Episode Transcript
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count on. So we're
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supposed to start the podcast.
1:27
Ready, one, two, three. Patriots,
1:30
Gatriates, they triates, look off!
1:32
Oh my God, you did it
1:34
and you remembered. I kind of
1:36
killed it, I feel like. I
1:38
feel like you absolutely crushed it.
1:40
Welcome to America's top DEA podcast.
1:42
You guys, there's been a vibe
1:45
shift in the country. Trump has
1:47
proven to be every bit, the
1:49
disaster that we knew who was going
1:51
to be. It is a face
1:53
plant beyond all face plants. We've
1:56
taken the eagle back off the
1:58
shelf rebranded her thanks to a
2:00
great listener. Right. And we've got
2:02
to fight on and try to
2:04
save this country, but before we
2:07
do that, it's time to dip
2:09
our toes and do some petty
2:11
grievances. Pumps, what have you had
2:13
it with? What I've had it
2:16
with, in this, honest to God,
2:18
my head's gonna explode the next
2:20
time I hear it, I've had
2:22
it with right wing media after
2:24
Trump crashes the economy. unemployment goes
2:27
through the roof saying he's playing
2:29
4D chess. I'm like motherfucker what
2:31
evidence do you have that he
2:33
is capable of doing anything? I
2:36
mean let's just take a quick
2:38
trip down memory lane inherited half
2:40
a billion dollars 30 years ago
2:42
bankrupted six times bankrupted casinos which
2:44
is damn near impossible to do.
2:47
The only qualification he has. is
2:49
that he was on a reality
2:51
show called The Apprentice, which was
2:53
all smoke and mirrors. They couldn't
2:56
even feel him at his office
2:58
because it was such a dump
3:00
truck. We've seen the inside of
3:02
his houses. It's dump truck city.
3:04
So if I have to hear
3:07
one more time, he's playing 4D
3:09
chess. I really might explode. I'm
3:11
100% concur. It is embarrassing. I'm
3:13
embarrassed for the people that say
3:16
it. I'm embarrassed for these people
3:18
that they can just never quite
3:20
say, you know? I supported him
3:22
and it was a huge mistake.
3:24
Right. All the red flags were
3:27
there. The felony charges, the grab
3:29
them by the pussy, trying to
3:31
give a microphone a below job
3:33
on the campaign trail could have
3:36
been a really big red flag.
3:38
And I just got sucked up
3:40
into the moment and it was
3:42
a dumb thing to do and
3:44
now I'm ready to join you
3:47
all and fight for this country.
3:49
But instead, these MFers, I think
3:51
we're talking about a double-digit IQ
3:53
situation or just breathtaking. narcissism. They
3:55
just cannot. reverse course. There's not
3:58
a shred of decency to reverse
4:00
course. I'll tell you that brings
4:02
up another one of my, I've
4:04
had it. I've had it with
4:07
people not taking accountability. If I
4:09
fuck up or you fuck up,
4:11
we will go to the other
4:13
one and say, I am sorry,
4:15
I was wrong, I need to
4:18
do better. That's how it's supposed
4:20
to be. But you have ass
4:22
plans from the top Trump, his
4:24
wife, Elon Musk, they all sit
4:27
around and play victim and nobody
4:29
ever says, you know, I made
4:31
a mistake. I probably shouldn't have
4:33
done that, but I'm in a
4:35
reverse course now and I'm going
4:37
to do better because accountability is
4:40
out the window. So now you
4:42
have all these yahoos with the
4:44
balls on their trucks running around
4:46
with impunity thinking nobody has to
4:48
take accountability for anything. I cannot
4:50
believe we're here in 2024. It's
4:52
overwhelming when you think about the
4:55
tens of millions of people that
4:57
went and voted for this man.
4:59
And here's the thing. You can
5:01
only look at videos of him.
5:03
Not of any spin from either
5:05
Fox where they would spin it
5:08
favorably or from CNN or MS
5:10
NBC who might spin it unfavorably
5:12
Eliminate all of that and just
5:14
watch videos of him starting with
5:16
the the blowjob microphone situation and
5:18
listen to what he says after
5:20
that and then ask yourself Should
5:23
this person be in charge of
5:25
anything of anything much less the
5:27
United States of America and the
5:29
problem with Trump 2.0 is now
5:31
he's surrounded by equally inept morons
5:33
at a scale that is just
5:35
staggering and the incompetence from signal
5:38
gate, you know, texting the war
5:40
plans to these hair-brain tariffs that
5:42
are tanking the global economy to
5:44
denying people due process, disappearing people
5:46
off the streets, one poor gay
5:48
barbers shipped down to El Salvador.
5:50
And I think what is so
5:53
maddening about the whole thing is
5:55
that I know that there's millions
5:57
of Americans that enjoy this. And
5:59
that's the biggest heartbreaker in it.
6:01
That really is. They like the
6:03
cruelty. They're in it for the
6:05
cruelty. Yep. All right, I'm gonna
6:08
lighten it up a little bit.
6:10
I have a relatable non-political grievance.
6:12
I've had it with... bathroom procrastinators.
6:14
And what I'm talking about is
6:16
you're traveling with a friend or
6:18
your spouse and you're sitting in
6:20
an airplane gate and you have
6:23
an hour that you've been sitting
6:25
at the gate and then the
6:27
flight attendant says we're going to
6:29
start boarding in one minute and
6:31
then your travel partner says I'm
6:33
gonna go to the bathroom right
6:35
now and you're like wait we've
6:38
been sitting here for one hour
6:40
you've had one hour to go
6:42
empty the tank and you're choosing
6:44
to do it now when we
6:46
all have to shuffle around and
6:48
get in line and make sure
6:50
we do everything properly and efficiently.
