Argue This! #165 Uniforms For School

Episode 165 October 09, 2023 01:06:57
Argue This! #165 Uniforms For School
Argue This!
Argue This! #165 Uniforms For School

Oct 09 2023 | 01:06:57

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Hosted By

Alex The Truck

Show Notes

[Explicit Language]

Should all students be required to wear uniforms at school?

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Episode Transcript

[00:00:00] Speaker A: Alrighty. Alrighty. It is. Argue this with Troniwani. Yo and Alex. A truck. Welcome back, everyone. Let's just go ahead and get the fucking plugs out at the beginning. You can follow me, Instagram and Twitter or X or whatever the fuck you call it. I'm alex the truck. I'm Alex truck all over the internet. Tron? Is the Troniwani on YouTube? [00:00:24] Speaker B: New format that getting the plugs out early. [00:00:27] Speaker A: Might as well just knock them the fuck out. [00:00:32] Speaker B: Heard. [00:00:34] Speaker A: So I saw this thing on the internet the other day. [00:00:41] Speaker B: This thing on the internet thing on the internet. It always starts with the internet. [00:00:46] Speaker A: Yeah, that's where I get my fucking inspiration for fucking arguing topics. But there are certain private schools that have uniforms. Should every fucking school have a uniform? Public, private, all of them. Should they all have uniforms? That way you lose your individualism and get ready for the workforce that makes you wear a uniform anyway? [00:01:21] Speaker B: I would say it depends. And this is what I mean by that. Right? So I think the default should be a uniform. And then if the parents want, they could be able to opt their kids out of wearing a uniform. Mainly because I do think having a uniform helps with the inequalities of being labeled the poor and stuff like that. Like the K shoe brand and stuff like that. But as well, I still think the parents should have the N say in it. And when you say that what's it called when they get a job that they'll have to wear a uniform? Some jobs they don't have to wear a uniform. Especially like kids these days, dude. [00:02:09] Speaker A: Like, if you work at Taco Bell, you have to wear a uniform. [00:02:12] Speaker B: Right? If you work at Taco Bell, you do have to wear a uniform. But if you work from home on a remote job, you don't really have to wear a uniform. [00:02:20] Speaker A: Yeah, if you're working at home entering Data, you can be naked at home and just be entering data. [00:02:26] Speaker B: Can't be naked. You have to have a shirt on. [00:02:28] Speaker A: Oh, do they have a camera on your yeah, typically. So yeah, you have to wear a uniform. [00:02:33] Speaker B: No, it's not a uniform because yes, in traditional sense you're not wearing a uniform, but in company culture you have a range of what your shirt or pants and stuff you could wear. So that's why I say it depends. [00:02:55] Speaker A: I mean, for me in my job as a truck driver, I have a little bit of lenience on what I can wear. Just a tiny bit. But I have to wear black pants and one of my work shirts. Now, if I'm wearing like a sweatshirt or whatever over it, then I don't have to. They'd like me to, but I don't have to. I mean, at this point, I've been delivering to the same customers for like eight years, right? So they know who the fuck I am. I walk up? Hey, Alex. What's up? And they know what to expect. If I was a new know I'd wear like a shirt with my name on it. None of my shirts have names on. Yeah, like I went to a private military boarding school and we had to wear uniforms every day. We had multiple pairs of these uniforms and we had work uniforms because it was a boarding school and we lived there and we'd have to go outside and do work. So we had blue jeans and colored shirts depending on what rank you are in the school, right. So you're coming in, you're an orange shirt. After you've been there for a bit you get a yellow shirt and then every normal student gets a burgundy shirt. And if you're a captain, you're one of the five captains of the school, you get a red shirt and if you're bad you get a brown shirt. These were the uniforms said the name of the boarding school and all that shit on it. And I'm like cool, I know what to expect. No one's better than anybody else. You can wear whatever shoes you want. So if you want to have that little bit of individualism there, sure. And then if you want to have a special day where you can wear whatever the fuck you want, cool. But the amount of fucking kids that will look down and make fun of somebody because they can't afford a nice shirt like just get all these kids like a pack of undershirts and some overshirts and the school has laundry facilities. Every school does. And for the poor kids that can afford it, have them bring in their stuff on Friday and they're able to take their clean shirts home and at least have some fucking clean shirts and pants. [00:05:49] Speaker B: Sounded very little socialist there. But I agree with it. I agree with everything you're saying right now. [00:05:54] Speaker A: See people will see socialism, communism and be like, oh that's awful. I'm like, no, it can work in certain situations. [00:06:06] Speaker B: So are you saying then that the answer is a blend of socialism and capitalism? [00:06:13] Speaker A: Yeah, I mean that's exactly what America is. [00:06:16] Speaker B: Except for socialism is for corporations. [00:06:19] Speaker A: In America, if your house is burning down, how much do you have to pay the firefighters to put it out? Nothing. Socialism. [00:06:28] Speaker B: That's one point. How many times was corporations bailed out during the 2008 and the 2020 and. [00:06:38] Speaker A: Other times because I guarantee you they have dirt on one another. They go to like Jeffrey Epstein's Island and it's like, oh Mr. Banker dude, I saw you fucking that little twelve year old boy and I have a video of it. You better bail me the fuck out or that's going to get out and you're going to go to jail for the rest of your life and lose everything. So they fucking go through jump through hoops and make sure that everyone is doing everything right. It's the same thing as gang mentality. In order to be canonized into a fucking gang, you have to go commit a crime. [00:07:12] Speaker B: Gang mentality. [00:07:13] Speaker A: Gang mentality. That's exactly it. [00:07:16] Speaker B: Do you believe there's gang mentality in the police? [00:07:19] Speaker A: Oh, yeah. It's the world's biggest gang. [00:07:23] Speaker B: All right. Just want