Episode Transcript
Transcripts are displayed as originally observed. Some content, including advertisements may have changed.
Use Ctrl + F to search
0:00
Mayer Lori Lightfoot doesn't even make it past
0:02
the first round of voting in Chicago. A
0:04
Saint Louis man shoots homeless man point
0:06
blank on the street and we examine the reasons
0:08
why. And the Supreme Court considers striking down
0:10
Joe Biden's student loan bailout as Democrats
0:12
Wine. I'm Benjuel. This is Benjuel show.
0:20
Well, Laurie Lightfoot, the SMEagle of
0:22
American politics, a person who
0:24
began as sort of a semi
0:26
charming, hobbit, and then ended up being
0:29
really just a quite terrible person who
0:31
helped wreck Chicago's politics even further.
0:33
She has now failed in her real bed, the first
0:35
mayor to fail in a ReWalk bed in Chicago
0:38
in forty years because Chicago is a
0:40
one party town. Chicago is a place where
0:42
when the party appoints someone the head of the party, that person
0:44
stays there for literally ever. Daily
0:46
family ran that city for decades because
0:48
of this. Laurie Lightfoot, did not last
0:51
two terms because she was that bad a mayor
0:53
according to the Wall Street Journal. Mayor of Lorry Life
0:55
had lost her reelected by failing to garner enough
0:57
votes to make even a runoff election. Shouldn't
0:59
even should think one of the top two. Should think number
1:02
three in the selection, which is pretty
1:04
shocking. The the top two, by
1:06
the way, included a person who last time
1:08
he ran from Air, actually was endorsed by
1:10
the Chicago Republican Party all seven of them.
1:12
This is a stunning fall for candidate
1:15
who'd won all fifty of the city's awards
1:17
four years ago, but it's sparred with powerful teachers unions
1:19
and been under fire for her response to rising
1:21
a crime. The associated press declared Tuesday
1:23
night that Paul Ballis, a more modern a Democrat who had won
1:25
the support of the city's police union. There you are.
1:27
And Brandon Johnson, liberal teacher's union organizer
1:30
secured the top two spots in April's runoff election.
1:32
Dallas Again, the guy who won the most votes
1:34
is actually police friendly. He's a little bit
1:36
more investor friendly. He's somebody who's not
1:38
nearly as radical as Lightfoot. Lightfoot
1:41
ran in third place. It was first time
1:43
in forty years the city did not elect a sitting
1:45
at mayor who sought reelection. She told
1:47
supporters on Tuesday that she had called, ballot
1:49
and Johnson to congratulate them and that she appreciated
1:51
the love that her supporters had shown her during the campaign.
1:54
Unfortunately, there were only seven
1:56
of them. So she actually didn't she
1:58
she could hug them personally. guess was
2:00
very exciting for Lightfoot. And
2:02
and this should remind us that
2:05
what goes up in American politics does come
2:07
down at the laws of political gravity
2:10
apply. The real reason that
2:12
Lightfoot is no longer going to be the mayor
2:14
of Chicago is because she was a terrible mayor.
2:16
She was abrasive, she was
2:18
rude, she was nasty, she wasn't even
2:20
racist, and she also happened not
2:22
to anything about the massive crime problems inside
2:25
the city. In fact, according to wirepoints
2:27
dot org, Chicago's twenty twenty two homicide
2:30
rate is five times higher than that of New York City
2:32
and two point five times higher than Los Angeles's.
2:35
Those numbers aren't just post George Floyd,
2:37
post COVID. About a year ago, wearpoints
2:39
looked at the study Chicago's homicide rate, found the
2:41
city broke ranks from New York and Chicago and LA
2:44
in the nineteen nineties and it never dropped. Overall
2:47
crime is up thirty seven percent over
2:49
twenty twenty one and twenty percent over the
2:51
pre George Floyd twenty nineteen. Card
2:53
jacking set to hit hit nearly two
2:55
thousand this year or one every five hours.
2:58
This year alone thirty five Chicago children
3:00
have been murdered, so far that was as of September
3:02
twenty twenty two. So,
3:04
yeah, she did a horrendous job.
3:07
It wasn't just that she did horrendous job however.
3:09
It is it is Worth noting
3:11
here that Lori Lightfoot, who was treated
3:13
by the media as a godsend, she
3:15
was because she was intersexional as all hell. Lory
3:18
Lifel. She was a woman of color who was also a lesbian,
3:20
which means that she was sent from
3:22
on high by the angels to be mayor
3:24
of Chicago. In fact, she
3:26
was so inter sectional, she was like, she
3:28
was the closest thing that we have ever had to,
3:30
like, the most inter sectional person in the
3:32
United States, which meant should've been amazing at her
3:34
job. Right? Because diversity is our strength and all of this.
3:37
Well, it turns out she was crap at her job. David
3:39
Axelrod, of course, is a Chicago insider
3:41
among Chicago insiders. He said, Everybody's strength
3:43
is their weakness. Her strength is she's a very mutualistic
3:46
person. She's fought for everything she's gotten in her
3:48
life. She antagonized a lot of people. Those chickens
3:50
are coming home to roost. You said
3:52
the uncompromising nature of her personality, the lack
3:54
of relationships with other people she has to deal with constructively,
3:57
they wind up being very, very damaging. Yeah.
3:59
Well, that that happens to obviously be
4:01
the case. And this requires us to
4:03
take a bit of a of a journey through
4:05
time. To remind you all who Laurie Life was
4:08
because one of the things that Lorraine Lightfoot, Alster
4:10
tells us, is that the chickens are gonna come home
4:12
to roost not just for Lorraine Lightfoot, but for the entire
4:14
radical left, it's going to happen. Twenty
4:16
twenty 1678. The
4:19
Democratic Party, which has associated itself with
4:21
the radical left, escaped the GEA team
4:23
played because Republicans decided to raid
4:25
the local homeless shelter for candidates, but
4:27
that does not mean. That
4:29
gravity is not going to go by. They're going to continue floating
4:32
up there. Like the Chinese spy balloon,
4:34
they will in fact be shot down and they will
4:36
plummet to Earth and it will crash and hurt.
4:38
When that happened. You remember
4:40
back to the pandemic, there were three mayors, above
4:43
all of the mayors or treated by the media as amazing
4:45
at their job. They're actually terrible at their job.
4:47
Lightfoot? Chicago, Eric Arcetti in Los
4:49
Angeles, build de Blasio in New
4:51
York. De Blasio left in disgrace?
4:54
He
4:54
then ran for Congress, couldn't even make a runoff?
4:56
Eric Arcetti left, he was thinking about running
4:58
for Senate. He didn't even get an ambassador slot under Joe
5:00
Biden. And now Lori Lightfoot has become the
5:02
first Chicago mayor in forty years,
5:05
not to even None. Forget winning reelection.
5:07
She didn't even make the run off. You understand
5:09
how bad that is? didn't make the top two candidates.
5:12
Top two. She was number three. As
5:14
a horrible strength for Laurie Lightfoot. And again, there
5:16
is a reason for that. So let us review
5:18
the reasons why. So let's begin with
5:20
Laurie Lightfoot on crime. Because crime
5:22
is, in fact, a major issue for the people who live
5:24
in Chicago. Well, it turns out that because
5:27
Lori Lightfoot has not clamped down on the
5:29
crime, A lot of major corporations are like,
5:31
we don't feel like investing in your city.
5:34
And Laurie Lightfoot, because she is quite a
5:36
terrible person. Her response to this is to tell
5:38
the CEOs that they need to educate
5:39
themselves. This is Lori September twenty twenty
5:41
two. Any remarks to
5:44
counter the McDonald's CEO who says
5:46
people are afraid to come back to the
5:48
headquarters. Well,
5:52
I think that
5:55
what would have been helpful was for the McDonald's
5:57
CEO to educate himself before
6:00
he spoke.
6:01
So when corporations asked
6:03
Lori Lightfoot about crime, she immediately chided
6:06
them this way. And
6:08
then of course, there's no exception for Lori Lightfoot. She's
6:10
very abrasive. She's not a nice person.
6:13
And and the kind of bizarre mix between
6:15
Laurie Lightfoot, the reality of
6:17
living in Chicago, which means you might get shot
6:19
you might get locked down in pretty much any time under
6:21
Lori Lightfoot and her bizarre demeanor
6:24
really is not is not amazing. Back
6:26
in April, of last year. She was talking
6:28
about how there's gonna be a summer of joy in
6:30
Chicago. Meanwhile, people are getting shot on mass
6:32
in her city. And folks,
6:34
Just wait till Memorial Day
6:36
and our summer it will be the
6:38
summer of joy in Chicago.
6:42
It was not, in fact, a summer of joy in
6:44
Chicago because, of course, people were getting car
6:46
jacked on a routine basis. And and
6:48
Lori Life had always had somebody else to blame. And she
6:50
blamed remote learning for an increase in
6:52
car
6:52
jsavings. Yes, that was the issue. It was not it
6:54
was not how you undermine the police as we'll
6:57
get to in just a moment. We
6:59
started seeing this rise
7:01
in cases in twenty
7:04
twenty, and I'll be frank and say,
7:07
in Chicago, there was a
7:10
correlation that we believe between
7:13
remote learning and
7:16
and the rise in car checking. Yes.
7:19
That that that's what it is. It's the remote learning by the way,
7:21
who's responsible for the remote learning? Oh, yeah. It was you.
7:23
It was Lightfoot, who's helping to shut down
7:25
the schools. And we'll get to more of
7:27
light Laurie Lightfoot Laurie's history of Chicago
7:29
mayor, which has come to a crashing halt
7:31
as it should. In just moment first,
7:33
here is the deal. The same people who run
7:35
the government are the same people who
7:38
decide how much inflation they're ought to be in the
7:40
economy. And they're doing a horrible job. Why
7:42
would you allow these people to control your
7:44
financial fate? You should diversify. Right? This
7:46
is the smart thing to do. All smart investors diversify
7:48
at least a little bit. You should do so. By
7:51
checking out birch gold. When you hedge against inflation
7:53
my own in gold, whether that's physical gold or silver
7:55
in your safe at home or throw an Iran precious
7:57
metals. You can hold real gold and silver and attack
7:59
shelter retirement account. I bought gold from Birchgold
8:01
in preparation for uncertain economic at times and
8:03
you can trust them the way that I do, again, diversification
8:06
is just a smart strategy by goal today. Get a
8:08
free save to store it in as well. That's right.
