00:11:10.260Yeah, well, I mean, I'm very proud of the country and everyone that was involved.
00:11:14.720I think it's a huge accomplishment for them and for the country.
00:11:18.780I'm glad we're taking the lead on this.
00:11:21.080And like Marcella said, it's been at least 50 years, maybe longer, depending on your perspective of what happened back in the 60s.
00:11:29.960but uh you know i and i had questions about that like i was like how are they getting through the
00:11:35.020van allen radiation belt and that was missing from all the stories i didn't see any stories
00:11:39.460about the launch saying here's how they figured out how to get past that van allen radiation belt
00:11:43.840i asked grok about it and it said something about like maybe they could have the right angle so they
00:11:50.500could kind of maybe move along with the particles so they're not getting hit by the particles and
00:11:54.720maybe they have some kind of shielding but they didn't go into a lot of detail yeah because that
00:12:00.200was i mean that that's one of the things where they said oh we lost the technology we don't know
00:12:04.500how they did it like it's like come on you come on you didn't lose all you know and uh like somebody
00:12:11.580figured it out somebody knows how they did it and um so that's a question in my mind still is like
00:12:17.800how did they get through the van electric radiation belt without you know having lots of radiation
00:12:21.440hit them and killing them and but they you know it looks like they did it so that's a huge
00:12:26.300accomplishment whether it's the first time or not you know or not but um you know i'm also
00:12:31.760interested in what's on the dark side of the moon you know there's all those conspiracy theories
00:12:35.620there so i'm like waiting for the footage to say show me the dark side of the moon because they
00:12:39.760they're circling it right now as i understand it so they should have lots of footage i don't know
00:12:44.460if they're broadcasting any of it or exactly how that's going but um you know supposedly they're
00:12:49.840orbiting around the moon and so they should be able to see all that stuff and so it's kind of
00:12:53.840interesting from a lot of different perspectives and then the reactions there was this viral
00:12:58.820clip where they asked some kid like why are you interested this or why did you come out to watch
00:13:02.780the launch and he's like we're going to the effing moon i saw that kid he's like we're going back
00:13:07.640but he didn't say effing yeah and then and of course we have to show what the other side said
00:13:14.840so tom costello from nbc he said we should celebrate he said i think it's important and
00:13:22.420relevant to take a moment to say wow we should be collectively not as americans not as north
00:13:27.280americans but as just as humans proud of the achievement here that humans have been able to
00:13:31.940do this we're about to go even further so he was like saying no no no this is an american
00:13:36.060accomplishment it's just a human accomplishment like just come on dude just like for once in
00:13:42.760your life show some patriotism show some spirit like we did it the chinese didn't use it my god
00:13:50.700right exactly like we're doing it and uh so this is gonna just be so fun for so many reasons like
00:13:58.940will the images line up like can we ever act like okay this is just the chick talking okay i know
00:14:06.420nothing but why can't they land on the moon this time um they they will eventually artemis 3 in
00:14:18.6802028 is supposed to land um again they they are redoing everything it um so this is part of that
00:14:26.820uh figuring that out and how it'll work eventually it will land on the moon and then there will be
00:14:33.300like possibly a uh like they're gonna have you know a constant um presence presence in the moon
00:14:44.080my brother that you might not know is an aerospace engineer so i was texting with him yesterday he
00:14:51.800was part of nasa's this particular project before and i asked him a few questions and
00:14:58.500And, you know, my brother is like, oh, yeah, the hardest part is over because I asked him, they're supposed to do the moon's gravity through the moon's gravity.
00:15:07.680They're supposed to slingshot back to Earth.
00:15:10.040And I asked him, like, is that difficult, Mauricio?
00:15:13.020And he was like, no, no, that's if they know how to how to maneuver the and go around and it's going to be, you know, it's it's elementary.
00:31:19.780And they push their sons to only marry women like that.
00:31:23.600I could certainly see that from different perspectives.
00:31:26.640One might be that sort of introsexual competition where, you know, there's plenty of slut shaming here in America and it's probably just on another level with the Muslims because they have different standards of how you're supposed to dress.
00:31:41.380I'm just saying I could see that happening where it's more driven by the women as opposed to anybody else because they would call each other out if they're not complying with things or doing something more attractive or more tempting than the other women are doing.
