In hour 1 of The Armstrong & Getty Show
Broadcasting live from the Abraham Lincoln Radio Studio, the George Washington Broadcast Center, Jack Armstrong, Joe, Katty.
Armstrong, and Jettie and he I'm for Seeable and Preventable.
Our original air names for Seeable and Preventable. That's the headline of the Senate report about the Secret Service failure in the first Trump assassination. We'll be talking about that later live from Studio C. See Emily let room deep with them, the bowels of the Armstrong and getting communications compound. And hey y' all, today we are under the tutelage of our general manager, the evildoers, the evil doers, so many evil doers domestic, fore and everywhere you look. Un evildoer.
Wow.
So our headline of the evildoers general manager. The lazy years, the years of lyon in the clover, watching the clouds go by our throat. It's time to wake up and smelled evil man. I'll tell you what. Hesbula fired a ballistic missile at Tel Aviv. First time they've ever done that, a different different from rockets. Ballistic missile like big boy equipment which was intercepted, but it had never been done before and never gone that far. They intercepted it right over Tel Aviv, and China tested an ICBM overnight with a dummy nuclear payload, just to remind everybody we could send one of these anywhere in the world, just just saying yeah, yeah, I'm reminded of the mockery Ronald Reagan took when he was talking about a missile interception technology program that we ought to get ahead of that because de terrence won't last forever. He was derided and mocked as a fool his Star Wars program. He's such an it. He's a warmonger many years ago, and that's what saved Israel's bacon over and over and over again. Yeah, and then got the Secret Service report that's out of this from the Senate, which is controlled by the Democrats. I think that's why it makes it so powerful. And it ain't good. It ain't good at all. Man. That sniper up on the roof saw all the police running towards something with their guns drawn. Wonder what's going on over there. Nobody bothered to like talk to anybody else and say, probably ought to get the president off the stage. There's a whole bunch of cops running with their guns drawn. Just didn't happen for whatever reason. It's funny how consistent I think both of our thinking has been on this since the very beginning. You know, the crowd that's saying there's no way it wasn't an inside job, because there's no way there could be a failure that obvious and egregious. Well, according to the Senate both sides evidently, yeah, they're that incomp which is tough to take. The report also said it was the first time they'd had one of those counter snipers on a building. The Trump people had been asking for it for a long time, and they had been told that the resources weren't available, which Rand Paul says is bs but I don't know anything about that. But so that's the first time they had the counter snipers on the roof. So one more event without them and Trump would be dead, definitely dead. Good lord. Yeah, and uh whoa altering history in all kinds of different ways. Based on Trump's speech yesterday where he sounds pretty pretty far down the road of Ukraine's just got to deal with the fact that they lost, and then the war is over. We ain't supporting you anymore, right right, Yeah, Yeah, So there's a lot of going on. As you said, evil doers. Why don't we let's start the show officially. Okay, there we go. I'm fine with that, but we'll get to that center report later. There's some wild stuff in there. It's just it's highly troubling. It's it is disturbing. Yeah, it really is. I'm Jack Armstrong. He's Joe Getty on this. It is Wednesday, September twenty fifth of the year twenty twenty four. Life will not be a born twenty four. We are Armstrong in Getty. We approve of this program. Let's start the show officially. Then, according to FCC rules and rags, precisely at Mark.
A cat that went missing during their owner's trip to Yellowstone National Park was found recently in California, more than.
Nine hundred miles away. That story is pretty unbelievable.
Who brings their cat on vacation.
All of America celebrating the return of the Yellowstone Cats. Everybody happy for the cat, happy for its owners. I just I don't want to talk about the news of the day. Oh, it's so discouraging. She want to go you want to go big on the cat walking nine hundred miles back to its owners. Make that our features, make that our future story. Today, we can ge we can talk to somebody in Yellowstone, we could talk to somebody in California. Maybe we could take it made this way to Sacramento. Let's let's see that. We've probably got eyewitnesses, probably got the listeners to the show are familiar with the Yellowstone cat is found safe and solid. How did you make it through Yellowstone? You got like mountain lions and wolves and bears. How did the Haitians not get it? You know, the Haitians would have heard there's a cat. There's a cat running around by itself, no protection whatsoever. And I'm hungry, right, you gotta get past the gauntlet of the Haitians before you get even deal with the mountain lions. As a poor little lost pussy cat and Yellowstone to made its way home safely. And we have multiple eight night jokes on that. Is that, right, Michael? Just one morning, let's say, let's hear another one. Let's just take another try.
