Episode Transcript
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0:00
I have a personal question for you guys today.
0:02
Do you take pills? Do
0:04
you pop pills? I 90, just any of them 90? Do
0:06
you take don't know, Xanax when you're feeling a
0:08
little anxious? Do you pop and not often, but
0:10
just when you're feeling super anxious, you take a
0:12
Xanax. Or do you
0:14
take Adderall? Are you one of those people that says,
0:16
I need to be motivated today. I have a lot to do,
0:19
so I'm gonna take an Adderall, but I want to talk
0:21
about that. I want to have an open conversation about
0:23
that. Plus, later on in
0:25
the show, 90, of course, are gonna discuss the State of
0:27
the Union. The only thing that matters from State of
0:29
the Union, which is certainly not anything Biden
0:31
said. But the
0:33
Mitt Romney and George Santos SmackDown.
0:36
Yeah. Let's talk about that. I thought that was amazing.
0:38
All that and more today coming up on Ken Owens.
0:52
I know some of you guys have to be immediately uncomfortable
0:54
me asking that question. Like, oh, gosh, can't have to love
0:56
you, but I don't wanna talk about the fact that I maybe
0:59
popped some Xanax or Adderall
1:01
and I know I shouldn't, but I do it because
1:04
people are ashamed of
1:06
taking pills. And why is that Is there
1:08
something deep down that tells you that maybe
1:10
it's wrong? Well, I wanna share this personal
1:12
story. shared it before, but it's important enough
1:14
that I put it in a monologue and that
1:16
you share it with other 90. And I want know
1:18
this is not the judgment zone whatsoever.
1:20
In fact, I want this to be the opposite of the judgment
1:23
zone zone. Because there's so much that I've learned
1:25
and I I know that this is one of the most critical
1:28
moments of my life, which took
1:30
place, which was when I was at
1:32
University of Rhode Island, I had a terrible
1:34
breakup with my first boyfriend,
1:37
my first real boyfriend, you know. And I was
1:39
crying my eyes out. I mean, I was shrieking
1:41
like an injured animal. I
1:44
was so impamed
1:46
by the idea that we were breaking up.
1:48
That remember the RA checking on me and asking
1:50
if I was okay. And
1:52
that my dad called 90, he had never heard me cry
1:54
like that. It was so guttural that he
1:57
drove the two and a half hours up to
1:59
pick me up from school and to bring me home.
2:01
And when I was home that weekend, he scheduled an
2:03
appointment for me to see his doctor. And
2:07
I talked to his doctor and told
2:09
him how sad I was. I 90, my boyfriend
2:11
broke it up and he prescribes me
2:13
with clonipins. Right?
2:16
Which is such a weird thing looking
2:18
back on it. I was eighteen years old, fresh
2:20
faced, crying over boyfriend, driving appointments.
2:22
Anyways, I thought it was, like, cool.
2:25
I was like, great. I have a prescription that the shift is
2:27
going to make me feel better. And my dad dropped
2:29
me back off at school, Sunday 90. And
2:32
I remember this girl 90. I will
2:34
never forget Zoe and the conversation that
2:36
we had that changed my life. I think about this all
2:38
the time. I said, hey, look, Zoe.
2:40
One of my friends, I have 90 this
2:42
prescription is gonna help me and it's gonna
2:44
keep me calm because like I'm so
2:46
anxious about this breakup. And
2:49
she said, okay. She's like, just out
2:51
of curiosity, you know, why
2:54
are you taking these pills? And I said because I'm tremendously
2:56
sad. And I can't stop crying.
2:58
I cannot stop crying over
3:01
so and so. And she said, okay.
3:03
And why are you crying so
3:05
much? And I said because he and
3:08
I just broke up, obviously. I'm sad
3:10
because he and I just broke up. And
3:12
she said just food for thought, but I have this opinion
3:15
that if you can answer the question why,
3:18
why you're sad, then that's just a human
3:21
emotion. Right? And she said, if you told me that, like, for
3:23
no reason, you're walking down the street and sunning outside
3:25
and, you know, no worry. You just start crying
3:28
90. That I would say you have a chemical
3:30
imbalance and you might need some pills or
3:32
some medication. But if you can answer the question why you're
3:34
sad, it's just a human emotion. You're gonna have to want deal
3:36
with that human emotion. The pill is not
3:38
going to make that human emotion go away, even
3:40
if it just numbs it temporarily. And I
3:43
threw out all of the pills that
3:45
night. Just literally thought that
3:47
that made so much sense to throw out all the pills and
3:49
the conversation never left 90. It's carried me through my
3:51
life. When I have an emotion, if I can answer the question,
3:53
why there's something wrong with me? And I'm so
3:55
grateful that this god
3:57
moment happened in my dorm and freshman
3:59
year because now I just think
4:01
about the many times that doctors
4:04
try to give me pills. Just try to give
4:06
us pills for anything, you know, any emotion,
4:08
oh, too happy here's a pill, too sad, here's a pill,
4:10
feeling little anxious. Yeah, I'm feeling little anxious
4:12
because I'm about to give birth. I don't know anything about
4:14
Here's a bill. It might calm me down. Don't worry. It's safe
4:16
if you're pregnant. And you just go I say, doctor,
4:18
you don't need a pill. I I'm telling you why
4:20
I have this human emotion. Human emotions are human
4:22
emotions. They're human. They're normal. And
4:25
I have this on my mind because
4:27
of this horrific story that is in the press regarding
4:29
postpartum depression, and I'm sure that you guys are
4:32
following it. Out of Massachusetts, a
4:34
young woman named 90 Clancy.
