All Episodes

April 30, 2024 35 mins

Hour 4 of A&G features...

  • A warning for Trump in his NYC case...
  • A Kamala clip that will damage you...
  • One heckuva chant...
  • The rapid acceleration of the Pro-Hamas movement...
  • Final Thoughts! 

Stupid Should Hurt: https://www.armstrongandgetty.com/

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
From the Abraham Lincoln Radio Studio at the George Washington
Broadcast Center, Jack Armstrong and Joe Getty Armstrong and Getty Show, the.

Speaker 2 (00:14):
NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell says he wants to make the
super Bowl part of a three day weekend. Now. Goodell
wants the super Bowl to be played over President's Day weekend,
still on Sunday.

Speaker 3 (00:22):
The game, but with Monday to recover.

Speaker 4 (00:26):
Well, if that's the case, we're going to start taking
President's Day off at least, I am.

Speaker 5 (00:31):
Well, yeah, I think that's his point. There are a lot
of people get it off.

Speaker 2 (00:36):
And because you and others have been saying for years
the Monday after the super Bowl should be a day off, but.

Speaker 3 (00:44):
Or played the damn thing on Saturday. Yeah, I don't know.

Speaker 2 (00:48):
I mean, I know some of the arguments to why
you don't, But anyway, they just keep moving it back
further and further. So now it's going to be into
mid February, mid to late February. All right, Accordingly it
was in January. My whole life prison will be in
the summertime, and they'll change uniforms those players leaving the
teams and start back up the next Sunday.

Speaker 3 (01:10):
Right exactly.

Speaker 4 (01:11):
There will be a criss crossing of the nation for
one week and then they'll resume play.

Speaker 3 (01:17):
So this is new.

Speaker 2 (01:20):
Trump got hit with a fine because he won't stop
saying bad things about the trial and the judge and
the jurors and stuff like that. He got one thousand
dollars fine on nine violations. So that's a nine thousand
dollars fine for a guy that's worth three or four
billion dollars whatever. Not sure, Not sure that's a good
way to motivate him to do anything. But the judge

(01:42):
went on to say that if necessary and appropriate under
the circumstances, it will impose an incarceratory punishment.

Speaker 5 (01:50):
I believe that it's threatening to put you in jail.

Speaker 3 (01:53):
I may impose an incarceratory punishment.

Speaker 2 (01:57):
Why wouldn't you just say I'm gonna throw you in jail.
Why wouldn't you say that incarceratory punished. It's first time
I've ever seen that word in my life. Incarceratory anyway,
So they actually threatened the former president with jail time,
which again he's got to be calculating does that help
me or hurt me? And I could see a scenario

(02:17):
where it would help him to.

Speaker 3 (02:19):
Get thrown kick the right thing to say.

Speaker 4 (02:21):
That'll piss off the judge, but sounds thoroughly defensible, especially
to the right and moderate two thirds of the country.

Speaker 3 (02:28):
It's a win.

Speaker 2 (02:29):
Yeah, don't let it be because you called one of
the jurors fat or ugly. Make sure it's something to
do with free speech or something that you got a
little solid footing. Yeah, you get thrown in jail for
a couple of days.

Speaker 3 (02:40):
Oh, huge win.

Speaker 4 (02:42):
Mugshot with a big smile and a thumbs up. Right,
sign the maga hat. Give it to the deputy taking
their picture. He'll let you get away with it.

Speaker 2 (02:52):
Sign a maga hat. Yeah. There's no way that this
is the end of him violating the gag order. Right,
This is going on for a couple more months, clearly.
Oh yeah, So there's not a chance that the judge
doesn't need to at least get pretty coarse close to
the incarceratory option.

Speaker 3 (03:13):
Right.

Speaker 4 (03:13):
I'm more than willing to speculate on ridiculous things that
won't happen just to amuse myself. But this is not
one of those cases. I think this is as likely
as not to happen.

Speaker 2 (03:22):
Oh yeah, I think it's I think it's on the
other side of fifty ply that they throw him in
jail or something along those lines. What could they do
to him as a president, restrict his house, arrest.

Speaker 3 (03:41):
Something, I think? What about community service?

Speaker 5 (03:43):
He has to pick up garbage on the side of
the road.

Speaker 3 (03:47):
Paint over some graffiti somewhere, ud be something in his
blue suit with his long time.

Speaker 2 (03:53):
Because there have been I've read and listened to way
too much commentary about how difficult it would be to
put him in jail with the.

Speaker 5 (03:59):
Whole Secret Service thing.