A fearless cat traveled one thousand miles back to its owner's home in California after going missing in Yellowstone. That is amazing, and it proves once and for all that those cat stuck in trees could come down if they wanted to. They just love all the attention from the hot firefighters.
That's a pretty good point. Baxter gets lost in the Yellowstone, He's gonna go with the first family that offers him a treat, You, slut you. Those stories have always amazed me, though the the how do you survive? Is one thing, obviously, of not getting eaten by another animal or hit by a car, or run out of food or water or whatever.
But how the hell there's plenty of adults, plenty of adults that, without a cell phone, would not be able to make it to.
California from Yellowstone, not a chance. They wouldn't know how, They wouldn't be able to figure it out, right, how's a cat do it? Spectacular? Little understood navigational abilities, little understood, I'd say, not understood at all. Yeah, it's incredible. I've been hearing these stories since I was a young lad. Though I have a dog that made it back seven hundred miles or whatever somehow over Hilldaleen and Highway significantly. Uh, yes, amazing. There's plenty of fantastic Disney movies about it. Yeah, it is absolutely amazing. I mean, so you have to assume that the beast the cats are dogs who do this sort of thing. In a modern Disney movie, the dog would be transgender. But anyway, back to you leaving a red state for a blue state because it's so miserable. Exactly, its owners moved to Texas and it walks back to California because it's so miserable in Texas. Jenny the transgender dog leaves behind the big tree of the Texans and makes it home to the blue paradise that is Kelly Udicon, where they can live out its true life as a trans woman dog. Oh jeez m. Yeah, that's quite amazing. That's a good story. And you'd rather talk about that than the news of the day because it sickens you. Yeah. Part of it is that, you know, as I do my diggings all day long and into the night and read and watch it all, I could easily identify something just horrible and ill advised advocated by Kamala Harris, which is rare because she doesn't really save much at all. Likewise, Tim Wattz, likewise, Donald Trump, likewise jd Vance, just terrible, dumb populist policies so it would be bad for the country, and it just it's left me somewhat discouraged. Yeah, I heard a good term yesterday that I apparently the podcast America Guys Do. That's a couple of the old Obama strategists to have a podcast. It's really popular on the left, Pod Save America. I don't remember what it's called. Yeah, and I don't need to promote it, so if I get it wrong, it's probably to our you'd hate it, folks, go ahead try it anyway. Apparently they use a term called the polar coaster about how every day you can pick a poll to back whatever argument you want to make. That's clever term. And yeah, it is clever term, and it's pretty accurate. So there are so many poles that come out, and the race is so freaking tight, it's tied. The people who say it's tied are the people that are being the most honest. The people who take a two point lead in a margin of error that is greater than that and say Harris looks to be benefiting from the debate, or Trump seems to be pulling back ahead after she's not doing interviews, it's just crap. That's just crap. There's nothing to back any of those narratives. It's a polar coaster and there's just tiny, tiny, and it's tied. So that's that's the reality. So I'm going to try to stay off the polar coaster until somebody actually has some sort of meaningful lead. Oh no, I don't want to hear a damn syllable about any poles, which poles? All of them? Okay, Well, some of this, that's right. Some of the not who's ahead stuff is way beyond the margin of error and pretty interesting, like the fact that Kamala Harris has had the big est turnaround and approval in history. The only person that had a bigger turnaround at the president or vice president level is George W. Bush because he went up forty points from just under fifty to over ninety after nine to eleven. But that's a different circumstance, uh the way Kamala it was because she is unleashed such a stunningly brilliant battery of policies and plans for the nation. We can all we can all understand why w Bush's poll numbers went up. We all pulled together as a country and thought Jesus or under attack. We need to support our guy. Why did Kamlarees have a twenty five point turnaround, the biggest ever? Huh? What? What didn't you like about her that you now like when she was down at like thirty four