Badlands Media - Quite Frankly Ep. 54: Killdozer at 22, Tim Hortons MAID & Reading Kaczynski with Jay

Episode Date: June 5, 2026

It's the 22nd anniversary of Marvin Heemeyer's killdozer rampage through Granby, Colorado, and Frank welcomes back Jay to walk the timeline. Two acres at auction, a concrete plant blocking his access,... a check stamped "cowards," and a year of secret welding inside a Komatsu D355A. The episode threads George Bernard Shaw, John Adams on studying war, and JFK on peaceful revolution into a single question: how unreasonable do good men have to be willing to get? From there, the grievances stack. New York is replacing mother and father with "gestating parent" on official documents. A Canadian doctor allegedly assessed a 45 year old man with Crohn's for medically assisted death in a Tim Hortons parking lot, then forgot a drug from the cocktail and the patient briefly came back to life. Oregon wants to ban hunting and fishing in a state with no late term abortion limit. AJ from Twitch calls in to ask where the line actually is. Frank reads excerpts from the Unabomber manifesto, Jay pushes back on Kaczynski's tidy leftist conservative dichotomy, and the night closes with sperm whales speaking Chinese.

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 The badlands, daughter the badlands, explain those badlands. That's a hell of their name. Terrorized the town of Granby, Colorado for much of this afternoon and evening. King 5's Chris Ingalls is live in our satellite center with some pretty incredible video. Chris. Lori, this man barricaded himself inside a bulldozer with at least one machine gun, maybe more. Tonight, cops have that dozer stopped, and they're trying to blast their way into the armored cab. A man has gone berserk.
Starting point is 00:00:30 Home video rolls as police opened fire on a one-man wrecking crew. The man at the controls is bent on destruction, humbling a police car here and rolling through the mountain town of Granby, Colorado, destroying buildings and trading gunfire with police. Police couldn't stop the slow-moving bulldozer, which was armored with heavy iron plates welded in place of windows. Some townsfolk say the driver is a muffler shop owner, an expert welder who was outraged by a zone decision nine months ago. He's madder than hell, but he is. Witnesses say the bulldozer smashed properties related to the zoning case.
Starting point is 00:01:13 The property of the former mayor who's now deceased, a former board member who was all on the board at the time of the zoning decision. So it does feel they're all targeted. Grandby County Hall. City Hall and the police department were hit. The town's library was dozed and various businesses. and various businesses, including the newspaper building in Granby's downtown, were damaged. There's a SWAT officer standing on guard.
Starting point is 00:01:42 Police moved in when the dozer got stuck in building wreckage. And tonight, officers appeared to be negotiating with the suspect. Police haven't released any statements, but an emergency management official says police have tried to blast their way into that armored vehicle. At this late hour, police have had no luck getting into the cab, even with explosives. So far, though, no word of any injuries. I'm Chris Ingalls Live in the King 5 Satellite Center. And that was killed those are 22 years ago.
Starting point is 00:02:10 Frank, I mean, I remember the name, I remember the, but the backstory. I want to hear the backstory. His name is Marvin Heemeyer. Okay. Okay. And he was a welder. And I got some, I got some. A good one, apparently.
Starting point is 00:02:25 A very good one. A very good one. And that's when he put all of his powers to better use that he believed. bet was better use after all every avenue that he had tried to explore to have some kind of a peaceful outcome with the people around him in this community were exhausted. So I got some notes over here, just we can go through this the timeline. Just taken from the Instagram here too and I was just looking for stuff for tonight. Welder muffler shop owners, as they said in the in the video,
Starting point is 00:03:00 in a small mountain town of Granby, Colorado, to many who sympathize with his story. He represented the everyday American who played by the rules only to watch the local officials, connected businesses, and a system that favored the powerful grind him down over the years of bureaucratic stonewalling fines and what he saw was outright corruption. After exhausting every legal avenue, he reached a breaking point in his own words from audio recordings left behind, sometimes reasonable men must do unreasonable. things, end quote. Now, just thinking about how that ties in perfectly to what we did last night and just the, what is a far less physically destructive point of order where you have a,
Starting point is 00:03:45 a man who has had his father's collection of Legos stolen by a corporate chain of, you know, the Lego stores, it's not like an official Lego store, but still, whatever, hobby stores. And now they're crying foul because, you know, that kill dozer came in the form of of YouTubers, citizen journalists, in a time when we are actively redefining what citizen journalism is. And Megan Fox said it last night herself. You know, if people will have less and less faith in the justice system, then mob violence,
Starting point is 00:04:27 that mob rule, mob justice. is going to reign supreme again because the world needs a method for wrongs to be righted and balance needs to be struck again and we are completely imbalanced right now. I have more on here, but give me your thoughts. Well, I mean, that was one of the main takeaways. I was listening to you as I was driving from Boston to New York, as I often do at that time and night, avoid traffic and listen to Frank. And you only take me three-fourths of the way of the journey.
Starting point is 00:04:55 I just want to complain about that on the air. Sorry. Start another episode. So on demand. So that was the line that stood out to me when Megan said, you know, if you're going to create a situation where people have no choice. And this, I thought, wow, that's so pertinent to so many different fields, including my field, right? Like, if you're not pushing the field of health and health sciences and public health forward, then you're holding it back. So that's why it's the job of someone like me to push back on my field.
Starting point is 00:05:26 And it's amazing to me how many people get upset about that, right? Or like last night, you had a sort of a monologue. It's so ironic, you do this so many times, and it just kind of shows the back and forth that we have is truly natural because a lot of times we're thinking in the same way. That's why you said, you know, I don't fly a thin blue line flag. It's not because I don't back some police officers, but I refuse to treat any group of people as this like homogenous thing. or I'm just going to back the group no matter what. No, because groups are made up of individuals, and individuals are capable of excelling and being great at what they do
Starting point is 00:06:02 and also being terrible and corrupt. So why would I back all police officers or back all doctors or back all anything? That is collectivism. Why don't we, if we want to live in a meritocracy, I think, and it's not as cute, it's not as bumper sticker, which is part of the problem, back the blue. I say, actually, why don't you back people who think for themselves, who engage in critical thinking?
Starting point is 00:06:24 You know, there's a very long bumper sticker, and it doesn't quite get the same point across, but it's the way we must live as a society if we want to progress. And so, and then you connected that to COVID. We're going to back the cops that were arresting people on the beach for not wearing a mask? No, you're going to back those police officers in the UK who did something so despicable that they were more afraid of being called a racist than they were about delivering first aid to a dying victim. Screw those cops. Screw them.
Starting point is 00:06:48 And some of them resign. That's not enough. That's not enough. So I just thought you're, I thought Megan's point was very spot on and I thought you're continuing of that to spread it out into other areas. We have to, we have to stop. We have to resist the urge to be collective as we have to judge people on their individual merit, no matter what subcategory they are part of. Even if we generally speaking back police, which I do. My grandfather was a cop, but that doesn't mean there aren't bad cops.
Starting point is 00:07:15 Oh, yeah, well, cops would know that. Of course. And the cops should be policing their own. So we have, so now, now let's get into grievances. Okay. For Marvin Keyer. Okay, 1992. He bought two acres of land at auction for around $42,000,
Starting point is 00:07:29 planning to support a friend's auto repair business and eventually operate his own muffler shop there. He believed this would give him a solid future. Disputes arose almost immediately from the previous owners, the Dawshchev family, including claims of harassment, though accounts differ. That was just taken right from Wikipedia. Also from Wikipedia.
Starting point is 00:07:51 following years, Hemeyer faced repeated fights with the town overzoning, sewage hookup, and access. He wanted to connect, he wanted to connect to the municipal sewer line, but felt the town demanded he pay exorbitant costs and accept inferior alternatives like septic systems. He viewed this as extortion by government fiat, fines piled up for code violations like junk cars or septic issues, which he saw as targeted harassment. Now, the core issue escalated around 2001. All right. That's when the town approved a concrete batch plant right across the street or adjacent to his property.
Starting point is 00:08:28 The development pushed by the Dostchev family that backed by the local officials blocked his access road and threatened to choke off his business. He Meyer protested, filed complaints, sued and appealed arguing it would destroy his livelihood. The town council approved it anyway. He felt the system was rigged, a powerful local family, and a compliant official's steamrolling a small. single businessman. He also classed with local newspaper, which he believed was biased against him and other figures, including over ideas like bringing gambling to the areas. Years of lost court dates, denied permits, fines, including one where he wrote cowards on the check, and mounting frustration left him feeling isolated, betrayed by the very community that he tried to contribute to.
Starting point is 00:09:15 That's from Denver 7.com. Wow. So as far as preparation goes now, now he says that's it. That's it. There's only one way forward here. And that is to be the welder that he is. I'm going to put my skills to good use. 2002, 2003, Hemeyer had had enough.
Starting point is 00:09:32 He quietly bought a Kumatsu D355A bulldozer. Quietly. Very quietly. And spent over a year in secret modifying it inside of his shop. He armored it with. thick layers of steel and concrete, added cameras for visibility. Since he'd been,
Starting point is 00:09:52 he'd be sealed inside. There's actually no, so, I mean, Discovery Channel back in the day, they actually did a really great three minute breakdown of it, and they give you the inside view. I could probably get the pictures.
Starting point is 00:10:04 Wow. You can see the inside view. There's all televisions and, you know, monitors in there that had been rigged up so that they can feed in visuals from the cameras that were around. it because he couldn't see anything else.
Starting point is 00:10:19 He also cut holes along the side where several rifles and other projectiles would be able to, he can, you know, fire battleship style around the side. And let me see here. To him, this was his MK tank. He had gun ports, made it nearly impenetrable, the last resort against the system that wouldn't listen. He recorded hours of audio explaining his grievances. While, like, like, while he was in the act.
Starting point is 00:10:46 of driving the bulldozer or like pre-recorded? Pre-recorded. Okay. Framing his actions as divine duty and a stand for what was right. He emphasized he had tried reasonableness until it was no longer possible. That's from Steven Zimmerman.com. Can I give you a quote that, I mean, this is kind of amazing because I don't know if you remember at the Vermont retreat in 2023, I started off one of my presentations with a George Bernard Shaw quote.
Starting point is 00:11:11 The reasonable man adapts himself to the world. The unreasonable one persists. in trying to adapt the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on the unreasonable man. Yeah. That's really cool. I know. I mean, I know.
Starting point is 00:11:27 I mean, as soon as you said that, I was like, oh, I remember that quote. I used that in a presentation. Yeah. I mean, listen. And we're not unreasonable men. But again, I got to go back to what Megan said. It just struck me. I'm literally on Route 95 going, I wish I could write this down.
Starting point is 00:11:42 You know, I gave it. But I didn't forget it because it was just so pertinent to the conversation and to so many different conversations you and I have had over the last four years together. You know, it's all progress really does at this point depend on the unreasonable man, the person who's not willing to just go along with whatever it is, whether it's celebrating a whole month of your sexuality or whatever it is. No, no.
Starting point is 00:12:04 I know. I don't want to do it. Where the hell was it? John Adams study war. Let me see here. Let me see here. See if I can find it. Here you go.
Starting point is 00:12:19 John Adams on the finer arts. The reason why I bring this up is, because you're talking about reasonable men, unreasonable men. Where we are right now is society is fractured in pretty hard ways. Now, I don't believe, it may projection and psychological mind games and all that other stuff make it seem like the worst among us, the craziest, the most
Starting point is 00:12:47 violent, subversive Marxist elements of society that just hate everything that's natural. Because they have conquered so many very loud squawk boxes, it makes it seem that they are in much greater supply than they are. Still a formidable force. Sure. People have been ruined. Generations worth of people have been ruined.
Starting point is 00:13:13 But still, the whole thing here is that now that that infection has taken root and there's no way to actually cure it or bring somebody back from the jaws, the grip of that infection, that mind virus, what we have here is a society that is set up with the rules that civilized men, the rules that men who were willing to be uncivilized put into place. in order to civilize ourselves again in the post-war, the post-formation of our society. You know, that doesn't mean that it stopped us from having war abroad or domestically since then. But you think about that, and it's really all about, okay, here is what we're going to do and here are the rules, and here's why it's going to keep us in fine working order. It's not going to ensure peace, but it's going to give us a good way forward through hard times. all that other shit, you know, to maintain the dignity of human liberty and all that stuff. Well, what we are, what we're dealing with right now is that there, those, those standards and
Starting point is 00:14:24 those rules are in place for a society that has no connection to them anymore. And you have people like you, me and most of the audience over here, uh, who actually likes playing by the rules. I mean, we hate, we hate the, we're, they're just mutant aspect. of how we're living right now, like, for example, taxation. I'm going to say paying your taxes. That's not. That's not by the, that's not the rules there.
Starting point is 00:14:51 No, it's not. No. But as far as free speech, as far as, you know, what you do, biological realities, as far as informed consent and being able to truly own yourself and not be coerced into accepting any kind of, any kind of attack on your person or whatever the hell else. and to be harassed by government or anything like that. All that shit aside, we're playing by rules that belong to a civil society. And the people who are actively destroying it and taking great glee in doing so,
Starting point is 00:15:28 they are always trying to hold us to a standard that they themselves do not accept because they see it as a way to suppress somebody that they are abusing. on a tail. You get strapped down on a gurney and they're just molesting the shit out of them. And they're just, that's what it is. They try to hold you to a standard that they themselves do not have. And that's why I'm talking about, you know, how do we get to a point? You might have to get unreasonable again.
Starting point is 00:16:01 And the reason why I bring this up is because there's this scene from John Adams, the HBO series, when he's in France. and he's there with Benjamin Franklin. They're sharing a bed, of course. Is this the scene that we talked about last time? No. Window open, window closed. They're sitting around with all these bougie French people who ask John Adams about,
Starting point is 00:16:26 you know, what he likes about the finer arts and music and whatever. And here is a man who is, you know, he's kind of a curmudgeon. John Adams, he's a curmudgeonly kind of guy. and and and but all he's concentrating on is that he's in the middle of a war and he's trying to get himself through a war secure victory for a nation that he'd like to see founded on its own and to be separate from what they were currently attached to in England and here's what he says about the finer arts. The dancers. Dance. No, no, I regret to say I have no ear for
Starting point is 00:17:16 La Music. I'm afraid my occupation allows me a little time for the final arts. He has not the time. He has a lot of time. For those you in podcast land, the French around the table are saying he doesn't have the time. He's got a lot of work.
