Episode 3117 - The Scott Adams School 03⧸18⧸26
Episode Stats
Length
1 hour and 2 minutes
Words per Minute
165.72208
Summary
It's hump day, so it's time for the Gayatola's Happy! This week, the gang talks about the new Punch Monkey and his new girlfriend, and the best way to make a cup of coffee. Oh, and Marcella and Owen have some news.
Transcript
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four three two one we're live we're live good morning good morning steve the texan
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beat steven lang those two good morning bookish or should i say gracie wow look at all these
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people joining. Wow. Hello, Sophie. Welcome, everybody. Is it Wednesday already? We're in
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hump day territory. The Gayatola's happy. More on the Gayatola on Friday. Yes. I threw that in
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just for fun a few minutes before. Me, my day. Good morning, everybody. There are some that are
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even worse that were not included in the article yes interesting good morning sandy people saying
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hello to me too you got you know scott you guys and scott have the best audience you're all so
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nice no the best the best people on the planet for sure yeah of all the podcasts i do because
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regular radio i do is regularly as well they could turn into pod everybody's so hostile
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you guys are all just always so nice it's it's so refreshing i agree i tell them that all the
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time I look over, I see their comments. Even the trolls are fine. Like there's a couple of trolls
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and I'm like, you know what? They're special too. They're here. They're a smarter troll,
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if anything. I think that conditioned them with his occasional rants to just get them to pipe
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down or leave. Yeah. I love that. You guys, is everybody in? I mean, some people tell me to
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wait longer. Some people are like, hurry up. I know. And I also want to sip a coffee in the
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worst way possible. So are you ready? I'm ready. Here we go. Grab a vessel. I've got one. Wow.
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Is it my imagination or do you get better looking every day? I think you do. It's because you're
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smarter. You're more fit. You're just sort of a better person than you used to be. It's going
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in the right direction. Good work on that. But if you'd like to make your day even better,
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then it already is. I've got a suggestion for you, and it's something called the simultaneous
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sip, and it doesn't take much. All it takes is a cup or a mug or a glass, a tank or a chalice
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or a stein, a canteen, a jug or a flask, a vessel of any kind. Fill it with your favorite liquid.
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I like coffee. And join me now for the unparalleled pleasure, the dopamine of the day,
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the thing that makes everything better the simultaneous sip go
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work for me wait how funny is that once again i did not preview that sip and there was scott
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saying exactly what we just said that this is like a smarter better looking more fit group of
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people. So congratulations to all of us. My name is Erica. You can see who we have here with us
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today. Owen and Marcella and returning BJ ditched our honking for freedom.com. So y'all
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we're Oh, sorry. Welcome to the Scott Adams school. I meant to mention that too. I have
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a visual update for you okay on my little punch monkey and his girlfriend momo which i someone
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in the chat will have to tell me i think translates to peaches or dumpling wait he's
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got a girlfriend now oh wow look at him he's balling now he's accepted and he's got the girl
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it's so great i i can't i'm like i'm so obsessed with this little monkey okay let me see i hope
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this works. Okay. I'm very slow today on the PC. Okay, here we go. Here we go. Punchy's
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loading. And I want you guys, so he's the darker of the two, okay? He's the darker little
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Oh my God. And I want you to know the last little image, he's like, it looks like he's kissing her,
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but like their little noses are together and his eyes are closed. So sweet. So sweet. Okay.
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that was my girly whiny voice for the morning that's it i'm done okay so you guys bj's here
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we've got a newsy show for you and marcella and owen have picked some news topics for us and i
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think marcella is gonna kick us off today is that right marcella look marcella look how you look
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today you look beautiful i youtube do not give us a copyright infringement uh oh yeah that was
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allegedly punch and that was allegedly assault yeah so we we have very uh so we have lots of
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good news and the bad news we'll try to make it into good so that's that's our theme of the day
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uh though there was a meteor that sonic boomed into ohio and uh it took up 10 different states
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were able to hear the fire were able to one see it and hear it uh people said it was like
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like an earthquake it felt like an earthquake and i don't know if there's anybody in the chat that
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felt it or saw it some of the people out there in ohio um so it was northeast ohio it went the meteor
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lit up cleveland area it was seven tons meter streaked across the sky 40 000 miles per hour
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um allegedly nasa says it was a meteor that's alleged and then california couldn't be you know
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couldn't stay um you know they they want to be first first and fraud first and everything so
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they had to have uh you know some some kind of street going in uh in the sky in garden grove
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Orange County California it was recorded at the same around like the same time or something and
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basically they're saying that's just probably nothing it was probably not not SpaceX was
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probably some kind of airplane fuel I they don't know wait did you see that one in California it
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was like making left and right turns and looping around well yeah allegedly I mean allegedly it was
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a clear video that's for sure scott always says can we ever get non-grainy videos it was a clear
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video yeah it was pretty clear that's a good point i'm gonna ask bj to weigh in on all of this
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no canadian uh meter not yet no it's it's very funny uh for a few years i had mentioned before
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i produce a podcast for an intelligence analyst and i and he's military into canadian military
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and i asked him once about what what do you think about ufos like we're on a long drive somewhere
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whatever he said you know it's funny i was him and another guy were asked by a senior general
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in the canadian military to look through all the ufo files in canada i said what are you kidding
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he said yeah we had like eight days just to go through everything all the claims we have that
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have been reported to the canadian government over like 30 years and he said it was just boxes and
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boxes and i said so would you find out he said nothing just a bunch of really weird crazy people
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that clearly were as scott liked to say 80 of twitter or x are are drunk or inebriated
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he said that's mostly what it was just drunk people hallucinating so do you think it's all
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fake do you think there are no aliens or ufos or real craft i mean i remain open-minded i can
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always be convinced, but yeah, I'm pretty sure most of it is our tech. It's because it's funny
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how as our technology advances, the more claims of what we see, you know, they have like this F47
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that finally is being, you know, unveiled shortly. Well, for how many years was advanced technology
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being tested that we never knew about, right? I will say what's interesting, you know, having
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lived in latin america maybe marcella you can weigh in on this there's been there's so many ufo
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sightings in mexico in particularly in particular which is close to america by the way and i remember
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asking people like well what do you think you know there's been reports of lights over mexico city
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hovering there for like hours like ah we don't care we're too busy they're just like if something
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bad's gonna happen we'll find out and we just gotta go on with our lives you know i think we've
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done this before, but everybody listening in the chat, real or fake, real or fake? What do you
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think about the alien stuff, real or fake? We want to see what you think. What do you think,
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Owen? I think 99.9% of it's fake, but I at least would say I'm open-minded and I want to believe
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that it's real. I want to believe that there is stuff out there. Although I would probably say
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it's much more likely and i think scott said something similar that if there is something it
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probably isn't from another planet it's probably from here from maybe some ancient civilization
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like a drone or something that is still around from thousands of years ago and there may be a
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you know there may have been something like pre-flood that just survived you know it might
