Hour 4 of A&G features...
From the Abraham Lincoln Radio Studio at the George Washington Broadcast Center.
Jack Armstrong and Joe Getty Armstrong and Getty Show.
So, if you're watching the NCAA tournament, the men's side, the guy that's getting so much attention right now, there's big fat guy DJ Burns for NC State who's been marching them through the tournament and they made the final four. And you have to be a college fan, or maybe you've lived in North Carolina like Joe and I did for a while to understand what a big deal it was for NC State to knock off Duke to go to the final four.
Oh my god.
Oh yeah, the date will be celebrated for the next one hundred years.
That's a big deal for that crowd.
Unless you want to Duke, which is you know, you got to be a certain sort of person to get to do that.
Yeah, you're fine anyway.
Yeah, you'll be all right. This is our Secretary of State. Just a little bit of go talking about I feel like somehow Hamas and what they did to Israel has not landed as jahadists Muslim fundamentalists the way it should and fitting into the whole.
Yeah, picture, I would agree completely. Yeah, good point. It seems seen as just a liberation struggle.
Yeah. Anyway, here's our Secretary of State a little bit ago.
We've been focused on trying to make sure that October seventh can never happen again.
But having said that, the security.
Relationship we have with Israel is not just about Gaza Hamas October seventh. It's also about the threats post Israel, by Hezbollah, by Iran, by various other actors in the region, each one of which has vowed one way or another to try to destroy Israel.
I think this is another example of the Biden administration sending out signals domestically to try to keep the college crowd happier, some of those Arab voters in Michigan or whatever. But in reality, like over the weekend, while we were off for four days, we just signed off another a ton of money and a bunch of the super fancy fighter planes and all this different stuff for Israel. And you got Anthony blink and say, hey, let's not forget hezbela Hamas Ron. They're all vowing to wipe Israel off the planet. So they really are trying to have it both ways.
It's interesting. It reminds me of a sailboat tacking back and forth as it goes into the wind. Because last week they were shouts, eating frantically about how the land war in the North is no good. You got to reduce civilian casualties and bb Net and Yahu needs to go and bah, we hate this. But on the other hand, Israel faces all sorts of crazy threats, not just a mess and they need to kick some ass. All right, what's gonna happen next week?
Yeah, and him reminding everybody, which should be in every newscast, is just like a like a background, a couple of facts you need to know to understand the story. These organizations live for destroying Israel.
It's not just like a land dispute.
Yeah, it's not one of their projects. It's why they exist.
A border dispute. They want all Jews on earth to be dead. It's like what they get up in the morning wanting to have happened anyway. So tying it into the entire Muslim fundamentalist threat, you've got a couple of different people talking about what a threat isis is out there because they have the same ideology as Hamas. This is general Frank Mackenzie, former Sentcom commander, on ABC this week.
Isis K in particular, but isis in general, has a strong desire to attack our homeland. We should believe them when they say that they're going to try to do it, and so I think the threat is growing. It's begun to grow as soon as we left Afghanistan and took pressure off isis K. So I think we should expect further attempts of this nature against the United States as well as our partners and other nations abroad.
I think this is inevitable.
Top of the fold, front page, USA Today Today, Target number one for isis K, the US boy welcome back the threat of terrorism from Islamic nut jobs.
Been a couple of fundamentalist Islamic attacks in France lately. It's just terrible attacks on teachers and that sort of thing. They're aware of it there.
From the USA Today article, the US remains target number one for isis K, said Mark Kwantaka, retired two star Army general who oversaw intelligence operations for US Central Command. They clearly would like to strike the homeland, but their challenge is penetrating our security, which has proven to be quite resilient in recent years. How does that resilient security fit in with our almost entirely open border.
An excellent question.
Yeah, anyway, we are.
It's inevitable, right, I mean, it's inevitable that ICE's k gets off an attack like this, either against a US interest overseas or in the United States, and then we'll be back to that, I guess, the war on Terror.
Maybe they'll bring George W. Bush back and ask him some questions. I don't know.
Oh, boy, Dick Cheney, reanimate him somehow. I realize he's not dead. But you know I was about to say, is Dick Cheney dead? Well, I have to substantially him up.
I don't think I could have told you whether he was alive or dead.