Starting point is 00:17:38 Now I must study politics and war. You see, so that my sons will have the liberty to study mathematics and philosophy. My sons must study navigation, commerce and agriculture, so that their children will have the right to study painting and poetry and music. I'm going to study the politics and the And then you know Ben Franklin said that was a good diplomatic approach And and and that just pops up for me
Starting point is 00:18:19 Because I think about the same thing is just that we are It's starting to feel like we don't have the right To get to With the painting and the poetry and the music right now As much as I love all those things And it's not to say that we have to give them all We need to be active in culture I'm just saying as far as the whole, the dynamics and the nature of where we find ourselves
Starting point is 00:18:44 and the standards we're holding ourselves to whereas so many others don't even acknowledge exist or wouldn't be able to compromise. I mean, that's a state of war. That's a body that's a body that's at war with itself. Sure. And until that war is settled in some way, we're never really going to be able to enjoy the fullness of a robust culture again. I am reminded again of another quote,
Starting point is 00:19:12 John F. Kennedy, those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable. It comes back to this idea. And then, of course, how unreasonable are you willing to be in order to fix things for the next generation? We're going to find out.
Starting point is 00:19:29 I'm going to find out. Yeah. I mean, and then, you know, you think about a John Adams, And you listen to him speak like that. And then you fast forward to a Joe Biden who says, you know, where you fight the government has F-15s or whatever, you know, whatever, you know, I mean, we have fallen.
Starting point is 00:19:52 Yeah. I think society has maintained that, you know, I thought about this during COVID. You remember when Anthony Fauci? I don't know if you remember this was like a, this was a quote that I latched on to, and I was persistent in posting about this. This is probably why I don't reach anybody on social media anymore. he told he said Americans have a like a revolutionary spirit or an independent spirit or something along those lines and he said uh you know and that's you know that's all well and good but sometimes they need to know when
Starting point is 00:20:19 to just shut up and do what they're told that was anthony fouchy people you can look it up and and what i remember and this was i believe early enough on where i didn't have much of an in opinion on him i did not prejudge him in any way, but it did not take very long to realize what kind of a man he actually, what kind of a rat he actually was. He's a liar. He's a fraud. He's a coward. He's all the things, you know, that men like John Adams would would rail against. And so again, that's who we are led by. But I think the population at large is still very much of that, as Anthony Fauci even admitted, revolutionary mind, revolutionary spirit. And again, so, you know, how unreasonable are we willing to be to get simply where we should be, where we deserve to be, where we were maybe
Starting point is 00:21:06 once upon a very long time ago. It's interesting. We are in interesting times, Frank. That's a curse, right? May you live an interesting time? It's a blessing and a curse. I'm fine with it. I wouldn't want to live in any other time.
Starting point is 00:21:18 I'm fine with it. Absolutely. I mean, you and I both have a history in the arts. I mean, I thought my whole life was going to be centered around music. And I quickly realized that, I don't know, there was something I've not that, Music isn't important, and I'm definitely not the person who's ever going to downplay music or the arts, but I just felt like, well, I'm good at something else, and this is something that is so, so important to everybody, their own health.
Starting point is 00:21:45 I don't know. And we all need to participate in our own little private revolution. Maybe that's the key. Well, hey, you know what? Part of that revolution will be tomorrow. Good segue. The VIP? Pete, that tomorrow night, this time tomorrow night.
Starting point is 00:22:00 It's going to be filled. This place is going to be filled with life. Like the founding fathers, you know, scheming at a local pub. I mean, we could do a lot of scheming tomorrow night. Yeah, well, we're also going to be eating a lot of sourdough and olive oil. We're going to be eating some unreasonable foods. Like, beef liver pattee, that is definitely not a public health message that they will put out there.
Starting point is 00:22:25 A lot of vitamin K, a lot of saturated fats. So you're going to have a lot of that. It's already made. It's homemade. It is sitting in the refrigerator in my Airbnb right now, waiting for you guys tomorrow. That's right. You're officially a local. I'm officially a local.
Starting point is 00:22:38 I live five minutes down the road for the next four days. Wow. Yeah, it's nice. I was like, oh, I've got to go to the studio. Is it in the same place from last? No, I'm in Greenwich this time. Oh. Five minutes away.
Starting point is 00:22:49 Buzi. Oh, yes. I mean, I spared no expense this time. That's not true. I sped no expense. So yeah Yeah Yes
Starting point is 00:22:59 Well okay So that's that's great Well here Here you get the gas powered Jeep Well listen There is There's no Shortage of grievances
Starting point is 00:23:09 That's true I'm gonna listen I hate to I hate to screw with the energy right now But This is in New York And this is what the New York I think this has happened
Starting point is 00:23:21 In Albany today Is this the thing about the floating no the floating that's the floating I was I was just as mad as Megan was these people are insane they don't care about the environment and that should be the first of all you know how many you know how many how many fish were going to be killed by that they don't but that's what I mean they're so hypocritical it's unbelievable the fact that the fact that they were saying well this is going to be good because when we put these football field length solar panels that are float along the surface of a reservoir or something else it's go it's it's it's it's
Starting point is 00:23:54 going to have a self-cooling relationship with the actual locality because it's going to be floating on water, the water's going to keep it cool. Well, that means that you're going to heat the water up. I mean, that's why we would put those bubble covers over our swimming pools in the summertime. Solar cover. You keep the solar cover. You keep the leaves out. But you also, you know, you make it a little bit warmer the next morning so you're not freezing
Starting point is 00:24:20 your balls off. And who knows what that's going to do to the local? you know, animal and plant life in the water. We don't, we, I'm sure no one has studied that long term. No. No,
Starting point is 00:24:29 no, because it doesn't matter, Bill Gates is going to block out this on anyway. It's horse shit. It's all horse shit. It's all ridiculous. But this is something different. New York is set,
Starting point is 00:24:38 as long as the beaver woman puts her signature to it, they're set to outlaw the term mother and father. Oh, no way. Brave New World. Get out. Anybody who read Brave New World with us for Book Club with Jay Dyer a couple of years ago in January.
Starting point is 00:24:55 That's, you know that this was, this is the whole thing. The actual, the family structure and the ability to even turn the idea of a mother into an obscenity. That's a huge part of all this stuff. And of course, here it's going on.
Starting point is 00:25:11 They want, they say that it is, this is, yeah, this is all good. I don't know what documentation in particular this change is going to take part in, but they say that,
Starting point is 00:25:22 at least, in some forms and some documents in some official capacity the state of New York is going to outlaw outdated terms and replace mother with a term called gestating parent Oh, birthing person was what they were
Starting point is 00:25:39 They were trying to do this like four or five years ago, I remember And father was not is non-gestating parent Yeah Biologically accurate I guess It's just it's just fucking ridiculous Time for instituting proceedings proceedings proceedings, proceedings to establish the, like, paternity would be parentage,
Starting point is 00:25:56 mother gestating parent. I mean, it's just... I think they were, weren't they also? This might have been Canada. I had a friend who was a nutritionist in Canada, and she was talking to me about this back in 2020, and they were, I think, chest feeding, chest feeding, was no longer breastfeeding, right?
Starting point is 00:26:15 Because, because, of course, you don't have to have breasts to breastfeed. Well, no, no, no, no, it's not only that. And this is one. I think this is a crime against humanity that should be ranked up there with every other form of child abuse. But the men, the men who go to their doctors after they acquire a child somehow, the men who believe that they're women and they go acquire a child somehow, they go to their doctors. And the doctors put them on a cocktail of drugs that actually forced this biological male body to lactate some. Jack up their prolactin levels, baby. Let's go.
Starting point is 00:26:52 They start lactating some chemical sludge that is fed, that they feed to the children that they have. That is the most out of all of the nightmares that we have read about over the years, that one every time I think about it, the nausea comes on stronger than most for some reason. That poor kid that has been hooked up to this insane man. nipple. And it's just... It's not funny, but... It's just fucking nightmare. Yeah, I mean, but this is, again,
Starting point is 00:27:29 let's go back to the theme of today. How unreasonable do we have to get in order to stop this kind of madness? Because that's exactly what it is. I mean, that child is, is in no way, shape, or form going to get the nutrients that it needs to thrive, which means they're going to have to supplement with some kind of probably, you know,
Starting point is 00:27:45 soy-laden, you know, vegetable oil, sugar, soy-laden, you know, slop that is formula today and probably be better off with that to be perfectly honest and you're setting up your trial probably for a lifetime of chronic disease
Starting point is 00:28:02 all for your virtue signaling and your complete defiance of biology. You are at war with nature and you're going to lose. You're going to lose and the child's going to lose. The child never had a chance. Never had a chance. Yeah. Which is why we have to do something as adults. We can't allow that kind of insanity
Starting point is 00:28:16 to persist. Hey, speaking of I don't want to actually lead from that into this. The master of the segue? But I didn't know this is bad segue. It's anti-segway. In fact, anything I talk about after this is not a good segue. Hard turn.
Starting point is 00:28:33 It's hard. It's like you have to take a break. We need a pellet cleanser here. Hold on. Let me see what I have. Hold on. Let me see if I have a break video. What if I want to have sex before I get married?
Starting point is 00:28:44 Well, I guess you just have to be prepared to die. Okay. That's good. feel better now. Now we feel better. So Andrea got in touch with me. Oh, cool. And she did I, I didn't tell you about this. I said it on the air the other night. She said that everybody, if you're coming to town, you already got it. By the way, emails went out to all the ticket holders on Monday. Another one went out today. And just so you got your places, your times to be, your local guide, places to go, whatever the hell else.
Starting point is 00:29:16 and what you're going to call it. Andrea said because the drip bars on that local guide that anybody that comes in who's in town to be at the event or knows me or are going to go to the event that she's going to be giving everybody who wants one a complimentary B12 shot. I'm going. I told Jen that and she said,
Starting point is 00:29:40 is she going to do it like she thought she was going to do it like at the mansion? and Jen was like, I can help her because Jen's a nurse. She's like, I can help her do the shots. I was like, I don't think she's going to do that. But Jen would want to, she wanted to do that. I want to do it before that answer. I want to get my shot and go to the mansion, so I feel like, oh, yeah.
Starting point is 00:29:58 I never had this before. So I, B12 is nice. Yeah, so there you go, guys. And you come to the mansion and look at that. I mean, you're going to get some B12 in the patte, but then you can just get, then you can mainline B12 from Andrea. That's great. Right.
Starting point is 00:30:11 All right. So there you have it. I just wanted to throw that out there, Frank. Oh, oh, by the way, tonight we're giving away our, we've got the jackaloupe. This is a ounce of copper, an ounce of silver. It's the eagle on one side, the Pledge of Allegiance on the other. Oh, that's cool. We've got a tube of botanical chocolate from Justin.
Starting point is 00:30:30 We've got a embroidered shirt by our friend Margie out there. Straight people like rainbows, too. It's an extra large. It's all we got, so that's what you're going to have. you're going to have my my bands my bands uh what you would call it album and
Starting point is 00:30:47 that's all uh that's all for for one thing I'm going to put a I'm going to put a Polaroid in there as well and um you know Frank I was gonna I didn't pack it and I'm so mad when I got up here I was like unpacking in the Airbnb and I wanted to wear the shirt that we made for last year the the life liberty meet and I'm gonna start got it
Starting point is 00:31:07 well guess what I'm gonna start I'm gonna bring those I'm gonna I'm going to start giving, I'm going to give some of them out. Oh, yeah, those shirts are great. They're great quality and, I mean, they look awesome. Right. I just want, I meant to, I wanted to wear it on Saturday and I forgot it. Damn it. Here is the, this is the second, like, Eve, event Eve show we've done in a row.
Starting point is 00:31:24 We do a lot of Eves. I know. Event Eve, listen to this one. Flesh-eating New World Screw Worm has been found in a Texas calf. Okay. U.S. Department of Agriculture confirmed the presence of a flesh-eating new world screw worm. Across the border during the Biden administration.
Starting point is 00:31:42 The USDA said that the only animal affected was a three-week-old calf in Zavala County, Texas. After larvae were identified in its umbilical area. So that's bad. That's bad. For the calf, I don't know what else to say. I haven't done a lot of research on that. I'll have to look it up. You don't please.
Starting point is 00:32:06 I don't want to hear anything. We're going to do a whole screw worm episode. don't want to hear anything about it, screw worms and Ebola, and it's just, get more and more of that stuff. So we'll get to your chat, your super chats in a little bit. I want to work those in a little bit more tonight. Hold on. Here's one that I wanted to hear from you.
Starting point is 00:32:24 And then we're going to take calls. I want to take calls from you guys. The lines are going to be open. The big thing here is, of course, you know, how are we? How are we set up right now? Is there, you know, what do you think? about the 22 years after Marvin you know it's been 22 years since the uh now what is one of those things the killdozer for its faithful maiden voyage it's only voyage some may say hey you can't
Starting point is 00:32:54 fight city hall Marvin hemeyer said hold my beer and he went at it so i'll tell you what i relate to marvin hemeyer i relate to at least the writings of ted gosinski i don't relate to sending a bomb to a radio shack, Sky King, I think this all goes under the same category. And I know more as the years go on, I don't know what if it is, if it's just a reflection on me or society at large. So just to go back to that a little bit,
Starting point is 00:33:24 I want you guys to be able to call it on that, your thoughts on these types of characters. Maybe we'll actually grab some Ted Kaczynski manifesto notes for the second half. When I worked at the hospital, I was, there's a, like on YouTube, somebody reads, it's hours long, I think, somebody reads hit the manifesto.