6:53
Now you're going to the bathroom,
6:55
you do this and my husband
6:57
does this. I always do it
6:59
because I genuinely have to go
7:01
to the bathroom. I don't try
7:03
to do it on purpose. But
7:05
what about the five minutes before
7:08
that? You know the flight takes
7:10
up at one? Well, here's what
7:12
I do. I try to time
7:14
it so that I don't have
7:16
to pee on the airplane. So
7:18
I'm timing it like, okay, we
7:20
board in eight minutes, that I'm
7:23
going to go to the five-minute
7:25
mark, and then I'm going to
7:27
go to the bathroom, so that
7:29
way I can avoid it. But
7:31
I will say, push back a
7:33
little bit. When they start like
7:35
picking up the microphone, you're standing
7:38
in line texting me. We're in
7:40
line. We're in line. We're in
7:42
line. I'm like, yeah, but we
7:44
have assigned seats. So it doesn't
7:46
matter where I really am in
7:48
the line. But I have your
7:50
shit. You take off for the
7:53
bathroom. You just, it's always right
7:55
standing by you. You're not taking
7:57
it on the plane. Right, but
7:59
then that means I can't board.
8:01
Haven't you boarded? Yeah, because I
8:03
started making you take you take
8:05
your Yeah, I think it's, I
8:08
kind of have it as a
8:10
strategic, I think as long as
8:12
it's five minutes before, I don't,
8:14
I don't want to like be
8:16
walking on the plane and then
8:18
go, but I like to delay
8:20
it so that I can, in
8:23
hopes of avoiding the airplane, P.
8:25
The strategy, I understand a little
8:27
bit. In Josh's case, listener Josh
8:29
is my husband, I think it's
8:31
literally like he's just into his
8:33
phone or whatever it is that
8:35
he is, and it's just like,
8:38
oh shit, we're about to board,
8:40
I better go empty the tank.
8:42
It's not an intentional, but I
8:44
do kind of think it's chicken
8:46
shit. to leave your stuff with
8:48
somebody then, who is then, who
8:50
wants to board on time, who's
8:53
then held hostage, because you know
8:55
how I am about that kind
8:57
of stuff. I like to be
8:59
on time. You like to be
9:01
the first one in line? I
9:03
like to be in line. I
9:05
like to get to my seat,
9:08
put my stuff under, and the
9:10
wheels touched down. Yes, I just
9:12
have a whole rhythmm, and then
9:14
sometimes I'm at the mercy of,
9:16
in your case, this delayed being
9:18
strategy. Just irresponsible urination is what
9:20
I would call it. It's just
9:23
that's just flat-ass irresponsible urination It
9:25
would have been more responsible to
9:27
have done it five minutes before
9:29
Yeah, well, and here's the thing
9:31
Kiley our producer She has a
9:33
strategy to dehydrate before flying and
9:35
it's pointed out what a great
9:38
strategy that is so I've been
9:40
really trying to use that and
9:42
I've been doing better and then
9:44
the pilot who did a triple
9:46
flusher on the plane and I
9:48
went right after so I've been
9:50
trying to avoid toilets on airplanes
9:53
like for the past year. I've
9:55
been really good about water intake,
9:57
but I do, it's a strategy,
9:59
I just go right there at
10:01
the end. Welcome to I've had
10:03
it, I'm Jennifer. I'm Angie. All
10:05
right, Kylie, speaking of dehydrating on
10:08
planes, our listeners tend to be
10:10
follow a little bit of politics,
10:12
follow a little petty grievances, and
10:14
everybody knows that last week, Corey
10:16
Booker, the Senator from New Jersey...
10:18
broke the record for the longest
10:20
speech on the Senate floor because
10:23
he's passionate about fighting for democracy
10:25
and fighting for equality for everybody
10:27
and trying to save this country
10:29
from the idiot Donald Trump in
10:31
his moronic cabinet, a micro penis
10:33
parade cabinet. Interestingly enough, Corey Booker
10:36
went online and talked about how
10:38
he prepped for his 25-hour speech,
10:40
and I think Kiley has a
10:42
clip. Where's anything that allowed you
10:44
to not have to go to
10:46
the bathroom for 25 hours? Again,
10:48
I don't want to send doctor
10:51
to get mad at me, I
10:53
don't want my doctor to get
10:55
mad at me, but I really
10:57
spent time to hide reading myself
10:59
before and so I did not
11:01
have to go to the bathroom.
11:03
You have to go to the
11:06
bathroom at for 25 hours. Kylie,
11:08
did he call you for tips?
11:10
He did. I felt so validated
11:12
when I watched that. I immediately,
11:14
I saw that and I emailed
11:16
it to Kylie immediately and I
11:18
was like, you and Senator Booker
11:21
intentionally dehydrating him for democracy, Kylie
11:23
because she's a germaphobe. Right. And
11:25
because airplane bathrooms are gross. His
11:27
was selfless, Kylie is kind of
11:29
selfish and I've adopted it. Yeah,
11:31
I like it, but you know
11:33
what's interesting is every time I've
11:36
been on a flight with you
11:38
get up to pee twice as
11:40
much. if I didn't try to
11:42
dehydrate. I'm just a peer. Yeah,
11:44
you are. You are. She's a
11:46
big, empty the tanker. Okay, I
11:48
have some news stories here today
11:51
that I would like to review.
11:53
Okay, excellent. The first one is
11:55
study shows cows hate country music
11:57
and listening to it makes them
11:59
produce less milk. Research indicates that
12:01
music tempo and genre can influence
12:03
dairy cows milk production. Slow soothing
12:06
music such as classical pieces has
12:08
been associated with increased milk yield
12:10
due to its calming effects on
12:12
cows. Conversely, country music does not.