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have been covered in ice for a while or hidden somewhere or it might still be hiding in the oceans
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and i think it would be much more likely to be from here or you know there's also the theory
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that it's some spiritual thing like angels or demons and that may be a possibility too that
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there is you know some way for them to kind of cross over or make themselves seen and there
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could be something related to that too i think it's what scott would describe this is how i look
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at it and oh and i'm sure you and the rest you probably look at the same way uh it's a great
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luxury belief, right? Or recreational belief that, yeah, you know, recreationally, I hope
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there's aliens. And yeah, of course there are. But realistically, no, no, they're not. But you
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know, that's how I have any of you seen any ever seen anything that you thought maybe was
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Marcella? Me too, Marcella. Yeah. I have not. I have not ever had any personal experience like
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that but i'd like to i'd like to see it aurora borealis you know the northern lights that and
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when you see something like that you realize that there's just magical things that happen naturally
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and you can imagine an uneducated society how they could have responded to that sort of stuff
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uh so yeah building a spaceship yeah yeah i do wish i do wish there were aliens that would be
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amazing but says an alien that's kidding until they come over and take over all our cities and
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enslave us all well you know give us some excitement and some problems to deal with
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we can focus on not fighting each other and focus on something external right yeah they could unite
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us look at that so to add brian romilly says it's coming so i think he's on the other side of this
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he said he's going to come back maybe a few months from now and tell us the truth cool that would be
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awesome july there's there's a connecting story that owen um talked about earlier a few weeks back
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um sort of connect that it could be connected so suspense music inside your brain an aerospace
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engineer monica jacinto resa was a coal inventor of a key u.s rocket alloyed banished while hiking
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in 2025 in months later which is the news that we gave you major general william neil mccaslin
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who oversaw the program that funded the program that she worked in also banished while hiking
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wearing boots and somewhere i don't know probably in the west uh utah i don't know but he still
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hasn't been found she hasn't been found so the idea was uh i don't know it most likely is
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just a random thing but they both uh worked in the same thing they both have intelligence
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uh i don't know moral of the story is don't hike alone
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yes you can get lost together i guess too just don't hike maybe the moral of the story is don't
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work on ufos yeah there's that too alleged ufos right marcella alleged ufos wait yeah well they
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i don't think they can sue us but maybe you know you're gonna file a lawsuit
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yeah when i was in the army i went to jrtc which is this place out in i guess it's texas but it
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it might be near nevada or something like that and uh apparently i was told while i was there
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he's like hey we're actually really close to area 51 so i was probably close to there at one point
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but um didn't see anything don't you think area 51 is like the gayatola like it's a little diversion
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it's like here's area 51 but meanwhile like area 406 is really where it's at well i i have to
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imagine that if it ever was real like if it you know if they brought all the roswell stuff there
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and the live biologics whatever they had um that once it became this public thing they would have
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of course moved everything i mean that's the first thing you would do is to say let's get rid of all
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this stuff and move it somewhere else and um i do think it's much more likely in that case that it
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is just used as a place to test new technology and therefore it looks really weird from time to time
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where you see things you've never seen before but um you know yeah i think it would probably be much
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like more likely they would find some other place in some other desert to keep it secret but i don't
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know i mean it's it's an interesting theory it's fun to talk about but i don't you know i don't
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spend a lot of time thinking about it i post stories every once in a while just because they're
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fun but um dj said area 404 page not found there you go all right marcella give us another another
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tidbit well the save act um well hold on did i miss i misspoke save america act okay it's the
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save america act uh trump tweeted today for all the fake news out there i'm not i don't want to
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be fake news. It's called the Save America Act, not the Save Act. Nobody knows what the Save Act
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means. So the Save America Act, when finally Thun got brave, if I want to put it in a
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better way, he finally put it through a vote for it to actually be voted on. So this is not the
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vote for the vote i mean this is the vote for the vote not the actual vote so he um they voted on
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it yesterday 51 to 48 there was a few losers that voted against it i think mark what is her name
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markovsky somebody put it in the chat yeah she voted against it uh tim tillis uh is it tillis
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did not show for the vote um basically it's advancing and one of the things finally uh
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tune is saying that now they're going to have the democrats are going to be on the record being
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against uh having as you recall some of you might not remember the save america act is to require
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voters to show id that they are american that they can vote and that they are citizens in order to
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vote you have to be a citizen so either a passport or birth certificate in order to vote and to
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register for federal elections um a lot of critics came out against it uh from the democratic party
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one of them was chuck schumer um in a video clip the he said that uh what is it it's cynical
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it's beneath wait i don't have glasses he's so full of it and he knows it and it's just
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so gross with the little glasses trigger me marcella it's cynical it's beneath the senate
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it's beneath democracy to actually you know so allegedly it's beneath democracy in order to
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prove you're a citizen or to vote i don't know how that is they never answer that they just
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talk about it but anyways if it's on its way but now they get to filibuster and they haven't made
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it a rule for it to be a talk talk filibuster so they could just like take all this time around
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ted cruz came out on x and said you know they need to make a talk uh talkative filibuster
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filibuster to force them to have them actually in the senate floor be there for hours talking their
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head off in order to delay everything because right now they can delay it on a pseudo filibuster
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and so he wants it to be an actual talk talkative filibuster but we'll see what happens
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i'm pretty pessimistic about this whole thing i think they're going to put it up for a vote
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for this political theater that you were talking about where they'll say oh look the democrats are
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are against it and we're all for it and uh of course they won't all be for it i mean i'm pretty
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sure mitch mcconnell who did vote to advance the bill is probably going to flip to no and there'll
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be a few others probably and it'll it'll just fail and but even if they do i mean even if they all
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just say oh i voted for it it'll all just be for show because if they put it forward without the
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filibuster that means it needs 60 votes to pass and then they'll be like look i just didn't have
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the votes you know i did my best and he'll claim he did everything he was supposed to do and in
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fact what he should be doing is exactly what you said and have the talking filibuster and have
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50 votes be the standard and then they could do it but if it ever went to that i would then guess
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that mcconnell and others would just turn tail and vote against it and so i'm pretty pessimistic
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about it i wish i could be more optimistic i want it to happen um and you know i'd want it to be a
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real process to get it actually passed. But I think this is all just political theater. They're
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all going to play games. They're all going to posture. They're going to have their time on the
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floor talking about why the Democrats are against it. The Democrats are going to say it's
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disenfranchising voters. And it's just all the same things we've been hearing for years.