00:31:56.640um so i could certainly see that yeah maybe i don't know i remember watching uh something about
00:32:03.280like the women in kuwait that have to have the whole hijab and underneath they're wearing like
00:32:10.300gucci and they're all down and they have like meetups with their girlfriends because they can't
00:32:16.060be out in public and they're like take off the hijab and then they're like you know very kardashian
00:32:21.460looking and they they they hate it like they're like we we can't believe we have to act this way
00:32:26.300dress this way. And I was just like, God, but you should be able to wear what you want to wear
00:32:32.760is the point. And that's freedom. So not just that, obviously, but the fact that these women
00:32:41.880in Kuwait couldn't just walk around in their Gucci and their Prada. They had to be covered
00:32:47.460from head to toe, their face, everything. It's just insane in my opinion. And if it's their
00:32:54.040opinion too, when they live there, I feel bad for them. That's a scary thought, but I do hope
00:32:59.700the people in Iran, the good people in Iran are okay. I hope that they can see this through.
00:33:08.740And you know what? I just want to add on one more thing. I wish I had thought about this further so
00:33:13.820I could articulate it in a way that it was to me, but I'm going to botch it. But so sometimes,
00:33:22.380no, you know what I'm going to do? So this is something Joel had said to me, Joel Pollack,
00:33:28.000we were on the phone the other day and he had such a good way of explaining to me, we were
00:33:33.260talking about Passover and what freedom really is. And that, you know, sometimes like you're
00:33:39.200walking across the desert to get to, you know, your freedom and maybe the first group that was
00:33:47.480walking. Most of them didn't make it, but they also still knew that they were walking away from
00:33:53.040slavery. So they still had all of that slave mentality on them. We were slaves. Maybe that
00:34:00.640first group that had to face it still had to carry that burden, but they paved the way for the second
00:34:07.280group to be like, oh, the people that went before me, they're the ones that broke through so then
00:34:13.520we could come after. And that's why like the second wave of people are the ones that really
00:34:17.080made it. So I feel like, you know, maybe this is the first rung of that type of thing. So the people
00:34:22.920that are living in Iran right now, you know, that had to live through all of this, like they're kind
00:34:28.460of paved the way for their freedom. I hope, and I hope that more make it behind them. That was so
00:34:35.600inarticulate. But when Joel said it to me, I was like, wow, that's a really good way of looking at
00:34:40.620like what's what you're already living with and what you have to carry on top of what you want
00:34:45.080so it's a big burden so I I pray in whatever way I pray for anyone living that way so
00:34:52.600Marcella or Owen did you want to add on to anything with that story yeah I mean I would
00:34:58.080just say like I understand what you're saying too and another angle to that might just be that as
00:35:02.560if you grow up with those types of standards like I'm supposed to be under a burqa or a hijab or
00:35:07.980whatever it is um you might consider that almost like a safety thing like i'm safe if i'm in this
00:35:14.640i'm not safe if i'm not in this and you might just feel really uncomfortable without it on if
00:35:19.180you're out in public and you feel like oh i'm doing something wrong someone might do something
00:35:22.560to me yeah um and and maybe they raise their kids differently you know they might say we want we
00:35:28.160don't want this but it's you know probably often hard to just adjust and live a completely different
00:35:33.040way than what you're used to perhaps all right we'll move on so um there's a trump that the post
00:35:44.260uh says kangaroo court so i don't know what which i mean i don't know which court he meant because
00:35:51.020there's so many uh cases that come out the that one a federal judge blocked a mass termination
00:35:58.360of parole for nearly 900,000 migrants who entered via a CBP one app under Biden,
00:36:08.440Sleepy Biden. And so basically she undid all of this all at once, the judge did. And that was
00:36:18.720shocking because it's going to create a massive amount of court blockage because the reason that
00:36:27.180she did that is that you can't really do a blank mass termination of parole via one order. You have
00:36:36.120to do it pursuant to every case, which in a way I agree with her, with the judge, but at the same
00:36:44.280time, it becomes almost impossible to do that in a timely manner. So I'm sure it's going to get
00:36:50.340appealed beyond this point, and the Supreme Court might have to hear it. There was another case,
00:36:58.200a commercial therapy case, where the Supreme Court sided with President Trump's eight to one
00:37:06.360decision. The Supreme Court in that one had struck down Colorado's ban on conversion therapy for
00:37:13.160minors. It wasn't President Trump's, particularly his his
00:37:18.740deal, but it is a conservative position to have conversion
00:37:23.360therapy. I don't know if you're familiar with that. But basically,
00:37:28.620it came down eight to one. Put it in the chat. If you know, who
00:37:35.680Who was the one? You know, that was the one one out of all of
00:37:40.820them and you're like oh i'm the one hey you're the one which which justice was it that here it
00:37:49.040comes was against conversion therapy to have the freedom yep katanji brown jackson yes
00:38:01.920jackson brown what is it brown jackson brown jackson yeah brown jackson okay yes yeah but
00:38:09.320But there was also recently the case where a judge blocked the construction of the ballroom and the defunding of NPR and PBS.
