Episode Transcript
[00:00:01] Speaker A: All right, so this week is going to be a little bit of a two parter.
[00:00:07] Speaker B: We.
[00:00:08] Speaker A: We're gonna release the first half of this whole episode.
This was a two hour episode about Charlie Kirk and, you know, debating his, you know, words and like that. Tron is very against, you know, what he said.
I. I'm, you know, all for Charlie Kirk, 100%. I'm all, you know, MAGA, Republican, 100%.
So yeah, if you're like, I'm tired of hearing about this thing, skip the next two episodes. Like, this episode's gonna be released today.
And then next week, instead of waiting the full two weeks, you're gonna get the second half of this episode.
So yeah, enjoy or don't you? Don't be a big crybaby. I don't care.
But yeah, enjoy.
Alrighty. Alrighty everybody. Welcome back to another week of argue this and holy.
You know, recording this like every other week, you know, allows to build up and yeah, it absolutely dead.
Like we recorded the Sunday before Charlie Kirk got assassinated.
And I'm like, oh, man. God damn it.
[00:01:23] Speaker B: We're.
[00:01:25] Speaker A: That's gonna like dominate everything.
So, yes, we do have to talk a little bit about that.
[00:01:30] Speaker B: It's still dominating everything.
[00:01:32] Speaker A: Yeah, I mean, now the conspiracy theories are dominating everything.
[00:01:39] Speaker B: We will talk because I want to hear what conspiracy theories?
[00:01:44] Speaker A: The. The conspiracy theory that there is a second shooter behind Charlie Kirk and all this dumbass. I'm like, you know, oh, there's. Okay, continue, you know, but let's do the intro first. I'm Alex A Truck. This is Trny Wanny. You know, argue this.
[00:02:03] Speaker B: We.
[00:02:03] Speaker A: We argue things and if we say legal. We're not lawyers, we're not your lawyers.
And yeah, you know, after this, I'm gonna go out, you know, shooting and you know, giving money to, you know, people that are suing the government.
But yeah, so let's, you know, talk about Charlie Kirk because this is, you know, not been discussed and we at least have to cover it. You can't ignore it.
Do you think that Charlie Kirk deserved to be killed for having an opinion?
[00:02:38] Speaker B: I don't think anyone deserves to be killed for having an opinion.
[00:02:41] Speaker A: Do you think anybody deserves to be killed?
[00:02:45] Speaker B: I. That. Yes.
[00:02:47] Speaker A: Okay, good, good.
I'm just like making sure you're not one of those like bleeding hearts.
[00:02:52] Speaker B: No one deserves to die.
[00:02:54] Speaker A: I'm like, no, like pedophiles, 100%. Throw them in the grinder, you know, just like, keep it running. Just. I don't care, like if the President's.
[00:03:02] Speaker B: A pedophile My, my only issue with killing if like government sanctioned killing is that we have to be a hundred percent that somebody is guilty for us to kill someone. And we've as a government have done a lot of executions and a lot of executions. Some of the people have been proven not to do the crime so that.
[00:03:26] Speaker A: A few white people can.
[00:03:27] Speaker B: That's why I want to just be transparent on that.
[00:03:30] Speaker A: Yeah. Like I have to, you know, give credit where credit is due. I don't know, like, of any like black pedophiles.
I'm sure they're out there, but like in a much lower number.
[00:03:45] Speaker B: They are, they're out there, but, but.
[00:03:48] Speaker A: Like, like, you know, do you see what I mean here?
[00:03:53] Speaker B: Like, serial killers are. Black people are in a much lower number.
[00:03:57] Speaker A: Yeah, that too. You know, female. You know, serial killers are just caught way less because they know how to get rid of blood.
Or they cry, you know, and be like, I'm Casey Anthony. It's like, all right, first one's free.
What about.
[00:04:18] Speaker B: So what about the other girl who killed the French person and whatnot? Do you remember that case?
[00:04:25] Speaker A: The other girl that killed the French person?
[00:04:28] Speaker B: Yeah, like it was around the same time as the KC Anthony. Well, I guess it was. Was it before? I think it was after the Casey Anthony case.
You have no clue what I'm talking about. No, this is me.
[00:04:40] Speaker A: I mean, like there was like, you know, the latest one was fucking the rapper that killed like the 15 year old girl.
[00:04:49] Speaker B: Alleged.
[00:04:51] Speaker A: Alleged.
[00:04:52] Speaker B: Alleged.
[00:04:53] Speaker A: Are you defeated? I am.
It was found in his abandoned tassel. I'm like, you know, God damn you. Like you, you got set up the worst of all time or you're just a really dumb fucking killer.
And I have to say that criminals are dumb.
[00:05:11] Speaker B: Amanda Knox.
That was a girl I was thinking of. That name has no ring bell.
[00:05:17] Speaker A: Ringing to you in my head. You want to know what's in my head? Truly?
Nickelodeon had a show called the Amanda Show.
[00:05:24] Speaker B: I know what you're talking about. I never thought that's so funny that like, that's where your mind went.
[00:05:32] Speaker A: My mind played the theme song to the Amanda show. I know.
[00:05:36] Speaker B: I saw a smile just appear on your face out of nowhere when I said Amanda Knox.
[00:05:41] Speaker A: Like Amanda Manda Manda Amanda Knox.
[00:05:43] Speaker B: Oh my God.
[00:05:44] Speaker A: Dang it.
[00:05:44] Speaker B: Never mind. This is already too far.
But I say alleged because they haven't been proven guilty. Now my opinion is they're guilty as.
[00:06:00] Speaker A: So, okay, I'm like, yeah, no, like.
[00:06:03] Speaker B: Just want to be transparent. Just want to be transparent.
[00:06:06] Speaker A: What is the odds that it's like, it wasn't me, you know, what is he going to do? Like, pull like a shaggy and be like, wasn't me?
[00:06:13] Speaker B: I don't know, man.
[00:06:14] Speaker A: Caught rotting in the Tesla.
[00:06:16] Speaker B: I hate. I hate the black community for this. But we cheered so much where we were. Like, the glove doesn't fit. You must acquit. That was guilty, too. Sorry, O.J. that's how I feel.
[00:06:30] Speaker A: It was. It was like a good rhyme and people like, yeah, you know what? You know, we need OJ to play football more than, you know. We need him in jail.
[00:06:38] Speaker B: No, we need. What it was is the.
I hate that the black community was like, yeah, we at least, like, stuck it to the man. And I'm like, no, this is a fucking cli. OJ didn't even talk about him being black until he got caught a murder case, you know what I mean? Like, there's so many people like Tiger Woods. He didn't call himself black until he fucking caught that case too. Like, everyone.
[00:07:04] Speaker A: He got a divorce.
[00:07:06] Speaker B: No, he also caught a case where, like, what's it called?
Raping a chick or some shit.
[00:07:12] Speaker A: I mean, I'm sure she fucking got paid out fat for that.
[00:07:20] Speaker B: Bro, Bro.
Oh. No amount of money is worth getting raped and, like, violated and having that trauma forever.
[00:07:28] Speaker A: Hundred thousand dollars. Go ahead, do it to me.
[00:07:31] Speaker B: No, no, no, no. I'm not saying that it wouldn't help in life and it will make life easier. Easier.
[00:07:37] Speaker A: But yeah, 100,000 is not life changing money. But it's enough for me to, like, okay, that's fine.
[00:07:42] Speaker B: At least it's enough to start changing a life.
Like, if you literally put like, whatever your current goal or life is right now, if you just put that money for another year of it and put the rest into, like, investments and stuff, it is totally life changing.
All that shit is so just being transparent.
[00:08:05] Speaker A: I mean, if you.
[00:08:06] Speaker B: I look at both sides of everything.