12:14
And here's what I have to
12:16
say. What's that asshole that just
12:18
went to S&L and then played
12:21
victim? Morgan Wallace. That guy. So
12:23
this schmuck gets invited to go
12:25
on S&L. He accepts the invitation.
12:27
This is not a command. This
12:29
is not your life. It is
12:31
in danger. He hops on his
12:33
PJ and he flies to New
12:36
York and he does S&L. And
12:38
then he doesn't want to stay
12:40
around in the post credit role
12:42
and hug everybody in commiserie. He
12:44
abruptly walks off stage, gets to
12:46
his private plane, and pops up
12:48
on Instagram, return, can't wait to
12:51
get back to God's country with
12:53
a picture of his PJ. And
12:55
now he's selling merch, get back
12:57
to God's country. And I just
12:59
think, what a whining victim. titty
13:01
baby this always having to be
13:03
persecuted when you signed up to
13:06
go on S&L and he acts
13:08
like he was tortured in some
13:10
liberal bubble you don't have to
13:12
do S&L right go do you
13:14
know go sing it in Nashville
13:16
at Toby Keith you know go
13:18
fuck me bar or whatever the
13:21
fuck that place is called but
13:23
I mean come on I've had
13:25
it with country music except for
13:27
a couple of artists, like the
13:29
Dixie Chicks, and maybe anybody else
13:31
who isn't maggots. But in general,
13:33
when I hear country music, and
13:36
this is old for me, like
13:38
I always just think Republicans doing
13:40
bad shit. Well, who was that
13:42
guy? There's a bunch of big
13:44
trumpers that are country music artists.
13:46
I mean, I don't know why.
13:48
It just seems that you hear
13:51
that. Maybe because the lyrics are
13:53
dumb. There's a tear in my
13:55
beer and I'm crying for you
13:57
dear. Maybe because it's like stupid
13:59
music. Maybe, but here's the thing
14:01
that I take away from all
14:03
that. Just like you said, nobody's
14:06
making you be on S&L. Nobody's
14:08
making Elon Musk, nose dive is
14:10
stock, and go in and harm
14:12
people on purpose. and then sit
14:14
around and cry about it because
14:16
people don't like him. You asked
14:18
for this. This is a consequence
14:21
of your behavior. Be accountable. The
14:23
victimhood that I see in 2025,
14:25
it's like Trump 2.0 makes the
14:27
victimhood of Trump 1.0, which was.
14:29
Unbelievable, blows it out of the
14:31
water. I didn't think that grown
14:33
billionaires could cry around about poor
14:36
me as much as I've seen
14:38
in the 75 days that Trump
14:40
has been in office. It is
14:42
unbelievable. Can you imagine if the
14:44
woman was crying around about what
14:46
a victim she was? She'd be
14:48
hysterical. She'd be unhinged. These men.
14:51
are the biggest whining titty babies
14:53
I have ever seen in my
14:55
life. They are. I've never seen
14:57
such meltdowns. You know, the Little
14:59
Mermaid's Black. Republicans and magga have
15:01
a fucking meltdown. You're scared of
15:03
a black mermaid. What the fuck
15:06
is wrong with you, you pussy?
15:08
They're mad at Snow White because
15:10
she spoke out for the actress
15:12
that played Snow White. She spoke
15:14
out about all of the senseless
15:16
killings in Palestine and Bash Trump.
15:18
And now they're having stage five
15:21
meltdowns over her. They are the
15:23
biggest crying. winging group of titty
15:25
babies. It's just unbelievable. I simply
15:27
don't watch things that I don't
15:29
like that might have an actor
15:31
in it that I don't like.
15:33
I would not go to a
15:36
Kid Rock concert and then make
15:38
a whole thing on Instagram where
15:40
I'm a victim of Kid Rock.
15:42
Right. I would simply forgo the
15:44
concert and hence forgo being a
15:46
victim. It's that simple. Next up,
15:48
we've got a story. wants us
15:51
to stop using the thumbs-up emoji
15:53
as it's deemed too passive aggressive.
15:55
Gen Z is officially calling out
15:57
the thumbs-up emoji saying it feels
15:59
passive aggressive and outdated especially in
16:01
work chats. generation C as simply
16:04
okay or noted, younger users are
16:06
interpreting as cold, dismissive, or even
16:08
sarcastic. And here's what I have
16:10
to say to that. Double
16:12
thumbs up. This is ridiculous. This
16:14
is so ridiculous. This is the
16:17
part where there's a weird intersection
16:19
in pop culture with our podcast
16:21
where we are really liberal and
16:23
progressive and leftist and we want
16:25
to lift up marginalized people and
16:27
validate people's feelings and be politically
16:29
correct. And this is the part
16:31
where I'm not at all politically
16:33
correct because I say if you're
16:36
upset about a thumbs up emoji.
16:38
The problem is not the emoji.
16:40
The problem is you. And I
16:42
would predict that as soon as
16:44
your parents found out you were
16:46
conceived, there was a hideous, obnoxious
16:48
gender reveal party. I would expect
16:50
that you probably slept a couple
16:53
of Stanley cups to work with
16:55
you when you're upset about the
16:57
thumbs up emoji. I just think
16:59
this is insane. to get your
17:01
paines in a wad about an
17:03
emoji. You know, here's the thing.
17:05
I think we've created this whole
17:07
generation and I am guilty of
17:09
this. You're so special, you're so
17:12
great, everything you do is so
17:14
good. And so now they send
17:16
a works text and they... receipt
17:18
is acknowledged with an okay and
17:20
what they wanted was a standing
17:22
evasion. Oh my gosh, little baby,
17:24
you are so good, you're the
17:26
best of this. It's just like,
17:29
that is not reality. I agree
17:31
with all of that and I
17:33
also want to add this. Sometimes
17:35
I think a heart is too
17:37
strong. I agree. Sometimes I message
17:39
somebody something like, hey, I'm running
17:41
five minutes late and then I
17:43
get the heart emoji in response
17:46
and I'm like... You love that?