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I fear I agree with you. And never forget this, you guys. Never forget who the people you
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allegedly voted for, because without ID, who knows who voted, um, what they're doing to you.
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And somebody said, I'm sorry, river, somebody on YouTube said, you know, it's not, it's the
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people's house, not the grift barn, but it is the grift barn, unfortunately. Um, BJ, I want you to
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speak on this, but I also have a question. Do you have voter ID? Do you have to do that in Canada?
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Uh, yeah. In that, uh, racist, bigoted third world country to the North, you must, uh, provide, uh,
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identification to vote in canada much like somalia and all of south america and most of africa and
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every country in the world you have to show id just like when i i don't know rent a hotel room
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or buy uh prescription drugs that my doctor has assigned to me i have to show uh id this is you
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know and this is a good example of what scott would talk about and i try to talk about this
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framing the gears and the sheen and how it actually works most of politics i think we all
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know you know better in the us than we do in canada that it's really the international strategic
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management companies aka lobby firms that control your representatives and that is often with foreign
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money so it's laundered through large law firms into ngos and those ngos then work with these
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think tanks to get legislation passed. And they have completely co-opted the leadership of the
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Democratic Party on certain, not every issue, obviously, but on certain issues, because the
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last thing they want is an independent America where the people vote, because these foreign
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interests that want to, that have found a loophole that they can orient American policy in their
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favor against the interest of the united states and its citizens and it's it's so frustrating
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it happens in canada as well but the focus is the united states because i think part of the problem
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and americans always get upset with me for this is you have a two-party system i don't like that
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i think that's causing chaos around the world it causes people to think always in binary terms
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whereas canada which is nowhere near perfect we do have a multi-party system and the parties work
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together and they negotiate stuff and it has some weaknesses as well but i think it makes it more
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difficult for these foreign interests to capture one party or the other um it's a little bit of a
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buffer it's not perfect it has its other its challenges as well but um yeah very very concerned
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And this, by the way, is with a friend of mine who's very involved in politics yesterday for coffee.
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It is, they know internally polling, both in the Democratic Party and the Republican Party, they know this is a 90-10 issue.
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90% of Americans, including all Democrats, want it, and it's still going to fail.
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That shows there's some serious systemic issues, and there's parts of your government that just needs to be re-engineered.
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Some say the bubbles in an Aero Truffle piece can take 34 seconds to melt in your mouth.
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Sometimes the very amount you're stuck at the same red light.
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I think we have to really realize that, you guys, that, and we can make a difference.
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And I think you just have to get in the face, not physically, but on the phone, make noise,
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you know, call your, call your state senators, governors, Congress people, everybody and
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make a stink. I mean, I would say I was doing this for a long time for this one issue that
00:23:40.140
has nothing to do with politics. Well, it actually does, but I had the number of my
00:23:44.500
state people next to me and I would call them every single morning. Or if you're maybe shy
00:24:16.800
I mean, I think that if we don't get this passed now,
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I don't see it coming again. I feel like this is like these once in a blue things that will come
00:24:26.240
up. And if we don't make noise and get this thing passed, just forget it. We already know that our
00:24:32.100
voting is corrupt. I mean, come on, it is. I mean, even the Democrats, they're like, oh,
00:24:38.420
like Jasmine Crockett, I didn't win. And now she's like, it's rigged. It's like, oh, but I
00:24:42.680
thought that they're all just so perfect, these elections. No, it's rigged. So our future is on
00:24:49.440
the line our country is on the line today i learned jasmine crockett is a racist what dared
00:24:55.920
she dared challenge an election result that equals racist by definition right isn't that the way it
00:25:02.160
works there that's the rules yes she's probably a nazi too anything goes yeah at least she's not
00:25:10.960
at least she's not against having criminal felons right on her staff she has to employ everybody
00:25:24.900
Well, the next story, we're getting into a little bit more hot water with the next one.
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Joe Kent resigned yesterday, and he was the director of National Counterterrorism Center.
00:25:44.980
He was a longtime Trump supporter, probably the first to criticize him officially in his resignation letter.
00:25:53.380
He claims that Iran posts no imminent threat to America and accuses the administration of starting the conflict under heavy pressure from Israel and its influential lobby here at home.