8:10
Unqualifying purchases from Vertical Group
8:12
now through March thirty first. It'll ship a free
8:14
save directly to your door. Just text Ben to
8:16
ninety eight ninety eight ninety eight yet, get your free info
8:18
kit on gold, claim eligibility for your free
8:20
safe then, talk to one of their precious
8:23
metals specialist. That's been to ninety eight,
8:25
ninety eight, ninety eight today. Diversification
8:27
is a smart strategy. Get started today. Ask all
8:29
of your questions. And then when you feel solid, Text Ben
8:31
to ninety eight ninety eight ninety eight. Get your free info
8:33
kit. And then when you feel solid, start investing
8:35
with Birch Gold today. K. So again,
8:37
why did the crime rates spike under Lightfoot?
8:40
Well, because you hated the cops. Because
8:42
she was dramatically opposed to police department
8:44
at every single step. Go back
8:46
to the summer the the actual
8:48
summer of love in Chicago. That would, of course,
8:50
be twenty twenty during the George Floyd riots.
8:53
And over and over and over again, Lori
8:55
Lightfoot undermined the cops.
8:58
So back in July of twenty twenty, for example,
9:00
she was yelling about not allowing Donald
9:03
Trump's troops to come into the city to shut down
9:05
riots in the city. Meanwhile, the loop was being
9:07
completely vandalized. She tweeted
9:09
out July twenty first, twenty twenty, quote, under
9:12
no circumstances while I allowed Donald Trump's
9:14
troops to come to Chicago and terrorize our
9:16
residents. Meanwhile, the residents are being terrorized
9:18
by literal rioters in the
9:20
street. She was having open arguments
9:22
with her own alterman. The alterman were like,
9:24
you you are. You got are not doing a good job of tamping
9:26
down crime, and she starts yelling at her alderman
9:29
and telling them that they are literally full of
9:31
bleep. This is the kind of person that Lori Life
9:33
was. What
9:34
are we gonna do? And what do we tell our residents
9:36
other than good faith people stand
9:38
up? It's not gonna be enough. Thank
9:43
you all of it.
9:46
Next question? No, I want
9:48
an answer. I bet
9:51
you commented on everybody. I want an answer.
9:53
It's not something you ignore. This
9:56
is the question that I have.
9:59
Your offer for that, full of shit is
10:01
what I think. As you
10:02
think, we want a fucking you
10:04
bet. Who are you gonna join me? I'm
10:06
full of Lori Lightfoot,
10:09
go back to May. And her initial comments
10:11
about George Floyd is that she took Floyd's
10:13
death incredibly personally and also went out of
10:15
her way to rip Donald Trump. Yet,
10:17
when you rip the cops, when you rip the
10:19
president, when you suggest that there ought to be
10:21
no no federal presence in the city when you can't
10:23
handle your own stuff. It turns out the crime goes up
10:25
and the PD hated Lori Lightfoot, as
10:27
well they should have because she was terrible for
10:29
the PD. She was consistently undermining the
10:31
ability of the police to do their jobs.
10:33
And it wasn't just with regard to crime, it was
10:35
also with regard to COVID. So Laurie
10:38
Lightfoot was the lockdown of fanatic
10:40
extraordinaire. So
10:42
it began with Lori Lightfoot really walking
10:44
down the city as tight as you could
10:46
possibly walk it down. In March and April,
10:48
You'll remember, and all the way back in April of twenty
10:51
twenty, she actually went to her hairstylist
10:53
and she was caught on camera visiting her hairstylist,
10:55
and then her defense was Observed.
10:57
She said it was essential because she was mayor of the city
11:00
that she get her hair
11:01
done. She needed her hair done. It was really,
11:03
really necessary. This is the kind of person that Lori Lightfoot
11:06
We are trying to do the best that we can under difficult
11:08
circumstances. I am practicing social
11:11
distancing, the woman who cut my hair
11:13
at a mask gloves on. So
11:16
we are I'm practicing what
11:19
I'm preaching and making sure I don't typically
11:21
take pictures these days. But
11:24
we are trying to do everything we can to emphasize
11:26
the messages around social
11:28
distancing, washing your hands, staying
11:30
at home. But I as
11:32
a elected official in the public
11:35
face of the city. I need to make sure
11:37
that I am out there and visible through
11:40
this crisis.
11:42
And then she didn't shut down COVID
11:44
in the city as it turns out because not
11:46
possible, but that didn't stop her
11:48
from in October of twenty twenty.
11:50
Declaring herself, Rona destroyer. I'm
11:52
not kidding you. This is the greatest one. This
11:55
is this is the mayor of Chicago
11:57
in the middle of the pandemic. Declaring
11:59
herself the destroyer of coronavirus. She'd
12:01
shut down pretty much all businesses in the city. She'd
12:03
locked everybody down. All the schools were closed.
12:05
She was doing the bidding of the teachers unions, all the rest
12:07
of it. And here she was dressing
12:10
up as Rona destroyer. Why
12:12
why is this why why did she lose political viability?
12:14
No one knows. No one knows. So
12:36
guess what we're here to talk about today? And
12:38
meanwhile, pretty much that same time
12:41
a year. She was celebrating Kamala Harris
12:43
and Joe Biden because the election was
12:45
happening. And so she actually went out,
12:47
and she didn't event, like in public, celebrating, Kamala
12:49
Harris and Joe Biden.
12:54
This is a great day for our country.
12:56
We get to take our democracy back.
13:02
There she is out with giant crowd for
13:04
Kamala Harris and Traviden. Some are massive or not.
13:11
And like two weeks later, she declared that they needed
13:13
a thanksgiving lockdown in the city of Chicago,
13:15
a Thanksgiving lockdown. And
13:18
she said, it should impose a ten person
13:20
ceiling on gatherings like weddings, funerals,
13:22
and other events, according to the Chicago Tribune,
13:24
during the Thanksgiving holiday. So she was out
13:27
there rallying, and this was Laurie Life, but it was the
13:29
Democratic Party writ large. You're allowed
13:31
to You're allowed to do your politics. Coronavirus
13:34
apparently did not affect anybody who has sufficiently
13:36
woke, including Laura Life, which she could go and she
13:38
could get her hair done. She go and she could do rallies
13:40
and people could twork in the streets for George Floyd in her
13:42
city, people could riot? The real
13:44
problem was, of course, if you wanted
13:46
to go to grandma's funeral, that was the real issue.
13:49
For Laurie Lightfoot. mean, she
13:51
she was so radical Laurie Whitefoot that
13:54
after holding La la Palooza in the city in October
13:56
twenty one, which is what she did. She actually held at
13:58
La la Palooza. In Chicago,
14:02
at at exact same time, she was
14:04
chiding the Chicago Police Department's Union,
14:06
the fraternal Order of Police, For
14:08
a quote, trying to induce an insurrection against
14:11
her attempted a vast mandate. She won a vast mandate
14:13
on the police. The police had to be vaccinated. Couldn't
14:15
arrest anybody, but they definitely had to be vaccinated. And
14:18
then she accused them of trying to incite an
14:20
insurrection.
14:22
So you asked a question of why the lawsuit.
14:25
Because we believe that the FOP leadership
14:27
is trying to foment in a legal work
14:29
stoppage because trick, pure and simple. We've
14:31
laid that out in the materials, and
14:33
we're not just we're not having that. The
14:35
the contract is cleared and it's been known for a long time.
14:38
The police unions are not authorized
14:41
to strike. It's in their collective bargaining agreement.
14:43
It's a matter of state law. What we've
14:45
seen from the fraternal order
14:47
of police and particularly leadership is a
14:49
lot of misinformation, a lot of half truth,
14:51
and frankly Lightfoot lies in order
14:53
to induce an interruption.
14:55
And we're not having that. In
14:58
insurrection. And the the
15:00
the way, insurrection, if you didn't 1678 get mad and
15:02
you were a cop, and all you wanna do is please crime.
15:04
She wouldn't let you please crime butt. She would try to force you to
15:07
get the vaccine, and then she would call you an insurrectionist for
15:09
not wanting to get the vaccine.
15:11
I I wonder why she was so unpopular, guys. makes
15:13
no sense. By the way, then she tried
15:15
to actually create and she did create
15:17
a vast passport in the city of Chicago, and
15:20
she tweeted out in November of twenty
15:23
twenty 1678. quote,
15:25
to put it simply, if you have been living vaccine
15:27
free, your time is up. If
15:29
you wish to live life with the ease to do the things
15:31
you love, you must be maxed. This health
15:34
order may pose an inconvenience to the unvaccinated, and
15:36
in fact, it is inconvenient by design.
15:40
And she was as fascist as an elected
15:42
official can be. She was she was essentially a
15:44
wax fascist. She literally went out
15:46
in public and said that if you want to live
15:48
life, you must be vaccinated. Must be if
15:50
you want to live life. Here she was in December
15:53
of twenty twenty one. December of twenty
15:55
twenty 1678, it was clear
15:57
by this point. That people should have
15:59
the freedom to vax or not vax as they saw fit.
16:01
And here she was telling people that she was going to shut
16:04
down their lives if they were unvaccinated. The
16:06
SMEagle. The mayor of Chicago.
16:09
Our future is gonna depend
16:11
upon whether or not they stopping
16:13
hesitant and get the vaccine. I
16:16
don't wanna shut the economy down. I don't wanna
16:19
have to take other mitigation steps.
16:21
We have been through hell and back in the last
16:23
twenty months. Nobody wants to go back
16:25
to that
16:25
time. Lease of all
16:27
me.
16:29
But if we have to take domestic sex, we will
16:31
take them. I hope we never ever have
16:33
to get back there again. But it
16:35
really depends upon the actions
16:37
that people take here and now.
16:40
We IN ANOTHER CRISIS
16:42
AND WE'VE GOT TO ACT ACCORDINGLY. Reporter:
16:45
BUT LURY Lightfoot POLITICAL CAREER IS DEAD.
16:47
I hope that you wrote a will, but you should
16:49
write a will. I mean, we're all going to pass at some point.
16:52
And that means that you need a will, make sure that people
16:54
like Laurie Life, but the bureaucrats who staff your government
16:56
are not actually determining how you're assets are
16:58
dispensed or who takes care of your kids.
