Episode Transcript
[00:00:01] Speaker A: Alrighty. Alrighty. Welcome back to another episode of Argue this with Alex the Truck and Troniwani.
[00:00:08] Speaker B: Yo.
[00:00:09] Speaker A: So this week we figure we'll do a little bit of, you know, mothers, you know, and how awesome mothers are, especially ones that are kind of cool.
Let me first give a shout out to, you know, my mom, you know, I got to, you know, step on her dreams and ruin her life, and she still has to love me.
And I, I, I do have, like, a serious question, Tron. Like, do you think that mothers and, like, you know, should always get, you know, custody of children?
Like, no, it, like, I'm not saying, like, you know, there's any in it. Like, no animosity. You know, like, both parents make, like, the same. They're just like, hey, we're gonna go our separate ways.
[00:01:02] Speaker B: You know, if everything is a hundred percent equal, then the child should get to choose. Unless the child's too young, obviously.
[00:01:12] Speaker A: Make, make the child like five and then just back, you know, like, the judge is back. Okay, you get, you know, I, I feel like, you know, anything like that should just be 50, 50, no child support 100% of the way. But, you know, I, I do see where, you know, judges are partial to, you know, giving kids to the mom.
[00:01:42] Speaker B: Right.
[00:01:44] Speaker A: You know, do you think that that is a sexist thing and that should be abolished because sexism is a protected class or sex is a protected class?
[00:01:54] Speaker B: I think it should be abolished. Just because, Just because you're a mother doesn't mean you're the best parent. Just the same as. Just because you're a father doesn't mean you're the best parent for the child.
[00:02:08] Speaker A: So, so you're just, like, looking at it bland. You're like, eh, okay. Okay.
So should judges that do prefer the mother should, like, we just, you know, take them off the bench?
[00:02:23] Speaker B: Well, that's, this is where I don't.
You're opening a little bit of a can of worms in a different direction with asking this question. I know, because this is where DEI comes in where, like, how do you prove this is a reason that they feel this way? Or they're, they chose this person. Say, same as, like, everyone's got to, you have to understand that everyone has natural biases.
[00:02:51] Speaker A: Yeah, I have a bias towards the mother.
[00:02:53] Speaker B: I don't think, as a judge, you're, you're not supposed to have biases in any of your decisions.
And so if you could prove that, like, you have this bias because of X of feeling or whatnot, then, yes, you should be removed.
[00:03:13] Speaker A: But Again, so you heard it here first. The judge that helped the fucking illegal immigrants escape out the back should be taken off the bench and be thrown the fuck away. Oh, man, I enjoy fucking trapping somebody.
[00:03:27] Speaker B: I don't think, though, that's the case with that judge. And it's not because the judge has bias. I think that judge is showing true discretion with the law because they are illegally trying to take this guy without his court mandated date.
And so he there being. This is where, again, everything gets muddy.
[00:03:59] Speaker A: I mean, we're, you know, this isn't about the illegal immigrants. You know, I mean, I did bring up. I did think of a new fucking point on that. You know, if they're supposed to get due process, where is the due process for the men that are accused of, you know, hitting women?
[00:04:15] Speaker B: Everyone should have due process. That's in the Constitution.
It doesn't say citizen, it says person. So it's every person should have.
[00:04:25] Speaker A: Well, they, they never, they never thought that, you know, people would just like, we didn't have, like borders back then.
[00:04:33] Speaker B: Also, black people wasn't considered persons back then too.
[00:04:36] Speaker A: They were considered three quarters of a person.
But just saying they were almost there. They were just loading in.
[00:04:45] Speaker B: We've decided to be able to understand the framework of the Constitution with more modern intent and eyes.
[00:04:56] Speaker A: See, we just need to come up with time can, like, you know, time travel. That way we can just go back and get like Thomas Jefferson, George Washington and like John Adams and all them and just bring them back. And it's like, what? Oh my gosh, there's blood. You allow black people in here, it's like, oh, God damn it.
Can we get like the black people out of here?
[00:05:17] Speaker B: I think they'll be more shocked about all the races in one area hanging out than just the black people. But that's fair.
Like, it also depends on where you take them. Because if you take them to like, you know, San Francisco, they'll be like, man, there's a lot of Asians, but they'll be using a different word.
[00:05:36] Speaker A: There's a lot of Orientals.
Like, I, I feel like if you grew up with something and you don't have any hate about the word you're saying, you know, it's not racist.
[00:05:49] Speaker B: Bruh. Bruh. I, I kind of agree with you and kind of don't. Because when I call myself a certain word, that's N word, but not the hard R, but a different word that ends with the lit.
People, like all my white friends get super uncomfortable and it's really funny.
[00:06:14] Speaker A: Yeah, white guilt is hitting hard, and, you know, they're just getting it out of the way. There's like, all right, my white guilt is gone. I can watch Django and laugh now.
[00:06:24] Speaker B: I don't.
I want to say white guilt isn't real, but it is.
But I want to say, though, a lot of people who bitch about white guilt also have that white superiority that would hesitate to call someone the N word if they were air quotes, acting like it. Because then my question would be, what's acting like it? And then why don't you call other people of lighter complexions were too, that if they're acting like it, we have.
[00:07:03] Speaker A: Different words for them.
[00:07:04] Speaker B: There's just certain things I want to bring up. And the other words, if you're talking, if you're thinking. If I'm thinking what you're thinking, 100% doesn't hit the same. Because there's not all that racial and systemic connotation about that with that word.
[00:07:26] Speaker A: I mean, like, I feel like there's a bunch of white people out there that would gladly pay for a ticket back to Africa, you know, first class.
And it's like, you know, if you hate America so much, you can fly back to Africa and see what real racism is.
[00:07:43] Speaker B: I think a lot of people who feel that way are also forgetting the. All the stuff that was built by people they oppressed. And if they want to just pay for our ticket, that's not the same as, hey, we're going to build this area up and then you can move there.
There's two different things. And I'm just pointing that out.
[00:08:11] Speaker A: I mean, like, I. I did the. The math on what reparations would be if we're to give every black person in America equal reparations for, you know, what the people that actually suffered, you know, went through, because, you know, we. We pay them. And there was a lot, a lot more than I thought. I'm like, holy.
And it turned out to be like, 600 bucks.
[00:08:37] Speaker B: Are we counting for inflation?
[00:08:39] Speaker A: Yeah, counting for inflation. 600 bucks.
Because the population was way less back then. And I think it was like, you know, 3 or 4 million black people that we had in slavery that would get reparations.
And if, you know, we took that and then just divided that out to, you know, the. What is it, 35 million black people.
It's like, yeah, you get like, 600 bucks.
[00:09:08] Speaker B: But that's. Again, you're not. You're just taking it like, okay, here we. Sorry we didn't pay you. Here's this instead of, like, all that unaccumulated wealth and opportunity that's been.
[00:09:22] Speaker A: I mean, like, if the reparations were paid, you know, then I feel like, you know, black people can never bring it up again.
[00:09:33] Speaker B: I.
[00:09:35] Speaker A: Like, if you. If. If every black person in America was like, hey, we're sorry about that. That sucks. Here is, you know, money for someone you've never met suffering then.
[00:09:49] Speaker B: But. But you understand, like, the compounding of it is what I'm talking about, though. Like, all right, so, yes, you're giving every black person money now in this economy, now with everything now. It. But you didn't give everyone the money when they had the opportunity to go ahead and invest and have all that compound wealth and the compound of the housing and their land going up. Possibly, I'll guarantee you there are people that will it up, but everyone who also has not done that in people who has had the opportunity to have the same type of wealth and upbringing as the higher ups in our state. Now, it would be different. Like, you could just look at it now, again, not modern as in 2025. But even if you went to back to, like, what's it called, 1990s, somebody graduating from Harvard and stuff is statistically more well off now than somebody who, what, didn't graduate from there then, and then if you compound the opportunities those people had to get to Harvard, you might have different outcomes for people. I'm not saying that it's a hundred percent guarantee, but the outcomes are. I guarantee you the outcome isn't going to be the same as it is now.
