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.
We're still chanting, saying we will not leave, we will not stop. You see divevest. We will not stop, we will not leave you see dive vest. And then they're saying that palace time will go on and lift forever, that they will not be leaving. Officers now going individually and asking them one on one, are you gonna leave optional? Are you gonna lea voluntarily? They say no, and then they're being walked away like that and zip tide. So they're starting that process. The line keeps moving in and then officers are moving their helmets and walking them over.
As overnight on the UCLA campus where the cops came in and cleared it out, and now it's just garbage, and I would in coolers and water bottles and probably drug paraphernalia and.
Vegan and gluten feet free food and lotion.
Oh so much hummus uh. The mistake before we get back to what happened in UCLA, the mistake is these universities acting like it's a negotiation. I have this situation with my kids all the time. We're not having a negotiation.
I have to say, right this is not negotiable. You've broken them.
I'll go to bed at eight forty. No, I said eight thirty. We're going to bed at eight thirty. We're not having We're not having a negotiation. It's not like I'm selling a car here. But if you play into it with the you know, you would give us your demands and then we come back with other demands and you talk about until at midnight the negotiations.
What quit using that word?
Do we still have the Ronald Reagan stuff from the other day, the minute long of it, minute fourteen whatever it was. That's so good, I mean, essentially saying what Jack's saying, that.
This needs in and needs to end.
The day before yesterday, Ronald Reagan said, So, this guy is Steve PATTERSONOV MSNBC. He was on there today talking about how things went down at UCLA.
Let's hear this.
Police have been transparent about this. They've been telegraphing this and posturing. We've watched sort of the progression of the police being here as a security force, making sure there were no more counter protesters, keeping the areas safe for the people that were here in the encampment. Then all of a sudden, the switch flips. The announcements come up from the university, from the police, from the state really to say, essentially, this is now changing into an element in which you need to leave. We consider this encampment unlawful to the point at which safety is breached for students on campus. That point was very clear. There's a clear delineation. All of a sudden, police are wearing riot gear, they have zip ties, they have helmet and then the choice has to be from the students as to whether or not you're now putting on a helmet, getting a shield, bearing up the encamment that you're in, bracing for a fight.
Essentially, and a little more from him, and then we'll discuss many students chose to leave.
We saw a sort of a mass leave not too long ago, before all of this was happening, Others sort of choosing to protest peacefully outside of the encampment where they were holding these peaceful rallies to sort of generate support for the people that were going to stay. But then there are a hard core element of people who chose to stay and chose to fight back, and now they are fighting.
Back, and they seriously fought back, like giant metal barricades and fire extinguishers being thrown at cops, and cops are swinging sticks and they're smoking the air. I mean, it was quite the looked like the sixties, or looked like some other country melee at UCLA overnight. I'd like to know, of the hard core how many of those were students. I'm guessing most of the people that stay behind to fight the cops aren't.
Yeah, I would guess it's less than half.
And that's the math that the college administrators are doing. They're doing it belatedly because they agree with a lot of what even the hardcore Marxist agitators, outside agitators.
Believe they agree with them.
But the math they've had to do is that, Okay, this is not just our students. Now, this is a bunch of pros who've come to our campus and they are intent on violence. You have to understand that the outside agitators quote unquote, which is exactly what they are. They won't leave until there's violence. They're there to provoke violence. That's specifically why they have come. And the longer you let it go, the more of them there are, and the better equipped and armed they will be. And so the naive leftist college administrators in California and on the East Coast for that matter, have bilatedly come to their senses and said, oh my god, this will end in violence, and the sooner we end it, the less violence there will be.
And I wonder how much of it had to do with the counter protesters, whoever they were, the pro Israeli dudes who showed up with big sticks. If that hadn't happened, I think the UCLA protests would probably still be going on. But they realize, okay, good a chance of it. If we don't deal with this, there's gonna be there'll.
Be dead people.
Yeah, maybe, although we've seen the same thing happen in multiple campuses around the country that didn't have a bunch of patriots, pro Jewish people, call them whatever you want to. Counter protesters come into the night and will pass. So, like I said, I think the college administrators finally woken up to the inevitability of their being violence.
And every day you wait, or every hour you wait, he gets going to be harder to dislodge them. I would hope the lesson has gone out even to the bluest of progressive Marxist universities, that we can't let these things get a toe hold at all, or it just becomes a giant medium mess for us. Because howoul did you hear over the last couple of weeks the places that dealt with it quickly?
You don't even remember.