Really, he's alive anyway, gives you hope. I mean, he's on how many heart procedures and pacemakers and see you got a the bab boon's heart beating his chest or something. I don't remember all the details. But anyway, Yeah, like I've said before, and we'll say again probably till my dying day, that whole question that was so hot after nine to eleven, Islam coexisting with the Western world? How is that gonna go? And yes, I know there have been intersections of Islam in the West for hundreds of years, but in the modern way, in the twenty first century, mass migration, open borders way, how is that gonna work? That question is not decided at all. We just had a little period of calm.
So there's talk that Saudi Arabia might normalize relations with Israel. So I've got to assume that puts them on the list for al Qaeda, isis k that crowd.
Yeah, they've been on that list for a long time, some have Bin Laden could tell you.
Yeah.
But and MBS, I'm sure has maybe the best security on earth. But uh, what's that all about, Saudi Arabia normalizing relationships with Israel?
What's his motivation?
Business business Saudi Arabia. He wants to.
Move countering Iran?
Uh? Yeah, I think that probably factors into it. That I'd say that's a happy co effect of opening the country up being much less just an oil shake them and becoming an international destination place for tourism, investment, that sort of thing, and opening up to Israel and saying hey, hey, we're reasonable, We've got relations with all sorts of people here is super important to their whole image. You know, everything from the live Golf tour to was it the UA one of your Gulf states hosted the World Cup. All these countries are desperate to become Hey, we're fully international here. We're not crazy. Come and see us.
It's tough in the Middle East, though, so the reason he so he probably almost certainly doesn't believe women shouldn't drive and all that sort of stuff, but he's got to keep the the crazies happy.
Yeah. Out in the hinter lands. As you well know, Jack, there's a hell of a wellspring of like serious job fundamental Islam that he's got to at least buy off. And those he can't buy off, he'll kill off. But you know, he's just trying to keep the pot from boiling over.
So I was making my way through my book about Monocha began Israeli prime minister in the late seventies, and he made the deal with Anhar Sadada of Egypt, which was huge and still is huge that Egypt and Israel. You know, they ain't at war anymore because Egypt was the number one military in that region all that time, and so on war Saddat he's meeting with began and Carter regularly, and he told President Carter, because he was being advised by his visors Anhwar Sadada of Egypt, that I have to say a bunch of really strong things or I will get assassinated. So he would regularly have to make all these pronouncements out loud about things he would not give on or whatever at Israel to try to just stay alive. And then at Camp David with President Carter and Monoccham began, you know, they could get to negotiating or whatever. And when he finally did do an agreement with Israel in a couple of years, he was dead because of that very reason. The crazies would not put up with normalizing with Israel, and MBS will have the same problem.
Yeah, yeah, absolutely true. I'm just looking at a map of Egypt. I came across the story the other day speaking of wanting to open up to the world and say, hey, we're not crazy fundamentalists, and we got more oil here that the government of Egypt just swept into some seaside like beachfront places on the Red Sea and just said, yeah, the government's taken your house. So get out. They went all Kilo versus Connecticut. Was that the famous Supreme Court case where the Supreme Court made a terrible, terrible ruling that said the government can use them in domain if it would help the community in general by profit. You know, it's a horrible, one of the worst decisions ever. But Egypt has gone full on. Yeah, we're confiscating all the good beachfront property and we're going to sell it to international investors.
Wow.
Well, you gotta be careful in that part of the world to try to keep the crazies happy so you don't die like so Nwar. Sadat and Monocha began. Both got awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for making that deal. Saddat didn't show up to the ceremony because he had to pretend that I didn't agree with that.
That's not at all what I agreed to.
He had to pretend that he didn't even agree to it to try to make people back home happy.
But it didn't work. He still got assassinated.
Yeah, I don't I don't understand how you would pull that off. Exactly your signatures on the damn thing.
Yeah, well, they misled me. They lied, you know how they are that sort of thing. And by the way, I didn't know this.
Uh.
President Carter hated Monocke began just hated. At one point told his wife Beggin's a lunatic. You can't deal with him. Didn't take that in as I was watching the news as a kid following the story.
No, wow, that's that's interesting. If you're you know, acquainted with the history of it, that's really interesting. But thence Dot that assassination. I still remember the video. He was there watching a parade. He was there on the reviewing stand as the parade went got by, and a bunch of the military guys said, hey, guess what, mister president sir, our guns are loaded. We're gonna shoot you with them.
Yeah, and they did. Yeah.
And MBS will be facing that if he normalizes with Israel this week, like he's talking about.
Anyway, a lot more on the way. Stay here, we'll get this.