Speaker 3 (04:01):
Mm hmm.

Speaker 2 (04:02):
Yeah, of course he would love that spectacle, man. I
think so, I really do. Oh my goodness, the more
I think about it. Remember John Stewart on The Daily
Show was mocking, the cars are coming down the street.
There you see Donald Trump getting out of the car,
walking toward the car. Wait till you see the coverage
of him being thrown in jail.

Speaker 4 (04:22):
Oh yeah, you would make O J's low speed chase
seem like a nothing burger.

Speaker 2 (04:27):
Oh boy, this is something to look forward to because
I think it's likely to happen.

Speaker 3 (04:31):
All right.

Speaker 4 (04:31):
Also sort of politics, Have you eaten something you shouldn't have?
Perhaps you've accidentally double dosed on your pills, and you
need to vomit immediately. While I have good news for you. Friends,
you're about to Michael, we'll play eighty five. Then I'll
set up eighty six because you might need two doses.
Ladies and gentlemen, I give you Kamala Harris on the

(04:55):
set of The Drew Barrymore Show, in which Drew fawns
and drew all over her. Good lord, start the misery, Michael.

Speaker 6 (05:03):
My staff, for example, sometimes they'll show me little things
that just amuse me, Like apparently some people.

Speaker 3 (05:09):
Love to talk about the way I laugh. Oh yes, okay,
I love your laugh. Well, let me just tell you something.
I have my mother's laugh.

Speaker 6 (05:16):
And I grew up around a bunch of women in
particular who.

Speaker 3 (05:20):
Laughed from the bellet. They laughed. They would sit.

Speaker 6 (05:23):
Around the kitchen and drinking their coffee, telling big stories
with big laughs.

Speaker 7 (05:28):
You know, I'm never gonna be no, no, no, not
that person. It's not the laugh, you big phony. It's
the inappropriateness of when you unleash.

Speaker 5 (05:40):
It, right, Yeah, it's when you laugh that's the problem.

Speaker 4 (05:43):
She is so good at aggrieved self righteousness.

Speaker 3 (05:47):
Well, she's actually bad but she goes to it a
lot like I was that little girl exactly.

Speaker 4 (05:52):
I have my mother's laugh, and I was around women
who laugh from the belly, and the predominantly black female
audience says, yeah, that's right.

Speaker 3 (06:00):
I know.

Speaker 2 (06:00):
I'll always remember that moment in the debate where she
owned Joe Biden by talking about bussing and how you
were against bussing and I was a product of bussing.
I was that little girl, and I remember at that
moment I googled it because I thought, if I remember right,
black people hated it as much as white people. So
I brought up the point really quickly. Nobody liked it, Like,

(06:23):
what are you talking about, lady.

Speaker 5 (06:25):
And that little girl was me.

Speaker 2 (06:27):
Yeah, no, nobody liked.

Speaker 3 (06:29):
Being bussed black people. She's the idiot and was soon
out of the race.

Speaker 2 (06:33):
Yes, but yes, but that is the reason. According to
one of the books I read, that Biden picked her.
He thought that when she got in his face like that,
he saw a strength there and a fighting attitude that
he wanted on the ticket.

Speaker 3 (06:46):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (06:46):
Okay, well, if you haven't vomited yet, you're about to
seriously pull over to the side of the road grab
yourself a trash can or something like that.

Speaker 3 (06:54):
You're going to need it. Listen to this, would you.

Speaker 8 (06:58):
I've been thinking that we really all need a t
and is hug in the world right now, But in
our country, we need you to be Mamla of the country.

Speaker 3 (07:15):
All right, that's the word. We all need a hug
right now. We need you to be the Mamala of
the country. And the crowd erupts and they hug.

Speaker 2 (07:27):
That's the worst thing I've ever heard. That is the
worst thing I've ever heard. If I eaten or something
slightly acidic, I would be vomiting on my shoes right now.

Speaker 3 (07:37):
I'm sorry.

Speaker 4 (07:37):
The Senate has already acted and rescinded the women's right
to vote.

Speaker 3 (07:42):
I'm sorry.

Speaker 2 (07:42):
That was just that, only my iron constitution that is
keeping me from vomiting all over this microphone.

Speaker 5 (07:49):
Right now.

Speaker 3 (07:50):
We need you.

Speaker 2 (07:51):
To be the Mama of the country, the mama la. Oh,
I get it now, I didn't get it. Kamala, Mamala
waits sick to my stomach and actually I threw up yesterday.