[00:08:08] Speaker A: Like, if I didn't have any use for it, then, you know, like. Like most people get a hundred thousand dollars and blow it on something. Like, got myself a brand new car, got myself, you know, brand new tv, right? You know, they'll just go out and get, you know, brand new and it's like, no, save that money.
[00:08:25] Speaker B: Yeah. What you should do is just pay your rent for a year and then put whatever you spend a little extra side for food and then invest the rest and everything you work right now. You would be able to play with or invest that too.
[00:08:40] Speaker A: Invest everything, you know.
[00:08:42] Speaker B: No, no, I'm being realistic.
Otherwise, I would say invest everything. But that's why if you get a.
[00:08:51] Speaker A: Hundred thousand dollars, pretend like you didn't get that hundred thousand dollars.
Throw that into, like, you know, an investment account. It grows, you know, say, you know, 5 to 10%. Say you get 7%. You're getting $7,000, you know, after the first year. Boom. You know, leave that in there. Compound interest, you know, grows another 7,000. So you're getting 7,000 on the hundred, and then, you know, the 7% on the 7,000. Boom. Added in.
[00:09:19] Speaker B: Yep.
[00:09:19] Speaker A: Yeah. So it's like $7,600, and. And then it just keeps on rolling. Keeps on rolling, you know, and it rolls really fast. Like, it's like, now you're getting, you know, 7% on, like, the 15,000 and the 100,000 and that. Now it's like, you know, boom. Okay, cool. Now I. I got, you know, 25,000.
And, you know, after, like, four years, $125,000. Heck, yeah.
And, you know, just keep it rolling. And then, you know, I think it's like, after, like, seven years, it, like, doubles, you know, and then it's like, oh, cool. And then just like, let it keep on, you know, now you have $200,000. You know, say you get 10%, that's $20,000 of the year.
Boom. Keep it rolling, keep it rolling. Keep it. You know, but they don't teach kids compound interest in school.
But back to, you know, Charlie Kirk and what we were talking about before.
[00:10:19] Speaker B: Yep.
You know, so on my Facebook post, I put on that. I wanted to start with, what happened to Charlie Kirk was wrong. I also did want to point out the hypocrisy in America, which there's tons of. And then I brought up this same. The school shooting that same day that happened. And there hasn't been anywhere near the national coverage of that. Now, I understand Charlie Kirk was murdered on. Not on tv. Like, millions of people were watching it. So I do understand that. But for. And then I continue.
What's it called.
I'm just saying keep that same energy for Charlie Kirk as for these other horrific acts, because I also brought up George Floyd and stuff like that, too.
I remember George Floyd died of fentanyl.
He did not die of fentanyl. He.
[00:11:12] Speaker A: Fentanyl this knee in his neck.
[00:11:17] Speaker B: Anyways, I remember people saying, all eyes matter, but as per usual, America, that only matters with the eyes of the beholder and not as a default. It breaks my heart to see us divided with lack of empathy and sympathy. We, as Americans lack unless it's someone on our side. And I just wanted to, like, that's. That's literally my feeling of the Charlie Kirk shooting. Like, as you. As plain and simple as I could say it.
[00:11:47] Speaker A: Yeah, it's like, you know, like, Martin Luther King was not killed in, you know, while having the I have a dream speech.
[00:11:55] Speaker B: Right?
[00:11:55] Speaker A: He was killed at a, you know, motel, just.
[00:12:00] Speaker B: And Martin Luther King was a flawed person, too. He cheated on his wife. There was tons of, like, there's no perfect human being. So every person who is the leader of your movement also has flaws. You shouldn't idealize leaders. That's all I'm saying.
[00:12:17] Speaker A: You know, with that up.
[00:12:18] Speaker B: What's up?
[00:12:19] Speaker A: Like, I never really watched Charlie Kirk. I didn't have time to, you know, sit down and watch his entire videos. I'd see, like, a clip every now and again of him dunking on a student with, you know, good logic. And it's like, okay, yeah, but, you know, this. This college student doesn't know what the he's talking about. He just got out of high school, you know, just got done doing Fortnite dances and, you know, playing with his Tamagotchi, you know, and you think he has the world figured out. People don't have the world figured out, and they're like 70 years old. Like, no one does. But, you know, I. I like a lot of people, like, Charlie Kirk's takes and, you know, but, like, I just, like, watch them, you know, dunk on college students, and I find it hilarious. I'm like, oh, that's funny.
[00:13:06] Speaker B: All right, so again, I. We're not. I refuse to whitewash Charlie Kirk.
So what happened again was horrific.
It is very sad to. That his kids are growing up without a father. Is very sad for his wife to be a widow. It is very sad and traumatizing for everyone who saw that live and also who saw it accidentally while. Because it was. That video was everywhere. I refuse to watch that video because I'm already traumatized enough with enough of the school shootings.
School shootings are so normalized right now that it happens all the time. And we haven't. We haven't done it. Like, we don't even talk about anymore. I think there's. What was it? I was pretty sure it was, like, 43 shootings in schools this year alone in 2025.
[00:14:07] Speaker A: And they're, you know, coming up with drones with non lethal takedowns to, you know, that are, you know, at the schools.
And so, you know, if something pops off, you know, like 10 of these drones pop up immediately and fly over RO, bro.
[00:14:22] Speaker B: We're not trying to become RoboCop. And in that dive, did you see how society was with our RoboCop and dive rainbows? Very, very bad. Very bad. Okay?
[00:14:32] Speaker A: RoboCop went around shooting dicks off of dudes. You know, like, I agree with that. Good job, RoboCop. Good job, Alex Murphy. Holy shit. Yes.
[00:14:41] Speaker B: Anyway, you know, but I'm not. I refuse to whitewash Charlie Kirk because he was also person who preached hatred and bigotry.
[00:14:50] Speaker A: Ow.
[00:14:52] Speaker B: What do you mean? How.
Tell me. Hold up, because I actually have some stuff I want to ask.
[00:14:57] Speaker A: Yeah, yeah, bring. Bring the arguments.
[00:15:00] Speaker B: Because when people are like, what's it called? Charlie. Charlie Kirk, he talks about. He's just asking questions and he's only preaching the Bible and stuff, stuff like that. Right?
Hold on.
[00:15:18] Speaker A: You're talking about the black pilots or.
[00:15:20] Speaker B: Well, we could talk. Let's use that for example. Give me a.
Because everyone uses that as like. Oh, well, he said that out of context. He did. Or you get. You're taking out of context. So what's the context for that? That he. He stated, full quote.
[00:15:38] Speaker A: Okay, so the context for that whole thing is companies are required. Are forced to hire people of color, you know, so you can come in and, you know, not know anything. And they have, like, if you're the only black person that goes in, like, if you tron. Go into, you know, Delta Airlines and be like, hey, I want to be a pilot, they're like, all right, cool, you're hired. Because we've had no other black people come in to apply for this job and they have to hire you. You know, he's just worried that, you know, what if I get one of these people that, you know, just showed up, you know, for the job, you know, as a joke application, and got it. And now they're the fucking pilot. And, you know, they're under qualified to, you know, do the job of being a pilot.
[00:16:26] Speaker B: Did they change the qualifications of getting the pilot license for DEI people? Not. Not to. Not hiring, but to get the license for it.
[00:16:39] Speaker A: The license is very easy to get. It's like getting a car license. I can get a go. I can go get a pilot's license today.
[00:16:46] Speaker B: Show me the requirements. Like, so we could read it aloud. The requirements not for a pilot license. For commercial pilot license. Because that's what we're talking about. We aren't talking about private. We're talking about commercial pilot license.
[00:16:59] Speaker A: Commercial pilot license requirement must be 18 years old. So, yeah, anybody must be able to read, write and speak and understand English.
[00:17:12] Speaker B: Hold on, wait, wait, wait. Before you say must be anybody, remember your side of the right also is all like, these minorities can't speak English and don't understand and da, da, da.