00:38:17.340So there's a lot of stuff happening and a lot of, you know, what I would call obstruction happening in the courts where it's like they get these activist judges.
00:38:25.060They may even shop it around to find the right judge.
00:38:27.280But then they get them to put in some injunction and just stop every single thing that Trump is doing.
00:47:42.180In Baltimore. Nothing's happened. It's just still a wide open gap.
00:47:47.360Like, so this is what I'm talking about.
00:47:49.000If we add in the nuclear side, there's another story I saw recently where the TerraPower, which is that Bill Gates-backed nuclear firm, they're doing the small modular reactors, I think.
00:47:59.960But they said they were able to get all the engineering work that traditionally in the past has taken 18 months, and they completed it in eight weeks.
00:48:12.320So it's like two months instead of 18.
00:48:14.640It's a small fraction of what it used to be.
00:48:16.940and i think it's using digital twin technology like you know which is a little bit like an ai
00:48:22.080thing but it's you know not quite the same but um you know with all the various advances we have
00:48:27.480i think a lot of these things can be done a lot faster but i think the bureaucracy is is the slow
00:48:33.120part it's like you know if you say we got to allow 90 days for feedback or we've got to allow however
00:48:39.600long for people to submit proposals or we've got to allow you know all these things and then we
00:48:44.020you multiply that by 12 steps or 50 steps or however many you put in the
00:48:47.500process, then you're still limited to saying, okay,
00:48:50.480even if I can do it in a day, I've got to wait three months for a response.
00:49:14.020you can that's the difference to me it's too too many steps too much red tape it's the white house
00:49:20.420i mean it hasn't been that long since he started being president no i get it that it's the white
00:49:26.100house but that's my point like like everything everyone wants to put their freaking uh stamp
00:49:32.100on everything and their opinion into everything well guess who can change the rules congress can
00:49:39.860change those rules which i it comes again to congress not doing their job of actually um
00:49:49.700you know updating all these antiquated slow-moving rules and one of the reasons could be fraud
00:49:57.620um just my opinion and possibly trump's opinion because he brought up the federal reserve building
00:50:04.900in a in a post about this historic preservation um he talked about the federal reserve building
00:50:11.480that's taken so much um you know that they're not suing them to stop it it's taken billions
00:50:18.260of dollars to build it and now this that's not being paid by by uh the congress or any any
00:50:25.380taxpayer they're blocking that possibly because that's not how it goes you didn't go through the
00:50:33.780right channels. You didn't pay the right lobbyist. I'm looking at the comments. It is a free ballroom
00:50:41.360for sure. And let me just let you guys in on a little secret. Let's just do it this way. In
00:50:51.1202028, when there's a new Republican president, I don't care if it's Vance, Rubio, DeSantis,
00:50:58.360whoever it is nothing will change they will then have advanced arrangement syndrome so it does not
00:51:05.120matter you guys they did the same thing with george bush they will do the same thing with
00:51:10.660the next president it went the democrats are like literally they're getting more kooky by
00:51:17.460the minute so it does not matter who the next president's going to be like they're like oh no
00:51:22.740it's just because it's trump nope it's not going to matter you'll say it's so nothing's going to
00:51:27.200change. Speaking of kooky Democrats, there was this birthright citizenship case and Ketanji
00:51:34.740Brown Jackson put a hypothetical in front of the court to consider. And she said that the way she
00:51:42.500put it is, if I steal someone's wallet in Japan, the Japanese authorities can arrest me and
00:51:46.520prosecute me. It's allegiance, meaning they can control you as a matter of law. So there's this
00:51:51.740relationship based on even though I'm a temporary traveler, I'm still locally owing allegiance in
00:51:56.060that sense. So it sounds like what she's saying is if you want to show allegiance to your country,
00:52:01.040go steal a wallet. I can't. Can you imagine? I think Trump was sitting there when she said that