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Um, now I have to say that Joe Kent, um, lost his wife, um, in war.
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She was the first, uh, one of the only women that has died in combat by ISIS.
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Um, and so his, his way of looking at things may be different than the general public or
00:26:31.320
the general staff, you know, with that in mind, Tulsi Gabbard did post sort of a response.
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She's the director, as you know, of the national intelligence, who she basically, he worked under
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her. So President Trump's, she made statements about President Trump being the commander in
00:26:55.660
chief and being able to decide these things for the nation. And if he saw a imminent threat,
00:27:03.200
then that is what we see as the United States and her under him would see that as well. She said in
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her statement as our commander in chief, he is responsible. This is about president Trump
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for determining what is, and is not an imminent threat and whether or not to take action and
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what actions he deems necessary. So, you know, a lot of people are saying she's not defending him.
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She's not doing the, so a lot of people are seeing it on both. One, they're saying that
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Gabbard is defending him and another, she's just explaining things anyways. So he came out this
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morning, this morning he was busy. President Trump was, uh, truthing or whatever you want to call it
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the whole morning he uh one of the the i want to say tweet but it's a truth um that he posted was
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remember for all those absolute fools out there iran is considered by everyone to be and then he
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put this in capital letters number one state sponsor of terror we're rapidly putting them
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out of business that's his statement i don't know if it was kind of connected to this but i put it
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here um to clarify i don't know personally as an attorney i think kent is in a bit of hot water
00:28:29.440
is it did he give away some intelligence by saying that in his resignation letter
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i don't know so um bj i can't see owen so you had a more visceral reaction than owen did so
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i'm actually going to ask you to respond first um why don't we let owen go first because i have a
00:28:49.520
few things to say on this okay that might take a minute or two okay and i'm interested to hear
00:28:55.200
owen's perspective because he's very uh reasonable and centered as well so this is true okay um
00:29:03.440
are you talking about like what trump said or what are you looking for a reaction to
00:29:07.920
the scope of you know joe kent resigning actually well so okay so first i like joe kent
00:29:17.260
i think he's a reasonable guy i think he's generally very america first and i'm sorry to
00:29:23.140
see him go um i know there were some accusations that he was leaking information um so if that's
00:29:30.120
true then you know i i guess it would make sense that they would get rid of him um because that
00:29:37.340
would be a pretty bad thing to have done but um you know i i don't want to say anything bad about
00:29:44.160
joe um you know i remember when he was running for office and it was like he didn't get a lot
00:29:49.780
of support from the republican party but he eventually got this position in the trump
00:29:54.140
administration and i was happy about that and uh again i'm sorry to see him go i think um again it's
00:30:02.220
it's hard to know what the truth is because you're going to get two sides to the story and i'm sure
00:30:07.020
Joe would probably deny that he leaked anything. I remember, I know there's all these older tweets
00:30:13.340
popping up too from Joe saying that he wanted us to take out Iran. He wanted us to take out
00:30:19.260
the nuclear stuff. And now it seems like he's saying the exact opposite. But I would give him
00:30:26.120
some grace on that as well, just because saying you want that to happen is very different than
00:30:33.680
saying how you think it should happen and he may have disagreements with the way things are being
00:30:39.860
done or the scope of what's being done or what you know the risk that we're putting ourselves in
00:30:44.380
and so I don't necessarily see those as inconsistent either the way a lot of people
00:30:49.160
are trying to portray it so I think a lot of this is kind of not really fair to Joe
00:30:52.540
and I do wish him the best but you know again I can't say what's true or not if I take it at face
00:30:59.340
value and say that he was leaking information then I certainly understand why they would get
00:31:03.440
rid of him and um you know that makes sense but again it's hard to know i mean unless they're
00:31:10.700
gonna criminally charge him and prove it in court i don't know how to know whether or not he did
00:31:14.780
that or what he did exactly bj yeah i think um it's it's frustrating for me from my perspective
00:31:25.660
that um it's not it's not people's fault but i think we generally have a very superficial
00:31:31.860
understanding how geopolitics works. And so when they throw out terms like, you know,
00:31:37.260
this country is the biggest state sponsor of terrorism. And, you know, sometimes that one
00:31:42.460
day it's Qatar, one day it's Iran, and they're both equally, we're using the biggest or the worst
00:31:50.340
a little bit too hyperbolically, even though I agree with it. So I look at it this way.
00:31:56.900
um we we have this problem in spades in canada um people need to understand how iran operates
00:32:06.860
and it's quite complex uh but how they operate in the west and i think this is where people get lost
00:32:14.020
in the nuance and oh what i like about uh you owen with all your posts you're very uh sensitive to
00:32:21.540
highlighting the nuance of situations and sometimes things aren't so black and white there's a lot of
00:32:26.100
gray area. A perfect example, if you want to understand how Iran operates around the world
00:32:31.980
and in the United States and in Canada, is to look at the, there's a documentary on Netflix
00:32:39.140
called Nisman, the Prosecutor, the President and the Spy. And it's about the AMIA attack
00:32:46.020
in Argentina in the 1990s. I think it was 92 or 94, something like that. And it shows,
00:32:53.500
I mean, it shows the event of Amya and then the prosecutor who was killed, like Jeffrey Epstein, and under spurious circumstances, and the President Kushner, the far leftist, was involved in Hezbollah.