[00:11:23] Speaker A: Okay. Yeah, like, I. I can, you know, see what you're saying. Like, if you were to, you know, like, inoculate like a sportish on one and then not inoculate another, and then, like, wait 100 years and then inoculate it and then be like, all right, both of you get out there in the world. Oh, look at this. You know, sportish, or like, an even.
[00:11:44] Speaker B: Better.
[00:11:46] Speaker A: You know, representation was like, dude that did the race, he, like, got a whole bunch of random people. It's like, hey, we're racing today for 100 bucks. You know, first place, you know, gets a hundred dollars. But, you know, he's like, everyone stand in line. You know, if you have both your mom and dad at home, take a step forward. You know, if you've never had to, you know, worry about where your food's coming from, take a step forward.
You know, and like, he did that until, like, a bunch of people were, like, almost at the finish line and he's like. And like a bunch of like black people are still at like the beginning line.
And he's like, all right, everyone in the front, turn around.
It's like, now feel guilty.
He's like, still started the race and like, let some white guy win. I'm like, what a fucking piece of shit.
What a piece of shit.
[00:12:36] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:12:36] Speaker A: You know, I'm like, you were that close to teaching a good lesson.
[00:12:41] Speaker B: Well, here's a great lesson of analyzing it now, but it's going to be highly.
You know, some of your MAGA friends would disagree with this, but a great example would be America and China. Now, like, America had all this time, was able to get ahead and stuff due to being isolated and stuff, built up the great economy China was behind. And then when America came over, it was all like, yo, China, you gotta open the borders or we're gonna kill you. Then try to look at what China did in less than 100 years. You know what I mean?
[00:13:21] Speaker A: Like, yeah, China has a one child policy and they're communists and you know, they're, they're. The President's about to get bad because, you know, they're about to have a whole bunch of stuff and no one to sell it to because, you know, no one else wants Chinese except for America.
[00:13:42] Speaker B: It's like, what are you talking about? A lot of people have already been making deals with China, the eu.
In fact, Trump did the greatest, wildest thing and yes, I just said the greatest and wildest thing that Trump did, but he brought China, Japan and Korea together.
[00:14:01] Speaker A: That's a peacemaker right there. That's my president.
Hell yes.
Donald Trump 2028. Donald Trump 2032.
[00:14:11] Speaker B: He did that? How? By fucking Americans.
It's gonna be terrible.
[00:14:17] Speaker A: I mean, I want to see where it goes. You know, people like, well, we, you know, we, we can't, you know, build something nice over here. We, you know, and if we do, fucking shoes are gonna cost $800. And the only reason they cost $800 is because the capitalists want to keep their profits that they got for fucking, you know, paying Chinese people like a nickel to make them.
[00:14:39] Speaker B: So then are you against capitalism? I'm confused on this response.
[00:14:45] Speaker A: I'm not against capitalism. I'm against certain capitalists that are bad.
[00:14:53] Speaker B: So you're against capitalism with the asterisk?
[00:14:58] Speaker A: No, I'm against certain, you know, corrupt capitalists.
[00:15:04] Speaker B: But the corrupt capitalists are working in the framework of capitalism that's dictated by our society. That we've agreed is good that you are agreed that you like, see, like.
[00:15:16] Speaker A: If they come over here and try and sell shoes for 800, they going to realize very quickly that no one's going to want to buy them because they're able to buy them like a year ago for $20, you know, now I'm not going to go buy your same shoes for 800 because an American made it.
You know, how about this? I'll buy your shoes for, you know, 40 bucks, you know, because you have to, you know, pay the American more, you know, like, it. It. Everyone that's like, yeah, we, we, we need to, you know, make deals with China. You're, you know, encouraging slavery.
[00:15:52] Speaker B: You understand?
[00:15:54] Speaker A: Like, I understand very little, but the.
[00:15:57] Speaker B: Encouragement of slavery is a function of capitalism, right?
[00:16:02] Speaker A: Like, I am here for slavery.
[00:16:05] Speaker B: You have to have a bottom class in capitalism for it to maintain itself. And that bottom class has to be bigger than the upper class because it's kind of shaped like a thing called a pyramid or something. I don't know, it's a little weird, but that's kind of how capitalism is.
[00:16:22] Speaker A: Like, China has so many people that, you know, they don't have enough jobs for everybody. So, like, hey, we'll fucking, you know, make it. You make it to where you have to work, like, you know, for pennies a day, but yet they can still afford to, you know, feed their families, you know, pay for a house, pay for a place to stay, and watch TV for fucking pennies. It's like, why don't us as Americans just go over there and take advantage of their, you know, real estate?
You know, let's go fucking, you know, rack up all their fucking shit like Californians did to the rest of the United States after they moved out of California, you know, go buy up all their fucking properties for fucking pennies on the dollar. And then when it goes up and all these Chinese people are like, oh, fuck, we need more money.
You know, then it, you know, the tariffs seem pretty good, and tariffs are only bad for, you know, America.
And I also find it hilarious that, you know, most people didn't know what tariffs were. They didn't know they existed. They didn't. They had no clue what they were, you know, a month ago, you know, I'd say two months ago, maybe. Like, I don't know what a fucking tariff is.
And then the second Donald Trump says it, they're like, that's bad because Orange man said it.
[00:17:48] Speaker B: Who pays for the tariffs?
[00:17:52] Speaker A: Yeah, we do. I'm fine with that. I'll pay it. No problem.
[00:17:55] Speaker B: Okay.
At least we could Be in agreement of that part. The average American, the people, but the consumer is paying for it, right?
[00:18:05] Speaker A: The, the p. The manufacturer also has to pay for a chunk of it. Cuz if they make us pay for all of it, you know, it's like, oh yeah, we're just not going to buy from you. You're going to ship it over here, having to pay the tariffs to ship it here.
[00:18:19] Speaker B: I'm pretty sure if it's a stalemate of all the manufacturers, let's just say the big, all the big companies, Walmart, Target, all them, they're like, you're, you're all going to pay this. Otherwise, sorry, there's going to be so many Americans that are actually going to end up paying that because there are, there are, there are towns that only have the Walmart in the Target and stuff because all the local stores and stuff were shut down because of your capitalism that you like?
[00:18:54] Speaker A: Yeah, no, like, like that gun right there, you know, you see that gun?
I could buy that gun cheaper if I had it shipped in, you know, from, you know, out of the state and probably save myself, you know, maybe a hundred, two hundred dollars on that gun.
But you know, I wouldn't be supporting my local gun store. So I bought it from my local gun store, spent a little bit more. I have no problem doing that to support what's here and I'll have no problem, you know, supporting, you know, local businesses, local, you know, manufacturers to, you know, bring me my shit.
[00:19:40] Speaker B: But not everyone is able to do that. Would you consider yourself living paycheck to paycheck?
No, but how many, what do you think the percentage is of the average US citizen?
[00:19:55] Speaker A: If I got a $10,000 bill right now, it fuck me though. I'll just say that.
[00:19:59] Speaker B: I understand that. But you're able, like you have more, you have more than $500 after the end of the month that you saved used, extra blue.
Any in that category?
[00:20:16] Speaker A: Yeah, yeah, I do.
[00:20:19] Speaker B: Yeah. How. What do you think the average US citizen can do? Say that?
[00:20:25] Speaker A: I mean, you just, you guys have to work a lot, you know, it sucks.
And you just have to like do a job that fucking absolutely blows. Like, I'm a truck driver, I'm on the road fucking like 55 hours a week. It sucks donkey dick, but you know, at the end of the day I'm like, okay, cool, I got some money.
But the best way to make money and fucking bo, bo, bo, bo, you know, segue back into what we were talking about is saying the N word to black children to Make a million dollars.
[00:21:03] Speaker B: Which is wild.
Wild.
Like we are not in a post racist America. No matter how much people want to be like, well, we voted a black president and da, da, da. And look at.
[00:21:20] Speaker A: No racism is always going to exist because, you know, racism, you know, is a, you know, thought. It's an opinion.
It's saying, hey, I feel like, you know, white people are better because I sit here and watch videos that are fucking hand picked from, you know, all of America.