Starting point is 00:33:42 And I remember, I just wanted to, I'm very curious, I wanted to learn. And I found myself driving to work every morning, listening to like, you know, 45 minutes to an hour. But that's how long my commute was. And I can't tell you how many times I was like, wow. Huh. That's not so, it's not so crazy. And I think, but like back then, Frank, even during this killdozer thing, I think a lot of these people in a strange way were ahead of their time. They saw things in their own personal life,
Starting point is 00:34:11 and maybe they didn't even realize that they were sort of spreading, but don't you feel like what maybe started off in little pockets like a disease has sort of now spread throughout, you know, the body politic, the actual, you know, corpus of America into every little, that's why when people say, you know, get out of this state, get out of that state, I mean, you look at some of like Rich Barris's polls, there's no safe place. I mean, you can try to run away,
Starting point is 00:34:37 but ultimately we're going to have to face this thing one way or the other. And that's what I think. I think a lot of these guys, well, like you said, I can separate the feelings, the emotions, and the thoughts from the actions of like, I'm not going to drive a killdozer around and I'm not going to mail bombs. But that does not mean I have the intellectual rigor to be able to separate those two things and say, but that doesn't mean that the point is illegitimate. And I think that's really important to be able to assess the situation.
Starting point is 00:35:06 Yeah. Okay, so then you know what? I'm going to leave the lines over while we go to other things, because it's kind of just like a grab bag kind of a night at the whole number of things that are going on. I have some new stuff from John Ward in the second half of the show. I have some reels, have some other things that are over here. But I'm going to leave the lines open. You have any thoughts about not only Killedozer on this anniversary, but how it ties into other people, like we were saying before. The Sky King or even Ted Kaczynski and what he was expressing in his manifest.
Starting point is 00:35:36 though. Just call in with whatever the hell you want. It's also just open lines so by all means, just by the way, we did not coordinate our colors here. I don't know. Are people talking about it in the chat? I never wear a red shirt frame. This is so weird. You guys can go back every appearance.
Starting point is 00:35:53 I don't think I've actually ever, maybe I've never won. I only own two red shirts, so it's kind of funny that we end up wearing the same colored shirt. It's just that every time I look down at the computer I see a wash of red and white. After the break, we're going to switch chairs. then it's really going to screw with you. I'm not wearing a Yankees hat, though.
Starting point is 00:36:12 I swear to God, yeah, well, that doesn't matter. Frank, I don't want to wear the Yanke's hat anymore. I don't wear a red sock's hat either. How did the killdozer story end? We know how Ted Kaczynski's story ended. He killed himself. He did. He killed, at the moment.
Starting point is 00:36:26 He shot himself inside of the killdozer, and it took them hours to get him out because they had to bring in, first of all, they called in SWAT. And once the, Once the engine of the bulldozer finally just gave out. And he said, all right, this is the end of the road. And he took himself out. So that was obviously his plan all along. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:36:47 There was no. That was it. He caused back in 2002 money or 2003, whatever the hell it was, 22 years ago, $7 million with a damage. So you're talking about maybe $20 million with a damage. But he didn't kill anybody, right? No. I wonder what his sentence would have been.
Starting point is 00:37:06 Uh, his sentence? I know, I don't know. I wonder. That's why I'm like, you know, I mean, I, that, that level of public property destruction, I, I, I, he probably still, I'd be surprised. I'd probably would have attempted murder. They probably would have got him somehow for that, right? Like, because he didn't know people were in those.
Starting point is 00:37:21 Because he would be, because he's going after, um, town hall. Yeah. It seemed to be that he was going, he was, he was, he went after the former mayor's house, whatever, who was already dead. He had already died. So maybe he wasn't totally stable. Right. You know, so he was just like going to, he was just going to the hotspots around town.
Starting point is 00:37:41 Anything that, that, that at that point he could burn an effigy of who had been screwing with him over the time. So, I don't know. It's, I'm sure, I don't think that he would have been out of jail within 22 years. You think? I don't know. I just, it was interesting that he, that he killed himself. Obviously, that says something about, you know, where he was. but obviously then wanting to go out with a literal bang.
Starting point is 00:38:09 And it took hours for them to get them out because they had to call in, they had to call in people to actually, you know, you know, but cut him out. Yeah. I mean, but they knew they must have heard the gunshot. They knew he killed himself and they were like, well, maybe. It's not moving anymore. He's not shooting out of the gun turrets. Yeah, well, after at least an hour of there being no discernible action inside,
Starting point is 00:38:32 you have to imagine he's just, what is he sleeping? I can't believe he didn't like booby trap the, you know what I mean? A final explosion. Yeah. I'm surprised he didn't do it. Hey, listen, don't give him any ideas. Sorry. theoretically. Don't give him any ideas. That's what Jay would have done. He should have consulted me first. I'll be honest.
Starting point is 00:39:02 Killed those are next time. I think this through. I have a perfectly peaceful man. Hey, did you hear about this in Ontario? An Ontario man dies of maid. That's their, that's their euthanasia program out there. After being assessed outside of Tim Hortons? Daryl sent me this because she lives in Canada, the failing nation of Canada. Tim Hortons? What kind of a store is that again?
Starting point is 00:39:25 It's like a, like a Howard Johnson's, I think. It's like a restaurant? Yeah, I think so. Yeah, they serve coffee and stuff like that. I don't know if it's a breakfast place or like a restaurant. Yeah. Okay, a London, Ontario doctor who assessed a patient with inflammatory bowel disease and a history of mental health issues for made.
Starting point is 00:39:42 Well, it happens when you eat at Tim Horton's. Outside a Tim Horton's location and later personally drove the man to the place his life was ended has agreed to a minimum six-month supervision. Oh. So wait a second. So, wait, wait. In another case, Dr. James McLean failed to administer one of three drugs used in a assisted death, one that paralyzes the body's muscles, including the muscles involving breathing,
Starting point is 00:40:09 the patient resumed spontaneous breathing again after initially being pronounced dead, and after McLean had already left the home. As first reported on Monday by the Globe and Mail, the doctor's case is raising new concerns about maids, oversight, and accountability. What is striking is not only the seriousness of the concerns identified in these cases, but the limited regulatory response, says Dr. Ramona Cole. a family physician. These are not physicians.
Starting point is 00:40:37 Now, so now we're like, we're on like dollar store Jack Caworkians. Like they're not, you know, they're not even doing it right. That's unbelievable. Okay, wait.
Starting point is 00:40:47 I need to know more about the Tim Horton's thing. What the hell's going on? You're assessing people for euthanasia outside of a family restaurant? Frank, the things that I see and hear coming out of Canada would blow your mind. This was just one of the stories recently.
Starting point is 00:41:04 I have a lot of, um, I've had, for some reason, I've had a lot of Canadian followers ever since I started Instagram back in 2019. So every once in a while I get these stories and I'm just, I'm just blown away. Um, wait, I need to, I'm going to control F. Tim Hortons over here. I can, I can tell you what it is. Well, because I want more in, and this is such a badly written article. Just get, get to the, hold on. Let me, let me see here. Uh, Canadian chain for signature premium blend coffees plus light fare pastries and breakfast sandwiches. That's Tim Hortons. So I'm like Dunkin' Donuts.
Starting point is 00:41:43 Okay. So why was a man getting assessed for made outside of it? I got nothing on that. I mean, this is what I mean. So this reminded me, it's not the same, but it reminded me of that story of the man. This ended up being more complex. But do you remember the story about the guy? And actually the video went viral because he was filming it where the Canadian police
Starting point is 00:42:05 officer was arresting the guy because he said a doctor thought he should be involuntarily remanded into some kind of like mental program for 24 to 48 hours. He was like a YouTuber who was pushing back on the Canadian government for its Chinese ties, which is a legitimate concern in Canada. You remember, did you see that? That was probably a couple of weeks ago. I didn't see it. The kid, I wish I could remember his name, but he's filming the whole exchange where the police officer is telling him in the, in the car, we have to take you into custody because a doctor deemed you unfit. He's like, what do you?
Starting point is 00:42:37 I didn't get any kind of a, no, they said they did it from afar. So, I mean, that's what they're doing in Canada. And I wish I could remember the guy's name. Maybe I'm sure the chat remembers. This was a story maybe two weeks ago. And the video went viral because the kid filmed it from, from his dashboard, the interaction with the police. So that's also in Canada.
Starting point is 00:43:00 Well, I found, I believe. I found a little something here to add on to the. Lucy, June, June 2023, this is all of this happened. I guess it's just making headlines now. Family physician in London, Ontario met with Thomas Dillon, a 45-year-old man with Crohn's disease and a history of mental health. They conducted, McLean, Dr. McLean, conducted at least part of the maid eligibility assessment outside of Tim Hortons in a parking lot in an informal setting in St. Thomas. This is according to the New York Post. It's unbelievable.
Starting point is 00:43:37 Dylan was approved under track to have made for people whose natural death is not reasonably foreseeable, but who have grievous and irremediable or irremediable medical conditions causing intolerable suffering. Frank, I keep going. McLean and second assessor, a nurse practitioner, found him eligible because, of course. Well, this is going back to what I'm talking about. Do I back all nurse practitioners and nutritionists and doctors? who can't handle, because they don't know what to do with IBD,
Starting point is 00:44:09 they say, well, we can kill you. I mean, this is. So he died, let me see here, provided the lethal injection,
Starting point is 00:44:17 they drove him to the place after dozens of text messages, injected in he died. The college physicians, now they're investigating complaints about this in another case involving the same doctor. They found McLean's actions concerning for several reasons, discussing sensitive made matters in casual or public parking.
Starting point is 00:44:34 lots, potential boundary issue for texting and driving the patient to be killed, and the risk of appearing coercive. So I don't know if he's getting kickbacks for every person he kills. Okay. So now you go back to COVID, right? Protocols. Remdesivir, ventilators, hospitals getting paid to do certain things. So you have to wonder, is that at play here?
Starting point is 00:44:55 Which, again, I mean, talk about ethical violations. Yeah. I mean, kickback to the only, or else the guy is just a sadist. and he enjoys, you know, killing people. Well, other than that, he's agreed to six months of professional supervision. Can you imagine, like, what do you have to do in Canada to lose your medical license? That's not enough? Deny a birthing person, their right terminology.
Starting point is 00:45:20 Not a firm, a three-year-old identity, I suppose. Now, why outside the Tim Hortons? The reports don't give a single definitive why. And that's just a convenience, patient choice, informants. approach, you know. You're talking about taking a life. I know. And you are so casual. I mean, I guess that speaks to an even larger issue, right? That doctors don't even value human life enough to go through a rigorous process to make sure. And again, from my perspective, when I think about how ill-equipped doctors are to handle the modern scourge of chronic illness that, for the most part,
Starting point is 00:45:58 many of them helped create by the polypharmacy and the, you know, the things that they been injecting people with and medicating them over the years without ever addressing lifestyle diet, all those things that they say, and it's definitely that doesn't matter. Actually, it matters a great deal. You just don't have any education on that. So therefore, you think, if I can't fix it with a pill or I can't fix it with a surgery, I guess you're going to die. I mean, we are sort of living in idiocracy now, like that clip that you played, what if I want
Starting point is 00:46:28 to have sex before I'm married? Well, I guess you're just going to have to be prepared to die. I know. You know, doctor, my gut hurts. You know, every time I eat, oh, I don't know, maybe if I'm forced on this plant-based diet, which has a whole bunch of fermentable molecules that my gut can't handle because there's a dysbiosis. I don't know. What should I do?
Starting point is 00:46:48 We can kill you. Like, they don't have the training to even be able to begin to understand the human body on that level. So that's what they've decided. There's your socialized medicine. It's so wonderful, isn't it? Bernie? Right, Bernie? Let's get everybody into a socialized medicine.
Starting point is 00:47:01 and, well, Maid will be coming to America, I'm sure. I just... Well, wait a second. Actually, it's coming to New York State this August. This is before or after we remove mother and father? Probably around the same time. Made Governor Kathy Hokel sign the Medical Aid in Dying Act into New York State law. It allows mentally competent, terminally ill adult residents
Starting point is 00:47:29 who have prognosis of six months or less to leave. live legally request medication from their physician to peacefully end their lives. That is going to expand in huge ways. Oh, absolutely. Frank, this is what it happened in Canada. And what they did was,
Starting point is 00:47:44 dude, hold on. This is, you see, this was get me. The other day I was reading about Oregon. And this is what I'm saying about like with John Adams and, and,
Starting point is 00:47:53 and what we knew, how we are being held to a standard that doesn't exist and there needs to be some sort of a leveling on. before we can even get back to being civilized people again. Because I was reading in Oregon that there is legislation that's being at least considered or pushed through. I don't know, it's gaining support in the Oregon state legislature that they want to ban. We're not talking about certain categories. They want to ban hunting and fishing, period, because of animal cruelty.
Starting point is 00:48:28 Jay, this is one of those states. that you can kill your child the day before their due date. There is no, there is no wait time for abortion and no limit to the day that you can tear a child, limb from limb, pluck their limbs like daisy petals. The day before they come out, before they're born into this world, you can do that over there. And the fact that there are people who are, the old animal cruelty, we got to stop people from pulling some strikes. bass out of local water waterways. This is, this is, in New York is the same thing. Oh, yeah.
Starting point is 00:49:10 New York's the same thing. If you think that that's going to stick to six month prognosis terminally ill, it's, it's not. And we already know death tourism in Vermont is, is a thing that's well established at this point. It's crazy. Well, I mean, I'll go back to the unreasonable conversation we had earlier. How long before people just, and I'm, I remain unconvinced.
Starting point is 00:49:31 that any reasonable person would actually, given those facts, whatever side with the state on that. But this is the problem with tribalism, this is the problem with belonging to groups, this is exactly why I don't back the blue or I don't do any of those things. Because once you put yourself in a box,
Starting point is 00:49:50 Democrat, Republican, conservative, liberal, whatever you want to label yourself, there is a human tendency to want to stick with the tribe. And so I know people, I know people in my field who would never agree to that. But if it's a liberal ideology or a conservative ideology or whatever, the group they're in,
Starting point is 00:50:08 they have a hard time resisting the inertia of the tribe that they are part of. And it is, you're right. Frank, killing mentally ill people, you understand, you know, the left loves to throw around, you know, Nazis and Hitler.
Starting point is 00:50:26 That's where that started, you know. And by the way, you can go look up the Supreme Court case, Buck v. Bell, I've talked about it before. Hitler learned a lot of the Nazi tricks from the United States, specifically from California. I mean, eugenics was a real thing. They just got rebranded. So, I mean, I don't even think people actually understand the history of the country that they live in. So again, I'll just, for the audience, I mean, it's like try really hard to remove the tribalism. It is part of our nature to want to belong because it would have kept us safe in other times.