Them, no, you know, and they came to some sort of agreement with Look, we'll take a look at this, we'll have a forum on Palestinian rights.
But you got to get off the quads. So the kids got off the quad.
We're talking about the Sacramento State University, the angry little children there, and you know what, they're naive.
They think they're doing the right thing.
They've been indoctrinated in this crap their entire lives if they grew up in California. So they're just doing what their better is, what their educators have.
Told them they should do.
So I have a fair amount of sympathy for the kids, even as I mock them. But I certainly believe, or I hope that the far left administration of for instance, Sacramento State is take is keeping a close eye on who is in that encampment, because if you don't NFP this in the butt, you're gonna face the same problem U see LA did, because the pros are gonna come down for Portland and Seattle, come up from LA or over from Chicago or whatever, or set up camp, and then the pooh will indeed contact the ventilation equipment.
Three and a half months to the Democratic Convention. Do you think this will still be a hot enough story then or it could be over? I suppose there are a lot of the fire.
Gone out of it. That's a tough one to call.
I mean, if the convention're going on for quite a few months now, if the conventional was in two weeks, I'd think, holy crap is going to be.
Lit.
They better bring in the National Guard already. But three and a half months from now, I don't know.
You know, Yeah, it's tough to say. It's kind of a coin flip just because of the time span. And I've also been noodling through just on and off. All Right, your neo Marxists who want the downfall of Western civilization and build a communist utopia, because that's what all of this is about, is well put, I'm telling you put.
A pin in that. I've got a question about that. But back to what you were saying.
Okay, well, I was going to say, what would best serve them at the convention? Do they just I mean their number one goal is violent in disarray to bring down the system. Or do they want to maybe keep it quiet and let Biden get the nomination and win the election because in general the atmosphere is better for them under Democrats. I don't know. I don't know what they're thinking is on.
That I said, put a pin in that, dripping with irony. I'm not actually the sort of person that says that sort of thing.
So you've just circled back to putting a pin in it?
What was it when I heard the other day? I heard a new good one. I want to use business speak, it'll pop into my head. But what is it about Marxism that lives on as an active ideology that people believe in enough they're willing to.
Physically fight for it.
What is specifically about Marxism that is like them, most failed ideologies die out because there's just not enough adherence. I mean, because well it's been tried and it doesn't work, and it turns out that sounds good, but it turns out, how what is special about Marxism and that it just you can't snuff it out?
Well, I would say that the one hundred million people who died from it in the twentieth century would say it doesn't work. Is a bit of an understatement, right, Yeah. I think it's got an appeal, especially to young people. It's about fairness and equality and lifting up the weak. And you know, kids, God bless them, the vast majority, unless they have psychopathic tendencies, they don't like bullying, to see bullying, they don't want to see a little animal hurt. They're they're they're kind, they have beautiful spirits, and they're sold on the idea that this this political system ensures everybody's equal and fair and nobody's hurt or left behind. And and you've got to be just naive as hell to fall for it. But it has an appeal, It clearly does.
Maybe the most brilliant, evil but brilliant thing Marks came up with was fashioning an ideology that would continue to have appeal in the face of failure after failure after failure. It's just it's something, I.
Mean, and in the face of the de mind boggling success of free markets and free people that have read Pinker's Enlightenment. Now it's it's wonderful, but I mean lifting billions of people out of poverty, curing dread diseases, reducing infant mortality by miraculous levels wherever the free market has gone, and free people, freeing people from the chains of oppression. The success of representative government and free markets is it's astonishing, it's awe inspiring. Yet they deny it to little.
Kids, and it's got to have Marxism has got to have more of an appeal with our soft children now. And they again, they didn't raise themselves, they didn't come out of the wombsoft.
We've taught them this.
But if you if you teach kids to be scared of everything in the world is scary, you know, harder your folk are willing to go out into the world and take their chances and think, you know, I can make it.
I don't know if everybody's gonna make it, but I'm gonna make it.
Well, if you're kind of taught the world is scary and it's going to be hard and all this, well, you're much more likely to want to latch onto Marxism, where you're in theory taken care of.
Well, that's a good point, because your play never consisted of going out and exploring, making mistakes, learning from them, and managing your own fear and becoming ultimately successful. That was our play in the way that you know lion cubs play chasing each other and jumping on each other. They're learning survival skills. We've denied our children the opportunity to learn their survival skills.
It's heartbreaking.