[00:17:23] Speaker A: So I've never seen a minority, you know, I'm just saying, you know, a black person or a person of color.
[00:17:29] Speaker B: Okay, so we're just talking a black person right now, right?
[00:17:33] Speaker A: Yeah, just a black person.
[00:17:34] Speaker B: Basically make sure where we're staying, you.
[00:17:36] Speaker A: Know, I'm not saying, you know, like, the amount, like, how many times have you seen, you know, like, someone that couldn't, you know, speak English that well, work, you know, in the fucking cockpit? Never.
[00:17:48] Speaker B: Understood. I just want to make sure.
[00:17:51] Speaker A: Written exam covering aeronautical knowledge, practical test check, you know, ride successfully, practice flight tests with the ffa, pilot examiner and instructor endorsements.
And then, you know, you have to do 250 hours of flight time.
That, that's nothing.
That's a month log a hundred tower hours of pilot in command time cross country, you know. So, like, yet two months. And you're fucking good. And you do all this shit, you know, while, you know, you get the job.
So, yeah, you can just like walk in, you know.
[00:18:45] Speaker B: What do you need for your private certification?
[00:18:48] Speaker A: Okay, private pilot license.
Let's, you know, search this.
A private pilot license allows you to pilot an aircraft for personal transportation and recreation.
To get one, you need to be 17, English, la, English language medical requirements, complete both ground and flight training to meet FF, FAA aeronautical experience, minimums like 40 flight hours and pass a written knowledge test.
So, yeah, easy.
[00:19:27] Speaker B: I don't think it's as easy as you're making it sound. How many people do you think?
[00:19:31] Speaker A: Like, how many people do I know that have this license? 3.
[00:19:36] Speaker B: The private one I'll give you because that one's much easier to get. But going back to, like, the other one. Right. How many people do you think could pass? Not we're not talking the pilot written exam. How many people do you think pass or fail the trucking written exam?
[00:19:57] Speaker A: Like, none. It's fucking dead easy.
[00:20:01] Speaker B: No one fails it.
[00:20:03] Speaker A: I passed the first time. It was like, okay, stupid. Like, do you remember your written exam for getting your driver's license?
[00:20:09] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:20:10] Speaker A: That easy.
[00:20:13] Speaker B: It's like, you see tons of people who failed that.
[00:20:18] Speaker A: Yeah, they're the dumbest of the dumb people.
You lived in California. There's a lot of dummies out there.
It's like you see an old lady and a young child. What do you hit and it's like, I guess the old lady, cuz she's lived more of a life, it's like, no, the brakes.
It's like, oh man.
But yes, it like this is what you know, he's saying is like, you know, he doesn't want people to be, you know, forced into a job. It's like no Child left Behind. Do you remember that whole fucking thing?
Whereas like if you fail in, you know, middle school, they just push you on to high school anyway.
You know, should you be in high school if you have none of the fucking knowledge?
[00:21:02] Speaker B: No, but you.
Everyone who's gotten the pilot license has the knowledge too. That's what I don't understand is like.
[00:21:09] Speaker A: There'S a lot of people with CDLs that I do not trust to be a truck driver at all. They are the dumbest people on planet earth and they, you know, you can like. I literally went in to go get my cdl, went to a Budweiser transportation facility like, like one of their warehouses, you know, walked around the truck, you know, pointed out, you know, what most of the stuff was. Took a little, you know, road test, you know, drove around town.
[00:21:38] Speaker B: Okay, check it out, check it out. And this, all this is extra against the original thesis of. Okay, so all white people have to get the same license as all black people and. Right.
Stop.
All white people have to get the same tests as the black people. Right? To get a license to even certify for the thing. Right?
[00:22:04] Speaker A: Yes, you do. Okay.
[00:22:07] Speaker B: No, no, it's not. How is it prove how the test scores are lowered to get your commercial pilot license?
[00:22:15] Speaker A: Is it easier for black people to get a commercial flight license?
[00:22:22] Speaker B: There you go, boom. No, it's not easier right off jump.
[00:22:26] Speaker A: But now because what Trump did.
[00:22:29] Speaker B: No, no, there's no caveat because again, we're just doing the straight thesis of this.
That's what it was.
[00:22:39] Speaker A: There are a lot of BET. 3.9% of commercial Pirates pilots are black.
[00:22:45] Speaker B: Yeah, okay, 3.9.
I still don't see how that changes.
No, no, no, how does that change the fact that the black pilot and the white pilot both have to get easy certification that both could get acquired in two months.
And the black person is the one that you're worried about? Even though both have to meet the same standard of this minimum qualification.
[00:23:14] Speaker A: Okay. At my regional at least a lot of effort is to reaching out to minorities or otherwise underrepresented groups to get them interested in aviation, help them overcome hurdles, know that they are welcome, etc. But that to my Knowledge, there's no preference. Once you submit an application.
[00:23:30] Speaker B: O, it does attack already. Damn it.
Can I get a towel?
[00:23:36] Speaker A: Yeah, right there. Brown towel right there.
[00:23:39] Speaker B: This, yeah.
[00:23:39] Speaker A: Is that.
[00:23:41] Speaker B: Sorry, continue.
[00:23:46] Speaker A: But yeah, there's a lot of outreach, encouragements, scholarships, celebration of diversity. Yeah.
So yeah, they like none of this.
[00:23:55] Speaker B: None of this, none of that goes against what Charlie Kirk was like, proves Charlie Kirk's thesis of, well, so black.
[00:24:05] Speaker A: Person, black people are getting, you know, scholarships and they're, you know, getting all this, you know, cool, you know, free shit to, you know, go in and, you know, become a pilot, you know.
[00:24:17] Speaker B: Yeah, they're getting free stuff to become a pilot. How does that make them less qualified still?
Because I don't.
[00:24:26] Speaker A: Maybe they just got pushed through, you know. No, it's the worry. It's the worry in the back your head, you know, it's like if you have, you know, a female nurse, you.
[00:24:37] Speaker B: Know, so shouldn't I. In that theory, any white guy that's between the age of what, 18 and 26, I should be worried about because they could be a shooter of any sort.
[00:24:49] Speaker A: Okay, no, no, no.
[00:24:51] Speaker B: Isn't that the same worry then? Because statistically, no. How's that not.
[00:24:54] Speaker A: So imagine you go into a.
[00:24:56] Speaker B: How's that not.
[00:24:56] Speaker A: Imagine you go into a black bar.
[00:24:58] Speaker B: Wait, how's that not? The, the pilots. There is less statistical black pilots than there are statistical shooters. Right, but there are. So there are more school shooters. So should way more worried about white people being a school shooter when you.
[00:25:14] Speaker A: See a white person. Yes, you, you should be worried about them, you know, the same as you see anybody you should be worried about.
[00:25:23] Speaker B: Okay, so if we kept that same standard, same feeling, same energy that. Shouldn't we be worried about the white pilot same as the black pilot? Because we're worried about any pilot.
[00:25:35] Speaker A: Okay, imagine like the script was flipped. Okay.
Like, have you ever been to a black barbershop? Like, yeah, so imagine you go into a black barbershop and then there's a chair with a white dude there.
[00:25:47] Speaker B: Uh huh.
[00:25:48] Speaker A: Okay. Howdy Doody, how's it going everybody?
And you know, he's just, you know, waving his hand and you know, like, who wants to sit in my chair? I can do your hair up. Good.
Would you go sit in his chair?
[00:26:02] Speaker B: Absolutely. Here's the real thing, because here's the question.
Would that say, have you been to a black barber shop?
[00:26:09] Speaker A: No.
[00:26:10] Speaker B: You've never been to a black barber shop?
[00:26:12] Speaker A: I have not been to a black barber.