to make sure. [00:07:26] Speaker A: No, the police is 100% a gang. They wear the same colors. They're like the Crips with a badge. They were blue. I didn't think you got that. You looked at me confusedly. I don't know what color the crypts were. [00:07:49] Speaker B: No clue at all. That would be blue. [00:07:54] Speaker A: I mean, they're called the Crips because they go around Crippling people. The police. They're called the Cripples? Yeah. Not every joke is a fucking murdering joke. Just like, I'm not a police officer, I'm not looking to murder people. But, yeah, as far as police go, they are a gang that fucking gets each other's backs. The amount of times I'll see a fucking fucking chest video what is that called? Body cam footage of somebody drunk driving their police cruiser around and falling asleep or crashing it. And they're, like, try and get their backs as much as they can. It's like no, every single police officer that commits a crime, it should be, like, quadrupled. [00:09:07] Speaker B: That's fair. I don't remember what city. I want to say it was La, but I absolutely could be wrong. But there was actually, like, police gangs where they have their own tattoos, they committed crimes, and it was a police gang unit. [00:09:23] Speaker A: Well, I mean, they know UCS and shit like that where you have to go undercover and infiltrate a gang in order to take it down. [00:09:38] Speaker B: These were, like, cops that formed their own police gang. [00:09:46] Speaker A: They all do. They're all friends. You spend every fucking day together. And if one of my coworkers, like, one of the ones I'm close with, was to get in trouble and I can have their back and they wouldn't get in trouble, I would do that. But the ones that I don't know are the new ones. It's like, I don't know you that much. Go fuck yourself. [00:10:12] Speaker B: That's fair. [00:10:16] Speaker A: It's like Derek Chauvin out yet? [00:10:21] Speaker B: What? [00:10:22] Speaker A: Chauvin? [00:10:23] Speaker B: Why would he be out? [00:10:26] Speaker A: Like, how long did he get in jail? [00:10:30] Speaker B: I don't remember. How long? [00:10:32] Speaker A: Oh, federal prison, 21 years in prison. State sentence, 22 and a half years. [00:10:41] Speaker B: But, yeah, it was out of La because the FBI got involved in shit like that. I totally remember this. [00:10:50] Speaker A: Yeah, they don't care. They are untouchable. Who are you going to call? The police. They are the police. They are the top dogs that happened this year. That happens every fucking year. [00:11:03] Speaker B: That's fair. [00:11:05] Speaker A: Where police fucking go do some fucked up shit, get in trouble, and if you're one of the ones that are trying to snitch, they make sure you leave or they make sure you die. [00:11:18] Speaker B: I, again, could be wrong and I'm going to fact check myself in a moment. But I'm pretty sure it was the Republicans that voted against national police database for, like, cops that got fired and other shit like that or under investigation. [00:11:33] Speaker A: Good. [00:11:36] Speaker B: That it was voted against. So there shouldn't be a database of these police officers that did crimes so they could continue doing what they're doing now of, like, leaving an apartment and moving to a different apartment. [00:11:50] Speaker A: Yeah, go for it. [00:11:52] Speaker B: We're talking about how the police were bad. What? Okay, go ahead, explain. [00:11:57] Speaker A: The police are bad, but for the same reason that if you were to leave, like, say you committed a crime in okay. [00:12:06] Speaker B: Uh huh. [00:12:07] Speaker A: And then you moved out here to know the crime is in California, and as long as it's not like, a felony, you're fine coming over here. They're not going to extradite you for that California crime back over to California. [00:12:24] Speaker B: Okay, so it's okay for a cop that's been charged with a bunch of police brutalities, right. So instead of getting fired, he resigns and then he just moves over to a city or two. [00:12:39] Speaker A: If he does a crime, if he is a criminal that is doing crimes, then yes, fucking have that as public knowledge where you can go look it up. Or you should be able to call the old fucking precinct where he is from. Hey, why did he leave? Oh, here's his records. Boom. [00:13:02] Speaker B: Right. But because of the police union, which is one of the strongest unions, and because of what's it called agreements they have, they don't get the record for just moving when they move to a different department. [00:13:16] Speaker A: Yeah, but you should be able to call and get those records, which is. [00:13:19] Speaker B: What the national database would have done. [00:13:22] Speaker A: Nah, you don't need to know everything, because what if you fucked up just a little bit and now you can't get a fucking job as a police officer? [00:13:31] Speaker B: As a police officer, you should be the most outstanding citizen amongst us. [00:13:41] Speaker A: What if someone makes up some bullshit on you? What if someone fucking puts some shit in your file and you're like, I'm leaving this department and going somewhere else that's not crooked, and then they fucking go and put in, like, 100 rapes on your fucking charges. And then you're like, what the fuck is this? [00:14:00] Speaker B: Why is it always an argument of what if when we're trying to address the problem of what is right now, we should address the what is right now and handle the what if. The what if happens later. We should go ahead and laws aren't made to be in stone. They're supposed to be something that we could change as society changes. And so, yes, we should be able to have a national database, and then if we find out that the national database is being manipulated, then we should go ahead and address that as well. [00:14:39] Speaker A: But we should address well, I'm against national databases because I don't want a national database of whoever has a gun. Because once you start one national database, all the national databases start. [00:14:50] Speaker B: We already have a national database for criminals. Should we not have one for criminals? We have one for DMV. Should we not have it for DMV? [00:14:57] Speaker A: Absolutely. [00:14:58] Speaker B: We already have it for your gun registration. Should we not have it? There's already national databases that were already around that we already implemented. We can't just be like, oh, well, I'm against it, so I don't think we should go ahead and create one. Well, you