4:36
She's now being charged with three counts of premeditated
4:39
murder after giving birth, eight
4:41
months after giving birth. 90 strangled
4:43
her toddlers, five and three years old,
4:45
and then she slit her wrists and
4:47
jumped out of a window all
4:50
of the children died and she
4:52
somehow miraculously survived
4:54
this and she is in the hospital. As
4:57
she is being tried, she is now parabolic,
5:00
horrific case. As soon
5:02
as I sit the news, I just felt so
5:05
tremendously 90, and then I had this thought.
5:08
I I thought to myself what pills was she
5:10
90? Not how
5:12
depressed was she, but what pills was she on was
5:14
my thought process because I have this
5:16
theory that these
5:18
antipsychotics 90 medications for
5:20
anxiety even if they
5:23
temporarily make it better. Whenever I
5:25
see somebody that is long term on this medicine,
5:27
it is always compounded the
5:29
issue that they began with. Right? So if
5:31
they had anxiety to start and they took the pill
5:33
and it calmed them down and I know plenty of these girls
5:35
in front of these girls that pop us action and they feel
5:37
anxiety, The next few times they feel
5:40
anxiety, they assume something's wrong with them and they need more
5:42
and more of that pill to quiet the 90.
5:44
And that feeling is just so foreign to them that
5:46
they really overreacts. When they're feeling
5:49
anxious. I've I've never seen pills
5:51
long term be good. Right?
5:53
Be good for the person. And I'm talking
5:55
about 90 Right? To Brittany Spears, oh my god.
5:57
She shaved her head. That was like so crazy.
5:59
You're all remember that moment. She was having this breakdown
6:02
because the press was following her non and they would not
6:04
leave her alone as by her begging to be left alone.
6:06
And so what do they do? They put her on psychotic,
6:09
antipsychotics for years. Does 90 Spears
6:11
seem better to you? Was
6:13
she looking better to you as the years went
6:15
on? No. Something happens
6:18
when you're put on this stuff long term and I kept that
6:20
thought to myself. And then,
6:22
actually, this has been launched as
6:24
her defense that she was on a cocktail
6:27
of medication that actually drove her into
6:29
a psychosis. Do you doubt that 90? I don't
6:31
doubt that storyline whatsoever. I'm gonna read you
6:33
some of the drugs that she was on. Brace
6:36
yourself because there's a lot of them. Doctors
6:38
had her on 90. Ambient.
6:40
Okay. So just so we're clear, we know that just
6:42
being on ambient. There are people that have been on it
6:45
and don't remember what they did. They got up, drove
6:47
their car, till someone come back and then
6:49
they go back to you. They don't remember it. They just go,
6:51
complete ambient psychosis. Right?
6:54
People that she they she was also
6:56
part of me on Klonopin's. She
6:58
was also on Valium. She
7:00
was also on Prozac. She was
7:02
also on something called Lemiktol.
7:05
She was also on Addivind. 90 was
7:08
also on Rameron. She was also
7:10
on Syoquel, and she was also
7:12
on Trazzadone. Does that
7:14
seem normal to you? Does
7:17
that at all seem like that would that that
7:19
person would be a well balanced individual? Do you
7:21
not believe that the doctors harmed her in
7:23
this circumstance by putting her on all the psychotic
7:25
medication? And why did they put her on it?
7:27
Let's talk about that diagnosis of postpartum
7:29
depression. Because I thought about it a lot, and
7:31
think it's ridiculous to make women think that there's
7:33
something wrong with them. Because
7:36
they feel sad and they feel
7:38
overwhelmed. Right? Every
7:40
woman believes that they're suffering from postpartum fashion
7:42
for things that are completely understandable. Right?
7:45
My sister, you know, doctor thinks I
7:47
have postpartum depression because she went
7:49
through a very traumatic birth. Right?
7:52
And then after having this traumatic
7:54
birth and being rushed in for an emergency
7:56
90 section, she's she's given
7:58
a baby. She can't breastfeed the baby. She's going through
8:00
pain. Why are we pretending there's
8:03
something wrong? If there's a diagnosis that's
8:05
happening to her because she's healing and
8:07
she's going through all of these emotions. Right?