And all, you know, watch this video upon this video, upon this video and think that this is what happens every day, you know, everywhere you go. And it fucking changes your percept, your perception of what America is.
You know, like me, I'm racist, you know, and that's because, like, I've seen, you know, how white people vote for Kamala.
I'm racist against white people. That, that's what I'm saying.
I don't think white people will microwave their chicken. Like, let's get real.
[00:22:22] Speaker B: I think you have been, I don't know, the ick from white people is races.
As I am superior to you because I am white or I'm superior to.
[00:22:39] Speaker A: You because I know how to cook food. Like, there we go.
I'm superior to you because, like, I.
[00:22:44] Speaker B: Don'T think that's a race thing.
[00:22:47] Speaker A: Oh, it is like, like I, I've had some good ass fucking, you know, southern black food. Oh my God.
Like you lose your racism quick.
Like, food is like the, the key to solving racism.
Potlucks. That's how you solve racism.
You know, everyone bring a dish from your homeland. Bring some lumpia. Oh my God, Filipino people are the greatest.
[00:23:15] Speaker B: You know, I don't think that.
[00:23:17] Speaker A: Bring some curry. Oh my God.
You know, the Middle east is great.
[00:23:21] Speaker B: I don't think that one lady who called a five year old the N word is ever going to change because of food.
[00:23:30] Speaker A: I think she was just having a bad day and some, you know, kid was digging through her stuff. And like, I, I see her point here. Okay?
[00:23:40] Speaker B: I have never.
Somebody start digging through myself and the first thing I say is a racial slur.
[00:23:48] Speaker A: I mean, you, you, you're already black. So it's like.
[00:23:53] Speaker B: So black people can't be racist or say racial slurs against other blacks.
[00:23:58] Speaker A: Like, if you're African, then yes, of course. But you know, if you're just, you.
[00:24:05] Speaker B: Know, one of the most racist people are old black men. So that's all I'm saying.
[00:24:10] Speaker A: Oh, no. Like, do you have any like African friends? Like, like, like dark black Africans?
[00:24:18] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:24:18] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:24:19] Speaker B: Like, from Ghana.
[00:24:20] Speaker A: Yeah, from Ghana.
[00:24:21] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:24:22] Speaker A: Hilariously racist. Oh, my God. Like, have me rolling.
Oh, my God. I'm laughing my ass off because they're allowed to say the fucking quiet part out loud.
And, you know, it's like, you know, you. You can say what you know, people, you know, think on the inside and just don't say because it's rude to say.
[00:24:49] Speaker B: So do you think the people who talk about their own race are like, yeah, all of us suck, except for me, because I'm different?
[00:25:00] Speaker A: No, I mean, like, you know, Chris Rock has a whole bit. He's like, you know, who do you think is more racist? White people are black people.
He's like, black people. Because black people hate black people, too.
And he's like.
Like, that's not the word he says. But, you know, I know.
[00:25:20] Speaker B: I. I see this all.
[00:25:22] Speaker A: Okay. Yeah. So. So you understand what I'm saying here is like, you know, I. I don't blanket judge anybody. You know, I'm like, you understand, though.
[00:25:33] Speaker B: The reason why black people are racist against other black people is because the colonization. Because. Because of, you know, their association to whiteness and white power. And again, it's the same as, like, the house, like, yeah.
[00:25:51] Speaker A: And everyone hated the Uncle Toms, but it's like the Uncle Toms were, like, you know, educated and got to, you know, sleep in the house.
And, you know, like, the white man's like, I like you. And, like, they're the ones that got credited for, like, making, like, peanut butter and. And, like, the, you know, the crescent wrench.
That's why they call it a monkey wrench.
[00:26:13] Speaker B: They.
[00:26:18] Speaker A: Anyways, but yes, if you're gonna go out and act a certain way.
Yeah.
[00:26:26] Speaker B: So then why don't you call white people act that certain way the N word? Why don't you call Chinese people who act that same way?
[00:26:35] Speaker A: Because they all have their own fucking, you know, slurs. And I like to rotate my slurs.
But, you know, how often do you see, you know, white people walk into a CVS with the trash bag and just start fucking, you know, filling that shit up.
[00:26:51] Speaker B: You know, the most people who steal from Target are rich white ladies, right?
[00:26:55] Speaker A: Yeah. But they put, like, one or two things in their bag and are quiet about it. They don't say shit.
Oh, they steal, like, some lipstick and a candy bar and, like, that's it.
They don't fucking go and steal it. This is again where.
[00:27:11] Speaker B: This is again where Perception.
[00:27:13] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:27:14] Speaker B: Ikea.
Do you know who the Kia boys were? Do you know what ratio they were. Do you know also what race? Like, dude, no, you can't just say.
[00:27:27] Speaker A: I, I love. You know, just like, you know, slipping some in, see if we'll slip past you. But like, there, there was those, you know, two young girls that like went and stole like an UberEats car.
And like, the dude was like, you know, coming back and like they're getting in, trying to steal his car, and he's like, hey, don't steal my car. And then they tase him and you know, as his hand is clamping to the steering wheel, drive off, crash the car and kill them. And then they, you know, get like six months probation for it.
You know, it's like, I feel like.
[00:28:00] Speaker B: I don't think they just got six months probation for all that.
[00:28:04] Speaker A: I'll pull it up.
[00:28:05] Speaker B: Please do.
But there's tons, like, there's tons of.
[00:28:17] Speaker A: Two girls that kill a Uber Eats driver in New York.
Let's see if it.
Yeah. Two teenage girls plead guilty for their roles in the carjacking.
[00:28:35] Speaker B: Go back up. What did I say? Maximum sentence.
[00:28:40] Speaker A: The 14 and 15 year olds will not be reason from juvenile.
[00:28:43] Speaker B: Did you just. I could have quoted. You said months.
[00:28:48] Speaker A: Well, like, no, no, I'm just pointing. This is what, like when it first came out, this is like what I just pointed out.
[00:28:54] Speaker B: That again, facts are important.
And. And back to what I was going to say. There are tons of stories out there of rich white people who, yeah, here's.
[00:29:08] Speaker A: A Pakistani immigrant that came to the United States in 2014, build a better life at work and like two, you know, young, you know, black girls go in, steal his car, tase him, crash car and kill him. And now they're just gonna be in jail for six years.
You know that? That's it. They're just, they're gonna be in juvie until they turn 21. That's it.
Slap on your wrist for killing somebody.
Now, they are children, I will give you that.
[00:29:41] Speaker B: There are tons of. Bro, bro, bro, bro, bro. I can't even think of the dude's name right now. Brock Turner. What about people like that?
[00:29:51] Speaker A: Brock Turner was a rapist that got the shit beaten out of him. And he gets fucking doxxed every fucking time he tries to move somewhere new.
[00:30:00] Speaker B: So what makes you think that these girls or whoever they are are not going to get docs when they get out?
[00:30:11] Speaker A: No, they won't.
[00:30:13] Speaker B: What makes you think that?
[00:30:16] Speaker A: I mean, like, this, you know, story was from July 7, 2021, and I'm probably like the only one that remembers It. And you know, it's only because, like, you triggered a memory.
[00:30:26] Speaker B: I'm like, I think that Pakistani family remembers it. So I can't say that you're the only woman. And that's the minimum of people who remember it.
[00:30:34] Speaker A: I mean, it was in New York.
[00:30:36] Speaker B: Just point out backs.
[00:30:39] Speaker A: I think he was like, just, you know, like maybe his wife and like, they're old, so, like they have Alzheimer's. Like, I had a husband and it's like, you dead? But he's dead.
Okay. I'm used to it. I'm from Pakistan.
[00:30:56] Speaker B: Who kills most of the Pakistanis? Pretty sure.
[00:30:59] Speaker A: I'm pretty sure it's Americans just dropping their bombs.
[00:31:02] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:31:05] Speaker A: Is that the point you're trying to make?
[00:31:07] Speaker B: So we're. Yeah. So they're. I'm just pointing out the fact that you, You're. I'm used to it.
[00:31:13] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:31:13] Speaker B: I didn't say. I didn't.