00:52:07.320too. I think he was sitting there. I don't even know how to respond to that. I'm wondering how
00:52:15.040the lawyer did respond, but I think they shut her down pretty handily and explained why that wasn't
00:52:20.520case but um yeah i don't understand how a supreme court justice could say something that stupid
00:52:27.240because that was biden's pick by the way does anyone know who gave her to biden i want to know
00:52:33.720who um like go backwards in the trail like who said this is your this this should be it because
00:52:38.840it wasn't him you know i i don't i should look into it but i think a lot of the justices are
00:52:46.440picked from the dc circuit um their their court of appeals judges already in dc and are well known
00:52:54.360to the political you know what i'm forgetting too i forgot dei like i'm thinking they just
00:53:04.260picked somebody now i'm remembering that they needed like a black woman yeah i forgot biden
00:53:10.000definitely said that i think yeah he did okay so she was the best black woman they could find
00:53:15.560fantastic well she's a gem she has major dreams of being famous and being an actress
00:53:24.300so i'm like thinking somebody does she yes she does she was on on a broadway stage like they
00:53:32.580brought her up to act out a part in a broadway stage totally inappropriate as as as a justice
00:53:38.240she went up on stage on broadway to like dance around in some show i'm like this is so pathetic
00:53:43.960and I think she might've even been in a TV show. I'm not sure, but, um, I think some like Patriot
00:53:51.900should offer her as leading role where she plays a judge, almost like a night court kind of show.
00:53:58.520And she gets to play a judge and she gets her show, but she's got to leave the Supreme court
00:54:03.780to go do this job. So it's just a nice way of being like, here lady, we're going to put you
00:54:07.900over here. Okay. You, you go over here and you're going to play a judge just like you are now.
00:54:13.100And then we go fill that seat with someone amazing because this is a joke. And I can't even imagine
00:54:20.200it was eight to one. Do you think she has any self-awareness where she looks around and she's
00:54:26.720like, oh, am I the one? It's just so crazy. You know, Scalia, Justice Scalia, my favorite justice
00:54:38.920of all time he used to be sometimes the only one because he would always be against you know
00:54:45.760against the grain and so there is some kind of thing in in the supreme court where you
00:54:51.920are kind of become entrenched as with your own political viewpoints or you know your own legal
00:55:00.020viewpoints so she might be there and she might like that because she gets that attention it's
00:55:06.920true it was hamilton she appeared in hamilton that's what i was gonna say that sounds something
00:55:13.620like she would like she's like a um she is like a local municipal judge in my opinion like she's
00:55:21.640just i'm sorry i like she she's too stupid to be there it's not right like her decisions affect
00:55:29.000this entire country it's not right can can you impeach a judge how do you get rid of one
00:55:34.940um you you she's appointed for life i know i think i think there is an impeachment process
00:55:43.800but like all the other impeachment processes it's never going to actually happen
00:55:46.960they would i don't think they'd even bother trying because they would know number one that
00:55:51.420it would just never remove that person from office and number two given that you know it
00:55:56.940would just be a big spectacle and wouldn't it would just maybe pit the branches of government
00:56:01.560against each other in a pointless way like there's no reason to go through that whole process for
00:56:05.560that and so i doubt that would ever happen unless there was some massive scandal like you know
00:56:09.920somebody really was an epstein pedophile or something where it's like everybody agrees this
00:56:14.580guy gotta go you know but i think you know short of something really really massive scandal i don't
00:56:21.120think he's not scandalous enough i mean it is for me but i don't i don't think it's gonna work
00:56:27.640I don't I don't think she's she's dumb. I really don't. Because to get to that level, you really can't be in. But again, it's not a matter of intelligence, as we've seen a lot of very intelligent, educated people do don't have any common sense.