8:10
What do you expect happens when women
8:12
give birth? And then they cannot
8:14
sleep. Doctors are being told wake up that baby
8:17
every three hours to breastfeed it. Oh,
8:20
breast is best. Yeah. You're not breastfeeding.
8:23
We really recommend it. Breast is best.
8:26
So your rest is besting
8:28
it. You're not sleeping. You're learning.
8:31
You you got a huge learning curve.
8:34
You've got raw nipples from 90.
8:36
And on top of that, maybe you've got other kids
8:39
that you have to keep up with that are
8:41
screaming. You know what they what
8:43
they do to prisoners on a Guantanamo Bay,
8:45
they deprive them of sleep and they play
8:47
loud music in their ears. Yeah,
8:49
noise and a lack of sleep because they know
8:51
that it drives people into
8:54
a psychosis. Right? And
8:56
mothers are supposed to deal with this and be told
8:58
that, like, if you aren't done with this so well
9:01
that there's something wrong with you, not
9:04
hey, let's normalize moms needing
9:06
to take a break. Let's normalize moms realizing
9:08
when they're reaching their limit and they can't
9:10
breastfeed. Right? When they say, you know, actually, I have so much
9:12
going on. I can't 90. And
9:15
let's normalize the conversation realizing
9:17
that every single child is different.
9:20
Every child is different. I have been blessed this time with
9:22
my second child. 90 has slept with the night at this
9:24
moment, we brought her home, but I've also been brought Linden
9:26
Bliss with my ability to not listen
9:29
to doctors. Right? To understand that
9:31
what they give you sometimes is absolute nonsense.
9:34
Right? Wait. You can repeat 90 three hours. I did that with my
9:36
first child, it drove me crazy. I'm second child.
9:38
I said, nope, baby sleeping. I'm not waking up sleeping
9:40
baby. My breasts were regulated in the baby. And
9:42
sure enough, it did. It did.
9:45
Didn't listen to any of this, the science
9:47
of what they decide is best for 90, my child.
9:49
I know what's best. I know what I have and what's
9:51
best is that I'm saying? My mother used
9:53
to tell me story about four children 90 one
9:55
of I'm one of four. My mom used to tell me story
9:58
about how with my younger sister,
10:00
she my son actually did not stop
10:02
crying. It was one of those children, maybe she was
10:04
colicky, and she just screamed at the top
10:06
of her lungs. That that will drive I mean, I have
10:08
you ever been to my child a 90, an infant that screams
10:11
nonstop? It will drive any person
10:13
into a crazy moment. My mother said that she
10:15
lives the first hour, she literally had to just hand
10:18
my sister
10:19
to her sister, my aunt, and
10:21
just take a day.
10:23
And 90 said it was a I had to 90, I literally
10:25
needed to 90, you know, she didn't need she didn't need
10:27
a cocktail of 90 clonipinvalium, Prozac,
10:29
adamant, Ramon, and Seroquel. She
10:32
she needed sleep. She had separation
10:34
from her baby for the health for her personal
10:37
health. She just needed a little bit of separation.
10:40
And now all of a sudden, we are over
10:43
90 people with forms of depression and in fact,
10:45
giving them further bouts of depression in
10:47
my view by overprescribing
10:49
them on all of these drugs. Now, I'm not saying that
10:51
there are some circumstances where something
10:54
goes wrong. And for
10:56
whatever reason, even if they're
10:58
well slept. And
11:00
they have to nannies that
11:02
are taking care of the kids, that there are still some
11:04
moms that may for whatever
11:06
reason that Barry Dark talks about their and in those
11:09
scenarios, they do need to seek help, but
11:11
I believe that we are overdiagnosing
11:14
people. I believe that those are the rare circumstance
11:16
And in the majority of circumstances, we're just over diagnosing
11:18
women altogether with things that are understandable,
11:21
understandable human emotions. And it goes
11:23
on and on and on by the way. For
11:26
example, a girlfriend of mine hosted her name
11:28
is Corinne Tatum. She's married to Brandon
11:30
Tatum, who is a great friend of mine.
11:33
And he has his own radio show
11:35
and Hurricane Adam posted that she was
11:37
looking for a nanny to come help. And
11:40
in response to her posting, those people were
11:42
upset that she was asking for Nannie, because
11:44
Korentatum now has the privilege of
11:46
being stay at home mom. You know, she
11:48
had a C section. She had high risk
11:51
birth. 90 she now has a privilege of being a stay at home
11:53
mom and people just can't even imagine
11:55
why she would need a nanny. And here's
11:57
what Carintano wrote. Because I
11:59
think it's so powerful. 90 wrote in response
12:02
to the comments. It's comments
12:04
like you don't need a nanny. Why
12:06
women are afraid to ask for help 90 in
12:08
the pits of despair and postpartum depression
12:10
and postpartum psychosis and hurt themselves
12:13
and their babies. Making women
12:15
who need a mental health minute every
12:17
few days 90 like they're lacking something.