17:00
Creating a will is super important. My wife and I have one
17:02
of course. My partners at Epic Will can help get
17:04
you set up with a will today for just hundred and nineteen
17:06
bucks in as little as five minutes. Epic Will can help
17:08
you create your last will and testament your living will even
17:10
healthcare power of attorney. Head it over to epic
17:12
will dot com slash apparel. Get my discount code,
17:15
save an extra ten percent on your complete will package.
17:17
With Epic Wills easy to use template, all you
17:19
have to do is fill in the blanks. Go to epic
17:21
will dot com slash payroll. Save ten percent
17:23
on Epic Wills complete will package. That's
17:25
epic will dot com slash appearance. One of the most important
17:28
things you can do is to make sure that your
17:30
assets are properly disposed of. Also, you need
17:32
living well, so you can actually think through
17:34
you would do in certain health scenarios because you don't want people
17:37
doing that on the fly. These are all documents that
17:39
you can do, and you can do them quickly and easily with
17:41
epic will dot com slash apparel. Save
17:43
ten percent on Epic World's Complete Wheel package, very
17:45
important for you, very important for your family, epic
17:47
will dot com slash shapero.
17:50
Well, Laurie political failure here does raise the
17:52
question as to why it took so long for her to fail. And
17:54
the answer, of course, is the intersectionality. Everyone
17:56
recognized pretty quickly, Laurie Life was not up to the
17:58
job. She was bad at the job. She was nasty about
18:01
her job, but she was able to get away with
18:03
it because of course she was a black lesbian. And this is
18:05
the thing that matters more than anything else in American politics
18:07
is your identity status. Which is why
18:09
she kept calling upon it. So back in July of twenty twenty
18:11
one, for example, she literally said that she
18:13
would she would only give interviews to
18:16
black reporters, which is about as racist a thing,
18:18
as a public official, has ever said.
18:20
It's an amazing thing. It's literally saying
18:22
that you will 1678, of any race, if
18:24
I if I said, I'm only giving interviews to white reporters.
18:27
Would make you a racist. Right? That made me a racist. Lorry
18:29
Life, what says this sort of stuff? No problem. Your
18:32
offices that you invited black and
18:34
brown journalist to to this round of interview.
18:37
Why? I'm happy to vouch for Craig Law
18:39
for Heather Sharon and others. Well,
18:42
look, I I think in this
18:44
one day, when we are looking
18:46
at the two year anniversary of my
18:48
inauguration. As a one of the color,
18:51
as a lesbian. It's
18:54
important to me that diversity
18:56
is put front and center.
19:00
So diversity diversity. Well, why is
19:02
it important for lord life with that? Diversity is front
19:04
center because that's the only reason she's mayor of Chicago.
19:07
And that was always her constant defense. July
19:09
twenty twenty one, there's a lot of critique of her
19:11
performance because she's a bad mayor. So what did she say? She
19:13
said literally ninety nine percent of all criticism of
19:15
Laurie Life was racist and sexist. What does she
19:17
now have to say about the citizens of Chicago
19:19
who voted her out?
19:21
Mayor in recent months, yeah, there have been questions
19:23
raised about your your temperament and
19:26
your reaction to criticism, Tribune
19:28
editorial used the term irascible.
19:31
How much of this do you think might have to do with the
19:33
fact that you're a woman and particularly
19:36
a black woman? About
19:38
ninety five percent of it? Expand
19:41
on
19:41
that. Well, I mean, look look
19:43
at my predecessors. Did did
19:46
people say to Rich Daily, held
19:49
the, you know, tea
19:51
sessions with people that he didn't disagree
19:53
be on. Ram Emanuel was
19:56
a polite guy who
19:58
was a a uniter? No. Women
20:01
and people of color are always how it's a different
20:03
standard. I understand that. I've known
20:05
that my whole life.
20:09
Amazing. Right? Intersectionality is always
20:11
sword and shield. It also allows her
20:13
to suggest that of course her own failures are the result
20:15
of systemic racism. So back in June of twenty
20:17
twenty one, as the murder rate was already skyrocketing
20:20
in her city, disaster area, she's still
20:22
doing COVID lockdowns and all the rest. She was declaring
20:24
racism made public health crisis in June
20:26
of twenty twenty one.
20:29
We think about racism. Many of us
20:31
think about it's visible and audio
20:33
Audible forms. But the
20:35
reality is the insidious nature
20:38
of systemic racism
20:41
has other impacts that are every
20:43
bit as deep and harmful.
20:46
So again, sword and shield. It allows
20:48
you to claim that all the problems in your city are the result
20:50
of systemic racism and also in a critique of
20:52
you, is about that same exact sort of racism?
20:54
Well, here's the problem. At a certain point, your citizens
20:57
get sick of this bull crap. At certain point, your
20:59
citizens say no. We would actually like to live in a
21:01
city that is livable. We don't care about your intersexional
21:03
bona fiedies, and we don't care that the media are
21:05
going to treat you with kid gloves because you're a black lesbian.
21:07
We don't care about any of that. Or off putting, you're
21:10
terrible at your job, goodbye. So we all
21:12
get a fond farewell to Laurie Lightfoot. the problem
21:14
is that the the sort of
21:16
thought process that put Lori Lightfoot in
21:18
place in the first place. He's sort of ideology
21:21
that made Lori Lightfoot a hero to the left
21:23
That is still alive and well in major cities
21:25
all across the United States. And the
21:27
chickens, as I say, are not going to only come home
21:29
to root for Laurie Life. They're gonna come home for
21:31
a lot of the radical leftists who are in positions of
21:34
local state and federal power. So long
21:36
as they mimic the stupidity of the policies
21:38
of people like Lori Lightfoot. That
21:41
is particularly true in the city of Saint Louis.
21:43
In just a second, we're gonna get to the most horrific story
21:45
of the day in Saint Louis, because Saint Louis is basically
21:47
attempting to do exactly what Lori Lifel did in Chicago.
21:50
And some of the public officials
21:52
there are about to feel the same exact heat.
21:54
First, you know, you look at the news, it's hard to
21:56
sleep. Hey, for me, on personal
21:58
level, I have three young kids. I have
22:00
a dog. The dog wakes me up in all hours
22:02
of the night. Well, this means that when
22:04
I get onto my mattress I need to sleep. And this is
22:06
why I rely on Helix Sleep. Helix
22:09
Sleep, make sure that I have mattress personalized. Just
22:11
for me, it's a premium Mattress brand that provides
22:13
tailored mattresses based on your unique sleep
22:15
preferences. The Helix lineup includes fourteen
22:17
unique mattresses, including a collection of luxury
22:19
models, a mattress for big and tall sleepers, even a
22:21
mattress made just for kids. I've had
22:23
my Helix Sleep mattress for literally
22:25
years at this point. Feels just as good as the
22:28
day that we got it. I took that Helix quiz. I was mashed.
22:30
When they firm a breathable model because I need the
22:32
firmness or I get back pain, I need a breathable model,
22:34
I tend to heat up, and I Helix made it happen
22:36
for me. They'll do the same for you. Helix has a ten
22:38
year warranty. You can try that for a hundred nights risk free. They'll
22:40
even pick it up for you if you don't love it, but you will. Helix
22:42
has over twelve thousand five star views. Their
22:45
financing options and flexible payment plans make it,
22:47
so a great night's sleep is never far away for a limited
22:49
time. He looks he's offering up to twenty percent off all the
22:51
master's orders plus two free pillows for our listeners.
22:53
He's their best offer yet. Hurry on over to helix sleep
22:56
dot com slash ben with Helix. Better sleep starts.
22:58
Lightfoot? Okay. So over in Saint Louis,
23:00
there's a video that has gone absolutely viral because it's the
23:02
video of a person getting word. And
23:04
it is a shocking, horrifying
23:07
video. In the video,
23:09
I'll describe for folks who can't watch. You
23:11
will see, there is a man
23:14
that happens to be a black man who is
23:16
casually loading a gun. Just
23:18
Standing on the street. There's no one else on the street.
23:20
It's the middle of the day. Broad daylight.
23:22
There's a homeless guy who's sitting on
23:24
the curb also appears to be
23:26
a black man. And the
23:30
the guy is sitting
23:32
there, boning his
23:33
gun, and he He's
23:36
being take
23:37
this is for, like, thirty, forty seconds. Just
23:39
loading his gun. Cars driving past middle
23:41
of the day, no problem. And
23:44
no one does anything. They're just taping him. And
23:47
eventually, he is going to just shoot
23:50
this homeless man in the back of
23:51
that. Just to execute him.
23:54
In cold blood, in the back of the head. Isn't
23:58
it? I mean unbelievably horrific
24:00
video. Apparently, according to the
24:02
UK Daily Mail, witnesses said they saw the pair fighting outside
24:04
the Shell gas station further up the street moments earlier.
24:07
The shooter has now been charged with first degree murder. He fled
24:09
the scene. He was arrested entering public library
24:12
later in the afternoon. It
24:14
remains unclear if the
24:16
shooter who has a forehead tattoo and
24:18
a neck tattoo, which is always the sign of a of a
24:20
vice president Chase Manhattan Bank, has
24:22
a criminal record or views out on bond or probation
24:24
at the time of yesterday's shooting. Frightened
24:27
Saint Louis residents say it's more proof that local leaders,
24:30
including Soros backed progressive circuit
24:32
attorney, Kim Gardner, do not have a handle on escalating
24:34
crime. This is broad daylight. Have we seen enough
24:36
can't sugar coat this any longer. It's time for Saint
24:38
Louis to do some soul searching. Some people said, okay.
24:41
So here's story with Kim Gardner.