already have them. [00:15:13] Speaker A: You already have it. [00:15:14] Speaker B: You already have it with your Social Security number. [00:15:18] Speaker A: Yeah, that just says my credit. That's it. If a cop commits a crime I'm going to repeat this if a cop commits a crime, they should have to deal with quadruple consequences. So if they fucking go and kill somebody 25 to life. Quadruple consequences. Fucking life. To fucking forex life. Derek Chauvin should spend the rest of his life in fucking prison. He's going to get out when he's like 60 some odd years old, and I'm sure somebody's going to come and stab the fuck out of him. I don't even think he's going to live the entire time in prison. I think he's going to die in prison. [00:15:59] Speaker B: That's also what you said about what's it called 69 still being alive. [00:16:06] Speaker A: Yeah, but he's getting the shit kicked out of him, which is fucking hilarious. It's like even better. [00:16:24] Speaker B: I was just awkwardly silent because I'm looking for this one thing that just happened. But this one cop had a total of 58 complaints against him over use of force and sexual harassment and other stuff like that, right? He shot 30 shots into a guy running away and was acquitted for it. You think that this information shouldn't be on his record for stuff like that? [00:16:52] Speaker A: Well, it's obviously on his record because you just found it. [00:16:55] Speaker B: 58 complaints. [00:16:56] Speaker A: You just found it, right? So when you hire a police officer, me, personally, I try to cops do. [00:17:07] Speaker B: You think are hired with records and stuff like this? How many do you think are not hired because of the record? [00:17:15] Speaker A: A lot. Okay, so I try to join the police force and I try to join the state troopers. The amount of information they demand from you is wild, right? [00:17:30] Speaker B: But once you're actually an officer, switching departments and stuff like this is a fucking common tactic. What the fuck do you mean though you shouldn't have this? Do you even know what you're arguing against right now? Like legitly cops do. This is a thing in the police that they get ready to get fired or they're under investigation. So they resign at this department and they just move over to a different department and get hired again. [00:18:00] Speaker A: How about this? [00:18:01] Speaker B: That's why the Black Lives Matter was started and talked about with the national. [00:18:07] Speaker A: If you're going to get fired, do it quicker. Fucking big boom. You're fucking fired. Badge and gun, you're done. [00:18:13] Speaker B: You can't do that because of a fucking police union is what I'm talking about. [00:18:18] Speaker A: Then get rid of the police union. [00:18:24] Speaker B: You're an idiot. You can't get rid of a fucking union. That's against the law. You have the right to unionize. Hence why we're going through you have. [00:18:35] Speaker A: The right to disband a union. [00:18:37] Speaker B: You don't have a right to dis. [00:18:45] Speaker A: So if a union starts taking advantage of all the workers and being like, hey, guess what? [00:18:50] Speaker B: Fucking the workers have a right to disband the union. You're right. The cops aren't going to disband their own union. It's just the same as the cops investigating themselves or anyone else investigating themselves. How are they going to go ahead and hold themselves to accountability if they're investigating themselves where they're the ones who's. [00:19:10] Speaker A: How about have some people that are the ones that investigate the cops. They're not cops. They're the people that investigate cops and investigate all the fucking shit that they do. And you can put whoever the fuck you want in there and they're the ones that go through and be like, okay officer, you are a piece of shit. Badge and gun. You are off the force and you can never come back to the force. Make it like a dishonorable discharge. [00:19:47] Speaker B: Right? And to do that you have to get the unions to agree to a different change in the whole system. Whereas in a national database, it's not something that the unions would be able to vote on. [00:20:03] Speaker A: They would still hire these people. They're in desperate need for cops because people are fucking quitting left and right because there's some cops that don't. [00:20:12] Speaker B: If they're in desperate need of cops, wouldn't you have been hired in your own example? [00:20:17] Speaker A: No, I just didn't give them the information and I fucking stopped the whole application process for the local PD. I walked into an orientation thing and learned everything that they need to do for state troopers. There's like a test that has about 2000 people taking it and only the top like 5% of those people get to move on to the next step. Which is cool. I didn't make that fucking cut. [00:20:57] Speaker B: You're saying that it is harder than the bar? [00:21:02] Speaker A: Yes, it they don't do any background checks to go do this test. Now if you fail at like if you do the test you get the top five and then they do the background check and then they're like, yeah, go fuck yourself. Then they'll move on to the top 10% and they'll just go down the list until they get good qualified candidates. But in order to join the state troopers, you cannot have done drugs within the past ten years. That includes marijuana. That includes everything. [00:21:51] Speaker B: Right? [00:21:52] Speaker A: So we're already out. I'm not out, motherfucker. You did drugs ten minutes ago. [00:22:02] Speaker B: No, I'll be okay. [00:22:06] Speaker A: But yeah, they put you under a lie detector test and make you swear and all kinds of shit. [00:22:13] Speaker B: Clinch your butthole. [00:22:14] Speaker A: Is that a thing? [00:22:16] Speaker B: It used to be a thing. Clinch and, like, lie detectors back in. [00:22:21] Speaker A: Early 2000s, clinching your butthole would work. [00:22:26] Speaker B: Yeah. Clinching and clinching. [00:22:31] Speaker A: I kind of want to buy a lie detector and learn how to beat it. Then make, like, a YouTube series on how to beat the lie detector. And then if you want to get personalized training on how to beat a lie detector, I'll do that, dude. Imagine that. Imagine you're you can go into a lie detector and it's know, Alex taught me how to beat this shit. Now I'm ready for it. [00:23:02] Speaker B: You know, most lie detectors are not admissible in court because of that. [00:23:07] Speaker A: Yeah? No, it's