17:48
Like, were it love already? And
17:50
it's like somebody that I just
17:52
met a new client or something.
17:54
I'm like, we're loving each other's
17:56
text. That's what the beauty of
17:58
the thumbs up. It's benign. It
18:00
doesn't, it just notes an acknowledgement.
18:02
I see your text, I understand
18:05
that you're running late. I'm not
18:07
gonna start saying I love it.
18:09
I love that you sent me
18:11
a text. Sometimes the heart is
18:13
too aggressive for me. And that's
18:15
why, and there's some people that
18:17
you text that you don't. like.
18:19
And the last thing you're thinking
18:22
about is hurting anything that they
18:24
do. And that's the beauty of
18:26
the thumbs up. Sometimes it's fun
18:28
to be passive aggressive. Sometimes passive
18:30
aggressive is a tool that's in
18:32
your toolbox that you can fuck
18:34
with people that you work with
18:36
that you don't like. What I
18:38
have to say to Gen Z
18:41
is learn how to harness being
18:43
stealth passive aggressive and quit demanding
18:45
love and red heart emogies from
18:47
everyone because the world is a
18:49
very disappointing place. Hone your passive
18:51
aggressive skills. I like that. Hone
18:53
them. Get better at it. All
18:55
right. And in a related story.
18:59
News of teens who don't enjoy
19:01
life has doubled thanks to social
19:03
media study reveals. Research published in
19:05
Nature Communication indicates that the impact
19:07
of social media on life satisfaction
19:10
varies across different stages of adolescence.
19:12
The study found that during certain
19:14
developmental periods increased social media use
19:16
predicts a decrease in life satisfaction
19:18
one year later. And here's what
19:20
I have to say. I get
19:22
it. when I'm on social media,
19:24
I'm not as happy. I don't,
19:27
the idea when I'm like down
19:29
on my phone like this, looking
19:31
at it for longer than 20
19:33
minutes, I think, ooh, put your
19:35
posture up, put your phone down,
19:37
live your life. There's a whole
19:39
world out there that you want
19:41
to see. But I do kind
19:44
of think these two things are
19:46
connected. This artificial world of social
19:48
media and getting butt hurt over,
19:50
right thumbs up emoges. People need
19:52
to live their lives and don't
19:54
project like... into social media too
19:56
much as to feeling a void
19:58
and don't put a burden on
20:00
the recipient of a text with
20:03
what emoji they should use. I
20:05
agree. They're totally bedfellows and it's
20:07
just sad to me that because
20:09
of social media and the use
20:11
of it, kids are getting less
20:13
interaction, in-person interaction and I'm not
20:15
surprised that this is a result,
20:17
lonely, sadder, all of those things.
20:20
Plus they're comparing themselves out all
20:22
the time. It's a sad situation.
20:24
It really is. It really is.
20:26
OK. Today, you guys, we have
20:28
a great guest. His name is
20:30
Senator Chris Murphy from. the great
20:32
state of Connecticut. And this is
20:34
a man when Trump first started
20:37
his second term. I know that
20:39
we all felt national paralysis and
20:41
fear and like what the fuck
20:43
is going on. And it felt
20:45
like the Democrats weren't fighting. It
20:47
felt like there wasn't a cohesive
20:49
message. And there was one constant
20:51
with the exception of Bernie Sanders,
20:54
AOC, that really spoke the truth.
20:56
And I would think, are they
20:58
seeing what I'm seeing? And then
21:00
I'd go to Chris Murphy's Twitter.
21:02
And he was seeing exactly, and
21:04
he would explain it perfectly. And
21:06
this man is a fierce defender
21:08
of democracy. He's a fierce defender
21:10
of equal rights, civil rights, social
21:13
justice, the things that are important
21:15
to all of us here on
21:17
Aswhole Island. So let's welcome to
21:19
I've Had It, Senator Chris Murphy.
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right, let's welcome. to I've had
24:07
it, a fierce defender of democracy
24:09
and fighter of fascism, Senator Chris
24:11
Murphy of Connecticut. Senator, thank you
24:13
so much for joining us. How
24:15
are you today? How's your job
24:17
going? How's work? Well, okay, those
24:19
are two different questions. I'm good.
24:21
I'm healthy. My children are healthy.
24:24
It stopped raining. My job is
24:26
a pain on the ass these
24:28
days. Yeah, okay. So we like
24:30
to start off with just a
24:32
daily petty grievance. And so we
24:34
ask all of our guests what
24:36
they've had it with. So Senator
24:38
Chris Murphy, what have you had
24:41
it with? Price gouging by sports
24:43
teams. So I just tried to
24:45
buy tickets for me and my
24:47
two cents to go to Red
24:49
Sox game. I'm boss. I'm my
24:51
favorite team. I really want my
24:53
kids to become Boston Red Sox
24:55
fan. I'm not winning that argument.
24:58
Like to get a seat that's
25:00
like, you know, we're just within
25:02
like eyesight of the field $175
25:04
$150, like, I'm not like complaining
25:06
about the amount of money I
25:08
make, but like nobody who's making
25:10
$50,000 a year can afford to
25:12
go to. like a Red Sox
25:15
game or a Bruins game or
25:17
a Rangers game. And like that's
25:19
tragic because that's like a coming
25:21
of age experience for kids and
25:23
like it's now just affordable for
25:25
hedge fund managers and CEOs and
25:27
it's, I don't know, it's heartbreaking
25:29
to me as like a sports
25:31
fan who like my relationship with
25:34
my father was all about our
25:36
relationship to sports and live sports.