00:33:10.660
They do, and I'm encouraging everybody to watch this as an example, and I'm going to just get to what's happening today,
00:33:17.280
as an example of why politicians always say they're such a great sponsor of terrorism and
00:33:24.580
why they're so dangerous. In this particular case, what this documentary missed, and this is the key,
00:33:30.740
this is very, very important, is, and it comes to today, that prior to the bombing in Argentina,
00:33:38.700
which was Hezbollah, which is Iran, that's their proxy, that's Iranian money, the president at that
00:33:45.220
time was Carlos Menem. Carlos Menem was elected on a leftist platform and he was president from
00:33:53.380
89 to 99. However, once he was elected, he went economically right wing. Okay. That's that period
00:34:02.220
of time where inflation was under control and Argentina started to recover because they abandoned
00:34:07.840
all the leftism that they used to get elected. That was their minister of the economy, Domingo
00:34:13.600
Caballo. I think in Argentinian Spanish they say Caballo. Anyways, his wife was key in Carlos Menem
00:34:23.560
getting elected. She had connections to lots of money around the world. She happened to be
00:34:31.020
a Syrian pro-Islamist lefty. So this is another example of foreign money. This has been going on
00:34:38.580
for a long time. That's how he got elected, which is why she divorced him two years after he got
00:34:44.280
elected and took a U-turn and went right-wing economically. So the retaliation started from
00:34:52.020
Hezbollah when his son, Carlos Menem Jr., mysteriously died in a helicopter crash that
00:34:59.560
was very suspicious, much like the five people who were the only witnesses of Bukele's national
00:35:06.600
security advisor who was tortured and murdered under custody they too died in a suspicious
00:35:13.160
helicopter and ties to the same sort of international regimes so very careful and
00:35:19.340
they're very subversive and this is what led to the amya bombing why because once the leftist
00:35:25.580
government of menem got elected once you get into power you start to get access to intel from all
00:35:32.280
over the world from embassies all over the world now you're in the seat now you get to see what's
00:35:36.040
actually going on behind the scenes and apparently one of the things that Israel does for many
00:35:44.220
western nations is when there is Iran or Hezbollah activity and they're building infrastructure
00:35:50.000
in a country they contact that country's intel services to say hey these are the bad guys on
00:35:57.280
the ground we suggest you do something about it and we know because they're constantly attacking
00:36:02.420
us in Israel as well. You do what you want with it. And that apparently is what caused them to
00:36:08.360
take a right turn. They realized how bad the degrees of political entryism was into Argentina.
00:36:14.480
And because they used Israeli information that was collected in Syria, that is why they bombed
00:36:21.720
the Amya bombing occurred. Now, from there, go watch the documentary. It will give you a clear
00:36:31.100
eye as to why they're so dangerous because these people get elected into governments
00:36:36.620
in our countries and in the case of the amia bombing there was a think tank out of washington
00:36:43.840
dc that worked and collaborated with argentina and alberta nisman who basically got kushner
00:36:52.580
and the leftists and hezbollah all work he had them nailed he was going to nail them to the wall
00:36:58.280
in his testimony and the night before he happened to get killed or as they say he committed suicide
00:37:06.060
sounds familiar and that think tank that was working with the U.S. government trying to help
00:37:11.240
Argentina purge this Hezbollah entryism from within their government was an organization
00:37:18.160
that's still active today called FDD and it was founded by a Christian Zionist named
00:37:24.960
Richard Carlson yes Tucker Carlson's father so much of what goes on in the world it's not only
00:37:34.900
is it so connected but it lends itself so much to what Scott always said if you know the news
00:37:40.580
you don't know anything if you know who is the news now you understand how the pieces fit together
00:37:47.740
and this is a perfect example and in Canada's case right now luckily we just got rid of in
00:37:53.340
in I think the last election cycle, we had a member of parliament named Majid Johari.
00:37:59.860
Majid Johari, we knew Canadian intel, law enforcement, everybody knew, was Iranian IRGC
00:38:07.360
because they built enough infrastructure within Canada, put a ton of money to get this guy elected
00:38:13.640
into Canada, into the Canadian government. Because once you get elected, like I said before,
00:38:18.580
now you get access to classified information sometimes depending on what committee you're in
00:38:24.000
you get access to what's going on with that with that country and you can leak it back home and
00:38:30.600
this is why in the case of Canada when President Stephen Harper was Prime Minister he closed the
00:38:37.240
Iranian embassy why Iranian embassies around the world are used as central collection agencies for
00:38:45.160
intel, but to harass and extort members of the Iranian diaspora all over the world.
00:38:54.640
And the Chinese do this too. I explained this once about Ai Weiwei. What they'll do is they'll
00:39:00.280
monitor the Iranian community in the United States and California and say, you get out of line.
00:39:05.520
We know your uncle, you know, he owns the bakery in Tehran. Why don't we just go torture him for a
00:39:11.020
few months. This is why it's so dangerous to have those people in the Western governments to give
00:39:16.380
them power through this device of political entryism that they use. So we get this idea that
00:39:23.060
they're a big funder of terrorism, a state sponsor of terrorism, and they're so dangerous. We always
00:39:28.620
think, yeah, bombs are going off. That's part of it, but it's more the subversive elements within
00:39:36.000
the country gathering intel learning technology finding about drone programs and sending it back
00:39:42.640
to the countries who loudly chant chant the death to america that's why i call them the death to
00:39:49.680
america people and it's it's astonishing that people want to run cover for death to america
00:39:56.000
people and then claim that they're america first it's very frustrating well in in updating to the
00:40:02.800
news story um you know joe kent spoke about how he was sort of against you know israel having a lot
00:40:12.400
of sway with president trump but in uh one of our um viewers sent me um something that updated uh
00:40:23.440
mark levin posted on x that he wanted to have uh an interview with joe kent as you know mark levin
00:40:31.520
sort of in people's mind represents israel or israel first probably but yeah yeah i mean in
00:40:39.120
people's minds and so he said joe is going to appear joe kent is going to appear in his show
00:40:45.120
he said sure let's go right and that would be great for them to speak and i do want to confirm
00:40:50.720
or or highlight that joe kent was resigned um tulsi never uh fired him or anything or
00:41:00.800
neither did the administration they allowed him to decide um but i do also want to highlight
00:41:07.120
something that somebody highlighted in locals or youtube i'm not sure which um is that for
00:41:14.880
i don't know full background but i think he joe kent had had issues with trump and with the
00:41:23.680
briefings that they give intelligence briefings that they give trump he already um joe kent has
00:41:30.240
already been anti-war and you know for whatever reason during the briefings they're given to the
00:41:36.800
president joe kent was not involved so he was not actually at the briefings i don't know if that
00:41:44.040
means that some intelligence that he's counterintelligence but he might not be
00:41:49.960
overseeing all intelligence that goes to the president um maybe that's the uh the difference
00:41:57.420
I actually don't see a difference between President Trump and Joe Kent.
