In hour 2 of The Armstrong & Getty Show
Broadcasting live from the Abraham Lincoln Radio Studio, the George Washington Broadcast Center, Jack Armstrong and Joe Getty arm Strong and Jetty and he Armstrong and Getty.
White folks, trash, white supremacy, white woman, white boy, white entitlement, centering white Island.
That's from the trailer for the new movie Am I Racist? By Matt Walsh, who's a thinker and a funny person. And I don't know our what's our show stance on the Borat style of doing movies where you trick people into Borat rubbed me the wrong. Even though I would find it funny. I didn't like the whole tricking people thing.
I will tell you the difference between Borat and what Matt Walsh's done because well, most particularly what is a woman, because I've seen much more of that than this new one. But he does not put people in an unnatural or uncomfortable situation. He just just asks them what they think.
And you know he's misrepresenting in this one. He is misrepresenting who he is.
He's kind of doing a character, but I mean showing up at a dinner table with human feces in a bag was what Borat did. What Matt Walsh does is say what is a woman? And listen to people flounder.
Uh yeah, I'm just thinking, I haven't I haven't seen this movie. But a lot of borat has taken advantage of people being nice as opposed to this where it's just letting them explain themselves in a way that they agree with but is going to be embarrassing to them and they don't even know it. But we'll get the Robin DiAngelo part. Here's a little more from the movie with America inherently racist? What the hell is that the word inherent is challenging there? America is racist? Who expose all of the inherent Yeah, the entire system has to burn. And I'm not going to even use say this country, this country is not worth saving. This country is a piece of shit. I've watched so many clips from this movie already. It is going to make me insane and also be funny. But at one point in the movie he ends up getting to have sit down with Robin DiAngelo, who wrote the horse S book that the media loved so much about white fragility and just that whole thing. We're all racist and the more you say you're not a racist, the more proof it is you are racist and all that.
Robin DiAngelo, who just recently was found to have plagiarized colleagues of color for her horse crap PhD or whatever she had. But you know is been pointed out. All you can do is plagiarize. The point of their doctrine is you just repeat the doctrine, You repeat the incantations.
There's no groundbreaking work to be done. It's a cult. Let me read this to you. Walsho had been conducting an interview at DiAngelo, the author of the White Fragility book, for a documentary project, while feigning anti racist sentiments and posing as an activist, summoned Ben, his producer. After finishing up most of his questions. This has Ben a producer on the film. He said, I thought it would be a powerful opportunity to speak directly to a person of color and confront our racism and also apologize for the white supremacist systems that are press Ben Walsh began. DiAngelo followed by saying, on behalf of myself and my fellow white people, I apologize. It is not you, it is us. As long as I'm standing, I will do my best to challenge it. I mean the fact, See that's not like Borat tricking her. She's offering up that crap. Yeah, well, just gives her cues and she leaps at them. Announced that he'd pay Ben reparations if he'd accept it, prompting his producer to quip, I mean I won't turn it down. Walsh had been a few bills from his wallet. That doesn't make up for four hundred years of oppression, but it's all I have. Walsh taking hold of the new cash is while it Ben fully fully de bends in obviously he's one of the producers on the film, explain that he doesn't know if it's ever enough, but praised Walsh for putting in the work, which is a phrase from White Fragility, and acknowledged the small progress I think we made today. Dangelo looked introspective and bewildered as it unfolded, and then Walsh said, do you want to pay anything? I think reparations is like a systemic dynamic and approach. She said, I mean, I think there may be some people who would be offended by what just happened. Ben explained that he wouldn't turn down cash a solemn looking Walts then stressed he the need to allow ourselves to be uncomfortable in this moment too.
Wow again, straight out of her whole twisted vernacular.
Here right, he said, this is something that I can do right now. Why wouldn't I do it? I can go get some cash, for sure, she said, after struggling to figure out how to handle the situation. I don't mind if that would be something that would be comfortable for you. Ben's Oh god. After getting Ben's blessing, D'Angelo that just walked over to her pocketbook, pulled out thirty dollars and said, this is on a cash Oh my god, that's hilarious.
Oh that's beautiful. That couldn't have gone better.
Thank so. Smiling Ben replied, oh my god, that's funny.
Oh called on her own ridiculous horses she has to dig into a person.
Yeah, here's thirty bucks for four hundred years of oppression. Oh that is prices. I can't wait to watch that movie out on the thirteenth.