25:38
So that's that's that's what I'm,
25:40
that's my headache. Yeah, I get
25:42
that we're big Oklahoma City Thunder
25:44
fans and they're like the top
25:46
team in the NBA which when
25:48
you live in a Little Market
25:51
City like ours, it's a BFD
25:53
to quote the former president and
25:55
I Same thing like they're probably
25:57
going to make it to the
25:59
playoffs and it's so expensive and
26:01
you want to get good seats
26:03
and you want to experience the
26:05
ambiance, but I want to share
26:08
with our listener something I thought
26:10
was really wholesome and sweet about
26:12
you We were trying to book
26:14
you and we kept, we like
26:16
to, Pumps and I like to
26:18
film at like 8 a.m. And
26:20
your staff said that you were
26:22
unavailable because you like to take
26:25
your kids to school. And I
26:27
just thought in this world of
26:29
all this horrible Trumpism and all
26:31
of these horrible men that are
26:33
trying to be so macho, that
26:35
just was like, I was like,
26:37
oh, he takes his kids to
26:39
school every morning. I loved hearing
26:41
that. Yeah, I mean, that's still
26:44
my most important job, you know,
26:46
being a dad. And there's 16
26:48
and 13. So, like, I'm on
26:50
the clock. Like, I don't have
26:52
that many years where, you know,
26:54
I get to see them every
26:56
single day. And, you know, for
26:58
as long as I've done this
27:01
job, but especially right now, like,
27:03
they're to the ground, right? Like,
27:05
you can't get, like, too self-important,
27:07
you know, problem with their, you
27:09
know, the girl they like at
27:11
school. So like to me, like
27:13
that's sort of what, you know,
27:15
what keeps me honest in this
27:18
job is by spending as much
27:20
time as I can with with
27:22
them. And you know, like, it's
27:24
so hard at that age to
27:26
get them to talk to you
27:28
so that drive to school when
27:30
I have them like trapped in
27:32
the car is sometimes the only,
27:35
you know, moment that I can
27:37
actually get them to answer some
27:39
some questions. So yeah, sorry that
27:41
we had to, you know, rejigger
27:43
around the driving to school schedule,
27:45
but pretty important. I was really
27:47
happy to do it, but I'm
27:49
worried about young boys in this
27:52
country right now. I have two
27:54
sons, Pumps has two sons, you
27:56
just mentioned that you had two
27:58
sons, and we have a president
28:00
that ushered in Andrew Tate. He
28:02
had, what was the name of
28:04
that boxer? Connor McGregor. Connor McGregor
28:06
at the White House. The president
28:08
himself, we all know what he
28:11
said on the Access Hollywood tape,
28:13
adjudicated, rapist, all sorts of just
28:15
horrible misogyny that seems to be
28:17
mainstreamed. And I know there isn't
28:19
a political fix for this per
28:21
se, but just as a dad.
28:23
and as a parent, what can
28:25
you speak on to this rising
28:28
surge of misogyny and that the
28:30
boys in this country, they just
28:32
don't seem like they're okay. And
28:34
it really worries me. Yeah, I
28:36
think about this all the time,
28:38
and it's so heartbreaking to me
28:40
that we have outsourced to the
28:42
right. a conversation with men and
28:45
boys and like I just do
28:47
think we have to be honest
28:49
that like men in general are
28:51
going through something right now and
28:53
of course they are because for
28:55
like thousands of years our societies
28:57
were patriarchal men were on top
28:59
of everything on top of families
29:02
the economy. culture, and they still
29:04
are, but all of a sudden,
29:06
women are in the workforce. All
29:08
of a sudden, in 40% of
29:10
families, the female makes more than
29:12
the male. And so, you know,
29:14
the easy way that you used
29:16
to identify yourself, you know, as
29:19
a man, right? Protect your breadwinner
29:21
for a lot of men has
29:23
disappeared. And, you know, the right
29:25
has this really irresponsible, you know,
29:27
tail to tell. Let's just dial
29:29
it back, you know, 1950 or
29:31
18. and that's not right, but
29:33
the left kind of tells boys
29:35
and men, like, just get over
29:38
it, like, just get over it.
29:40
And that's a hard thing to
29:42
get over because you've got to
29:44
replace that identity structure with something
29:46
else. And then, you know, there's
29:48
a couple other things going on
29:50
for boys than you guys know
29:52
this one. I think social media
29:55
has been in some ways much
29:57
more harmful on boys because they
29:59
are, you know, less natural in
30:01
creating social. connections. And so when
30:03
they get given this invitation to
30:05
withdraw into their phone, boys really
30:07
easily take it because they're just
30:09
not as naturally connected, as I
30:12
think as young women are. And
30:14
then let's just be honest, like
30:16
the Me Too movement has been
30:18
confusing for young boys, right? Sort
30:20
of not knowing exactly sort of
30:22
what's acceptable, what's not acceptable in
30:24
terms of how they approach. girls,
30:26
which has also caused a lot
30:29
of them to withdraw, you know,
30:31
not as much dating, boys having
30:33
sex much later. That's been tough
30:35
on boys. There's just a lot
30:37
going on and the left is
30:39
just kind of like, I don't
30:41
want to talk about it. It's
30:43
messy. I'm going to say the
30:46
wrong words. And the only message
30:48
that these boys get is from
30:50
the right, which is, it's, it's
30:52
the women, you know, who've done
30:54
this to you. And we would
30:56
just be better to dial the
30:58
whole culture back. And that's a
31:00
terrible answer. We got to have
31:02
a better one. I completely agree.