Speaker 3 (08:03):
It is tad sick, folks. Play it one more time, Michael.

Speaker 8 (08:07):
I've been thinking that we really all need a tremendous
hug in the world right now, but in our country,
we need you to be Mamola of the country.

Speaker 5 (08:17):
Jesus.

Speaker 3 (08:21):
That turns it up to eleven.

Speaker 2 (08:23):
I was thinking about Howard Stern's interview with Joe Biden
the other day when he Howard Stern, one of the
most contrary people in the history of media.

Speaker 8 (08:33):
H.

Speaker 2 (08:35):
Said to Joe Biden, I'm actually nervous right now, and
I never get nervous, and I would just like to
thank you for not only being a good father to
your children, but being a good father to this country
and being a father for all of us.

Speaker 5 (08:46):
That made me want to gag Howard Stern.

Speaker 2 (08:50):
First of all, it's ridiculous to say about Joe Biden
in this polarized time, but Howard Stern is.

Speaker 3 (08:55):
Doing that whole funning thing over politician.

Speaker 2 (08:57):
So we got Howard Stern saying Joe Biden is a
father to us all, and Drew barrymore San Kamala Harris
is a mama to us all, and then creating the
horrible term mamola.

Speaker 3 (09:06):
But uh, that's hard to take. That is hard to take, man.

Speaker 4 (09:15):
How do you function as an adult being that big
a sap?

Speaker 3 (09:20):
I don't get it.

Speaker 4 (09:22):
That's that's that's one of the worst things I've ever heard.
My skin is crawling now and it won't stop.

Speaker 2 (09:26):
You gotta be an over emotional actress from an actor
family to be able to get close to that emotion.

Speaker 4 (09:31):
I guess I seriously, I need to go see a
dermatologist or have a stiff drink or something. I just oh,
it's it's a rarely seen condition where your skin won't
stop crawling.

Speaker 5 (09:43):
My teeth hurt from that. It's it's all kinds of
a pains.

Speaker 3 (09:46):
Do we need transition music?

Speaker 5 (09:47):
Oh?

Speaker 3 (09:48):
That is so terrible.

Speaker 2 (09:50):
So then then and then they hug on the stage
and the crowd roars its approval. Seriously, none of you
people should be allowed to vote.

Speaker 3 (09:59):
You said, sad women.

Speaker 5 (10:01):
I assume it's all women in the crowd. Yes, she's sad.

Speaker 3 (10:04):
Sad women, Oh my god.

Speaker 4 (10:07):
And then if there's any dudes who got dragged along
to that to watch that, you can't vote either, all right?

Speaker 5 (10:13):
Especially Oh yeah, we need you to.

Speaker 3 (10:16):
Be the Mamala of the country.

Speaker 4 (10:18):
Oh, tears in her eyes and everybody yeah and hugs
and everything. Good Lord, the grown ups need to run
the country.

Speaker 5 (10:26):
Seriously. The worst thing I've ever heard.

Speaker 3 (10:28):
Yeah, I told you, Wow, you sure that wasn't ai?
That was real?

Speaker 4 (10:35):
No, I know, I know it's hard to believe it
was real, but wow, I'm just glad we had each
other to go through this. Kamala Harris's lack of talent
and her repulsiveness, and I realized she's not repulsive in

(10:55):
the conventional sense. But I'm trying to come up with
what's the what's the word that indicates the opposite of arisma,
a charisma? There needs to be a word that means
that she has it in spades. I mean, it's it's amazing.

Speaker 3 (11:10):
Well, she is so.

Speaker 4 (11:11):
Off putting as a politician and a human being. By
the way, Howard, it's not his fault, but I don't
know if i'd go with you. You've been such a
great father to your family, and you got the one
son as a crack addict who spent all the family's
money and started sleeping with his dead brother's wife and
spent all of her money.

Speaker 3 (11:29):
I mean, it's not Joe Biden's fault, but.

Speaker 2 (11:31):
It just it seems weird to bring up the whole
you're such a great father thing to me.

Speaker 4 (11:39):
Yeah, well, we need you to be America's bye, dad,
it didn't work.

Speaker 3 (11:49):
You want me to be by and your dad? What job? No, mama,
Lowe quit saying.

Speaker 2 (12:00):
On the way text line four one five two nine
five kftc.

Speaker 3 (12:04):
Armstrong.

Speaker 9 (12:10):
President Biden suggested earlier this month that his uncle was
eaten by a tribe of cannibals during World War Two. Okay, man,
we get it. Scranton was a tough town.