percent approval? That's weird, man. No, I think it's explained completely, like we said yesterday, with one hundred percent positive stories about her according to people who majure this sort of stuff, and negative stories about Trump out of the mainstream news. Right right, Well, I turn my gaze toward our beloved listening audience, you good folks, and with palms upturned, I ask you, I'm actually up turning my palms tack can vouch for that? What is a person of logic to do in a completely illogical world? Are you? How do you not go nuts? Are you a nihilist? You are? Now? No, not a nihilist? No, no Ah might be a what would you call somebody who's like a hermit? I mean not literally, I'm not going to live in and eat. I'm not going to live under a lean to in the woods or anything like that. I just conscientious objector h refuse, Nick, You're not going to go all van go and walk around naked, living under lean twos for mostly no no no, like cabin in the woods and manifestos and giant beards or anything like that. I just I feel like this party isn't for me. I've been to many parties like that. Why so much baby oil, pddy. I think I'll go. This doesn't seem like my scene? How does? How does mailbag look? Very good? Need to get to it? It's cold text line four one, five two nine KFTC. For instance, the Secret Service learned from the news reports that there was an Iranian plot to assassinate President Trump. They weren't briefed on that for some reason. Let's get to that next segment. Let's bust right into it. I've got a lot of great stuff to get to today. Let's do a little freedom loving quote of the day. This is great, sent along by Page in Oregon, where my son is celebrating his birthday today. I can't believe a little boy is thirty but happy thirtieth Deco. You're not listening, but happy birthday, buddy. Let's see uh So, Page says, I started reading The Gathering Storm by Winston Churchill. It is excellent, brilliant, Yeah, and this is the theme of the volume. It felt like it could have been written for today. She says, glad to see, as you've been reminding us, human nature is indeed cyclical. Thanks for how you keep us laughing amidst these dark and spicy times. Thank you, page. I'm reminded of the joke about the great clown Pogliacci. Is that right? Never, We'll get to that later. Here's the theme of the book, the subtitle essentially, how the English speaking peoples, through their unwisdom, carelessness and good nature, allowed the wicked to rearm. I'd say that's a pretty damn good description page of what's going on in so many cases today, unwisdom, carelessness, and good nature. Surely everybody just wants to be friends and do business like us. Ha ha mail bag rub Us note mail bag at Armstrong Egeddy dot com. Jeff Wrights, I've given up hope on a hot Dogs or Dogs Armstrong and Yeddy T shirt. You gotta get one. I've are one. How I love that. That's what I'm my favorite praises of all time? Yeah yeah, And he says, how about the wouldn't the R have to be like in all caps to make sure you're emphasizing hot dogs are dogs? Yes? Yes, excellent point. How about a monarchy now t shirt? He asks, excellent idea is one and all? Jeff, thank you? Jared in Pillson, Pillser, Pilsen, that's there the term. Are you saying the name of a town or do you have a hair stuck in your teeth? Ah? Surely that's the town in Czechoslovakia, the Czech Republic now, from which the term Pilsner comes from. Oh yeah, so Jared who lives in Pillsen? Apparently? He says. I just cast my vote in a regional election as a recently naturalized Czech citizen. I was shocked to see that you can't enter the voting booth without presenting your ID. Barbarick resist me much obvious? Yeah, absolutely, the check are racist against black people like Jeff, who is white. Moving along, that's the only explanation for wanting ID to vote, other than trying to make sure you're who you claim you are. Good morning, gentlemen, Ris Brian, listening to your conversation about Heswela having eighty thousand rockets. You guys frequently cite Iran for funding these entities. However, never touched on the fact that we are funding Iran, so through fungibility, we are funding Hespela. Please come full circle on what's really happening with the military industrial complex funding both sides of conflicts that I wouldn't oversimplify it that way, Brian exactly. But yeah, the Biden administration has, through their fanciful, you know, idea fantasy of reaching some sort of all encompassing deal with the Mullahs and the revolutionary Garden Iran, they have been financing Iran, allowing oil revenue, et cetera. It would almost be better