How Could Society Allow This To Happen?

Published Jun 12, 2024, 4:57 PM

In hour 3 of The Armstrong & Getty Show:

  • Antisemitism is spreading quickly through the nation
  • A Fortnite tournament and inspiring athletes
  • "The anger in our streets isn't over a far away war."
  • Coldstone-gate! No pistachios! 

Broadcasting live from the Abraham Lincoln Radio Studio, the George Washington Broadcast Center, Jack Armstrong and Joe Getty Armstrong and Jetty and he Armstrong and Yetty.

The laptop was established by the FBI agent as real and authentic, and so the media said, okay, well that evidence was now used, they forget all of the other files on that laptop. If the laptop is authentic, if those files are real, then you have these detailed accounts of a multimillion dollar influence peddling operation run by the Biden family.

But the media just simply doesn't want to go there, or hasn't so far.

I think this upcoming September Hunter Biden trial, unlike the one we just lived through, is gonna be just so damn full of juicy nuggets every single day, depending how corrupt old man Weiss is.

You know, he brought the gun charges because he had to because that fake corrupt plea deal was exposed. Now he's bringing the tax charges too, belatedly and incompletely. But the prosecution at the gun trial was definitely full on, it was proper, it was good. So I guess I've got to trust that it's going to be in the tax trial too, having trouble trusting.

Right that man, If I'm President Biden, I can't be excited that that trial is going to be going on in September, weeks before the election.

You know, there's several ways in which Biden's the Democratic Party are just holding their breath until November fifth. You got the plot line that Joe Biden sold he might die or so senile, he might be so clearly incapacitated it would be a mockery of the United States for armed for a president. So you have that time, that time or a clicking, a tika taking, and then you've got the Biden influence pedaling thing moving fairly rapidly toward a oh my god moment, because again a tax investigation is where did that money come from and where did it go? Which is the entire question surrounding the pedaling of influence in Ukraine or China, among other places. So the trial, I don't even remember.

We've been talking about this stuff for so long and there's been so many zigs and zags. So the Hunter Biden September thing is just he didn't pay as much taxes as he is supposed to.

Ah, yeah, I mean enormous amounts of ignoring his taxes.

Yeah, but as you pointed out, to figure out whether he broke the law and how much tax he should have paid, you got to figure out what his income was, where it came from, and how it should have been taxed, which, for the way the Biden family runs their business, could be pretty exciting.

Yeah. And I saw the Twitter account one legal expert who said, and I wish I hadn't in front of me, but he said, essentially, in looking at some of the documents that have been subpoena or released or whatever, he said, they're absolutely also building an unregistered foreign agent case here. I don't know that that's true, but that's what we guess. Would we care about that? What do you want unregistered foreign agent's running ground?

Sir? Tak The chaos in terms of who ought to be president now h only in that it supports the idea that it's a multinational influence pedaling scheme. Different topic. This just came out. I'm looking at the pictures here now. Last night, the homes of the Brooklyn Museum director and multiple Jewish board members were vandalized. Holy cow, make no mistakes, as this reporter This is a vile this is viol anti semotism, and it is making Jews and everyone feel unsafe.

And I'm looking at the picture here.

So the museum director is Jewish, the Jewish members of the board, they all had their homes vandalized on the same night nobody else did, so I don't know how you would interpret it. And the sign on there, so it's got their name, it says Brooklyn Museum, so it's basically saying I know who you are and where you work. And it says white supremacist Zionist on the sign. And lots of red splattered everywhere, which is blood. You know that's a threat, right Well, did have to be eliminated or run out of town or hurt or killed or whatever because of their sins. The sins changed through the alleged sin changes from decade to decade, but the plotline is always the same. Splattering red all over the doors and windows of a home of someone Jewish in the wake of October seventh is pretty over the top.

Afal those people must have missed that. To Giant Wall Street. You're in an article yesterday about how the head of Hamas wants as many civilian casualties as possible. That's how we win, he said, we need blood to achieve our glory.

We need blood to get attention. That's our winning strategy. You think Israel gets Sinowar, I'd be surprised.

If they didn't. That's the guy with charge I'm talking.

I would think I would think they get to him too. They think he's in those tunnels in Rafa right somewhere.

Oh yeah, yeah, he's almost got to be.

And he's an evil bastard. I's taken in some of his biography. He was evil before he became the top guy with AMAS. I mean he was like scary by the Helmas.