In order to settle in privacy lawsuit, Google has pledged to destroy millions of users browsing data, and based on your silence, it sounds like there are some.
Very relieved people.
Well, Google's like your search history may be gone, but our judgment will last forever.
Yet the lawsuit accused Google.
Of tracking what people search in incognito mode. Ooh, I'm not a computer scientist, but I think we already know what people search for in incognito mode.
I'm not a computer scientist.
Yeah.
The idea that there's a privacy mode or incognito mode that who isn't having access to the giant company whose platform you're using.
You think they don't.
Oh, we'd like to keep your information, but you said it is incognito, so I guess we won't.
Yeah, please if they can make a nickel out of it, a nickel times you know, there's hundreds of millions of people. Hell, if it was a tenth of a cent, they'd say, Yeah, we'll go ahead and keep this data. Not tell you we won't, but we will.
Yeah. We all need to wake up to that.
If a device can hear you, watch you, or hang on to your data and take it, it will it's doing all.
Of those things.
Yes it is. Yeah, so I'm torn. I've got a couple of different directions we can go. We were talking earlier about the idiotic, indefensible, capricious, ridiculous twenty dollars minimum wage, just fast for food workers whose companies haven't bribed Gavin enough. Again, not the burger flippers and the next door diner they're exempt. Not the dog walkers, not the gardeners, not the whatever, everything else on earth, just fast food workers. Just terrible, terrible, terrible, and it ought to be just loudly rejected by all voters. But people don't understand business and economics. And I was reminded of one of my favorite books, The Myth of the Rational Voter, And I'll dig more into this spin years since I read it, But it's about the fact that people just systematically, in a tendency way more than chance would suggest, get economics. And in the introduction the last couple of sentences as follows, economists typically conclude that the man in the street and the intellectual without economic training underestimates how well markets work. I maintain that something quite different holds for democracy. It is widely overrated, not only by the public, but by most economists too. Thus, while the general public underestimates how well markets work, even economists underestimate markets virtues relative to the democratic alternative. Part of his point being that democracies are constantly voting for stuff that's a bad idea, but people think, oh, wait a minute, there's a law that will keep my rent from rising that's good for renters, And way more people get that wrong than right, maybe because you've got to go to that second and third step of the way a market works to understand why it's a bad idea, whereas that very first blush seems good, but we get it wrong over and over again. So the fast food worker, we've played a couple of clips throughout the show. You can picture them saying this is so good, this will help me, blah blah blah. The next week they get laid off and they think my cruel, greedy employer, they suck and they won't even connect those two events.
Or your hours are cuts, you're making the same amount of money you are making me for.
Right, Yeah, exactly. So I think one of the most important things we could possibly do in this country for a good policy would be to have more economic training in school. Of course, the kids can't even freaking read or write or do math, so that was probably not going to happen anytime soon. But that's why you keep getting policies that are this self evidently terrible, and it's fairly popular too. Uh.
You know, I had focused on the just the basic economics of forcing a wage at a certain level for an unskilled job and how it'll make the product more expensive, but hadn't focused on the fact that why that, why just that industry? Why have people who arrange flowers for sixteen dollars an hour?
Why? What? What was the theory behind this?
Well, the theory behind it, politically speaking, is that's visible and people say, oh, low wage workers. I get it, that's why it works politically. The reality is that the SEIU and other unions want to unionize fast food workers. They've been trying for years, and so Gabby boys just trying to help them out. Yeah.
Yeah, obviously it's got to be something like that, because otherwise it doesn't make any sense.
There's all kinds of people out.
There cleaning hotel rooms or muwing lawns, or stacking boxes or digging hole the grocery store cash here, sure, exactly?
The tons of them? Yeah, yeah, working class, low wage jobs. Yeah, tons and tons of them. Although you know, it could be they're going to pass the grocery store cash You're Act of twenty twenty five.
I gotta I got a quick question you said earlier you think you could train somebody to flip burgers in a day and a half. Does anybody know have you worked at McDonald's, burger King someplace like that? How long does it take to get trained to work there? I'm actually kind of interested. Text line four one five, two nine five kftc.
Armstrong and Getty.
Bill Biden come back story that you may have missed with the polling that has changed over the last couple of weeks.
Maybe we'll hit that before we get out of here today.