[00:26:13] Speaker B: So first of all, this question then, doesn't make sense of you asking. But second of all, then. No, no second of all then from someone who's been there multiple times, I will say that they aren't going to let anybody who can't cut hair sit in that chair, let alone the white guy, has to show himself a hundred times more skillful than the next person to be in that black barbershop. Same as that black pilot tends to have to show 100 times more that he's as skillful or better than the white pilot to get that job. Hence the 3.9% of the. Instead of, you know what more of the percentage.
[00:27:00] Speaker A: I mean.
[00:27:01] Speaker B: Yeah, just pointing out that. Go ahead.
[00:27:03] Speaker A: Like, but like in my head, like.
[00:27:06] Speaker B: You know, oh, like real talk. So many black people are going to clown on them first and then one but. And then one person's gonna let them do their hair, which would be a drawn. And that everybody else will let her do their hair. Just saying. Or you would it up and then he would get beat up and then he would never have another chair at that same barbershop again.
[00:27:28] Speaker A: Exactly. You know, that's what, you know, people are worried about. You know, I wonder if this white guy is going to up my hair. That's the exact same thing that Charlie said. You know, I wonder if this, you know, black guy is qualified.
You know, that's it. That, that's, you know, the beginning, middle and end of it. You know, not, you know, this guy, this. Oh, man, we have a black pilot. He's going to crash the fucking plane.
[00:27:51] Speaker B: No, no, no, no. Again, I already. I gave all the same qualifiers, that same energy. It's same energy across the board. That's. That's how it is now. Same as what I said though, right? Because again, I, I don't speak for the whole left or any group. We are talking individual here. And I said, yeah, that I would roll with it and that's how it would be. Now. Did I say the whole group? No, but if that white guy. If we wanted more white barbers in black barbershops, then we would need a DEI initiative for white people to be like, hey, it's okay to come to the hood and show us your skill in the black barbershop. Again, you would have to have those initiatives for underrepresented groups, especially groups who already feel a racial inferiority or a racial tensions amongst other races in a normal setting.
[00:28:47] Speaker A: Like, have you ever lived in the hood?
Yes, yes. You know, but. But I'm just, you know, proving a point so, you know, have, you know, not to Walk around at night because it is more dangerous.
[00:29:02] Speaker B: It depends on your hood and where the street and where you're from. Like there's a lot of separate factors to that because like your block is totally safe at night, you know.
[00:29:12] Speaker A: But like imagine like me going to like, you know, Stockton, California, you know, at night, you know, it's like, oh shit, it's like you don't stop at fucking stop signs.
[00:29:20] Speaker B: You know, I think it would be okay. I've been to the hood. If we're talking just a hood and a random person going through the block.
[00:29:29] Speaker A: It'S going to be cool.
[00:29:30] Speaker B: In fact that random person is typically, yeah, more safe unless they're flaunting but typically more safe to walk through it than somebody who's from the hood and from opposite clicks. And that's just being real. Because again, again most people in the hood, they're not just looking to, with everyone. But if you're, if you're flaunting and have like a Rolex watch, walking around in hood at night. Yeah. You might get jacked like just being real.
[00:29:56] Speaker A: Okay, so like imagine this. Okay, so I, I, I, I can, I, I don't, I haven't asked a question, but I know you've gone through this situation.
[00:30:04] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:30:04] Speaker A: You know, you're walking around, you know, late at night and you hear from a distance and hey, yo, let me come talk to you.
[00:30:11] Speaker B: Uh huh.
[00:30:12] Speaker A: You already know what's gonna happen, you know, are like, what's going through your mind.
[00:30:18] Speaker B: I don't know what's gonna happen but I'm not trying to find out. So I'm gonna continue walking. So what you what's going through?
[00:30:25] Speaker A: This guy's coming to fucking jack me.
Get the fuck out of Dodge. That is exactly what is happening.
[00:30:31] Speaker B: That is not what's going through my, what's going through my body.
[00:30:34] Speaker A: Catch up to you then be like, oh, he wants to talk to me. What about sir?
[00:30:39] Speaker B: I didn't say that exactly. I don't.
[00:30:44] Speaker A: I used to live in the hood.
[00:30:46] Speaker B: I know this chick again. I know but, but there you can't know someone's intentions. First of all, it's always wrong to say you know someone's intentions because that's how we get to our divide in the US now.
[00:31:01] Speaker A: But, but you know that thought, is this guy going to rob me?
[00:31:06] Speaker B: But it's good to always be safe, which again every American should. What I never said nor have I thought this guy's going to rob me. My thoughts are, I don't know this guy. This is Awkward. This is a raw, like, all the red flags are up. I'm going to continue going, what are.
[00:31:27] Speaker A: The red flags about?
[00:31:29] Speaker B: Unsafe situation.
[00:31:30] Speaker A: Why is it unsafe? You don't know he's going to rob you.
[00:31:33] Speaker B: You're right. You don't.
[00:31:35] Speaker A: So because. But you're.
[00:31:36] Speaker B: Wait, wait. Because I don't know his intentions of. Is he going to rob me before he's going to give me a cookie? I don't want to find out. Like I said, all the red flags are there. So I'm going to try to maintain my distance and be safe and walk out. Like, again, I don't know. There's nothing like that with that. It's the same as like my white friends be like, hey, want to go out in the woods and go shooting?
[00:32:00] Speaker A: Sure.
[00:32:01] Speaker B: We're like, yeah.
[00:32:03] Speaker A: I mean, if I say, hey, you want to go out to the woods, go shooting? You know, I'm gonna bring you out to the woods and bring all my guns and we're gonna go shooting and have a good grand time. But you know, if it's like some.
[00:32:13] Speaker B: But if it's a random group of white people with fucking. Yeah, with what's it called, Confederate flags and stuff, like, hey, oh, you want to go shooting? I don't know. Again, I'm going to be the same thing of be safe, maintain my distance and go.
There's nothing of me saying, oh, these white guys are here to rob me or the black guy is here to jump me. Like, there's nothing of the difference of those two. Both of those scenarios are going to be like, all the red flags are here. Don't know if they're going to be like, hey, want to go shoot it and something bad happens, or they're going to be like, hey, want to go hunting and I get to eat deer. Which really did happen in Montana and.
[00:32:51] Speaker A: I did go with them because Montana is a completely different area.
[00:32:55] Speaker B: No, I know, but again, I'm just saying stating that again, race has no factor in it if you're. If I am being honest as a person, but I am also not judgmental and I am also not preaching hate of, well, I have to question a race because I don't know if they're pushing through or not. Again, the black pilot that he is questioning had to have the same minimum effort as Paul here, the white pilot. So there's no reason question the black pilot versus Paul.
[00:33:28] Speaker A: But you know, he's not saying, oh, man, I hate the fact that I have a black pilot.
[00:33:32] Speaker B: You're right, he didn't I didn't say. Did I say.
[00:33:35] Speaker A: He just. He wondered out loud. And people, you know, are calling that racist. You know, I wonder if the viewing.
[00:33:45] Speaker B: Racial divide, it is not a racist statement, but it is taught, like spewing, oh, I'm just asking questions on a racial divide issue. And so, yes, there the tint could still be the same depending on perspective. Again, you, like you said, and I said, we can't read people's minds, so we don't know what the intent is there. But if we're just going following what the words were said and how it's used and we like really did logically break it down of, hey, how we're doing now?
Paul, Johnny, both have the same fucking. Have to meet the same minimum requirement. We're gonna worry about one or the other. They're both the same.
[00:34:31] Speaker A: Like, say I take you out to a bar and you see a dude that looks like Stone Cold Steve Austin, you know, drinking Budweiser. You know, I'm sure somewhere in your subconscious you're gonna like, I wonder if that guy is racist.
And then you're going to go talk to him anyway.
And you're like, oh, no, he's not racist. You know, he's a cool dude.
