh

(01:06:53):
this uh uh why generation is comingout? They're pretty they're pretty right thinking.
I know my son, he's twentytwo. He wants nothing to do
with the government. Nothing, right, that's a burgo it is as long

(01:07:15):
as it's not just I want nothingto do with the government, so I'm
not going to pay attention to what'sgoing on there. And that's yeah.
And that's part of what I'm seeingin some of them, is is that
you're seeing them say I want nothingto do with the government. So I'm
going to back out. I'm notgoing to vote. You know, honestly,

(01:07:39):
Jay Boots was in that isn't thatin that program for a while that
you know, he just was soangry with the government that you know,
Santa Cla. Did you get himfixed? Did you get him fixed?
Oh? I don't know. Idon't. I honestly, we don't.

(01:07:59):
We don't. Uh, we don'tfight that battle anymore. Wait. Wait,
I just tell him, you know, if he's not if he's not
doing his civic duty, he's notdoing a civic duty and he can't talk
about it. So I will talkto you more. I will cancel him
as a friend if he does that. Oh yeah, So it looked like

(01:08:19):
it looked like Trump was coming on. I think you were gonna go and
uh and watch that if you getif you get a chance, give us
a heads up on it. Ithink I'm gonna hit a couple more articles
and then we'll be out, uhfinishing up with it too. So Peyton,

(01:08:40):
great to hear from you, likealways, anytime you can get on,
get on. You know, wehad we had an honest abe jump
on like eight thirty one night,nine thirty one night and we were about
ready to close her down and thenhe he jumps on at nine thirty.
We didn't. We didn't close herdown until ten thirty. So you see,
as on or you get on,you come on. So absolutely,

(01:09:03):
thank you appreciate you having me on. Definitely. So one thing we didn't
get a chance to talk about wasjd. Jd Vance has been chosen as
and and I wish we would havegotten a chance to talk about it because
I did want to hear his histake on this. But so JD.

(01:09:28):
Vance is now the running mate toTrump, and my question really was to
him even was what does he gainby adding Vance to it, because it
looked like, you know, there'sthe Marco Rubio, Doug Burgham Burgham,

(01:09:56):
which again I I know that atone point Aramuswami was on there. I
I just felt like, if ifyou were going to choose I and and

(01:10:18):
one hundred percent, I I dolike Vance. I've actually talked to Vance
myself, and I really do likehim one hundred percent. I have no
no qualms with him being the choice. I really, you know, because
he's here in Ohio when I ranmy food truck, I actually, you

(01:10:38):
know, got to talk to hima few times at different rallies and stuff,
and you know, I just Ijust I didn't know, you know,
I I don't I don't know whetherhe gets he gains a a group
kind of like what what we weretalking about. You know, we gotta
we gotta keep Cakling Kamala on therebecause she she commands the black vote.

(01:11:06):
But I just I kind of wondered, like, you know, I I
love him, I like the Ilike the choice, but the optics of
it is, yeah, and Igot a true liberty twitch on here,

(01:11:36):
and he's he's he's blowing us upand he's just saying, you know,
you know Trump, you know,Trump is truly trying to build his best
team. And that was one ofthe things we were talking we were actually
trying to lead into it is isthat Trump, you know, seemed like
he was more you know, moreintrospective and that's why he you know,

(01:11:57):
and maybe that's why he chose Vanceis because you know, honestly, if
the country, if he if hegets if he does get assassinated or he
does, you know, there isan issue that he can't run the country
that maybe vance is is his choice. Maybe he's the best choice that he
sees to run the country afterwards.And and you know, he's even talking

(01:12:21):
about how how Vance is is agood team player, and that's what I
talked about. Also, is Ihaven't talked to Vance for for a few
years now, and I'm just hopingthat because he's only been in office for
so many years, you know,he's not not been there forever, that

(01:12:42):
maybe he doesn't owe everybody that someof the others do or that some of
the others have, and maybe thathe just, you know, like you
said, he's just he's just thebest guy for it. He can just
he's gonna be able to steamroll in, uh you know, and uh,
you know his with his background andeverything, he's just going to be that