Speaker 2 (12:23):
Kind of funny, so somewhat insinuating that the cannibals existed
here in the United States.

Speaker 3 (12:28):
Don't we all need a check on now?

Speaker 2 (12:30):
I uh.

Speaker 5 (12:34):
I came across this yesterday. I thought it was interesting.

Speaker 2 (12:37):
This is from the Congressional Budget Office on one of
my pet causes to be mad about the student loan bailout.
So the CBO actually put out what they think this
whole student debt policy is going to cost the American taxpayer.
On the low end, the total is going to be
eight hundred and seventy billion overtime, on the high end

(13:02):
one point four trillion if the current policies stay in place.

Speaker 4 (13:10):
When I was kicking around in my head, a combo
chant that the kids ought to be doing on the
college campuses, something the effect of I can't say it,
but something about the Jews and bones. Also, please pay
off our loans.

Speaker 3 (13:31):
I mean to really illustrate.

Speaker 4 (13:35):
Yes, we're absolutely repugnant to anti Semitic, radical, neo Marxist pawns. Oh.
By the way, working class people, please pay off our
Columbia loans for us.

Speaker 3 (13:45):
Right, I'm a privileged, uh.

Speaker 2 (13:51):
Annoying destructive force in America, and you should pay for
the fact that I chose to go to this expensive college.

Speaker 4 (13:59):
How about we hate Jews to their bones? Also, please
pay off our loan. That is awesome. We got to
get that going.

Speaker 2 (14:08):
We should put kafeas around our face and do a
video where we do that and post it.

Speaker 5 (14:13):
That is so good.

Speaker 3 (14:15):
I love that idea.

Speaker 5 (14:16):
We gotta do that all.

Speaker 4 (14:17):
Right, handen, don't let us forget, because I'll forget in
five minutes.

Speaker 5 (14:20):
But so you hear big numbers, right, they don't mean anything.

Speaker 2 (14:23):
I mean, really, the only way I can measure things
is how many times would it stretch to the moon
and back? Now, none of these, none of these numbers
ever mean anything to anybody. So that's why I'm going
to put them in relation to something else and it'll
be eye popping. Your eyes may pop out. I hope
you're not driving. So again, these are the CBO numbers.
Congressional Budget Office that says here estimates are rough and

(14:44):
will change as more information becomes available. Okay, well, then
let's go with the low number. There was a low
estimate and a high estimate. Even at the low estimate
of this is going to cost taxpayers eight hundred and
seventy billion dollars.

Speaker 3 (14:58):
That is more than was.

Speaker 2 (15:00):
Spent on all of higher education between nineteen sixty two
and twenty nineteen. Oh wow, there, your eyes popped out.

Speaker 5 (15:10):
That's not unpopping numbers.

Speaker 3 (15:12):
Last segment you made benvomit, Now I'm blind.

Speaker 2 (15:15):
That is more than all the money that will be
spent on universal pre K and all childcare between now
and twenty thirty four, great Scott, And it's almost as
much as all the projected education money appropriated from now
till twenty thirty four. All education at all levels will

(15:35):
be just under a trillion dollars. And the midway between
the low estimate and the high estimate of what we're
going to bail out is more than that than all
of education at every level over the next ten years.

Speaker 5 (15:49):
I mean, that's.

Speaker 2 (15:50):
Unbelievable that this is happening. There are too many things happening.
I can't believe. I'm gonna go crazy.

Speaker 3 (15:56):
Yeah, I hear you.

Speaker 4 (15:58):
And my part of this jihad is to regularly point
out that a lot of this is in service of
keeping the money flowing into these phony, non teaching dens
of neo Marxism, the colleges and universities. If you remove
the pain of the utterly unforgivable and unjustifiable levels of

(16:19):
debt kids are coming out of school with, then you
can keep the scam going. And that's what this is
all in service to all those deans of DEI or
make his six figures. There's five hundred and forty of
them at the University of Ohio or whatever Ohio state.

Speaker 3 (16:34):
They depend on this to keep the scam roll.

Speaker 5 (16:36):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (16:36):
That's how that first number works out, is that college
didn't used to be near as expensive, I mean, not
even even close. So all of college spending, all of
it between nineteen sixty two and twenty nineteen is significantly
less than what we're going to spend to bail out
the current student loans.

Speaker 4 (16:55):
That's insane, it really is insane. I'm not sure how
this ends. I mean, all these different examples of systems
that don't work, systemic corruption not being called out, it
won't end well.