Hmmm intriguing. So is HL making formally famously informed us, I'm formerly in fame inflamed us whatever that this slip at the top, Yeah, well quite a series of them, Brett anyway, I love that clip anyway. So, as H. L. Menkin famously informed us, the aim of practical politics is to frighten the crowd with some hobgoblin or another, usually imaginary, into voting one way or another. And I think so much of the whole climate change thing is that climate may be changing, and maybe we can do some stuff to make it better. We ought to be planning ahead the rest of it, but it seems like it's mostly just an excuse to direct huge tranches of government money to various cronies or favorite industry. It's a form of handing out money meets central planning, and it's all unholy and shouldn't be happening. The other aspect of the climate politics that makes me insane is all the well meaning people. I think they're mostly well meaning, who think if the US or even an individual state just does this, that or the other, we can really make it a change. When the what did I read the other day, seventy eight percent of human beings who live in the developing world. I mean it's like almost everybody is not in the industrialized democracies are saying, uh, we're not doing anything. We can barely feed ourselves. We're just starting to be able to feed ourselves. So no compromises, No, we're going to develop as fast as we can.
So the big movie they showed us at the Sphere in Las Vegas was all about Earth and the origins of Earth and everything like that, but that at the end it was about if we can hold on to our planet by blah blah blah. And my youngest who was always on the lookout for that sort of thing, they had to slip.
In climate change at the end. Good boy, that's right, yes, bastards. Anyway, this is getting a fair amount of attention. I think I understand why it is satisfying on a number of different levels. It's a BBC guy who's named Stephen Sacker, who's interviewing the president of Guyana, which has recently discovered they've got crazy amounts of oil right off shore in their territorial waters and.
Some of the body and the world's going to tell them, yeah, we all became completely different countries.
We need to discovered.
World.
We're supposed to ignore it.
Right, and that could go well, you'll hear what he says. The only thing I want to add to it is that the visual in the body language and all is this. This middle aged BBC guy has a bit of the proper Englishman going in a bit of the I know what's right and wrong, and I'm going to tell you what's right and wrong. And this president of guyan who's name is Irfan Ali, he ain't having it. Takes a second and get going. But it's clip number ninety Michael. If I didn't point that out, please enjoy.
Let's take a big picture look at what's going on here. Over the next decade two decades, it is expected that there will be one hundred and fifty billion dollars worth of oil and gas extracted off your coast. It's an extraordinary figure, but think of it in practical terms. That means, according to many experts, more than two billion tons of carbon emissions will come from your seabed, from those reserves and be released into the atmosphere. I don't know if you, as a head of state went to the copan.
Right here, let me stop your idea.
Do you know that Guyana has a forests forever that is the size of England and Scotland combine. If forest the stores nineteen point five digatons of carbon. If forests that we have kept alive, a forest that we have kept Does that.
Give you the right?
Does that give you the right to release all of this carbon from.
That gives you the right to lecture us on climate change?
I am going to lecture you on climate.
Change because we have kept this forest alive. The stores nineteen point five digatons of carbon that you enjoy, that the world enjoy, that you don't pay us for, that you don't value, that you don't see a value in that the people of Ghana has kept alive. Guess what, we have the lowest deforestation rate in the world. And guess what, even with our greatest exploration of the oil and gas resource we have now, we will still be net zero. Can will still be net zero? With all our exploration, will still be net zero?
No, no, it is powerful, powerful words, mister President. I'm not completed as yet. I am not finished as yet. I am just not finished as yet.
Because this is a hypocrisy that exists in the world.
The world in the last.
Fifty years has lost sixty five percent of all this biodiversity. We have kept our biodiversity. Are you valuing it? Are you ready to pay for it? When is it developed?
More? Is pay for it?
Or?
Are you in the pockets?
Are you in the pockets of those who have damaged the environment? Are you in the pockets? Are you in your system in the pockets of those who destroy the environment through the industrial revolution and no lecturing us? Are you in their pockets? Are you paid by them?
Why he's good.
Even without the fact that they got a giant forest, even if they didn't have a tree, the fact that the world that profited off of oil all these years and change their societies forever, going to these little countries and saying, yeah, but that age is over now, So too bad you didn't discover oil earlier. We're gonna have to leave you behind the rest of the world. You know, you don't get to get like super developed and rich and fancy like we did.
He could have just said, I've been to New York, I've been to London. I know how you all developed with fossil fuels. Now it's our turn. Oh you don't want the carbon in here, you stop using it. I got people to feed, I got an economy to develop. Wheah he shoheah. I did the crying. I gesture with the guy.