12:19
Stop telling women how to mother. I
12:21
will block anyone and everyone who
12:23
tells me that I don't need help. I think
12:25
that is a tremendously courageous
12:28
statement that she just put that out there because how
12:30
dare you? How dare you assume that because she just
12:32
stayed at home mom, that means that she has to spend
12:34
every single waking second with
12:36
her child or else she's a bad mother. Maybe
12:39
she wants to go out and get her hair blown out. Maybe
12:41
she wants to go get a manicure. Maybe she wants
12:43
to just go meet up with friends and not
12:45
have a toddler on her arms. Maybe she wants
12:47
to feel like herself again. I always
12:50
say, like, I feel that my mental
12:52
health explodes. I'm so happy when breastfeeding
12:54
is over. Because I just get to have
12:56
a moment. My body feels like it's mine
12:58
again. How do you share a mother for feeling that
13:00
way? Oh, no. Unless 90 wanna breast
13:03
90 until the toddler's four, there's
13:05
something wrong with you. Maybe you need pills.
13:08
Now, we're human beings. Women
13:10
are human 90, and I am so disgusted
13:13
by the prosecutors
13:16
who in the case of 90 Clancy, I can't even
13:18
imagine how broken this woman was.
13:20
I can't even imagine looking at the
13:22
the list of pills that doctors prescribed
13:25
her. I can't even imagine what her
13:27
mental state was. To have done this
13:29
to children who she obviously loved.
13:32
Of course, she loved these children. Right?
13:35
She had three children who she loved, who
13:37
she cared. Who she grew and who
13:39
she burned and who she took care
13:41
of. And for her to do this, of
13:43
course, she was not in the right middle state, but the process secutors
13:46
are arguing in a merciless in a merciless
13:48
campaign that it is in fact merciless
13:51
that she was well aware of what she was doing and
13:53
that she planned it out.
13:55
Just
13:55
having no understanding, no understanding
13:58
for this woman. I am
14:00
I am pleased to see that her husband
14:02
has forgiven her and that
14:05
more men and more women are speaking out
14:07
talking about these circumstances that
14:09
she was in. It's it's a horrible 90. Of course, Of
14:11
course, there has to be consequences for what
14:13
took place. But to think that
14:15
a that she wanted to
14:17
kill her three children, and kill herself
14:20
and jump out of
14:22
the house to jump out of
14:24
a window because everything
14:26
was actually perfectly and the drugs
14:28
were working, I think
14:31
that's evil. And I think we need to
14:33
all stop being so evil when
14:35
it comes to mothers and when it comes parenting.
14:37
And if there's any takeaway from
14:39
this, I I hope that if you're listening to this that
14:41
you understand that there's nothing wrong with
14:44
you for feeling a
14:46
human emotion. If you have human
14:48
emotion and you need time and you
14:50
need space to yourself to think through it,
14:52
90 that should be your first instinct
14:55
before you turn to doctors whose
14:57
only jobs is to look at you as
14:59
a product and money to be made. That's
15:02
all I have to say about that. For
15:04
those of you that follow me on Instagram, you know that I am
15:06
up at four thirty AM to work out because I like
15:08
to get a head start on my day and I enjoyed that
15:10
time for myself in the morning before the kids wake
15:12
up. That being said, living a healthy lifestyle
15:14
isn't always 90, especially when you're on enrolled
15:16
as much as I am. I need simple,
15:18
manageable routines to make I'm getting the proper
15:21
nutrition every day, which is why I'm
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16:21
Okay. Now it's time for some topics, digital.
16:31
So the state of the union was last
16:33
night and I was forced to wash it against my
16:35
will because Jeremy Booring had
16:37
one of his razors to my neck. And so we sat
16:39
around during our
16:41
backstage live, and we listened
16:44
to our gaslighter in chief. And there's a lot
16:46
that I could say up to the union, you know, a
16:48
lot of it say about how angry It made me
16:50
There's a lot that we could comment about, don't
16:53
know, Joe Biden's general gate heading
16:55
into there, which lets us know that he is, in fact,
16:57
suffering from some early stage dementia,
17:00
probably not such an early stage if we're being honest.
17:02
We could again talk about that gaslighting, him
17:05
90, and he wants to fight the
17:07
fentanyl crisis as he allows
17:09
fentanyl to pour over our open
17:12
borders and allows millions of illegals
17:14
to come in. Many of them having drugs.
17:16
90 could talk about the strangest portions,
17:18
which I think would be him pretending
17:20
that he's anti big pharma, Is
17:23
this not the exact same guy
17:25
that we had to fight because he
17:27
tried to authorize OSHA
17:30
to mandate the vaccine into
17:32
every single working individual
17:36
arms in America. Remember he did that?