Standards, right, So, just so you understand, he will say, because he's micromanaging the fighting from uh Gaza, he will say, hey, uh, you got to put a rocket battery in the courtyard of this apartment building, okay, and fire fire as many rounds as it takes to get to the apartment building destroyed with all the people in it, because we need we need some headlines here. I mean, that's the way he thinks. He reminds me of his own words. Who was the guy that ran al Qaeda in Iraq? Who was a household name for a while there, remember.

He l Bargatti l something back Daddy ran Isis.

But then there was that other nut job.

And this guy kind of reminds me the Sinoar with with Hamas that they're like actual psychopath lunatics. Like I don't think Osama bin Lad was a psychopath. He had a very warped view of religion and was willing to kill people in the name of him stuff like that.

But Zarkawi that anyway, Yeah.

Was just a lunatic like he you know, like torture animals, you know, like a lunatic psychopath. And if this Sinowar guy seems to be like that too, who runs some moss and they got to find him and kill him, hopefully they do.

And then this article kind of related. This was in the whatever the FP is, Oh the Free Press to bring that up later in the out or Barry Weiss's outfit, which I absolutely love, but go ahead, I'll do my thing later. I want to hear more about that.

But Eli Lake wrote this in the Free Press, and I love everything Eli Lake does.

It's also good. Uh.

The article is if one wonders why it always seems that every building hit by Israel as a hospital and every casualty is a child or woman. The story of a journalist with a side hustle as a hostage guard provides some answers. That's the journalists who died the other day, hiding hostages in his home, working with Hamas. So the whole I'm a journalist, I'm a doctor. You just bombed a hospital. Only women and children died. Come on, how long? How long is our media going to go along with that?

As long as they're convinced that the best selling narrative is the Israelis are too mean.

This this attack on the director of the museum, and everybody on the board are Jewish, And the signs and the blood and the red paint on the door, snow walls.

This is like I was saying yesterday.

I used to read this stuff about thirties Germany and think, how could a society allow that to happen? The crystal Knachs and all that sort of stuff. Now I can see how it happens.

Yeah. Well, and the Nazis were not popular until they were pretty popular. And by the time they were pretty popular, they were so brutal they took over. Brutal and corrupt. And so when you see the rather small minority of our countrymen who are actually down with the up with Hamas movement, if you'll pardon the convoluted wording there, don't think. Well, you know, it's just I don't know, one hundred and fifty thousand people nationwide, a bunch of confused college kids. This will never go anywhere. It's not so. And I actually I want to get to the other free press thing eventually this hour, but we don't have time now. But that's precisely what it's about. It's about if you let this sort of thing go long enough, if you send the message over and over again, as the George Floyd riots did, as the ANTIFA attacks in Portland did that. You know what, if you're on the left, you can go ahead and resort to violence and hate and the rest of it. It's going to quickly. It'll be like a wildfire. Jack, you've told the story of a wildfire that started in your front yard. Oh jezu hot summer day in California. It doesn't like spread like you think it does. It explodes outward.

Yeah, so your metaphor works.

Well, yeah, that's the point. We just can't let the fire get to big or it will quickly be beyond control. Anyway, not to get over serious about the world, but I just I think complacency might be the keyword to describe American politics right now. I want you this weird belief that everything will always be pretty much the way it's been last forty years.

I want you to tell us about Barry Weiss's free press, because I don't know about this, so I look forward to he that also, uh uh.

This is definitely not serious.

There is an event tonight that almost certainly will have more people watching it. Then we'll watch the NBA Finals. But unless you're a certain age or have kids of a certain age, you don't know what's happening.

But it's huge.

I tell you about that coming up, among other things.

Rape thirty is my name, OK, you know, I ya.

I know that.

You don't have any idea what this is.

I know I do not.

I don't have any idea what this is.

If you have a twelve year you have a twelve year old boy, they know exactly what it is. That's good, Michael, that's nick a thirty. I think that's the way you pronounce it. It's nick and then it's e H thirty anyway, nick a thirty. He's one of the most popular Fortnite players in the world. He's got ten million people to follow him on YouTube and watch him play Fortnite. And he's got a new skin coming out this weekend, which is a big deal when they call it a skin. But it's like your avatar, you're outfit. What you are is he like a snake or a lizard? And then you pay for them, you buy them. My kids spend more money on stuff in online games than they do actual toys. Wow, and they get the same amount of pleasure out of it. Like my son will you know, take twenty dollars of the money he got from birthday money or whatever, and he bought the Peter Griffin's skin so he could play Fortnite as Peter Griffin from Family Guy. It's actually kind of brilliant because you don't accumulate stuff around the house. Yeah, you know, it's weird because of my age and having trouble wrap in my head around it, it seemed like, well, that's not real. You just spent twenty dollars as opposed to I don't know, some plastic Chinese something or other that is physical, but it's gonna end up in the closet and I'm gonna have to take it to good will someday.