Speaker 5 (17:14):
At least she came up with that bones loans chant
that was pretty.

Speaker 3 (17:17):
Good, Thank Armstrong and Getty. How many examples you want?

Speaker 2 (17:22):
Protesters at Washington University, George Washington University broke down barriers
yesterday that were already set up by the campus police
and prevented one of their members from being arrested. Chanting
globalized the Intifada, So they took down police barriers and
they allowed that, I.

Speaker 4 (17:40):
Guess globalize the killing of Jews. Yes, good idea. Nice
all in the name of tearing down the system and
installing some sort of Marxist utopia under these morons. So
frustrating for those of us who've been calling us out
for a long time. I don't know, does this all right?

(18:01):
Here's your seventy million dollar question. Does this crisis on
so many college campuses and some of the ugliness that's
been thrown around, does this alert enough Americans to the
rot that's gone on that some sort of serious reform

(18:23):
is undertaking a start?

Speaker 2 (18:24):
Well, I think most people already knew that where the
rubber meets the road. I think that Forbes magazine article
that came out over the weekend about the new Ivy's
and all that sort of stuff, and they quoted all
kinds of different business leaders who said the percentages I
should I'll dig that up so I have them in
front of me. But yeah, I'd love to high percentages
of business leaders have said they are not wanting to
hire people from Harvard, you know, whatever, these various universities

(18:48):
because of the trouble it will cause in their workplace.

Speaker 5 (18:52):
And we've talked about this before.

Speaker 2 (18:55):
You get somebody who applies and puts pronouns in your
cover letter, I think that person is absolutely less likely
to get hired than more likely.

Speaker 5 (19:03):
To get hired, because there's just going to be a
nightmare for hr.

Speaker 2 (19:06):
Anyway, I think it'll take a long time for this
to ne spool, of course, but as fewer people get
meaningful or well paying jobs coming out of certain schools
and they started going to other schools, I think over
time it will have an effect.

Speaker 3 (19:20):
But that's a slow process. Oh yeah.

Speaker 4 (19:23):
If if I'm running a business and I see a
graduate of one of the so called elite universities who
is highly.

Speaker 3 (19:32):
Trained in my field.

Speaker 4 (19:34):
But you see on their resume that they spend a
lot of their time on social justice activism. And then
you've got a guy who's been working on air conditioning
systems and such, and it would take a good solid
two months to train them. I'm going with that guy
one hundred percent. What easy decision, all right.

Speaker 2 (19:52):
Remember one of the campus protest leaders. Last week, we
showed that his application to Stanford, all he wrote was
over and over was black lives matter, Black lives matter,
Black lives matter. It's the only thing he wrote, and
he got accepted because it showed him to be so,
you know, socially aware and cared.

Speaker 5 (20:09):
So much about that issue.

Speaker 2 (20:10):
That's nuts. Well, here here's a great example. So let's
play this guy again. You remember this guy from last week,
Our friend Camanie James, one of the leaders of the
Columbia protest Zionis.

Speaker 10 (20:22):
They don't deserve to live comfortably, let alone. Zionists don't
deserve to live the same way we're very comfortable accepting
that Nazis don't deserve to live. Fascist don't deserve to live.
Racist don't deserve to live Zionus. They shouldn't live in

(20:44):
this world.

Speaker 2 (20:45):
So now some of the other leaders there at Columbia
say he's no longer welcome there. Well, yeah, now that
he's become a national sensation and been outed, he's not
welcome there. But how many other people who think exactly
the same thing, including you, are still there. But so,
what I learned about this kid yet yesterday? This is
Kiami James. He was a super active exactly the same

(21:05):
kid in high school in a variety of groups and
started different groups and protesting and all this different sort
of stuff and social media activism, and that is how
he got into Columbia. Columbia chose him because of his
activism in high school. So all of these colleges picked
these people. They're now turning on them and occupying their

(21:25):
buildings and causing him all these problems. His goal was
to become a US representative, which I think he's do
doomed now, but without this kind of exploding and becoming
the face of this sort of thing. Absolutely, he was
on that track to become you know, any of the
squad type people.

Speaker 4 (21:45):
Absolutely, I was gonna say he'll be interning in ilhan
Omar's office next way.

Speaker 2 (21:50):
Yeah, right, maybe you won't become a congress person. Bi'll
be working in one of those, will be a staffer
for one of the squad.