Starting point is 00:51:07 In the times we live in now, tribalism is almost always a negative. And it will always lead you down a path of collectivism rather than individual thought and rugged individualism, which is what this country is supposed to be built on, which is why the founding fathers, especially this time of year, you know, they should be looked up to as examples because they resisted the urge to be tribal and tried to for their own path. Individually, that's why they fought amongst each other to try to create something that was more perfect.
Starting point is 00:51:34 And I think it would serve all of us if we would give into that way of thinking a little bit more individual. You are capable. People always say to me, well, I don't know, you know, half the things you know. You think I was just born knowing this stuff? You just do the work. And you'd be surprised at how much you are capable of understanding. Don't sell yourself short and don't outsource your common sense to a whole bunch of crazy
Starting point is 00:51:56 people who don't give a shit about you. Like you said, who would rip the limbs off a baby a day before it's born, but want to protect some kind of fish in a pond somewhere. Those are not people you want to align with. They're just not liberal or otherwise. You don't belong to that group. I promise.
Starting point is 00:52:12 No, it's, it's, that's, that's a death wish. That's a dead end. Hey, real quick. Got dark. We got dark, Frank. Sorry. Nah, it's fucking. Everybody, like, comment, subscribe. If you're not, if you're not subscribed here,
Starting point is 00:52:28 hit the subscribe button and keep the notifications on. That's how we're going to build back some momentum, aside from all the things that we have to do over here on a production end, on the back end of things, and the workflows that we are reestablishing and the fun that we're going to be having throughout the rest of the year. What you can do, always like, leave a comment during the show, after the show especially,
Starting point is 00:52:52 but hit the hype button after the show, but make sure you're subscribed and the notifications are on, no matter where the hell you are. If it's on Rumble or it's on YouTube, we got Badlands on with us tonight. Hello to all of our friends over there. Wherever it is,
Starting point is 00:53:06 just make sure that you are locked in notifications on. Those are all things that platforms take note of when they are going to suggest topics, suggest things to subscribers of a channel. It's ridiculous, but we got to do it anyway. And also clip the hell out of these shows. Frank,
Starting point is 00:53:25 you know there's a Tim Hortons in White Plains. Oh, good. Be careful in the parking lot. I know. I was going to say, be very careful in the parking lot. But if you guys come to the, you know,
Starting point is 00:53:34 to the event, yeah, we can get your coffee somewhere else. Just stay away from the Tim Horns. I have five pounds of coffee out there. I can't wait to start. No need for Tim Hortons. No,
Starting point is 00:53:42 we're going to be good. We are good, ladies and gents. Listen, the lines are still on. The lines are on. They're open. 914-200-0269.
Starting point is 00:53:52 I see some old friends of ours here. See Doe Boy in the chat room and a few others. All the chat rooms. It's great to see people in. But you know what? There's a lot of people and everybody has a phone. So give me a buzz. Let us know anything that you're thinking here tonight.
Starting point is 00:54:07 And that would be nice. So very rarely Jay and I actually commit to doing open lines. We always say we're going to and the whole night goes away. Three hours later, we're like, damn. I know. It's all gone. So the line is open. Other than that, oh, man, other than that, there's a few other crazy things.
Starting point is 00:54:29 ST just sent in a super chat. So she is in the midst of our wonderful raffle tonight. ST says, Frank, the beaver tooth past made in New York State that is effective August of 26. You know what's hysterical, Frank? Oh, sorry. No, go ahead. I was going to say New York is one of those states where I have, like, I can't order, and you know this firsthand. I can order labs for you in any state you live in except New York, New Jersey, and Rhode Island.
Starting point is 00:54:56 So I think it's ironic that New York will kill you if you have gut issues, but I can't order functional labs to try to help you clear them up. I mean, just I want you to think about that for a second. New York is so concerned about your health that I can't order a set of functional labs for you to try and help you heal. but because, well, it's just better that we kill them. That's essentially what Kathy Hold is saying. I know. Just putting it out there. It doesn't make any sense.
Starting point is 00:55:27 It's wild. It doesn't. Let me see here. The dynamic duo put together again, Frank and Jamuga says Jay Brits. Good to have you out there. Running on Empty says, Blessings for a Beautiful VIP event and Spring Fling. Wish I could be there, says running on empty.
Starting point is 00:55:42 I wish you could too. Next year. Next year is going to be, well, you know, we'll have one. We're going to have a, but a proper jamboree probably at the same place in October of next year. It's going to be so good. I'd like to do something music related next spring. But I'm telling you guys, if you're within a hundred miles of driving distance, get in touch with me.
Starting point is 00:56:05 There's still chance for you to get here on Saturday. It is going to be so good. Sal is going to be actually butchering a, he, I said, are you, you're going to save one prime rib just to butcher. that day, right? Because I know you're probably going to process a couple of them and whatever, but he goes, oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. I'm going to do some work in front of people. So you guys going to be able to actually schmooze with the butcher as things are cut into beautiful ribbons. Frank, it's just if I want to tempt people because Sal sent me this. We were, you know, I just dropped off. So all your marinerids are primal kitchen. So no seed oils. They're all,
Starting point is 00:56:40 you know, we very carefully selected everything, top notch. Three whole prime ribs. You have a picture? No, he just sent me the list of what we're doing. Okay. 30 pounds of skirt steak that are going to be marinated in this terriacchi, this primal kitchen terriaki, and he's going to rub some pineapple juice on the outside at the end. Boneless chicken thigh skewers, Mexican corn, with this avocado mayo that we use.
Starting point is 00:57:06 And he's actually also making a tray of Big Ziti and some vodka panay. My sister-in-law and Lauren, they put together a couple of cold sides. I'm actually going to go grab two five-pound trays of my favorite tomato salad that you tried. Oh, that stuff was great that night we grilled. From Park Deli. Oh, I'm telling you, you guys, this is the ultimate America 250, Frank's 20 years of broadcasting. It's going to be a beautiful day. We're going to hang out outside.
Starting point is 00:57:35 It would be ultimate if I can't, I would want fireworks and I would want cigars for the guys. And I couldn't do either of those things. because of the ground rules, whatever, but it's still going to be awesome. Sparklers? I don't know, but sparklers, I think, is possible. We got tons of lawn, lawn games. Yeah. There's a lot of great shit.
Starting point is 00:57:56 And it's cool because, I mean, it's just going to be a big party with families and kids, and it's going to be great. All right. Let's take a call. First one up is Michael. Go ahead. Hi, Frankie. Just real quick, in the early 90s, I was working at Michigan State University in the radioology department on IT.
Starting point is 00:58:19 And so I was like receiving packages for computers and stuff. And I knew Ted Kaczynski was out there. Yeah. So it was just one of those things that because he was at the height of his activities every time knowing that he was out there, every time you got a package, it was in the back of your mind, or you had some other connection to him? It was kind of in the back of my, well, kind of a connection too because I was working in the IT for the radiology department.
Starting point is 00:58:51 Yeah. But yeah, every time I, unfortunately it was like one of the things we got was like five new PC, 386 PCs. I remember the 386, yeah. Yeah. And it was like $15,000. They were like $3,000 a piece. Wow. Wow.
Starting point is 00:59:12 Mike, Mike, you're the one that sent me this roll of quarters, right? Yeah. This is Mike's roll of quarters he sent me. These are all pre-1965. Oh, cool. And he won me to start putting these into nightly raffles and stuff. So once we get into next week, I'm going to start, I'm going to be able to crack this one open. We're going to be, these, these are great.
Starting point is 00:59:34 Oh, cool. You can already, you can already see, hold on, let me see. You can see the old eagle. I vividly remember picking those up on the street as a kid. Oh, you know that that's the real deal right there. That's very cool. Michael, thank you so much for contributing to the show like that. It's great to hear from you.
Starting point is 00:59:51 Thank you. Well, it's my pleasure. I love your show. I think your audience is great. I feel like being generous, you know, so thank you. It helps out a great deal. And I appreciate you more than you'll ever know. Thank you, Mike.
Starting point is 01:00:06 All right, thank you. All right. Have a good night. Let's take a call. I'm really glad Ted Gazzinsky never sent any. thing to your ID. I got some things from Kaczynski in a little bit. 512, you're on the air. Go ahead.
Starting point is 01:00:18 Hey, guys. This is Kelly. Hey. I'm in Austin, Texas. Good day. Get to hear from you. I just wanted to kind of tell you, I work with a lot of people in Canada and just kind of have small talk with them. And, you know, I was a Democrat years
Starting point is 01:00:34 and years ago. And, you know, I just kind of opened my eyes to a lot of stuff. I worked on the Obama. a campaign. I know, don't hold it against me. But I voted for it. I voted for it. So is your fault. Well, you know, I got my, I got my political science degree. My whole dream was to work on a campaign. And I was able, I was blessed. I got hired on and I went to go work on it. But it was totally different than what I ever imagined. And, but I started really seeing something that was,
Starting point is 01:01:06 I just couldn't nail it at that point. It just didn't fit, you know. So I moved on. And then we had, you know, I watched ABC, NBC like everybody else in the world. And, you know, I saw the Trouin Martin. And I started seeing the narrative that was coming across the news. And it just didn't make sense to me. I just couldn't, I couldn't grasp it. So I turned it off before everybody said turn off the news.
Starting point is 01:01:33 And COVID came out. I live in Austin. If you know anything about Austin, we have a homeless population. I've been there. Yeah, absolutely. Yeah. And nobody was dying in our homeless camps. And you're talking about that.
Starting point is 01:01:49 We were talking about those are the little things that everybody was asking that never made it to any kind of a bigger platform. Yeah. You know, not that you want, you're thinking about anything. But you think that what they were describing in the news, what they were describing from the time that we were getting those crazy CCTV, TV footage videos from China. People dropping dead in the street. They were just like planks of wood. Dropping dead.
Starting point is 01:02:17 You know, we had to go six feet. And I live in a part of Austin that's very conservative. You know, but, you know, we still can't talk freely, shall I say. And so, you know, we started noticing that. And then my husband happened to nail a nail gun through his hand. And we had to go to the hospital. And it was vacant. and you know we were shut down right and so we were just like something's going on this is not right
Starting point is 01:02:47 so we started digging and everything like that and you know we just started using common sense if you can't if you can't see it it's not really right well i work with these Canadians and you know and we have small talk and everything like that and they they're so controlled they can't see it yeah and and and And that's the worst part about it because they do believe, like I do, because our conversations meet, but they believe that their health network is best, even though they're telling me it takes them seven months to go see a doctor. Yeah. You know, they believe everything is just good for them.
Starting point is 01:03:28 And, you know, with going through Alberta, you know, they think that's horrible. They're cheating. their country and it's just because they're they're so controlled and even though we are so controlled to a point we're really not but they really are they even have restrictions on what they can share on social media i mean i hear that from you know from darrell all the time what what she's unable to share on facebook or or even you know so yeah they can't post anything and the crazy thing about it it goes into their HR department like i said i work with them their HR is completely different than our HR.
Starting point is 01:04:05 And it's because of what they can do and what they can't do. But, you know, looking at that video, I was talking to one of my girlfriends up there offline. And I said, hey, did you see this video? Does that happen? You know, about the guy that was being talked to through his car with the police officer. Okay, yes. And it started in a cafe. And, you know, and I said, is that really happening?
Starting point is 01:04:30 And she was like, yeah, they're just, you know, they're crazy. Kelly and I said the police are crazy she goes no the police aren't crazy wow I said I said what yeah it's yeah and I say you don't find it wrong that someone met him at a cafe and then cleared him insane he just looks insane yeah I know it's see it's not talking about I'm I'm talking about and and that's why you know you say okay well what what is the how do you fix that Well, you're not, here's the crazy thing is that it's real simple. It's not the best solution, but it's the, I mean, it's not going to be the most complete solution, but it's the best one we have.
Starting point is 01:05:13 And if we are ever able to really, you know, people, they call it national divorce. But like I said the other night, the problem is that everything is too tied in to the thing next to it. Yeah. Everything is connected. everybody's dependent on everyone else in ways that it was never supposed to be like that. You could become dependent on people that you build communal relationships with, your families, your familiars, your friends, all that stuff, your churches, your congregations, whatever it is, that's where you seek help.
Starting point is 01:05:47 That's where you have community. And everything else, you know, you didn't really give a rip. And you didn't know so much about what was going on even in. the state next to yours, you didn't know enough to want to form an opinion about the people over there because, of course, their opinions on life had nothing to do with what was going to impact you where you lived. But now every initiative, every idea, every piece of legislature has to be not only national, but a world-changing thing.
Starting point is 01:06:22 That whenever somebody voices opposition for even as simple as a personal or religious reason or maybe it is a constitutional reason or something a little bit more deeply philosophical, you become an enemy to so many people instantaneously. And you become an ally to so many others. And it's just all necessary and all unnecessary. And you can't untangle that unless the umbilical cords are clipped. And if everybody just has even a year to two years of literally having nothing on their hands to do but improving their lots where they live with nothing but local resources, I mean, it's just like you're, you've got, what do you have? You know, it's like, I don't know how the hell that can happen. It's going to have to be state by state. And, um, and, uh, thank you for the
Starting point is 01:07:19 call, my friend. I always talk about that. It's going to have to be state by state. There's going to be one like Larry Sharp. I keep bringing him up because he's the only person I've been able to actually sit down with who was running on a truly reform ticket for a state like New York. And he had an idea as a governor if he can find a way to actually twist the knobs of government around here to not only create a better educational situation for children within the state of New York, but a way that you actually have a surplus of state funds and you're not taking money from D.C. anymore.
Starting point is 01:07:54 Imagine that. All of a sudden, you're autonomous. And then, and then perhaps you're, you know, perhaps at that point, if you are a liberal in the state of New York, you might be fighting with the local conservatives, but the liberals and the conservatives in Vermont or in Pennsylvania have, you don't even have time to think about them. I mean, and that's at least, at least that's manageable. Right.