I mean, I don't know what's the difference. It's all about amusement, right, Does it make sense? Does it make sense to you?

I mean, I still have trouble with the idea of your buying stuff that only exists online, but if you're getting as much or more enjoyment out of it than something that's real.

Using my finger quotes, No, it's all economics. I get it. I get it completely. One thing I know is I am utterly out of touch with the enormity of that economy because I've heard about it enough to know it's enormous. But I'm sure it's more enormous than I can imagine. Well, right, so my son told me, he said, yah, to talk about this tomorrow.

That never Back Down video is the video from nick a thirty that he'll be playing in this big Fortnite tournament that's going on tonight. They only have a certain number of the really big ones every year, and I don't know what the numbers will be. I'll look them up tomorrow, but I would be shocked if it's not significantly bigger than the NBA Finals. Wow, because that's how many gazillions of kids around the world play Fortnite of all ages, including like college guys.

Oh you know, that's funny. That fits in so well with something I saw from Jason Riley in the Wall Street Journal. He was talking about how he learned to play golf through a relative who loved the game, but he started watching golf because of Tiger Woods. And then he gets into how you know, purses on tour of quintupled since Tiger started playing, and a lot of it has to do with Tiger drawing eyes and sponsors and the rest of it. And then he pivots to Caitlin Clark in the WNBA, and in terms of popularity, Caitlin Clark is the Tiger Woods of her sport. She left colleges the NCAA's all time leading scorer for women and men, and they mentioned that when her Iowhawkeys faced South Carolina, it drew a larger audience than the men's final for the first time in history. Anyway, keep in mind she's the all time leading scorer. And then Jason talks about how his daughter has long liked playing basketball, but she started watching women's basketball because of Caitland Clark. And then they get into then he gets into the incredible idiocy of the Olympic team passing on Caitlin Clark. The WNBA is desperate to expand its brand. Oh, he makes the point that they could elevate the salaries and close the gap a lot too. But excuse me, he says, but it won't showcase the sport's biggest start in an event that drew more than three billion viewers worldwide in twenty twenty. This is self sabotage. And then he gets into and as a black man, he can write about this stuff and really, you know, come hard at it, he says. One question is whether WNBA officials are queasy about having a straight white woman become the face of a league dominated by women who are black and gay. Thanks don't seem to care, but there are commentators who seem to think of little else. Sonny host Austin co host on the View attributed Ms Clark's fame to white privilege. How insane are these woke racialists? I just told you, Sonny, she's the leading scorer of all time, but her fame is white privilege.

Yes, she's got she's the leading scorer of all time, most three pointers, the most of this, the most, she's got the most, all these different things that wasn't her skin color. The ball actually went through the hoop more often than with anybody else, regardless of skin color.

Former ESPN co anchor Jamel Hill, current neo marxist woke activist on MSNBC right or Was said, the hoopstar's acclaim was quote a little problematic, and then quote we would all be very naive if we didn't say race and her sexuality played a role in her popularity. I never thought about her sexuality once.

But uh, and then let's see Jason Whitlock different Jason also a black man.

For what it's worth, no non social media. The Olympics people said, well, the problem with having mss Clark is you have to tell.

Us who would we cut? Who do we remove? He said that debate is comical, like it matters. For the first time in American history, women have the biggest star in sports and they don't know how to utilize her.

This is high comedy. They're all Tito, She's Michael. They're all Tito. She's Michael. That's hilarious, but hey, you know, at the risk of ruining a good chuckle, that sort of perversity. That's sort of hiring the doctor who's of color instead of the doctor who's most competent, or buying medical equipment from based on race, or promoting people at school based on race, and blah blah blah.

That serves nobody. It perverts every process and who it really screws, Like all the black gay WNBA players, Is them right and everybody else.

Along with them?

Right? You want to go from making seventy five grand a year to significantly more more, Caitlin Clark is good for that.

And every DEI program everywhere it exists.

Immediately, I heard Joe Biden talking about people like you the other day who want to n DEI.