[00:31:15] Speaker A: It wasn't a race thing. It was just like. No, it's just Pakistanis do get killed, you know, and you know, people in Pakistan and Israel, like the Middle east and all that, it's like, yeah, that's awful that that happens, you know, But I don't want my tax dollars going to helping them.
[00:31:40] Speaker B: So you want your tax dollars to go to like, bro, bro. Okay.
[00:31:44] Speaker A: Build a big bomb to kill them all so that way no one's fighting.
[00:31:47] Speaker B: Time out, time out, time out.
So the two planes that fell off the carrier that cost us $120 million.
[00:31:58] Speaker A: That'S because the Houthis were attacking.
You didn't know about that, did you?
[00:32:07] Speaker B: Really? The Houthis.
[00:32:08] Speaker A: The Houthis were attacking and they had to make evasive maneuvers and that's why the planes fell off.
[00:32:14] Speaker B: That's your.
[00:32:14] Speaker A: That's my answer. Yes.
I. I'll look it up right now.
[00:32:20] Speaker B: Don't even know here.
[00:32:22] Speaker A: I'll even go to straight up explain Straight Arrow News.
Straight Arrow News is, you know, it doesn't have like bias on one side or the other.
Let's see go in here.
Jets, USS for the second time in.
[00:32:52] Speaker B: A little more than a week.
[00:32:53] Speaker A: Knock it off. Yeah. Overboard jets, full story.
For the second time in just over a week, the US military lost a jet in the Red Sea going overboard from the USS Harry Truman aircraft carrier. U.S. central Command said the jet was landing on Tuesday when the system that helped the aircraft failed, sending the multi million dollar jet in the sea. What failed?
Peters? The tail hook failed to hook the wire. That slows the aircraft, you know. Okay, so that was One, but the first one was from the fucking Houthis and they had to make like a fucking, you know, evasive maneuver. So one was an accident, you know, whoops. The fucking, you know, complicated fucking thing of landing a, you know, plane on a moving platform in the middle of the sea. Middle of the Red Sea, you know, it's kind of hard to do.
[00:33:45] Speaker B: All I'm saying, my friend, is in this one mini talk conversation topic, I didn't even say one word. And you changed. You had to change your angle of defense on this.
And all. All I would just say, like Tron was just saying is, hey, we as America could have spent that $120 million to still have free suit and lunch. That's literally all I was going to say.
[00:34:19] Speaker A: I mean, we can still go get them.
[00:34:22] Speaker B: No, we can't. That's going to cost way too much more money.
[00:34:25] Speaker A: Yeah, I feel like some dude with like a fishing magnet can just like throw. Throw it in there and just yoink.
[00:34:31] Speaker B: It up and then it's unique how none of this, you know, like you.
[00:34:39] Speaker A: And you can see who's like reporting on it. You know, like far left, you know, has fucking 33.
[00:34:48] Speaker B: No, no, no. Far left has zero center left has 31.
But it looks like the center is reporting on it the most.
[00:35:02] Speaker A: Yeah, I mean, it's not like a political issue.
[00:35:10] Speaker B: I would like to debate. It is, but it's okay.
[00:35:14] Speaker A: But yeah, I mean, straight arrow news, like, I'm sure you've heard like a billion people actually talk about it and it is, you know, fucking solid. Yeah, and just, you know, media miss, you know, some Republicans are defending Planned Parenthood following proposed funding cuts.
But yeah, you can see like who's fucking covering shit, you know, FBI Director Cash Patel thinks Jeffrey Epstein hung himself.
That's hilarious.
Cruz.
Ted Cruz proposes a bill to help military hurt by vaccine mandate.
That's ridiculous. Jesus Christ.
Some. Sometimes the right is just wrong.
Sorry, Teddy. Yeah, you're a idiot on that one.
But, you know, back to this lady. Back to this, you know, old race or this young racist lady, this Uma Thurman looking.
[00:36:31] Speaker B: This young racist lady with old heart.
[00:36:35] Speaker A: I mean, like, I feel like, you know, there are people that are tired of tipping, like tiptoeing, you know, like we have to say African American. It's like Africa is not where every black person is from.
[00:36:50] Speaker B: I'm sorry that you have to tiptoe. Not saying the N word.
Well, I mean, that's a terrible argument.
[00:36:58] Speaker A: I'm not saying tiptoeing around The N word, I'm saying, you know, tiptoeing around, you know, oh, is this going to be a microaggression?
[00:37:06] Speaker B: Yeah. So then, I'm sorry you being upset about, worried about other people perceiving microaggression makes you want to say the N word. We still go back to that spot.
[00:37:18] Speaker A: I mean, I fucking, you know, listen to, you know, some rap music. I'm like, I'll be like, bumping some.
[00:37:24] Speaker B: DMX and most black music. How much. How many times do you say the hard R?
[00:37:29] Speaker A: A lot.
[00:37:30] Speaker B: Yeah.
Pretty sure DMX is one of his favorite songs or best, like popular songs. What these want from A? Not a R?
A?
[00:37:42] Speaker A: I never said DMX was one of them.
[00:37:44] Speaker B: And then he says that the. That's his baseline through the whole thing.
[00:37:51] Speaker A: See, you know.
[00:37:52] Speaker B: Oh, yeah, what about Kidrick Lamar? What about. He says.
[00:37:57] Speaker A: Yeah, he mumbles through, you know, like.
[00:38:00] Speaker B: Just, you know, J. Cole also a.
[00:38:05] Speaker A: Okay, J. Cole is fucking classy.
I don't say nothing bad about J. Cole around here, Dre.
[00:38:13] Speaker B: Eh?
Yeah, Snoop.
[00:38:17] Speaker A: Snoop is too fucking high to say Er.
[00:38:20] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:38:23] Speaker A: But like, like, they, they, they.
[00:38:28] Speaker B: So then what rap music are you listening to? That's. That's a hard R all the time.
[00:38:32] Speaker A: Jimmy Rebel.
[00:38:34] Speaker B: Fair, Fair.
I should have known. I set myself up for that. I apologize for that. Like Uncle Ruckus says, I apologize for my indiscretions.
Jeez.
[00:38:50] Speaker A: But yeah, I mean, like, like, people are.
Yeah, I think, getting tired of being accused of being racist when they're not.
[00:39:02] Speaker B: Was that lady not being racist?
[00:39:06] Speaker A: I mean, you know, not really. I mean.
[00:39:15] Speaker B: Not really, huh?
[00:39:17] Speaker A: I think the guy that was filming her was like, you know, convicted of like, being a pedophile or something like that.
[00:39:22] Speaker B: No, he was not convicted of being a pedophile.
[00:39:25] Speaker A: Okay, let me see.
[00:39:28] Speaker B: You need to get.
[00:39:29] Speaker A: What was the cameraman of the racist video convicted of?
Rochester, man.
That's his name. Let's go.
Yeah, like, she keeps on coming up in.
In a. NAACP calls for charges. Who called a five year old the N word?
[00:40:09] Speaker B: Yeah, the NAACP is a corrupt organization. That's fine. Dumbass. They. They don't even. They can't even condemn Elon Musk for doing a Nazi salute. But they could want charges going against this woman for calling a kid that's five the N word.
[00:40:26] Speaker A: No, I mean, like, I was going through a construction zone the other day and a person was holding a stop sign and they're going like this to me.
[00:40:37] Speaker B: I swear to you, they didn't do this.
With the thump on this chest that he did with.
[00:40:42] Speaker A: I couldn't tell and then picked up.
[00:40:45] Speaker B: I'm just saying.
[00:40:46] Speaker A: Just saying, you know, they're. They're. They're, you know, like, this is.
[00:40:52] Speaker B: Would you. Would you go to a primarily Jewish area and do the exact same thing?
[00:40:59] Speaker A: Yeah. What are they going to do? Fucking complain at me?
The Jews are not a threat to me.
[00:41:07] Speaker B: I want to record this.
[00:41:09] Speaker A: This is recorded. No, no, no.
[00:41:11] Speaker B: I want a video. Record this. We'll blur out your face that way.
I'm going to call you out your bullshit. Let's do this.
[00:41:21] Speaker A: Where's the Jewish neighborhood around here?
