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This is 668 dissonance.
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Every episode we blast anyone who gets in our
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that makes the news, makes it big,
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it's political, and there is
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No. Welcome, Matt. This episode six hundred
1:09
and sixty eight of cognitive
1:11
dissonance. Anything
1:12
happened big happened this week 668? Yeah.
1:14
It just you know, some minor major
1:17
upheaval in the community. So
1:19
This is a surprise. You know, we don't wanna spend a lot of time
1:21
on this. There's there's plenty of spaces where your people
1:24
can go and and 668. Yeah. But
1:26
we do 668 address the article
1:28
that came out from religion news services with
1:31
respect to sexual conduct allegations
1:33
by Andrew Torres. Yeah. With
1:35
respect to that
1:36
situation, you know, it there's
1:38
a feeling I think within our
1:40
community that we're all personally connected --
1:42
Yeah. --
1:43
because our shows exist within the same
1:45
periphery. 668? And that is a
1:47
fair but inaccurate understanding.
1:50
Right? So I just want to make clear
1:52
from our side of the world that Andrew
1:56
is somebody that we have worked with on a
1:58
handful of fundraising 668, and
2:00
we've met about a handful of
2:01
conferences. Yeah. They're
2:02
not in our relationship. We
2:05
don't still have yeah. We're 668
2:06
like, he's not he's not our lawyer. He's
2:08
not our lawyer. He's never been part of our part
2:11
of our group. He's not in our personal
2:13
social circle. He's not our lawyer.
2:15
We don't have a contract with
2:16
him. He's not part of our company.
2:17
Yeah. We don't work with him. He's not part of citation
2:19
neither. He's never part of -- He's
2:22
not part of his old dad. Yeah. So
2:24
we have we have no we have no relationship
2:27
with Andrew Torres. When we were approached
2:29
by Arab Emirates weeks
2:31
ago, With information about
2:33
the sexual misconduct allegations, we offered
2:35
help, including financial aid to those that were
2:37
involved. We took it very seriously,
2:40
and we offered to help Yeah.
2:41
And and and and 668 add really quickly,
2:43
like, nobody came to us, but Aaron --
2:46
Right.
2:46
-- like Aaron came to us. Aaron is the person
2:48
who came
2:48
to us. And as he did, our
2:50
response was
2:51
668 can
2:52
we do to help. Yep. And we helped him find
2:54
resources and offered to pay for a lawyer.
2:56
That's what we offer. That was That was the extent
2:58
of our of our connection there. You know, that
3:01
said, the situation itself is unacceptable.
3:04
Our community and every community deserves
3:07
safe spaces that are inclusive for everybody.
3:09
Agree. And to the extent that in
3:12
any part of our community, not ours, hopefully,
3:14
not the Cognizant
3:15
family. Right? Yeah. 668, you
3:17
know, to the extent that any community has
3:20
become unsafe, that is a deeply
3:22
tragic. It is an unpleasant place
3:24
to be in and our hearts go out to everybody involved.
3:26
I agree. You know, a couple years ago, we ran an
3:28
event. We did the pizza party. We did.
3:30
And we very intentionally when
3:32
we ran 668, wanted to make sure it was a very
3:35
safe space for people. For sure. And then we did
3:37
our very best to make sure that it was the safe
3:39
space. That's the only event that we ever ran. Right?
3:41
Yes. But we wanted we actually win it
3:43
with 668 that we wanted it to be 668 very safe
3:45
space for people. And so we
3:47
recognize that this is a terrible situation
3:50
668, like, genuinely, this
3:52
isn't a person who we're 668. We're
3:55
connected to. Like, we just aren't connected
3:57
to him. You know, there's thing called the segue.
3:59
It gets you from one topic to the
4:01
next one. You'd
4:03
look into it. See, so I didn't I
4:05
almost didn't believe this story. I found it in
4:07
a couple of places. This is I'm gonna actually
4:09
read a big chunk of this article because I'll end up just
4:12
have to 668 in. Florida
4:14
panel recommends forcing student athletes
4:17
to give students their menstrual
4:19
history. 668 is happening, guys.
4:21
This is 668 like this is
4:23
an onion arc. You know, I know
4:25
a lot of people when they talk about
4:27
like the rise of just like
4:29
dictatorships and fascism and
4:31
terror and all that. They don't
4:33
think it, but they should be thinking DeSantis.
4:36
Oh, a hundred percent mean, like like and
4:38
and and really we should be thinking about it
4:40
in a way that's like, it's
4:42
a terror if he gets to be
4:44
president. And to you. 668 the
4:47
DeSantis as president would be as
4:49
tragic or worse than
4:51
Trump.
4:51
He's a Like, he's a He's a He's a 668. Yep.
4:54
We you cannot underestimate the horror that this
4:56
country would fall under with a president
4:59
to Santos. I think he is easily the
5:01
most racist. He's 668. Major
5:04
politics.
5:05
And he's the one who is boldly
5:08
putting racist and shitty policies
5:10
into place in 668 in
5:12
the face of everyone Yeah. -- he
5:14
has civilized in the world -- Yeah. -- he's
5:16
campaigning on his own races. You're right. Apsia
5:19
is campaigning on his own misogyny he
5:21
is campaigning on trying
5:24
to galvanize the worst parts
5:26
of the rock. The very worst parts. And and he's
5:28
doing a good job. And that's where makes him fright
5:30
Yeah. There are people there. There's a there's a group
5:32
of people there that fucking love
5:33
him. He won. Yeah, man. You know? He didn't didn't
5:36
win by.
5:36
He cd668, like, eat, buy. No.
5:39
The Florida High School Athletics Association is
5:41
standing by its decision to require
5:43
student athletes to give their schools
5:45
detailed information about their periods.
5:48
An unprecedented policy raising major
5:50
concerns about privacy, the
5:52
FHSAA announced in October
5:55
it was changing its annual physical form.
5:57
So when you're a student athlete, you you gotta
5:59
go, you gotta turn in a physical. Right? Then
6:01
basically, the reason you have to turn a physical
6:03
to the school is to
6:04
say, I went to a doctor and they said I could
6:06
play this sport 668 I'm not
6:07
gonna die. Right? I'm not gonna fucking drive 668.
6:09
Right. That's the only extent that the
6:11
schools should fucking be involved. Sure. Right?
6:13
But no. The form includes optional,
6:16
but detailed questions about students' menstruation
6:18
cycles, including when they got their first period,
6:21
when they had their most recent one and
6:23
how many weeks pass between each
6:25
period. Previously, only one page
6:27
of the paper form on which pediatrician would sign
6:29
off on a student being allowed to play. The
6:31
only relevant information the school cd668,
6:34
what the fuck does the school need to know?
6:36
When these young ladies are having
6:39
their fucking periods, and how many days their
6:41
typical cycle is. And when their last period
6:43
was, their only reason to track that is
6:45
nefarious. You cannot come up
6:47
with a non nefarious ways.
6:49
Yeah. I don't know what the the only reason you're
6:51
tracking that is because you wanna you wanna
6:53
know whether or not
6:54
they're, you know, that they're pregnant or something like that.
6:56
You know what I mean? 668 a there's a
6:59
there's a reason why you're doing it and it's
7:01
not because you 668, like, are curious.
7:03
Right. That's super weird, intimate information.
7:06
668 such it's such and I 668, like,
7:08
I'm not I'm not swayed by the optional
7:10
peace either. Right? You put this on an official form
7:13
and people feel compelled by the officialness,
7:16
officialocity, official
7:18
A lot
7:20
Yes. There you go. I got it. I think
7:21
that's the right word. Think of it. Yeah. I don't know
7:23
what the right word 668. Yes. I'd
7:26
spend a week. Cd668, so I've had a long
7:28
week. My
7:30
stress is very high. I
7:33
don't know what the right word is, but people feel compelled
7:36
by the fact that it's on an official form. Sure.
7:38
No. 668 fill it out. Yeah. And, like, the
7:40
fuck does they school administrator cd668
7:42
to know when a fucking thirteen year old
7:44
girl's last period
7:45
was, and that it's twenty nine days before her
7:48
668 twenty. So that is
7:49
such intimate information. They like a
7:51
really what is it? Fifteen weeks there?
7:54
Fifteen week abortion is the is the
7:56
668, I think, there is that what it is. You know that's what it's
7:58
driving us? That's what it's for. I mean, know that
8:00
that's what it's driving at. This is
8:02
this is a horror and, you know, you
8:04
wanna talk about the the right
8:06
I don't even know if they beat this drum anymore. I
8:08
and and correct me if I'm
8:10
wrong. But for the longest time, the
8:12
right beat the drum of being the party
8:14
of small government.
8:15
Yeah. And I actually don't know that they still beat that
8:17
drum. But if anybody was tempted
8:19
to give that drum a whack this
8:22
day and age. I cannot see how
8:24
you could say, well, look, we're the party of small
8:26
government, but I wanna know when your fucking
8:28
thirteen year old daughter 668 had her
8:30
fucking menstrual cycle. 668
8:32
what could be more intimate than that?
8:35
I I would not ask my closest female
8:37
friends, that information.
8:39
Yeah. I can't yeah. But for me Right.
8:41
You're right. I have I have women in my life that
8:44
I have been close friends with for ten,
8:46
fifteen years. There's no world.