Well, and listen, I understand your earlier point going in about how misrepresenting yourself in any way could be seen as I don't know, somehow dishonest on the other hand, he misrepresents himself as an ally and he says nothing that would undermine that impression he portrays an ally. He's not like trying to get her to say something she doesn't believe, right, Yeah, And if drawing her out in short, and if you weren't completely full of crap or trying to back a nonsensical ideology, you would say, what are you talking about him?
I gonna give him thirty dollars with that help anything, But you go along with it? Oh god, dang it, that's hilarious.
And one final point at least from me, while some might consider I'll just speak for myself, me to be like paranoid about how the whole woke DEI critical race theory thing is neo Marxism bent on tearing down the system. In that earlier clip we played, you had a couple of young women, and it's so often women for whatever reason, talking about the United States is racist to its bones. It needs to be teared down, torn down, It isn't worth saving. It's a piece of ass. And that's absolutely the neo Marxist view, right, And they take over institutions and turn them neo Marxists not by saying we need Marxism, but by saying you're racist, and everybody at the institution says.
What what do you mean? What can we do? What should we do?
So you stop calling us racist? Well, have five of our people on the board. That's that's it's an instrument of conquest.
Movies in this movie's in theaters by the way, it's not streaming yet anyway, so I'm going to see it in the theater hopefully this weekend, and locally it's playing locally. Oh great. As on a similar topic.
I mentioned just one of these stats last week, I think it was. It was a research survey of well over one thousand registered voters ages eighteen to thirty four about romantic partners. So this is young voters. Which of these would be a red flag in a potential partner? They asked women, they asked men, because there are only two sexes anyway, what I identifies as a maga Republican. Seventy six percent of women said red flag, which is interesting.
Fifty nine percent of men said the same thing.
Wow wow speaking, I guess to the low ceiling, the high floor and the low ceiling of Trump.
Neither would be a red flag for me. I mean, I would need way more evidence than you say you're a Republican or Democrat.
Oh yeah, yeah, well exactly. And you know, maybe it's our age or upbringing or something. I'm rather strongly, staunchly, proudly conservative, but I know plenty of sweet, generous, kind, decent people who swing differently pulled up lay and I think, net, what are you gonna?
I can't imagine asking that question for one thing, or knowing until we're quite a ways into the relationship.
All right, I love number two Red flag. They have no hobbies. Sixty six percent of women say red flag, sixty percent of men similar number.
That's a good one. So what do you like to do? Nothing? I don't know. I watched TV, what kind of TV? Whatever's on internet? Porn mostly? Oh boy, yeah, Katie, this is they have no hobbies.
That just screams I play video games all day long.
Oh that's the gotcha, good one. Yeah, we need the young perspective. That is exactly what that means. Yeah, yeah, because you have to do something, right, I mean, you're not doing nothing. So the thing you're doing is watching video or play video games.
Right. I should clarify that these are ranked according to how big a red flag they are for women, and the men go up and down. But your number three red flag for women, Sixty percent say it's a red flag. If the guy says all lives matter, yes, no, you serious?
Yeah?
Yeah, that speaks to wokeness. Fifty eight percent of women say it's a red flag. If they say there are only two genders, you got, oh about sixty percent say that's a red flag. I know I'm not gonna be with you guy.
You know that, even though, because I agree. But the fact if you brought it up really early, the fact that I don't know, I don't know. It depends what we were talking about. I guess I don't want an I don't want anybody that political. That like, we're having our first meal together and you're starting to bring up the most controversial issues in America. Right, all right, woke jack whatever?
Tell you what If I'm on a dating app and and when a woman says, hey, you'r guy, I'm a woman. That's cool because there are only two sexes. I'm gonna say, let's get married. She's gonna say we haven't met yet. I'm just I don't care. You're saying let's get married.
I'm using gendered language.
All right, Let's see number five. I didn't even get They are so unbothered. They never ask for details.
What they're like, you're that I've breathed, you're breathing. That's good enough. I've had that experience before, just in general with people like you. You kind of hit them with, you know, your's whatever, business, dinner, whatever, you're making a conversation. You mentioned something that you think is you know, a pretty interesting headline, and nobody has any follow up question. Yeah, I get that.
That's weird saying yeah, They go okay, neat, Yeah exactly.