[00:41:23] Speaker B: Oh, I'll find one.
[00:41:25] Speaker A: I'll go to a Jewish market.
I'll wear the Hitler mustache.
[00:41:31] Speaker B: What's worse is.
[00:41:34] Speaker A: It.
[00:41:34] Speaker B: I know you would say Hitler mustache actually softens the whole thing.
[00:41:42] Speaker A: And here's what it is. Jewish people have been through this so much, it doesn't even faze them. They don't care.
They're just like, yeah, oh, another ignorant guy. And then they get on with their day. They're just like, oh, I had a.
[00:41:57] Speaker B: Friend from the Middle east that he dressed up as Hitler for Halloween.
Including the mustache and everything.
[00:42:04] Speaker A: Yeah. I mean, like, if you're doing it with, like, hate in your heart, and I, I hate Jewish people. And I, I, you know, I should see all of them dead. Like Hamas and like that. Like, they. They want, like, Jewish people dead, you know, then, yeah, you're bad.
But, you know, if you're just, like, doing it as a joke, you know, joke in poor taste, you know, of course that, you know, it's a bad, you know, poor taste joke. But, you know, at the same time, you know, you're not doing it with a hate in your heart.
Like, if you're sitting in your car rapping the DMX and, like, you know what's going on? Yeah. And you, like, drop it and you're like, oh, shit, my. You know, my black friend's in the back seat and you, like, look back and do you think he's gonna go, I can't believe you're so racist?
[00:42:59] Speaker B: No. Because even right now, as I'm listening to Tupac in my ear, he says the A.
[00:43:06] Speaker A: I need to know who.
[00:43:07] Speaker B: Says A hard R.
Okay.
[00:43:09] Speaker A: I'll Google it right now. I love the fact that I have Google with me.
Rappers that use a hard R.
Songs where Juice says hard R this Jew or Juice Average Juice world. Question.
White rappers have used the N word.
Hard R songs and lyrics on Spotify.
Oh, my God, look at that. You know.
[00:43:44] Speaker B: Can you Name any of these people?
[00:43:47] Speaker A: No, I. I don't listen to.
[00:43:49] Speaker B: You said, you listen to it.
[00:43:51] Speaker A: Listen. Like, you know, Eminem, you know, and sometimes he has, like, some black guys on. I'm like, all right. You know that guy?
Okay.
[00:43:59] Speaker B: D12 does not say the hard.
[00:44:06] Speaker A: I'm like, oh, proof. Are you saying the harder. Oh, no, he's dead.
You know, I'm like, I feel like they're about to say the hard R and then they get killed. Like, you know, Biggie was about to say the hard R and he's like, all right.
You know.
[00:44:23] Speaker B: Also, you just reminded. Not just. But I was looking up. We were talking about the Jews.
Did you remember the story where the Jewish Florida man got arrested because he was shot? 2 Iraelis thinking they were Palestinians?
[00:44:40] Speaker A: What?
[00:44:40] Speaker B: Yeah. This happened in Florida?
[00:44:42] Speaker A: Of course it happened in Florida.
Never heard of this.
[00:44:46] Speaker B: This is back in February.
[00:44:48] Speaker A: God damn it.
I mean, I, like, in all honesty, I feel like, look, he looks like a nice guy.
He's really sorry.
He won't do it again. We should probably release him from jail forever.
[00:45:08] Speaker B: We shouldn't have jail to begin with.
[00:45:12] Speaker A: Well, then where would, you know, black.
[00:45:13] Speaker B: People sleep in affordable housing?
[00:45:18] Speaker A: See, you know, and like, you know, it's a racist comment, but, you know, there's no hate in my heart. See, like, that. That's the difference between, you know, no.
[00:45:29] Speaker B: There was just malice, but still, there's.
[00:45:35] Speaker A: I mean, we. We should just have more black owned businesses. You know, have, like a class that teaches, you know, young black men how to, you know, raise up their own business and just, like have, you know, black leaders in, you know, communities.
You know, our mayor of this town is a black man.
[00:46:00] Speaker B: I know we tried that in the 60s before they were all shot, but that's a different story.
[00:46:06] Speaker A: Yeah, we're done shooting them. We're sorry, okay? We won't do it again. I'm sorry, Fred Hampton. Oh, man, that was bad on us. We're sorry.
[00:46:15] Speaker B: I don't even know why you're apologizing. You aren't even.
[00:46:20] Speaker A: I mean, apparently I'm supposed to be guilty about race or fucking slavery, too. I'm sorry that we enslaved you. I'm. You know, but like, we, like, no one gives a fuck about, like, the Chinese people. They were just thrown in caves and, like, cave got blown up.
[00:46:33] Speaker B: And both of my people were definitely fudged.
[00:46:36] Speaker A: Oh, yeah.
Like, Korea had the longest streak of uninterrupted slavery.
Like, slavery is just everywhere.
You know, evil is everywhere. And, you know, you kind of have to Deal with it.
[00:46:53] Speaker B: I don't think that's the answer is you just have to deal with the evil. Because if we just have to deal with evil, then why do we have prisons? Why do we have jail?
[00:47:05] Speaker A: Yeah, we should just kill people. Like, we should kill pedophiles. Like, you know, like, that is, you know, my honest, you know, hardcore, you know, belief is like, you know, if you're a pedophile dead, you know, why are we, you know, spending money to keep you alive? We honestly should just fucking kill you.
You know, we should just, like, put you in a fuck in a, you know, just line you up. Bang, bang, bang, bang, bang, you know, or, or, you know, harvest your organs, you know, strap you to a bed, take out your organs while you're still alive. That way you fucking suffer, you know, Rapists should have their dicks removed while they're awake. No anesthetic. Congratulations, you're now a dickless.
[00:47:49] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:47:50] Speaker A: Why? Why not? Like, I, I, I, like the cruel and unusual punishments is what is saving a lot of criminals right now. Like, if it wasn't for that amendment where it's like, you're not allowed to have cruel and unusual punishments for people, oh, my God, we would, I, I have lined up and there's people more creative than me.
[00:48:11] Speaker B: We already put enough innocence to death on death row who, they sit there for years and stuff, and then we find out after we killed them that they're innocent. Or even the guy earlier, last year who, you know, was innocent, the courts were like, yeah, and we still killed him.
So there was that.
[00:48:33] Speaker A: There's no such thing as an innocent person. Like, if I got, you know, sentenced to death for something I didn't do, I'd be like, ah, I've done done some dirt. No, I'm like, yeah, you got me. Okay.
And I'll just, I'll credit the, you know, the killing of myself to the bad things I've done. I'm like, there you go.
Justified. Go for it.
And then they flip the switch and like, oh, we're out of power because we're in California. We're trying to kill you with an electric chair. There's a brown out because something's on fire and everyone's using Tesla power.
[00:49:10] Speaker B: I don't think California has a death penalty.
[00:49:13] Speaker A: They should.
[00:49:16] Speaker B: In fact, I think Texas decided to restart the death penalty.
[00:49:21] Speaker A: I mean, Texas should put in an express lane, like a fucking slide that you go into, like a pit of spikes.
Like, it, like, shoots you off and you're like, wee. And then it's a pit of spikes.
I feel like that'd be fun. That'd be a fucking great way to do it.
[00:49:35] Speaker B: So how many innocents is you kill? It justifies all the people you put on death row.
So how many innocent people have to die before it's unjustifiable? Honestly?
[00:49:50] Speaker A: I mean, like me, a number. 100 of them have to be innocent. But there's no such thing as 100 of people being innocent.
[00:49:57] Speaker B: So even if it was, so even in your 100 thing. So out of 100 people, 60 people were innocent, 40 were guilty. You would still be like, yeah, we should still have death penalty?
[00:50:11] Speaker A: Yeah, of course.
I mean, if you're that bad in court, you know, kind of suck a dick.
Like, I pay, you know, for an attorney, you know, if I was to use my guns to defend myself, that is completely covered.
[00:50:30] Speaker B: So with. In your thought process of being bad at court and with the systems against you and stuff, then the killing of Emmett Till was justified.