8:48
668, it's it's none of my fucking business. I
8:50
wouldn't be curious about it. I'm not a weirdo.
8:53
Yeah. But also, even
8:55
if, like, something something, that
8:57
information is just too intimate for me
8:59
to
8:59
ask. And so 668 require
9:02
it of teenagers
9:03
Yeah. Man, that's creepy. Are you gonna put
9:05
it on job applications now too? I pardon
9:08
me once everyone just write it on
9:09
everyone. On everything. On
9:11
everything, CECL. Everybody
9:13
just walks around with those slashes and the
9:15
face 668 it. It's zero days since
9:17
my last period or 668. Exactly. This
9:21
unbelievable. Holy shit. What
9:23
a fucking mess. It's 668 a mess. It's
9:25
a 668
9:26
mess. It but it's Florida, and you 668 expect
9:28
that. Yep. I have nipples, Greg.
9:31
Could you milk me? Okay. It's a great
9:33
668 subject, perhaps.
9:35
This story comes from query, creepy new
9:37
details emerge about drag hating senator
9:39
whose GOP colleagues missed seriously
9:42
turned on her --
9:42
Yeah. -- could
9:43
have made the weird news segment. This cut
9:45
It's very close. This cut, it's really clear.
9:48
668 the same thing. Let's really Okay. Same thing.
9:50
Yeah. This is one of those this is one of those that you
9:52
gotta just reach. Because they're so bizarre. Yeah.
9:54
And I will I will actually miss details
9:56
because I It's just so fucking
9:58
bizarre. So, 668. New
10:00
details have emerged about Julie Frymueller,
10:03
the anti LGBTQ ultra
10:05
conservative ranking file Republican state senator
10:07
from South Dakota who was inexplicably stripped
10:10
of her legislative power last week. Fry
10:12
Miller's GOP colleagues voted to suspend
10:14
her rights as an elected official and create a
10:16
committee to investigate serious allegations lodged
10:19
against her by an unnamed legislative
10:21
staffer. At the time, no additional
10:23
information was given as to why they were taking
10:25
such extreme actions against one of
10:27
their own. We now have a better idea.
10:29
Then it launches in to this fucking
10:32
bizarre world encounter.
10:34
As it turns out, Fry Mueller allegedly
10:37
offered unsolicited advice to a woman about
10:39
breastfeeding her baby son that went
10:41
beyond way beyond what most people
10:43
would consider appropriate workplace
10:44
conversation. This is genuinely,
10:47
guys. This is 668. I can't I'm
10:49
gonna read you
10:50
a story. 668 read it. Just just go
10:52
go. In a statement released yesterday, the woman
10:55
alleged I was told by senator
10:57
Fry Mueller, 668 my husband could
10:59
suck on my 668 to get the milk to
11:01
come
11:01
in. She indicated a good time
11:04
for that is at night. 668 it doesn't
11:06
stop there. Jesus. What do you what do you have like a you
11:08
have like a 668 on your back to get
11:10
it home?
11:15
Like, 668? What? What?
11:18
What? Oh, I you know, and the best time
11:20
for him to suck on your breasts would
11:22
be Look, if milk is gonna come in
11:24
and that's the way you're going to get your milk to come
11:26
in, I don't think the clock is the
11:29
issue. You know?
11:31
Oh, yeah. Hold on a minute. You know what? It'll only
11:33
it'll only work if it's and what
11:35
are you with
11:35
gremlins? You can only suck on the titties
11:38
after midnight. 668 a weird
11:40
conversation to have with someone in
11:42
the first place -- Yes. -- right?
11:44
668 conversation in the first place, but
11:46
then to be, like, by the way,
11:49
I know this great way that we're 668. Look.
11:51
And then you're just the person is kind of looking
11:54
quietly around the room to try to
11:56
exit the conversation as quickly as
11:58
possible. I'm not trying to purport
12:00
to be a fucking lactation expert. Right? So,
12:02
like, maybe that works. I don't
12:04
know, but I also know, like, 668
12:07
something you don't tell 668, hey
12:09
man, you know what help is if your husband
12:11
sucked on your titties. That it really 668 it has to
12:13
be after the is down. Yeah. What
12:15
any shit is that? That is the weirdest shit
12:18
ever. Maybe keep that I don't even
12:20
care if it works. Yeah. That's a weird keeping
12:22
to yourself, Mommy. You're
12:23
like, well, you know, I'll let her doctor actually
12:25
get her advice on how to fucking lactate.
12:29
Gosh. So weird. 668, Fry
12:31
Mueller went on to a graphic demonstration of
12:33
how to do it.
12:34
Okay. See now that's where you're going. You're
12:36
still too far. This is this is a little
12:38
too far. All too far. 668
12:40
doesn't stop there. She proceeded to
12:42
provide hand gestures in her chest area
12:44
and
12:45
motioned to her husband to see if he agreed
12:47
and he smiled and nodded like, yep,
12:49
dembs the titties. That's how you
12:51
suck. I'm What the fuck? What? What?
12:54
What?
12:54
This is a congressperson in a
12:56
668 senate. Well, I go. As if that
12:59
wasn't creepy enough, the women also alleged a Fry
13:01
Miller warned her against having her baby son 668,
13:03
saying this will cause him issues, including
13:06
giving him down syndrome, You cannot
13:08
get a vaccine which changes the
13:10
number of chromosomes. 668 feels
13:13
like a lot. That's like vaccines
13:16
aren't that powerful. It's
13:19
fucking racism and causing him to
13:21
die from these vaccines. Then she
13:23
alleged that feeding babies formula made them
13:25
guinea pigs for big pharma and
13:27
warned the woman that she was taking away
13:29
god's gift of immunity from her son
13:31
so
13:32
much. I cannot tell you how much I can throw
13:34
in a fire. Well, here's the thing, man. Like
13:36
like, it gets weird, but then it's just like and
13:38
then it just falls into straight up
13:41
boring conspiracy at the
13:42
end.
13:42
Yes. It's like, okay. Yeah. This person is clearly
13:45
in that case. But, like, the rest of it is just,
13:47
like, you're, like, your
13:48
668, where do you think you
13:50
know, Even I have to go through
13:52
these weird workplace debt like this
13:54
is proper touching
13:55
story.
13:56
Yeah. Right. I can't imagine, like,
13:58
what do you click on on
14:00
the fucking downloadable
14:03
compliance thing to be like, yes,
14:05
I can show someone how titties
14:08
work or whatever at work. 668. Thank
14:10
you. Yeah. Like, in my company, we
14:13
have the same as your company. Right? Because there's, like,
14:15
there's sexual harassment and compliance and,
14:17
like, ethics 668. And like, yes,
14:19
is it repetitive and and self evident?
14:22
I always thought
14:22
so, but clearly, it isn't actually
14:25
self 668. Because
14:26
a state senator -- Senator. -- is like,
14:28
you know, what would be really welcome, is
14:30
some bizarre insane world
14:32
advice.
14:33
Man, this a people are getting elected. Yeah.
14:35
They're getting elected. They're they're insane
14:38
people and they show up and they win
14:40
enough 668
14:41
to be in charge of part of a
14:43
state. That's these people
14:45
are far too powerful for the messages
14:47
that they have. Alright. 668 look at some
14:50
this is somebody that I would
14:52
have thought CECL when we started this show.
14:54
When we started this show fifteen, sixteen
14:56
years ago, somewhere around there. I
14:58
would have genuinely thought, alright.
15:00
Well, the world is weeding
15:02
these people out. Right? It felt like
15:05
the world was beginning to weed those kind
15:07
of people out. Not only has the world
15:09
not weeded those people 668, but those
15:11
people are becoming more numerous and more
15:13
powerful. Yeah. Being
15:16
deeply deeply wrong
15:18
668, like, some of the easiest 668 settled
15:22
questions in scientific history is
15:24
no longer just
15:25
why? No. It's and these people get 668 walk
15:27
right in. They walk right in. Yep.
15:29
The point is, ladies and gentlemen, that
15:32
green for lack of a
15:34
better word
15:36
is good. The
15:36
story comes to New York Times, forget
15:39
pandemic puppies, 668 the
15:41
inflation chicken.
15:43
Is there one of those wacky, wavy, inflatable
15:45
chickens? Let's keep inflating.
15:49
It's just It's just 668 it, like, fuck it. You guys
15:51
be, like, walking around. 668.
15:54
No big rubber eggs or
15:55
whatever. I would buy the shit on. I would buy
15:57
the shit on that and I would mic it or I would have fucking
16:00
so it's just like, whknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknknkn
16:02
668 now,
16:06
don't remember Gotcha. -- on a
16:07
chicken. Gobain -- Yes. -- they're they're
16:10
all supreme. 668 all they make. When they sing, they're all
16:12
supreme. So this this
16:15
story this is one of those stories that, like,
16:17
there's a lot going on in this story.