if it was the military industrial complex. Then if it was wide eyed naive iild like belief that you can give a ram this money and they're gonna use it for food and not weapons. I mean, that's insane. Yeah, the first one you can deal with greed, I understand, right, naive fantasy. No, that's a little tougher to deal with. Chad in Washington State, right, Hello you fine, fellows. May I remind you, Oh, we were talking about that feeling of being overwhelmed by discouragement because of technology, says may I remind you that the only thing technology is perfect at one hundred percent of the time is wasting your time? Oh man, no kidding, God, dang it. I gotta break that cycle. So does everybody else in the modern society. You know, I wanted to get this in from Tim because it's harsh criticism, and I just want to give a sampling of the sort of email we get. But we have no time. Perhaps we can squeeze it a little bonus mail bag later on. I've caught myself last night doing that thing where how much time have you just spent, like a half hour maybe just kind of randomly going through stuff with no purpose, no benefit. Yeah, you know, I started focused for the researching the show or whatever, but then just kind of randomly looking at tweets and headlines and just killing time. That's the worst thing to do with your life. Armstrong and Getty. Among the many horrifying things that have happened in the last twenty four hours around the globe, China says it test fired an intercontinental ballistic missile long range missile carrying dummy warhead landed in the Pacific Ocean somewhere, And we don't have a whole lot more information about that other than it's a fairly provocative thing. To do. The Ministry of China's Defense didn't specify the exact location. They said the launch, which was carried out by the People's Liberation Army Rocket Force. You gotta love communist countries and their names for their various things. People's Liberation where we have slaves, the People's Liberation Army, where we have more slaves in any country on Earth. You have no basic human rights in China, but we've liberated you. Congratulations. They said it was part of a routine annual training and not directed against any country or target. Okay, save, Yeah, that's all. Speaking of China and referencing Winston Churchill for the second time this hour, let me hit you with one more thing here. Yeah, go right ahead, the Pentagon. A Pentagon official who's not run by the Chinese Communist Party said the timing of this is everything. This launch is a powerful signal intended to intimidate everyone. That's the way we read it. Yeah, oh yeah, clearly or ah yes. Churchill, who said famously it was our freedom loving quote of the day, I think last week nothing changes until you're attacked. And the quote we are sharing earlier, I look at and we're getting ready to play some really interesting audio from former Congressman Mike Gallagher, who is one of the best smartest people to ever serve in Congress. And there's part of me the things it's tragedy he's no longer there, but he thought he was wasting his time. So the other part of me thinks, you know what, Bud, if you think you're wasting your time and it can are better served doing this, go ahead and do that. I get it, but it's a little discouraging. But he is talking about the asymmetrical warfare threats we face from China, particularly technical, and while we are unquestionably not doing nothing about that sort of threat, I have a very bad feeling, and I have a feeling you share Jack, that we're not doing nearly enough. So, having said that, Mike Gallagher had a great conversation with Brett Peer the other day, we're going to feature a little bit of the audio from that. Why don't we start with clip seventy five Michael and will wing it from there.
We've had a series of incidents that go back to the revelation that the Chinese have infected our critical infrastructure with malware that they could weaponize. In the midst of a war that's we don't know our own vulnerabilities with the requisite level of clarity. Imagine, for example, we were to get into a conflict with China over Taiwan and they launched a preemptive cyber strike that disabled water utilities in the Midwest or prevented Americans from getting access to energy. Imagine the chaos that would cause, or if they exploited the vulnerabilities inherent in the fact that Chinese smart cranes dominate ports across the world.
What they could do to international commerce.
So on the modern battlefield, we need to not only know our adversary, but know ourselves and map our supply chain in great detail.