00:42:03.620
I think Joe Kent has decided in his own mind that there's no inherent danger or how you would see it.
00:42:12.020
But, you know, as president, a president can decide if they have certain other information like you were talking about, BJ.
00:42:19.780
there's so many different connecting parts that maybe the totality of the circumstances led to
00:42:27.880
the attacked and led to take out uh the the leadership uh the the supreme leader in iran so
00:42:35.560
yeah i think that actually relates to what we're seeing with tucker carlson when you saw that
00:42:40.400
picture of tucker carlson in the white house i think that was a canary trap to be honest that's
00:42:45.140
related to all of this which is why he might be in very big trouble to be honest by the way
00:42:49.040
amazing comment from uh sean here said bj is sounding like the canadian mike benz and that's
00:42:56.900
awesome i appreciate it very cool that's nice yeah now streaming on paramount plus my center
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so um yeah i want to see if owen wants to respond to any one more thing just before owen
00:43:38.940
starts and i'm curious what you would think of this owen uh you know part of the reason i just
00:43:43.280
couldn't i couldn't go the distance for many many years in politics people have to understand that
00:43:48.920
politics is strange somebody told me a long time ago political parties are cults and they're
00:43:54.700
different in one way they're cults where everyone within the cult hates each other and is stabbing
00:44:01.180
each other in the back it's just the weirdest most negative environment you can ever be in
00:44:09.820
There's no positive energy in political parties.
00:44:12.720
And everybody's got an axe to grind with somebody else.
00:44:15.900
They're all politicians, which you know you can't trust.
00:44:19.300
Like, I've put my faith in politicians many, many times
00:44:22.140
who end up stabbing me and other people in the back.
00:44:26.560
And maybe in this case, maybe Joe felt stabbed in the back a number of times
00:44:34.960
this happens a lot, but it'd be very interesting to see the conversation with him and Mark Levin.
00:44:40.240
And I think we need to do more of that. When people are completely at odds with each other,
00:44:44.860
don't just shut each other out. Just have a public conversation and find the areas where you agree
00:44:49.720
and the areas where you agree to disagree, but just do it respectfully, which is, I think,
00:44:53.020
why we all love your platform and what Scott built, because that was kind of his ethos,
00:44:59.740
wasn't it but anyways well i mean i i certainly agree that um it's a dirty business i don't know
00:45:07.220
if it was on west wing or one of the other political drama shows where they said if you
00:45:11.100
want a friend in dc get a dog yeah truly like you you you can't really trust anybody and there are
00:45:19.200
all these agendas there's lobbyists there's blackmail there's bribes there's all sorts of
00:45:23.540
things going on all over the place and you know i i certainly have gotten more jaded the more i
00:45:28.280
paid attention to it um i think when i was young like in my 20s i didn't really pay much attention
00:45:33.240
to politics but i had already come to the conclusion like these guys are just out for
00:45:37.180
themselves they're not really out for the american people um you know they're doing what's best for
00:45:42.240
their interests whether that's getting re-elected or getting more campaign dollars to slush around
00:45:48.040
for other people or just to gain power and so it's a big game of thrones sort of environment and
00:45:54.620
um that stuff is going to happen and I've certainly learned more about that um in the
00:46:01.900
business world you know just in terms of the politics that are played um where people play
00:46:06.920
games to get power or to you know manipulate other people and things like that and it just
00:46:11.280
gave me a little bit of a microcosm of what I imagine is always happening in places like
00:46:15.780
Congress. So yeah, I mean, I don't have any reason to believe that it's unified or that everybody's
00:46:25.640
always pulling in the same direction. And that's certainly that's not what we see today. And I
00:46:29.860
wish we would see more unification, at least to get things like the Save America Act through and
00:46:34.540
some of the things where 80 or 90% of the people want this. It would seem like you should be able
00:46:40.380
to come together and do these things. But it seems pretty rare that people actually do come together
00:46:53.080
I'd also like to see more collaboration across the aisle.
00:46:55.700
But to your point, with a two-party system, it's kind of hard.
00:46:58.360
And it's gotten worse, I think, over the last probably 10, 12 years
00:47:03.720
in terms of maybe even 20 years where it's just like
00:47:10.740
They just play all these political theater games
00:47:12.840
like we're seeing with the tsa or dhs funding where it's just a game to them they don't really
00:47:19.700
care about national security they don't really care about what you know is or isn't funded and
00:47:25.060
they all know that in the end they're going to fund the stuff they're going to give people all
00:47:28.200
the back pay so it's all just a game it's all just a political show um to try and just say oh
00:47:35.040
we're going to put our stake in the ground and show people that we're fighting but in reality
00:47:39.840
They know how it's going to end. And it's just, you know, it's all it's all a show. And if I go back to the Iran situation, I mean, I think the way I try and make sense of it, at least, is it seems to me that Trump decided, OK, now is the time.
00:47:58.280
You know, we have to do it now. And it's important to resolve this. And I do appreciate that part about Trump that he wants to finish things. He wants to make things fundamentally different than they have been in the past in ways that many other presidents just aren't courageous enough to do that.