16:19
But, you know, one of the reasons why I wanted
16:21
to talk about it was because 668 something that we were
16:23
talking about a couple weeks to go where, you know,
16:26
Bernie Sanders came out and said something
16:28
like, you know, there's a
16:30
bunch of these companies that
16:33
are trying to profit off of
16:35
the avian flu -- Yep. -- by
16:38
raising their prices and not reporting
16:40
any avian flu problems And,
16:43
you know, this 668, I think, you know,
16:45
like, very 668, what we've gotta say is, like,
16:47
yeah, there's a lot of other
16:48
factors. But one of the factors that needs to be addressed
16:50
is corporate greed. Like one
16:52
hundred percent One of the factors has to
16:54
be corporate grade. I get it. You wanna say,
16:56
yeah, there's a problem with inflation, and
16:58
there's a problem with certain things that get spiked
17:00
early in inflation. And the way inflation
17:02
works and when they raise this, and this article
17:04
goes into great detail 668 tell you
17:07
why the prices of eggs go up
17:09
668 one of the things that you've gotta focus
17:11
on is the corporate greed that drives
17:13
those
17:14
prices. Yep. know, 668 at
17:16
the same time that all this is happening. The
17:19
major agricultural companies
17:22
that that are in charge of in selling
17:24
the eggs that are they are reporting record
17:27
profits. Record profits.
17:30
So 668 they try to blame this
17:32
on is, oh, our expenses went up. Well, if
17:34
your expenses go up, your revenue
17:36
needs to go up. But if you're expensive, like, let's say
17:38
you make on every carton of eggs in the world
17:40
before, right, in the before time. So carton
17:42
of eggs, eighteen eggs was about a dollar ninety
17:44
nine. Yeah. Now locally
17:47
for us. Now the New York Times reports the number way
17:49
lower than what I could buy it. Sure for. Right? Yeah. No.
17:51
Now I bought eggs literally yesterday for
17:53
six dollars for eighteen eggs and I got the 668,
17:56
like -- Sure. -- not dirt eggs. Right?
17:58
You'd spend eight nine dollars, not 668 eggs.
18:00
Right? So it's it's the prices have
18:03
gone from two dollars well
18:05
past four into six. They've increased
18:07
just dramatic. Yes. But
18:10
if you had an acceptable profit
18:12
line on a dollar ninety nine of say
18:15
a 668. Let's say your margin was fifty percent.
18:17
What companies are doing now is they're raising
18:19
their prices as their expenses
18:22
go up to preserve not their
18:24
profit but their margin. Yeah. And when
18:26
they do that, their total profit in
18:28
whole dollars goes through the roof because
18:30
if you were making fifty percent profit on
18:33
two dollars, made a dollar. And that was an acceptable
18:35
business strategy. Now instead of saying, now
18:38
we 668 charge three dollars to make a dollar.
18:40
Now they're saying, well, we'll charge three dollars to
18:42
make a dollar fifty. And they've made
18:44
fifty percent
18:45
more. Now they're charging six dollars to make
18:47
three dollars. They're preserving the margin
18:49
side of the equation.
18:50
Yeah. Yeah. And we're letting them do it. Yeah.
18:52
And we're letting them blame it on expenses.
18:55
Right? We're we're listening as if
18:57
it's real to this bullshit argument
18:59
where they say, well, you know, our expenses, labor
19:02
costs have gone up. Fine. Yeah. Okay. 668
19:04
you are preserving your margin. Yes.
19:06
You are not preserving your
19:09
initial dollar value profit
19:11
line. And when you preserve your margin,
19:13
you're raising the prices well in
19:16
excess of what you need
19:17
to. Yeah. That's fucking that
19:19
that's grifting. Yeah. 668 just literally
19:21
668. It's literally grifting. And,
19:23
you know, the problem is is that is that
19:25
we don't have any way to
19:28
prevent them from doing this. Right. We're
19:30
668 crazy. There's nothing in the government
19:32
that stops them from doing
19:34
this. All the things that might have stopped them
19:36
was probably taken out in the eighties. Right? It
19:38
was probably all taken out in the eighties
19:40
and seventies to stop them from
19:42
doing this. And so what we have is
19:44
we have the system that keeps on revving
19:47
itself up You know, I think about labor
19:49
in the sense that I think about, like, when people
19:51
when when companies complain about,
19:54
you know, workers missing work. And
19:56
you're like, you guys don't staff
19:59
well enough. Right. That's not on the workers
20:01
who miss work. That's you know, it's
20:03
natural for someone to miss work.
20:05
It is a natural thing that happens and
20:08
should be
20:08
expected. But what happens is is
20:10
we are tragically understaffed in
20:12
this country. Yep. We we build
20:15
the we build every company and part
20:17
of this. We've talked about this before. Part of this
20:19
is because it's all bullshit.
20:21
If a company exists in order
20:24
produce a quarterly --
20:26
Yes. -- stock 668. Stock rate. Right? So
20:28
companies are incentivized not for
20:30
long term success, but for short term success.
20:32
Yeah. Which means that they are structurally
20:35
required to produce profits at an
20:37
increasing level year over year. Every
20:39
company, if you made a billion dollars last
20:41
year, you can't make a billion dollars this year. Your
20:43
company didn't grow. Inflation cuts into
20:45
the value of that billion dollars. Now a billion
20:48
dollars is a less acceptable term. You now
20:50
have to produce a billion and
20:52
five dollars or whatever the dollar value is.
20:54
Right? So companies are we've we've we've
20:56
created this incentive structure, which makes it
20:58
impossible for companies to
21:01
be beholden to these shareholders 668
21:04
to produce quarterly profits and to not
21:06
look at long term success and to do
21:08
all of that at the expense of the worker.
21:11
Your point is exactly right. When you staff
21:13
a business, what everybody does is,
21:15
what's the minimum number of people I can have?
21:18
668 the job done. Yeah. And then if somebody gets sick,
21:20
what we'll do is just overwork everybody
21:22
else, or their work will while
21:24
they're gone, or their work will stack up
21:27
Right? Exactly. When you wanna go on vacation, I
21:29
know when I gotta go wanna go on vacation, I've
21:31
gotta do two or three weeks
21:33
worth of work if I wanna take a single week off.
21:35
Yep. Because when I come back, all that work
21:37
that piled up during that week, I've gotta now
21:40
do that. So I've gotta catch up. So if I don't
21:42
get ahead before I leave, I'm
21:44
really behind when I come back. And that's
21:46
natural for so many people in this 668.
21:48
And I work a a salary
21:51
job. Right? What about those people
21:53
who get stuck on, like, a shift And,
21:55
you know, you you read all this stuff nowadays
21:57
about how managers nowadays are not they're
22:00
they're making these people who work for them.
22:02
Do this work of being a manager to
22:04
find people to cover and all that. No.
22:06
I mean, it's like it's like such a mess
22:08
that we've created and and and
22:10
we let corporations get away with it all
22:12
the time. You you know, you should
22:15
have people who are ready to go.
22:17
That should there should be enough people
22:19
on your staff so that should never happen.
22:21
Yeah. So that your your your business runs
22:23
seamlessly And if you just so happen
22:26
668 you paid somebody a little extra and they
22:28
didn't, they weren't working their ass off while
22:30
they were doing it because you overstaffed a 668, That's
22:32
okay. Yeah. That's okay because you were
22:34
ready for a problem that didn't occur
22:36
and that's that's good. But if you
22:39
if you always are
22:40
understaffed, the problem will occur and you're
22:42
gonna be fucked, or at least your workers. So that's the
22:44
thing is that is that you are probably
22:46
668 the higher levels, you're probably not fucked.
22:48
Right? It'll be fine. You're fine because the
22:51
pressure comes -- Yeah. -- pushes down to
22:53
the bottom. Yeah. There you know, it's also the case that
22:55
more and more. I know this is, like, these are more
22:57
privileged jobs, but more
22:59
and more when you do leave the
23:01
office, you don't have nine to five hours or nine
23:03
to six hours or nine -- Yeah. -- because you have a
23:05
cell phone. You have email. You're expected at all
23:07
times day and 668. To at the very
23:09
least be monitoring that. Right? And when you
23:11
go on vacation, I I will raise my hand. When I go
23:13
on
23:14
vacation, I won a hundred percent half
23:16
to bring my company phone. And I one hundred
23:18
percent need to check that phone every
23:19
day. Sure. I have to I have to check email
23:21
too. How on vacation are you? If you
23:24
are still -- Yeah. Beholden --
23:26
Yeah. -- at every time. Oh, so I gotta get
23:28
rugged. I 668 do my prep before
23:30
I'm gone. I gotta when I'm
23:31
gone, still be a little
23:33
668 be available. You might have to take a
23:34
phone call. So I have to, oh, you know 668, this is actually I got
23:36
to I got some emails throughout the day. I might have to
23:39
take a phone call. I may have to go online and
23:41
change something online. Right. Do you travel
23:43
in your computer? I do. Every single time
23:45
I have to because someone's gonna call me from
23:47
the office and be
23:47
like, I can't fix this thing. You need to fix it. Right.
23:50
And then I gotta fix it. Right. And those
23:52
are, to be very clear, those are privileged
23:54
jobs. Right? The work creep
23:57
has has really, like, reached its
23:59
fucking arms around every Everything. We
24:02
the the average American work week last time
24:04
I looked, which is a while ago, 668 it's probably worse
24:06
now, is over forty five hours -- Sure.
24:08
Yeah. People are getting
24:10
fucked. They are just absolutely getting
24:13
fucked. And on all sides by this,
24:15
and part of the problem III
24:17
don't
24:18
even know, like, this is, like, this fucking
24:20
pipe dream shit, 668, like, why
24:22
the fuck can we buy 668 in companies? Yeah.
24:24
You know what I mean? Oh, it really like, why So
24:26
what is this created that it benefits us?