[00:50:46] Speaker A: I mean, he looked at that lady, but like that, you know, in all honesty, that lady should be put to death the same way that Emmett Till was put to death.
All is fair.
Like. Like, I. I feel like if you, you know, lie about someone to get them in trouble or get them hurt or get them punished in any way whatsoever, you know, whatever they suffered, you now have to suffer. So if you lied to get someone put to death, now you get put to death.
I mean, it will stop fucking false allegations quick.
[00:51:26] Speaker B: I don't think it will, because like you said before, if you're good at court, you'll be able to get away with it. Did OJ really do it or did he not do it?
[00:51:35] Speaker A: He didn't do it. He wrote a book.
[00:51:40] Speaker B: Fair.
[00:51:41] Speaker A: O.J. is an innocent. You know, the glove didn't fit. You must have quit.
You know, he had a great lawyer.
[00:51:50] Speaker B: So Michael Jackson. Did I do it?
[00:51:53] Speaker A: I don't. I, like, honestly, I don't. I don't think Michael Jackson, you know, was like a, you know, hardcore pedophile. I feel like he was a hardcore.
[00:52:03] Speaker B: Because you just decided to add that in there.
[00:52:06] Speaker A: I. I feel like he was weird with kids, but I. I don't think he, like, actually, like, touched them in any, like, sexual way.
[00:52:15] Speaker B: So to be a pedophile, you have to touch him?
[00:52:20] Speaker A: Yeah. Yeah. I'd say you have to, like, you know, make like, you know, sexual contact towards the kid.
[00:52:26] Speaker B: And so what if they were older? Like an older man not touching, but having.
[00:52:34] Speaker A: If you sit there and have touch.
[00:52:36] Speaker B: Yourself, is that not.
[00:52:38] Speaker A: Isn't that still you're touching with your eyes? Yes, that is.
[00:52:43] Speaker B: So then where, where does Michael Jackson then fall in on that?
[00:52:48] Speaker A: Like what, what proof do you have?
[00:52:53] Speaker B: I don't have enough proof cuz I'm not a lawyer.
[00:52:59] Speaker A: Yeah, I mean like I like show me the proof and then I'll make.
[00:53:04] Speaker B: The proof that you have that he did it.
[00:53:08] Speaker A: It's not my job to prove that, you know, he done it. It's your job to prove that he.
[00:53:12] Speaker B: Did so that everyone, just making sure everyone is.
[00:53:17] Speaker A: Everyone is innocent.
Everyone across the board. It is the state's job, it is the prosecutor's job to, to bring forth evidence, you know, true hard facts, evidence that someone did something wrong and then that is the reason they are put in prison.
You know, honestly, I also feel like they should fire bad cops.
[00:53:41] Speaker B: So what's that we're called due process. Is this, this one. We came back like. Let's go back around to the beginning of the conversation.
They should. We go back around to the beginning.
[00:53:53] Speaker A: Yeah, let's go back around the beginning. They have evidence.
[00:53:55] Speaker B: Everyone should. Everyone deserves due process then, right?
[00:53:58] Speaker A: Every person, every, everyone is.
Everyone is innocent until they are proven guilty.
You know, if you are an illegal immigrant out here committing crimes, they already have you dead to rights. Just alone with the illegal immigrant stuff, you know, sorry, you know, we need you to go back home and then come back in the correct way. Come in, you know, the right way. And we will welcome you in with open arms.
[00:54:26] Speaker B: With what about the few students who did have legal immigration, did follow everything.
And yes, you might want to argue that they don't have first amendment rights, but shouldn't they have had the due process to argue their rights in court instead of being taken and whisked off because they did everything the right way?
[00:54:50] Speaker A: Were they paying taxes?
[00:54:53] Speaker B: Everyone pays taxes. Even when you buy stu from the store, you're paying taxes and it sells tax.
[00:54:58] Speaker A: The store is paying taxes and you're just reimbursing the store. So otherwise you can, you know, claim that off in your taxes, are you.
[00:55:09] Speaker B: Not paying the tax on the receipt.
[00:55:12] Speaker A: You don't have to.
[00:55:13] Speaker B: We, we're trying to, we're not arguing semantics here.
And we're arguing because you're saying that you're not paying taxes, store is and you're reimbursing the store. But with. Even though that's the end result is you are reimbursing the store, are you not paying the tax that's on said receipt? Yes or no? Is it? Yes. Or no question.
[00:55:37] Speaker A: I mean, when you are paying the tax to the store, when you were.
[00:55:41] Speaker B: Completing that purchase, you are paying that tax, correct?
[00:55:44] Speaker A: Yeah, you're paying tax, but the store has to pay that to the government.
[00:55:49] Speaker B: You know, and then even if you have.
We'll go a different route then.
Even if you just have your. On your student visa, but you are driving in via car in your name, you are paying registration and taxes to the state and stuff that way, right?
[00:56:08] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:56:08] Speaker B: I mean, so they're paying their taxes.
[00:56:12] Speaker A: But, you know, guess what?
[00:56:14] Speaker B: And guess what, they're paying taxes that they don't get to pull out because they don't.
[00:56:18] Speaker A: Those taxes don't go to, you know, the federal government, though. Like, those taxes go to, like, the roads and stuff like that.
[00:56:25] Speaker B: They go to your state.
[00:56:26] Speaker A: They go to the dmv, which is a Department of Motor Vehicles, which is not, you know, the ones that make laws.
[00:56:34] Speaker B: So now we're adding semantics on who we're paying tax to. Hold on. We're just trying to.
I'm just breaking down again what you're talking about.
Your original overarching statement, your, your thesis, your was that they don't pay taxes. I'm just pointing out different ways that they do pay taxes.
[00:56:55] Speaker A: Yeah. So when I go on vacation to like, Jamaica, you know, should I get all their rights?
I'm paying taxes. When I go there. I should be able to vote for whoever's like the leader of Jamaica.
No, why don't I get to play it? Why don't, like, if I go over to China, why don't I get to vote for like, the Grand Emperor, China?
[00:57:16] Speaker B: The people on shooting visas don't get a vote for a president or anyone here.
I don't understand the question.
[00:57:24] Speaker A: So that's a false equivalent.
Then they shouldn't get any of the rights, you know, hey, congratulations, you're here. You know, and to, you know, afford the ability to buy food, you have to pay the tax. And to afford the ability to drive a car, you have to pay the tax. That's what you're bet you're paying for. You're paying.
[00:57:42] Speaker B: If you want to change the law of the Constitution, then you have to change the constitution. You can't just say, oh, well, they shouldn't get it because I don't get it when I go to their country. No, the Constitution is clear when it says person.
[00:57:57] Speaker A: Okay, we'll change it. We'll just make, you know, American citizens only.
[00:58:02] Speaker B: You have enough votes to change a constitution.
[00:58:04] Speaker A: We very easily do.
[00:58:05] Speaker B: We.
[00:58:06] Speaker A: We're in charge of the presidency, the Senate and the House. We're going to get that changed. I'm going to, you know, DM Donald Trump right now to be like, yo, dj, my man, you know, we need to change that constitution from people to U.S. citizens.
[00:58:20] Speaker B: If you do that, let me get a hat signed by him.
I'll wear that.
[00:58:27] Speaker A: You. You'd wear it?
[00:58:28] Speaker B: Absolutely.
[00:58:29] Speaker A: I would like, I would wear the.
[00:58:33] Speaker B: Live streams and everything. If I literally had a Make America Great again hat with Donald Trump signature on it.
[00:58:40] Speaker A: Oh, man.
Like, I'd have to get two. Like, I.
[00:58:49] Speaker B: Like, I still gotta get myself.
[00:58:51] Speaker A: I'm like, I want mine going like a glass box. I'm like, yeah, my God. King fucking signed that for me.
[00:58:58] Speaker B: Me with a big presidential sharpie.
[00:59:07] Speaker A: I mean it, it's going to be hilarious. If Donald Trump is like, since this was made by autopen and like, if he's just like, you know, nullifies anything done by autopen, because so many things have just been done by autopen.
You know, imagine, you know, select save signature on how many do you know.
[00:59:29] Speaker B: That he's done some auto pin stuff?