24:43
So Kim Gardner, has presided
24:46
over a massive increase in
24:48
murder in the city of Saint Louis. Saint Louis
24:50
is one of the deadliest cities in America I
24:53
think it's a second only to New Orleans at this
24:55
point. And the rise in murder
24:57
in Saint Louis started unsurprisingly in twenty
25:00
fourteen. In twenty fourteen, the year
25:02
of the Ferguson riots that has won police all across
25:04
the country, stopped policing at the behest
25:06
of public officials People like
25:08
Kim Gardner or Lori Lightfoot, people who suggested
25:10
that the police were the problem. And so you saw the
25:13
murders. In Saint Louis spiked from a hundred and
25:15
twenty a year in twenty thirteen, fifty
25:17
nine, one eighty eight, one eighty 82051
25:19
eighty six, one ninety four, two sixty three,
25:21
in two in twenty twenty, that was the George
25:23
Floyd ear. Year in which we decided the
25:25
police were totally evil, two hundred and sixty three
25:27
people were murdered in the city of Saint Louis,
25:30
two hundred in twenty twenty 1678, at
25:32
least two hundred in twenty twenty two. And
25:35
and part of that is due to Kimberly Gardner. So
25:38
Kimberly Gardner is the rogue prosecutor
25:40
who has decided like a bunch of other soros. Appointed
25:43
prosecutors, the prosecuting crime is
25:45
really bad and really terrible. So
25:48
for example, Kim Gardner, She
25:50
has taken on the cops in the city of Saint Louis
25:52
in sixty minutes, did a full story about
25:54
her and her bravery, and Here
25:57
she is alongside the police union
26:00
rep talking about how she has basically stopped the police
26:02
from doing their
26:02
job. This is in twenty twenty one.
26:05
Gardner's pushes for reform have also
26:08
led to conflict with the Satan was police
26:10
union. Jeff Rawda told sixty
26:12
minutes Gardner was in over her
26:14
head. She's a prosecutor that, you
26:17
know, wants to second guess everything law
26:19
enforcement does and and
26:21
find fault when there's no fault to find.
26:23
Wittaker pressed Rawdah on the number of police
26:26
involved shootings that happen in the city
26:28
being highest per capita in the
26:30
nation. Well, we don't shoot
26:32
bill. We shoot back. I mean, we
26:35
we live in a very violent
26:36
city.
26:37
Kim Gardner says the momentum for change
26:39
comes from the citizens of Saint Louis.
26:41
Definitely. And that's why I'm not gonna
26:44
back
26:44
down. That's why I'm not gonna kiss the
26:46
ring of the status quo to keep it
26:48
a certain way. Okay.
26:51
By the way, the sixty minutes interview also
26:53
included clips of her talking about much hate mail she receives.
26:55
Right? How everybody who opposes her as racist, the
26:57
Lori Lightfoot model. Because Kim Gartner
26:59
is a black woman. And that means intersectionality
27:02
and that means you weren't supposed to criticize her
27:04
crap policy and the fact that she wasn't prosecuting
27:06
crime. An investigation by a local TV
27:08
station, according to Heritage, showed that in twenty
27:11
eighteen, prosecutors in the city got guilty verdicts
27:13
in just fifty one percent of cases. Gartner's
27:15
office loses half the cases it takes to trial.
27:18
She says that she's not going to prosecute
27:20
felonies because she wants
27:22
to focus on more difficult cases, but then she doesn't actually
27:24
win those particular cases. And
27:26
she is part of a broader problem
27:28
in DA's offices across country ranging from Kim
27:31
Fox Chicago to Maryland Mosby, Baltimore's rogue
27:33
prosecutor decided to simply let murderers off
27:35
the hook in that in that particular city.
27:38
According to News Fort in St. Louis Gartner was
27:40
also enjoying herself chatting around on somebody
27:42
else's dime during this time.
27:45
Well, now, the rubber is meeting the road
27:47
because reality sets in. There's
27:50
a horrific horrific story from her
27:52
city. This is KSDK reporting,
27:54
a seventeen year old girl. Was struck
27:56
and critically injured by a car while she was
27:58
walking in downtown St. Louis on Saturday
28:00
night. This is about a week and half ago. St.
28:02
Louis Bleat said the crash at left the scene injured started
28:05
when a twenty twenty three Audi q five drove
28:07
through a yield sign at the intersection of Saint Charles Street
28:09
North eleventh about eight forty PM. Apparently,
28:12
in twenty sixteen, Chevy Malibu struck the
28:14
audio. It was coming through the intersection and sent
28:16
the audio crashing into a parked car and a twenty
28:18
and there was and there was seventeen year old girl walking in area
28:20
in the car hit her. The girl was
28:22
rushed to the hospital with critical injuries, she ended
28:24
up apparently losing both of her legs.
28:27
She lost both of her legs. Seventeen
28:29
year old girl was coming
28:32
home from a volleyball tournament. And
28:36
The person, the driver who was arrested
28:38
and charged with second degree assault, driving without a
28:40
valid license and multiple other crimes, and
28:42
was twenty miles per hour, over the speed
28:44
limit and did not try to brake before the crash
28:47
was out on bond at the time of the
28:49
crash and had committed multiple
28:51
parole violations multiple
28:53
parole violations. So people started looking into this.
28:55
They're like, oh, Kim Gardner, what exactly is
28:58
it you would say? You do hear? Because
29:01
You are literally just letting criminals out on the street,
29:03
and now they are maiming seventeen year old
29:05
girls. And
29:08
you think this is part of your job? Things
29:10
got so bad. In Saint Louis,
29:13
that the mayor of Saint Louis, Tashuara Jones,
29:15
who is an ally, right, of Kim Garder. She
29:18
also is inter sectional and also is a Democrat
29:20
very far from left. And she says
29:23
that Kim Gardner has lost the trust of the
29:24
people. That's how bad things are becoming in Saint Louis. Democrats
29:26
are throwing other Democrats under the bus. Here we go.
29:29
I think that she needs to do some serious soul
29:31
searching and whether or not she wants to continue
29:33
as circuit attorney for the city of
29:35
St. Louis. Saint
29:36
Louis mayor to Charlotte Jones criticizing Saint
29:38
Louis Circuit attorney, Kimberly Gardner.
29:40
The circuit attorney who's been there for
29:42
six years, this incident and
29:44
others have highlighted the
29:46
fact that some improvements need to be made in
29:48
her office because she's lost the trust
29:50
of the people.
29:53
It's amazing. Amazing. Okay. But here's
29:55
so here's the here's the best part. How did Kim Gardner
29:57
defend ourselves? So first, she said that she had
30:00
on three separate occasions as recently as last month
30:02
requested the defendant's bond be revoked.
30:04
But apparently, the defense
30:06
is turning for this particular person contradicted
30:08
gardener's accountant said she was falsifying the timeline.
30:11
She literally put out two entries in her timeline
30:13
event that were completely fabricated, made
30:16
up because she's having to cover for the
30:18
fact that she is soft on crime. Yeah.
30:21
Like, play stupid
30:23
and dangerous games and win stupid and dangerous
30:26
prizes. How's Kim Gardner defending herself in Saint
30:28
Louis? The same way the Lori Lightfoot did. Everybody
30:30
who dislikes me and thinks I'm doing a bad job
30:32
is a racist. Mayor
30:34
Tashara Jones said the prosecutor lost
30:37
the public trust. And if Kim Gardner was trying
30:39
to restore it, it's hard to see how
30:41
in a combative press conference Thursday,
30:44
she described herself as the victim.
30:46
Dodge direct questions and dove
30:48
further into diff division
30:50
and deflection. In
30:52
spite of the vitreous, the hate,
30:55
the racist attacks, While it
30:57
is true, my office could have done more.
31:00
To say we did nothing, it's only
31:02
disingenuous, what is willfully
31:05
ignorant. There are numerous attacks
31:07
on our office. There are numerous
31:09
individuals that have an agenda to make sure
31:12
that my office does not succeed. And
31:14
we did our job. And as I
31:16
said, could we do more? We could.
31:18
But did we not do
31:20
nothing? That is not true.
31:23
K. Well, she's gonna be out on her ass as
31:25
well. The chickens are coming
31:28
home to Ruth. Guys pursued
31:30
bad policy and then try to cover it up with
31:32
the patina of intersectionality, and it is
31:34
failing, it is failing in Chicago, it failing in St. Louis
31:36
is gonna fail a lot of places. Before
31:38
all the chips settle. Meanwhile, the
31:40
Supreme Court is getting ready to devastate the
31:42
Biden administration, so the Biden administration played a super cynical
31:44
game. You'll recall that last year, they
31:46
said they were going to forgive student loans held
31:48
by forty million Americans. Now the Biden administration does not have
31:50
any power to do that. They don't even have anything remotely
31:53
like the power to just do that. What they were
31:55
using was a bill that was passed in the
31:57
aftermath of nine eleven. It was designed to
31:59
relieve student loans at for American veterans.
32:01
That's what it was designed to do. And so
32:03
Joe Biden because he's a cynical politician.
32:07
Just say it that way. He's as cynical as that
32:09
day is long. Decided that he was gonna put out a notice
32:11
just before the election, that he was gonna relieve student
32:13
loans at amounting to hundreds of billions
32:16
of dollars. Doesn't have power to do
32:18
that. He doesn't have an excuse to do it. There's no legal
32:20
excuse. And how was he gonna get this through
32:22
legally? What he was gonna do is he gonna claim that no
32:24
one actually had standing to sue him. In other
32:26
words, because no one is quote unquote damaged and because
32:28
of the general taxpayer can't sue, then there
32:30
is no way for anyone to stop him, which,
32:32
if true, would basically
32:35
spell the end of any serious legal
32:37
check on the powers of the executive branch. Either
32:39
the executive branch can just get rid things, willy
32:41
nilly without any legislative authority whatsoever?
32:45
Then, what exactly are the limits on them?
32:47
The limits just don't exist?
32:49
Well, according to Wall Street Journal, the Supreme Court is skeptical
32:51
of that argument. The administration apparently
32:54
believes that justice Samuel Alito, then when it comes to handing
32:56
out benefits, trillion dollars here, a trillion dollars there that
32:58
doesn't really make much difference to Congress, adding
33:00
that hardly seemed very sensible. Justice
33:02
Neal Gorsech asked whether Education Secretary
33:04
Miguel Cardona was outside his area of competence
33:06
putting forth a regulation with such extensive economic
33:09
impact, quote, I understand the secretary has considerable
33:11
expertise when it comes to educational affairs.
33:13
In terms of macroeconomic policies, we normally
33:16
assume that every cabinet secretary has
33:18
that kind of knowledge? Liberal justices,
33:20
of course, have when Congress authorized the education
33:22
secretary to respond to national emergencies
33:24
waiving or modifying legal provisions applicable
33:26
to the student financial assistance programs. Debt
33:29
cancellation obviously is part of the equation. Elena
33:31
Kagan, who is far left as it's possible to be on the
33:33
court other than Sonia Sotomayor. She said Congress
33:36
doesn't get much clearer than that. Okay.