24:28
It
24:28
doesn't.
24:29
It only benefits the very ultra rich. And
24:31
I will say this 668, like like, you
24:33
look at the profit margin on all these
24:35
companies, and then you look at how hard
24:37
the workers are working. Yeah, man. And,
24:40
you know, not being able to get days 668
24:42
being able to take a day off, and these companies
24:44
are making record profits. Crazy
24:47
668. bullshit. That's absolute bullshit.
24:49
And this and 668 egg thing is that, you know, like, I know
24:51
that we'd sort of jumped off a little bit talking about
24:53
labor little bit on the egg thing, but really genuinely
24:56
668 cd668 is the source of a lot of problems
24:59
in this country and it needs to be
25:00
addressed. It it does because, you know, and a a
25:02
corollary to the egg thing is that when
25:04
gas prices were at their
25:06
peak, So were oil
25:08
668? Yep. Yep. No. You're
25:09
absolutely right. You're right. So it's not like you
25:11
can't listen to them. I just want to iterate
25:13
this point. You cannot listen to them
25:15
when they tell you that the reason for
25:17
inflation, when the reason you are paying more at
25:20
the pump or at grocery store the
25:22
reason is not oh, avian flu.
25:24
The reason is not, you know, the supply
25:26
and chain problems. None of those reasons
25:28
are real. As long as corporations
25:31
are breaking in record profits. Meaning,
25:33
if they've made more money than
25:35
ever before, then the problem
25:37
is not an expensive side problem. Yeah.
25:39
668 not. They're lying and they are
25:42
stealing from us. So
25:44
if that happens, we
25:47
lose. This
25:50
story also from The New York Times Republicans
25:52
a sale vaccine and mandates
25:54
with misleading claims. We should just read their
25:56
claims here real quick and then read the the
26:00
Absolutely. So, Dr. Walenski,
26:02
the CDC 668, said in August of twenty
26:04
668 one, quote, what they can't do?
26:06
They being the vaccines. 668 they can't
26:08
do anymore is prevent transmission. The
26:10
CDC's own website says, right now, the
26:13
vaccine does nothing for 668. Zero,
26:15
yet that was the whole basis of the vaccine
26:17
mandate. Well, not
26:19
really. That was representative with
26:21
Chip Roy. Representative Chip Roy. I'll
26:23
look at Chip Roy. Chip Roy.
26:25
That's a fake name. 668 sounds like
26:28
it sounds like one of those ice cream
26:30
cones that you like, if you eat it all, you get it
26:32
for
26:32
free. Oh. Like, it's the chip Roy. The
26:34
chip king.
26:35
Hey. Welcome 668 big ten. If you
26:37
can eat the
26:37
entire chip Roy. You and you're family
26:39
eat free. They serve it 668 you like one of those
26:41
little sinks. Alright.
26:43
A chip Roy contains A gallon and
26:46
a half of Rocky Road ice cream
26:48
smothered an oohy gooey hot
26:50
fudge and caramel topped with trailings
26:53
and nuts. There's nothing that
26:56
668 me more gross than the overeating competitions.
26:58
Like, it's so grossed out by that. I just,
27:01
like, 668 makes me crazy. I
27:03
can't watch those. I can't Like, when
27:05
those people do, like, the chowing down compositions,
27:07
I'm just 668, I like that guy from fucking
27:09
stand by
27:10
me. I'm ready to throw up on the audio. Yes, dude. That
27:12
shit is appalling. Really?
27:14
And it is also like it is this,
27:16
like, weird cultural,
27:20
like, horror
27:22
where it's
27:22
like, it's like, oh, look, people are hungry.
27:24
I'm eating so much food. I'm sick.
27:26
And I'm doing it as a
27:27
competition. He feels so uniquely American.
27:30
He feels so much like
27:32
a fuck you. They should hold really
27:34
668. Like the only thing that would make it worse is like
27:36
holding it in front of a soup kitchen. I know 668. You
27:38
know what I mean? That's what it feels like. It feels like
27:40
668 like those people, those people who make those videos,
27:42
where they just dump a bunch of shit on the counter and then they
27:45
mix it up with their hands. Yes. Here we cd668. Oh, I
27:47
wanna just walk in and just slap
27:49
every person in that video. It's
27:51
like, what if look is wrong with you. Yeah. I was like,
27:53
oh, man, this is 668 toilet. I'd be like,
27:55
you should go in your toilet. That's
27:57
where you pull up. Anyway,
27:59
Shailesh. Back to the chip store. Troy. Who
28:01
we does? 668 we got it? Fuck. So
28:04
mister Rafoya's Mister
28:06
Roy, I was called it mister Chip
28:08
Roy. Mister Roy, I'm calling 668 mister
28:10
Chip Roy. No. That's it.
28:11
Mister Chip Roy is referring to and
28:13
cherry picking comments made -- Mary ticking.
28:16
Sherry picking up. Sherry picking 668. You think that
28:18
Sherry The
28:21
director of the CDC about the agency's
28:23
guidance on COVID 668 vaccines as well as the
28:25
rationale. In August 668 twenty one, when
28:27
a surge in COVID case is caused by the most infectious
28:30
delta variant prompted the CDC to encourage
28:32
people to wear masks public again Dr. Willinski
28:34
appeared on CNN to explain the updated
28:36
guidance, asked about breakthrough cases,
28:39
fully vaccinated people who nonetheless catch
28:41
the cd668, 668. Walenski stressed the
28:43
importance of inoculation despite the fact that
28:45
the vaccines did not appear to prevent break through infections.
28:48
He they said, quote, Our vaccines are working
28:50
exceptionally well. They continue to
28:52
work well for delta. With regard to severe
28:54
illness and death, they prevent it. But
28:57
what we can't do anymore is prevent transmission.
28:59
So they're they're they're skipping the whole
29:01
part about how the vaccine makes
29:03
it so much fucking safer if
29:06
you fetch COVID.
29:07
And and and this is this is where people
29:09
use these very selective terms
29:12
to get around like,
29:15
what it really does to try to make
29:17
it 668. Like, and and 668, Tom,
29:19
we have people, 668, who
29:22
are now trying to say vaccines are
29:24
so unsafe, I'm gonna tell you --
29:26
Yeah. -- that the CDC I mean, like,
29:28
what the sweet fuck is going
29:30
on.
29:30
They're trying to kill us. They are. They're
29:33
668,
29:33
like, literally 668 to kill you. We're still,
29:35
like, the this is making me fucking nuts.
29:37
We are we are on the verge of rolling
29:40
back the emergency
29:41
declaration.
29:42
Yeah. The COVID emergency declaration. For
29:44
some context, the September
29:47
eleventh two thousand one terrorist
29:49
emergency declaration is still in
29:50
effect. Is 668 really? It is still in effect. No
29:52
kidding. No kidding.
29:53
Wow. You know how many people died, fucking
29:55
nine eleven, three thousand. We're still losing
29:58
five hundred people a day. Yeah. It's nine
30:00
eleven every six days. Yeah.
30:02
668 now -- Yeah. -- based on our current numbers from this
30:05
668 and we're less like,
30:06
yeah, you know what's over --
30:07
Yeah. -- the fucking 668 man. We we
30:09
we are opening ourselves up
30:12
to a world of continued hurt.
30:14
And this causes people who are on
30:16
the periphery, people who are immune compromised,
30:19
people they are gonna live forever. In
30:21
the margins. Yeah. Because we can't get our shit
30:23
together. Yeah. Because senators are like,
30:26
you know what the vaccines do? They
30:28
give you double autism Monkeyades
30:30
or whatever fucking horrible claims 668 monsters.
30:33
Monsters will get up there and they'll say this terrible
30:36
shit. And they know
30:38
that this is one hundred percent winning
30:40
them voters. Yeah, man. There's so many
30:42
uneducated and under educated
30:45
people in this country that they're all
30:47
willing to throw away
30:49
their health to,
30:51
like, win an argument or whatever. Yep.
30:54
They are willing to immediately
30:56
without any proof whatsoever blames
30:59
something on the vaccine. Yeah. Right? Immediately
31:02
without any proof whatsoever. That should tell you
31:04
everything you need to know about
31:06
their methodology. That's to tell you
31:08
everything you need to know because they don't
31:10
know anything. The only thing they're trying
31:13
to do is confirm their biases as
31:15
soon as
31:15
possible, and they have no proof to back
31:17
it up. And thing is, like, think
31:19
about this as a true thing for politicians. Right?
31:22
If they are willing to weaponize
31:26
the vaccine for votes,
31:28
That means they are comfortable with killing
31:30
a non zero number of people to keep their
31:32
job. Yeah. How many people would you
31:34
kill to keep your job? I would kill
31:36
zero people.
31:37
Jesus 668. That is a true statement. No. I
31:40
668. They're willing to say. I know. I will
31:42
there is a there is a non zero hour
31:44
people. But I'm willing to let 668.
31:46
There are many of these politicians
31:48
that you know for sure are double 668, triple
31:50
whacks. Talking about your
31:52
668. Vacks up as often as they can get it.
31:54
And they are they are
31:57
lying to their constituency
31:59
668 they're getting a blowing this
32:01
up as much as they possibly can
32:04
668 four votes and that's despicable. I
32:06
will say 668, I just noticed
32:08
this the other day. I was looking to see what the
32:10
COVID 668 cd668 thing is now.