So that's absolutely true. Some of this conversation was in the wake of the exploding pagers and walkie talkies and a growing awareness of the idea that you could have sleeper capabilities like mister Gallagher was describing there in say a pager or a computer system or a crane. I've been reading recently and corresponding with one of our beloved listeners about the logistics of the United States military and the civilian auxiliary ships that get the AMMO to the fighters they're not fighting ships, they're transport ships, and how we're way, way, way understaffed on all that sort of stuff, And it just clicked in my head the idea of, you know, we have a crane in Seattle, say that's going to unload a bunch of stuff onto one of those auxiliary ships, and the Chinese decide, yeah, I don't think you need those tanks because they've got everything under surveillance, and all of a sudden, the cranes go haywire. Right. The hindsight being twenty twenty on this when something big happens next year or ten years from now, is going to be horrific. Yeah, and a little tough to take and a little tough to take. Next clip, Michael, We've.
Had a series of incidents that go back to the revelation that the Chinese have infected our critical Michael's the first clip malware Hello, the next one seventy six. I believe, and I think in light of the patri attack, in light of the weaponization of supply chains, more broadly, we're going to see a bifurcation of the world into a totalitarian tech stack and a free world tech stack. Our job is to make sure that the latter prevails over the former, and step one in doing that is recognizing that the CCP is not a responsible actor when it comes to technology or climate change or fetanyl cooperation.
That's a fundamental first step. So I've thought that for a long time that we're going to have a an iron or what did they call the wall in East Berlin between East Germany at Berlin Wall, but the iron curtain iron. We're going to have a technological iron curtain that it's going to be pretty obvious. There's, like he said, there's the there's the tech that belongs to Russian, China and Iran and all those those people that want to be in their orbit, and then there's the tech on the other side. And you don't cross sides. Yeah, the we've discussed before. The greatest trojan horse in the history of international relations was not the trojan horse. It was China convincing the US that we were buddies, and the more we opened up to them and interacted with them, the more reformed and friendly they would become. And it was from the first moments of that a ruse, which is, you know, good for them, bad bad on us. Have we figured that out yet? The conundrum of the clips there, Michael.
I started with seventy five and seventy six, but you said in seventy six was the same clip?
Sure sounded to be. Yeah, let's go ahead to seventy nine. We'll figure out that problem perhaps during the commercial break.
More broadly, I'm just worried about the fact that we're not attacking this problem with a sense of urgency. If our goal is actually to prevent World War III, we would be working much more aggressively. We would be taking intelligent risks.
Look.
The Times of Israel reported today that the whole Pager operation was cooked up by a highly talented female intelligence operative in our twenties. Ask yourself, could something like that happen in the American national security establishment today? I doubt it, because we've come too risk averse, the defense industrial bases become too ossified. We need to leverage our asymmetric advantage, which is our ability to produce world weapons grade software, and apply it to revitalizing our entire defense industrial base.
Oh my god, when I hear stuff like that, this just is so discouraging to me. I mentioned a podcast has listened to it had a former CIA A guy on it. Who is an expert in Iran, and they were actually talking about the pager attack and he said, our CIA could never pull that off. And the host said, really, we don't have the technology. He said, no, no, we have the technology. But you could just never get that through our overly lawyered system. I mean, if you came up with the idea and then you ran it up the flagpole, it just just too many departments. It would get lawyer to death. You could never do that in the United States. Question for the audience, have you ever been part of worked for a big behemoth of a company and gotten smoked by nimble, smaller entities, startups, whatever? Yeah, yeah, hush two at times. Yeah, through our careers, we've seen that it's frustrating to be the big, ossified, lawyered up, bureaucratic country. Oh well, nothing changes until you're attacked. Prize Picks is fun, he says. By way a transition quick word from our sponsors, Prize Pick. Prize Picks is America's number one daily fantasy sports have with over five million active members. You're taking the over under, and Travis Kelsey, I'd go with the under. All you do is pick more or less on stat projections and then you can watch the winnings roll in. You can now win one hundred times your money on Prize Picks with as little as four correct picks. You can get your money within fifteen minutes. This is something you can jump on and do whenever. It doesn't have to