33:38
The Heroes Act, again, was designed to alleviate
33:40
student loan debt for for veterans or in the case
33:42
of like a terror attack. Joe Biden just
33:44
declared a national emergency. An ongoing
33:47
national emergency for COVID, an emergency he himself
33:49
has said does not exist. And then he
33:51
has used that as the predicate to cancel student loan
33:53
debt. And my favorite is that he claims now that the inflation
33:55
rates and the hard economy mean that we
33:58
have to get rid of student loans. That's
34:00
at the same time he is claiming that everything is wonderful and
34:02
hunky dory economically speaking. Well,
34:04
the the Supreme Court is about to get rid of this
34:06
thing. They're going to strike it down. And they
34:08
have to strike it down because it's absurd.
34:11
It's it's a ridiculous ridiculous use of patient in
34:13
power. And the reason it was such cynical game
34:15
is because Biden himself had said, Pelosi
34:17
had said he doesn't have the power to do this.
34:19
And so he knew that. So he's hoping that if the Supreme
34:21
Court strikes it down, he will then be able to campaign against Supreme
34:24
Court and all those evil Republicans who wanna who
34:26
wanna make you pay your debts and all the rest. I
34:28
don't think it's gonna play out that way. I think it's gonna play out
34:30
as another failure. Another promise made by the
34:32
Biden administration that wasn't real in the first place.
34:34
I think he's playing a game that he
34:36
thinks is too sophisticated by at least
34:38
half. It's just not that simple. We'll
34:41
get to the Democratic whining in response in
34:43
just one second. First, my friend Jordan
34:45
Peterson has a brand new five part series on daily
34:47
wear plus. It's called Vision and Destiny. It's a
34:49
series designed to help you find clarity and direction.
34:52
In a world where we're more interested in coddling and
34:54
affirming stupidity, Jordan is unafraid to tell you
34:56
some pretty hard truths. Here he discusses the damage
34:58
we're doing by quote unquote affirming someone's
35:00
chosen
35:01
gender. The trans activists would come
35:03
up to me and say, well, you know, you're really hurting me.
35:05
If you don't, except my indeterminacy
35:08
of identity. And I thought,
35:10
well, that's what you think. But as a trained clinician,
35:13
I think that I'm going to do you a lot
35:15
more damage in the medium to long
35:17
run by going along with your claim
35:20
that you can just be anything you want
35:22
moment to moment. You think that's
35:24
freeing because you regard all social constraints
35:27
as inhibitions on the
35:29
wonderful manifestation of your true
35:31
self. But I know that in order
35:33
to be healthy, in the long run, you have to be
35:35
integrated at multiple levels of
35:37
social community. And when you introduce
35:40
indeterminacy, As to
35:42
your status at the
35:44
sex level, no one has any
35:46
idea what to do with you. And so how are they gonna
35:48
play with you? They don't know what you are
35:50
in the in some sense that
35:52
even enables the ballgame
35:55
to get off the ground. And so
35:57
that's no recipe for long term
36:00
well-being because that's always bandied
36:02
about that notion of well-being and
36:03
harm. It's like, no. You
36:06
have to negotiate an identity. And
36:10
Jordan is speaking tough truth to people, truth
36:12
they actually need to hear. If you have friends who
36:14
are wondering, number one, my Jordan is popular
36:16
or number two, friends who are experiencing the
36:19
chaos of life and don't have a guide. Jordan is a
36:21
great guide. The first two episodes are out right now.
36:23
New episodes come out every week. It's all exclusive
36:25
for DailyWire plus members join now
36:27
at dailywire dot com slash subscribe to watch
36:29
vision and destiny from Jordan Peterson.
36:31
Okay. Meanwhile, Well, Democrats are, of
36:33
course, whining and screaming and mulling
36:36
about the fact that the supreme court is very likely
36:38
to strike down what is obviously an
36:40
unconstitutional seizure of power by
36:42
the executive branch to get
36:44
rid of hundreds of billions of dollars,
36:46
maybe trillions dollars over the course
36:48
time in student loan debt. Biden
36:50
knew at the time he did this that this was not legal. He did
36:52
it anyway. And again, the entire
36:54
political cynical game was, I'm gonna
36:56
do this thing. That totally is gonna get struck
36:58
down. I'm gonna make that promise. And if I make
37:00
that promise and then the promise gets struck down, I won't
37:02
get blamed because, of course, I made the promise and shows people
37:05
I was willing to do it. And what I need is more
37:07
power. And if you give me more power, I really would give That's
37:09
not how it's gonna play out. You
37:11
lied. You said that you could do a thing and you lied.
37:13
And the
37:14
American people are gonna hold you accountable for that
37:16
lie. By the way, on principle, if
37:18
you take out a loan, repay your loans. I don't know
37:20
when it became okay in this country to believe
37:22
that if you take out a loan, you shouldn't repay your loans.
37:24
And to everybody else's responsibility for
37:27
your crap decisions. You made a bad
37:29
decision to take out hundred and fifty thousand dollars
37:31
in loans to go get that sociology degree
37:33
from the local community college or
37:35
the overpriced private college. Your
37:37
problem, not mine, not anyone else's.
37:39
You didn't. That was stupid decision making.
37:42
If it's gonna be anybody else's problem, maybe it's the school.
37:44
Maybe we should sue the school for false advertising, for
37:47
fraud. Maybe the school made you promises
37:49
and we're fulfilled. Alright. Go through the school. But
37:51
why I should pay your student loan debt is beyond me?
37:54
I'm not paying your credit card debt. I don't see why I should
37:56
pay your student loan debt. Again,
37:59
it's it's amazing. It's considered selfish for
38:01
people to say, I don't wish to pay your debt. You should pay
38:03
your own debts. It is not selfish however for
38:05
you to incur a bunch of debts and then expect everyone
38:07
else around you to pay them. That's an insane
38:09
thing. But this is, again, part and parcel of of,
38:11
I think, a broader democratic program at this at this
38:14
point in American life, which is to make people
38:16
lazy bums. I think that the the goal of
38:18
the Democratic Party at this point is to make your
38:20
life worse so that you will blame the system and
38:22
then you will give them power to change the system.
38:25
I I think that there are top level members
38:28
of the Democratic Party and the press who are perfectly
38:30
happy with incentivizing bad and stupid
38:32
behavior. Yeah, you should there shouldn't be any
38:34
consequences for behavior. Get pregnant out of wedlock.
38:37
Be overweight. Go to incur
38:39
debts that you can't pay. Drop out of school. To
38:41
all the dumb things because after all, the reason you're
38:43
failing is not because of those individual decisions is
38:45
because of the system. Now first
38:47
of all, that is a recipe for individual unhappiness.
38:50
If you actually wish to be happy in a free
38:52
country, make good decisions. Make decisions
38:54
that make your life better. But it's not in the interest of
38:56
a lot of politicians to actually incentivize you
38:58
to make those good decisions. It's in their it's in
39:00
their interest for you to fail because then
39:02
they can say that your failure is the responsibility
39:05
of a system and they need the power in order
39:07
to change the system. And Bernie Sanders'
39:09
entire stick is exactly this. All
39:11
failure leaders are the system's failures. Now give
39:13
me the power and I will pick that power and I will use
39:15
it on the behalf. When we structured the entire he's
39:17
ever produced a damn thing in his entire life. So we're
39:20
now about to hear from a bunch of people who have never
39:22
reduced a thing in their entire life. Like never,
39:24
their entire career and not produced a job,
39:26
They've not produced a business, they've not produced
39:29
a product, they've not produced a service, and here they are
39:31
explaining why you, a person who has produced
39:33
all of those things, should pay the bill for somebody else.
39:35
Who took out a bill to get their ed degree
39:38
from the local community college. So
39:41
first we begin with Miguel Cardona. Again,
39:43
many career useless people in government at this point.
39:45
One of the striking facts about the Biden administration and
39:47
the Democratic Party in general is how few of these people
39:49
actually earned a living before they actually
39:52
went into government. And
39:54
Cardona was AAA
39:57
principal I guess. I guess
40:00
that's as much of a job as anybody in this administration
40:02
is held I suppose. But here's Cardona suggesting
40:04
this is pandemic related
40:05
relief. This is not pandemic related relief by any
40:07
stretch of the imagination.
40:09
HOW DO YOU MAKE THIS FAIR THOUGH? BECAUSE THERE,
40:11
I BELIEVE THE CONCERN MIGHT
40:13
BE THAT THERE WILL BE FUTURE A LEGAL
40:16
CHELL winches. And
40:18
there are many things to consider
40:21
when you forgive some loan
40:22
debt, but not other loan debt.
40:24
And then you have people who have paid off the debt.
40:27
We know that after national emergencies,
40:31
when loan payments are paused, when
40:33
it's time to restart the loans, there's
40:35
up to twenty times the amount of defaults
40:38
that you would normally have. We
40:40
wanna prevent this. This is why we
40:42
proposed targeted debt
40:44
relief of ten thousand dollars or twenty
40:46
thousand dollars if you're a pal recipient
40:49
to help those folks get back on their feet.
40:51
And as far as folks who Is
40:53
that pandemic related relief?
40:55
Well, that happened prior to the pandemic. This
40:57
is pandemic related relief. That
41:01
millions -- Is not.
41:03
-- we poured trillions of dollars into people's
41:05
pockets to stay home for two years. And
41:07
here he is saying that it's pandemic related relief. By the way,
41:10
the reality is 1678 of the claims they're making is that
41:12
inflation has and it makes it harder for
41:14
people because the economic conditions to pay back their loans.
41:16
Precisely, the opposite if your wages
41:18
went up and your actual
41:20
student loan debt is on a fixed rate
41:22
from a fixed
41:23
base. That means that your
41:25
actual price to repay your loan
41:27
went down. Hey,
41:29
if your income went up and the debt is
41:31
the same, that it costs you less money,
41:33
relatively speaking, in order to pay off the debt. And it makes
41:35
no economic sense. But the real point here is
41:38
a bunch of useless people suggesting that they get to steal your
41:40
money and then use it for purposes of their own making.
41:42
And relief out the people of responsibility in the process
41:44
because they want to intensify stupid behavior
41:46
they want to. Here's Ilhan Omar,
41:49
an anti American useless person, talking about
41:51
how not gonna stop until everyone is freed from
41:53
student loans debt.