00:48:19.780
they're you know they always kick the can down the road they always just say oh you know we're
00:48:24.040
not going to deal with that we're not going to make any big change we're just going to keep things
00:48:27.660
going the way they have been maybe they'll fund one side to fight the other side or they'll try
00:48:32.480
and destabilize things and get people to fight with each other in the middle east but nothing
00:48:36.860
ever really changes it's just back and forth back and forth you know suddenly we're funding al-qaeda
00:48:41.640
then we're fighting al-qaeda and like it's just ridiculous and i think i do appreciate that trump
00:48:47.640
is saying, you know, enough of this, we're going to put an end to this. And I'm hoping that's the
00:48:52.860
result. I don't know if it will be. And I totally understand the argument against it. I get it
00:48:58.120
completely. Um, and I'm not arguing that he's doing necessarily the right thing or the best thing
00:49:04.320
or doing it the best way. But I do think that, um, I think I understand what he's going for,
00:49:11.200
which is he wants to have fundamentally a more peaceful middle East. And he wants to get rid of
00:49:17.020
the root cause of all this terrorism. And so I think my hope is that he'll at least accomplish
00:49:23.680
that. And at a minimum, I guess the worst case hopefully is that, um, he'll set them back 10 or
00:49:31.320
15 or 20 years and we won't have to worry about any significant threats for many years to come.
00:49:38.580
Um, even if the regime somehow ends up surviving this and they come back eventually, they'll
00:49:44.480
probably come back much weaker and it'll be something that hopefully another president
00:49:48.500
will be able to deal with much more easily in the future. But, um, I do think there's
00:49:54.300
a real terrorism threat there. I think it's pretty obvious that they have been funding
00:49:57.680
this all around the world. Um, whether it's Hezbollah or the Houthis or, you know, people
00:50:02.960
in Qatar or other stuff. And, um, certainly there are real threats to America that have
00:50:08.980
come from Iran and they've tried to assassinate the president. I think at least two or three
00:50:12.300
times according to the u.s government at least and um so you know i think trump might take that
00:50:17.960
a little personally and i can understand that as well um so you know i i from there i kind of just
00:50:25.740
take a step back and say okay i can't control any of this stuff i can't make any of these decisions
00:50:29.540
i can't really affect what's going on so i'm just trying to make sense of it and hopefully see kind
00:50:35.000
of how i think it might turn out and what the possibilities are um because for the most part i
00:50:39.940
can't really affect the actual events. And I just have to hope for the best outcome we can have for
00:50:44.380
America. And I think also, Owen, I'm sure, I think you'll all agree with this. This is kind of how
00:50:50.260
the framing that I look at it, like what did Trump say when he got elected the first time and the
00:50:53.880
second time? No stupid wars, no new wars, but the United States has been at war through proxy
00:51:02.460
with venezuela with iran uh for many many years um and who else who else has he taken out
00:51:12.600
and cuba cuba he is fixing i think what he's trying to do he's trying to fix all the boomer
00:51:19.480
problems like all the problems from the 19th century and that have lingered on for decades
00:51:25.620
i think his approach is like okay let's just fix all of that let's do the monroe doctrine doctrine
00:51:30.540
secure the western hemisphere if europe wants to implode that's their problem we'll try to help
00:51:36.660
but we're not gonna they don't want to help themselves that's their problem and we're just
00:51:40.580
going to secure america's interest in the western hemisphere and by the way the monroe doctrine
00:51:45.740
also includes canada so that's going to be very interesting once uh cuba is settled which
00:51:51.400
from what i'm hearing is weeks away um you guys just want to take a second to say this is such a
00:51:58.280
great conversation it's um an important conversation so if you're i know you're enjoying having bj here
00:52:04.880
with us so if you're enjoying any part of today's program please hit the like the subscribe the
00:52:10.740
little heart on locals it really helps us so we can keep going and keep having all sorts of
00:52:16.140
conversations um i kind of want to wrap up the iran thing right now because it's like you know
00:52:23.480
By tomorrow, it's going to be a whole other story.
00:52:26.500
Just one comment, because a few people posted this,
00:52:29.820
that Joe Kent is going to be on with Tucker Carlson tonight.
00:52:33.940
And to which I say, what would Scott always say,
00:52:52.700
he's a little uh yeah they said he was like just screaming about joe kent for three hours last
00:52:58.780
night i can imagine oh yeah i i really feel like the guy's gonna have a heart attack right on
00:53:04.420
camera i'm like dude he's certainly passionate um so can we can we just get grab another story
00:53:13.280
owen or marcella just to kind of take down our temperature something positive or just not iran
00:53:19.580
that's positive james o'keefe went undercover as a um as a homeless person in skid row in los
00:53:29.400
angeles um you know the funny part about this is i think of scott and how like he would always make
00:53:36.080
fun of james o'keefe because james o'keefe would always go undercover but he looked just like
00:53:42.400
himself and he's like nine feet tall like how do you know he's like this is marcella and then
00:53:48.020
this is not marcella you know so he went it's funny because you know i could do that i could
00:53:54.580
go undercover in uh skid row if you guys want me to but at least clark maybe it'll be dangerous
00:53:59.820
but he he dressed up as a um unhoused person and basically while being undercover he investigated
00:54:10.260
and maybe he just you know as a good investigator he he allowed things to take course
00:54:17.740
and one of the things was that he was being bribed as a homeless unhouse person with uh
00:54:25.380
either cigarettes marijuana anything else for voter registration for them to sign voter registration
00:54:31.400
and when you have to do that in california you have to write your name but also where you live
00:54:38.260
and if you don't have if you're homeless you don't technically sometimes they do have an address but
00:54:44.760
sometimes they don't so they would put something like whatever name street fake streets on it
00:54:51.880
so he was this is all on video um legally he can't really use the video uh sorry to say because
00:55:01.740
he would have to say that they're on video um meaning that if he had a hidden camera
00:55:09.640
whatever was said in the hidden video footage of the camera can't be used against these people
00:55:16.460
because that's like that's against the evidence code in california and in other states and in
00:55:23.920
federal court so that's going to be an issue for prosecutors but basically he has people paying
00:55:29.540
him bribing him to sign voter registration and these are people the majority of them are american
00:55:36.520
So they have, uh, you know, so the save America act wouldn't really influence this, but after
00:55:44.480
this was, uh, done and he has the video on, on his ex, probably on YouTube as well.