31:05
One thing that we talk about
31:07
all the time on this podcast
31:09
is that we have these white
31:11
men in positions of power Trump
31:13
and his wife slash controller, Elon
31:15
Musk, sitting around crying that their
31:17
victims all the time. Yet they
31:19
juxtapose themselves as this. these alpha
31:22
males and I'm like, how can
31:24
people watch this and think, oh
31:26
yeah, billionaires crying about poor me
31:28
is perfectly acceptable? And I just
31:30
wonder from your perspective in a
31:32
position of power. How do you
31:34
perceive the constant self-victimizing? Yeah, I
31:36
mean, it's just a tactic that
31:39
they're using to try to get
31:41
richer. I mean, this whole thing
31:43
is a con. It's Donald Trump,
31:45
Elon Musk, they're Marilago friends, just
31:47
making up arguments. to enable them
31:49
to steal from us, right, to,
31:51
you know, award themselves contracts, to
31:53
shut down programs that matter to
31:56
the middle class like Medicaid in
31:58
order to give themselves more in
32:00
order to reward contracts to them
32:02
and their friends, to give themselves
32:04
more tax breaks. And so, you
32:06
know, they're going to tell whatever
32:08
story is necessary to. engage in
32:10
that kind of theft. I do
32:12
think we have to have a
32:15
conversation about where male role models
32:17
exist. It is true, like a
32:19
lot of young men do look
32:21
up to people like Elon Musk
32:23
and Mark Cuban people who have
32:25
had this tremendous economic success, but
32:27
success is not just becoming a
32:29
billionaire, right? Success is, you know,
32:32
being a leader, being a good
32:34
human being, giving back to your
32:36
community. So one of the things
32:38
that I'm obsessive about is getting
32:40
more men into teaching. So that
32:42
you know, you have more. male
32:44
role models that are just doing
32:46
good, providing an education in the
32:49
classroom. We need more young men
32:51
to have easy attachment to male
32:53
role models early in their life.
32:55
The dad can be your male
32:57
role model, but a lot of
32:59
young men don't have dads in
33:01
their lives, and teachers can do
33:03
that, but we still have a
33:06
hard time getting men into the
33:08
teaching profession. That could help alleviate
33:10
this reflex that a lot of
33:12
young men have to sort of
33:14
look just at the billionaire as
33:16
their set of role models. So
33:18
ever since Trump 2.0 started, there
33:20
was this like paralysis, nationwide paralysis,
33:23
and all of us were kind
33:25
of searching for the truth. Who's
33:27
going to speak truly about what's
33:29
happening and what we're seeing? And
33:31
consistently, Senator, you were one of
33:33
those people that I saw on
33:35
MS NBC or I could go
33:37
to... or Twitter page, and I
33:39
was like, he's telling us, he's
33:42
verifying that what I'm seeing, and
33:44
pardon my language, but this fuckery
33:46
is real and that they're doing
33:48
this on purpose and they're doing
33:50
this for sport or for Vladimir
33:52
Putin or for both. And you
33:54
spoke about it and it was
33:56
so comforting because knowing the truth,
33:59
even if it's not what you
34:01
want to hear, at least you
34:03
know that that's the truth. And
34:05
so with these tariffs, you see
34:07
all of these. Americans losing their
34:09
401 case that they paid into
34:11
their whole life and then they
34:13
may be thinking, oh, this sucks,
34:16
I'm going to have Social Security,
34:18
well, we know Elon Musk, it's
34:20
called that a Ponzi scheme and
34:22
a lot of your coworkers are
34:24
trying to dismantle and privatize that,
34:26
which is not going to end
34:28
well. And so when I went
34:30
after these tariffs, I went to
34:33
your Twitter page and you had
34:35
the most logical example and you...
34:37
beautifully wrote that you think this
34:39
is an additional attack on democracy
34:41
so that corporations and business would
34:43
be beholden to Trump. He likes
34:45
reducing people and reducing businesses to
34:47
come to him and kiss the
34:50
ring which brings me back to
34:52
my one point a lot of
34:54
this is done for sport for
34:56
a broken man with inner child
34:58
issues and it's manifesting in the
35:00
United States of America. Yeah, that's
35:02
that's right. I mean, I think
35:04
you have to see everything through
35:06
one prism, right? This is this
35:09
is a broken man, but a
35:11
broken man who wants to rule
35:13
forever, who wants to crush the
35:15
opposition so that he or his
35:17
family or his chosen successor. can
35:19
rule in perpetuity. And you know,
35:21
there's a playbook for how this
35:23
happens, how somebody who's democratically elected
35:26
never leaves power. You basically co-opt
35:28
all of the centers of power
35:30
in the country and you force
35:32
them to essentially sign loyalty pledges.
35:34
So that's what's happening right now.
35:36
He's doing that with law firms.
35:38
He's doing that with colleges and
35:40
universities and now. he's going to
35:43
do that with industry. That's what
35:45
the tariffs are about. At least
35:47
that's my opinion. Last night, economists
35:49
were like super confused when the
35:51
terrorists came out because they were
35:53
like, this doesn't make any sense.
35:55
Like there's no logical explanation for
35:57
how this is going to improve
36:00
jobs or improve the trade balance.