[00:34:51] Speaker B: If Stone Cold Steve Austin was sitting drinking beer and looks like Stone Cold. No, I understand. You understand guy who looks like hold. I understand. But he was wearing Confederate flag with banana and stuff, I would be hesitant to go talk to him. But if he said, hey, I would say hi back. There's nothing wrong with that.
[00:35:12] Speaker A: But yeah, like you, you just admitted you're like, he might be, you know, racist. I'm gonna.
[00:35:17] Speaker B: No, no, no. I said, I added the caveat of the. What's it called? The Confederate flag gear and bandana now, as if it was just, you know, a biker dude. Dude, biker dudes are the coolest people. I'll hang out with them. I don't care. But again, I, as in Tron, am very open and whatnot. I really.
It's just how it is. I like coming from a place of understanding instead of a place of trying to be right. Because in our world and in America, it's impossible to be right 100% of the time. So let's come from a better place, understanding. So now let's go on with the. Another quote with Charlie Kirk. Do you have another one you wanted to because.
[00:36:08] Speaker A: Well, that was the big one that everyone was talking about.
[00:36:11] Speaker B: Yeah, but that one I think is like, again, I.
[00:36:13] Speaker A: That's just him wondering out loud.
[00:36:15] Speaker B: Did I explain my reasoning of why I feel it is. Yeah, you want, like, racial divide. It is not. Is not racist statement, but it is spreading a racial divide. Question.
[00:36:29] Speaker A: Well, like back in the day before dei, if you saw a black pilot, he's like, this guy earned his spot. But, you know, forcing people into it.
[00:36:37] Speaker B: First of all.
[00:36:38] Speaker A: Forcing, you know, dumb kids into heist.
[00:36:40] Speaker B: Like, first of all, when you're giving inferences to like, hey, this is what he thinks. And again, we can't say this is what.
[00:36:49] Speaker A: Like that. That's literally, you know, like, I'll. I'll pull up the quote. I'll put the whole thing right now.
[00:36:54] Speaker B: Do it.
[00:36:55] Speaker A: Charlie Kirk explaining the DEI black pilot statement.
You know, you know, so, yeah, I mean, you know, Turning Point CEO Charlie Kirk said, if I see a black pilot, I'm gonna be like, boy, I hope he's qualified.
[00:37:15] Speaker B: Really quick stop there.
Full stop.
[00:37:18] Speaker A: See this. This is why.
[00:37:20] Speaker B: Oh, wait, before we continue. Full stop. So are we agreeing that the black pilot and the white pilot both sitting in the seat left and right are the same equal qualification? Right.
They both have to have. Be qualified. No, no, it's full stop, yes or no answer.
The black pilot, white pilot, both have to be qualified to sit in that seat. Right.
[00:37:41] Speaker A: They have to, you know, get a qualification.
[00:37:43] Speaker B: Correct. So they have to be qualified to sit in that seat.
[00:37:46] Speaker A: Yes, but it's.
[00:37:48] Speaker B: There we go. So continue now because both the black pilot and the white pilot, who are both sitting up there are both automatically qualified to sit there. Continue with this.
[00:37:59] Speaker A: So here, like, here's the full, you know, context of the quote.
You know, we've all been to the back of the plane when turbulence hits, and you're flying through a storm, and you're like, I'm so glad that the, you know, guy with. Guy with the right stuff and a square jaw is in the cockpit before he took off. And I feel better now thinking about that. Kirk says, you want to go thought crime. I'm sorry, If I see a black pilot, I'm gonna say, like, boy, I hope he's qualified.
Colbert said, you know, but, you know, you wouldn't have done that before.
That's not immediate. That's not who I am. That's not what I believe.
Neff said. That's a reality that the left has created. Kirk says, I want to be as blunt as possible because now I'm connecting two dots. Wait a second. This CEO said he's forcing. That white qualified guy is not going to get the job. So I see the guy, he Might be the nice person and say, boy, hope he's, you know, not a Harvard style, you know, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
That landed half his, you know, flight simulator trials.
So hold up.
[00:39:05] Speaker B: Oh, wait, continue first.
[00:39:07] Speaker A: Go ahead. And you know.
[00:39:08] Speaker B: No, continue. Because there's. This is the last bit of the quote anyways.
[00:39:11] Speaker A: Such a good point. That's so fair. Also, it creates unhealthy thinking patterns. I don't want to think that way. And no one should. Right. But by the way, when you couple it with the faa, air traffic control, they got a bunch of morons and affirmative action people.
[00:39:24] Speaker B: Okay, so now we're talking qualification.
Black pilot and white pilot both have to have the same qualification to sit in that chair.
So on qualification, black pilot and white pilot, in theory on that say together, that same qualification black pilot has, white pilot could land only half the same simulations to get the qualification correct. Same theory. Because that's what it. Because we. Oh, wait, wait. We already talked about in the very beginning, affirmative action has nothing to do with qualification. It has to do with hiring. So.
Yeah.
[00:40:04] Speaker A: And then once they hire them, qualification.
[00:40:07] Speaker B: Wise, black pilot and white pilot both are qualified the same, right?
[00:40:12] Speaker A: I mean.
[00:40:13] Speaker B: Yes.
Both have the same minimum qualification, maybe. Nope, Nope. Minimum qualification to get your to be pilot. We went through the qualification list.
[00:40:25] Speaker A: Half of the.
[00:40:26] Speaker B: No, we went through the qualification list. Right.
So if we went to be qualified, then that's the minimum to do it. Right.
[00:40:36] Speaker A: Half of the doctors graduated at the bottom half of the class.
[00:40:40] Speaker B: Correct.
Do you know.
[00:40:44] Speaker A: Do you want a D doctor? Do you want a doctor that got all Ds but passed?
[00:40:47] Speaker B: Have you ever asked your doctor what was his grade in college?
[00:40:52] Speaker A: I don't have a doctor.
[00:40:55] Speaker B: That, That's a separate issue.
[00:40:57] Speaker A: Then that's gonna.
[00:40:58] Speaker B: But have you ever. Have you ever. So you, You've never seen a doctor?
[00:41:03] Speaker A: Every time I see a truck driver, you know, and I meet a truck driver.
[00:41:06] Speaker B: Not a truck driver.
Never been to the hospital. You've never had a. Have a communication with the doctors in your adult life?
[00:41:13] Speaker A: No.
[00:41:15] Speaker B: Okay, that are. That this thread of conversation stops there.
[00:41:22] Speaker A: It's a bad.
[00:41:23] Speaker B: Yeah, because again, it.
[00:41:25] Speaker A: The. The only doctor I have is the doctor that touches my penis and does physicals.
[00:41:30] Speaker B: That's it. Wait, wait, so he. Did you ask if he's on the bottom half of the.
[00:41:34] Speaker A: Well, no, it's a nurse.
[00:41:35] Speaker B: But did you ask her if she's on the bottom half?
[00:41:39] Speaker A: No.
[00:41:40] Speaker B: Did it ever occur to you she might be on the bottom half?
[00:41:43] Speaker A: Yes.
But you know, she's not Doing anything life saving. She's checking my testicles. You know, like, yeah, those are testicles. Good job. Turn your head and cough. You know, and she's not complimenting the size of my dick. And I'm like, good for you, lady. Good for you. I know it's hard to control yourself just seeing such a fucking massive hog and make, wow, it's a big dick. But, you know, she didn't say anything about it. I'm like, that's professional now, if you asked. Oh, wow. Where did you get such a big dick? From my mama. Did you graduate at the bottom half of your class? That's what I'm asking.
[00:42:19] Speaker B: You are an idiot.
[00:42:20] Speaker A: I know that. That's my favorite fucking part of this podcast, is getting to be the idiot.