be part of a like a fantasy football team where you spend hours and hours and hours on this and you're not playing against a million. Yeah, it was all over the country. Prize Picks is the easiest and most exciting way to play fantasy sports. Unlike the other apps. On Prize Picks, it's just you against the numbers, and Prize Picks invented the flex play, which means you can still cash out even if your lineup isn't perfect. You can double your money even if one of your picks doesn't hit. So download the Prize Picks app today. Use the coade Armstrong get fifty dollars instantly when you play five. That's the code Armstrong on Prize Picks get fifty bucks instantly when you play five. You don't even need to win to receive that fifty dollars bonus. It's guaranteed. Prize Picks are run your game. I'm trying to pick the good, the analogy, metaphor for whatever, for what's going on with with our country and the way we look at the world, and perhaps Assimile, I don't know what would be best, but I was thinking about like people I've known whose lives were clearly going off the rails, and I mean, all the indications were there and people were telling them, but it just wasn't registering. And you say, you just at some point you just sit back and Okay, well, nothing's gonna change until something really bad happens. So I guess we'll just wait something really bad how happens. I hope it's not the worst thing, but there's there's nothing else that's gonna and that's what happens. Of course, it's inevitable. I mean, all the arrows are pointing that direction, and it's clear that's the track is laid. It's like a train on a track. There's only one place to go, and that's that's where we are with geopolitics. I think I think that is the perfect metaphor. And it doesn't matter how much you yell, as long as everybody's getting paid, and then everything will change and other people will get paid. Man. It's frustrating, Yeah, it is. It goes back to what I was talking about the other day that I've just I am an avowed, proud realist, and I think it's you know, what's a difficult line to draw is at what point are you being a more perfect realist and at what point are you being a cynic? Right? Right? Right right? Can you fully recognize that all of the things were so frustrated about. That's how human beings are. They were that way when Churchill was trying to wake up the British Empire generations ago, and we are precisely the same. We just have different toys. Our TVs are better. So does that make you say, well, the hell with it? Then good luck this country. I don't care anymore. Urge. You just think, all right, that's the waters we're paddling, so keep paddling. I don't know. It's frustrating. Putin bombs kids on the first day of school at the bus stops. We know what Hezbollah and Hamas do. China rams their boats into boats in the Philippines, even knowing we have a treaty with them to come to the protection fires. A ballistic missile, which, as the Pentagon said, is only meant to intimidate the world. And every single thing we say in all of those hotspots is we're not going to escalate. We don't want to do anything that's escalatory, while the other side continually escalates. I don't know, I don't know, and a sleeping giant. We're the paralyzed giant. And you know, I'll talk about this more later, but based on Trump's speech yesterday and then listening to some of the rhetoric on MSNBC today, it seems like we're making a more non interventionist you know, I wouldn't go as far as isolation is to turn, but just you know, that's the rest of the world. Let's stay out of it. Let's not get sucked into. Because of the experiences of a RACK in Afghanistan, you can understand people being gunshy because those things it's hard to see how they benefited and you know, cost lives and a ton of money. Yeah, trying to figure out and then communicate to the voters whether you did the right thing in the wrong way or just the wrong things. That's a subtlety that I think is tough to convey. Dang, we got a lot of other stuff that's not so dark later, like lots of stuff. Katie's headlines are on the way coat. I hope you can stay here. So if you've received any crazy texts in a way that you've never seen before on your iPhone, it's because of iOS eighteen, the new eighteen operating system, which I haven't downloaded yet, supposed to be their biggest update in iPhone history, but they always claim that. Anyway, There's all kinds of groovy new things you can do with texting, Like I got one the other day. Somebody texted back yes, and the yes came flying around the screen and doing loops and then landed in the thing. Just you know, amusing little things like that. But to work my way toward that, I updated the seventeen point seven or whatever last night I was asleep, and now, as always, things that I liked are gone or different or don't work. Like I can't voice text today. It just doesn't work. Why. I don't know, new setting or something, but it's the way I've been doing it for fifteen years, just doesn't work anymore. So whatever I hate up testing, it's better. It's moon improved. Yeah, but you can make your text fly around and there's new emojis.
Well wait, so you so you updated to eighteen and then you went back to seventeen.