Speaker 3 (21:55):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (21:55):
I love the idea that. No, no, he's not a
leader of this anymore. He's not welcome. He's in the
style of libs of TikToker. I became aware of a
Twitter account yesterday that this woman just quotes transgender people
on sex issues, children issues, locker room issues, whatever, just
quotes them directly, and she's now reviled for doing that.

(22:18):
This guy hanging himself with his own words, the words
he's been using for the longest time and is continuing
to use. So don't pretend that, oh, we don't approve
of him, he's not one of us.

Speaker 3 (22:26):
Oh, come on.

Speaker 4 (22:29):
Your movement, Like the universities themselves have self selected who's there.

Speaker 2 (22:35):
So what do you think is going to happen with
this occupied building at Columbia? Now that's something you actually
can't tolerate, isn't it having them take over a building.
They smashed out the windows, they put bike locks on
the doors. I mean, so what do you do with
that today? That happened overnight? If you haven't heard that story.

Speaker 4 (22:52):
You consult the police department and the state troopers or
whatever and say, all right, how do we do this,
Let us know how we can help, let us know
the time you turn it over.

Speaker 3 (23:02):
To the cops. Yeah one percent. Well then they're probably
going to go in immediately, aren't they. Uh No, I
doubt it.

Speaker 4 (23:10):
There's probably a like a guidebook for how to deal
with this sort of thing. You try to get as
many out as possible through quote unquote negotiating, or they
missed their moms and dads or whatever, and so it
probably nothing will happen today.

Speaker 2 (23:25):
What if I blow in an anonymous call to the
NYPD and say one of them misgendered another member of
the protest.

Speaker 3 (23:33):
Inside the building, people are being misgendered in there, they'll
probably storm the place, knights sticks, a flashing.

Speaker 2 (23:43):
I mean, the fact that we have gone from misgendering
is hate speech and protests and safe spaces and coloring
books and puppies because you made me take the SATs
during COVID and after Trump was elected. Remember they canceled
very as tests or delayed them because Trump got elected.

Speaker 3 (24:03):
So the fact that we've.

Speaker 2 (24:04):
Gone from that for calling the for the extermination of
a certain religion in the blink of.

Speaker 5 (24:11):
An eye is just head spinning, right.

Speaker 4 (24:14):
They're they're inculcating the kids, they're propagandizing them, They're they're
brainwashing them into ultra sensitivity against the opposition and everything
they do, and utter contempt for those people as well.
It's like the two sides of the lunatic revolutionaries psyche

(24:38):
that they're they're enraged at the sins of the other,
but their own sins. They don't think about it at all.
They don't even consider them sins. Any brutality is justified
against the people who have hurt me.

Speaker 5 (24:53):
Well, it'll be interesting to follow today.

Speaker 2 (24:55):
So you think they'll go slow and trying to get
those students out of there.

Speaker 3 (25:00):
Yeah, I think so. Yeah.

Speaker 4 (25:01):
Yeah, they'll try to figure out a way to minimize
the headcrack and bad publicity and stuff, and it might
go on for a couple of weeks.

Speaker 3 (25:09):
I don't know, weeks. You think, Okay, it's possible. Yeah.

Speaker 4 (25:13):
I like this piece by Beckett Adams in the National Review.
It's entitled the Return of mostly peaceful left wing anti
Semitism enjoys the benefit of a credulous news media that
can't seem to see what ordinary people do. And sure
you may see a bunch of pro Hamas activists on
American campuses wearing kafeas and frothing at the mouth for
a worldwide intefada. Ensure the demonstrations enjoy endorsements from Hamas

(25:38):
and the Supreme Leader of Iran, which they do, but
rest assured these cryptopogrims are largely or mostly peaceful. According
to our fourth estate at the Washington Post, campus rallies
in which activists daydream aloud about the extermination of Israel
are characterized merely as anti war demonstrations headline of an

(25:58):
April nineteenth New York Times article. At Columbia, the protests
continue with dancing in pizza. The New York Times continues
at a moment when some campuses are aflame with student
activism over the Palestinian cause. The conduct has disrupted awards, ceremonies,
student dinners, and classes. The college administrators are dealing with
the question that Columbia considered this week, will more stringent

(26:21):
tactics quell protests or fuel them. The report goes on
to site academic freedom experts, whatever that is, who believe
it sets a dangerous precedent for Columbia University administrators to
break up pro Hamas encampments. Not in a million years
would the TIM or its experts question the wisdom of
Columbia Harvard in deciding deciding to forcibly remove, say a

(26:44):
pro Ku klux Klan rally, one replete with slogans cheering
for the murder of Jews, Catholics, Blacks from university grounds.
But yet we are asked to consider the notion that
it might set a dangerous precedent for academic freedom for
campus administrators to ask for the police to remove students.