[00:42:30] Speaker B: Even in full context, it doesn't change the fact that he is spreading a racial divide of a question in. I mean, because. No, stop, stop. Because right here, full stop with this, he's. If you scroll up just a little bit, he talks about, what's it called? I hope he's qualified. And then he talks about. Wait, you would.
[00:42:57] Speaker A: Yeah, I mean, like, let me, Let me see if I can actually fucking, you know, get the whole, you know, thing.
[00:43:03] Speaker B: Oh, all I'm saying is him then saying, well, I wonder for.
What's it called? Landing half of the flight simulations. That's a extra black racial qualifier that he's adding on to that where there's no need for that context. Because again, to meet the minimum standard of qualification, both pilots have to hit that. So there is no reason for him to be like, oh, I see a black pilot. Then I wonder if he's qualified because to sit in that seat, him and the white pilot both had the same minimum amount of qualification. Now, I mean, now, now, to say maybe this guy got hired because he's black, that's a different thing. But to say he's under qualified and hired because he's black.
That is what Charlie Kirk said. Again, two different statements were arguing or were arguing, but. But like, Charlie Kirk.
[00:44:02] Speaker A: So, like, did you see the truck driver that killed three people in Florida?
[00:44:06] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:44:07] Speaker A: So, like, everyone has seen this. He got his license in California because, you know, like, okay, cool, you know, Mexican immigrant, you know, here in the country illegally and, you know, just California gave him a CDL and went out and killed three people.
Now I have to look at, you know, pretty much any Mexican truck driver and say, boy, I hope you know, he's not illegal and gonna go out and kill, you know, a bunch of fucking people.
You know, accidentally, because he doesn't, you know, can't read the fucking street signs. That's why, you know, Donald Trump has now been like, you know, hey, if you pull into a way station, prove you know how to speak English, you know, and if you can't prove you know how to speak English, get the fuck off the road.
And I don't see that as a bad thing.
[00:45:00] Speaker B: How many different signs? Like, you know, how many sentences are written on signs?
[00:45:11] Speaker A: Quite a few, actually.
You have to, you know, be able to read, you know, all CMVs must carry chains September through May.
And if you don't, you know, here's how much it's gonna cost, you know, chain law in effect. If you can't read chain law in effect, then, oh, guess what? You're going up the mountain without fucking chains.
You know, hey, this road's closed also, you know that no cvs, no, you know, vehicles above this weight. There's a lot of fucking signs also that applied directly to commercial vehicles instead.
[00:45:44] Speaker B: Of going down this, that, what's it called? Pathway. Because that was a little.
It'll just take longer to argue. To show my point and show what I'm trying to prove is.
Here's the easier one.
How many trucks driving in videos have we seen of white truck drivers crash into stopped vehicles ahead because they weren't paying attention?
[00:46:12] Speaker A: I mean, there's a few, I would.
[00:46:15] Speaker B: Say more than a few, but there is a few. Right, so then in theory, should, should it.
[00:46:20] Speaker A: Let me get like, I like actual stats podcast. How many truck drivers crash every year in America?
In 2023, 5,472 fatalities occurred in crashes involving large trucks with 153,000 injuries.
[00:46:40] Speaker B: God damn, that's a lot of injuries. A lot of injuries.
[00:46:42] Speaker A: Yes. You know, all crashes, large trucks accounted for 13.4% of all traffic fatalities. Okay, let's see how many regular vehicles cause fatalities in America?
About 24,000 deaths.
[00:47:08] Speaker B: I don't understand how this argument is talking about when I was. We're talking racial.
[00:47:15] Speaker A: But, you know, it's like, because if.
[00:47:17] Speaker B: If you're going to argue, like, so should we have less cards? Yeah, we should have more walkable cities. We should have free buses and we should have trains and what's it called? Monorails. Yeah, that's exactly what I'm saying. And I'm down with that.
[00:47:31] Speaker A: Okay. Yeah, I'm kind, I'm kind of on your side here. I, I like, you know, driving is not a right. You do not have a right to drive a Vehicle. You know, it is a privilege. And, you know, I am all for having, you know, mental health assessment to, you know, get behind the wheel of a car.
[00:47:47] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:47:48] Speaker A: You know, and if you're gonna, you know, have, you know, breakdowns and meltdowns, it's like, oh, no.
[00:47:52] Speaker B: But before we do, before we limit that, we should have more like, we need a. Have the better infrastructure to support that type of stuff and depend on let's.
[00:48:04] Speaker A: Ubers and who's don't have people in them. They're driverless cars.
[00:48:10] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:48:10] Speaker A: Just like they're bringing out wayos all the time. And like more and more wayos they're obnoxious as. But I'm like, that's convenient. Especially if I can get like a cheap waymo. Hell yeah.
Like, I'm all for it.
[00:48:25] Speaker B: But again with this. Now can you look up big truck accidents divided by ethnicity?
[00:48:32] Speaker A: Oh, man, this is gonna be like putting me on a list.
How many black people get into truck accidents in America?
[00:48:40] Speaker B: No, I want the truck accidents by ethnicity.
[00:48:43] Speaker A: Oh, we got it. Don't you worry.
[00:48:46] Speaker B: Right there. The 2021.
[00:48:48] Speaker A: Yeah, it. Okay. Yeah, off. I don't care.
The following terms are used throughout this fact sheet. Hispanic, Latino, American Indian, Asian, black, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
In 2021.
Is that supposed to say Asian people? I think they misspelled Asian. They did.
[00:49:14] Speaker B: But also real quick.
[00:49:15] Speaker A: No, A, I, a, n. What is.
[00:49:17] Speaker B: Oh, I wonder what that is too. But real quick. This is traffic accidents. I was asking big truck once.
[00:49:25] Speaker A: This is big truck. Yeah.
[00:49:26] Speaker B: Is that big truck? Are you sure?
[00:49:28] Speaker A: American Indian and Alaska Native. Okay, gotcha. That's who that is.
[00:49:33] Speaker B: Go back to the top real quick. Are you sure this is a big truck? I thought this is all fatalities.
[00:49:38] Speaker A: This is probably, you know, it doesn't matter.
[00:49:42] Speaker B: But, you know, it does matter because, like, I want to say no, because we're. It matters for the fact that it would be very similar to the pilot. For that, you need a additional qualification than just your regular license, same as you need additional qualification than your regular pilot license.
[00:50:01] Speaker A: Is it easier for a black man to get a commercial pilot license?
[00:50:05] Speaker B: We went over this already.
[00:50:07] Speaker A: Yeah.
No, it is not easy.
[00:50:10] Speaker B: Yeah, we went over this.
Now again, if we're talking hiring, but.
[00:50:14] Speaker A: You know, a major challenge for many aspiring pilots is a high cost of training, which portion disproportionately affects underrepresented communities. But since with dei, they give them, you know, all the money that they need to go in and, you know, get in there so they'll give Him a scholarship to go to, you know, flight school. Beck, hey, congratulations, you're black. We're gonna pay for your flight school.
And, you know, like, okay, cool, man. Yeah.
Now, here's the thing, you know, yes, it is kind of like a wrong, you know, thought to say, hey, you know, pilots and people and, you know, these trusted positions, you know, you should worry about them. You know, people in air traffic control. Absolutely fucking, you know, worry about them. They might be blind, you know, just.
[00:51:02] Speaker B: To answer the question, because they only have the 2021 for the large trucks. 54% of the large trucks accidents were white. 18% of them are Hispanic. 17 black, 2% Asian, and less than 1% the AI. And.
But so then with that same thing of, ooh, I wonder, should we look at all white, about all. Most of the white truck drivers be like, yes, man, I hope he really doesn't have an accident. I'm really worried about him. And, like, be like, oh, yeah, all you blackies and stuff. Y' all are great. Continue doing what you're doing. I have no worries. Is that what you're saying?
[00:51:47] Speaker A: You know, here. Here's, you know, a real fucking thing. Because I am on the road.