17:38
June for that? No. He doesn't remember either
17:41
90 because of that early or late stage
17:43
event that he's going through. We could talk
17:45
about him pretending that he's sticking into
17:47
China. Yeah. We
17:49
sure showed them by allowing them
17:51
to float a balloon, a
17:54
spy balloon for eight days across
17:57
the entire contiguous United
17:59
States. Nope. Nope. I don't know why that though because I
18:01
feel that's the best moment from a state of the union.
18:04
It's actually this little riff
18:06
raff that went on between senator Mitt
18:08
Romney and George Santos.
18:11
So some reporter had picked up that they had
18:13
shared some words, some lip 90 said I
18:15
think that Mitt Romney told George
18:18
George 90, he shouldn't be 90. And
18:21
that is interesting. And then Mitt Romney
18:23
afterwards, spoke to the press and admitted that
18:25
that he did in fact go up to this
18:27
congressman from New York who has lied about
18:29
everything on his resume and he shared
18:32
some words with him. Here is what Ramy
18:34
had to say.
18:39
Yeah. Why don't you why don't
18:41
you say that again? I didn't
18:43
expect that 90 be standing there trying to
18:45
shake hands with every senator in the president of the
18:47
States. That's Given
18:49
given the fact that he's under ethics investigation, he
18:51
should be sitting in the back road saying quiet instead
18:54
of his
18:56
parading in front of
18:57
the president and and and
18:59
and 90 coming into the room. To be able to
19:01
respond to you. 90 said he said
19:03
he you know, that he embellished his
19:05
record. Look, embellishing his thing you got an
19:07
a when he got an a minus. Lying of what
19:10
is saying you you graduated from a
19:11
college, 90 didn't even attend. And and he
19:13
shouldn't be in Congress. And they're
19:15
gonna go through the process and hopefully get him
19:17
out. And but he shouldn't be there.
19:20
And and if he had any shame
19:21
all. He wouldn't be there. Why didn't you make a point
19:23
to say that though? And he he went I mean, he was kind
19:25
of out of your way to He was standing right there in the
19:27
aisle, shaking hands with 90. Could he respond
19:29
to
19:29
you? He 90 may have.
19:32
didn't hear. I didn't hear you. Yes.
19:38
SO MADE 90 IS IT WRONG
19:40
HERE? YEAH, SHORE GEORGE SANTOS HAS
19:42
BEEN CALLING ABOUT VIRTUALLY EVERYTHING. THE SCHOOLS
19:44
HE ATTENDS, HIS EMPLOYMENT HISTORY, HIS FAMILY
19:46
BACKRAP whether or not he was a drag queen
19:48
in Brazil. This guy's definitely shady
19:51
and it is right that there is an ethics
19:53
probe against him. I think 90, I just
19:56
find it to be hilarious. I just said
19:58
it's amazing that he's made it this
20:00
far. But Mitt Romney
20:02
is also Mitt Romney.
20:05
So this is a weird circumstance of
20:07
pod Kettle Black. 90 shouldn't
20:10
be here, Mitt 90 says, oh,
20:12
these guys are fraud, this guy's lying,
20:14
this guy's raised money on these lies,
20:17
and now he's here at GOGRA is, okay, Mitt
20:19
Romney. Are you kidding me? You're Mitt 90. And
20:21
you raised a lot more money on the basis of your lives.
20:23
You had people all around America actually believing
20:26
that you would be a strong conservative candidate
20:28
for president. And those people gave you
20:31
four hundred and forty nine
20:33
million dollars towards your
20:35
campaign. Only to watch you
20:37
lose and then to turn to a leftist.
20:40
Right? So I'm gonna guess that George Santos votes
20:42
more conservative than you. What's what's worse?
20:44
Lying before or lying after?
20:46
I don't know. I kind of think lying after
20:49
might be worse, having people believe
20:51
in you, invest in you. then everything that
20:53
you do in Congress is just you
20:56
working for the left. They can always count on
20:58
Mitt Romney's vote to left RIGHT, THIS GUY.
21:00
Oh, I LOVE TRUMP ANDDOORS ME AND
21:02
DOORS ME AND THEN AS SOONEST TRUMP ENDORSED
21:04
90 GETS BACK INTO OFFICE. HE HAS EVERYTHING I
21:06
CAN FIGHT TRUMP voting for him to be impeached. I mean,
21:08
just I just literally opposed
21:11
the MAGA agenda for
21:13
four years straight. Why?