32:13
Anybody can get another vaccine
32:16
if you haven't got it in two months. I
32:18
I went on there and like, oh, really? I did my
32:20
And I was like, yeah, I didn't get one in two
32:22
months, and they didn't ask me any other questions.
32:25
Oh,
32:25
really? I actually didn't ask any other questions.
32:27
So you could just go there and just say, hey,
32:29
this is a thing. I'm actually going on a trip
32:31
this
32:31
summer.
32:32
Yeah. And I'm planning on getting it, like,
32:34
a month and a half before I leave. Yeah. I think that's
32:36
wise. And I'm gonna be like, yeah. I'm just gonna get it
32:38
a month and a half before I leave so that's six
32:40
weeks, and I'm at my highest immunity
32:42
that I can be sure. And then hopefully,
32:45
I don't get sick while I'm on
32:47
vacation. Yeah. You know, I think that's why. That's
32:49
what I'm gonna do. That's We're we're in a place
32:51
where a constant vigilance
32:53
and a
32:54
668, like, a regular vaccination
32:56
schedule may be required -- Yeah. -- because this shit
32:58
is still circulating. Well, I will. If they
33:00
say you can get it every two months, I might
33:02
get it four or five times a year. Yeah. You know what
33:04
I mean? Like, I don't know. That's 668 not as
33:06
it's not 668 me
33:08
tell you that COVID is terrible
33:11
and the effects of long COVID have
33:13
been shown to be really genuinely
33:15
terrible. So if can avoid it at all
33:17
costs, I will. Yeah, man. Same. Hey.
33:20
Hey. Over here.
33:23
Hey. Did you
33:25
forget Valentine's Day? Well,
33:27
I got you. Okay? Because when
33:29
you go to adam and Eve dot com and use gold
33:32
glory, you get half off.
33:34
Almost any one item. Now I
33:36
know, did you order something overseas, but it
33:38
got shut down by the US Navy? I
33:40
got you. Use called glory
33:43
at adam and me dot com. Because
33:45
when you do, not only do you get the fifty
33:47
percent off thing that I mentioned, you know, a second
33:49
ago, you get three free gifts, one
33:52
for you and and maybe you and and
33:54
you again, or you could share it with people. That's fine.
33:57
And also, six for his
33:59
spicy movies. I mean, you
34:01
like 668 spice. You like 668
34:04
don't talk too long. You like cd668 especially
34:07
on Valentine's
34:07
Day. You know, you dip those movies and some chocolate,
34:10
damn 668, you
34:11
gotta 668 going or something. And
34:14
also free shipping. So that's
34:16
free. 668 that's
34:19
like love already we're giving
34:21
you 668 some love to to you.
34:24
So go to adam and Eve dot com
34:26
and use code glory, you know, just in
34:28
case you forgot to do the act. I mean,
34:31
forgot to get 668
34:34
Day gift, you know, last minute kinda situate
34:36
your God. I mean, it's not like
34:38
death. PM before this episode is supposed
34:40
to go up. No. It's it's it's I
34:43
mean, 668 Valentine's Day, you should
34:45
go to adam and dot com and use called glorious
34:47
668. So do that. Thanks.
34:50
Dip it in some chocolate today. You know what
34:52
I mean? Just sometimes dip
34:55
whatever you got in some chocolate. I'm sure
34:57
somebody's can they it
34:59
off or something like 668, you
35:01
know, don't sit there too long with the 668. That's
35:04
probably not good for 668, but just use called glory.
35:06
668 fine. Jesus wants
35:08
you to spell 668 the word. I
35:10
want small circle of salt and
35:12
star
35:13
within. This 668 comes to religion
35:15
dispatches dot org behind the inclusive
35:17
sounding ads of this hundred million dollar
35:19
PR blitz for
35:21
Jesus. 668 the same old conservative
35:23
Christian fantasy. These
35:25
you probably haven't seen these. You don't watch commercials.
35:27
No. So have you seen them?
35:28
Yeah. So I sent these all the time because
35:30
I watched 668.
35:31
Right? Yeah. So you're exposed to commercial. I see
35:33
it all the time. And I you know, funny
35:35
enough, I don't watch all the commercials in
35:38
between. What I do is as soon as the commercials
35:40
come on, I normally skip because I
35:42
watch sports in
35:44
arrears. Mhmm. I wait two hours
35:47
and then start the thing so I don't have to sit
35:49
through the commentary. I don't
35:51
know. When I watch football game, I have
35:53
a thirty 668 second skip on my controller.
35:57
It's amazing for football time because
35:59
they hike the ball, they throw it down
36:01
the field, guy gets tackled. I press thirty
36:04
seconds skip. They are back at the line.
36:06
Oh, ready to hike the ball again. And
36:08
so it the guy says two or three numbers
36:10
hikes the ball. The next play happens. As
36:12
soon as he gets tackled, I hit skip and it
36:14
does it again. So you can fast forward it and essentially
36:16
fast forward the whole game and
36:19
I can watch every snap until they get
36:21
to, you know, when they're
36:23
when they're trying to go with no
36:25
huddle, which is 668 normally take longer
36:27
than thirty
36:28
seconds or shorter than thirty seconds. So it's normally
36:30
very fast. So I can't I can't do it all the way through
36:32
the game. 668 I can do it through most of the
36:34
game. So how fast can you watch a game now? In
36:36
about an hour and fifteen minutes. That's awesome. Yeah.
36:38
So I can just what is it like three hours? That's
36:40
hours normally, so I can normally watch about an
36:42
hour hour and fifteen. It's little longer
36:45
because, you know, it's
36:47
it's an hour long. You would if
36:49
if you just cut out all the stuff and you
36:51
just ran the clock or 668, it would
36:53
be an hour because it's a fifteen minute periods.
36:55
But it would know, I could I could finish in
36:57
about an hour or hour and fifteen minutes. In
36:59
any case, these commercials will come on
37:01
when I skip through the commercials. So I skip
37:03
1234 normally.
37:06
Uh-huh. And that's normally not enough to get through, but
37:08
sometimes it is. And I'll catch a commercial
37:10
once in a while. Right. And I'm getting these
37:12
commercials where it's like this high
37:14
production value thing
37:16
and their their message in here
37:19
is, yes, that Jesus
37:21
or Jesus is the answer basically is
37:23
what they're saying. And the
37:26
the commercials, Tom, very
37:28
much feel
37:29
progressive. I know they're
37:31
not
37:32
progressive. 668? Have that feel to him.
37:34
But they have that feel to him and they do things
37:36
they say weird shit like Jesus
37:39
wasn't immigrant. 668 you're just like
37:41
and I like, it your attention. You're
37:43
like, wait a minute. I don't hear lot of
37:45
Christians talking like, 668. But
37:48
these are definitely done. By
37:50
people, I think 668 to
37:52
reach a more progressive audience
37:55
with a progressive message and
37:57
they are hardcore Christian groups
38:00
that are normally very
38:01
668, but they will take what they can
38:03
get. Yeah. Well, The article indicates
38:06
that this is financed by the Koch 668 or
38:08
Koch brother. I think there's one 668. So
38:10
Koch the Koch people the Coke
38:13
guy. And it's it seems from licensed Not
38:15
my Coke guy. It's just a Coke guy.
38:17
It's just a polar bear. It's just financed by
38:19
a by a polar bear. Never 668 a
38:21
cup. But Sure. Yeah.
38:24
I was thinking about that guy who's sort of humming in
38:26
the car 668 around a lot.
38:28
He was always like, hey, man. You wanna do you
38:30
wanna do Anyway,
38:33
so, like and 668 they've what they've indicated
38:35
is, like, yeah. Like, we wanna bring them in
38:37
and then we'll essentially indoctrinate them
38:39
into the hard right. Yeah.
38:41
So it makes sense. Right? Like,
38:44
let's appeal to them at the level 668 they're out.
38:46
Let's appeal to them on these values that they hold.
38:48
And then we'll get them to accept this messaging,
38:50
and then we'll just shift the window on them. Yeah.
38:52
And that's fucking scary.
38:55
A hundred million dollar
38:57
668. To do this is to get people
38:59
who have progressive values
39:02
to that are also susceptible to the,
39:04
you know, messaging of Christianity 668 say,
39:07
oh, well, welcome in. Welcome in. We also have
39:09
that message. And then as soon as you get here,
39:11
what we're gonna do is we're gonna immediately
39:13
start to 668 indoctrinate.
39:15
668 in indoctrinate. Yeah. Bring you further right. Bring
39:17
you further right. They're not going to be
39:19
influenced by AAAAAA
39:22
microancy of left leaning thought
39:24
into their organization. Right? That's what's
39:26
not going to happen. What they're absolutely
39:28
gonna do is bring you in and shift you
39:30
right. Yeah. Bring you in and shift you right.
39:33
And that is fucking awful.
39:35
That is fucking awful. And to use
39:38
the values that people have and
39:40
to sort of like use their values
39:42
as a way to wedge their way into the door
39:44
of your
39:45
668, in order to then change
39:47
your 668. Holy 668, is
39:49
that me? Yeah, man. 668 is. It is.