41:56
Regardless of what happens today,
41:59
We are not going to stop. We
42:01
are not going to rest until
42:03
every single person who
42:06
has student debt is freed
42:08
from that and is able to
42:10
have opportunity in
42:12
this
42:13
country.
42:16
All all these people all these people. It's it's
42:18
amazing. Corey Bush. The the
42:21
languageer. Corey Bush, the the muelling and the whining.
42:23
The the tears are sweet. It's filling up here because
42:25
the court's gonna strike this thing down. And then all these people
42:27
are just gonna whine and cry and they're gonna cry
42:29
and whine. Here is Corey Bush again another career
42:31
useless person. Was never produced a product
42:34
service or business talking about how
42:36
about how everybody should
42:38
have to you should be able to to just not pay their
42:41
debts pretty much.
42:43
So let me ask you. And
42:46
I I need to hear your response. Are
42:50
the prophets of a student
42:52
loan servicer, more
42:54
important than the people's lives. You're
42:58
important to people. Lost
43:00
revenue, which is what they're claiming. Is
43:02
it more important than people
43:05
staying housed in bed? Should
43:08
a far rise supreme court
43:11
stop over forty million borrowers.
43:14
From receiving student net student debt
43:16
relief.
43:19
I have a question. If she believes that profit isn't
43:21
is is not more important than people like It's all
43:23
about people's lives versus profit. Oh,
43:25
the profit markers. I have a question.
43:28
According to Fox News, Missouri Democratic representative
43:30
Corey Bush's campaign told out sixty thousand dollars in
43:32
private security payments last year to Courtney Merritt.
43:35
Who should quietly married earlier this month?
43:37
It seems like somebody is perfectly happy to,
43:40
you know, embezzle what that sounds
43:42
like. Meredith pocketed the security payments despite
43:44
not having a Saint Louis private security
43:47
license, which is needed to perform security functions
43:49
in the area. Merits also received the
43:51
campaign cash as it simultaneously paid hundreds
43:53
of thousands of dollars to a Saint Louis Security
43:55
Firm and another individual for personal protection.
43:59
So, yeah, she she's very much against profit unless
44:01
her boyfriend soon
44:04
to be husband is making it for being a security
44:06
guard even though he doesn't actually have a security license.
44:08
Meanwhile, you have Ayanna Pressley, she says it's Catalyst
44:10
and spiteful, not to relieve people's student
44:12
loan debt. Well, somebody who paid off my own student loan
44:14
debt something you pay off my wife's student loan debt.
44:16
Let let me just point out that it is
44:19
Calus and spiteful for you to expect me
44:21
to pay off your student loan debt or anyone else to
44:23
pay off your student loan
44:24
debt. Pay your own damned bills.
44:27
Hard in Dubai, unjust, and
44:30
egregious student loan debt.
44:33
With the stroke of a pen and clear
44:35
legal authority, he responded. He
44:38
canceled student debt. But
44:41
callous and spiteful, Republican
44:45
officials disconnected
44:47
from the hardship of everyday folks.
44:50
Who are burdened by this debt.
44:54
Those Republican officials and corporate
44:56
interests across our nation
44:58
just couldn't leave well enough
45:01
alone. Couldn't
45:04
leave well enough alone, unbelievable. Meanwhile,
45:06
we're shooting to leave again. The squad. The
45:08
squad gang. These these are the best and brightest
45:10
they are. She says it's unhinged for
45:12
the Supreme Court to to oppose this. And
45:14
she She actually is the is the
45:16
founder and chairman of the unhinged
45:19
People's
45:19
Club. So she should know about unhinged. Here we go.
45:21
We are all standing
45:23
with you. And just know this,
45:26
I've seen things come and go. You know, when
45:28
folks coming off is coming
45:30
go. But movement people don't go nowhere.
45:33
Right? They can change hands.
45:35
They can this unhinge Supreme Court can make
45:37
all these decision, but we're not going anywhere.
45:40
Well, I mean, then you can just stand there, I suppose.
45:43
And again, the tiers are the tiers
45:45
are sweet. They were supposed to be salty, but they are indeed
45:47
sweet. Because you know what? You're going to lose.
45:49
And then your party's gonna get blamed because you lied
45:51
to the American people. And you lied to American people
45:54
as it turns out fairly regularly. God's
45:57
justice is coming and that writes swiftly for a
45:59
party that consistently lies in the American population
46:01
and promises things it just can't fulfill.
46:04
This is also true, of course, of Joe
46:06
Biden. Now, I have to say,
46:08
I'm feeling little bad today for people to
46:10
judge. He's secretary of transportation who has now blown
46:12
out his presidential prospects because he
46:15
was a a little nitpicky about going to East
46:17
Palestine, Ohio for three weeks. He was too busy
46:19
going on on, kind of,
46:21
John's on private jets to talk about
46:24
how there were too many white construction workers
46:26
or something. Well, now Pete Buttigieg
46:28
is is trying he's now put in the position of having
46:31
to defend Joe Biden. Because Biden has also knocked
46:33
on to East Palestine. Ohio has been willing
46:35
to jet off to Ukraine to do a photo op
46:37
with the Vladimir Zelensky. And he's
46:39
he's still out there doing political events. He's just not going to Palosine.
46:42
So here's Pete Buttigieg. He's now being forced to defend
46:44
Joe
46:44
Biden, not going to these Palosine.
46:46
And now that you have been to East Palestine,
46:49
and you've seen the devastation firsthand, it's
46:51
his decision
46:52
ultimately, but I have to ask you, do you think
46:54
president. President Biden should visit and
46:56
speak with families there. Well, what I know is he's
46:58
been very concerned throughout this
47:00
process about what the people of his
47:02
Palsteiner going through. I think also
47:05
a visit to that level can sometimes
47:08
have a lot of disruptive effects that would need
47:10
to be thought of
47:10
carefully. But I'm certainly glad that I 1678.
47:13
Oh, these excuses. Oh, the I'm
47:15
I'm so glad that I 1678. Oh, dude, it's
47:17
too late. It's too late. You can't save yourself. The
47:19
problem for the Democrats, of course, is that Kamala Harris
47:22
is the worst candidate in human history. And
47:24
Pete Buttigieg just blew himself out. So they got no
47:26
one on the bench. That bench is absolutely empty, which
47:28
means you are stuck. With Joe Biden.
47:30
So Joe Biden in the event yesterday? And,
47:33
man, he is gone. He
47:36
is no longer with us. That
47:38
means it's time for an episode of a
47:40
a new ongoing series we'll call
47:43
Joe Biden versus the teleprompter.
47:48
Truly international under pressure. How
47:50
can that be, Joe? Well, right now, the
47:52
government our tax dollars payout through
47:55
Medicare that help for prescription drug.
47:58
If they have to pay out hundred and fifty nine
48:00
hundred fifty nine thousand
48:03
dollars lead, Let's
48:08
He's
48:10
angry at the front. He's
48:14
angry at the teleprompter. Yeah. Yeah.
48:16
It went a hundred and fifty nine billion million but
48:18
trillion ex million dollars in me, man.
48:22
I'm sorry that the brain doesn't But that that was not his
48:24
only battle with the teleprompter. This teleprompter
48:27
wins that one, but Joe was back at
48:29
it. Back at it, and
48:31
and here is redox. Rumble
48:34
in the
48:34
jungle, Joe Biden versus the teleprompter
48:36
part two. By
48:39
the way, your ducks
48:41
are good, if there's any angels in heaven, they're
48:43
all nurses, male and female. You
48:45
know why? Well, guys let us
48:47
you guys make us allow us to live.
48:50
Nurses make you one of it.
48:55
What in the what? What
48:57
just happened? You know, who got the
48:59
doctors and the and nurse Yeah.
49:03
You doctor? Yeah. They're right. You hear me?
49:06
Well spoken, sir. Well spoken.
49:08
And she got one on the chin. Does that not the teleprompter's
49:10
not reading from a teleprompter? He's reading from
49:13
the ghost or all around him
49:15
ever present, waiting for him.
49:18
Well, Joe Biden also told weird
49:20
story yesterday. Again, this is their this is their leader.
49:22
Is the man who is going to lead them to the promised land.
49:25
Joe Biden had a story. He had a story about
49:27
nurse. Apparently, this is the second time he has told this
49:29
particular story. It's not quite on corn
49:31
pop level, but I'm always up for a good Joe Biden
49:33
story. I like Joe Biden stories. I think they're funny.
49:35
Whether it is whether it's the story about His
49:38
father, my personal favorite, the best driving story
49:40
ever is, of course, the one about his father telling him
49:42
that two gay men going out on a street
49:44
corner in Scranton, Pennsylvania in nineteen
49:46
fifty two. Those guys met Love Joey.
49:49
That's that's the best story. But this one
49:51
is pretty
49:51
good. This is the one where apparently
49:54
he had a pornographic dream about a nurse or something.
49:58
A nurse named Pearl Nelson, military.
50:01
She come in and do things that I don't think you'll
50:03
learn medical school. Nursley School.
50:06
She's whispering my ear and couldn't
50:08
understand him. She whispered, she leaned down.
50:10
He'd actually breathed on me to make sure that I
50:13
there was a connection human connection.
50:23
Oh, he's gone, folks. It's
50:25
sad. It's sad. The president is gone.
50:28
That's that's sad. Some means to
50:30
reach out to Pearl Nelson, be like, so what did you teach Joe
50:32
Biden that you didn't learn in in school?
50:34
Is that by the way, is that a tactic that nurses frequently
50:36
use? They go and blow in people's ears?
50:38
Is that a thing? I feel like
50:40
that's not a thing. Like maybe
50:42
they don't learn that nursing school because that's crazy.
50:45
I've never should make a human connection by
50:47
blowing in my in my wrong chica.
50:51
Solid stuff there from the president. Of
50:53
the United States. Just just, wow, he's gonna
50:55
test. Meanwhile, I I have
50:57
to say, I am amazed at the number of commentators
51:00
or actively like upset about
51:02
the fact that the Lab Leak theory appears to be
51:04
true. And the FBI has now suggested that
51:06
Lab Leak theory the COVID-nineteen virus started
51:09
in a Wuhan lab and then was accidentally leaked
51:11
out and then the Chinese government covered it up. And
51:13
why is that even political? It
51:15
seems like it shouldn't be. The only reason for it to be political
51:17
is for people like Anthony Fauci who supports gain of
51:19
function research in Wuhan. But other
51:22
than if your name isn't Anthony Fauci or Francis
51:24
Collins, I don't really see why
51:26
per se you'd be invested in this. But the answer
51:29
is because the wrong people believed
51:31
the Lab League Theory. There's a
51:33
fascinating exchange yesterday between Nate Silver
51:35
and Mehdi Hosn. Medi Hassan is
51:37
the political hack over at MSNBC who used
51:40
to work for al Jazira. And
51:42
he tweeted out yesterday simple
51:45
reason why so many people 1678 keen to discuss the Lab
51:47
Li theory is because it was originally conflated by
51:49
the right with Chinese biopic conspiracies continues
51:51
to be conflated by the right with antifoundry
51:53
conspiracies. Blame the conspiracy theorists.