not for court shit. It's for getting into the state patrol. [00:23:14] Speaker B: That's fair. [00:23:15] Speaker A: And most jobs cannot use a lie detector. Like those big old posters that they have in the back, they're like, yeah, they can't use a lie detector here, but if they catch, like, drugs in your piss, then yeah, you're fucked. [00:23:34] Speaker B: Yeah. That's why you just buy a thing. A kit. [00:23:39] Speaker A: Do you have a kit? [00:23:41] Speaker B: What's up? [00:23:42] Speaker A: Do you have a kit? [00:23:43] Speaker B: Yeah. [00:23:44] Speaker A: That's wild. Is it the one you drink and you piss real clear or no, it's fake pee. Those fake pee? [00:23:52] Speaker B: Yeah. [00:23:54] Speaker A: I feel like I should just pee in little fake dick bladders and sell them between me and my wife. I feel like we could sell fucking real pee to people under the guise that they're going to use it for golden showers. And we do not promote using it for passing a drug test or lying to your parole officer. But if you do that's on you. [00:24:40] Speaker B: Your wife wouldn't be able to do it. [00:24:42] Speaker A: Why not? [00:24:44] Speaker B: They eat out of wolf. [00:24:46] Speaker A: Oh, yeah. Fuck. I like how you called my wife they but I could do it. I don't do drugs. [00:25:04] Speaker B: You could. [00:25:06] Speaker A: And then boom. Hey, guys. Fake pee for everybody. And because I'm pretty sure they look at the fucking horror moments and the piss to make sure it's male or female. It's like, hey, you just gave us, like, dog piss. [00:25:25] Speaker B: No, I do wonder how they do it with the trans and everything going around and how all that works out. [00:25:35] Speaker A: I'm sure it's fine. [00:25:37] Speaker B: I just wonder if that's something you have to disclose to your yeah. [00:25:42] Speaker A: When you go in for a piss test, they ask you a million fucking questions. I do piss tests all the time, at least whenever they give them to me. And yeah, I just go in and be like, yes, piss test. And I piss in a cup. And they're like, okay. [00:26:04] Speaker B: They ask a bunch of questions. I don't remember last time they asking me a bunch of questions why I took my test. [00:26:09] Speaker A: Well, for me, they do. They have me fill out, like, a whole sheet. [00:26:14] Speaker B: Yeah, I don't remember most of that. [00:26:17] Speaker A: It's because you do weed, you forget everything. [00:26:19] Speaker B: That's fair. It's also been like a year and a half many balloons ago. [00:26:25] Speaker A: Yeah. Every fucking two years I have to go in and give them my piss. They say they don't test it for drugs, but I don't trust that for shit. [00:26:34] Speaker B: Why don't you trust that? They wouldn't lie. [00:26:39] Speaker A: Well, they test it for sugar to see if I have diabetes. [00:26:42] Speaker B: Yeah, but yeah, your job makes you take a diabetes test? [00:26:50] Speaker A: No, the government does, okay? It's for a med card. It's for a medical examination card. They make sure that all my fingers work. I can see, I can hear, I can do all this shit. And I get paid the entire time to do it, too. [00:27:06] Speaker B: Yeah. I was under the impression you just had to do, like, a regular physical, if that makes sense. [00:27:13] Speaker A: Yeah, the physicals are different. Like, every damn time. Like the last physical I did, I went to a place and they're like, yeah, we don't have anybody here. And so I had to go to a place on Saturday, which is, like, across town. It was like, the only place that was open on Saturdays. And I had to wait a few hours, but I got paid to do it, okay. Which is very cool. And they're like, oh, is this a drug test? No, it's not a drug test. I'm like, you guys are going to just test over drugs anyway. Might as well. You already have it. [00:28:00] Speaker B: You think so? [00:28:03] Speaker A: It's not really worth the risk. [00:28:06] Speaker B: No, not worth the risk is true. But I don't think they could legally do it if they're telling you it's worth one thing. [00:28:16] Speaker A: I mean, I'm not paying for the doctor's visit and I sign a fucking piece of paper releasing all this information to my employer. [00:28:26] Speaker B: That's fair. [00:28:29] Speaker A: So it's like, hey, sign this, releases this, makes it so you can't sue us for giving this information to your employer, and bada bing, bada boom. [00:28:46] Speaker B: No, that's fair. I just didn't think about it like that. [00:28:52] Speaker A: Yeah, I have no problem with them doing what they need to do. Making sure as a drug user yourself, do you think we should just legalize all the drugs and say, fuck it. So should we pull an organ and just be like, yeah, just don't do drugs at work. And if you shook to work high, you're fired. But if you want to smoke crack on your weekends, smoke crack on your weekends. Go for it? [00:29:30] Speaker B: I do feel yes. I also think there should be caveats, like you say, for jobs, for things like that and whatnot. [00:29:44] Speaker A: Yeah, I mean, if if you're fucking driving a truck across country, you shouldn't be able to be doing math. [00:29:55] Speaker B: Not while you're on the job. [00:29:58] Speaker A: But if you have like a weekend and you're like, fuck, I need to get this car done, and you get your gurgler out and you smoke a bit of meth, go for it. [00:30:09] Speaker B: But man, your wording of out of the drug user yourself makes it sound all bad. [00:30:16] Speaker A: Weed and coffee is a drug. [00:30:19] Speaker B: Weed and coffee is not a drug. It is a drug. [00:30:24] Speaker A: It's a hardcore drug. [00:30:25] Speaker B: It is a drug. [00:30:32] Speaker A: It's the most addictive of the drugs. Well, no, that's meth. But meth and heroin are like the most addictive. But weed is easy to get addicted to. Like if the zombies started running down the street today and you were to never smoke a blunt again in your life, would you be able to do that? [00:30:59] Speaker B: Yes, but it'll be very sad. I'll be a very anxious person. I'd be like, we're talking to zombies, bro. Be real. But I'm being honest though. I won't be a happy person. And that wouldn't be on my first outing of supplies. Maybe my second. But my first outing would be like books and information that I don't know, and what's it called, equipment that I need. And then the second outing would be like, again, food, more equipment. And then pot. [00:31:39] Speaker A: See, I would go get food and then just kind of hunker down because it's going to be wild for