Speaker 3 (27:00):
I was playing his hamas terrorists.

Speaker 2 (27:03):
So you tweeted out yesterday some video of University of
Georgia students being arrested, and you said, the hysteria, My god,
the hysteria.

Speaker 5 (27:11):
I haven't watched the video. What were they doing?

Speaker 3 (27:13):
Oh? Yeah, the.

Speaker 4 (27:18):
The activist children had decided like engage in this group
hugs so that they couldn't be torn apart and arrested.
And they were pulling the kids apart to zip time
or whatever and serve them a summons and they'd probably
get a thirty dollars fine. But so they were pulling

(27:39):
these people apart, and at one point there's one dude.

Speaker 3 (27:42):
He happens to be a black dude.

Speaker 4 (27:43):
It doesn't really enter into it, but he was wearing
a hoodie and they're pulling the cops are pulling him,
and at one point they pull on his hoodie and
this girl there's two girls and a guy who are
screeching this whole time, and the one girl says, oh
my god, they're pulling him by the.

Speaker 10 (27:59):
Hoody, pulling it by the Hoday do you say that.

Speaker 4 (28:04):
Not saying it is hoodie pulling a kin to like
electric shocks to the genitals now or what?

Speaker 3 (28:12):
Oh my god, they're pulling it by the honey.

Speaker 5 (28:19):
It's funny.

Speaker 3 (28:20):
Well, it's just the whole thing.

Speaker 4 (28:21):
Everybody was hysterical about everything that was happening, and the
cops are looking around like, uh well, utterly stonefaced immune
to the screeching, and.

Speaker 3 (28:30):
The screeching is so juvenil and hilarious. That is funny.

Speaker 2 (28:37):
So that that must be protester one oh one that
if they touch you, to act like they're breaking your
bones exactly.

Speaker 4 (28:43):
Yeah, you remember that from the blocking of the Golden
Gate Bridge.

Speaker 3 (28:46):
Oh my god, my head it burns. You're squeezing my head. Yeah,
it's right out of rules for radical sound. It seems
to work pretty good.

Speaker 5 (28:57):
They're pulling him by the hoodie.

Speaker 3 (28:58):
That is pretty my god, they're pulling him by the hoodie.

Speaker 2 (29:03):
All right, we will finish strong next.

Speaker 9 (29:11):
South Dakota governor Christy Noms facing criticism for writing in
her upcoming memoir about killing her fourteen month old puppy
even crazier it was during a drug deal gone bad.

Speaker 3 (29:26):
In a new.

Speaker 9 (29:26):
Interview, our head writer wrote that jokes the light.

Speaker 2 (29:36):
So you said, Jimmy Kimmel had a long screed about
the governor of South Dakota.

Speaker 11 (29:40):
Yeah, yeah, it's just he was just really angry about it.
They had a really dark Yeah, they had a really
dark joke too.

Speaker 3 (29:47):
That they did about her was an ignoramus.

Speaker 2 (29:50):
I just I just think it'd be interesting to talk
to because some of my favorite pundits on the right
have said similar stuff. I just think it'd be interesting
to talk to him. Those grew up in urban areas,
this is very common. Like you might think it's still
might think it's horrible, and maybe you're even right. I
don't know, but I've participated in it. I've seen it
it's very, very common in rural parts of America, so

(30:14):
it's not as outland issues you think it is.

Speaker 4 (30:17):
Well, yeah, I don't expect to talk Jonah Goldberg into
agreeing with the governor, but he's at least got to acknowledge. No,
you got a firm dog that kills livestock and bit
a human. It's already in the proverbial farm up state.
What do you suggest they do with it?

Speaker 2 (30:33):
And state laws allow it in law in order we
like somebody pointed out in Oregon, it's legal. Yeah, if
a dog kills livestock, then you can put it down yourself.
So yeah, I mean, if it was just completely as
appalling and outrageous and psychopathic as you say, I doubt
state laws would allow.

Speaker 5 (30:52):
It all over the country.

Speaker 4 (30:54):
It's not like it was barking in the yard next
door and you got tired of it.

Speaker 3 (31:00):
Jimmy, Jonah, I don't.