Children's soccer is like the introduction to Marxism. We're not gonna keep score. Everybody's gonna be equal, and at the end, everybody's gonna get a juice box. It's just gonna be fantastic. That's what we pitched. Is like an entire ideology. It's gonna be fair, everything's going everybody's gonna be happy. You'll get a juice box from some unknown thing, like you know, the man just hands down stuff.
And there will be no messy, uncomfortable freedom. It will all be managed by the adults. It will be centralized planning. I think we've nailed it.
We've absolutely nailed children's soccer. That's what sir ruined the world. No, that's not the way I had to phrase it. That's what I was trying to say. More on the way State Armstrong, I'm so going to pass along is something I learned.
Maybe you already knew, but I didn't know it. So I needed a lawyer for a specific task. And I won't say that what that, because that wouldn't be fair. But he's suing me for defamation. I'm taking it personally. I think he harmed my reputation, which is not easy to do. No, I needed a lawyer for a specific task, and so I turned to our friend Craig, the healthcare lawyer, and ask him does he know anybody who does this sort of thing? He shoots me back some examples from all over the state of California, which hadn't occurred to me, because every time I've needed a lawyer for anything, you had to meet him in person. And I said, I can have them do this five hundred miles away from where I am without ever meeting them. Percy said, yeah, since COVID, yes, he said before COVID no. So now, if you need a lawyer, don't just think your town or even your area. Wherever, and depending on what the law is a mine to be your state.
I don't. I don't know if most people know that.
So it's similar to therapists, which, for better or worse, opened up the whole world of you don't need to find a therapist in your town that's got an opening Tuesday at three.
Find a therapist any we're in the country that's.
Gotten opening to Tuesday at three, because most of them will do zoom stuff. And now lawyers, Yeah, so I was on I did a zoom with a lawyer yesterday that Craig said. He said, I've done business with so many lawyers and all kinds of different things I've never met in person. So that's that's the thing now, and that's everybody should know that. And it really opens up. And I would assume that's gonna benefit good lawyers and hurt bad lawyers, and that I don't have to choose from the four people in my town who do this sort of legal work.
Now I can go anywhere. Yeah.
Number one, I'm really concerned about my kid who's heading off to law school.
But A.
Yeah, yeah, well that's good and appropriate.
It was fantastic for me.
I got a great firm that specializes in exactly what I need and there was nobody around me that did that work.
Right, So there, and I'm sure they are. They're like to do whatever they need to do, wherever they need to do it. Yeah, I'm reminded. And this is kind of a straight thought, but similar that it was a number of years ago the same Craig. We were talking about doing a new logo and for merch and the rest of it, and he said, go online. There are people all over the world, including third world countries, who will submit their designs and then you just hire one. And I think at the time it was two hundred and fifty bucks to do a complete logo package, which was you know, a tenth of what maybe the fiftieth of what it would cost you if you hired a graphic design firm. With all due sympathy to graphic designers and.
Commercial artists, learned that.
Now seems ridiculous and overpriced because I'll just get on chat GPT and say, let's see, I wanted to be armstrong and get any of the letters A and G, incorporate some sort of radio theme and give me twenty five.
Choices.
No, make it more patriotic looking back to take me ten minutes max.
Back to the lawyer thing, Uh, my lawyer, back to the lawyer thing. That now it's been opened up to you know, any lawyer you can get on the phone or on the zoom. It's interesting the things that happened because of the pandemic, which I wish would have never happened. But how long would it ever taken us to get here, or would we have ever gotten here if we hadn't been forced to by the pandemic? That now you can get a therapist anywhere that fits your schedule, in the kind of person you need, and do it on zoom or a lawyer.
I don't know.
Would we've ever gotten there if we weren't forced I think so. I think it turbo charged it. But yeah, it just makes too much sense.
Well, it made sense before twenty nineteen that I don't need to meet the lawyer in perpect person, But what didn't work that way? You had to meet him in person.
Yeah, that's why I'm saying it turbo charged it because in the past, saying no, we don't have to meet, let's just have a quick video conversation seemed almost like you're not important enough to me, but we all got over that.
It got us over some sort of hump, right, or when would we have started to ordering food from door dash? I don't know anyway, the upside of a pandemic on the Armstrong end Getty.
Show, Armstrong and Getty.
Trump.
You know there's a Republican convention, a Democratic convention. Well, your other smaller parties have their conventions too. You just're like online and there's six people there. But the Libertarian convention, Trump is going to speak there. Footnote footnote. Trump is not a libertarian, but he is going to speak at the Libertarian National Convention.
So there you go in the.