[00:59:31] Speaker A: Of course, everyone has.
[00:59:34] Speaker B: I know that he's done a lot too. So, you know, if everything got like, he would have a lot.
[00:59:40] Speaker A: Yeah. So instead of precedent, that's why he's not going to do it. That's why Hunter Biden is still, you know, a free man. Because if he, you know, goes down a certain path, you know, I'm sure someone has come to him like, oh, if you do this, this is going to, you know, set out on war path and people are going to try and get everything that was auto penned killed and then it could possibly up everything.
So now he's not going to do that.
[01:00:08] Speaker B: It's fair.
[01:00:11] Speaker A: I mean, everyone likes to, you know, look at Donald Trump like he's a bad guy. It's like, Donald Trump's just a guy.
[01:00:17] Speaker B: He is a bad guy.
[01:00:19] Speaker A: What, what makes him a bad guy?
[01:00:22] Speaker B: His.
He is a bad guy in my opinion. Let me go ahead and reframe that statement.
[01:00:30] Speaker A: Yeah, no, you're allowed to have, you know, an opinion that he is a bad guy. But I, you know, as am I.
[01:00:35] Speaker B: Saying, if your question still stands, in my opinion, his moral stances on the people, economy, poor and what's it called, health.
Those are just four things that he's a bad guy on that I have my opinions on.
[01:00:57] Speaker A: But I do live here in Colorado and I do want to fucking, you know, throw my opinion on the governor. You know, our current Governor is a dipshit, but we do have someone running for the governorship. We have a few, actually.
My first choice for governor is Representative Scott Bottoms.
He wants to get rid of income tax for the, you know, state income tax.
You know, that is your money.
He wants to just like, hey, you know, go ahead and have your money.
He, he wants to, you know, pretty much just bring Colorado back.
You know, he's been training on, you know, how to do this job. You know, he's been in government for a while.
My second choice is Sheriff Mike Sell.
Jason Mike Sell.
He wants to also bring Colorado back.
But if you want more information, Colorado back to what?
[01:01:59] Speaker B: Around what year?
[01:02:00] Speaker A: Just so I know, probably like 1461, where we can just do whatever the we wanted to do and everybody else.
Colorado didn't exist in 1461.
[01:02:17] Speaker B: I know.
[01:02:20] Speaker A: Just like government off, leave us alone, let us enjoy our freedoms.
And. And is it also put Jenna Griswold in jail and she should go into jail and then release a Tina. God, what was her last name?
That goddamn hero lady like Tina Scotts or something?
Tina Scott?
No, lady put in jail for voter machine.
Tina Peters sentenced in nine years.
[01:03:14] Speaker B: For.
[01:03:15] Speaker A: Allowing unauthorized access to voting materials. But she was just, she copied proof that they were rigging elections and then they just like threw her in jail.
But the proof is there and it already got out.
[01:03:34] Speaker B: That's wild that there's proof. And, you know, she's the only one who went to jail and no one else did because there's proof out there. It's wild that Donald Trump, who's, you.
[01:03:44] Speaker A: Know, Donald Trump can't do anything because, you know, whoa, whoa.
[01:03:50] Speaker B: Donald Trump has directed his DOJ to do a lot of things, but he.
[01:03:54] Speaker A: Could tore he cannot because of, you know, the power of the state in the Bill of Rights. We have the power of the people and the power of the state. So the power of the state, you know, charged her.
So, you know, the federal government cannot come and, you know, just release her out of jail without doing.
[01:04:14] Speaker B: Oh, no, I wasn't talking about releasing her. I was talking about following with the evidence drill that she has.
[01:04:23] Speaker A: Well, I mean, Jenner Griswold is the one that actually did it and just, just wait until it all shakes out.
[01:04:33] Speaker B: But you have a time frame of how long I have to wait for this.
[01:04:37] Speaker A: Hopefully before you're dead.
[01:04:40] Speaker B: That's fair.
[01:04:40] Speaker A: And hopefully before she's dead. I mean, Tina Peters is great.
And I mean, let me say how much.
Yeah, we've already done hour, but yeah, I Mean, like, let's go ahead and go back to, you know, that mother.
[01:05:00] Speaker B: That he got who has almost a million dollars for calling a child, should.
[01:05:05] Speaker A: She lose all that money.
[01:05:08] Speaker B: What do you mean lose it? She should not have it in the first place.
[01:05:11] Speaker A: Well, the, the family of Carmelo Anthony. He stabbed a white kid in the heart. Killed him, murdered him. He's never going to be alive again, you know, his family, you know, let me see. Actually, let me get, you know, true, up to date facts. How much money did Carmelo Anthony's family get?
$412,000.
[01:05:42] Speaker B: Oh, wait, that one that you just quoted, didn't it just say, didn't use that much.
[01:05:50] Speaker A: Oh, no, for the bond, you know, read the entire title. Here you go. Why Carmelo Anthony's family didn't use a $412,000 in donation for. For bond.
[01:06:01] Speaker B: Gotcha.
[01:06:02] Speaker A: To get him out of jail.
Carlo Anthony was released from jail on Monday after his bond was dropped from one million to a quarter million.
The family had raised $412,000 from Gibson Go. Oh, I thought it was gifts. And go like gifs and go.
Okay, well, I've never actually looked at the website, but yeah, I mean, four hundred and twelve thousand dollars. I think it's like four hundred and thirty at this point.
And you know, he stabbed someone, admits that he stabbed somebody, admits that he, you know, killed Austin Metcalf.
And they, they keep on saying that he bought, they bought that house, they're renting that house.
They, they, they moved, you know, houses because, you know, of the political attention and all the horseshit and they didn't want the death threats to keep on coming, so they rented a different house.
Yeah. Which is reasonable. I will give them that. But buying some new cars, you know, is, is not reasonable.
But should they lose all this money as well?
[01:07:20] Speaker B: What do you mean, as well? The lady isn't even losing money.
[01:07:23] Speaker A: I know, but, you know, should she lose, like, should she have to, like, donate all her money to, like, you know, something like, you know, the KKK or something?
What, should she have to, like, give her money away or does she get to like, say the N word and, you know, get a million dollars for it?
[01:07:44] Speaker B: So in this capitalism capitalist economy we currently live in, she shouldn't have to do that. But it also points out how racism is still thriving here in America.
[01:07:57] Speaker A: And that's how, I mean, you know, to quote to my friend Luke Stam, you know, you should never call a black person the N word because if you do, they start acting like one.
[01:08:17] Speaker B: I.
[01:08:23] Speaker A: Not My words. I didn't say that that was him.
[01:08:30] Speaker B: What is the N word? Like describe neighbor.
Describe the person.
[01:08:39] Speaker A: You know, the, the person that, you know, drives, drives around blasting loud ass music, shouting outside their car, being a hooligan.
But what about, what about acting like how the greasers used to act?
[01:08:56] Speaker B: Wait, or will we just take the two points you listed of person driving with loud music acting like a hooligan? What about the people who are in lifted trucks blasting rock music acting like a hooligan?
[01:09:14] Speaker A: Yeah, but they do it in that corn country.
Corn's not bothered by, you know, Tim McGraw.
And everyone out there enjoys it. And they're also doing it at respectable hours, not at 3 o' clock in the morning.
[01:09:34] Speaker B: I think you are making a lot of.
[01:09:36] Speaker A: Yes, I am making.
Obviously I'm, you know, going down stereotype road, you know, not. And I'm not saying every single black person is like this.
Like, you know, I, I, I, I have quite a few black friends that are, you know, not hood or thug.
And I have white people that try and act hood and thug.
So, I mean, everything being said.
[01:10:10] Speaker B: So everything be said back to what I was just pointing out was that this racist white lady who yelled at a kid and called him the N word got paid almost a million dollars. Money still coming in. And even on the comments, there's some racial comments in there about when they dropped the money supporting her. And just want to point out that again, racism is still alive and well. That's all.
[01:10:43] Speaker A: And for my final question of this episode, we'll end on this.
Does the guy filming her deserve any of that money?
[01:10:53] Speaker B: No.