Speaker 2 (31:03):
Know if I can handle anymore. I know I can't
handle any more outrage, but just this story. Maybe we'll
get into it more tomorrow. So some middle schoolers protested
trans athletes participating. Some middle school girls participated in boys
participating in their track and field, and they got banned
from future competitions by a West Virginia school board. Wow,

(31:25):
for protesting a human right, which is for trans athletes
to participate. As our friend Tim Sanderfer responded to that story,
if only they'd engaged in trespants, violence and assault while
demanding that Jews be massacred, then they wouldn't have to
face such consequences.

Speaker 3 (31:46):
Wow, beautifully said Tim.

Speaker 4 (31:48):
Yeah, I will spend the rest of my life fighting
against this madness. I hope I can continue to do
it in this context because it's better than shouting on
the street corners at.

Speaker 5 (31:59):
More effect, maybe a sandwich board.

Speaker 4 (32:02):
Yeah, but yeah, I am literally outraged.

Speaker 3 (32:08):
By that this has to stop, and it has to stop.
Like the day before yesterday, thank you, mister President, sir Governor.

Speaker 2 (32:14):
At the time, so, I was listening to NPR and
they did a story about how in so many states
across America they're rolling back trans rights and I thought,
that's clever wording to use rights as if that's something
that's agreed upon, yeah, and rolling them back right. It
reminded me of when we used to when we were
covering the O. J. Simpson trial, and we'd say, let's

(32:36):
check in on the trial of the murderer O. J. Simpson,
which was funny, but it was like, just you know,
the assumption there it is easy a murderer and that's unfair. Well,
they do that all the time with rights, where they
just put that in there is if the assumption is
it's a right, we all know that, and then we're
arguing about.

Speaker 4 (32:52):
That's why I go nuts when again last night Brett
Bear on Special Report used the term gender affirming care.

Speaker 3 (32:58):
No, are with.

Speaker 4 (33:00):
You people, I'm ready.

Speaker 3 (33:09):
To here's your host for final thoughts, Joe Getty. That
guy probably worked on that for hours. You could do
it with Ai in a blink of an eye.

Speaker 4 (33:20):
Now, hey, let's get a final thought from everybody on
the crew to wrap things up for the day.

Speaker 3 (33:23):
There is our technical director, Michaelangelo.

Speaker 11 (33:25):
Michael final thought, Yeah, my final thought is there was
I've never been this overwhelmed by the news stories as
I have been today.

Speaker 3 (33:33):
I know it is. It is unrelenting and hard to
wrap your head around, isn't it.

Speaker 4 (33:38):
Yep, you need a big hug from your Mamala Michael
Mamala Harris, Yes, yes.

Speaker 3 (33:45):
Oh I vomited again.

Speaker 4 (33:48):
Katie Green are esteemed newswoman as a final thought, Katie could.

Speaker 12 (33:51):
Have gone my whole life without hearing the word mamala
your final thought. Yeah, my final I thought was I
want to commend that UCLA student for not just going
off on those guys that wouldn't let them into the
campus because I wanted to reach through my phone and
knock those guys out.

Speaker 4 (34:10):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (34:11):
If I could have had a half of a good
excuse to not go to class and wrap myself in disappointment,
I would have taken it a lot of times in college.
But yeah, I really wanted to go to sit in
that finance class too, but I guess I'm not allowed
because I'm Jewish.

Speaker 4 (34:29):
My final thought is Drew Barrymore drools all over the
moron Kamala Harris. I'm miss young drunk Drew Barrymore who
showed her knockers to David Letterman, come on completely different.

Speaker 2 (34:39):
Woman Strong in Geeddy wrapping up another grueling four hour workday.

Speaker 4 (34:44):
So many people, thanks a little time. Go to Armstrong
and Giddy dot com. We've got a lot of great
swag there for you in the ang shop. Drop us
a line, hit the hot links. Got to get to
a few more great chants for the college kids like
the one I came up with.

Speaker 5 (34:59):
See tomorrow, I'd bless America.

Speaker 3 (35:01):
I'm strong and get get off.

Speaker 8 (35:04):
We need you to be Mamola of the country.

Speaker 4 (35:07):
It's rather preposterous, isn't it just insanitatious?

Speaker 3 (35:10):
It is? It is a painful moment.

Speaker 1 (35:12):
Can we get that?

Speaker 3 (35:13):
Are you sure of that? Dude?

Speaker 4 (35:14):
Well, yep, absolutely, Okay, get the hell out of here,
because these are brash times, aren't we aren't it?

Speaker 3 (35:20):
Isn't it me? Huh. That's also time to get serious
because I said trying to get serious? Am I not?

Speaker 5 (35:27):
Thank you all very much, Audio, Armstrong and Getty
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