[00:51:51] Speaker B: Yeah. That's why. That's why I wanted.
[00:51:53] Speaker A: On top of.
I rarely ever see black truck drivers.
[00:51:57] Speaker B: Right.
[00:51:58] Speaker A: You know, I rarely ever.
[00:51:59] Speaker B: Because there's only 17.
Well, there's less than 17. But, yeah.
[00:52:04] Speaker A: Yeah, it's not like a huge number of, you know, black folk out there, you know, driving trucks. Not a huge number of women either. Yep. You know, I rarely see, you know, Asians. It's mostly Indians and white people.
Like, realistically, that's who I see, you know, like, driving, you know, saya, trucks. You know, Indians, like, from India.
Good drivers. You know, I have nothing against them. They're good drivers. They know what they're doing.
You know, they. They fucking decorate their truck and, like, I don't want to fucking, you know, mess this up. And so they take pride in their shit.
You know, white guys, they're. They're busy, you know, fucking jacking off, you know, the trashy porn on their phones, and they crash in and kill, like, 20 people.
So, yes, I. I would say, you know, most likely white people are the problem in big trucks.
You know, anytime I, you know, see somebody get pulled over and with. It's usually white guys, but that's because of dei.
[00:53:03] Speaker B: But again, though, you don't automatically have that thought of, like, man, I hope this white guy's qualified. When you're. When you go In.
[00:53:10] Speaker A: Yeah, no, I do. Are you kidding me? All the time.
Every time I. Okay, so certain mega carriers.
[00:53:18] Speaker B: I think if you were being honest.
[00:53:20] Speaker A: No, yes. Honestly, you know, if I see xpo Schneider trucks.
[00:53:30] Speaker B: We're not talking. We're not talking.
We're not talking carriers. We're talking racial. You walk in your truck stop, stop, right? White guy, he's a truck, you know, he's a trucker. You just. You don't know what company he's for, but because he's out the truck stop getting food and stuff, you know, he's a trucker.
[00:53:46] Speaker A: If you're in the fuel island for two goddamn long, you know, I don't care what fucking race you are, you're a piece of shit and you should be shot like a dog in the streets.
Fucking fuel up. Move out of the fucking.
[00:53:58] Speaker B: I thought we started. Well, at least I started with the podcast was saying I don't think anyone should be shot.
[00:54:04] Speaker A: I do. If you fucking go to a loves, you know, they have little signs on the fuel island fuel and move forward.
So this is the rule, you know, as a truck driver. If you go to, you know, a giant, you know, flying J loves, you know, whatever fucking, you know, truck stop you want to go to. We have so many fucking areas with satellite pumps and all that shit. And if you're in just a pickup truck, fuck off. You do not deserve to be there. Go to your normal fucking pumps.
This is 100%. Every truck driver will agree with me on this. Every truck driver in America will agree with me on this.
You get to your fucking pump.
[00:54:42] Speaker B: If every truck driver in America would agree to you on this, then every truck driver in America would move forward.
[00:54:49] Speaker A: They're not truck drivers. We do not consider them truck drivers. You are a tourist in this industry. Congratulations, you've been a fucking. I've been a truck driver for six months.
[00:54:57] Speaker B: Fuck off.
[00:54:58] Speaker A: You are not a truck driver. You have to earn your goddamn stripes. Earn them.
[00:55:02] Speaker B: How long do you have to be a truck?
[00:55:04] Speaker A: Five years.
Be it for five years. Know how to chain up? Know every thing. Oh, man. You know, have you ever messed with your slack adjusters?
[00:55:15] Speaker B: Just want to ask. You say it takes five years to learn that, all that stuff, right?
[00:55:20] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:55:21] Speaker B: But you also said that it's really easy to be a truck driver.
[00:55:24] Speaker A: It is easy to get the license to get into a truck. Yes, it is. Wildly too easy. That is why we fucking, you know, we are an old boys club. It's like you have to earn your goddamn stripes, you know, you have to be like, yeah, I used to drive this and I drove this and I drove this and I drove this. You know, I've gone through like eight different fucking trucks. I've maxed out their fucking mileage and I've sent them fucking back. They give me a brand new fucking truck.
You know, I've done my fucking due diligence and done all my fucking miles. Over a million fucking miles on the goddamn road. I have done my.
I am a truck driver now. I do not have a, you know, stick shift anymore because my company got rid of it. So now it. That takes me down a couple pegs. I am no longer on the hierarchy.
Yeah, yeah. Like, it's a.
[00:56:13] Speaker B: So you believe there's a hierarchy?
[00:56:15] Speaker A: There's a hierarchy. Yes.
A hundred percent. There is a hierarchy. You know, you guys, like, there are certain trucks, you know, like the overs, like the super oversized and ice road truckers top the hierarchy. Boom. Hell yes.
[00:56:32] Speaker B: You know, you're making currently be an ice road trucker. To be in the hierarchy, you.
[00:56:37] Speaker A: You have to go do some fucking crazy rec. Like, not dumb reckless, but, you know, this shit just needs to get fucking done.
[00:56:43] Speaker B: Yeah, but if you're not. So if you're not an ice road trucker after, like, say you've been ice road trucker for a while, right? And then you have it. You stop doing it for like six months maybe you're.
[00:56:55] Speaker A: You're already in the hierarchy, dude. You're immortalized. You've done the.
Yeah.
[00:57:01] Speaker B: Are you prove you've done this.
[00:57:03] Speaker A: You have stories. Everyone has stories.
You know, if you come, you know, if you park your. And you come inside and you sit down and, you know, have yourself a subway or whatever the.
And you're sitting down, you know, swapping stories. If you're like, oh, one time I almost hit a cow. Fuck off, nerd.
It's like, you know, one time I watched this dude's fucking motorcycle explode in front of me and I came 2 inches from hitting his head, nearly flipped my truck. I got out and fucking took him to the hospital.
It's a real story.
You know, it's like, oh, yeah, that, that, you know, that's crazy.
[00:57:44] Speaker B: It's very Trunk. A lot of truck drivers are traumatized.
[00:57:48] Speaker A: No, I wasn't. I got his, you know, motorcycle up off the road and, you know, got all this out of the way and, you know, he bled all over my truck.
[00:57:57] Speaker B: And, you know, you are definitely. Even if you, you went through a traumatic experience.
[00:58:03] Speaker A: Oh, no, like, if I would have crushed his head. Yes, that would have fucking sucked. No, I saved his life. I'm like, good.
You know, he, you know, just wrecked his bike and, you know, got into the hospital.
Not traumatic, you know, fucking.
I've, you know, popped baby deer on the front of my truck.
But, you know, if you're like, oh, one time, I. I saw some ice on the road. It's like, one time, I was in an avalanche.
[00:58:31] Speaker B: All right, bring it back to Charlie Kirk.
[00:58:33] Speaker A: Yes.
[00:58:33] Speaker B: Bring it back to misquoting quotes or out of context, because the back. Black pilot quote.
[00:58:41] Speaker A: What else do you got? Give me another one.
[00:58:46] Speaker B: Happening all the time in urban America. Prowling blacks are running around for fun to target white people. That's a fact. It's happening more and more.
[00:58:56] Speaker A: Yeah.
Do you not think it's happening more and more?
[00:59:00] Speaker B: I absolutely don't think it's happening more and more.
[00:59:03] Speaker A: Send your kid to Detroit.
[00:59:07] Speaker B: First of all, even if my kid was prowled by blacks, they're not white, so. Whoa. That's not part of that statistic there.
Like, that being my kid makes them not white already.
[00:59:23] Speaker A: White passing enough.
Yeah, like. Like, no offense, but, you know, white passing.
[00:59:35] Speaker B: Yeah, they're white, pal. I never said they were.