I I grew up in a cult. Huh do you like salad or should we get a salad? Yeah? Yeah?
How about this one though, this one, and this is, and we have had so many young men when we're talking about white people aren't coupling, they're not having kids, they're not getting married. A lot of young dudes right in women are nuts. So a significant percentage of women, young women are nuts. Right now, listen to this number. Would it be a red flag if you're bo identified as a communist?
By the way, I'm a communist.
Only fifty five percent of women say that would be a red flag. Forty five percent of women say no, that's not a red flag.
So three quarters say Republican's a red flag, but only half a Magro Republican anyway, Yeah, it's a red flag for community, that is correct.
Yeah, yeah, Maga Republican is twenty point twenty one points higher than Communist as red flags. I don't even know how i'd respond to that. It's worth mentioning. Two thirds of guys say yeah, that would be a red flag. I imagine the other third is saying.
Well, is she hot? Right? Yeah? Hot hot communist babe? Yeah, I might hang around just because I'd be damned. Interesting, you're a communist. Interesting, how long you've been a communist? Why are you a communist?
Oh?
Do you think communism works generally in the past and why would it be any better in the future. Here's something really odd. They don't care about politics is a red flag for fifty percent of women.
That's too bad.
Yeah, that really speaks to what our young listeners were telling us.
Man, that wasn't true back in the day at all.
You must be a lefty activist, you must be so requirement politics would have.
Never come up for maybe till after you're married practically, to like really get into politics. What that's really interesting. If you're not into politics, that's a red flag. So you're not gonna say you're not gonna go to the march with me and talk about all these things now much we hate Trump because that's my favorite thing to do.
Two to one more guys say it's a red flag if they're into astrology.
I sensed you were a Taurus. Okay, check please.
Oh I met this girl the other day who She went, I can tell you're a Virgo And I went, nope, I'm in aries, but nice try. And then she proceeded to tell my husband that his chakras were off. Oh yeah, no, he's got to put him in the shop. Your chakras are off? Yeah.
Oh man, we're running late. We got to take a break. Yeah, what's your favorite red flag? Text line? Four one five two nine five kftcyety.
We're run by stupid people, stupid stupid people.
And we found that out at the debate with Joe. How did that work out?
And we're gonna find it out again on Tuesday night.
That debate was seventy four days ago when Trump and Biden debated and drove Biden out of the race seventy four days ago. The next debate is tomorrow night with a different candidate. As we all know, the election is only fifty seven days away at this point. And I came across this switch. I thought was interesting. This is from the New York Times in February, back when Joe Biden was still the candidate, and there was talk of, well, the reason he's still the candidate is because Kamala Harris and she can't be president. Obviously, this is in the New York Times. The painful reality for miss Harris is that, in private conversations over the last few months, dozens of Democrats in the White House, on Capitol Hill and around the nation, including some who helped put her on the twenty twenty ticket, said she didn't rise to the challenge of proving herself as a future leader of the party, much less the country. Even some Democrats whom her own advisors referred to reporters for supportive quotes confine privately that they had lost hope in her. Wow was it the New York Times. Now she's the Oh my god, forward hope joy. Obviously we're all on board. Let's ignore any any, any possible downside, because we're all on board for Kamala Harris. It's amazing.
I've never seen an emperor's new clothes, their lipstick kind of pig of this extremes before.
It's astonishing. No, it's it's beyond anything anybody's ever seen. Oh.
I mean, it's like, okay, maybe you got a quarterback, young quarterback, he's a bust. Say Johnny Football comes back and he, you know, wins the Super Bowl or something like that. Except you gotta win before people change their mind. You can't just declare, you know what, he's not a wash out, he's the best us out of.
That before he throws a completion. What the hell is that? Right, delusion? Well, it's Trump derangement syndrome, is what it is. It's TS. Yeah, yeah, what odd times these are?
And the folks who invented the Internet thought that everyone will have all the information they need, so nobody will ever be misled again.
Right right, right, right right. We'll update you on a whole bunch of different stories coming up. Hope you can stay tuned. Armstrong and Getty.
The best thing about living in California is that we're not a swing state, so they leave us alone. No, right, I mean, oh yeah, in La I think I've seen one Trump sign and Scott Bao was sleeping under it.
Just yet, it is interesting living in and I don't know how many of you listening right now live in a state where you know exactly how the state's going to go. It's not even close. Well, actually, if you're if you're in any state other than the seven battlegrounds, it's not it's not a question. So that's interesting. Yeah.