Armstrong and Geeddy my dog Baxter, who's he's a funny lad. I almost went off talking about his cancer, but that's too serious. You know what, He's an old dog. It happens. I love him anyway. So it reminded me of a conversation we had the other day, both of us. When we're going to take Baxter for a walk. We say you ready and It's a funny question because it's not like a dog would ever say, you know, I'm right in the middle of something, how does one thirty work for you? Or I'm not feeling it today, I'm just not feeling a walk. Yeah, yeah, he's ready. He is really ready. But it also it's rug that when you say are you ready, he indicates that he is absolutely ready, which is kind of funny the way that evolves, because that's his cue that we're about to take a walk. Yeah. Yeah, he's a fine fella. By glly, I'll miss him anyway. So I come not to bury the free press, but to praise it. Is that the opposite of the Caesar thing. That's what I'm going for. Why don't we start with this just so you have a little perspective of what we're talking about. Michael hit us with sixty one. Would you this is a special report with Brett Behar.

Tall Shimoni survived that festival and was inside the exhibit during the protest.

I felt like I'm back in October seventh. I got a panic attack. I was very scared and sad.

Earlier in the evening, anti Israel protesters unfurled a banner that read long Live October seventh at Union Square, where protesters got in the faces of NYPD officers and clashed with pro Israel supporters before head underground into the subway station, disturbing commuters while writing alongside NYPD officers dressed in riot gear.

This is the pro Hamas, anti Israel, Marxist lunatics who are disrupting various parts of America and college campuses. You know, Jack, I got the memory of Joe Biden. What was the piece that Barry Weiss published, Oh, is about how the New York Times newsroom had gone completely woke and lost its mind that she wrote her letter of resignation. Well, she went on to found something called the Free Press, which is essentially like a substec thing, but it's a she has like a group of people working on it, and it's brilliant. It is really really good.

And wow, the talent it would take to not only have her punditry, but to put together an organization like that.

That's something. Yeah, And it's entirely subscription supported at this point, and I've happily subscribed. But they write in Today's whatever you want to call it. Perhaps you've seen the videos circulating on social media of our reporter, Olivia Reinold, surrounded in downtown Manhattan by a mob of people screaming for Intifada and tearing her notebook. She's a Zionist, shouted a masked man wearing a hez Bula flag fashioned as a head scarf. Get her out of here, and they publish a picture. As expected. Olivia was a pro. She captured what she could over the course of an hour, filed an incident report with the NYPD, and then sat down to publish this discount of what happened, which you can click to. Next day, she was hard at work on her next story, but it's worth pausing at this moment when our brilliant colleague was harassed for doing her job, to remind you of our mission, the stakes of that mission, and also to explain why over the past eight months we've devoted so many resources to covering the fallout from October seventh, not just in the Middle East and across the West. And then she goes into a bit of the history and gets into the principles of what they do at the Free Press honesty, and it's explained in some detail, but I'll just hit the headlines, honesty, curiosity, having an open mind. In other words, respect, hard work, independence. We are proudly not a political monolith. Independence isn't just a journalistic value for us. It's also fundamental to the way we are building our business excellence, common sense, and belief in the American project. And that's the point she really elaborates on. Our reporting and opinions can be harshly critical of our country and its leaders, but that is because we believe deeply in America and its promise. We prize the distinctions between democracy and dictatorship, good and evil, the rule of law and mob rule, freedom and unfreedom. Is she for Biden or Trump?

Oh?

Boy, that was well done that you doubled me over. Oh got to catch my breath. Ah. I think that couple of sentences we could spend like a career discussing the contrast between being harshly critical of something because you love it so much, or among many who we've identified many times in many different ways, who are harshly critical of our country because they hate it and want it to go away, and we'll tell you so openly. Yeah.

It reminds me of because I had this conversation like yesterday with one of my kids. You know, when I'm pushing you on this or complaining about that, it's because I want you to go out and succeed in the world.