36:02
And you know, what I said
36:04
is you read. Right. It doesn't
36:06
make sense economically because it has
36:08
nothing to do with economics. What
36:10
he's doing is he setting up
36:12
the system of penalization. on industry
36:14
so that every industry or every
36:17
big business has to come to
36:19
him, bend the knee, kiss the
36:21
ring, and pledge loyalty in order
36:23
to get tariff relief. And that'll
36:25
have a, you know, a double
36:27
impact. First, you know, the economy
36:29
will get a little bit better
36:31
when he releases a certain set
36:33
of tariffs and everybody can shout
36:36
hooray, but then he gets the
36:38
loyalty pled. I don't know what
36:40
that looks like, but the company
36:42
could, you know, decide to never
36:44
publicly criticize the president. decide that
36:46
they're going to police their employees
36:48
and make sure none of their
36:50
employees work for Democrats. It's not
36:53
economic policy. It's just about his
36:55
need to have people prostrate themselves
36:57
to him and his belief that
36:59
in doing that, the democracy will
37:01
become so weak, the opposition will
37:03
become so weak that he won't
37:05
ever have to worry about Democrats
37:07
winning. I don't think that's how
37:10
it's going to play out. I
37:12
still think that we have the
37:14
power to defeat him, but that's
37:16
the game that he's playing. All
37:18
right, let's do a little trash
37:20
talking on your former co-worker Marco
37:22
Rubio. And what an abject disappointment
37:24
Lil Marco has become. And I
37:27
think Trump kind of pegged him
37:29
when he first ridiculed him back
37:31
in 2016. I am just so
37:33
embarrassed for him because he knows
37:35
better. He knows what happened with
37:37
Zilinsky in the Oval Office was
37:39
an ambush for a party of
37:41
one for Vladimir Putin. Russian state
37:43
TV is in there. And he
37:46
just sits there and goes along
37:48
with this bullshit. And I just.
37:50
I don't know the guy personally,
37:52
but you do. What is your
37:54
take on this? The emasculation by
37:56
Donald Trump of so many of
37:58
these maga men. And there's a
38:00
theme that's running through this whole
38:03
conversation with you. And it is
38:05
this masculinity, either realized or unrealized
38:07
or in search of. But Donald
38:09
Trump consistently enjoys emasculating people because
38:11
maybe Freud would say he's never
38:13
been realized as a strong man
38:15
himself. But, you know, we'll do
38:17
a psychology episode another day, but
38:20
let's gossip about Marco Rubio. Yeah,
38:22
I can't explain what has happened
38:24
to Rubio. When he first came
38:26
to the Senate, I mean, he
38:28
was an interesting guy. He, you
38:30
know, participated in a big bipartisan
38:32
negotiation to change the immigration laws.
38:34
He actually signed on to a
38:37
bill that would have provided a
38:39
pathway to citizenship for, you know,
38:41
12 million Americans. And then... you
38:43
know over time he just stopped
38:45
being interesting so this wasn't terribly
38:47
surprising to us who have watched
38:49
Rubio I mean he hasn't participated
38:51
in any bipartisan talks he hasn't
38:54
had an interesting idea in a
38:56
in a decade I think and
38:58
so like I think it's really
39:00
hard to understand like what happens
39:02
when the cult takes over right
39:04
yeah like if you had a
39:06
friend right who like went away
39:08
and joined a cult for three
39:10
years right, came back a fundamentally
39:13
different person. Like, and somebody said,
39:15
well, what happened? You'd be like,
39:17
well, I don't know. Like, I
39:19
wasn't with him in the cold.
39:21
I wasn't, you know, I didn't,
39:23
I didn't see the indoctrination they
39:25
were doing on him. That's kind
39:27
of my view. It's like, they
39:30
go into this. closed information ecosystem,
39:32
right, where they are only hearing
39:34
from the magga voices in which
39:36
Donald Trump dominates. That's not the
39:38
world I live in, but something
39:40
in that world, like, corrupts both
39:42
your mind and your soul. So
39:44
you go from being interesting and
39:47
sometimes independent, like Marco Rubio was,
39:49
to a stoge in which which
39:51
like you just take orders. It's
39:53
like a cult. And I don't
39:55
understand how it works. And like
39:57
maybe there's a, you know, there's
39:59
like a magic potion that they
40:01
give these guys, but they just
40:04
come out on the other end
40:06
of it, fundamentally different people. And
40:08
Rubio is not alone. There's plenty
40:10
of other members of Congress who
40:12
used to be interesting, who are
40:14
now, you know, just sick of
40:16
fits. Yeah, totally. Okay, another person
40:18
that I've totally had it with,
40:21
I've always had it with him
40:23
forever, is obviously Mitch McConnell. But
40:25
the fact that he's now like...
40:27
an asshole that's finding a moment
40:29
of clarity really sits in my
40:31
craw because it's just like, dude,
40:33
you've been an asshole forever. You
40:35
have, you built, you fed, you
40:37
coddled, you rocked this entire beast
40:40
in this moment where we are
40:42
right now. Your Supreme Court, you
40:44
dicked over Obama. You're one of
40:46
the main architects of this entire
40:48
dismantling. And now you found Jesus
40:50
and you're voting like you voted
40:52
a couple nights ago with you
40:54
all. And it just... Pisses me
40:57
off because it shows that they
40:59
just like to own the libs
41:01
for sport and then when it
41:03
gets down to it He's like
41:05
oh shit hold up. I don't
41:07
I don't want what I do.
41:09
Oh, yeah It really pisses me
41:11
off. I mean like what's it
41:14
like when you see him at
41:16
work? I mean, but I have
41:18
the same like I have the
41:20
same feeling that you do right
41:22
because like I can't I can't
41:24
not have some Appreciation this like
41:26
this is his baby and and
41:28
he he midwifed the tea party
41:31
into existence which which led to
41:33
magga and then you know his
41:35
this he's got a number of
41:37
sins that he will have to
41:39
account for but you know at
41:41
the heart of it is the
41:43
second impeachment trial right there were
41:45
six there were six Republicans that
41:48
came out and voted for it
41:50
that meant that we only had
41:52
to get about ten more Republicans
41:54
and we would have qualified Trump
41:56
from ever running for office again.