Starting point is 01:08:17 That's the kind of, that's the only thing you can do is if this, they call it. national divorce, but it's actually just the way that America is supposed to function civically. It's an actual great reset. It's an actual reset to a, you know, to a federalist system. And, yeah, I know a lot of people would have to say goodbye to their social securities, which is, I mean, listen, I don't think we have to worry about a couple, one, one, two generations, sunset it out.
Starting point is 01:08:49 That stuff can just go away. Just let me keep all my money. I'll take care of it. Just give it to me. I want to rebate for all of it, man. Absolutely. I'll decide what to do with it. Gosh, you know, I'm still waiting.
Starting point is 01:09:00 This was the first year that I got a little bit of a return back. I got a little bit of a re- You do your money back? I got a small refund this year. First time I've had a refund in well over 10 years. And that's because of, you know, the way I've organized myself now and I have an accountant who is, you know, I guess, just a lot more diligent than my last one.
Starting point is 01:09:25 And they still haven't given me the money. Keep waiting. I filed in late January, early February. They got back to me in late April, said that I'm under review, and that they would need some time and they'll let me know what they're, whether or not they're going to give it to me or what they're going to do with it. And then I got another I got another piece of mail
Starting point is 01:09:54 in the end like mid-May saying we need another 60 days. Next time you are. Some motherfuckers. I think that you should correspond with them and say yeah, so you're saying I owe X amount of money.
Starting point is 01:10:09 It's under review. I'll have my people review it. And I'm going to need a little bit more time to get to that money. Let's see how they respond. Yeah, cool. So they send F-15s to your house. Correspondens.
Starting point is 01:10:20 You know what I saw? I saw on, I don't know who the hell this, I don't know who this kosher chutzpah guy is. I don't know if this is a, a rage bait account or something like that. Oh, okay, yeah.
Starting point is 01:10:31 I think it, it probably is, it probably is rage. Anyway, it was funny. I saw, um, I saw this guy,
Starting point is 01:10:40 he, he's got a lot of people pissed off because, you know, it's hard to catch satire sometimes. Yeah. But he said, when an American says, I don't,
Starting point is 01:10:50 hate Israel. I just don't want my tax dollars being sent there. They hate Israel. You know, and it's just like, I went to the chat room. Oh, boy. I went to the comments and good Lord. And listen, and I could just say, hey. Was Mark Levine in there? Probably. Probably. You know, and I just, I hate every, I hate every entity, every person who comes in contact with the money that was stolen for me. Yep. Everybody. okay everybody you can count me down as hateful in that respect i gave to caesar but it's not caesar's he took too much okay i gave to caesar but it's not frank at two frank i am not i'm not i do not accept that it is caesars um anyway let's take a call 5.07 you're on the ire
Starting point is 01:11:41 hey frank hey who's this be this is be close to god in the twitch chat oh you know what? It's good to have Twitchers calling in. Is that what they're calling? Twitchers? Twitch is coming to live. Tweakers. Go ahead. We're still here. Hey, Jay. How are you doing? How you doing, man? I'm doing all right. I know that you guys both mentioned that you were both pretty level-headed guys.
Starting point is 01:12:07 Maybe. Earlier. Sometimes. Well, Jay would have blown up his killdozer at the end, so. Yeah, that's kind of what I was getting to. The deal-doses. But where's your line in the sand? Because I was just trying to think about that poem they came for. Ah, yeah. So where's your line in the sand?
Starting point is 01:12:31 You know, I imagine the killthosur guy. Yeah. Probably thought that he was a pretty level-headed guy as well, the majority of his life. And then they pushed and pushed, pushed. Yeah. So where do you draw the line? I don't see I don't know it's a tough question
Starting point is 01:12:53 it's a tough question for for me only because my only reason for living at this point is to create a good stable household and protect my family so but if Lauren were in trouble
Starting point is 01:13:10 you would become killdozer would you not friends oh absolutely so that's where that's where it comes down to everything up to everything up to that would be, all right, let's think strategically here. Let's try to find a way around one situation or another. But when it comes down to general chaos and it's time to lock and load, yeah, that's, there's no negotiating when it comes to physical harm that is going to, you know,
Starting point is 01:13:42 that's threatening somebody you love or especially the people that you live to support. to defend. I mean, that's obviously a line that can't be crossed, but there's a lot of people out there who don't have, they have less of that at home. You know, maybe, maybe they're empty nesters, or maybe they never had a family, and maybe, you know, there's a lot of people who are, I don't know, are, are war veterans. There's a lot of people who really took that oath seriously. Yeah. I've talked to a lot of them. Well, I mean, you just, you just mentioned that that New York passed made, right? Yeah.
Starting point is 01:14:20 Is that not a line in the sand? For somebody, because it's coming. Yeah. Somebody has got to put their freaking foot down. Yeah. Well, like I said, that's going to be somebody's line in the sand. I mean, what you asked me is not a universal question.
Starting point is 01:14:35 People probably think about this all the time. What would I do if this happened? What would I do if that happen? You know, we don't have the comfort of thinking that we're going to, you know, It's all a Dawson's Creek episode anymore. It's not. So everybody, I think, runs those scenarios with their own special looking glass, kind of a timeline tester.
Starting point is 01:14:57 I think everybody tests those timelines from their particular standpoint and what they have going or not going for them. And that's why you have Marvin Heemeyers, and that's why at the same time you have people who tend to take other routes. Well, and I think it's just time for guys who aren't. at that red line to actually stand up and think about, you know, where things are going and maybe try and be proactive because you can see the writing on the wall.
Starting point is 01:15:31 And because I live in Cami, Minnesota. So, and, but I'm not qualified to run for anything. So, but I know people who are. And I think that that's where we need to start actively proactively, you know, encouraging people to just, who think like us, who want to bring things back to that Dawson Creek episode. That's kind of where I stand. I couldn't agree more.
Starting point is 01:16:00 I think we need to, you know, good, reasonable people tend to not want to get involved with unreasonable things like politics. But unfortunately, you know, it's like you get dragged kicking and screaming to a place that you've never intended to be. but maybe that's, you know, maybe our politician should be reluctant politicians. In fact, I think a lot of the founding fathers were a bit reluctant to do what they did. I mean, George Washington was offered all kinds of things. Wasn't he offered a king, you know, kingship essentially?
Starting point is 01:16:26 Yeah. You know, I think reluctance is a virtue. And I think a lot of the people that would do a great job, as you said, are more reluctant to even get involved. But I think we need more of that. And I think you're right. I think that's a great place to start out. I'm an eternal optimist. and I like to think my way through everything.
Starting point is 01:16:44 And I also am a realist and understand that thinking your way through everything, eventually some people will make that impossible. We aren't there yet, but we are trending in that direction, and that is problematic. Yeah, absolutely. Well, hey, this is why I thought it would be a great episode. You know, it's going hand in hand with a lot of the theme of this week, which is, you know, people aren't last night. People aren't buying it anymore.
Starting point is 01:17:08 Yeah. And it takes a lot just to be. be able to say, eh, poor shit. With the narratives about race or whatever the hell else, it doesn't work. That has to just be across the board rejected.
Starting point is 01:17:23 And people are going to, what is it? Meekly keep our head down and hope that they don't hit us. Hope that we aren't the random target that somebody chooses just, you know, one night, wherever the hell else in sometimes sleepy towns. You played that video of that kid.
Starting point is 01:17:41 Actually, I don't even know if he was a kid. think he said he had kids, the English man who basically said, I'm going to get, I'm probably going to get in trouble for this, but he was sort of ranting on TikTok or something. Yeah. I mean, that's the kind of righteous indignation that that that country needs right now, because they're further down the, if they calm down, you know, it's so further down the path that if they come down, if this latest, you know, flare up in, in the UK, where it happens every couple of months now and you wonder you know like our caller just said uh when when the when the
Starting point is 01:18:14 killdozers are going to come out and then they don't stop until the engines give out and they're just like you know no no that's it um but you know in that respect here here's here's what they have well let me finish my first thought first um in a situation where once if that flare up calms down. The kid that put those thoughts out on TikTok, he will be found. There's already people in prison for that in England. He will be served. Absolutely. No doubt about it. If, you know, right now, I think that the police and everything, they just have so much to concentrate on. If that comes down, he's going to stick out like a sore thumb, because whereas you have to analyze a crowd and try to extract some faces, here's somebody who took reasonable thoughts and
Starting point is 01:19:01 pleads. Totally reasonable thoughts. Completely reasonable. to a public platform that is being monitored by a completely illiberal, tyrannical government in the UK. And they would love to do that over here in the U.S., obviously. We still have a First Amendment, though. And what I was going to say before was, especially for British men, what they have coming against them, and I guess everybody, you know, our situation would be kind of similar. but if whatever's left of British men actually do stand up and fight at this point,
Starting point is 01:19:38 it's going to be British men versus the UK government, the Islamic plants, and they're liberal women. And the media, the media. That's what, that's what British patriotic British men are up against right now. Their government,
Starting point is 01:19:57 the army of Islamic implants that have been brought in over the course of a couple of generations that are, are protected by their court systems to a degree that is unthinkable still. Their media and of course they're they're crazed liberal women who are I mean, that's just it. You played that video of the of the woman crying on her boyfriend's shoulder when she was watching the parades of the Union Jack flag.
Starting point is 01:20:25 Don't worry. I'll protect you, babe. Whoa. It's fucking crazy. That's what that's what's up against it, man. Yeah. So please like share and subscribe and put the moment to know if you can do it. There's power in numbers.
Starting point is 01:20:38 That's the thing. You said there's power in numbers. And as long as people don't lose what's happening right now, you know, that's how that kid won't go to prison. Because they, you know, they always say, what are you going to do, arrest us all? And there is some truth to that. But it's when the things die down and the news cycle is so fast-paced at this point that if that goes away, that's when people like that will be singled out and hauled off to prison. And we forget that again, there, there,
Starting point is 01:21:03 are plenty of stories I've seen. I'm sure these people are still in prison for Facebook posts. There were people, I remember, man, this was months ago, maybe even a year ago, where one of our news stations was doing an interview with German politicians who were talking about these kinds of laws where they knock on your door at three in the morning. And the woman was videotaping it. We're knocking on your door about a social media post. I mean, that is quite literally insane. And I don't know. I mean, and then when I see Kirstarmer come over here to the White House, you know, I'm
Starting point is 01:21:40 sorry, but I mean, Donald Trump should have given him a public tongue lashing. I mean, he should have, he should not have been so cordial to him. We need them to feel pressure from every angle, from the bottom up and from the top down. And if they're going to continue that way, then God bless the people of England to stand up for that because they have completely lost their way. And I had, again, during COVID, had people, I have doctor friends who are over in England. And they're like, Jay, it is, it is bad. And that was six years ago.
Starting point is 01:22:08 Yeah. And it's only gotten worse. So I don't know where they end up, but this is totally unsustainable at this point. Yeah. You know? Yeah, I know. And, yeah, well, let's get to some super chats. And I'll take some other.
Starting point is 01:22:19 I'm glad we were able to stay on theme tonight, too. That's been great. All right. So up top, Mama Boots on YouTube. I just added her to the giveaway. tonight. Wherever the hell you are, super chats, I'm adding you in, Rumble, YouTube, quite frankly, superchat.com, which helps the best, the fastest, and nothing taken out of it, quite frankly, superchat.com. Says, will subscribers get a link to watch a VIP night again? I think, no, tomorrow,
Starting point is 01:22:51 the VIP night, I'm not going to be broadcasting in here. I want to be, I want to be a little bit more just in the party, I spent about two hours in here doing certain level of broadcast. And then by the time I got out there, the food was all eaten. That was really funny. That was mystery science theater. That was myself and the guy from Nephilim Death Squad. Yeah. You thought your audio was on, but it wasn't.
Starting point is 01:23:15 And so we just had to pick up the slack. Well, that's the whole thing. What I'm going to be doing this time, what I'm going to be doing this time around is that at certain times of the night, maybe once on the VIP night, but maybe once or twice during the main event on Saturday. I'm going to go live from my, from my phone. Now, because it's from my phone,
Starting point is 01:23:34 and I can't multi-stream, not good enough. I know a couple, like Grumble Studio has a multi-streamer and shit like that. It's not that good. I'm going to go live from YouTube, so make sure you're subscribed
Starting point is 01:23:46 with your notifications on, and I'll just go live and, you know, show people around, give some thoughts, you know, report on what's happening and the fun stuff there. So that'll just be for everybody because when we do these events next year again, I would,
Starting point is 01:24:04 when the baby's born and we have a whole new fresh outlook, it's 2027. I want all, I want so many of you guys to come out because it's going to be great. But what I will say is this. There's more, there's more reasons why you should become a member right now, whether it's on subscribe star directly through quite frankly.
Starting point is 01:24:21 That TV slash sponsor or wherever the hell else. On Patreon, they have a sale option now, and until Monday night, May, June 8th, Monday at 9 p.m. is when the sale ends, 55% off your first month. Frank's on sale. I'm on sale for 55% off. What a deal. And next Friday, the 12th, is when we get to, we're going to watch a Bronx tale together,
Starting point is 01:24:44 a watch party. You get like two movies we all watch together, a book club that's coming back with movies in July. There's Sunday streams. There's all these amazing product codes. You get keto brains samples. Get in touch with me if you want those keto brains. And I give you the world.
Starting point is 01:25:02 And right now, if you go to Patreon and become a $5 a month sponsor of this show, if you like it, your first month is $2.25. It's like, come on now. Come on. So you can't even get a cup of coffee for $2.25 anymore. You can't get a New York slice of pizza anymore for $2.25. I just got a super chat from Daryl. She said, Tim Horton's coffee sucks. So not only does the coffee suck.
Starting point is 01:25:24 They're going to try to kill you in the parking lot. Just stay away from Tim Hortons, everybody. Moral of the story. Just stay away from the room. And they're not even giving you the right cocktail of drugs. Hey, you know, I want to commit to, we talked about this before, but I want to do it on air. I think we should do a movie night where we'll do idiocracy together. Well, then why don't, hold on a second.
Starting point is 01:25:42 Because I feel like that movie is so timely. Still. How about this? Let's put it on the calendar. I have, see, I'm going to be, I'm going to take Lauren and Aurora away for a couple of on June 25th and 26th. And so that means that the 12th, hmm. You talking July now?