If I didn't care about you at all, I'd let you do whatever you want. Wouldn't make any difference, right, was it? C. S. Lewis the famous the opposite of love isn't hate. The opposite of love is apathy. It's probably ancient wisdom. But so anyway, again, we could dwell on that for a career, and I suppose we will in a way. But moving along with what Barry Rice Weis is writing, it's those last points about the distinction between the rule of law and mob rule, about the bright line between freedom and unfreedom, that take me back to what happened to our reporter yesterday in Union Square. That incident was not about Israel or Gaza. It was about an assault now daily on the most basic norms of our culture. Are we beginning? Are we becoming a country in which journalists are regularly surrounded and threatened for doing their jobs? Are we going to become a place in which marauding bands of masked young people harassed Jews visiting a memorial for the three hundred and sixty four Israelis murdered at a music festival because that happened yesterday too. Are we going to become a place where it is normal for people to get on the subway and declare, raise your hands. If you're a Zionist, this is your chance to get out yes also yesterday, or where police and security guards are regularly assaulted in the course of doing their jobs, and she includes a link to the story from UCLA last night. My point here is that anyone trying to convince you that this is about a far away war, or that the anger in our streets is mostly because Benjamin Nettyahuo is the current Israeli Prime Minister. Anyone who insists that this is a Jewish issue is deluding you and yourselves. So are those who comfort themselves by insisting that this will pass like some idiot wind, it will not. This is about a choice. We face a choice about what kind of country we want to be, what kind of country we are at risk of becoming, the only way to understand that is to listen to what these protesters say they want and what they are shouting for. What they openly desire is not peace but terror. You know, I would I'll depart from what Barry Weiss is writing there and just repeat what we've been talking about for a long time, and that's the weird Queers for Palestine trans writes against global warming, Black Lives Matter, in support of you know whatever, wacka doodle, other wack of doodle, cause I've left off the list. What's going on there, it's the great rainbow, pardon me of Look, we all want to tear down the system, so let's just just all band together. We hate Jews. You you want to tear it down because you hate white people. I just hate the West in general because I've been convinced by my professors that we need to start to get into Marxist utopia. They're all the same thing, and I just I think it's great that a woman of the moderate left like Barry Weiss is so articulately and strongly dedicating her whole organization to these people want death and chaos and we're not going to give it to them. I think that's that's a great moment. And there's so many examples. Bill Maher, for instance, what Joe Biden claimed he was going to be and that's the latest disappointment of his presidency.

To me, Luckily Barry Weiss is young because a lot of the I've been talking about the old liberals for a long time. Bill Mar's freaking pushing eighty years old. I mean, we need some young liberals with that, and he's drinking and smoking pot like he's twenty two. It's amazing how we went in the blink of an eye from don't say history because it's got his in it and it implies that women don't contribute to to say Herkstrey. It's amazing how we went from that crap to a guy can get on the subway and say, are there any Jews on the subway?

They need to get off now? In the blink of an eye, and just nobody cares about that, right, Like James Lindsay has pointed out all of that Herkstree stuff and microaggressions and all that that was masquerading as a moral code. But like DEI, it's a weapon of insertion and takeover. You take our institutions by scaring everybody and telling them they're bad people.

That's clear now. The fact that the mainstream media has no interest in some of that stuff you just mentioned. I mean, it's incredible, the chanting, you know, October seventh, every day at the memorial for all those slaughtered concert kids. And that's what Kamala harris Is husband said at a fundraiser. It makes me sick. These protests are violent and humane. It's got to stop. This is completely out of control.

Okay.

Does anybody in your wife's administration agree with you? And are they willing to say it out loud?

You know?

I remember years and years ago we had a really amusing conversation about the fact that I can't I have this strong aversion to liking anything that's really popular, right because because part of my self image is being an iconoclast, I can admit that. And how silly that is because you're every bit as much of a posers as the people who just like everything that's popular. So anyway, and that's stuck in my head because it's a good insight, but imagine being so manipulated by the idea of, oh my god, I can't agree with those people even if they say the sun is hot, Hitler was a rotten guy, or an ice cream cone on a summer day is a nice thing. If a report publican or a conservative says that I have only two choices. I can deny it or I can ignore it. Imagine being so manipulated by your desire not to ever agree with a conservative that you would turn a blind eye to people saying October seventh, every day outside of memorial to young people and young women who were raped, tortured, and murdered. That's your mainstream media. I cannot imagine being so dishonest. Some liberals says something I agree with, I'll say, yeah, I agree with them, because I'm not mentally ill. I don't know how to describe people who are that. It's like Trump de arrangement syndrome, but it's like conservative derangement syndrome. We're actually nice. People get to know us. We just disagree with you, It'll be okay.

So is the tide turning because of people like Barry Wise? I feel like we're barely making a dent. Yeah again, quoting Winston. And at some point Churchill's estate is going to charge me per mention. But this is not the beginning of the end. It's just the end of the beginning.