(01:13:05):
guy that can command authority, youknow. Uh yeah. A Liberty Twitter
says that Van seems like an excellentbalance to the Trump. Uh. Trump
talks simple and direct, but Vanceseems more detailed. And I and I

(01:13:26):
do and I do think like ifyou know, Trump will say we're gonna
make America great, and Vance willcome in and say this is how we're
going to make America great, andhe can kind of gives the plan because
and I think part of that isis that he's a military soldier. You
know, he he's been part ofof the military and and when you when

(01:13:49):
you speak in that realm and Iand I think that goes back to our
conversation earlier that we talked about how, you know, a lot of times
the management of our foreign policy wasbetter, our our safety was better under
a a former general or a formalformer uh you know, person who was

(01:14:12):
in charge of the of the country'smilitary. And with that being said,
I think they were they're they're easilyand more easily electable because they they give
the plan. They you know,that's that's what they're they're built to do,
is to to give out the plan. And if your people don't know

(01:14:35):
the plan, then they can't dotheir step in the plan. And even
if they don't know the whole plan, because like Colonel Sanders, you know
nine herbs and eleven herbs and spices, and you don't know the whole recipe,
if you do yours your part ofthe recipe, you know, then

(01:14:56):
it all comes together. And andeven if we don't always know the whole
plan, if we know part ofthe plan, then we know how to
do our part of the plan.Even as Americans, we have a part
to play. And so if we'reif we're going through the uh what's going
on? If we're going through it, you know, we we can do

(01:15:18):
our part. And I think thatthe Democrats, the Democratic Party has a
better They do a better job ofthat by you know, like we already
talked about sending out the emails andsending out you know, all of this
the talking points, you know,whether it's a daily, weekly or or
monthly, depending on how you subscribeto the to the the mothership that you

(01:15:45):
know, you that's you know,they do a better job of getting the
word out. And so without theability to critical think, those people,
you know, the people who followthem don't want to critically think anyway.
They want it spoon fed to them. And so they just you know,
spoot, spew out whatever they whateverthey get told. And then they go

(01:16:10):
on. But and and and maybethat's the case. Maybe there is no
like but you have to you haveto look at the optics. I mean,
I you and we talked about thisthat the best person for the job
should be should be the one chosen. And I've even talked a couple of
weeks ago about how you know whenwhen he can't, when Biden came out

(01:16:34):
and said, well, you know, I may not be as fast as
I once was. I can't runas quick, and I can't I can't
speak debate as well, and Ican't. You know, then then we
don't want you as president because you'renot You're not you're you're not at the
top of your game. I don'tcare if you're if you're only ten percent

(01:16:56):
less than you used to be,You're not better than everyone else in the
world, were better than everyone elsein the US, even And so I
I just I don't. I don'twant you to run the country. This
is the the biggest most prestigious jobin the world. You you aren't.

(01:17:20):
You weren't qualified because you're not thebiggest most prestigious person in the US.
Even so go away. Not supposedto be voted for. So, but
I do, I do really likethe jd Vance. You know, pick

(01:17:42):
I was actually hoping that he wouldpick jd Vance. But I just I
didn't want to lose the election becausehe well, it's just two white guys.
I I just I just didn't wantit to be you know, I

(01:18:06):
I honestly, as much as Idon't I don't think it matters. As
much as I don't think it matters, I think that it matters, and
I don't want to lose the electionbecause we didn't we didn't play the game

(01:18:29):
the best or you know, Ithink it's it's important enough that we we
do what we can and so that, you know, that's what I was.
I was even talking with with Peytonabout it a little bit about how
I thought that, you know,at least you know, with Rubio,
you know, he's he's got theLatino side, or if you got Ramaswami,

(01:18:56):
you know, you've got that ethnicityside, and so I thought,
you know, we could you know, that that made sense, or even
if we put a woman on theon the ticket. Honestly, I none
of those people I really want tobe president after this, like next where