Starting point is 01:26:05 I'm talking June. Oh, oh. The 12th is going to be a Bronx tale. Okay. And maybe the 19th is going to have to be the playhouse. Okay. So then maybe July, Friday, July 3rd. No, no, can't do that.
Starting point is 01:26:20 No, that would be. Yeah, that's just too much. Too many things going on that night. Oh, holy shit. There is. five Fridays in July. Oh, we definitely do one of those. That'll be good.
Starting point is 01:26:30 So then maybe like July 10th and July 24th or something like that, we should do, idioscrasies should be in there. Okay. I want to watch the bird cage. That's a funny one. The clips,
Starting point is 01:26:45 I haven't seen that in so long. I mean, Robin Williams is brilliant. I love him. No, I, we'll see. There's going to be some good movies. We already did so many good ones this year. Fatso was one of my favorite. favorites. That was one of my favorites is here. Um, I, uh, Don de Louise. Oh, okay. Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. Okay.
Starting point is 01:27:04 First time I ever saw it as an adult and it was, I don't think I've seen it. It was very, very good. Hmm. We had a good time with that one. We just watched as good as it gets last week. Oh, that's a great one. My favorite. Yeah. Great movie. So and it's wonderful. Well, we'll do it. Let's do it in July because I, I, I think we need to dust off that movie. People don't realize how good that movie is. Okay, so you know what we'll do? The Friday night that you are where you're at your place, I'll be at my place. We watch idiocracy and then of course we join each other on Zoom to talk for five minutes afterwards. I'll make sure that that movie night is public.
Starting point is 01:27:41 Okay. So as many people as possible to watch. Oh, big movie theater. Okay. Just so you guys can get another glimpse. Let's do it. Okay. Just be a part of it, man.
Starting point is 01:27:49 It's good. Okay. So Carmenina says wishing you all a great time this weekend. I will be there in spirit. Of course you will. You'll all be here in spirit. Carmenina and Mama boots. Great.
Starting point is 01:28:00 Okay, over on Rumble, I have some other things to do. Doll 76. Says Frank, please know I wasn't trying to be adversary on the call last night. Much respect. No, absolutely not. I just want to make sure you knew what I meant. She called in about thin blue line. Yeah, yeah, absolutely.
Starting point is 01:28:17 Yeah. Awakened Boomer says, hey, Jay and Frank. Jay, love the shirt. See you all Saturday. there you go i can wear it again if you want if you don't mind yeah go ahead all right let's see um who else do we have bad mf player says hope you all having a great quite frankly block party thanks frank and jay great show you're welcome it's great to have you out there i have you in there already okay and j semos is great discussion you guys are a great team but guys do get a little silly
Starting point is 01:28:50 but you guys do get a little silly just kidding a little What do we do? I don't know. It's actually kind of... It's a severe night, actually. It's a problem, I know. Tonight's a pretty severe night. We try to break it up.
Starting point is 01:29:02 Jay's a terrorist. Yeah, I mean... Jay's an absolute terrorist. I'm only trying to improve on the terror. All right, let's see you here. If you want something done right. If you want something done right. Okay, so let me get everybody in overripe.
Starting point is 01:29:19 And then we have... I have Ted Kaczynski quotes. You want to go there? I mean... Yeah. Okay. And then I have some real... Put a cap on the terrorism of the evening.
Starting point is 01:29:28 You know what? Let's just keep going. I don't have to change anything. Silly war. I'm not staying at my place tonight, so, you know, they can't find me. They don't know where I am. Corey J. Bill Cooper. I'll read all these pilled ones afterwards.
Starting point is 01:29:44 Serpentine, Frank and Jericho, Goulinello, both wearing red today. Are you guys starting a health gang? Well, a roving health gang. we don't we don't wield clubs and sores we we we carry around B12 shots and paté yeah watch out of those guys are giving out patay over there let's see here um oh miss Halston this is definitely something that we should take to the flip side tonight okay um because it's more you know health site what she's talking about uh raw milk curing asthma what are your thoughts on that any information he can share on asthma now um i i i we
Starting point is 01:30:23 talked about that before? Yeah. Do you want me to, I mean, I can give you a, just a super, super high-level thing now, but, you know, the Mayo Clinic had a book, I'm going to try to remember off the top of my head. I think it was called the raw milk cure. Believe it or not, the Mayo Clinic used to promote raw milk as a cure for many things. Now, they don't do that stuff anymore because the Mayo Clinic, along with many other institutions, have completely lost their way. But you should look that up, the raw milk cure. As far as asthma goes, there's a lot of, there's a lot of, of different factors, but one of the things that seems to improve asthma is the omega-6-3 ratio, because really you're talking about an inflammatory condition.
Starting point is 01:31:03 And I've seen several papers that show significant improvement in asthmatic symptoms when you adjust the omega-6-to-3 ratio, which is your sort of inflammatory to anti-inflammatory ratio, anywhere from 10 to 1. If you get it closer down to 4-1, you can significantly improve symptoms. And you do that by reducing your omega-6 consumption, so your C-2-1. and you improve by eating whole real natural foods and sometimes supplementing, although I'm not a huge fan of supplementing omega-3s unless, you know, the source for sure, but that omega-6 to 3 ratio, that inflammation, inflammatory ratio has got a really good outcomes
Starting point is 01:31:38 when it comes to asthma. So again, that's just like a really, really high level. I always remembered that from school. I found a lot of really good papers on asthma and specifically about that ratio. We'll do a lot more of those specific things. We're going to have like a health night again on here all day. It's been a while. We do a lot of mixed topics now, which I like.
Starting point is 01:31:55 Sure. But we'll do that again because I'm sure we're stocking up a lot of, a lot of, actually, we did a big health night last week. There's always things to do like, yeah. You remember we, I was, I said to you the other day when Bill Cassidy, the senator got ousted in his primary, I said, you know, he was one of the guys that was after RFK. And we did a whole episode on that, the plot to get RFK. Bill Cassidy was one of the senators that was trying to oust him.
Starting point is 01:32:21 The pharmaceutical companies were coordinating. with the senators. And I thought it was great when Bill Cassidy got, got his butt kicked out of, uh, out of the Senate because I remember that name from that night. And I went back to the, went back to that article in Brownstone Institute.
Starting point is 01:32:34 And I said, oh yeah, there he is Bill Cassidy. And he was a son of a bitch during so many of the hearings because he's a rhino. And he's a former doctor. So he knows so much, right? Yeah, they all do. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:32:43 Especially those, those senator doctors. Well, we have more on this in the second half. Yeah. But anyway, yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:32:48 Well, I'd love to do another full night on, on anything health, you know? It would be, Well, we need it. You think about how people are improving just because of these conversations. I get the emails all the time.
Starting point is 01:32:59 Tommy Jekyll, thank you. So, Brubark, question for Jay. Oh, we'll do that in the second half there too. Andrea, put me in for the loot. Tommy J. again. Let me see here. Oh, didn't Haymeyer pass along whatever financial assets he had in a way that he paid back parties that could not get at them?
Starting point is 01:33:18 Like trusts or something like that? I don't know anything about Heemeyer's. financial planning, but I wouldn't be surprised. Well, I mean, and all that kind of, those details matter because they go into the state of mind of the individual, especially if he knew he was going to off himself at the end. Yeah. You know, that, that, that, you know, because if it was just a random thing, then you think, well, maybe he was, had a few screws loose. But if you really plan this out and he just thought, I'm going to check out of here, but I'm going to make sure everything is settled. That's a totally different state of mind.
Starting point is 01:33:46 That's calculated. Yeah. J.R. at the lake. Thank you. Andrea D.R. J.R. Delona for a ship. Vesper, hogleg. Hogleg. Safety net. Revolution says, Jay, what can I take for the FOMO-induced hives? I'm breaking out
Starting point is 01:34:02 in on account of not being able to be there tomorrow. Smoke a lot of meat. Eat a lot of meat and have a cigar. Light it up, says Smoke Sesh. It's 420 somewhere. Awesome show, guys. Thank you, Smoke. And then here comes Sto Sto with a whole sleeve of cookies and then J.R. at the lake. Okay,
Starting point is 01:34:20 I got you all in there. I was able to to put you in as Jay was talking. Here are some from Uncle Ted. Uncle Ted. We're going to do like 10 minutes of this because I don't want to play some reels. I want to end with this newest thing from John Ward. Okay. Here we go.
Starting point is 01:34:38 I got this from, I just threw it into Grok because it was off the top of my head and I wouldn't have been able to compile this either way. We talked about five minutes before we went on air, yeah. Right. So the first one's up. Let me see. It's introductions about the industrial revolution.
Starting point is 01:34:55 Let's get down to industrial, let's see here, industrial technological systems may survive or may break down. If it survives, it may eventually achieve a low level of physical and psychological suffering, but only after passing through a long and very painful period of adjustment and only at the cost of permanently reducing human beings and many other living organisms to engineered products and mere cogs in the social machine. Let me see here. Therefore, we therefore advocate a revolution against the industrial system.
Starting point is 01:35:24 The revolution may or may not use, make use of violence. It may be sudden or maybe relatively gradual process spanning a few decades. This is not to be a political revolution. Its object will be to overthrow, not governments, but the economic and technological basis of the present society. And the Fed. Yeah, almost everyone will agree that we live in a deeply troubled society, one of the most widespread manifestations of the craziness is leftism. So a discussion of the psychology of leftism can serve as an introduction to the discussion of the problems of modern society in general.
Starting point is 01:36:02 He said that leftists tend to hate anything that has an image of being strong, good, and successful. They hate America. They hate Western civilization. They hate white males. They hate rationality. What year was this again? Well, was it, early 90s? Uh-huh.
Starting point is 01:36:15 those who are most sensitive about politically incorrect terminology are not the average black ghetto dweller an Asian immigrant abused woman or disabled person but a minority of activists many of whom do not even belong to any oppressed group but come from privileged strata of society oh boy oh boy is that true the power process for most people it is through the power process having a goal making an autonomous effort and attaining the goal that self-esteem self-customer confidence and sense of power are acquired, when one does not have an adequate opportunity to go through the power process, the consequences are boredom, demoralization, low self-esteem, inferiority, feelings, defeatism, depression, anxiety, guilt, frustration, hostility. You know what? It's great because you think about the advantages of the post-war America,
Starting point is 01:37:10 and we really started dealing with such great surpluses and such advantage. for at least one or two generations. And a lot of that has been squandered. And along with the squandering of whatever good feelings and momentum we had on the other side of the war, what I guess he's describing over here is why Disney characters are so bad. Or why characters in like the new Star Wars or anything else, these perfect Mary Sue female heroes and stuff who it's not that and they always go back to sexism.
Starting point is 01:37:50 They know, you know, men and it's all sex. Anytime it's a woman, it's like, no, no, no, no, no. This female character or this male character, whoever they're virtue signaling with, never actually went through a proper character arc. They never found rock bottom. They never found what was it about them that made them heroic. They were just always perfect in their imperfection. And that is, I think that in the same way that modern movie studios tend to pop out these really reviling, reviled characters more and more these days because there's just nothing attractive about them.
Starting point is 01:38:33 They are, they're a, a rapt political tootsie role that you just throw in somebody's faces. I think for that same reason that they went through no kind of power process of having a goal and having to build up self-esteem and self-confidence and acquire that through, go through some kind of, you know, we are just so bored, demoralized, and we don't know who the fuck we are. So this was 1995, by the way. And this is what I mean about we have invented dragons to slay at this point because we don't have to do the things necessary to how many times have I said in your show? Supermarkets are the 100% successful hunt, right? So there's no, so many of the things that human beings are
Starting point is 01:39:19 hardwired to find, you know, our dopamine reward system is, is, it's hardwired to want us to continue to do the things that help further the species and further society. And we don't have to fight for any of those things anymore. So now we create dragons to slay. We, we find wrong, that need to be righted that really were never wrong in the first place. And we are so bored, as Ted Kaczynski said, that now we're just sort of listless. We don't, you know, there's just no, and the characters that you're talking about, right, we're so detached from what makes the human story on a universal level compelling, like that underdog story. We're so detached from that that we accept that these characters on screen don't ever have to go through
Starting point is 01:40:07 that either because I never went through that but like you know just several generations ago they all went through that it's also where the nihilism comes from true like I was talking about that last night when uh the the the footage of people walking out of the black crows concert uh because I was so disappointed I love the black cars I know so disappointed anyone on that rant because there was a USA chant and and everybody uh defending him is they're all saying the the shit in the comments that they're saying is the reason why the USA chants are, you know, why somebody would put everything they have behind a USA champ because it is in a way a rejection of the toxic levels of, of self-loathing liberal nihilism. Yeah. That has become a, you know, a linchpin in our dying culture.
Starting point is 01:41:00 I remember what I, do you remember I said, oh, there was something I wanted to mention on the show and I can't remember what it was. I was thinking of it on the drive-over. I just remember. remember what it was. And it had to do with Brett Michaels. Boison? Yeah. So I don't know if you know this. He, I've always despised this guy. But he was supposed to, apparently there was supposed to be some America 250 concert and a whole bunch of artists dropped out because, eh, political, right? Like they had committed prior to, probably when they thought Kamala Harris was going to be president. So it could be a whole America sucks 250 kind of thing, right? I just want to take a moment. And maybe some people in the audience won't agree with me. I just, I have a thing with Brett Michaels. I think this guy is such a
Starting point is 01:41:41 loser on every level. He was a loser in his original music days because he was a, he was an 80s hair band guys. We really never contributed anything really to music. And then he became a reality TV show, so he was always kind of like suboptimal there. And now he has a chance to actually do something legitimate and celebrate. They asked him, for whatever reason, they asked this loser to participate in America 250, and he backed out. So the one opportunity this guy has to contribute, something positive to society, which he has yet to do, he backs out of it. Well, he wouldn't want to screw up any employment opportunities. I got, I was, I'm like, Brett Michaels, you are a loser.
Starting point is 01:42:19 You have always been a loser and you continue to be a loser, no matter how hard you try. Oh, I just, oh, Brett Michaels, go away. Go away forever. Yeah, you're right. He's got, in the next, you know, administration, he wants to make sure that he's on the right side of whatever. I was looking at last year. I was looking at, I played this on, I played this on Rumble last year for the 4th of July.