World of your hair being on fire because Trumps thought such a threat to a democracy he didn't interview with Time magazine the other day. That's getting a tremendous amount of attention because he said a lot of things about a lot of things. And the biggest headline, I guess from the like to be scared all the time media is Trump saying he won't accept the results if he doesn't think it's a fair election, which I don't think it does him any good to say. I wish he wouldn't say it, but nobody ever nails down Hillary Clinton on not accepting the results, or Stacy Abrams and Georgia or lots of other Democrats, Al Gore or lots of different people. I realized they didn't have an insurrection followed their statements, but they denied it was a fair election all the time.
Anyway, Yeah, you.
Know, Andy McCarthy was writing the other day about the fact that Hillary Clinton in her election denial and fixing and fraud, which is what Trump has ultimately charged with in the idiotic Alvin Bragg case. She even did the same thing in the same way. She covered up political expenditures as legal fees in seeking out the whole Steele dossier, which they financed. They hid those fees to that law firm, called them legal fees. She did precisely what Trump is accused of doing, and nobody bat.
It an I.
So the Time magazine cover story with a picture Trump on the front is if he wins, offering a glimpse at Trump's policy priorities for his second term. One lesson Trump seems to have taken away from his first term personnel is policy quoting. The advantage I have now is I know everybody, I know the good, the bad, the stupid, the smart. So I assume he's going to try to avoid having the stupid on there. But of issues that I'm interested in that they got into is how he's going to handle immigration, and Trump is signaling that he wants to boot out a whole bunch of immigrants. He's reportedly eyeing a mass deportation program inspired by Dwight Eisenhower's fifty four deportation campaign, reinstating the title forty two authority, allowing border agents to port migrant before they can apply for asylum. In the time interview, Trump didn't seem to know the details of enforcing the mass deportation, but indicated he'd try to use whatever mechanisms he could, including local law enforcement and the National Guard, quoting Trump, I can see myself using the National Guard, and if necessary, I'd have to go a step further. Without specifying what that step further would be than the National Guard, I guess the Marine Corps. I don't know, some teams delicious with that. Yeah, we have to do whatever we have to do to stop the problem we have. Trump also suggested he could use the National Guard to tackle issues beyond immigration, including crime. In November, he floated sending in troops to fight crime in democratic cities like New York and Chicago, quoting Trump again, and one of the other things I'll do, because you're supposed to not be involved in that, you just have to be asked by the governor or mayor to come in the next time. I'm not waiting. In other words, he'd send in the National Guard, whether he was asked or not. Here's the interesting thing about it. He may have some legal backing to do it, writes the Dispatch. The Insurrection Insurrection Act as it's currently written, as a blank check for any president to bring the military into the domestic realm, says Jack Goldsmith, Harvard law professor and former Assistant Attorney General in the Bush administration. It is extremely vague triggers for its use. It has no time limit on its use. So Trump might be able to actually do this. It's never been nailed down. There has been a push among legal scholars to reform the Insurrection Insurrection Act and more narrowly define the circumstances in which a president can invoke its authority and send in a national guard for crime or illegal immigration or whatever. But that hasn't happened yet. And it's pretty broad, and again it's never been nailed down, so who knows.
Maybe he can do it. Yeah.
Yeah, A lot of the stuff that I've read he said appeals to me. Some of it horrifies me. My concern about Trump is that he needs saying advisors to reign in the worst of his impulses, and I'm just not sure what his cabinet's going to look like. Who is advisors will be? Is a national security advisor word?
So let's get down to brass text. Do you have any concern? I feel stupid asking this question. That's how little concern I have. Do you have any concern he becomes a dictator and we never have another election again, which is stated every day on CNN and MSNBC in the Washington Post.
No, I'm completely unconcerned about that prospect, and.
Not because well, one, I don't think he would try to do that, but two, even if he did, I don't believe our system would allow that to happen. Like I'm concern our system wouldn't allow that to happen, and there aren't enough people at high positions that would go along with it.
Oh yeah, I'm completely convinced of that.
Completely.
My only concern is that the stopping of and this is all you know, imaginary or it's well, it's not imaginary exactly, because it is on the realm of possibility, certainly, but that if he were to go way over and the Democrats didn't like Nancy Pelosi did write the articles of impeachment in a way that the Republicans couldn't possibly vote for. If they wrote very sane, very sober, very short articles of impeachment, he was removed, for instance, I would be very concerned about what happened after that. I think there could be great anger in violence, So that worries me the whole. He'll cancel the election and become a dictator for life. Please stop it, Chicken, little disguisn't falling.