39:51
And this is this is one of those things
39:53
668, like, you know,
39:55
they they
39:58
rack I mean, I feel like football feels
40:00
like the place where they 668
40:02
be. Yeah. Because there was so much do
40:04
you remember how much pushback there was just from
40:06
a guy nailing down? Yeah,
40:07
man. Even if all is like there -- Yeah.
40:09
-- when when I went to go see the bowl
40:11
That's the real church. I went to go see the bowls
40:14
recently. I had tickets to go see the bowls. My
40:16
wife got them for me for Christmas. We went to there. And
40:18
we went on Martin Luther King Day.
40:20
So it was the day before Martin Luther King Junior's
40:23
birthday. 668? Yep. And we
40:25
went in and they had a
40:27
ceremony and all kinds of 668. It was really
40:29
very 668. And they're saying the
40:31
black national anthem. Something I had no idea
40:34
You know what I just Right. Yeah. Very cool.
40:36
It was really interesting. Never heard. Oh.
40:38
Raise every voice, I think, is what it's called.
40:40
Uh-huh. Not a hundred percent sure, but I think
40:42
it's raise every voice is what it's called.
40:44
But in any case, this is this is
40:46
a, you know, this is a it's a
40:48
progressive and it also is
40:50
a person of color audience. There's a lot
40:52
of people of color that watch basketball
40:55
and that enjoy basketball. And then, you know,
40:57
like, the game is the crowd is very
40:59
diverse. It's just a diverse crowd. And
41:02
I think it's more I think I don't
41:04
feel like they I see these nearly
41:06
as often as I see them with football. Football
41:10
has this I mean, you saw the kind of
41:12
stuff that happened when somebody, you know, a black
41:14
guy 668 down. Yep. And they
41:17
flipped their shit. I mean, man, they went
41:19
crazy. And I think there is a lot
41:21
of God guns and, you know Yep.
41:24
668 in the in in football
41:26
is the American rights sport. It really
41:28
feels like it is. And so they are
41:30
they know this 668. And
41:32
they're going for 668. But what surprises me
41:35
is the progressive message. That's what surprises
41:37
me. But it's
41:39
a it's a false message. Yeah. Because
41:41
the the money behind it
41:44
is a lie. Yep. They are they
41:46
are the money behind it is all about
41:48
anti immigration. What about funding
41:51
politicians that are anti immigration, and
41:53
anti gay, and anti inclusive?
41:56
And so 668 just a big
41:58
fucking lie and they're just lying to these
42:00
people. But, you know, if they make
42:02
it slick enough, I don't know. I mean,
42:04
a commercial for
42:06
Jesus. A commercial commercial for
42:08
Jesus. And the campaign is he gets
42:10
us. Yeah. He gets us. I actually
42:12
wanna read from the chat in here because the the
42:14
chat will really like articulate this.
42:16
So one of the one of the 668
42:19
that was involved posed as somebody
42:21
who was opposing this message
42:23
as being anti woke in order to sort of like
42:26
get the real message out. Yeah. Cd668 and
42:29
so if you scroll down -- Yeah. Sure. -- there's messaging
42:31
in here. Where somebody
42:34
668 one of the journalists is posing as
42:36
as somebody complaining about this. They say,
42:39
I worry people might get the wrong idea 668. Like
42:41
your video on your website makes Jesus
42:43
sound like BLM or 668. Does
42:46
that start people off on the wrong foot? BLM
42:48
is Antichrist. So shouldn't we keep Jesus
42:50
far away from that as
42:51
possible? So that's the poem. Right. That's
42:53
a guy. He's just fucking he's just trying
42:55
to He's trying to get
42:56
there. He goes with the real agenda. And
42:59
he says and the and the responses, I
43:02
honestly couldn't say either way. I don't believe
43:04
that ad is meant to make Jesus sound like BLM
43:07
or 668. He is sure as heck he
43:09
was not. Rather, it's our hope that
43:11
those sorts of people would engage us in
43:13
order to be radically transformed by
43:15
Jesus. Yeah. He's saying
43:18
there, look, I get it.
43:20
That's not actually our message. We're just using
43:22
it. The goal is to get people in the door,
43:25
and then we will radicalize them.
43:27
They might call it radically transformed
43:29
by Jesus 668 that is radicalizing.
43:32
Yes. That's what that is.
43:33
Jesus fucking raised. Yeah.
43:36
Sister, it comes from media 668. Cd668.
43:39
Cd668. Immediate. 668 eyes.
43:43
668 of Paul Pelosi 668 should dispel
43:45
conspiracy theories.
43:48
668 it won't. Did you watch it? I didn't Did
43:50
you watch? I did 668 watch it. See, I did
43:52
wanna see some way to hit by a
43:53
hammer.
43:53
Holy shit. I
43:54
668 weird about Holy shit dude. It
43:56
first off, you know, trigger warning. If
43:58
you if you are, like, triggered
44:01
by violence, do not watch
44:03
cd668 video It is
44:05
terrifying. 668 is so
44:08
668 shittingly terrifying. You
44:10
know, Paul Pelosi,
44:13
smartly figured out a way
44:15
to coded call nine eleven. I
44:17
I read 668 transcripts. So smart.
44:19
He's 668, codedly, coded
44:22
668 And then he said he wanted to get something to
44:24
drink. Right? So that's how he could call.
44:26
Right? So he's holding a glass of water
44:28
in his hand. And this guy
44:30
is standing there with a hammer. And
44:33
when they open the door, everybody
44:36
looks surprised except for Paul.
44:38
Right. The guy behind that door
44:40
who has the hammer is like, what the fuck?
44:42
And then the people outside are like, what's going
44:44
on? And you
44:46
could sort of feel like Paul
44:48
is like, I am safe
44:50
now. Right. Yeah. I was terrified a
44:53
few seconds ago. I wasn't sure I was gonna survive
44:55
this. I am safe now,
44:57
and that's when the dude just lunges
44:59
at him. And you don't see the hit. Oh,
45:02
god. But what you hear -- Oh. --
45:04
after it's over, Is Paul
45:06
just sounding like he's going
45:08
into a seizure? Oh. Like it's that bad.
45:10
Right. And they didn't they they couldn't
45:13
stop 668. It was too fast. As soon as As
45:15
soon as he sees the police and there's
45:17
like a moment of recognition, this
45:19
guy turns to go after him, Paul
45:21
tries to grab the hammer and he can't and he gets
45:23
walloped in the face with it. And so they both fall
45:25
down. You don't see it. It's off camera, but
45:27
it is terrifying to watch. It seriously
45:30
looks like a serial
45:30
killer.
45:31
Like, it's 668. My god. And
45:33
the problem is, is that Paul
45:35
gets the his house broken into in the
45:37
middle of the 668. You know, Trump
45:39
is out there saying they were breaking
45:42
668, not in. Right? Even though there's
45:44
video of them breaking in, people
45:47
are saying, oh, that person was trying to
45:49
break out of the house because they're Paul Pelosi's gay
45:51
lover or 668. Because they wanna, like 668 they
45:53
wanna slander this guy somehow because
45:56
that's how they think they can slander,
45:58
which Like, none of that is true. Right?
46:00
Yeah. The the guy was actually politically motivated, which
46:02
they don't 668 acknowledge. You know I also just wanna
46:04
back up and say, even
46:07
if that was his gay lover, 668
46:10
doesn't mean he should be mocked for
46:12
being beaten with a ham with a
46:13
hamper. So, like, look, it just tells
46:15
you everything about the fucking out
46:17
your ex Monza's 668 and
46:19
the awfulness of that. What does this say 668,
46:22
like, how they view gay people -- Yeah. -- gay people
46:24
should get hit by hammers Yeah. -- gay people attack
46:26
other
46:26
people. 668 doesn't matter if gay people
46:28
are beaten. Yeah. Like, just even if
46:30
you accept and we sure So even if you accept
46:33
this very message about that -- just
46:35
can't You can't even count them all. They're --
46:37
Right. -- gross and disgusting. And,
46:39
you know, immediately, people
46:41
were talking about this conspiracy theory
46:44
that they were, you know, that they were 668. That
46:46
they were concussed. And that was the problem. That
46:48
was the issue. That was what was going
46:49
on. And, I mean, talking about her on Fox
46:51
News.
46:52
Yeah, man. This is it. 668 Karl's assistant.
46:54
Like some, you know -- Yeah. -- fucking weird
46:57
no show crazy thing on
46:59
bitch shoot. Nope. This is main
47:02
network television -- Yeah. -- where people are
47:04
like, no, this could have been
47:06
different. And in fact, There's
47:08
another story that's attached to this
47:10
668. Elon Musk
47:12
tweeted -- Yeah. --
47:13
while this was going on -- Yep. -- I
47:15
remember this. Elon Musk tweets
47:17
out. He says, there's
47:20
a tiny possibility there may be more to this
47:22
story than meets the eye, and it's about Paul
47:24
Pelosi. Yep. And it's it's from
47:26
some garbage nothing. Right? It's from
47:28
smobbserved dot com.
47:30
The awful 668, Paul Pelosi, was drunk
47:33
again and in a 668. And it's it's
47:35
trying to pin the blame on the 668. Yes.
47:37
Right? Yes. Rather than to acknowledge that we have
47:40
so radicalized the right in this
47:42
country 668 time and time and
47:44
time again, people on the fucking
47:46
right are attacking other
47:48
human beings and trying to kill them --
47:50
Yeah. -- for politically motivated reasons. Because
47:52
the right is so far out of control.