51:56
And
51:56
Nate Silver, correctly tweeted back, this is so refreshingly
51:59
honest. The bad people thought the Lab Leak might
52:01
be true. Therefore, as journalist, we couldn't be
52:03
expected to actually evaluate the evidence for it. That's
52:05
exactly right. And that's really what this is about. Too
52:07
many people on the right, including senator Tom
52:09
thought that the Lab League theory might be true, and
52:12
therefore it was verbatim. And even now they
52:14
can't let all of it. So Stephen Colbert, a former comedian.
52:17
He went on his late night show and he attacked the Department
52:19
of Energy for operating outside their lane.
52:21
Based on their report, which is amazing because the Department
52:24
of Energy oversees, like, a couple
52:26
dozen labs that do exactly this kind
52:28
of work. So they're actually not outside their
52:30
lane. I love the comedian who
52:32
is well outside his
52:33
lane, talk about how others should not be outside
52:35
their lanes. It's it's so amusing. The
52:38
Department of Energy released a new report
52:40
saying a lab leak is the most
52:42
likely origin of the COVID-nineteen pandemic.
52:45
Well, there it is. Chinese
52:47
wet markets, you're off the hook. Let's
52:50
order around a pangolin poppers for the table.
52:53
I love a nice plate of wet apps. Now
52:55
if like me, you're wondering why the
52:57
Department of Energy is the one making
52:59
this judgment is because that agency oversees
53:02
a network of US national laboratories
53:04
some of which conduct advanced
53:07
biological research. No.
53:09
No. Bad energy
53:11
department. No BIOLabs until
53:13
you finish building your electric car charging stations.
53:17
Stay in your lane. You don't see
53:19
you don't see You
53:25
don't see the Census Bureau building nukes.
53:30
Staying your lane, guys, says Stephen Colbert,
53:32
the comedian who has never stayed, and you were
53:34
remotely close to his lane. Worth noting here that John
53:36
Stewart, who used to be the guy who made Steven
53:38
Colbert famous back when Steven Colbert had the occasional
53:40
funny moment. Stewart actually went
53:43
on TV and he recalled the backlash to him talking
53:45
about the Lab League. You remember in twenty twenty one, he did
53:47
a very funny bit on Colbert Show in which
53:49
she talked about the fact that the Wuhan Institute
53:51
of Neurology, was in fact
53:53
the source of of lab league
53:56
pretty obviously. He did a whole bit. It was very
53:58
funny about how if there was a chocolate league in
54:00
Hershey, Pennsylvania, might assume it had something
54:02
to do with Hershey. Well, here he was explaining
54:04
the backlash she received. The
54:06
Department of Energy came
54:08
out with a report saying that
54:11
they have they said low confidence,
54:13
but that the
54:15
COVID-nineteen was a result
54:18
of a lab leak.
54:22
Are you trying get me canceled again?
54:25
It's not about certainty
54:27
or the larger problem
54:29
with all of this is the inability
54:32
to discuss things
54:34
that are within the realm of possibility without
54:37
falling into absolutes and litmus
54:40
testing each other for
54:43
our political allegiances as
54:45
it arose from that. My my bigger
54:47
problem with with that was I thought it
54:49
was a pretty good bit that expressed
54:51
kinda how I felt. And the two
54:53
things that came out of it were
54:56
I'm racist against Asian people
54:58
and how dare I align myself
55:01
with the alt right?
55:04
It's it's he's totally right about this, by the way.
55:06
John Stewart. I mean, when he says that he was immediately
55:08
categorized as a right winger because
55:10
of that that thing. And he's as far left as possible
55:12
to be. It is amazing. Now the problem for John Stewart
55:15
is, of course, he has, in fact, engaged in precisely
55:17
the thing he's condemning. Sort of knee jerk. I'm
55:19
gonna side with the left and not examine the evidence
55:21
on on other possible ideas
55:24
stuff. He does that, but not on this one. On this
55:26
one, he was totally right. Meanwhile, Rand
55:28
Paul Senator from Kentucky who was right about the
55:30
game function research stuff all along. He
55:32
told Sean Hannity last night that Anthony
55:34
Fauci actually gave a waiver to the bypass IN
55:37
ORDER TO BIPAS COMMITTEE REVIEW WHEN HE WAS AUTHORIZING
55:39
THE WUHAN LAB RESEARCH.
55:42
Nine hundred FROM THE INTERCEPT Project
55:45
Veritas. Then we got the emails from the
55:47
NIH themselves that
55:49
they had a strong belief
55:51
that their money went to the Wuhan
55:53
Varral LNG Lab. So for
55:55
them to deny it or,
55:58
you know, aren't they just denying
56:00
the science at this
56:01
point? They don't 1678 tell us that they were
56:03
wrong? I think they're trying to escape
56:05
the culpability because ultimately Anthony
56:08
Fauci's advocacy here to go
56:10
outside the boundaries of the normal
56:12
process. THERE'S A COMMITTEE THAT'S SUPPOSED
56:15
TO REVIEW THESE DANGEROUS VIRUSES AND
56:17
SEE IF THE EXPERIENCE ARE
56:19
TOO RISKEY AND SHOULDN'T BEEN HAPPEN. This
56:22
didn't occur in the Wuhan Experiment. Anthony
56:24
Fauci gave a waiver. He was one
56:26
of the few people in government who could give waiver
56:28
and said, The research doesn't have to be
56:30
reviewed by the
56:31
committee. We're just gonna let it happen.
56:34
Well, you know, I think that may be one of the reasons
56:37
why Anthony Fauci does talks about. It's amazing how the
56:39
media, many in the in the media, are
56:41
are actively jumping to defend
56:43
Fauci and all the rest. Okay. Time for a
56:45
quick thing I like and then some things that I hate.
56:47
So things that I like. Last night,
56:50
I was I didn't event with governor Rhonda
56:52
Santos of Florida Bush governor in America, governor of my
56:54
home state, is a brand new bookout. That is
56:56
well worth the read. You should go check out it.
56:58
It is number one at amazon dot
57:00
com. So go check out his book Right now, here's
57:02
a little bit of a clip from the interview. The entire interview
57:04
is available on YouTube. We're also going
57:07
to put it on the feed probably this
57:09
weekend at some point. His book is called The Courage. To be
57:11
here's little bit of what it like yesterday. I
57:14
sold all my stocks before I got into
57:16
office because, you know, I used to trade stocks
57:18
as a hobby But I didn't to these
57:20
these these congressmen are trading stocks.
57:22
They're making money and you wonder how they're
57:24
getting that advice. So I didn't 1678 to be
57:26
in a situation where I made some trades,
57:28
and then two years later, I voted on something
57:31
and people tried to do. So I didn't do
57:33
it. Obviously, it's made me poor as a result
57:35
of that, but we didn't do it. And
57:37
then, you know, I didn't accept the
57:39
congressional pension. These guys
57:41
get a pension after only a few years.
57:43
You wouldn't be able to get that in the private
57:46
sector And so we said that no
57:48
on that. And and I think that I
57:50
I proved to my constituents that, you know,
57:52
I was a citizen going up there to try
57:54
to do what they wanted me to do but I wasn't
57:56
gonna play the
57:57
game. It was a great event.
57:59
Really enjoyed it. And I think that you'll enjoy
58:01
the full interview. Go check out YouTube before that or
58:03
just wait until this weekend or least the full
58:05
audio on our on our feed.
58:08
Also, time for some things that I hate.
58:14
Alrighty. So now apparently McDonald's
58:16
has decided that it's important to promote Cardi
58:18
B and Offset. So there are
58:21
a lot people who are McDonald's franchisees and they're
58:23
not particularly fond of this. They're not particularly fond
58:25
of this because Cardi B is pornographic
58:27
and so is awesome. These are not people who
58:29
are I would say models for the
58:31
Youngens. These are not be despite fact
58:33
that the left is trying to portray Cardi B.
58:35
As though she is an empowering figure for young adults,
58:38
she is in fact not. She is a
58:40
former stripper who has bragged about
58:42
how she drugged and robbed men. And
58:44
then she makes quasi pornographic
58:47
wrap about her about her various lady
58:49
parts. And she is now being
58:51
mainstreamed by McDonald's. Right?
58:53
Which, again, a lot of people go to McDonald's. Kids.
58:56
My parents bring their kids to McDonald's and you have a
58:58
ball crawl the whole thing. So a lot of franchisees do not
59:00
happy. Here's McDonald's pushing Cardi B and offset.
59:04
My dream day would also starts like
59:07
Pardon? Every good day.
59:10
I
59:10
surprise you were to place all to our sales.
59:13
Thank you, baby. Of course.
59:15
My baby. We
59:19
share our favorite McDonald's order. And
59:21
we start with a chairs.
59:27
Let's eat. The cardi
59:29
beans. It's all set meal. And I'll pass
59:31
my plan.
59:34
A Carty b and offset meal. Well,
59:37
mean, I I do love how they're hijacking, you
59:39
know, actual, you know,
59:41
like nineteen thirties and forties style
59:43
vibes. In order to try and class up
59:46
the joint, but these are not particularly wonderful
59:48
and classy people. You'll remember that offset.