the first little bit. [00:31:49] Speaker B: Yeah. But there's a lot of information that you don't know about surviving that you don't think about as a average person in the States. And so I do think that grabbing a survival book from a library would be immensely help your chances to survive legitly. Because most people don't think about what you could eat, how to make stuff, stuff like that. I already have a survival book of just basic stuff I should know. And growing through that, I wouldn't have known some of the knots to tie except for a basic knot. You know what I mean? [00:32:30] Speaker A: The Anarchist Cookbook. [00:32:34] Speaker B: The internet's not going to be up for the whole time. [00:32:39] Speaker A: No, it's a real book you can really buy. [00:32:41] Speaker B: No, I know, but you're not going to be able to go buy that book as the apocalypse is happening. [00:32:49] Speaker A: The libraries have it. [00:32:51] Speaker B: Not all libraries have it. [00:32:55] Speaker A: If I go online right now and just be like the Anarchist Cookbook near me, $20, right? Oh, I can buy it. Used acceptable for 1657. Hell yeah. [00:33:25] Speaker B: So you're saving yourself three something. [00:33:30] Speaker A: Emergency war surgery. Yeah. [00:33:36] Speaker B: Again, it's not going to be guaranteed out the library. If you think of a basic survival books, those are going to be at most bookstores. [00:33:57] Speaker A: They have a paper bag for $923.75. Shit. That doesn't exist anymore. Like telephone freaking and shit like that. [00:34:19] Speaker B: Heard. [00:34:22] Speaker A: Time, is it? Oh, shit. I'm only at 34 minutes. So back to the beginning. Fucking uniforms. Like, would you be okay with your kid being forced to wear a uniform in school? [00:34:44] Speaker B: They have to already. Because of Rotzi? [00:34:48] Speaker A: Because of Rotzi. [00:34:49] Speaker B: Junior Reserve office training corps. [00:34:56] Speaker A: General Reserve. [00:34:57] Speaker B: Junior Jrot. Junior Reserve Officer Training Corps. Rotzi is Reserve Officer Training Corps in high school. [00:35:07] Speaker A: I don't know why you call it Rotzi. It's ROTC, but. [00:35:14] Speaker B: When I was in school, most people in Rotzi called it Rossi and say ROTC. [00:35:20] Speaker A: When I was in military boarding school, T-R-O-T-C. Yeah, when I was in military boarding school, they called it ROTC. [00:35:27] Speaker B: Yep. When I was in Roti, that's what they called it. [00:35:31] Speaker A: You make it sound like it's a fun thing to do. [00:35:33] Speaker B: It was fun. I had tons of fun. Discipline was great. We got to do what's called training. I was part of the rifle squad. I was also a squad leader. [00:35:45] Speaker A: Did you shoot rifles in ROTC? [00:35:49] Speaker B: Yeah. But this is also in Texas. [00:35:52] Speaker A: Yeah, you get born, like, here's a fucking 1911, and you're like you're like just sucking on the gun like it's a nipple. [00:36:03] Speaker B: But yeah, it was hella fun. We got to do one of the funnest things was, like, repelling and stuff like that. [00:36:13] Speaker A: Yeah, repelling. Girls, stay away from my virginity. Women. I'm doing ROTC once a year. [00:36:20] Speaker B: They would drop us off in the middle of nowhere with, like, a map and compass and was like, find your way back. [00:36:29] Speaker A: And now people just pull out their Google maps and it's that way. [00:36:43] Speaker B: Because. [00:36:44] Speaker A: I'm sure there's people that fucking sneak, like, a phone in. [00:36:47] Speaker B: Oh, yeah, probably. It'd probably be easier just sneak a smartwatch in because you could take off the straps and you still have the watch part. [00:36:55] Speaker A: Yeah, as long as it does wireless has a SIM card attached, then you can just make boop boop that way. [00:37:06] Speaker B: Yeah, it's probably what they have never even thought of that. [00:37:09] Speaker A: Just sneak it in their butthole or whatever. [00:37:11] Speaker B: But I was born in the late 19 hundreds, so we didn't have that. [00:37:14] Speaker A: Yeah, none of us did. [00:37:15] Speaker B: We had pagers and flip phones still. [00:37:17] Speaker A: I didn't even get a pager. [00:37:19] Speaker B: Oh, I didn't say we. Well, I had a pager, but yeah, I had a pager because I sold drugs. [00:37:27] Speaker A: Of course you did. With a little bit of gold in a page. So you're okay. But. [00:37:42] Speaker B: That'S why I say that parents should have the option to sign out, like opt out of that if they want. [00:37:48] Speaker A: Why would they do that? It should just be for everybody. If you want to opt them out, you have to home school them. [00:37:56] Speaker B: I'm against homeschooling. [00:37:57] Speaker A: Why? [00:37:58] Speaker B: Because there's no real curriculum with homeschooling. [00:38:03] Speaker A: My wife is homeschooled. [00:38:04] Speaker B: I know. There's no real curriculum with homeschooling. [00:38:08] Speaker A: There's no real curriculum in regular school either. [00:38:11] Speaker B: Yeah, there so besides what's going on in Florida right now and Texas, there's basic knowledge of our history and stuff like that. There's basic knowledge agreed upon sciences and mathematics and stuff like that. Where, like, in homeschool, you don't necessarily need to teach all that. [00:38:34] Speaker A: Everyone that I've known growing up that was homeschooled. They're doing awesome in life right now. Like, I had. A friend growing up named Ryan, and he had a brother I forget his brother's name. Shit. But these two brothers, like, they were homeschooled. They got a birthday every five years, and they're doing awesome. [00:39:00] Speaker B: I thought the birthday every five years was like, religion or something. [00:39:04] Speaker A: Well, they are very religious, but they didn't shove it in your face. They're not like, hey, you need to fucking come on out. And do all know Silliness David was his brother's name. [00:39:22] Speaker B: Okay. [00:39:27] Speaker A: Holy shit. [00:39:29] Speaker B: Holy shit. [00:39:39] Speaker A: Yeah, no, he's fucking doing awesome. Yeah, he like rides bikes and shit. [00:39:45] Speaker B: That's awesome. [00:39:46] Speaker A: Like professionally, like Lance Armstrong, but without the cheating. [00:39:50] Speaker B: Yeah, but then you have some of the other people who didn't do so well as there's plenty of serial killers and other shit like that. Like cultist leaders and stuff. That was like homeschooled. [00:40:06] Speaker A: Let's see what serial killers were