We have a close election.
There's going to be anger and violence no matter who's declared the winner, which is horrible, but I think that's just a fact.
Now.
Oh I took in a great legal podcast yesterday about the Supreme Court's ruling on immunity and how that's likely to lead to some serious mayhem almost regardless of how it go or who wins. If the Supreme Court does as they're indicating narrowed the immunity somewhat and come up with some places where you you know, you're not safe from prosecution, or at least you could try it out there. If if Biden gets re elected, you got you know, various legal people in Texas or wherever who are going to go after him over immigration or a bunch of different things that they think they can claim was a crime. And then obviously if Trump wins an attempt to do the same sort of thing.
Yeah, my only equival is that there isn't any immunity.
It wouldn't be narrowed.
It just it doesn't exist. And I'm flipping through Tim Sanderfer's Twitter account. I thought it was Tim. I read somebody point out the other day.
There's a community. There isn't any immunity from what there's lots of immunity as a president.
Not for former presidents. I'm sorry, I should have clarified that you can, you can be sued, you can be prosecuted. There's there's nothing thing in the statutes or in the constitution that says the president can't be prosecuted for.
An official presidential act.
I can't remember exactly how it's worded, but what their point was is there's nothing in the Constitution about that.
And.
Because we've never needed it before, because nobody ever pushed it that way as part of what they're talking about in this legal podcast, which I thought was so interesting and it reminded me of lots of other.
Areas of life. For instance, just the idea of, uh.
You know how somebody's gonna get sued because the kid's over at your house on their skateboard and they fall on your driveway and get hurt and then you're going to get sued for it. Didn't used to happen because we didn't have any rules around it in the past, because we didn't need them for some reason.
We just didn't need them. We had a way of.
Working things out in the past that we don't now, and everything becomes legalistic, and then you got to nail down the very specifics on every single thing because everybody sues everybody. And that's where we're going with the presidency. Now they're gonna have to nail down every little, tiny, specific instance because people are going to start trying to push this.
Nobody was pushing it in the past.
Using the example these lawyers were of clearly beyond a doubt.
No, FDR died, so you know you can't prosecute a dead guy.
But hashtag Clinton body count gone.
Clearly beyond a doubt.
FDR did something illegal when he locked up US citizens who.
Are of Japanese heritage, right beyond a doubt. Illegal. But we just didn't do that sort of thing back then.
Yeah, I think that point is astute and extremely depressing. I'm excited about in the next day or two bringing to you a new strategy for dealing with bums and junkies in junkie camps that are ruining so many towns, particularly in Blue States. Coincidence, no ah, But it lies on suing the municipalities. So, hey, excuse me. There's fifteen junkies shooting up unlicensed dogs, crapping on the sidewalk, fornicating in public. Two of them assaulted me. Can you come take care of it?
No?
No, we really can't.
Because of a couple there's court decisions and we're not sure interactivist and blah blah blah, and the only way to restore sanity is to sue people.
Right. It was just so depressed.
It was really scratching me where I itch to hear a couple of lawyers say, if you put everything in the realm of the law, it gets really complicated and miserable really fast.
Because that's what I feel about modern society.
Just the you know, kids can't have a recess today because it rained yesterday and the grass might be wet. If the grass might be wet, somebody could sue, so the insurance blah blah blah. Just if everything gets into the realm of the law, life is difficult. And it didn't used to every aspect of everything, didn't, you know, firing somebody didn't used to be so incredibly complicated. But once you start nailing things down legally, you got to get very very very very specific about all the different contingent problems that can occur or they come up one at a time.
And that's how the country died. Kids now go to bed is lt.
And we're going to start now doing that with presidents, which I think is guaranteed.
I don't think there's a chance we don't.
You know.
I feel like and not to equate my beloved republic with a sports team, but I'm about to. It's as if the team has become so dysfunctional. Then the quarterback announces, we don't have to practice, we're too good, and when the inevitable happens, it's going to be tough not to say, well, of course it did. Of course you lost the attitude like that. With practices like you're doing it, you can't possibly continue winning.
But I I'm at a.
Loss for how to fix it exactly since the lawyers run the place.
There weren't very, very very specific laws about drug addicts sleeping on the street before, but it got dealt with, or kids who were completely out of control in school, but it got dealt with. All kinds of things got dealt with somehow before it made everything a legal issue.
I don't know. I don't see how you ever get back to that. Very frustrating again, I'm at a loss.