41:58
If Mitch McConnell, who was very
42:00
powerful then by the time he
42:02
left being the minority majority leader,
42:04
he was he'd lost a lot
42:07
of influence. But back then, had
42:09
he come out and put his
42:11
vote where his mouth was, right?
42:13
He condemned Trump's role in January
42:15
6, but then he wouldn't vote
42:17
to impeach him. Had he voted
42:19
to impeach him, I'm almost sure
42:21
that another eight or 10 Republicans
42:24
would have come along with him.
42:26
Trump would have been disqualified from
42:28
office. This would still be a
42:30
dark moment, but it wouldn't be
42:32
as dystopian as it is. And
42:34
so I'm with you, like I
42:36
have such complicated feelings about McConnell
42:38
in part because he also did
42:41
some good things, you know, before
42:43
this election, like we passed the
42:45
bipartisan gun bill, which has saved
42:47
a ton of lives in this
42:49
country in 2022, because McConnell decided
42:51
finally to do something about guns,
42:53
like he literally pushed that bill
42:55
into existence on the Republican side.
42:58
So there's like. There's like a
43:00
decent handful of good things that
43:02
he has done, but those original
43:04
sins, I mean, you just can't
43:06
wash them away. All right, listener,
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up. I
53:51
mean, had it, but there's no
53:53
better options. Like, I mean, it's
53:55
not like, yeah, the better option
53:57
is Hacking Jeffrey. So if that's
53:59
my option, then. had it, but
54:01
like if the option is like
54:03
whatever the new map gates is,
54:05
I would, you know, reconsider the
54:07
had it. Yeah, yeah. Okay, Senator
54:10
Murphy, thank you for joining us
54:12
today. Keep fighting fascism and fighting
54:14
for democracy. We really like you
54:16
and tell your kids you were
54:18
on a cool podcast and carpal
54:20
tomorrow. Will do. See you guys.
54:22
Bye. He does have Rizz. He
54:24
has some riz. I think, you
54:26
know, I loved that he trash
54:29
talked as co-workers. Because everybody loves
54:31
to talk shit on their co-workers.
54:33
Everybody loves it. And you know
54:35
if you were a senator or
54:37
a congressman, the trash talking at
54:39
that level, it's epic. I mean,
54:41
that is like peak trash talking.
54:43
And so I'm glad that he
54:45
came on here to do a
54:47
little trash talking of some of
54:50
his co-workers, because everybody likes to
54:52
do it. Now, here's a question.
54:54
Do you think when we leave
54:56
Kylie and Seth trash talk us?
54:58
Oh my god, 1,000 million percent.
55:00
A million percent. As they should.
55:02
As they should. I mean, bitching
55:04
about your boss is just something
55:06
that you do. It's a rite
55:08
of passage. Right. And if you...
55:11
Don't expect to be trash talked
55:13
at work. Then you're probably in
55:15
the wrong job I would be
55:17
disappointed in them, right? If they
55:19
didn't trash talk us, right? Just
55:21
don't let us ever hear it.
55:23
That's the only thing Okay, guys
55:25
listen. I know that this has
55:27
all been overwhelming all this maga
55:30
stuff Trump But we all meet
55:32
here on asshole island pups say
55:34
it We will see you next
55:36
to no. The fuck wait wait
55:38
There you go. There we go.
55:40
Okay, listen, we have merch, we
55:42
have a book coming out, the
55:44
link will be below in the
55:46
comment section if you're on YouTube.
55:48
Make sure you're subscribed. Pumps and
55:51
I listen. We have a very
55:53
ambitious lofty little goal here. We
55:55
are trying to get to one
55:57
million subs on our YouTube channel.
55:59
And surprisingly, it's within... striking distance.
56:01
It is. But we need your
56:03
help because for two barely competent
56:05
broads like Pumps and Me, we
56:07
need this other YouTube trophy. We got
56:10
one. We got a hundred thousand. We
56:12
were really excited. Oh my gosh, we're
56:14
so excited at our age. But now
56:16
to be 55 and receive this trophy,
56:18
this trophy, this would be my Oscar.
56:20
Let me know. She's 55. I'm 50.
56:22
Okay, you are such a bitch. You
56:25
said that like we, like it was
56:27
a we. And I just wanted to,
56:29
I just wanted to inject in the
56:31
permanent record, I'm significantly younger than Pumps,
56:33
but we do want that trophy, that
56:35
YouTube trophy. Okay, so subscribe, get your
56:38
friends to subscribe, log into your
56:40
friends, YouTubes, and subscribe there as
56:42
well. We love everyone, we're going
56:44
to get through this together, we're
56:46
going to fight for democracy, Pumps.
56:49
Tell them. We will see you
56:51
next Tuesday and Thursday and Thursday.
56:53
I'm from Oklahoma. God, what a
56:55
morgue. I'll tell you what
56:58
I've had it with. What's
57:00
yours? I'm added with that.
57:02
Listen up, Patriots, Gatriates, and
57:04
Natriates. We have a new
57:07
podcast that has dropped. It's
57:09
called IHIP News. It's Monday
57:11
through Friday, Friday, every day.
57:13
15 to 20 minute hot
57:15
takes on the political landscape
57:18
of the United States of
57:20
America always served with a
57:22
side of petty grievances. We
57:24
are on all the available
57:26
platforms, Apple, Spotify, Google, whatever
57:29
you get your podcast and
57:31
YouTube. Please go rate, subscribe,
57:33
and review so that we
57:36
will chart upwards with
57:38
America's greatest legal mind.
57:40
Pumps, what does an
57:43
eagle say? Kakaw! A
57:45
little bit more enthusiasm.
57:47
Kakaw! That's it. That's
57:50
it. That's... Kakaw! That's
57:53
the patriotism that
57:55
this country needs
57:58
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