homeschooled. Was Ted Bundy fucking homeschooled? [00:40:40] Speaker B: Okay, sorry. Watching the game, tyree Kill and just hooked up for a touchdown pass. [00:40:52] Speaker A: The BTK killer. I don't know. It didn't really say too much about, like, just give me the fucking information. [00:41:13] Speaker B: But no. [00:41:14] Speaker A: Was Ted Bundy homeschooled? No, he didn't. Ted Bundy went to Woodrow Wilson High School in Tacoma, Washington. So guess what? He wasn't homeschooled. And some of the most notorious killers know went to normal. Understand, they they started out with their classmates and ended with their classmates. [00:41:40] Speaker B: But I understand. I understand the joke too little dark, but I understand to have a school shooting without a school. [00:41:51] Speaker A: So if everyone was fucking home schooled, I feel like there'd be, like, no serial killers. I want to do this fucking experiment now. [00:42:02] Speaker B: You're going to experiment on no. [00:42:05] Speaker A: On children? Yes. No, on dozens and thousands and hundreds of thousands of children just home school them all after school. They can fucking go and meet. And it's like, if you're a loser, you're a loser. Guess what? The Internet is now a fucking thing. And you can meet people. You can go on VR and having, like, VR headsets. It makes it easy. [00:42:37] Speaker B: All right. I do think if you do have social interaction over, like, VR and stuff like that, homeschooling could be more acceptable. I think the issue I have with homeschooling a lot is a non basic curriculum and what's it called, the socialization issue. Part of it too. The other part of homeschooling too, is like, a lot of homeschool, people who are homeschooled that I know of, a lot of them were also home schooled in deep religious aspects as well. And so they weren't taught really, like, evolution and stuff like that. [00:43:26] Speaker A: Why do you need to know evolution? [00:43:31] Speaker B: That should be part of your thing. And should it be argued? Because that's what's agreed upon science so far. [00:43:38] Speaker A: There's been no evidence that evolution takes place. [00:43:44] Speaker B: What do you mean there's been no evidence evolution takes place? Science. People way smarter than me and you have already come to agreement that evolution is the most likely thing, same as. [00:43:57] Speaker A: The big is the most likely thing. [00:43:59] Speaker B: Same thing as the big bang is the most likely thing. So you shouldn't be taught, like, oh, well, it's God that created it. What the fuck are you talking about? [00:44:08] Speaker A: What about aliens? [00:44:13] Speaker B: This is why we shouldn't home school. Continue. [00:44:16] Speaker A: I wasn't homeschooled. [00:44:17] Speaker B: I know you weren't. Continue. [00:44:18] Speaker A: And I was taught evolution, but it's like, at the same time, I question everything, and I see it's like, okay, we have this jump from this jump. It's like, well, what happened in the middle? What happened to the skeletons that were developing this? You can't just jump from one to another, and then in recorded history, there's just no evolution. There's just nothing that really happens. There's mutations that happen. Like that one lady that had her legs chopped off, and they grew back because her legs grew at an accelerated rate. [00:45:01] Speaker B: What are you talking about? [00:45:03] Speaker A: You haven't heard about this lady? [00:45:06] Speaker B: No, I have not heard about the reptile lady. [00:45:08] Speaker A: No. It was, like, a lady that had, like, elephantitis in her legs, and they grew fucking wild. And when she was a little bit older, they amputated them and they grew back. They grew back all fucked up, but they grew back. [00:45:25] Speaker B: That's wild. [00:45:27] Speaker A: It ladies legs grow back. [00:45:34] Speaker B: Excuse. [00:45:41] Speaker A: A British woman was born with a rare genetic condition which meant her legs grew to an enormous size, and she had them both amputated only for them to partially grow back twice the size of an average baby when she was born. So yeah, but the rest of her fucking, like, seven. [00:46:05] Speaker B: What do you mean, like seven? [00:46:07] Speaker A: Like a seven. [00:46:08] Speaker B: You're judging. Oh, my God. [00:46:10] Speaker A: The top half of this woman? Yes. [00:46:15] Speaker B: You're such a dude. [00:46:17] Speaker A: She looks like Ellen DeGeneres up top. [00:46:20] Speaker B: I don't even know how to you're such a dude, man. Like, what the fuck is wrong with you? [00:46:27] Speaker A: Seven refuse. Tron doesn't want to be part of dude dumb. [00:46:38] Speaker B: I don't know how you end up sexualizing someone immediately like this. [00:46:45] Speaker A: I'd fuck her. I feel like that's a compliment to say. Hey, the top half of that lady is hot enough to fuck. She's, like, in a wheelchair, though. [00:47:04] Speaker B: What is wrong with you? How are you just continuing to go? How do you get all this thought out right now? I need to go ahead and start from here. This is my thesis. I need to get all the way to the conclusion of how I'm sexualizing this person, how I feel about it, what I would do and wouldn't do. What they look like. What the fuck is this? [00:47:29] Speaker A: Her name is Mandy Sellers. Yeah, I mean, hot enough. How is that wrong? How is that a bad thing? [00:47:48] Speaker B: Because Mandy is not here for your sexual gratification. [00:47:53] Speaker A: No, she's in Britain or England or the UK or whatever. [00:47:57] Speaker B: So then there's no reason to have a comment about sexual in a sexual. [00:48:07] Speaker A: Have pretty much everyone that's like, I've made sexual comments about Kim Kardashian. I'm like, nah. She's like, I haven't heard this know, big legged lady talk yet, so I don't know. She might be annoying. She might have like a really bad British accent. And I might be like, oh no, that buds are down to a four. Shit. Now. I don't want to fuck her. [00:48:39] Speaker B: You're the worst. Comedy is definitely your calling. This is terrible. [00:48:45] Speaker A: Honestly, think about it. If I was to be no reason. [00:48:50] Speaker B: To think about any of this combo. [00:48:52] Speaker A: If I was to be like, EW, this lady is so fucking gross. I hope she dies and never gets fucked and never has love. Is that better? [00:49:01] Speaker B: No, it's the same. There is no difference in this picture. You're sexualizing this person for no reason. Her sexual life, whatever