47:54
And what happens here is, you
47:57
know, remember that old statement,
47:59
it's like, you know, they print the traction on page
48:01
ten or whatever. You know, that old oh, yeah.
48:03
That old jethil statement. That's what this
48:05
is. That's what this is. It's rich. This this 668.
48:08
He says he apologized when somebody
48:10
says somebody says 668 on the
48:12
left want. Elon 668 to apologize for Pelosi.
48:15
For what? It is still a questionable
48:17
and bizarre situation between two men
48:19
in their underwear. No. It's not true.
48:21
One of them was in their underwear because he was because
48:23
of the He was a friend of his house. And it says,
48:26
nonetheless. And now, first off,
48:28
saying nonetheless -- Right.
48:30
-- means you acknowledge --
48:32
Yes. It does. -- that this is Weird.
48:34
Right? Yep. That's up. First off, don't say
48:36
none the last because you grant the position.
48:38
You're saying I I kind of
48:40
agree, but I still apologize. And that's
48:42
bullshit.
48:43
It's bullshit. But he apologized
48:45
for 668, and then they asked, what are you apologizing for?
48:47
Any 668 this tweet that basically
48:49
says, yeah, I apologize for it. But really
48:52
genuinely, this is a thing that's just
48:54
it stirs itself up on that
48:56
cd668, and they just fucking
48:58
freak out about this. Yeah, man. And there was
49:01
There was an attack. There was that guy, like,
49:03
last week or the week before, I can't remember
49:05
anymore. 668 so they who went together. Right.
49:07
Who who was who's targeting Democrats
49:09
-- 668. --
49:12
politicians who's trying to, like, kill them and, like,
49:15
we we are at a place where now where you know,
49:17
you got you got Alex Jones and 668 and
49:19
you've got QAnon and you've got the fucking
49:21
pipe bomber. Pipe bomber and you've got this fucking
49:24
guy. We have an endless string -- Yeah. --
49:26
of right wing terrorism. Sure.
49:28
Right? Yeah. And our politicians are kidnapping
49:30
the governor. Yes. Yeah. 668 to keep that
49:33
one. We can go through. You literally could finish
49:35
all the show 668.
49:36
Right. And talk about individual instances
49:38
of that. And we would not get them all. We wouldn't get them all. We
49:40
would forget some. That the right has
49:43
become so violent in
49:45
the rhetoric, so dismissive of reality.
49:47
So absolutely willing to
49:49
rewrite history as we live it. Yes.
49:52
As we fucking live in, it is
49:54
absolute nineteen eighty four double speak.
49:56
And that is, like, I'm not trying to be hyperbolic,
49:59
but that's what that terminology is. To
50:01
rewrite history as you live it. Yeah.
50:03
That is literally what is happening when
50:05
an event occurs like Paul Pelosi
50:08
who is a man broke into his
50:10
home looking for Nancy Pelosi,
50:12
looking for the fucking speaker of the house in
50:14
order to break her knees. We know that because
50:16
that's what he fucking said. When
50:18
that happens and that man gets attacked and
50:21
immediately 668 right spins
50:23
that and denies that reality of what happened,
50:25
668 is fucking absolutely double
50:27
speed. Yeah. That is a rewriting of history
50:30
in the present.
50:31
For anyone to think that
50:34
Vladimir Putin. The
50:36
fucking hell is Trump? It's just
50:38
this is 668 a whole back, but then also,
50:41
like like, so here's the thing. We
50:43
remember when he was over in
50:45
wherever he was, and he was talking. Putin was next
50:47
to him. Do you remember this when he was
50:49
talking? Oh, yeah. I remember him. Yeah. Somebody asked him and
50:51
he said, 668. I believe this guy
50:52
I went into his fucking size. I looked at
50:54
his
50:54
eyes and I and I believe him more than I believe
50:56
my own my own
50:57
security. This KGB spy really
50:59
fooled me. He really pulled the number. In any
51:01
case, Trump said this out loud, but
51:04
now he's doubling down on his sentiment.
51:06
668? Like, even if you're you you think
51:09
This guy never writes anything down. He always
51:11
speaks ex 668. You know, sometimes
51:13
he's a dimwit and he says dumb shit.
51:16
And, you know, there it is. But look at how many
51:19
times he's said dumb shit
51:21
and then he has doubled down, tripled
51:23
down, quadrupled down everything. Look
51:25
at look at a circle, like, I mean,
51:27
a fucking weather map where he has to
51:29
draw a circle on it to show
51:31
that he's not wrong about it
51:33
going, continuing up. It's literally
51:36
drawn on, there's nobody in the audience
51:38
who doesn't see that you did that with
51:40
a shot. Right. It's the most clear
51:42
thing. 668 now
51:44
And now we have Trump make shocking
51:47
668. It doesn't make shocking anymore 668 trusting
51:49
Putin over US intelligence low
51:52
life. Yeah. Unless you think that's out of
51:54
context, here's what he trrved.
51:58
Remember in Helsinki when a third rate
52:00
reporter asked me essentially who I trusted
52:02
more, president Putin of Russia,
52:04
or our intelligence low life?
52:07
My instinct at the time was that we had really bad
52:09
people in the form of James Comey McCabe,
52:11
whose wife was being helped out by crooked Hillary
52:14
while crooked was under investigation, Brennan,
52:16
Peter Stroke, whose wife is at the SEC
52:19
and his lover Lisa Page. Now add
52:21
McGonigle and others slime to the
52:23
list. Who would you choose? 668 or
52:25
these misfits? Who's in
52:27
charge of who's hiring? Well,
52:29
you know what I mean? Like, like, these are
52:31
your 668. Right? These are your
52:33
guys. Like, Like, look, man.
52:36
If James call me, won you the election, man.
52:38
Yeah, man. Yeah.
52:39
Absolutely. But James call me is literally
52:42
one you the election. 668 Rehina ever got
52:44
rid of McCabe, did he? I don't even remember, man.
52:46
I don't remember. Fucking remember him. The number
52:48
of people that he got rid of and how fast, like,
52:50
I don't even know. But, like, also,
52:53
the idea that anybody would
52:55
be like, you know 668? I trust Putin.
52:58
Putin, a man who said
53:00
I back can invade Ukraine until the
53:02
moment he invaded Ukraine, a man who's
53:05
single handedly attempting to
53:07
wipe out a nation of people
53:09
with terroristic attacks against
53:11
their domestic civilian
53:13
population. And we're gonna be
53:15
like, yeah, I 668 him more than somebody who's on
53:17
the other side of my political it's so embarrassing
53:21
that there's so many people in this country
53:23
that are like, he's a great negotiator, and
53:25
he's obviously won
53:27
over by a guy who
53:30
you couldn't trust him as far as you could throw
53:32
it. Right? And he's proven time
53:34
and time and time again that 668 not
53:36
telling you the truth and that he's trying to 668
53:39
you and he's trying to trick Puggen is
53:41
an actual monster. Yeah. He will be remembered
53:43
by history Absolutely. -- as one of
53:45
the worst monsters in history.
53:48
Right? He's a I mean, The
53:50
number of fucking dead on his
53:52
watch is unbelievable. And
53:55
the violence that he's willing to perpetrate
53:58
against the Ukrainian people for his own political
54:00
ends is staggering. And
54:03
the idea that in the mid of that
54:05
actual existential war
54:07
for the fucking fate of another sovereign
54:10
nation. The former president and
54:12
actual contender for the next president
54:15
is like, I trust that guy. Yeah.
54:17
With if he wins, our support for
54:19
Ukraine vanishes overnight. Yeah. Oh,
54:22
no. You're absolutely right.
54:25
668 platter. Yeah. Licking 668
54:27
balls while he does it. You're absolutely hand
54:29
Ukraine actually. Right? And and would
54:31
be terrified to be in Ukraine at that point. Because
54:34
it's terrible. I mean, it's just genuinely
54:35
terrible. Yeah.
54:36
It'll be a bloodbath. If if if Russia
54:38
takes Ukraine
54:39
Yeah.
54:39
And seizes it and holds it. The the
54:41
reprisals and we know this because --
54:43
Yeah. -- the towns that they grabbed the
54:45
towns that they grabbed control of the
54:47
human rights abuses in those towns
54:50
were fucking legion and
54:52
they're documented and they're on film and it's not
54:54
like inspiratorial. Like,
54:56
they rape and summarily execute
54:59
and torture people. They found, like, I don't
55:01
668 too gross. Like in the New York Times, they found
55:03
boxes of teeth that had been pulled
55:05
from prisoners. They are torturing
55:08
the civilian population. The
55:10
horrors that they're perpetrating cannot be
55:12
overstated. They can't be. Cuddle Lord.
55:14
So if they take Ukraine -- Yeah, man. --
55:17
the Ukrainians will suffer unbelievable misery.
55:19
It's it. It's a disaster as
55:21
it is. And then and then this guy
55:24
has been and he was for the
55:26
whole time he was in. It was
55:28
was doing whatever they wanted.
55:31
It was a fucking 668. It was it was gross.
55:33
Yeah. It's fucking laptop. The fact that he
55:35
doesn't trust the people that he's
55:37
in charge of hiring and firing -- Right.