Starting point is 01:42:44 Maybe I'll re-premer it again. Who the hell knows? Maybe I'll download it and re-premer it, but I wouldn't be able to put it on YouTube. It was Liberty Weekend, July, 1986. And they were celebrating the 100th anniversary of the, of the Statue of Liberty. And for some reason, my father recorded most, almost all of Liberty weekend on VHS. And you just see how it was just like everybody came.
Starting point is 01:43:21 It was a call to what, you know, it's a, it's the Reagan administration, uh, whatever. You have every kind of performer, every kind of celebrity. It was, it was really something else because you had, I especially loved the whole unity thing. There was Native American aspects of it there. Nothing was like, you know,
Starting point is 01:43:45 nothing was punishing. I know what Jimmy. I watched that stuff and like, damn, man, what the, it's crazy. No, it's crazy because, again, like we were talking about immigration on Tuesday night and stuff like that and what's going on in all these countries
Starting point is 01:44:02 and how Europe is really up against the wall with all of their their demographics over there. Same thing over here too. But all of that happened within 35 years. Yeah. So rapidly. It's rapidly. It's the farthest thing from natural.
Starting point is 01:44:18 For anybody to say, so, you know, you say, so what? Even if you've been trained to hate white people, for example, because for the average liberal who is at least tuned. to a basic activist tuning. Now, maybe they're not like, they're not showing up, you know,
Starting point is 01:44:39 to a, to a, some kind of an incoherent rally or something like that. Right, right. But let's say they just have a basic tuning. They,
Starting point is 01:44:48 they don't care, and they find it kind of noble that white people are going away. They find it kind of noble because just bad, colonialism. They only have a couple things they can say. All the words.
Starting point is 01:45:02 Yeah, all the words. Yeah. Can't genocide, bad, whatever. And, but at the same time you say, but wait a second, what we're saying here, forget about all your, all that. This is being, if this is just a natural way of things, then I guess you say, okay, you know, there are, there are species that go extinct every day.
Starting point is 01:45:23 There are new species that are created every day that we, do we haven't discovered yet and all that, whatever. And, but the fact is this has happened in 30 years. it's impossible for this to happen naturally. So are you okay with this? Are you okay with this being done to you too? Did you vote for that? Whether you think that, oh, well, look how this is working out.
Starting point is 01:45:47 Isn't that like poetic justice? It's not poetic justice. It is an absolute operation that is being run on Western civilization that gave you this wonderful cushy, self-expression you know promoting culture over here that is now slowly just fucking fading away
Starting point is 01:46:08 you're not at least concerned with the the rapid nature of this change you know that this is not natural and it's happening to you too you didn't vote for your own extinction it's happening but the alligator is going to eat me last Frank right
Starting point is 01:46:22 don't you see and that's the thing I don't think many of these people have the ability to think forget three steps ahead, one step ahead. So no, I don't think they've ever considered any of that. This is what I mean about, we've had it so easy for so long now, because of Western civilization, that we don't understand what it's like to build, create, manifest, struggle, fail, get up, you know, try again, readjust. We just, we don't have any of those, not all of us, obviously, but the people that we're talking about,
Starting point is 01:47:00 they don't have any of those qualities. And so they're just, and I think humans need to have that in order to be productive members of society. And when they don't have that, because so many things have been handed to them, this is why I think, you know, a hand out is fine.
Starting point is 01:47:15 I mean, a hand up is fine, but a hand out is only contributing to this madness and it only continues to keep people in the position that they're in. But again, that's also intentional. And they just assume that the alligator is going to eat them last, but it is going to eat them.
Starting point is 01:47:27 but again, I just don't think that they think that far down the road. And maybe, or maybe they actually, like you always say, maybe they're that the crazy people at the end of Independence Day. And they really do think that, that the, you know, this time the machine is going to uplift them to some kind of a better existence. It's not. No. It's not.
Starting point is 01:47:46 Well, there is one thing. I don't want to be unbalanced here. So Ted Kaczynski, here's what he said on conservatives and technology. And then I want to get to these, these reels before we end. the conservatives are fools. They whine about the decay of traditional values, yet they enthusiastically support technological progress and economic growth. Apparently, it never occurs to them that you can't make rapid drastic changes in the technology and the economy of a society without causing rapid changes in all other aspects of society as well. And that's such rapid changes inevitably break down traditional values.
Starting point is 01:48:23 I mean, he's not wrong. I think he's oversimplifying a bit. by putting people in generalized boxes, but he's not, he's not wrong. Well, where he's not, like you said, like you said, this is many pages long. Yeah. So I don't know. 35,000 words. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:48:37 It's a bit long. It's a bit long. It's a bit long. So essentially where I would say is, um, the neo-conservatives, which is still just progressive, their idea, the mercantilism. Yes. Uh, protectionism. things like that, things that led to that that that that sucking sound at the southern border that
Starting point is 01:49:02 Ross Perrault was talking about the thing that that that that opened things up to make it a little bit more even just necessary for businesses to move to other places to find greener pastures and that and that you know government was in the business of picking winners and losers and yes capital is involved but as far as that being a free market it is not. Not. Not even close. You know, so, and most leftists and conservatives, they really don't understand. They really never get to the point of how a free market actually, how a free market actually
Starting point is 01:49:38 plays out in certain scenarios. They're always just trying to find a way to regulate things with government in their own specific styles, which is not usually too far from each other. They're usually off by a few percentage points or something like that. and that's just what it is. So, um, restrictions of freedoms,
Starting point is 01:50:00 technology as a unified system, mental health and the system, the concept of mental health in our society is defined largely by the extent to which an individual behaves in accord with the needs of the system and does, and does so not without showing signs of stress. Does so without showing signs of stress. Yeah, the needs of the system instead of the person. That's what I'm saying.
Starting point is 01:50:20 Right. We need to be disconnected from the system. Yeah. On drugs and on. happiness, antidepressants are a means of modifying an individual's internal state in such a way as to enable them to tolerate social conditions that he would otherwise find intolerable. Oh, man. You know, I mean, there's so many things.
Starting point is 01:50:37 That's what I mean about this in 1995, and I was, you know, obviously blissfully unaware of any of this in 1995, but, and you read it now, and it rings a lot different. So that would be what? So that's 31 years. Yeah. 31 years ago. All right. Rapid fire through the real.
Starting point is 01:50:53 Are you ready? Let's go. $45 million of cocaine seized after an underground tunnel between Mexico and San Diego, California was discovered under a buy-for-less store. Wow. You think, you know, we're always talking about gaps in the wall. I would love to have somebody come on to actually take even just a minimal account of what we are looking at with subterranean traffic.
Starting point is 01:51:22 And do you think it was only drugs that was trafficked in these tunnels? Oh, absolutely not. Think about the shit that was going on in these tunnels. Oh, my lord. Wow. 2,270 pounds of coke was seized from the store and four people were arrested. Only four? Yeah.
Starting point is 01:51:37 Well, yeah. Well, they face a maximum penalty of a life in prison and $10 million fine. Man. But it's California, so you never know. Now, I don't know about this guy. This sounds crazy, but it also sounds like it could be true. It's from history feels. In 1784, Confederate surgeon La Grande G. Capers published a bizarre case claiming that a Civil War bullet caused a pregnancy after passing through a soldier's testicle and into a woman's abdomen.
Starting point is 01:52:05 What? I don't know why he's helping this guy lie about cheating. But, uh, no, listen, this is what happened. You got to, you've got to research this to see if it's real. I will. The grand capers. That is the most elaborate lie for cheating on your wife. Wow.
Starting point is 01:52:26 Okay. Yeah, he claimed, according to his account, the same bullet that went through a pass to the testicle of a soldier during a battle near Raymond, Mississippi in 1863. According to his account, the same bullet then struck a nearby young woman in the abdomen. Months later, capers claimed the woman gave birth to a healthy child and that the bullet was discovered inside the infant scrotum. you hit wait what frank this bullshit this boy yeah it has to be
Starting point is 01:52:53 there's no way it's bullshit I mean no how did the so the scrotum formed around it and she didn't bleed out the scrotum I will I promise I'll look it up I'm gonna go to PubMed right now that means that means that the the bullet
Starting point is 01:53:08 passed through the testicle like grab the sperm grabbed one sperm grabbed one sperm come on on the bullet and jammed one sperm cell into perfectly into the abdomen. I mean, I suppose it, I mean, it's a little bit lower than that.
Starting point is 01:53:24 You know, I should ask, I should ask Anne Bellinger if this is possible. And then, and then the bullet stayed and was it found in the, in the infant child? This is horseshit.
Starting point is 01:53:38 Yeah, it's not. But you know what? Here's the whole thing. Makes a nice story. It doesn't make any sense and it can't be true. So the real question is, who is lying?
Starting point is 01:53:47 I don't know. I don't even know how to search this in PubMed, but I'm going to search it. Despite widespread skepticism, the tale, the tale became a staple of medical folklore and is still cited in discussion of unusual historical case reports. Oh, you know what? Can you please make a note to yourself? Let's get like top 10 most unusual historical case reports of just like things like this. That's fun. Okay.
Starting point is 01:54:13 The weirdest things. I'm making it over right now. Okay. and and talk about LaGrand G. Capers. Hold on, hold on. What's his name? La Grande. L-E.
Starting point is 01:54:26 Yeah. G-R-A-N-D. Yep. G. Capers. C-A-P-E-R-S. He's a Confederate physician, and then you know the rest. You know the rest.
Starting point is 01:54:38 All right. Bullet pregnancy. Okay. Here's another one for you. A wild fact. Okay. Some of the only survivors of the Jones Massacre on November of 1978 were the People's Temple basketball team who were playing
Starting point is 01:54:53 in a way game in Georgetown, Guyana during the mass event. Jim Jones radioed the team demanding that they take their own lives for the revolution, but they refuse. Isn't that interesting? I wonder, we should, maybe we can find that they probably wouldn't want to talk. Have you ever seen the footage of, oh, yeah. Oh, it's crazy. It's awful.
Starting point is 01:55:13 It's crazy. Have you ever heard the footage? I don't know. The audio recordings of him urging people, hearing kids crying and all of stuff, the audio recordings of him urging people to drink the Kool-Aid, get it over with, get it over with, they're on their way. You just know the parents are forcing it down children's mouth. It's fucked up.
Starting point is 01:55:36 It's like the Milgram experiment, though. You've talked about that on the show before, right? How authority figures can make people do otherwise insane things. and that kind of goes with a theme of the show. But I think there was also a senator that was killed there as well, right? Because there was a senator that was visiting, and then on his way back to the plane, wasn't he assassinated by some of,
Starting point is 01:55:58 and that's what kicked off the Kool-Aid thing? He was a... Wasn't he a senator? There was a couple people. Who was out there? Was it Gene? It wasn't Gene Shaheen. It was somebody else.
Starting point is 01:56:09 Who were the members of Congress at Jonestown? One did die. There were house reps, I think. Yeah, because I remember seeing that footage, too. No, it was Jackie Spear. Jackie Spear, who just retired a couple of years ago. Oh, he wasn't killed. She.
Starting point is 01:56:24 She. I have a vision of a God. No, Congressman Leo J. Ryan Jr. of California. He died. Okay, okay. I'm pretty sure he did. Hold on. Let me see here.
Starting point is 01:56:36 Congressman Ryan was ambushed and assassinated by People's Temple members of the nearby airstrip. That's right. Yes. But Jackie Spire got out of there. Okay. Wow. And she was in Congress until maybe about a couple of cycles ago.
Starting point is 01:56:49 Wow. Wow. Yeah, she was a nut, but still, she just, you expect somebody who survives that to be a nut. Yeah. As nutty as that, who's that congresswoman from Connecticut with the purple hair? You ever see her? Rose. It looks like Skeletor.
Starting point is 01:57:08 She's a strange one. Rose something. Yeah. Congress is a funny lot of people. Yeah. She just, I know. Wow. Yeah. I mean, the footage, I don't think I've ever heard the footage. That's probably too disturbing. But I definitely, I think, because I think the footage of the assassination at the airfield, because cameramen were filming at that, because they were filming the Congress members down there at Jonestown.
Starting point is 01:57:33 And I think they caught the assassination on film. I feel, I have a memory of hearing the gunshots and everything. Like, and I think the cameraman was killed as well. Yeah, I know. I survived, though. I know. The footage, the aerial footage of the bodies, it's just incredible. All right, here you hear, this one I think is actually quite profound. Okay. Instagram 2016.
Starting point is 01:57:56 The good old days. Did you see that Danny posted the pictures from the party on Saturday? Oh my God, we got so drunk. That was awesome. 2006. The car is on fire. And there's no driver at the wheel. The government is great.
Starting point is 01:58:16 corrupt. We're trapped in the belly of this horrible machine. And the machine is bleeding to death. Albert Einstein? No. Albert Fenstein just discover the new flying cigarette method. You just need to, um, uh, uh, doom scrolling. No, bro. Well, it's crazy how things change. Well, I was talking about 2016 there was such such optimism about everything I wasn't even really I had friends that were they were so convinced that Hillary Clinton was going
Starting point is 01:59:03 to to lose in 2016 I wasn't that convinced but we that's a that's a pretty that's quite the shot to call because I remember it was like 99% she was supposed to win yeah I know I know and I didn't think that was the case but I also just figured well listen she is not well liked
Starting point is 01:59:22 we have been ripping her apart all year but it's still like this is the machine yeah we had eight years of obama and this is what they want now of course so i was because we were already in eight years of obama i was just kind of like it was really like clown pill time and i was just having fun and it's like you know what hey listen we're going to live our lot we're going to we're going to get through this the best we can and we're going to broadcast our way through the whole thing whatever the fuck um so it was a really fun year it was a fun year for me um and and and then and then of course all that happened
Starting point is 01:59:55 and it was a really amazing end to the year it was just so fun so I that that that 10 year differential is crazy but here's some really good news that everybody should know Pixar confirms Woody will say the N word in Toy Story 5
Starting point is 02:00:10 all right good finally so he's gonna he's gonna bring it back he will be saying the N word it'll be a
Starting point is 02:00:23 responsible usage. Responsible. Okay, here is the latest from John Ward. It's three minutes long. It's nine o'clock, but who cares? Let's just keep going. Ready? I want to, he hasn't posted in a while, and it's short and it looks fun.