they are doing, it has nothing to do with you. There's no reason to bring it up. There's no reason to be thinking about it. [00:49:23] Speaker A: I saw this documentary where people with down syndrome and shit and insane disfigurations and whatnot, their parents hire prostitutes to come fuck them. [00:49:41] Speaker B: I'm like, because people deserve physical contact. Prostitution is a job. There's no reason to look down on that either. [00:49:49] Speaker A: No. [00:49:49] Speaker B: What the hell is wrong with you? What is going on? [00:49:53] Speaker A: But it's like just to imagine beyond. [00:50:00] Speaker B: The real, it should be normalized that you could be a higher prostitute. [00:50:05] Speaker A: No, the prostitution part is not what Neil kind of gets me. [00:50:09] Speaker B: Okay, what gets you then? Go. [00:50:11] Speaker A: It's the fact that the parents have this fully disabled person that they have to take care of full time and then they put down like flower petals and shit for a prostitute to come in and fuck their disabled son. [00:50:35] Speaker B: So what bothers you as a supportive parent? [00:50:42] Speaker A: I would never imagine my mom buying me a prostitute. [00:50:46] Speaker B: You also aren't dealing with the issues that these people are. Yes, it's easy to see everything through the lens of what you experience, but the key to humanity is being able to understand other people's experiences without living through them as well. Like to have some empathy and to be able to just so if someone. [00:51:11] Speaker A: Was like a nonverbal autistic person. [00:51:16] Speaker B: They deserve love too. They deserve physical connection. [00:51:21] Speaker A: What if they were gay and they didn't want to have sex with a woman? And would it be considered rape if they did not want it? And they cannot verbalize that. [00:51:33] Speaker B: There's other ways to communicate besides verbal with nonverbal autistic people. So yes, there's a way to make sure they are consenting before you go through with it. [00:51:49] Speaker A: It's like anybody that's ever fucked, like it's like was know, consensual. [00:52:03] Speaker B: First of all, I don't know Helen Keller's fucking sex life to say anything of that. But in all honesty, if they were to hire a prostitute for that or if she had relations with another person yes, all sex should be consensual. And just because you're deaf and you're blind doesn't mean that you still cannot say yes or no. Pretty sure she wouldn't have survived if you're deaf, blind. Pretty sure you still could survive without. [00:52:41] Speaker A: She was engaged once. [00:52:45] Speaker B: Are you really looking into this woman's sexual life? [00:52:48] Speaker A: Yeah. [00:52:49] Speaker B: What the fuck is wrong with you? Why are you doing this? Why? [00:52:56] Speaker A: Only because it bothers you so deeply. [00:52:59] Speaker B: It does bother me so deeply. Every person you've brought up so far has been female and females. [00:53:10] Speaker A: Well, no, the fucking retarded kid for the male gaze. The retarded kid that his mom bought him a fucking prostitute was a dude. [00:53:27] Speaker B: Why are we calling him retarded? Why are we still degrading? Why are we doing all this? [00:53:36] Speaker A: Because it only bothers you. What do you mean, because it bothers you? It bothers the shit out of you. Like, we can't call these kids retarded. It's like retarded just means slow. It doesn't mean you can't catch up with everybody else. It means off the starting line, you're not the sharpest crayon in the box. But then again, most people aren't. And that was the term we used in the say hey. [00:54:18] Speaker B: We also use the N word in. [00:54:20] Speaker A: The we got rid of that. I had black friends growing up, and there was never any oh, they're different. Or the other or anything like that. [00:54:31] Speaker B: You know who bugs me with Lauren Boebert, too? [00:54:34] Speaker A: Is she racist? [00:54:36] Speaker B: She's arguing about how, like, what's it called, the Constitution, isn't a living document and it should be stayed as is. But that would mean then that she shouldn't be able to vote and other stuff like that because we change that. Those are called amendments. Those are why it is olivid documents. [00:55:01] Speaker A: Yeah. I mean, women shouldn't vote honestly, get rid of their suffrage. I love just saying things like that just to see the look on your face. Like, fuck. [00:55:16] Speaker B: Are you a just pearly things fan? [00:55:19] Speaker A: Oh. What? I don't even know what that is. Okay, just pearly things? [00:55:27] Speaker B: Yeah. No, it's a girl who's part of the manosphere. [00:55:32] Speaker A: The what? [00:55:33] Speaker B: The manosphere. [00:55:34] Speaker A: I don't know what that is. [00:55:36] Speaker B: Andrew Tate sneako. Stuff like that. [00:55:39] Speaker A: That's like, who the fuck is you? I'm, like, not even being fucking facetious or whatever here. I don't know who the fuck sneako is. [00:55:50] Speaker B: He's like an Andrew Tate wannabe that he also is popular amongst kids and stuff. There's this thing going around where these kids roll up to them, like one of the what's it called, game CAS. And they're all like, yeah, fuck women and kill all the gays and stuff like that. And it's just pretty bad. [00:56:11] Speaker A: Yeah, I think I've seen that fucking clip. That is hilarious. No, that's great. How about this? Parents, watch what your kids watch. [00:56:28] Speaker B: What do you mean watch what your. [00:56:29] Speaker A: Kids watch what your kids watch. Don't give them unfettered access to the Internet. They don't need it. No child should have unfettered access. You shouldn't give your fucking kid a phone with Internet access so they can just go to Boobies.com. I wonder if that's actually a website. I've never been to just Boobies.com. I'm going right now. Boobies.com. This domain name is for sale. How much is this for sale at? Holy shit. Holy shit. Oh, no. Pornstar.com. $1.5 million. [00:57:32] Speaker B: 1.5 million for what? [00:57:35] Speaker A: Pornstar.com. [00:57:37] Speaker B: That's ridiculous. Also, Tua has thrown two picks. [00:57:43] Speaker A: Now, I don't know what that means. [00:57:48] Speaker B: Tua is a quarterback for the Miami Dolphins. He threw two interceptions. [00:57:55] Speaker A: Fast growing VR and interactive porn site for $50,000. Doesn't even say what the website's name is. Cash included in the sale. Okay, so, yeah, they have little fun things to do. It don't