On the other hand, in cal Unicornea you have to put up with utterly corrupt one party government.
But no, you don't get campaign answer, right, But the national television show that is the presidential election for forty three states, it's just like a TV show. I mean, you don't have any role in it.
Not much, no, no, So a totally different topic, getting away from politics momentarily, the question before us is America's utes, And this is interesting.
Actually the utes.
In Sweden too is the Swedish Health Authority public Health Authority, which is charmingly named the folk hail Summndigettin. Apparently, like the Germans, the Swedes don't believe in separate words. They just this is the National Public Health Authority for the East Coast. They just make it into an enormously long single word. We should do anyway, good for the whole Folkale sum ninginginga dicon for speaking out. Finally, children under the age of two should not be exposed to any screens whatsoever. Hmm, no screen time under the age of two, because you'll warp your damn brains. Actually, among the little kids, well we can just lay run down.
I don't remember if my kids saw any screens before too. That's pretty little.
Well, you know, this is painful, and I don't mean to cause people pain, but it causes me pain when I see a young mother ignoring their baby and staring at their phone. Parents and guardians should think about how they use screens with their children. Yeah, tell them what they are doing on their phones when they use them in their child's presence.
Yeah, I am more concerned about that than two year old's watching whatever fair a two year old watch. I don't even know what that would be. But yeah, the whole you know, one year old's trying to pick up all of the things you're the human brain learns from their parents at least throughout history and not learning those things because mom or dad is staring at their phone.
Yeah, and again I don't mean a guilt people, but prior to two thousand and four, really, you're taking your kid for a walk. If you're a good parent, you're naming everything you saw, You're talking to your kid, You're teaching them language, not scrolling through whatever. But anyway, screen use among two to five year olds should be limited to a maximum of one hour. They say, children six to twelve should not use screens for more than two hours, and thirteen to eighteen year olds up to three hours, which is a sharp production on the current average screen time figures among Swedish children and young people, which is estimated to be about four.
Hours a day from nine to twelve year olds. Yeah, I know you've always been bigger on this than I have been. I just think there's such a difference between are you watching a documentary about animals or are you watching YouTube shorts that are each eight seconds long, Completely different experiences for the brain.
Oh that's true, Yeah, absolutely true. I think it's the passiveness of watching. If you're gonna make a broad statement, which we have been, I have been, then then yeah, just the passiveness of taking in something on a screen is bad. But within that realm, yeah, there's stuff that. I mean, if you're watching a kids show about physics, well wait a minute, that's a very different thing than TikTok shorts. Sure, yeah, it's a fair point. Let's see speaking of.
Us short it's so horrible and my kids love them and I and I routinely banned them and then they crop back up, but they just they're so addicting and it you know, we all know what that is. It's just that we want a little birched of something exciting. That was fifteen seconds long. Too long. I need a new thing.
I need a new topic. Already that topic has tired of me already. That's the key word, too. And I can't remember whether it was Bagosian or one of my favorite things. Is I was writing about that. It's not even great or funny. It's just new, something new, something new, something new, Which is why when you see you got a text, do you think, oh cool, and you know it's probably going to be something annoying.
I'm glad we had this conversation that I should have related. I should have tied these two things together yesterday because over the weekend I was having a conversation with my high schooler about watching the YouTube shorts and what it does to your brain. And his response, and typicult teenage was I don't care. I don't care. I said, you're so laconic. He said, what does that mean? And we looked it up and we went through all the cynonyms, synonyms and definitions because he is he is captain laconic.
As a teenage male tends toward laconitude.
Anyway, I said, you're laconic. He said, okay. I said that's hilarious. I said, you don't even know it. But and then last night he was telling me on Sunday night, you know, thinking about the school, he said, just Dad's school is so boring for me. I just can't stand it.
Ah.
I wish I'd had been smart enough to tie those two things together. Yeah. One of the reasons it's so freaking boring is you in those YouTube shorts and your brain is designed for bam bam bam bam bam. And that's not what real life is, certainly not what school is. Yeah, yeah, no kidding.
So on a similar topic, I thought this was interesting Are you tired of the partisanship, You're tired of the Trump dearrangement syndrome?
You want to reach across the aisle.