21:15
Because he is a fraud. He lies and 90 collects
21:17
money. So in this circumstance, nobody's
21:19
really the hero, least of all,
21:22
Mitt Romney. Anybody else Anybody else wanna
21:24
go up and say something George Santos, I might be able
21:26
to respect it, but not you, Mitt 90. Not
21:29
you. Moving on, this
21:31
is gonna get super interesting. Meghan
21:33
and Harry, as you guys know, they're just looking
21:35
for their privacy. It's all they want is their privacy.
21:37
And this is kind of an interesting,
21:40
I guess, Karmic equation. Because
21:42
90, Samantha Markle, if you don't remember who she is,
21:45
she is Megan Markle's sister, Megan
21:47
Markle, of course, hates her own family plus Terry's
21:49
family. Anybody that might be 90 she hates,
21:52
not because she's a bad person, but because everybody
21:54
is bad to Meghan Markle all the time. She's just a
21:56
permanent victim through life, and she just can't figure
21:58
out why people don't realize. That, you know, she's
22:00
literally Nelson Mandela. And it would be
22:02
nice if people would wreck ignise that she is Nelson
22:05
Mandela and she's also the pope and
22:07
she is also Beyonce and she
22:10
has saved the world. And 90, people don't realize that at
22:12
least of all her sister Manthe Markle who
22:14
is suing her for defamation, claiming
22:17
up a couple lied about her in an Oprah
22:19
interview. Okay? Now, It
22:21
has been proven over and over again that
22:24
from 90 from the Oprah interview
22:26
to the Netflix documentary to
22:28
Harry's wined fast in a book.
22:30
They have just told a lot of lies. A
22:32
lot of lies that are adding up. People are able to
22:34
debunk these lies. But who
22:36
cares because they are collecting
22:39
tens of millions of dollars. So the
22:41
joke's on you except this time Samantha
22:43
Markle actually scored a win.
22:45
THEY TRYED TO ESSENTIALLY GET THIS LAWSUIT
22:49
90 COMING -- WAS BROUGHT IN FLORIDA.
22:51
AND THE FLORIDA FEDERAL COURT WORLD
22:53
WERE NOT going to dismiss
22:55
this lawsuit. Well, let me actually slow
22:58
that down. They basically ruled that
23:00
Harry and Meghan must act 90
23:03
sit through a deposition before
23:05
the court will hear the dismissal.
23:07
So let me explain to you how that might work.
23:10
Because I'm very familiar with the information law.
23:12
Obviously, I just had this lawsuit with Kimberly Klasek.
23:14
So, essentially, I'm a Kimberly Klasek brought her frivolous
23:16
lawsuit against me for twenty six million dollars.
23:18
Obviously, my instinct was to say, this
23:20
is frivolous court, throw this out 90. And
23:23
instead, allow me allow my anti
23:25
slap petition to go through, which essentially says
23:27
I can sue her for bringing about fervous lawsuit.
23:30
And so the first thing that we tried to do was just to get
23:32
this outright dismissed and the anti
23:34
slap petition
23:36
heard. Wind up happening was
23:39
that the judge 90 said, we're not just gonna
23:41
throw this out immediately. Both of you are
23:43
going to have to sit for a deposition. And
23:45
then after we allow people
23:47
to ask questions, we'll then use that deposition
23:49
to discern whether or not we will allow this lawsuit
23:52
to go through. So the next phase would be
23:54
then determining whether or not there is grounds for this
23:56
lawsuit based on this deposition. So Kim
23:58
and I sat for that deposition, and in the middle
24:00
of the deposition, she just folded because depositions
24:03
quite serious. Right? You can tell your lies on Netflix,
24:05
you can tell your lies on Oprah, you can tell
24:07
your lies to the public, you can feed 90 to the press,
24:10
but will you do it under oath? Right?
24:12
Will you, when you are held up under of
24:14
say, yes, one hundred percent, I
24:16
was treated to racism. 90 a
24:18
race and my sister doesn't even know me because this is
24:21
one of the things that Samantha Markle has upset about
24:23
is that Meghan Markle referred to herself
24:25
as an only child to garner sympathy, made
24:27
her sister come across, as if she's
24:29
absolutely insane. She may be, I don't
24:31
know, but the court
24:33
is interested enough to want to hear of
24:35
a deposition to see if this suit should be brought about.
24:38
And so Meghan and
24:40
Harry are going to be grilled under
24:42
oath. That is incredibly interesting.
24:45
This is one of the weird times where they actually really
24:47
do want their 90, and the court is saying no.