59:51
It's amazing what you can survive to not be canceled
59:53
so long as you're part of rap culture. You remember
59:55
that Offset actually wrapped the lyrics
59:57
quote, I cannot vibe with queers. That was
59:59
not all that long ago. He had to issue an apology But
1:00:01
the apology was efficient because, of course, he is a member
1:00:03
of the intersectional cadre. That's totally fine. Well,
1:00:05
a lot of the franchisees are looking at this and are like,
1:00:08
we don't want any association with this. We don't
1:00:10
think that Cardi B is ChildSafe. The only
1:00:12
thing offset is ChildSafe. And messages
1:00:14
sent to the USA division, in recent weeks, several
1:00:16
McDonald's franchisees according to The Wall Street Journal,
1:00:18
said the artist Lyrics and Lifestyles were not
1:00:20
aligned with the company brand. Some owners wrote the chosen
1:00:23
celebrities could erode McDonald's family friendly image
1:00:25
and urged other franchisees to remove advertising
1:00:27
and merch associated with the Cardi B and Osset Meal
1:00:29
in their stores. McDonald
1:00:31
said Tuesday the chain has received widespread support and
1:00:33
excitement from owners in their restaurant employees regarding
1:00:36
the Cardi B and Offset Meal. Apparently,
1:00:38
the couple's promotion was meant to focus on
1:00:41
love and celebrating special moments. Oh,
1:00:43
isn't that nice? That it's
1:00:45
focused on on love. Right?
1:00:48
I mean, like, that's that's that's what it is.
1:00:50
It's all about about love.
1:00:53
And and really like classy forms of love.
1:00:56
Page six from the New York Post.
1:00:59
October twenty twenty two. Kardie
1:01:01
B shared a screenshot of explicit text messages
1:01:04
she and husband offset recently sent each other
1:01:06
amid rumors that the rapper had been unfaithful.
1:01:08
It all started Saturday with a Twitter troll
1:01:10
reposting a meme of spongebob squarepants
1:01:12
looking at a phone. With e caption, man
1:01:15
eat that d word. User added,
1:01:17
this is how offset be with random woman when
1:01:19
Cardi B be away from home. Cardi
1:01:22
wasted no time responding, actually, this is
1:01:24
how he B! Thank you. Since
1:01:26
deleted who was accompanied by not safe forattacks
1:01:28
between her and offset, who was saved in
1:01:30
her phone as Huntington. Huntington,
1:01:35
And it was rather
1:01:38
obscene, shall we say?
1:01:41
So, yeah, that that it's a classy,
1:01:44
just love, marital love, marital bliss.
1:01:46
That's what they are all about. Is is couples, what
1:01:48
room to be cheating on others sending
1:01:50
each other steamy text messages and putting them up on Twitter.
1:01:52
The the the classiest of the classi people.
1:01:55
This is this is why so many children
1:01:57
should be eating at McDonald's. Slow
1:01:59
clap for the geniuses over at the McDonald's
1:02:02
brand. Just They are wonderful at
1:02:04
this. Okay. Other things that I
1:02:06
hate today. So Harry
1:02:08
Styles is a human. I I've
1:02:10
been informed that Harry Styles is a human. Now, I I will
1:02:12
I I've said before that I
1:02:15
I find Harry Styles pretty
1:02:17
derivative. I mean, he's basically just doing David
1:02:19
Bowie a transdup. He
1:02:22
he he is supposed to be a fashion hero because he
1:02:24
keeps wearing women's clothes on the cover of magazines.
1:02:27
Because he's flaunting the rules guys.
1:02:29
And he's it's all part of the face tattoos syndrome.
1:02:32
Harry Styles. Well, wow. It's groundbreaking.
1:02:34
He's wearing a dress on the cover of him.
1:02:37
And then you say, well, yeah, and that's not very masculine. He
1:02:39
looks like he looks like adult. He looks like an idiot. And
1:02:42
maybe men should actually, you know, act masculine as
1:02:44
general rule. There are people who are not, but
1:02:46
maybe as like a model of male behavior. You might
1:02:48
wanna act, like, somewhat masculine. Like,
1:02:51
how dare you notice? Also, what makes you think he's
1:02:53
not, well, I think that it's not masculine to wordpress.
1:02:55
Just gonna put it out there. Doesn't seem like a particularly
1:02:57
masculine thing to do. Well, now, English
1:03:00
pops or Harry Styles is partnering with Michael Bloomberg's
1:03:03
every town for gun safety's students' demands
1:03:05
action. He has donated million dollars
1:03:07
in tour proceeds to secure more gun control in America
1:03:10
according to Breitbark. On
1:03:12
February twenty seven, twenty twenty three, styles
1:03:14
decided to join forces with every town.
1:03:16
Styles responded to recent shooting saying was
1:03:18
absolutely devastated by the recent string of mass shootings
1:03:20
in America. And so he is going to use
1:03:23
his money in order to promote gun control
1:03:25
in a country where he does not live. To
1:03:28
which we can only say that we fought revolutions so
1:03:30
we don't have to listen to Brits. So Harry
1:03:32
Styles can go back to making his
1:03:35
crappy music and second rate movies with Olivia
1:03:37
Wild. And wearing dresses on the cover of magazines,
1:03:39
you're not going to take our gun rights because
1:03:41
you donated money to Michael Bloomberg's group.
1:03:45
It so tiresome. A final
1:03:47
thing that I hate for today. So
1:03:50
in Puerto Rico, miss universe pageant,
1:03:52
is now going to allow a dude to compete. Isn't
1:03:54
it? It's actually exciting. Maybe I should put this in things I
1:03:56
like. Finally, gender parity.
1:03:59
Finally, finally, dudes will be allowed to compete
1:04:01
with the ladies. In the miss universe
1:04:03
contest. So exciting. According
1:04:06
to the associate press, Daniela Arroyo Gonzalez,
1:04:09
who's best known for winning a federal lawsuit against Puerto
1:04:11
Rico's government that allows people to change gender
1:04:13
on their birth certificate was chosen on Thursday.
1:04:16
It was her second attempt. By
1:04:18
her, we mean his. He's a dude. In
1:04:20
the April twenty eighteen ruling, US district court judge
1:04:22
at Carmen Consuelo wrote a royal and others who brought the
1:04:24
lawsuit have stepped up for those whose voices debilitated
1:04:27
by raw discrimination have been hushed
1:04:29
into silence. royal
1:04:31
will compete with other candidates representing the islands
1:04:33
at seven gay men municipalities for the
1:04:35
miss universe Puerto Rico title. Miss
1:04:38
universe pageant has allowed trans participation since
1:04:40
twenty twelve. The first, transgender woman
1:04:42
competed in the global event in twenty eighteen.
1:04:45
Now, this is not a great shock because, of course,
1:04:47
a trans activist who is a dude
1:04:49
from Thailand bought the Miss universe organization
1:04:52
for about twenty million dollars last year.
1:04:54
And so you're now going to look at see a bunch
1:04:56
of surgically enhanced dudes participate
1:04:59
in this universe contest. At this point,
1:05:01
I'm just wondering if if there's any purpose to this. Why
1:05:03
don't we just Well, honestly, why don't we just
1:05:05
use computer generated people, and
1:05:08
we'll have, like, a contest for that? Because let let's say,
1:05:10
that's what's happening when you have a mis universe contest
1:05:12
featuring surgically enhanced dudes. Basically
1:05:14
a contest among classic surgeons. So maybe we just call it the plastic
1:05:17
surgery contest because that's really what you're
1:05:19
doing here. Right? Just slice and off some fucking you're putting
1:05:21
in some fake vagina's. And you're and you're enhancing
1:05:23
some chest tissue, you're planting breast
1:05:26
tissue, and changing hormones, and you're shaving down
1:05:28
jaws, and you're poofing up lips, and you're,
1:05:30
like, who's the best plastic surgeon? It can
1:05:32
actually be a reality show. Who is the best plastic surgeon?
1:05:34
Because it certainly isn't who's the most beautiful woman
1:05:36
because these aren't women? I know it's
1:05:38
uncomfortable for for us to recognize the simple
1:05:40
fact, but that is a simple fact. You're now looking
1:05:42
at dudes who have been surgically enhanced to
1:05:44
appear more feminine, to look like women.
1:05:47
And so if you're saying that that is the best
1:05:49
woman that I guess women are all just assemblages
1:05:51
parts, everything that you say in the feminine
1:05:53
circles about how people should stop viewing women as an
1:05:56
assemblages of parts is completely
1:05:58
undermined by this. Because you are literally talking
1:06:00
about a man with an assemblage of
1:06:02
fake female parts, who you are now calling
1:06:04
a woman and having compete with the other women
1:06:07
apparently have not been surgically enhanced, generally
1:06:09
speaking. So, congratulate
1:06:12
If this person wins, congratulations to
1:06:14
his plastic surgeon because that's
1:06:16
really who is getting rewarded. They're
1:06:19
just well done. Plastic
1:06:21
surgeries come a long way. Also a thing I like that
1:06:24
is related to a thing I hate Mississippi is now
1:06:26
banning transgender surgery on
1:06:28
minors and hormone treatments on minors.
1:06:31
And that is good. Matt, my friend, Matt
1:06:33
Walsh, what is a woman? He
1:06:36
went actually to the signing of the bill and
1:06:38
he appeared at the press conference
1:06:40
with Governor Kate Reads of Mississippi who
1:06:42
invited him. He was the only invited
1:06:45
guest speaker. And it was great that
1:06:47
Matt 1678? Also shall act a couple members of
1:06:49
the press who are asking very dumb questions about
1:06:51
why boys can't be girls and and all of the rest.
1:06:53
The Mississippi bill banned from minors under the
1:06:55
age eighteen purity blockers, those would be chemical
1:06:57
castration drugs, cross x hormones and
1:06:59
surgeries for minors. It is a very
1:07:01
good thing. Again, all of this is because daily
1:07:04
wire does things like what is woman and all of that
1:07:06
is possible because you, our subscribers,
1:07:08
make it possible. You give us the money that
1:07:11
allows us to actually make things like what is woman
1:07:13
and to go on crusades like this to end child
1:07:15
mutilation across the country. Thank
1:07:17
you for your subscriptions. Really appreciate
1:07:19
it. Make sure to head on over if you're not a subscriber.
1:07:22
To go to daily wire plus and subscribe. But
1:07:24
today, so we can help protect kids all over the country.
1:07:26
It's just one of the things Matt is doing and we are doing
1:07:28
as a company as well. Alrighty, guys. The rest of
1:07:30
the show is continuing right now. You're not gonna want this, we'll get into the mailbag.
1:07:32
But if you're not a member, you won't be able to have your question
1:07:35
answered. So become a member use code Shapiro
1:07:37
and two months free annual annual plans, click the link in the
1:07:39
description and join us.
Podchaser is the ultimate destination for podcast data, search, and discovery. Learn More