Banning Smartpholtons in schools is the issue for you. This is from the New York Times, uh and it's written by I think it's David Leonhardt, who writes the morning newsletter thing. But it says several times a year, I visit a high school or college to talk with students about how I do my job and how they see the world. On a typical visit, I spent a few minutes in the back of the classroom while the teacher is conducting another part of that day's lesson. These experiences have shown me what a dominant and distracting roles smartphones and laptops play in today's schools.
From my perch.
Behind the students, I can see how many of them are scrolling through sports coverage, retail websites, text messages, or social media, looking up occasionally to feign attention. It's not everyone, of course, some students remain engaged in the class, but many do not, And he says I would have been in the latter group as smartphones existed decades ago. Like many journalists, I do not have a naturally stellar attention span.
Of course, Yeah, no, you give me a smartphone when I'm sixteen, I do exactly the same thing.
And he goes on that he probably would have ended up learning a lot less, And I think I would probably say the same thing about myself in a battle for attention with fantastically entertaining computers versus teachers. A growing body of academic research suggests it isn't going too well.
And then he gets into go ahead, is there any chance I think about this? A couple things popped into my head. So there's a new book out about this sort of thing. Maybe we should have her on. Her name is Nod in my head right this moment. But about the damage is doing. And as listened to a podcast interview in which they were offering up the counterpoint that we often do. This is what they set up about television, this is what they said about radio, This is what they said about lots of different things on how it was going to destroy people's minds and their ability to pay attention, and blah blah blah blah blah, and it didn't happen. I don't agree with.
It, yeah, or did it? That's a good it declined for sure.
Yeah. And then combining that with I was listening to a podcast with Elon Musk on it the other day and he is talking about the brain is capable of operating at a much higher speed than it has been operating throughout history, and that's one of the things that Neurlink is gonna help with. But he's just talking about the ability to that we'll be able to listen to podcasts at one and a half or two time speed because we can just take in information so much faster than human beings have been in the past. And is that where it's going with the shorts and then the short attention span and then everything will just be does have to be designed for people whose brains are built that way. You want to teach history, you got to do it in little bursts of somehow I don't know.
Yeah, I definitely would take a contrarian position on that, and I'm happy to be argued off of my position by Elon Musk er others. But you can there's a difference between taking in information and taking it in, processing it, remembering it, putting it into context with what you already know. Those are two different things. And I would argue that my side has several millions of years of practice and the new is a very very new experiment of barely a second old in the timeline of history.
Right, And I feel like you got to enter in, you got to enter in the data about the amount of people on anxiety medication and depression and suicide and all things. It's making people insane. You realize this.
Lispect, Oh yeah, yeah, well damn near literally, Although I think a part of that is just everybody so desperate for it tension, and one good way to get it is to say I have this anyway. At least eight states, including such a diverse localses California, Indiana, and Louisiana have restricted phone use are taking steps to for this year, following the lead of Florida, which banned phones in k through twelve classrooms last year. Other states, including Arizona and New York, are on the precipice of doing so.
God dang it. My son's school they did a retreat in the woods last week, but phones were allowed now that they're high schoolers, and my son said, that's what everybody did the whole time. I said, with people on their phones. He said, everyone with me because I don't have a phone, which he doesn't. But I thought I was sorry. I was shocked at that you're in the woods. I guess it must just be the idea that they hated so much, or the parents hated. I don't even know. I got to ask somebody.
But at the schools that have restricted phones, many people say they already see benefits. Come Florida school district that has colleague visited, they went even farther than the state law requires banning phones all day. Students now have conversations at lunch and play games like twister and pickleball, putting aside your lover eight for either of those games. They're playing games together. Before children mostly looked at their phones.
The principal said, I know my personal experience is like if I ever do actually sit down and read something like a long book, there is a feeling I get of I don't know, deep enjoyment, satisfaction, something that never happens with the bam bam bam bam bam stuff all day long.
I think it's probably just you're in something deeply as opposed to floating along on the surface of it than a new thing, than a new thing, than a new thing, it's a different sort of appeal to your brain. And they mentioned some of the issues. Or all right, how do you enforce it? What do you do if people break the rules? Should you ban phones during only during class or for the entire school day? To put it another way, is a more social lunchtime worth the downside that parents can't easily reach their children. That's just I'm an older parent, I'm old school. One hundred percent. Is it worth it?
Please? You got it?