[01:10:53] Speaker A: Why not? He's the one that made her famous. He's the one that uploaded the video. If he never uploaded that video, no one would care and she would still be in obscurity, you know, with a, you know, missing black father, you know, and just for her kid, and I don't know where he is, he went out to get milk and never came back.
Like, what if, like, like that's like the problem. What it, like, what if she's having a bad day?
[01:11:24] Speaker B: Having a bad day doesn't constitute as usually racial slurs. I have never looked at a white person, Asian person, Hispanic person, black person, or any other ethnicity and wanted to just yell out a racial slurp. There's, there's no reason for it.
[01:11:45] Speaker A: Yeah, but you know, start giving me a reason. I'm like, okay, you're priming me up. All right, let's go.
[01:11:50] Speaker B: So what is a real, what is a Justifiable reason for using racial slurs.
[01:11:57] Speaker A: Someone tries to break into your car, and you, you know, go out and catch them, and they start running away, and you're like, get out of here and stay out of here, yo. You know, and then.
Then you catch up to one of them and you curb stomp them.
[01:12:14] Speaker B: So you're now Liam Neesa, back when he was younger and chased down a black guy because do you know the story?
[01:12:25] Speaker A: I thought you were talking, like, about a movie. I was talking about American History X.
[01:12:28] Speaker B: But no Leo dies. Have really, like, admitted to all this.
[01:12:34] Speaker A: Gonna go watch all those movies again.
Liam Neeson, you're my goddamn hero.
[01:12:40] Speaker B: That's fair.
[01:12:41] Speaker A: But, yeah, white. White people are just, you know, getting sick of being called a racist. So now they're gonna be racist.
You know, call someone a monster enough times, they're gonna become the monster that you've called them.
[01:12:54] Speaker B: So then it's justifiable for all black people to act like, inwards then?
Because we as a people have been called inwards forever. Is that what you're saying?
It's all justifiable then? I'm very confused on where, like, where this line is, how the phone works and stuff.
[01:13:13] Speaker A: If every black guy acted like Uncle Ruckus, you know, kumbaya.
[01:13:24] Speaker B: But, like, not even every white person acts like a white person. Like, people are their own.
[01:13:30] Speaker A: Yeah. And everyone's a different person. And I understand that. And that. That, you know, that's what makes the world interesting. You know, take some time to, you know, get to, you know, know your, you know, Palestinian neighbor. Time. Take time to, you know, get to know someone from Ethiopia. You know, take time to, you know, learn about people instead of, you know, coming to quick, snap judgments and, you know, you might find out some cool. It's like, oh, man, the Filipino mother that lives three doors down made a ton of lumpia, and she brings over an entire tote of lumpia. Oh, my God. Hell, yeah.
[01:14:08] Speaker B: So then, should white lady be invited to barbecues?
[01:14:12] Speaker A: Why not, you know, invite her to barbecues. You know, have some.
[01:14:15] Speaker B: I don't think she gets invited to the barbecue, bro.
[01:14:21] Speaker A: You know, what if. What if she's, like, the older woman, like, like, you know, like that white girl sitting in, like, the bunch of, like, around, like, a bunch of, like, black men standing around the one white girl.
White girl in the middle of a bunch of black guys. Meme.
Yeah, this one.
What if. What if that's her?
And.
[01:14:50] Speaker B: I don't think that still justifies using the N word to a Five year old.
[01:14:54] Speaker A: I, I feel like if you take black dick, you're allowed an N word pass for every time you do it.
[01:15:00] Speaker B: That is not how that goes.
[01:15:02] Speaker A: You have to take it raw, you know, and gets to come inside. But, you know, after that you get one inward pass for every load you take.
[01:15:11] Speaker B: That's not how that.
[01:15:11] Speaker A: I, I feel like that. That's a fair trade.
Yeah. So you just pair in an inward.
[01:15:20] Speaker B: I hate I'm asking this question, but then how do you get past and call someone slurs. That's from the Jewish, Jewish ethnicity.
[01:15:30] Speaker A: Like, you don't need to ask for those.
Jew is not a slur.
[01:15:38] Speaker B: I know there's other slurs that are.
[01:15:41] Speaker A: Name three.
[01:15:43] Speaker B: I don't want to.
[01:15:46] Speaker A: Like, I don't, I don't think you even know 3.
I don't want to talk about this.
[01:15:55] Speaker B: No matter how I answer this, this is. Puts me in a corner. However, please be put in a quarter.
[01:16:02] Speaker A: He's like, I, I don't know any of the, you know, the slurs for Jew. It's like, Jew.
You just like say it with a nasty tone, like, that's their slur.
[01:16:16] Speaker B: Yeah, Jew.
[01:16:17] Speaker A: You know, just say with hate and like that. That's like the slur.
But, you know, you're, you like home cheap. It's like, it's not a slur. It's true.
Yeah, we're cheap and we save money and it's great.
I have money and you don't. I have a 401k worth $6 million. And you're poor.
It's like, oh, God damn, this shoe is spitting facts.
Just, just that. That's what it is.
But yes, if you take a load from any ethnicity, you know, no condom, you get, you know, whatever pass. That is an Asian pass. You can call them whatever you want. You can like go watch Gran Torino to learn the slurs and be like, oh, hell yeah, I'm gonna use that one.
[01:17:10] Speaker B: You have a lot of things wrong with you in your head.
[01:17:13] Speaker A: Yep, I do. 100.
But with that, we're gonna go ahead and end the episode.
Racism is bad, but it's not wrong.
I, I think that's like the lesson we're going to learn out of this one.
Go ahead and have your opinions, but it's better to keep them to yourself because either they're going to get you the beat the up or they're going to get you a million dollars. Mostly beat the up. So, you know, just, you know, think the N word in your head and get on with your Day smiling that you said it in your head, and you can have a million head dollars. How about that?
So that.
[01:17:52] Speaker B: Or you could get that language out of your vocabulary.
[01:17:57] Speaker A: I mean, I stopped saying it.
Like, do I get brownie points for it? Do I get an award? Do I get a medal? No, I get nothing.
You know, I. I just, you know, don't want to get beat up, so I just don't say it. But, you know, like, I. I do have, you know, some racist thoughts, but, you know, every time I meet someone in person, I give them a blank slate. I'm like, show me who you are, you know, back. Okay, cool. You know, you are not one of those.
But within five minutes, I can, you know, usually tell. I'm like, okay, you're one of those meth heads. Every white meth head, okay, you're immediately written off.
You know, white meth heads and, you know, black n. Words like that, that's, you know, the.
The equivalent.
[01:18:57] Speaker B: You have issues.
[01:18:58] Speaker A: I do, but I don't. I don't hold hate in my heart for any group of people. It's just, you know, the ones that I see, I'm like, the ones I see that bother me, like, in person, if I see stuff online, I don't care. I'm not gonna go to Twitter to beg. Oh, how dare you.
Fuck off.
Like, I think, you know, Greta Thunberg kind of overreacted there, but, you know, hopefully she's better.
[01:19:30] Speaker B: She's been proven right so far in this climate change.
[01:19:37] Speaker A: Like, no one took her seriously because she came out angry.
And I think that's really what it comes down.
[01:19:44] Speaker B: No one took her seriously because she was a she that was angry, that was young. And that's what it came down to.
[01:19:51] Speaker A: It was a young. That's it. There were. She's on the panel that disregarded her, you know, young.
But if you come out at something angry, you know, immediately with brimstone and fire, then, yes, you are going to, you know, get put on the back burner, and no one's gonna give a shit about you. But if you come at it, you know, with controlled reason, I. I like listening to that.
I. I like listening to, you know, people back. Oh, yeah, this is why I don't like Trump. I'm like, okay, yeah, this is why, you know, I think that your party is brainwashed and wrong. Okay, cool. But if you come at me screaming, disrespectful, you fucking Nazi racist piece of shit. How fucking dare you? I'm like, okay, I'm immediately writing you off. I don't care, so.
But yeah, I mean, try not to do racism, you know? And if you have it, think it in your head and you can all stay poor. So until then. We'll be back next week.
We will all. See you again then. Bye.
[01:21:04] Speaker B: Peace.