55:39
-- shows you all you need to know about
55:41
his his capability. Yep. I mean, he's
55:43
literally instead of replacing
55:46
them with the best
55:47
people, he just insults them
55:49
on his 668 media platform. That's
55:51
668
55:51
all he can do. Yeah. That's all that he
55:53
can do. 668
55:55
racist.
55:56
Also for New York Times, the college board strips
55:59
down its AP curriculum, its advanced 668,
56:01
For African American studies, the
56:03
official course looks different from a
56:05
previous draft. No more critical race
56:07
theory in the study of contemporary topics like
56:10
Black Lives 668, is optional.
56:12
Also, there's another part that they added
56:14
something new. Black conservatism is
56:17
now added as
56:19
well. So this is 668
56:22
heavy criticism from governor Rhonda 668,
56:24
Tom. Yeah. Yeah. This is a fuck
56:27
this is blacky erasure. 668
56:29
that's what this is. 668 exactly it.
56:31
This is governor DeSantis is
56:33
intentionally going through
56:36
a process of structural
56:39
black erasure. That is what it well,
56:41
because, you know, think about an AP class
56:43
as a class for those internationalists. 668
56:46
an advanced placement class. They're offered in
56:48
high school, typically in the junior and senior
56:50
year. And if you take an advanced placement class,
56:52
after you take it, you take a test. If you get a certain
56:54
score on the test, you get a credit that
56:57
transfers over into college. Right?
56:59
So this is an opportunity to
57:01
teach students about
57:03
the black experience. 668 what this
57:05
is. About about African American history.
57:08
That is an important we we
57:10
need more of this. Right? We need white
57:13
people in particular should be
57:15
spending an enormous amount of our time
57:17
in history trying to understand the
57:19
experiences of minorities that we have oppressed
57:21
in this country to understand the reality
57:23
of how our country structurally performs
57:26
-- Yeah. -- and was 668. And
57:28
we don't do that. And to,
57:30
like, go through the curriculum and
57:33
to then sanitize it, to
57:35
make the curriculum acceptable to
57:37
like bigots like Rhonda 668,
57:40
it just strips all the meaning
57:42
and the value from this. He is he
57:44
is I
57:45
mean, like, this is so hateful. Yeah.
57:48
It's such a hateful position. And
57:50
it's so obvious and so
57:52
unbelievably
57:53
racist.
57:54
It is so What what it is is it's
57:56
winning points. I mean, a group of people
57:58
in this country because there are
58:00
so many people. I mean, you know, you
58:02
668 somebody and they'll say, you know, who's
58:05
the most hated group? And they'll be like, oh, it's white
58:07
guys. Those are the most -- Oh, yeah. -- group. Like, you
58:09
can ask so many people, oh, you 668, say that
58:11
that's the case. Yep. And so, you
58:13
know, what he's doing
58:15
is he's feeding into anyone
58:18
that is willing to think that
58:20
and listen to that and and he's
58:23
reinforcing it by saying
58:25
you're 668. And what I'm gonna do is
58:27
I'm gonna be your savior. Yep. I'm gonna protect
58:30
you from this. Mhmm. In any way that I can
58:32
and the best way I can do it is because, you
58:34
know, these people hate the
58:36
educated. They just 668 the
58:38
educated. And so what he's gonna do is he's gonna
58:40
punish people as much as
58:43
he can and the punishment then
58:45
just turns down, it basically what it does
58:47
is 668, he's gonna punish us by making
58:49
us ignorant. Yeah, man. The the you're
58:51
a hundred percent
58:52
right. You know, the less educated people
58:54
are about these particular topics. The
58:57
less informed they are to make decisions
58:59
-- Right. -- about Right. -- about any of this.
59:01
The goal is to
59:03
enforce and create a
59:05
narrative of victimhood that
59:07
it still holds a place of power
59:09
and authority. Yeah. And they're doing
59:11
a great job of that. Right? If they can
59:14
create this narrative of victimhood without
59:16
ever 668 control to anyone,
59:19
then they get both ends of the spectrum.
59:21
They can they can have both sides of that equation.
59:23
Yeah. Well, we're the 668, we're still in power.
59:25
We still have all of the 668, we still have all
59:27
the money, we still of all the CEOs and
59:29
all the, you know, most of the congresspeople
59:31
and most of the, you know, we still have all the actual
59:33
structural power, but we're still victims. If
59:35
they can have that, they get their cake and they get
59:37
it to eat it too. Right? It's it's a fucking
59:40
clan shaped cake, but they get to have it and
59:42
they get to eat it too. And that's like exactly
59:44
what they're trying to do. And the way to
59:46
do that is to keep people ignorant. Because if
59:48
you were to if you were to teach everybody the
59:50
sixteen nineteen project, If you
59:53
were to teach them the truth of how
59:55
policing came to be in this country, if
59:57
you were to teach them, like, the reality of,
59:59
like, the horrors of the reconstruction
1:00:02
and the Jim Crow era, and how long
1:00:05
it took for any of that
1:00:07
sort of structurally to move away
1:00:09
after people think that after the
1:00:11
emancipation proclamation, it was like, well, I don't know
1:00:13
why everything's not solved. That was two hundred years ago.
1:00:15
And you're like, Well, you're a fucking
1:00:17
idiot.
1:00:18
Yeah. Like, you're an actual fucking idiot. Yeah.
1:00:20
Like, you're 668 but you're not an idiot. You
1:00:22
just are uneducated. And now the
1:00:24
now the lack of education is intentional.
1:00:26
Mhmm. It's intentional. Right? You're
1:00:28
right.
1:00:35
So we're gonna wrap it up today. We wanna
1:00:38
we 668, of course, invite you to
1:00:40
listen to this Thursday show
1:00:43
which is gonna be a deep dive on
1:00:45
a long form article about Elon Musk's
1:00:48
takeover of Twitter from the verge.
1:00:50
Now, Tom reads this article aloud
1:00:52
we are gonna post the reading
1:00:54
of this article on our Patreon page.
1:00:57
It's gonna be free to everybody. Right?
1:00:59
So whenever launch is gonna launch,
1:01:01
you can go listen to it. We're gonna make
1:01:03
it go live, I think,
1:01:06
the morning of the Thursday.
1:01:08
Patrons will get it early. But the morning of
1:01:10
Thursday will make it go live for everybody. And
1:01:13
then if you 668 listen to it, you can go
1:01:15
there and listen to Tom read that article from the
1:01:17
Virgin. Or you could read the article yourself,
1:01:19
and then you can listen on a regular podcast
1:01:22
feed to our discussion of
1:01:24
that on
1:01:24
Thursday. This upcoming Thursday. And
1:01:26
so that's because this month, we're giving
1:01:28
away all the ebbs away. So this month, we
1:01:30
wanna kinda give you a whole month of
1:01:33
all of the extras you guys can kinda get a sampling
1:01:35
of what we're gonna do. And if you find it
1:01:37
compelling, then we would encourage you to
1:01:39
become a patron. When when March rolls
1:01:41
around, 668 at the two dollar
1:01:43
level will get the The you're
1:01:46
reading it. Yeah. The reading of the deep dive
1:01:47
article. And this is forty
1:01:49
five minute article. It's a
1:01:50
lots of long articles. This is not a short article.
1:01:52
This is a long 668. So you get a ton of audio
1:01:54
there, and then you'll also get us talking
1:01:56
about it afterwards. And so
1:01:58
we're gonna post it on Patreon on, if if
1:02:00
you if you wanna go listen to it,
1:02:03
go listen to Tom, read it, and there
1:02:05
there's no charge. It's not gonna be charged to anybody. We're
1:02:07
gonna we're gonna release it to patrons early. 668
1:02:10
everybody's gonna get it on Thursday morning.
1:02:12
668. That's gonna wrap it
1:02:14
up for this week. We'll catch you
1:02:16
Thursday this week. And we're gonna
1:02:18
leave it like we always do with the 668
1:02:20
creed. Credulity is not a
1:02:22
virtue. It's fortune
1:02:24
cookie cutter mommy issue hit no
1:02:27
Babylon bullshit. 668, scientifician,
1:02:30
668, bubble, toil, and trouble
1:02:32
pseudo quasi alternative acute punctuating
1:02:35
pressure rise 668 grand pyramidal
1:02:37
free energy healing, watered downward
1:02:40
spiral brain dead pan sales pitch,
1:02:42
late night info document. Leo
1:02:46
668 cancer cures, detox reflex
1:02:48
foot massage, death in towers,
1:02:50
taro cars, psychic healing crystal
1:02:53
balls, big 668 any aliens,
1:02:55
churches, mosques, and synagogues, temples,
1:02:58
dragons, giant worms, 668
1:03:00
dolphins, 668, berther's, witches,
1:03:02
wizard vaccine nuts,
1:03:05
shaman healers, evangelists, conspiracy,
1:03:08
double speak, 668, nonsense.
1:03:12
Expose your thrust
1:03:15
your hands, bloody, evidential,
1:03:18
conclusive. Doubt
1:03:21
even this.
1:03:33
The opinions and information provided on
1:03:35
this podcast are intended for entertainment
1:03:38
purposes only. All opinions are
1:03:40
solely that of Glory Whole Studios LLC.
1:03:43
Cognitive dissonance makes no representations as
1:03:45
to accuracy, completeness, currentness,
1:03:48
668, or validity of any
1:03:50
information and will not be lie for
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1:03:57
information is provided on an as is
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