He should have done the whole little what is this tiny world's tinally is violin?
Yeah, do all the class.
Let me call ambulance. Wow, you want some cheese with that wine. That's another one there, boy. Guiana is a little country. It's right there, north coast of South America, between Surinam and Venezuela.
Now there's always the chance that, like has happened in many of these tiny little countries around the world, you end up with a handful of elite who live like well, let's call them princes or kings, and the rest of the country doesn't benefit at all, because.
That has happened a number of times.
Oh yeah, yeah, Or you just become the proverbial not banana republic, but the oil shake them where you don't develop the economy, you don't educate anybody, you don't have to do anything because you just hand out enough oil money that everybody stays where they are and shuts up. And then when the oil economy goes bust and you don't care. You got billions of dollars and you escape to the Caribbean or wherever you go.
Anyway, Well he was good.
We haven't had leaders that sharp for a while that could have rattled that sort of thing off.
Well he was sub eighty. That helps. The man appeared to be I don't known as forties or fifties. It was shocking to me.
And it reminds me of this that I came across leaders disapproval ratings and developed democracies. What is going on with our democracies? So it points out that Joe Biden has a fifty four percent disapproval approval ratings get talked about all the time. But it's the disapproval number that is pretty huge because mostly political scientists believe a disapproval approval numbers go up and down, usually have a disapproval number that stays relatively static.
Approval numbers go uping down, and then a bunch of chunk the chunk.
Of people that go back and forth, but disapproval, once you disapprove of somebody usually stay there. So disapproval numbers are a big deal that way. Joe Biden's at fifty four percent. Nobody's ever been reelected with a fifty four percent disapproval rating, but we do live in different times, and we've ever lived before, and he's running against Donald Trump. But even with that being as high as it is, Justin Trudeau in Canada has a fifty nine percent disapproval. Rishi Sunak, the Prime Minister of Britain, sixty six percent disapproval two thirds really grace.
Wow.
Fumio Kushita of Japan seventy percent disapproval.
So is that woman Yun suck Yole of South Korea seven?
Well, I'm not sure you can say that on the air, but.
Seventy percent disapproval for her? Wow, I'm a little.
I'm curious about Japan because they've finally turned around their decades of economic stagnation.
All the all of these are curious to me. I mean, how do you get a disapproval number that I.
Well, Trudeau, I get because I know a handful of Canadians and they despise the guy.
LGDP, lgt LBG, LGBTQ two plus Emmanuel McCrone of France seventy one percent approval. So you got on UK, Japan, Korea, and France all at about seventy percent disapproval at the top, ole Off Schultz of Germany seventy three percent disapproval. But so, what's what these first world developed democracies that elect somebody and then three quarters of people don't like them.
Yeah, it might be different answers for different countries.
Something's going on with It's a bit.
It's clearly a trend though.
Yeah, I would say so.
And as we as we know with Trump and Macrone and a number of other examples, there's been a whole bunch of trying something complete breaks it. There's a whole bunch of been a whole bunch of trying something completely different. People are just I don't know if we're expecting too much or or or maybe we're right and we're getting screwed by our own governments, but we picked them.
I don't know, but something is happening.
Getting back to the Industrial Revolution and the unfolding of history among the Western democracies. Could it be that we are all more or less simultaneously reaching a point of affluence, comfort, declining birth rates, cynicism.
We've gone from unhelpful expectations for what life should be or what should be we should be given right a in smartphones?
But uh, there's a you know, people often refer to it as a midlife crisis when you're talking about a person, when you and it depends person a person, When you go from the striving, scrape, scrapping, clawing, trying part of your life to the I'm kind of past that part, that's a real transition for a human being. You become a different person. Some people are happy, some people die, some people are miserable. Could it be that the industrialized West is well I already said it, nearly simultaneously arriving at a point of what's the point anymore?
Wow? Could be?
So, do we need to buy a little red sports car and get a side piece or what are you suggesting?
War's a conquest? I don't actually know.
Yeah, I don't know either, but that is interesting.
Yeah. Yeah, I've always hated the cliche of the man having a middle midlife crisis. It's cruel, dumb, and lacks understanding. It worked in your your witticism there. I appreciated that, but.
There as an attempt at humor, not reality.
Yeah. Now, but are we as developed states having something like that?
Yeah?
What's the point anymore? We can't get any more of this, So what are we trying to do?