matter. We're going to go ahead and end this. That way I can stop getting you all mad and riled up. You can go enjoy your football in peace. [00:58:37] Speaker B: I got to do a paper. [00:58:39] Speaker A: It's got to do a paper about retards, three page paper, and it's about. [00:58:44] Speaker B: Social or it's in sociology, so I was right. [00:58:49] Speaker A: Retards about education and how they can't do it. [00:58:54] Speaker B: Race and ethnicity also plays an effect. [00:58:57] Speaker A: In it about black retards. [00:59:02] Speaker B: I want to punch you so bad right now. I don't think I've ever said as a reaction. [00:59:21] Speaker A: The worst thoughts that go into my head is, like, when you see people acting like, cash me outside, girl. And they're like, I'm fucking victimized. It's like, no, you're acting ignorant right now. [00:59:45] Speaker B: I have mixed feelings about that person. [00:59:49] Speaker A: It's like, you're not fucking black. Stop doing this dumb bullshit. [00:59:56] Speaker B: It whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa. [01:00:01] Speaker A: How is that a wrong statement? Whoa. How. [01:00:09] Speaker B: MERS did a song about called Dark Skinned White Girl, which is also on this topic of, like, white girl is grown up in the hood and stuff like that, but she gets a bunch of hate on because she grew up in this culture. That's her culture. But a lot of people are like, Nah, girl, you ain't black. You can't be doing that. DA DA DA. It's like, bro, it's not even a black or white thing. It's a culture thing. [01:00:35] Speaker A: Well, then there's a fucking rich culture, and they're the ones that get the money. And if you want to fucking stay in that black culture, then you can enjoy not having any money. [01:00:52] Speaker B: It's because of black culture is why blacks don't have money. [01:00:56] Speaker A: If you want to say what you. [01:00:57] Speaker B: Said with that no, you said there's a rich culture. There's a black culture. If you want to stay in the black culture, that's why you don't have money. [01:01:04] Speaker A: I said, if you want to stay in that black culture. [01:01:08] Speaker B: So that black culture. Explain what that black culture is, please. [01:01:12] Speaker A: It's like, those people. [01:01:14] Speaker B: What are those people? Continue. Go. [01:01:17] Speaker A: So there is certain types of people, white trash people and rich people. That rich white people. There's also black trashy people and black rich people, so to say, those white trash people and those black trash people and those Asian trash people, any fucking trash people whatsoever. You don't get to enjoy money until you get yourself out of that mentality and out of that fucking mindset. Go do something else with your fucking life. Stop living like that. Stop living like, hey, I'm a fucking rapper or whatever the fuck. [01:02:05] Speaker B: If that's what you see to get you out of that trashy environment, that's how that culture and stuff what's elevated. That's what you're going to do. That's why in black cultures, to get out of the hood, it's more of either, A, going into the entertainment side or B, going into the hustling side. There's not enough of proof or shown of mentors of black excellence through academics because there's issues with blacks and academics still to this day. [01:02:45] Speaker A: I mean, as a black man yourself, you're going to school, you're bettering your life. Did you grow up in the hood? Yeah, exactly. [01:02:53] Speaker B: Off and on, I did. [01:02:55] Speaker A: And so you got yourself out of that you got yourself out of that hood mentality that's after I grew up. [01:03:03] Speaker B: I much rather have been able to now that I'm older and I'm in school now, I much rather have been able to go to school when I was younger. But me and my sister talk about it. The issue with going to school when you were younger, me and her were that we didn't have this as our option. This was never a real thing of like, hey, you know, you could go to school, right? That was never once told to us at school of like, hey, you know, you could go to college, right? That was never a thing. So again, this is what I was talking about with school society and how race and class and stuff still plays with it. It still fucking perpetuates that cycle. That's also why there's that school to prison pipeline and stuff like that. There's not enough mentors of us to show us as a bigger group of people that, hey, there is this other way out when you're going to school and your schools can't afford. [01:04:08] Speaker A: So be that mentor. Next time you see a young black kid, just beg, hey, you know, you can go to college. You know, there's a better life out there for you. [01:04:25] Speaker B: How many billionaires are there of blacks? Let's look at sports real quick. How many black owners are there? Sports teams and professional sports teams? There's not one. [01:04:38] Speaker A: How many sports teams are owned by a black man? God damn it, Guardian, shut the fuck up. Six sports teams owners who are people of color. [01:04:54] Speaker B: Out of how many? [01:04:56] Speaker A: I'm sure a few. Six. [01:05:00] Speaker B: So there's six that we could look up to in that one position. How many? Now, if you look at blackhead coaches. [01:05:10] Speaker A: Amongst all OOH with a Commander Sale, the NFL has seven black team owners. So seven out of probably a hundred. [01:05:26] Speaker B: Right? So now how many famous let's extrapolate that a little bit. How many famous rappers or sports people, players are black? [01:05:41] Speaker A: Oh, a whole lot more. [01:05:42] Speaker B: A whole lot more, right? [01:05:45] Speaker A: Black people are way fucking better. [01:05:48] Speaker B: No, it's not. Even. [01:05:54] Speaker A: If I see, like, a white guy being like, hey, I'm a rapper. I'm like, oh, yeah, sure, you're a rapper. Good for you. If I see a black guy that's a rapper, I'll be like, oh, man, fucking spit some shit for me. [01:06:13] Speaker B: We're perpetuating the cycle right here in this one example of how this is where you should be and this is your lane. You're one example right there's. [01:06:37] Speaker A: Whatever. But we're going to go ahead and end this. We've gone overtime, overtime, overtime. OT. Thank you all so much for listening. We'll be back next week. I'm sure I'm going to be pissed and turn off some more. I know. [01:06:55] Speaker B: Peace. [01:06:55] Speaker A: Peace. Bye.

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