24:49
So maybe what they'll do now is
24:51
just say, well, the court systems are
24:53
racist. That should be the next thing. But not
24:56
even the courts like Meghan Markle poor
24:58
poor Meghan Markle, she's being victimized. We all had
25:00
to go through it, but Meghan Meghan goes through the
25:02
court systems, it's different. Because she's
25:04
three percent black and the courts know
25:06
that some hounds. They're gonna treat her to a healthy
25:09
dose of court system racism
25:11
or something like that. Moving
25:14
on, I just find this to be hilarious. First and foremost,
25:16
I wanna be very clear. Breaking news
25:18
regarding Madonna, looking like Jigsaw, that
25:20
was us. 90 did that episodes. 90
25:22
weeks, we've been covering this phenomena. We've been watching
25:25
her face transform for
25:27
a very long time. And for some 90, people
25:29
were not catching on to this. I was just going, you know, she's
25:31
now fully looks like jigsaw. You guys
25:33
remember this. I was saying this for a very long time and
25:36
nobody called now. 90
25:38
are saying she looks like Jigsaw after her
25:40
Grammy's appearance. So let's take a look
25:42
at Madonna at the 90. 90
25:45
was introducing Sam
25:47
Smith for his demonic performance,
25:50
and this is her once again.
25:53
Looking exactly like Jake
25:55
saw, and people went, oh, my gosh, what's happened to
25:57
her face? That's a very fair question.
25:59
What has happened to her face? What happened down to face? She was very
26:01
beautiful on her youth. She 90 beautiful as she was aging
26:03
and then she got something done here
26:06
and it looks like a horror
26:08
film. Omadonna never
26:11
want to just accept that maybe this
26:13
could just be I went a little too far
26:15
on getting work done. And maybe I should have
26:18
aged a little more gracefully. Why
26:20
don't you know that if you think her face looks weird,
26:22
it's your fault. So let's just keep up gaslighting.
26:24
Right? I'm gonna just 90 it to my face. I'm gonna
26:26
get bunch of injections. Maybe twenty seven
26:28
face lifts. I'm gonna do something in my cheeks.
26:30
It's all gonna look puffy and weird. And
26:33
pulled back and like a horror film. But if you
26:35
comment on it, you're
26:37
the bad guy. Here's what madonna had
26:39
to say on Instagram about all the back lash
26:41
that she's getting around her scary face. She said,
26:43
it was an honor for me introduce Kim Petrus
26:45
and Sam Smith at the Grammys. I had wanted
26:47
to get the last award. Which was for album of
26:49
the year, but I thought it was more important that
26:51
I present the first trans
26:54
woman performing at the 90. A
26:56
history making moment. And
26:58
on top of that, she won a Grammy.
27:01
Instead of focusing on what I said in my 90, which
27:03
was about giving thanks to the fearlessness
27:06
of artists like Sam and Kim, 90
27:08
people chose to talk only about
27:10
close-up photos of me taking the
27:12
long lens camera by a press
27:14
photographer that would distort anyone's base
27:17
Once again, I am caught in the
27:19
glare of ageism and misogyny
27:21
that permeates the world we live
27:24
in, a world that refuses to celebrate
27:26
women passed the age of forty five and feels
27:28
the need to punish her if she continues
27:31
to be strong wills, hardworking, and
27:34
adventurous. I have
27:36
never apologized for any of the
27:38
creative choices I have made, nor the way that I
27:40
look or dress. I'm not going to start. I
27:42
have been degraded by the media since the beginning
27:44
of my career, but understand, this is all a
27:46
test, and I'm happy to do the trailblazing so that
27:48
all the women behind me can have an
27:50
easier time in the years to come. In
27:53
the words of Beyonce, you won't
27:55
break. Oh,
27:57
forward to many more years of subversive behavior,
27:59
pushing boundaries, standing up to the patriarchy. And
28:01
most of all, enjoying my life, bow
28:03
down, 90, boop boop,
28:06
shots fired. Hey look,
28:08
I mean, it's a boundary
28:10
you wanna push is your face. Go
28:13
for it. Go for it. If that's the boundary
28:15
you wanna push, if you wanna see how far
28:17
you can stretch your face to fork pops. Go
28:19
for it. I'm with you, Sister. Just
28:21
don't expect us not to comment on it. It
28:24
looks insane. 90 have a right to comment on
28:26
it. I don't know how you worked in ages of 90,
28:28
especially because 90 people are saying
28:30
is that if you had just aged, you would look better.
28:32
That's the whole point. They're not against the aging.
28:34
They're against you attempting to interrupt
28:36
the aging, attempting to interrupt the inevitable, and
28:39
then looking terrifying. Is
28:42
that guy's name Pennywise? Yeah. She's
28:44
starting to look like Pennywise. And by the way, you have
28:46
a rights sister to
28:48
look like penny wise, you can push
28:50
the boundaries and you can look like a whole
28:52
clown if you want. But, please
28:55
allow us to comment on it. And
28:57
by the way, I do want to re bring
28:59
up that portion where
29:01
she says that she really wanted to introduce presents
29:04
the first trans woman performing
29:06
at the 90. I love that everything's the
29:08
first now because we're making up things that don't exist. Like,
29:10
this is not the first trans woman to perform
29:12
at the Grammy's. It's a man performing at the Grammy. I'm
29:14
talking about. They're in work. If I just suddenly say,
29:17
I identify as a fish, Omadonna
29:20
introduced me as the first
29:22
ever fish to host
29:24
a political talk show. Mhmm.