I mean, post the decimation of World War Two, the US was more prosperous than any country could imagine being For half a century. The Europe was rebuilding, growing, striving, changing Asia same going from poverty and backwardness, or in the case of Japan being flattened to rebuilding into a modern superpower. Those were good times.
Well, we're about at a time.
But the classic you know, this will be the first generation that doesn't have a better lifestyle than their parents. Well that can't continue forever. Every generation can have a better quality of life than their parents. There's what's never happened it's cool while it happened. Well, it was going on, but it can't last forever. At some point things got to flatten out, right, What are you gonna get more stuff, nicer stuff that's not quality of life? No, anyway, these are some big questions that we'll be answered for us, whether we figured out or not. We'll finish strong next This week, Baltimore's Francis Scott Key Bridge collapse after it was struck by a cargo ship that was carrying you won't believe it, Boeing airplanes.
A number of sports.
Bars around the country are promising to only show women's basketball games during March Madness.
The bars are known collectively as the Empty Ones.
And that cargo ship has got like twenty two guys living on it still that haven't come off the boat.
I read about that over the weekend.
Yeah, it's like the fellow we talked to who gave us a tour of a port. They don't have visas and so they got to stay on board. Wow, they're like the mole people of New York. You remember when that was a big thing. Yeah, they just ooch around in the dark corridors of the ship. I don't know why they'd be dark. They can afford light bulbs anyway. That's how I picture them, like subterranean mole people. Hey Michael, before the show's over, play my favorite clips for me again.
Meantime, you have the fallout over the Transvestite Recognition Day so called on Easter.
What do you make transgender?
Rather?
What transgender?
I'm sorry, yeah, slip.
Of the tongue.
The official word and proclamation as you say, Transgender Visibility Day.
Yes, if you are all of us here at the Department of Education, Happy trans Day of Visibility.
Okay, if you weren't following it, Joe Biden renamed Easter Transvestite Appreciation Day.
That's outrageous and some good trollery. It's half true. Who was that that slip of the time, Miguel Cardona, the Secretary of Education. This one fifty.
Six from all of us here at the Department of Education, Happy trans Day of Visibility.
Which we then discovered is like the one hundred and fifty fourth some sort of LGBTQ plus day, week or month that we have on the calendar every.
Year every year.
That's correct, Like half the days on the calendar are some sort of lgbtwe people.
Plus the day, right, yeah or not? Where I'm gonna ignore it.
I'm inspired every single day by the remarkable work that Jack and Joe perform on behalf of the American public. They've got a busy day Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, and so on. Why they have carefully prepared for these final thoughts And the fact of the matter is they have final thoughts and they have them every single day.
That is too good.
The border is secure.
Wow, here's your host for final thoughts, Joe Getty.
Let's get a final thought from everybody on the crew to wrap things up for the day. There he is pressing the buttons, Mike l Angelo Michael, Yeah, Jack said at the sphere they have one hundred and sixty seven thousand speakers. How'd you like to be the guy that if one goes out, you gotta find it?
Yeah, there's a year account.
Oh, Katie Green are esteemed and newswoman. As a final thought, Katie, my.
Usual very enjoyable job of prepping for this show was a living hell yesterday because it was April Fool's Day.
Trying to find real news. Oh boy, dang.
It, Oh Jack final thought for US financial guru Pat McLean, friend of the show, texted about the twenty dollars minimum wage for fast food, pointing out and this is obviously true. That becomes a new baseline for all industries. So everything is going to be compared about the twenty dollars an hour to it, and it will affect everything. If you believe that wages should be legislated, this is brilliant, It'll fuel inflation, and it's overall bad for our economy.
My final thought, Cartoon Network went big on the trans Day of Visibility, and there might be a million confused adolescents in the United States who consider themselves trans. There are over two hundred million identifying Christians. Cartoon Network didn't mention Easter Wow.
Armstrong and Getty wrapping up another grueling four hour workday.
Good Armstrong in geddy dot Com.
Great clicks, God, bless America, I'm Strong and Getty. When it comes on for you to go, you'll have to go.
I should buy and bam, So let's go with the bines.
I don't need that because the scale has been really good to me.
Lely, I get on it and it says to me, oh, you're looking good, Jack, are you busy tonight.
That's what the scale is like. Disturbed as I am.
Michael and on that possibly nightmare inducing notes.
Happy trans day of visibility.
Have an amazing, amazing
Armstrong and Getty