00:55:52.400
Um, and after all of this, uh, Gavin Newsom's governor, Gavin Newsom's office quickly contacted
00:56:00.000
him um la mayor karen vast contacted him as well and basically the district attorney of los angeles
00:56:10.320
was contacting him again i don't see any possibility of charges maybe there is some
00:56:17.640
possibility based on his own statements that are made but undercover camera footage only goes to
00:56:26.660
show the problem but ah yeah let me use in court but you only have a few minutes left so bj could
00:56:35.040
you quickly give your point of view on this i don't know i i haven't seen the video but like i
00:56:41.620
said i think uh at least clark kent wore glasses but uh what are you um i think this is one of the
00:56:48.540
things we got to look a little bit more into you're going to see there's so much fraud that
00:56:52.540
goes on i mean in canada too uh ngos and all these you know social justice causes they're just
00:56:59.020
mechanisms for great great amounts of fraud to steal taxpayer dollars and often funnel them
00:57:06.040
around the world i mean i was involved in a couple of cases where we caught them doing exactly that
00:57:11.320
and stuff was ending a million tens of millions of dollars was ending up in africa why well because
00:57:17.880
you know some guy needed to buy himself a bentley in the middle of whatever african country it is
00:57:22.520
like they that's the problem with the open system and no checks and balances uh most of the world
00:57:27.940
are scam artists i'm sorry it's just the way it is not most people but most countries in the world
00:57:32.900
it's the scam artists who have the most leverage and some may say it's members of congress as well
00:57:38.880
i don't know i thought that was weird montreal so bj i think yeah we'll talk about it off camera
00:57:45.360
but i think you're maybe coming on next week but we'll we'll talk about it um i know we discussed
00:57:50.980
something about that but can you remember we absolutely have to talk about what's below here
00:57:56.280
about the police visiting people in canada going to their doors for social media posts
00:58:02.260
that's a huge topic that we absolutely don't have time for right now but montreal galaxy i promise
00:58:08.760
you you guys always remind me okay i was wondering why you wanted to know about that um so listen we
00:58:15.080
only have a few minutes left and um oh and can you touch on the the thing that james o'keefe
00:58:21.800
story real quick before we close out well i mean i think it's great to expose these things whether
00:58:27.300
or not it can be used in criminal court or not it is a separate issue in my mind um i do think
00:58:32.820
if you see a homeless person that suspiciously smells good that might be a tip off um so tip
00:58:39.280
for the fraudsters. But I do love what James is doing, and I think we need more of that.
00:58:48.220
I think we need as much exposure to these things. I love what Nick Shirley's doing
00:58:52.560
with all the fraud in California now and spreading it beyond just Minnesota. And so the more we can
00:59:01.140
bring transparency to these things, the better, in my opinion. And I think, again, it's a separate
00:59:07.340
process to go through the legal process to clean up all these things but i think you know anything
00:59:12.260
we can do to expose the corruption will hopefully move things in the right direction and it sounds
00:59:17.880
like that's what's happening here if you're saying that the government reached out to him then
00:59:21.040
they're probably thinking okay we got to do something about this because he brought attention
00:59:25.120
to it and if he hadn't brought attention to it they probably would have not even known about it
00:59:29.340
or they might have known about it and just said we don't have to do anything about it because
00:59:33.440
nobody's talking about it. So I think it's an example where people can really make a difference
00:59:38.760
just by shedding light on what's going on. 100%. You guys, amazing show. The comments
00:59:47.020
were off the charts. I hope you guys are okay with me randomly posting your comment on the screen
00:59:52.240
because now I know I have a new feature to play with and I would love to continue highlighting
00:59:58.020
that. And you guys, you have the best comments. You're the smartest people here. Scott cultivated
01:00:04.820
the best group ever. Tonight at 8 p.m. on Locals Only, subscribers only, I will be on again with
01:00:14.740
Kev Summers, our favorite Kev on Locals. Sorry, other Kevs, you're also our favorites. We're
01:00:21.840
going to be interviewing, not even interviewing. We're going to be chatting with Lisa DePasquale,
01:00:27.220
who is a commentator and author a huge fan of scott's forever and it's just gonna it's not a
01:00:34.520
girl conversation it's just a chitty chat night and everybody please come visit us okay we're
01:00:41.580
gonna be talking about her book and all sorts of stuff about scott and i just think it'll be fun
01:00:47.540
so eight o'clock we'll be on for like an hour or so so come visit us there okay you guys tomorrow
01:00:53.020
we have walter kern walter kern will be on with us and you guys uh make sure you send us questions
01:01:01.540
i'll post a link after the show on x and on locals and drop your questions in there that you want us
01:01:07.920
to ask walter i know someone wants to know how he gets his hair done so nice so we'll make sure we
01:01:12.440
ask him that and uh you guys thank you so much bj thank you thank you so much for coming on with us
01:01:18.240
and remember the prosecutor the president and the spy on netflix the killing of alberto news
01:01:23.520
nisman that will teach you a lot of how all this works say it one more time uh nisman the killing
01:01:29.680
of alberto nisman the prosecutor the president and the spy on netflix watch it it'll open your eyes
01:01:34.960
tremendously okay i know a lot of you were uh wondering what that documentary was there you go
01:01:40.560
all right you guys let's get out in the world today let's touch some grass let's be useful
01:01:45.840
let's keep thinking forward and positively and create your luck.
01:01:49.840
Okay. Start by moving your pinky if you're stuck and, um,
01:01:56.360
Thank you so much for letting us keep going on here on Scott's platform.
01:02:01.240
So you guys let's have a closing sip to Scott and always remember,
01:02:10.200
Bye guys. Thank you so much. This is not brand promotion, by the way.