No, I want to get to eighteen, but I didn't realize I hadn't updated the last one. So you got to do them in order. I guess I don't freaking know. Okay any who? Well no, you don't. It doesn't work. You can't voice text anymore whenever. After all, right, wow, wow, wow, wow, not a bad feeling. I think we all need to sit around and then meditate or sing a song kumbay a drum circle up those seemed popular something circle late in the mood. Hey, the incredible I mean like not credible secret service failings Next Hour. If you don't get Next Hour, you got to go somewhere, grab it via podcast Armstrong and get you on demand. You ought to follow us or subscribe whatever your favorite platform calls it. Right now, let's figure out who's reporting what it's lead story with Katie Green Katie, thank you guys. ABC News.
Full scale Israel has bule of war quote wouldn't solve the problem, says Blinkin'.
Oh for the love of heaven, we don't want to escala. I wouldn't do either. Probably had a good escala. On a daily basis. We look and sound week. When's the last time we ever made a strong statement about anything? Little? Uh? I always have to remind me where the vowels go, A little faf o, where's that in America's foreign policy? That's the most important aspect of foreign policy. That's not being a tough guy. That's preventing death and suffering, protecting such overwhelming strengths. Nobody dares challenge you. That keeps the peace. Sorry, Katie, back to you.
From CNN poll shows Harrison Trump locked an exceedingly close presidential race.
Yeah, until somebody breaks out of the margin of error. I'm not discussing poles anymore. You're here.
CBS reported quote suicide capsule death of US woman in Switzerland prompts multiple arrests and launch of a criminal case.
Yeah, that's a dang interesting story. We'll talk about later on many levels. Yeah. From the Wall Street Journal.
It was once the pro sports capital of America. Now it's been wiped off the map. What's that Oaktown, Buddy, Oakland.
As the Raiders, the Warriors. Everybody's out Yeah, you're right. You're right man. What a storied history for Oakland. And now all three teams are going to be gone. The Oakland A's starting their final homestand today, and I wish I was going to be at one of those games. Progressives have mismanaged Oakland into the ground. It has lost all of its luster, its glory. It is a shrinking force on the American landscape. Katie is a native Oakland or any disagreement.
There no, Now you nailed it from business insider Mark Zuckerberg now worth two hundred billion dollars.
Oh, just because the stock market went up, or the when the lottery or did something happen that would be ironic. Yeah, if you want the Soccerberg going into the seven eleven buying lottery tickets. He discovered a renoirs in the attic. I mean, how did something happen from USA today? What is galaxy gas?
New whippets trend with nitrous oxide sparks, serious concerns.
Is this different than whippet's back in the day.
It's a new form of whippet that unfortunately went viral on TikTok. Of course, of course it's it's awful there's kids crashing their cars and it's it's a big reason to be concerned.
Oh, for goodness sake, back to Zuckerberg, somebody ran another one of those tests, why should I vote for Kamala Harrison? Why should I vote for Donald Trump? And the results were unbelievably egregiously one sided. Of course, I want to hear that again. I want to hear that from the New York Post.
Hitler's AI translated speeches go viral on TikTok, with one video topping one million views.
So are these real?
Yeah, people are taking Hitler's speeches and putting them into AI, translating them into English, and then posting them on TikTok and they're getting a lot of love.
Oh I don't know about love, but I would check it out, because you know, I've read some Hitler speeches, but not all of them. That'd be interesting. It's not because I'm a Nazi or anything, or I'm sorry, just you said you are or you're not. Just want to clarify, I'm not a fan of Hitler. There you go.
And finally, the Babylon b Democrats born that if public libraries are defunded, homeless people will have nowhere to go to watch their porn.
Oh.
I can't laugh at that because it makes me so damn mad every time I met the library. Last time I was there with my kid. Go in the bathroom, there's two homeless people washing themselves in the bathroom, And I thought, you can't have your seven year old kid go to the library and walk around and go to the bathroom by themselves in that atmosphere. That's nuts. I want to talk more about that Hitler speech thing. I think that's important, that's interesting, Among others, a lot of good stuff today.
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