29:26
A political podcast. I want
29:28
you guys to know that I am the first
29:30
ever fish fishman, fishman.
29:33
To ever host because I just identified as that.
29:35
And so there you go. I it's
29:38
a history making moment. You guys, the first
29:40
ever fish woman posting a
29:42
poll hosting a political podcast.
29:45
And speaking of made
29:47
up terms, let's get to
29:49
this mother who was in the news because she
29:51
is admitting good on her that she regrets
29:53
letting her son, just the
29:55
age of four, transition to
29:57
a girl identity. So, yeah,
29:59
she had four year old son who she allowed
30:02
to socially transition into
30:04
a girl, and she realized her mistake
30:06
and trying to correct that mistake. She describes
30:09
as being like leaving a cult.
30:11
She's going by the name Rose because she wants to remain
30:13
not anonymous and she raised her two sons
30:16
as gender neutral with her wife.
30:18
Rose is a lesbian, which was reflected
30:21
in their clothes, toys, and language.
30:24
When her four year old son said he felt like a
30:26
girl, the mother and couraged him
30:28
in his new 90, which she now admits
30:30
was a mistake that haunts her. So let me
30:32
interrupt that right there because I find that to be strange.
30:34
Your son four years
30:36
old told you that he felt like a girl. I have a lot
30:38
of experience with kids and a lot experience in child care.
30:41
I baby sat throughout my entire life. I was a nanny
30:43
First, when I left college and when I was
30:45
in college, I I 90
30:47
full time and I
30:50
nannied for a three turning
30:52
four year old and let me tell you something.
30:54
This is not regular for four year old to come
30:56
to you and say something so existential
30:59
like I feel like
31:01
a girl, like some of their Shania 90, like
31:03
a fee, like a woman. No,
31:06
not not something of four year old sex.
31:09
It's not even something they even think they can't comprehend
31:11
that. It's just not what their brains can
31:14
comprehend at for. They might say,
31:16
look 90, I'm Superman, or
31:18
like, look mommy, I'm a barbeer. I
31:20
wanna be a mermaid. But this
31:22
sort of language of I am.
31:25
This is this is I feel
31:28
like a girl that was encouraged. So
31:30
Rose, while I appreciate you being in the news, we're
31:32
saying that you've changed mine. I also want to know that you're a
31:34
groomer. This is what happened. You groom your children. And
31:36
you admit that because
31:38
she goes on to confess this.
31:42
That she had led her sons
31:44
to transition. She started realizing something was weird because
31:46
first her four year olds said I
31:48
want I wanna be a girl. But then
31:51
Her other son who was three said that
31:53
he too wanted to transition to
31:55
a girl despite being more of stereotypical
31:58
boy. So what happened was she had two boys and she
32:00
groomed them. And then she realizes it's me grooming. And what
32:02
are the chances that I have two trans children? Maybe
32:05
the issue is me. Maybe I am the groomer.
32:07
And once she realized that what she had done
32:09
led her son's transition, 90
32:11
worked really hard to reverse the mistake. And
32:13
now, both of her sons, both
32:15
of her sons who are around eight
32:17
and nine are living happily as boys
32:19
and she describes him as blossoming and growing. So
32:21
how is that? Right? If being
32:24
trans is not a circumstance taking place
32:26
because of disorders, various kinds of disorders. Usually,
32:28
disorders are being passed down to children
32:30
that are being given to them by their caretakers
32:33
by their teachers, by the entire
32:35
ecosystem of evil that promotes this crap.
32:37
Right? That is the reason that
32:39
people are transitioning. That is the reason.
32:41
They are being groomed to
32:43
transition. And when you stop
32:45
the grooming, the individual
32:48
goes back to normal. AND
32:51
SHE IS RIGHTfully
32:53
SPEAKING OUT ON THIS. I THINK IT'S A GOOD THING SHE'S SPEAKING
32:55
OUT ON BUT I DON'T WANT TO JUST FORGIVE HER
32:57
90 her evil of interrupting
32:59
their childhood with this nonsense. And
33:01
she says that following her 90, by the way, she
33:03
has stopped being an activist and she has instead
33:05
become a skeptic. Well, what she 90 is I
33:08
have stopped being a groomer, and
33:11
I have instead become skeptical of groomers,
33:13
which, just so you know, Rose, that is a
33:16
great position to have in life.
33:18
Alright, guys. That is all I have to
33:20
say about that. Alright, guys.
33:22
The next portion of the show is going to be available exclusively
33:25
on 90 Plus. I'll be reading your comments
33:27
and answering your questions. So if you're not remember
33:29
yet, go ahead and link in the description and subscribe
33:31
right now.
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