[00:59:37] Speaker A: Like, I. I don't know their mom, but, you know, it's like, their mom's Irish and Polish. They don't know, you know, what. What their mom looks like at all.
[00:59:45] Speaker B: They're very white.
[00:59:46] Speaker A: Okay. Yeah, I. I'll take your word for.
[00:59:52] Speaker B: It, you know, double white.
[00:59:56] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:59:56] Speaker B: Like they're. They have to run from the sun, like in Riddick.
Anyways.
[01:00:02] Speaker A: Yeah.
Either way. But, you know, white passing.
[01:00:06] Speaker B: Yeah.
[01:00:06] Speaker A: You know, and.
[01:00:09] Speaker B: And why do you. Why do you choose Chicago?
[01:00:13] Speaker A: I chose Detroit or Detroit because Detroit, it's, like, a dangerous area with, like, the. The roving youths.
[01:00:23] Speaker B: So show me the article you're pulling up of roving use in Detroit of blacks hunting whites.
[01:00:32] Speaker A: Okay.
Group of black people beat up white woman.
Woman. You know, look at this first one.
[01:00:41] Speaker B: Right to our top story.
[01:00:42] Speaker A: The woman who was.
You know.
[01:00:44] Speaker B: I remember this.
[01:00:46] Speaker A: Yeah. Oh, man, look. Look at all this.
Wow. You know, the. The.
What is that? The roaming. Oh, holy shit. Look at these white people getting beat up by a bunch of, you know, black people. Here's a video of it.
A video from a month ago.
[01:01:03] Speaker B: Correct.
[01:01:04] Speaker A: Oh, look at her black eye. Holy shit. She's so white.
[01:01:09] Speaker B: Yeah.
[01:01:10] Speaker A: You know, getting beat up.
[01:01:11] Speaker B: You're very sensationalizing this. That's very understandable. Very sad.
So very sorry for that. Nobody should go through that.
Do you have another.
[01:01:27] Speaker A: One.
[01:01:29] Speaker B: No, that's the same.
[01:01:36] Speaker A: Let's see. Like, like, I'm not gonna go in because like, if I, you know.
Well, here's the thing. If I do, like, go in, like Twitter and shit like that, you're gonna see some fucking evil, fucked up shit.
And, you know, you're gonna probably see people get shot to death. And it's like, I don't want to fucking put you through that, you know, I don't want it, you know, to force you to, like, watch, you know, black people, like, kill white people.
Because, like, that is the kind of shit that you'll see on fucking Twitter.
That is the thing.
[01:02:06] Speaker B: The better verbiage is what you'll see on Twitter is people assaulting people and people murdering people. Because I am on Twitter and I have seen a bunch of videos of white people doing it too. Maybe not like that, but I've seen.
[01:02:21] Speaker A: White people on Twitter, white people beating up black people.
[01:02:28] Speaker B: Here we go.
[01:02:29] Speaker A: Let's see.
You know, a group of white teens attack a black teen. Suspects are cited with misdemeanors. Community is now upset and fucking, you know, gonna go crazy and burn down the entire town.
I love it.
You know, right at, right below it, it's a fucking, you know, the fucking Dijon soup.
[01:02:52] Speaker B: So one for one video where, again.
[01:02:58] Speaker A: Yes, people attack each other. And yeah, this is what happens. But to say you just watched a video of, you know, exactly, you know, Charlie's quote, you know, groups of fucking black people go around, attack, and not all of them get fucking, you know, footage of it done.
[01:03:16] Speaker B: It's happening more and more. And that's a fact, part of the quote. And again, it's not happy. More and more of a bunch of blacks just attacking whites for white because they're white.
[01:03:31] Speaker A: I mean, do I have, do I have to pull up the video of the subway?
[01:03:36] Speaker B: You.
[01:03:39] Speaker A: I mean, that, that was one person, but no one else on that train, all who were black did, did nothing to help her.
[01:03:47] Speaker B: You're right.
You're right. Same as the one guy who got acquitted for killing the other black guy on the subway. And the black guy didn't have a weapon and he was just shouting about being hungry. But again, I mean, he talking one for one. That happened one for one. So again, you. It can't be like, well, see, these black people are doing it more and more, but the whites, they're just here and innocent.
[01:04:15] Speaker A: How many black people assault white people in America?
I like the FBI. Let's go to there.
Murder, you know, total white black. It's actually pretty fucking close. I'm not gonna lie here, you know, Jesus Christ. White people, oh my God, you guys.
[01:04:38] Speaker B: Are awful for that part.
[01:04:40] Speaker A: Yeah, yeah. Jesus Christ.
[01:04:41] Speaker B: I wasn't gonna bring that up in our argument.
[01:04:44] Speaker A: I am, God damn.
[01:04:45] Speaker B: I am surprised actually about burglary.
[01:04:48] Speaker A: Yeah, but like, look, look at.
[01:04:49] Speaker B: Wait, wait, wait. I'm very surprised about burglary that you didn't mention.
[01:04:54] Speaker A: I haven't gotten down. I'm still here on the first three rows. Murder, rape and robbery. You know, white people on the fucking arrest, you know, holy shit, y' all getting arrested non stop, you know, 11,588, black, 4,427.
Proud of you guys, you know, not, not doing bad things, you know, robbery, you know, pretty fucking even between blacks and whites.
Aggravated assaults. Holy shit. White people getting arrested all the time. I don't even know what black people are complaining about, about the police no more.
You know, white people, white people are getting all the arrests. You know, we're.
[01:05:35] Speaker B: Wait, wait, why'd you skip over burglary?
[01:05:38] Speaker A: Okay, let's go to burglary because he's, you know, 81,000.
[01:05:42] Speaker B: Because I just wanted to bring up when white people and better yet, when Fox News and Newsmax bring up black people in crime and the assault and the robbing and the burglary and the murders just pointed out. Now I will say caveat though.
The murder one it percentage wise, blacks do have been arrested more for murder than whites in percentage wise as well amongst population.
But all the rape and all the other stuff, very high on whites.
[01:06:19] Speaker A: Yeah, I mean like I'm looking at the total numbers.
[01:06:22] Speaker B: Yeah.
[01:06:22] Speaker A: You know, white people like 70% of the fucking whole fucking distribution of everything. This is 2019 crime statistics too.
[01:06:29] Speaker B: Correct.
[01:06:29] Speaker A: So like just to, you know, really put it out there.
[01:06:32] Speaker B: Yeah.
[01:06:32] Speaker A: Under, wasn't it under FBI? Yes, I'm at UCR. UCR. FBI.gov crime in the US so yeah, I mean you can, you know, go through and you can look at the percentages.
You know, fucking, you know, Hawaiians and Pacific Islanders guys are fucking little angels over there. Look at you, you're doing no, no dirt.
[01:06:56] Speaker B: No, I was just saying though, wasn't 2019 under, who was president?
[01:07:03] Speaker A: Probably Biden.
[01:07:05] Speaker B: No.
Was it Biden? And even if it was Biden, who.
[01:07:10] Speaker A: Was the president in 2019?
[01:07:13] Speaker B: Trump.
[01:07:15] Speaker A: But then, you know, he got right out.
But you know that, that's, let's see, crime statistics of 2024.
[01:07:31] Speaker B: I don't think they have.
[01:07:32] Speaker A: They do.
[01:07:32] Speaker B: Okay.
[01:07:33] Speaker A: Of course they do. Are they not?
[01:07:35] Speaker B: Because it takes a few years to like actually compile it and stuff. I think you could get like 20, 22 or something like that.
[01:07:48] Speaker A: Oh, look at that. It gives me a nice little, you know, it's thinking.
Give me AI.
You know, gang activity.
I like that. Let me see. You know the gang activity.
13 to 16 year olds were the most reported age for victims and offenders.
67.
Yeah, so I mean, like, you know, get these kids out of the gangs.