So yeah, we've got a long slog in front of us, But as as a Youngish lesbian woman of the left says, this is about a choice. We face a choice about what kind of country we want to be, what kind of country we are at risk of becoming. And that's a fight worth having for the rest of my days. Just speaking for myself. Bring it on, bitches, pardon me? Yeah, good for her. What's it cost to be a member or whatever to read the stuff there on the free press? You know it ain't cheap. You got to make a living. I'm gonna click on, says subscribed, because I am. I've been hoping for so long that some new kind of news comes to.

Grow in popularity, because people believe in it so much that it becomes a workable financial model. Because that's one of the biggest problem of the modern journalism is how do you make it profitable that you can actually have journalists to do this kind of work and make a living. Yeah, it's eighty bucks a year if you want to do the annual membership. Pretty freaking cheap, all told.

Yeah, yeah it is. And I tell you what, I just again amplifying the voices, and gosh golly, if you decide this applies to us too, We would appreciate the support very much, but the idea of amplifying the voices of a realist, sane patriotism makes me very very happy. Yeah, that's good stuff. Well, we'll support her and her their work. Yep, awesome.

Well, something I just came across about the inflation numbers are out today that are kind of interesting, but and other stuff too.

Stay with us.

A Long Island woman, Janni Marie dunk is suing the ice cream chain Coldstone Creamery over no real pistachios in her pistachio ice cream. A federal judge has given the woman the green light.

To file the class action lawsuit.

In the court documents, it states that Duncan purchased her pistachio ice cream in July.

Of twenty twenty two.

She really believes at the time of her purchase that her ice cream contained real pistachios. Turns out it was just an artificial flavor. The complaint states it was false and deceptive practices in the marketing and sales of their ice creams. If she and the others in the class action lawsuit win, they could each walk away with fifty dollars.

Here's my question, how did that young woman keep that serious tone of voice through that whole idiotic, moronic story about what's ruining America. Right believes that story is about pistachio ice cream. That's not what that story is about.

That's an excellent point right there, is why do you not hear more of those stories where it's presented as you know, quote somebody, quote some this libertarian professor believes it's damaging America to have all these frivolous lawsuits and as.

Opposed to present it like it makes sense at all. Well, you know, part of it's just the dying news business. Young people get twenty two year old reporters that don't know any better working from us. Yeah, the story, everybody who hears that story.

Is saying, what kind of world do we live in where you can sue over the pistachio ice cream didn't have pistachios in it.

Class action lawsuits, which may have had you know, a decent enough founding, they are entirely about the attorneys making all the money. You as an individual quote unquote plaintiff, because I've been involved in a couple of these things, it was more trouble to get out of them.

You as an individual plaintiff don't get enough money to take your family out for pizza, and the lawyers make tens of millions of dollars well.

As you know.

I've brought this topic up with all the smart legal people we ever talked to me, and I've never.

Gotten an answer. I always say, I don't.

Know on how do we get out of this spiral of everybody's suits for everything, and everybody's liable for everything, so you can't the culture's stopping working.

I mean, it's just you can't function. How do you get out of this?

Nobody ever has an answer for that. I was talking to somebody the other day. I want upon the lawyers but my daughter and put them in a prison camp. I didn't want to controversial. I'm spitballing here. I didn't want to bitch about the world here, But here I am bitching about the world again. I was talking about somebody the other day who has an internship program where they let college kids internship there and get like hands on experience in a particular field.

I won't say what it is. And lots of people used to do it without insurance of any kind.

Then it became a thing where you can only have an internship program if you have a whole bunch of insurance in case somebody gets.

Hurt or harassed or whatever.

And then a whole bunch of internships went away because of that because a lot of people didn't want to pay the internship. Now the few that are left have had their insurance dropped because they won't insure them at all. So there will be no internships at businesses at least in California or this part of California because of the whole liability thing.

Nobody wants to live in that world. It's bad for the kids, it's bad for everybody. The kids loved it. I mean the kids freaking loved it.

They would regularly write letters and say it was their favorite part of their college experience, being an intern and getting hands on experience and get to actually do it. Can't do it anymore because of liability insurance. Nobody wins. There ought to be revolution in the streets over this.

You know.

I know when I heard that story, it made me so sad. It made my heart hurt so much for the kids, just for society.

Just I hate that so much. Might be Angina, You're heart hurting. That's to consult your physician. How the hell do we get out of this?

If we got an idea, Texas or email ust please You're strong and Getty

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