(01:19:24):
I could see JD. Vance beingbeing a good leader, a good president
after this or after Trump. Andmaybe that's what Trump sees is that,
you know, let's give a guywho actually could lead the country in a
positive direction a spot a chance.Let's let's uh, let's give you know,

(01:19:48):
let's let's put it, you know, let's let's reach our hand out
to the next generation and build legacyhere as opposed to just advance seeing our
strategicy and you know, doing itthat way and in that I can get

(01:20:13):
behind that. I can honestly onehundred percent get behind that. He's probably
the best vice president candidate that I'vereally seen in my lifetime. Obviously,
you know, the Bush Reagan dealwas like back before I was born,

(01:20:36):
so you know, or just youknow, I was like three or four
or two or something like that,so I just there wasn't you know,
I didn't have a whole lot intothat. So but really, you know
that kind of deal. I cansee it and and I and I really

(01:21:00):
do I do like it. Ijust you know, I just question,
you know, this strategy and uh, you know this this might be the
chance that he needs to to dosomething better great with it. And if
nothing else, it's a it's justanother great thing that he's done in his

(01:21:23):
life that you can just say,WHOA that guy. Just I mean,
he's just done so many crazy thingsand just you know, the life that
he's lived has been three or fourlives just you know, as you go
through things, and so you know, I do like it. I do
think it's a it's a good pick. I just you know, it's one

(01:21:46):
of those deals where I just Ididn't you know so, and then you
know, just just on on thepiggyback of that same day, separately,
a federal judge dismissed Trump's criminal indictmentover his handling of classified documents. The

(01:22:10):
judge ruled Special counsel Jack Smith's appointmentas prosecutor violated the US Constitution, which
required such appointments to be made bythe President and confirmed by the Senate or
by an act of legislation. SoI and then Smith intends to appeal.

(01:22:32):
He let it go. Man.They already they already said that he had
immunity for acts of work while hewas president. I think that slides,
you know, some of that slidesinto the federal documents stuff. I think

(01:22:55):
you can get even kind of kindof argue that that's part of it,
and just you know, and justget into it. And I've got the
Trump's speech on behind me here.I didn't get to hear any of it

(01:23:16):
or or what's going on. Butyeah, just I'll get we'll get some
notes from Peyton, and I'll probablywatch it here once once I get off,
I'll we'll we'll talk about it andmaybe I'll even jump on tomorrow and
do a little you know, mythoughts about it since we did the debate
and and things like that. Butbut honestly, just uh, just the

(01:23:47):
last last thoughts and stuff here.I can't believe Hawk Cogan's talking at the
the r n C. I didn'tget to see that there, but I'm
going to go back and YouTube thatsucker, And uh I did I did
get to, uh to shake hishand. I didn't get really meet him,

(01:24:09):
but I did get to shake hishand in New York. He came
out and to his his ring musicand and all of that. That was
cool. And then at a cardshow he was doing an autographed signing in
White Plains, New York. Anduh it was right after Rick Flair was
was sent to the hospital for theflu and and all of that good stuff.

(01:24:32):
And this was before COVID, sohe was, you know, came
out and gave a nice speech forfor Rick Flair. But you know,
cool, cool enough guy. Interestingnonetheless, but uh yeah, so I'll
have to look I'll look that up. But just uh, just final thoughts

(01:24:54):
on it. I mean, honestly, if if Trump was if if if
nothing else Trump was shot, uhand he becomes a more introspective, more
humble leader. I think he stillneeds to be outspoken. I think that
part of his stick is and partof like we talked about, part of

(01:25:16):
how he keeps America safe is thefact that he's you know, he's not
afraid. He is he is willingto go out there and do what it
takes too and say what it takesto to get things done. You know,
his negotiating skills, the ability toknow the person across the table from

(01:25:39):
you or at least be able touh intermingle around that I think has been
has been again what what it takesto get get things done? And so
if that, if if the shoe, if if the sho shooting took that

(01:26:00):
or did that, then I thinka lot of people are going to say
thank you to the shooter. Notnot not in a you know, hole
of thanks guy, or not ina a way like you know, Tenacious
D and all of that where youall should have miss, shouldn't have missed,