I don't know.
I suppose the best you can do is live a happy life in that world and a profitable life if you can. And yeah, this is incredibly depressing.
You've depressed me.
A musician you've probably heard but might not be able to name, died yesterday. We'll play a little hit of his music and others other stuff on the way. We'll finish strong. Stay here, This is a great Dwayne Eddie who died yesterday. He had a whole bunch of songs in the fifties that sounded more or less like this, but a very cool sound. No words, just him making his guitar sound.
Did he do the Monsters thing? I don't know. If he didn't, it was somebody attempting to sound like him. He didn't.
I mean, he kind of invented this sound, and he did the Peter Gunn theme, which is pretty well known.
But I was just looking at a picture him. I love this sex too. There's something almost obscene about that tone. It's a body well, yeah, that's exactly.
That's why parents were worried I was going to cause everybody to have promiscuous sex because these songs just kind of do that. Two things about Dwayn Eddie or just people in general. You're always talking about when anybody dies, they should show a picture of them when they were at the height of their life, and not them as an old man. I saw pictures of Dwayne Eddie as an eighty six year old yesterday. I saw a picture of him in like nineteen fifty five, surrounded by a bunch of hot chicks, that's a guy who had a good life going right there, and very cool looking. Dude looked like James Dean. Also, he said, I'm not a very good guitar player, he said, I just came up with this sound and you know, played that stuff. He said, I've never been very good. I thought that was interesting. And also how he lived off the royalties of those songs, lived a pretty good life the rest of his life, because that's the way the music bizines was back then. Man, you come up with a song like that, now you may be lucky if you make ten bucks.
You know, speaking as a bad guitar player, it's amazing the number of really iconic riffs that almost anybody could play right.
It's those are.
The riffs you remember and you can sing to, which I think tells you something you probably ought to know about music if you're a budding musician.
I'm reminded of the.
Promise made to the members of the band when they first backed Ronnie Hawkins way.
Back in the day. We're getting way back any music history.
You're not gonna make much money, but you're gonna get more tail than Sinatra. That was not the word that Ronnie Hawkins used to. But yes, that conveys it closely enough, which reminds me in a very odd way, which I'll get to in a second. I won a bochie tournament last night. I was at a large gathering of friends and compatriots.
You're gonna have to tell me what that is.
Bachie is where you got like a long rectangular court and you've got balls that you roll at each other and stuff like that. But my partner, who I knew a little bit, I was paired with him. He was a retired obg y N. And I tell you who doesn't have like a feeling about the mystique of lady parts. It's retired O bg y N. Can I go into the office geez, I don't know. So I don't think it would.
All the great joys of life.
We really don't have time to discuss.
Here's your host for final thoughts, Joe Getty.
Let's get a final thought from everybody on the crew to wrap things up from for the day. There is our technical director, Michaelangelo.
Michael, Yeah.
My message is for these college kids, quit the protesting.
Do something fun like a potato sack race or some horseshoes.
Do I sound like an old man, Katie Green or steamed not at all our steam us woman has a final thought, Katie, I will.
Be having something for lunch today that you might ew at, but it is a grilled cheese and apple sauce.
That combination is awesome. Don't knock it until you try it.
I have not had that that It sounds up my alley. What keeps the apple sauce from just running out the sides? Well, no you don't.
You dip it in the apple. Oh okay, I see gotcha. Throw a little bacon on that grilled cheese and we got a deal. Uh Jack.
A final thought, Uh yeah, I've got one, and it disappeared from my head.
My final thought is I'm getting one older. Why don't I do mine?
I'm gonna sede my time to this poetic young woman at the University of Washington. Hey, baby, when you're done screaming yourself blue in the face, you want to go out sometimes?
Yeah? Did anybody walk up toward point and say would you like to get coffee? Sometime?
You just I found your personality magnetic, armstrong and giddy. Wrapping up another grueling four hour workday.
Spit and not flying out of our mouth.
So many people who thinks so a little time go to Armstrong and Giddy dot com for the hotlings, for the t shirts, for the drop us A note mail back at Armstrong in Giddy dot com voice would cut glass.
God bless America. I'm strong and Getty.
Everything everything about this is lawless who we've all disavowed.
But that's all right, you little twenty six year old. Uh shame. This has to stop and it has to stomp. Like the day before yesterday, the vibes in here are amazing. Today. I've been thinking that we really all need a tremendous hug. Are you sure of that? Dude? Dude? Thank you all very much, Armstrong and Getty