Starting point is 02:00:38 So let's go. Have a language remarkably similar to Chinese, according to a new study by scientists who probably should be working on something that actually fucking matters. The whale's well-known habit of clicking and beeping like retard has turned out to actually mean something. Each syllable has meaning like vowels, or as the
Starting point is 02:01:01 Chinese call them vows. And like Chinese, the specific intonation of each click can alter the meaning of the idea being expressed. The reason I mentioned that their language seems to be very similar to Chinese arises from the way sperm whales use their vocal building blocks in order to produce a kind of a tonal and spectral pattern. And so just like in Mandarin Chinese, where the same syllable can have entirely different meanings, mostly depending on the tone, or the pitch and contour. Here the study discovered that these sperm whales use rising, falling, and rising falling tones. In Chinese, the same syllable, has at least four separate meanings. It can mean mother, hemp, horse, or scold. Something extremely similar seems to happen in the whale
Starting point is 02:01:45 language. They seem to modulate the spectral properties, creating what they call a diphtongle pattern, or a kind of a gliding vowel that exists in certain human languages. or understanding this correctly, that cute baby whale from the BBC documentary wasn't asking for its mother. It was selling weed. Out of the blue, a baby had straight for the boat. That is when I knew I was in a bad neighborhood. You only see this in the worst neighborhoods. I look out the window.
Starting point is 02:02:16 It was a fucking baby standing on the corner. Hey baby. The baby said, I'm selling weed, niggas, at all. The scientists assert that in exchange for more money and pieces of it. of paper with their names on them. They can establish contact with the whales and begin to explain why Asians have eaten them to the brink of extinction.
Starting point is 02:02:47 The hope is that the sperm whales' own pension for food with tentacles will allow a cultural bridge that facilitates mutual understanding and respect. If that plan fails, the Chinese will buy the remaining whale weed and then eat the ever-living shit out of the 7.73 sperm whales that remain in its territorial waters. When asked for comment, the sperm whale's spokeswale said,
Starting point is 02:03:08 quote, Wong Pongshong, ding, ding. dong which depending on intonation means either all hail chairman Mao or my horse mother smokes sticky icky icky acky ake of further interest is that the whales are tribal they use different names for different clans like the ping pong peng the pong ping and the Ku Klux Pang all clans however remain under the thumb of a clandestine whale death sex cult that revolves around the worship of infamous whalefucker John McAfee with one whale in particular stating it's the juice that is now cancelled, debanked, and deep platform from whale tube.
Starting point is 02:03:45 Exciting times in the science of whale chatting, curing cancer not so much, but perhaps through the mastery of whale Chinese, humans might find that very whale who has the answer to cancer. That's it for today. I'm John Warden. Until next time, remember, you're a world champion, ding-dang memes, wing-wang dreams. There you go. It reminds me of that, you remember the girl who woke up sounding Chinese? No. No. Matt loved this.
Starting point is 02:04:13 Sarah has spent most of her life in Plymouth and had the accent to match until recently. So fish and chips. Chips. I say that why? Yeah. Three and a half years ago she was rushed into hospital with a migraine, which left her with a voice she didn't recognize. I haven't actually heard my voice in the conversation for nearly three years now. Wait, wait, wait.
Starting point is 02:04:38 Her initial response upon hearing how she used to her. hearing how she used to sound from a bank telephone recording was too long for her old accent to return. Yeah, I'm not actually ringing about my policy though, I'm running for a quote. Do you show up my policy number? I know it's me, but I feel like I want to say, well, she make a good speak, she's speaker good. But like that, not me no more. There's one picture you can see all the facts. Sarah has been diagnosed with foreign accent syndrome.
Starting point is 02:05:11 The condition has only 150 known cases worldwide. Although it's called foreign accent syndrome, it's literally... That's what John Bon Jovi has because he thinks he's a cowboy. There's an impediment. There's nothing foreign about it. Obviously, I don't have a Chinese accent. I've never been to China like that. You'd have to spend a considerable amount of time in China to pick up the accent.
Starting point is 02:05:35 So it's impossible. Deep mud, tough night, night bus. Although she doesn't know why this has happened, months of speech therapy with specialist Martin Duckworth at Marjohn's in Pilemouth have provided some insights. I actually feel quite comfortable with my speech now. We can't give you any definitive answers about exactly what's happening, which is why we're following Sarah's journey.
Starting point is 02:06:01 But some small changes happened within her brain, and they've had an impact on the way she organizes her speech output. I'm done, I'm finished. Despite finding no answers or cure, Sarah has learned how to live with her new voice. It took a long time to actually accept that I was the problem for me.
Starting point is 02:06:23 I was the one making me feel bad. I don't know if I... But it's not, it doesn't seem like it's just an accent. It's it... She's using the English language differently as well. I know. Wow. I wonder if Lauren would keep me a around if that happened to me hi I'm a Frank I'm knowing I am so happy to have
Starting point is 02:06:44 happy to have a new baby thank you for my dinner tonight we make we make a baby name now I'm so thankful thank for this meal breakfast favorite breakfast I know well I the Japanese one is a lot more fun to do oh boy oh boy but And, that's 150 cases. That is a, that is a boutique disease. That is a load of shit. Wow. Yeah, I was going to say.
Starting point is 02:07:11 150 cases. What I mean? Bullshit. Wow. Oh, okay. Well, bye, by then. I know. Well, if anybody ever comes down with, uh, foreign accent disease, you'll just let
Starting point is 02:07:24 me know. Call in the show, please. Call into the show. I'd like to hear a little bit more about it. It's good to have you have. How did you find that guy, Frank? Which guy, a hopeful theorist? I'm just looking around.
Starting point is 02:07:34 in the chat room. John Ward? I don't know. I don't know who. Steve, appreciate you guys. Good luck this weekend. Let me put Steve Ellis in there. We're going to pick a winner now. We're going to pick the winner now?
Starting point is 02:07:45 What are you doing? Are you okay? Shaken Bake, who I wish he was coming to the state. It was so awesome. Shaken Bake was here for the jamboree. Yeah, I remember. The colonists in the British Empire had the same weapons technology. I don't know about you, but I don't have or have any friends that have any nuclear
Starting point is 02:08:02 weapons or fleet of MQ 9 drones with hellfire missiles. And I don't have that. Nope. I don't have that either. I'll check my Airbnb and see if they've got it in the closet. Indeed. Kobe Shumway says second try to get in. Kobe Shumway.
Starting point is 02:08:21 Somebody says in the chat, quite frankly. I know. Shagabake says the ones who make the rules, always the first to break them. Marvin is one of the greats. He got so stuck on the basement stair. stuck on the basement stairs the hardware store that's what stopped him within whistling diesel rebuilt the killdozer he might use on a tennessee courthouse soon who who's whistling diesel i've never heard that one shake and bake is in there for another one you got shake and
Starting point is 02:08:49 bake you better get that to me because i want i know i want to know what you're talking about who whistling diesel is r t three tech says always an intelligent variety filmed filled show rt 3 tech. Thank you. Pablo Wenskevar says, hi, Frank. And Jaquandra Goulinelo. Skobar. Good. And Sto Sto Stoepi, G. and Frank in the quite frankly house, loving it always.
Starting point is 02:09:15 Sto Stub is in there. And Carmenina, that was from before. Okay, we are all caught up. Oh, that's the first name of the killdozer? The Whistling Diesel Killdozer? Is that like the full name? Whistling Diesel was the name of it? I guess so. A hundred and 555,000 pound killdozer.
Starting point is 02:09:31 Wait, is that a realdozer? right? Three and a quarter inch thick steel plates with five and a half inch gap in between, which the team then filled with. So it looks like somebody, or maybe this is the version that you were saying that they rebuilt a 3D model of it, and that's what they call it. I'm not sure.
Starting point is 02:09:48 Okay. I'm just trying to, I'm just peripherally looking at it. Well, we'll do some fact checking on the flip side. We have a lot of things to do on the flip side, although we won't be doing the full hour because we got a big day tomorrow. We got a big day.
Starting point is 02:10:00 drawing have a great time tomorrow thank you i can't wait to really meet so many more of you guys and gals yeah next it's good i can't i can't wait to see everybody tomorrow and in saturday i'm really getting excited yeah uh last year i had a lot more like nerves this year i'm just like i'm going to eat i'm gonna eat everyone's gonna eat on saturday man it's gonna be wild yeah there you go okay and uh i got stoose stube and everybody jr at the lake silly boar frank and jimera kwi and then rev and J.R. at the lake at the end there. All right, here we go. Out of 136 entries throughout this week, who is winning? The silver, the bronze, the silver, the copper, the chocolate from yescacao.com. Marge's straight people like rainbows, two, embroidered shirt. And remember, even if you don't win
Starting point is 02:10:52 the, the medal here tonight, quite frankly, dot gold is run by Tony Arterburn. You use promo code frankly on anything over there, even if it is just a couple of, you know, a couple of constitutional quarters, you use promo code frankly and he's sending you free silver. Get yourself an ounce of silver. He's sending you some dime. Whatever the hell it is, quite frankly dot gold. That is silver, I still believe, is going to the moon. And that is Robin McCutcheon says $10,000 an ounce. So quite frankly, that's not financial advice. No, too late.
Starting point is 02:11:31 Can't take it back. Anyway, quite frankly, not gold. Thank you so much, Tony, and thank you so much to everybody else. Oh, and I'll get these these polarites made right now. Hold on. Watch, shield your eyes, epileptics. Oh, you should have done one together with the two red shirts. Yeah, hold on, Jay.
Starting point is 02:11:49 You got to say hi. Hold on, wait. Oh, by the way, I'm going to be walking around with this Polaroid. Oh, boy. I bought 110 slides all weekend. I'm going to be walking around, taking pictures and giving them to people. Ready, say, say what's up? There you go.
Starting point is 02:12:03 Okay, so Jay's now sending those out. Who's the winner? Here we go. And, wow. Smoke Sesh. Wow, guys, smoke sash, unpilled. Let me just say something. Smoke Sash, I haven't seen him in the chat room in a while.
Starting point is 02:12:21 He put one, one out of 136. And I'm telling you, just got to be in it to win it. I love these types of, uh, It just shows the probabilities. Smoke says, get in touch to me tomorrow. Great. Tonight, quick, tell me where to send this. And tell me what things you don't want.
Starting point is 02:12:40 And I'll give it to somebody else and we'll redraw. I should have made a first place and a second place prize. You know what? Let's draw again. I'm going to find a second place prize for somebody. Here we go. And wait. No.
Starting point is 02:12:59 That just, hold on. No, no, no. That just repeated. That was my great drum roll. That just repeated smoke sesh. They really want to give him a prize. He only has one entry that. So something wrong one.
Starting point is 02:13:10 Oh, oh. Whoops. I hit the wrong button. You just re-first the screen? Yeah. No, I had to pick another name. Oh, okay. And I clicked to pick again.
Starting point is 02:13:21 Okay, here we go. Another name, and it is Captain, Captain Super Aids. Where the hell the Captain Super Aids? I've never even heard that name before. Was that on YouTube? Captain Super. No, that's on Twitch. Wow.
Starting point is 02:13:44 That's from two hours ago. Captain Super Aids on Twitch. I can't. So Captain Super Aids. Well. And SmokeSess, you better email me, Frank, it quite frankly. I hope that screen name is a joke. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:13:58 I'll split up the Polaroids between you guys and I'll find something for Captain Super Aids. I'll send you another, um, another copper round and, uh, we'll, we'll take care of that. Okay. So they, somebody in the chat said, who are these people? Twitch. Captain Super AIDS is on Twitch. That's great.
Starting point is 02:14:18 He said before also, thanks for years of entertainment. Uh, and he sent some bits. Well, that's so cool. Yeah. I mean, then I love when years of entertainment people win. That's great. Like he's last, he's laughing in the chat room right now. Like his screen name is now went from unknown to famous.
Starting point is 02:14:36 Yeah. That is a beautiful. Anyway, okay, guys, over to the flip side. And we'll see you. I'll still be live for a Friday morning coffee stream. Just for a little bit because I just want to hang out with you guys, watch some reels and enjoy the first cup of coffee and what is going to be a very big day. Health Reclamationprojects.com. Yes.
Starting point is 02:14:58 We'll be doing a lot. You're going to be able to meet me and you're going to be able to meet. Nurse Jenny, if you're there this weekend. Oh, I can't wait to see Jenny again. Come hang out, ask us questions. You're not bothering us. We talk about health literally seven days a week. So people always in social settings are like, I hate to bother.
Starting point is 02:15:16 I'm like, it's okay, go ahead. Don't worry about it. This is what we're here for. I have this rash. Don't do that. Don't do that. Okay. There's my line.
Starting point is 02:15:24 See, everyone asks about limits, right? There's my limit. Don't show me your rash. Come say hi. Don't show me your rash. All right. That's my line. Well, you know what?
Starting point is 02:15:32 We're going to keep going. We're going to go until, well, maybe on 945. Who the hell knows? Not quite 10 enough. I'm only five minutes out on the road now. This is the night we stay on as long as you want. I'm just kidding. I know.
Starting point is 02:15:42 Good night, everybody. Have a good one. Thank you so much. Check out Jay's website and his substack. Oh, yeah. Yeah, yeah. Perpetualhealth. Subsdack.com.
Starting point is 02:15:50 That thing is starting to grow. I can't wait. Good for you. I have a good one, guys. Take care. I'll catch you on the flip side. Yes. Thank you, everybody.
Starting point is 02:16:07 much for a wonderful week and now for a great weekend. I'll see you on Monday, no doubt about it, but I'll also see you tomorrow morning for a little cup of coffee. Keep your notifications on and make sure you're subscribed on YouTube. So anytime I go live from the events, you'll be able to know about it. And now go over to quite frankly.combe. And press play or click the link I'm about to drop in the chat. The flip side is where it's at. Thanks for everything. Love you. Click the link I'm about to drop.

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