(01:26:20):
don't miss next time type deal,but in a in a way like
okay, we can see that thiswas a turning point, and we're grateful
for that turning point because I knowa lot of people are super turned off
by him. And honestly, I'vealways been of the mindset that I,

(01:26:45):
honestly, I I want to seethe results. And yes, I care
about your your your deal, yourintegrity, but I I care less about
your integrity and how people perceive you. And I care more about the fruit

(01:27:06):
that comes from your tree, thethe what you produce. And he's honestly,
he you know, he gives benevolently. He ran our country swimmingly,
like we didn't get into any majorbattles we were working on getting out of

(01:27:27):
Afghanistan, not the way that wedid. We caught up to a lot
of mercenary terrorists and decided to intheir careers. We you know, stayed
out of major battles. We pulledpeople out of out of you know,

(01:27:47):
places where they shouldn't have been,and all kinds of stuff like that.
And we, you know, Ithink that we, you know, we
still needs some of that. Obviously, I don't want him to go quiet.
I don't think he could, butI also think that he just,

(01:28:12):
you know, if he could juststay on the course and stay on on
it. And I think even yousaw it in in the debate where he
didn't get crazy. He could havemade it a muz slinging match. He
could have like just attacked him straighton and you would have watched Jogo uh

(01:28:35):
a lot, or he would havejust Joe would have just said, you're
lying, you're lying, You're lying, and that would have been the deal.
And we could have seen that.But we didn't see that. And
as much as you know, CNNand NBC and all of those guys wanted

(01:28:55):
to say he was he was bullyinghim and he was an angry protagonist and
he was just he was just pushinghim around and he was being mean and
hateful. That's not the debate Isaw. He told the facts, he
told the truth, and he calledhim out and Joe Biden didn't have anything

(01:29:23):
to say about it. He didn'thave any words to debate him. He
wasn't able to think on his toesto come back. There was no argument.
It was just you're lying, andon this thing, we created fifteen
thousand jobs and blah blah blah blahblah, all a bunch of lies.

(01:29:47):
But I do think you don't gothrough an issue like this or a life
event like this and not not comeback a different into or changed persons.
So again, get on follow,like, and share us on why I'm
angry dot com on why I'm Angryon all of your social media devices,

(01:30:12):
all of your social media pages,and uh, wherever you get your podcasts,
just go over there and search whyI'm Angry dot podcast and you will
find us and just like it,the hit the RSS automatic download, get
the podcasts, and honestly start thinkingfor yourself. Get out there, get

(01:30:34):
the information that we give you,get the ideas, the thoughts that we've
start in you, and just takethem out and start googling it and see
how crazy Google is. Like I, you know, I one hundred percent
have been googling things just to seenot even to like actually get the information,
but just to see where the information'sat. And and you know I

(01:30:59):
that I looked at the top trendingUH searches on Google. Trump was not
one of them. And you can'ttell me that Trump wasn't a majorly searched
thing on Saturday night when he wasshot, other than the fact that the
news organizations were slow to even getout that there was shots fired or that

(01:31:23):
he was even shot. So geton, get out, get a get
our name out, get our getthe y I Am Angry podcast out,
get angry, get uh get onhere, laugh a little bit, get
less angry, go back out inthe world and get angry again. And
uh, if you want, shootus some emails at why I'm Angry dot

(01:31:45):
at Why I'm Angry Podcast at gmaildot com, and get us the articles
that you read that you think weneed to talk about. Get on there.
I've got a couple still. Ifif it hadn't been for there being
a shooting, I have a couplethat I needed to read from even last
week. One about Lebron James Kidand uh, you know, all the

(01:32:11):
fun and then you know, justall kinds of different things. So but
get out there, get on followI and share us. We love you.
Remember to follow, like, andshare the Why I'm Angry Podcast across

(01:32:36):
all social media platforms and anywhere youget your podcasts. Why I'm Angry Podcast in now
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