The entire generation of people who can't have a conversation at work, they can't look boss in the eye, they're afraid to call for a pizza, and you're asking whether it would benefit them to have conversations with their friends during school.
Please, Slap's forehead gives up. Yeah. As an older person, I say this all the time. When our generation is gone, there won't be anybody who remembers that you used to go to school and not be in contact with your parents all day and it was fine, always, always, Yes, yep, So there are manybody where you do even say that. Everybody will have grown up with your in constant contact with your parents or your kids. So obviously that's the way it must be because it's nuts.
Then one day a machine came to be that changed everyone's brain forever the.
End, right, no kidding, I would think I always use this example. But if internet pornography can ruin young men's brains to the point that they cannot get aroused around an actual naked woman, that's how powerful the internet can be. So this is just a different version of it for the other stuff, right, But I mean, that's how powerful it can be. You wouldn't think there'd be anything on earth that could stop a nineteen year old man from getting aroused around a naked nineteen year old girl, But there is, and it's called, you know, too much stimulation of a certain kind on a screen.
Those of you who have not experienced being a horny nineteen year old man, ah, it is something that's like saying, there's a group of people who no longer breathe. They don't want to breathe, so they talk to It's as impossible to comprehend as that, I think. How is that not like a terrifying wake up call? Is it because people are uncomfortable talking about sex or usually it goes along with jokes or stuff like that. The mating urge has been turned off by the shiny screen.
Other than breathing and eating and water, there's no stronger urge, sometimes stronger than those.
You know what, Hey, hey, we schout down on the apple from the tree and knowledge. Humanity is dying out. Dog strollers are out selling baby strollers in South Korea. Just read that, So humanity is dying out. Give the beavers a chance. That's fine, babes.
God's playing.
Evidently Steve Jobs is Satan, and so ends my rant.
We know who's playing the halftime of the Super Bowl, among other things. On the way stay here.
Miami star receiver Tyreek Hill with handcuffed by Belief outside.
Hard Rock Stadium.
At one point, the encounter escalating when a third officer strikes him, he'll falling to the ground. One of the officers involved now on administrative leave. The incident happening just hours from kickoff, in just one block away from the stadium, Hill was stopped for speeding and got into a verbal altercation with police before being placed in handcuffs. Hill cited for reckless driving. Hill going on to play and score in Miami's home opener.
And then scored and then put his hands behind his back in a I've been handcuffed touchdown dance routine thing, which is demustration. Yeah that's something anyway, very exciting, very jazzy. They announced who's going to be the Super Bowl halftime act this time around. It is Kendrick Labar Uh, the rapper seventeen Grammys, won Pulitry Prize And my son said, like the biggest thing in the world, and I don't know is that. So we're drive around. I said, tell me something to play. So we brought up some stuff and I said, whatever happened to melody? And I put on some Frank Sinatra but perfect. We listened to some Kendrick Lamar. He got extra famous for like people who aren't already into his music because he had the big back and forth with Drake this year that turned into some really odd Twitter dueling or something. Anyway, there's your halftime show. Tom Brady, who has a three hundred million dollar contract to be an analyst now for the NFL, made his debut yesterday to mostly positive reviews other than trolls that I read. Here's a little of that.
It's a big man he's going against Tyler Geiden, but just too much power. He's got a great burst off the line of scrimmage, just ripped through. And that's why it's Randy Defensive Player of the Year.
And I'm not sure that tells me anything. It wasn't great, Hanson. Did you pick a bad Tom Brady clip on person a purpose because you don't like Tom Brady?
Okay, he says, yes, you undermining Bastard's notice in a lot of the big time analysts for the NFL are so old.
Terry Bradshaw won his Super Bowls in the seventies.
But the Lord, Yeah, the big network pregame and halftime crews are very, very old.
I'd say the demographics are much younger for the NFL, though, So I'm just surprised by that. And then you got to have the hot young chick who is the person that sets up everything, is in charge the anchor. Yes, it's absolutely obligatory. New York Times Sienna poll came out yesterday. This is the most tied presidential race in the history of polling. It is just astounding. You wouldn't think if you worked at it, and like you told people how to respond to polling that you could get into this even fifty to fifty all across the country.
So next hour a serious analysis of Russian disinformation efforts in our elections and other countries too, and the actual effectiveness of them. The results are very interesting, in semi hilarious. Stay tuned if you can. If not, grab the podcast Armstrong and Getty on demand.