Real Coffee with Scott Adams - May 01, 2026


The Scott Adams School - 05⧸01⧸26 BJ Dichter Joins the News Crew. Trump, Area 51. VDH. NJ Governor


Episode Stats


Length

1 hour and 2 minutes

Words per minute

169.30563

Word count

10,518

Sentence count

317

Harmful content

Misogyny

1

sentences flagged

Toxicity

19

sentences flagged

Hate speech

5

sentences flagged


Summary

Summaries generated with gmurro/bart-large-finetuned-filtered-spotify-podcast-summ .

It's Friday, and we're kicking off the day off with a bang! Join us in the first episode of the week as we celebrate the first Friday of the month with a special guest and some animal clips!

Transcript

Transcript generated with Whisper (turbo).
Misogyny classifications generated with MilaNLProc/bert-base-uncased-ear-misogyny .
Toxicity classifications generated with s-nlp/roberta_toxicity_classifier .
Hate speech classifications generated with facebook/roberta-hate-speech-dynabench-r4-target .
00:00:00.880 good morning you guys i'm sorry for the the minute delay we were we were in the green room 0.98
00:00:07.200 talking about sex slaves more on that yes we were it's friday happy sex day i mean sex 0.96
00:00:20.400 we're starting off great today this is going to be an exciting one honestly 0.98
00:00:23.760 This is the show today.
00:00:29.140 This is the flavor
00:00:30.360 happening right now.
00:00:32.800 Catch the vibes.
00:00:34.540 Catch the vibes.
00:00:35.960 Can I just have a moment to catch my breath?
00:00:40.640 I'm 12.
00:00:45.660 While the stream
00:00:46.840 uploads the whole thing.
00:00:49.760 Okay.
00:00:52.560 Get ready.
00:00:53.760 I don't think my lip sync matches with the song.
00:01:00.820 So it looks really weird.
00:01:16.380 There's our guest.
00:01:23.760 is that your first time hearing this bj yes it is do you love it very cute very clever is that
00:01:44.140 ai generated or what um bob lawler uh one of our og friends created that for us very cool yep so i
00:01:54.460 think he's actually playing his bob you're in the chat i think i saw you i think he is playing the
00:02:02.380 bass on that and did we get scott's drums in there i forget i forget how it all happened but it's so
00:02:08.940 good hi jared welcome you guys all right are you ready for the official sip i am let's go
00:02:17.980 but most importantly we will be enjoying the simultaneous sip and it doesn't take much to
00:02:23.500 participate it does not really merely have a cup or a mug or a glass a tanker chalice or stein a
00:02:29.900 canteen jug or flask a vessel of any kind fill it with your favorite liquid i like coffee and join
00:02:36.860 Join me now for the unparalleled pleasure of the dopamine at the end of the day, the
00:02:40.080 thing that makes everything better.
00:02:43.060 Simultaneous sip.
00:02:44.480 Go.
00:02:50.680 Now, you might note that I am sipping from the deplorable University Cup.
00:03:00.040 Yep.
00:03:00.720 And we had to fix that and get our own mug going, didn't we?
00:03:04.640 So good morning, Owen Marcell.
00:03:06.860 and BJ. My name is Erica. You are at the Scott Adams School. Today is May 1st. Let's go May.
00:03:15.560 Let's hit May hard, okay? And it's a Friday. What better way to start May? So, oh, and tonight we
00:03:22.200 want to remind you that Walter Kern is on the Greg Gutfeld show. So we'll make sure to look for
00:03:28.000 Walter. Good luck, Walter. You don't need it. All right, you guys. So, you know, Friday we're like
00:03:34.020 a little looser a little sillier but we still have some good news for you um but i did want
00:03:40.780 to start you know me i wanted to start with a little animal clip because it's me and animals
00:03:46.980 so look at this okay so these are are these alpacas look at they're going over that string
00:03:57.880 All right, this one's like, I'll walk around.
00:04:00.660 This one's like, oh, okay.
00:04:02.980 Oh, are they all back?
00:04:05.040 Looks like it's a match of each one.
00:04:07.760 Yeah.
00:04:09.200 Oh, I'll go under.
00:04:11.460 Oh, I'm staying.
00:04:13.400 Oh, I'll go under, too.
00:04:15.580 I refuse to go under.
00:04:17.240 I refuse to go over.
00:04:18.600 I refuse to go around.
00:04:20.180 What will I do?
00:04:21.300 What will I do?
00:04:25.180 Oh.
00:04:25.980 Oh, hard.
00:04:27.880 come on big daddy there you know
00:04:37.860 he's so smart see there's so many ways to get the job done i love that so that was my animal
00:04:47.940 the difference between a llama and then alpaca isn't it size isn't the llama larger than the
00:04:54.460 alpaca or vice versa again you know better than me i never never knew i just knew they were similar
00:05:00.320 but different one of them only has teeth on the top or the bottom i think it's alpaca so if they
00:05:06.900 actually like bite you it won't hurt marcel is like this is amazing news how does that make any
00:05:12.500 sense what do they do just bite into their own gums yeah they're like someone in the someone
00:05:19.340 ask brock and let us know you guys keep your eye on the chat for the official information
00:05:25.820 oh my gosh okay so that was that was one video which one spits at you oh the alpaca i have a
00:05:32.700 video of one spitting at me i thought that's a dragon in jurassic park that too i haven't been
00:05:40.060 there yet but yes so sometimes they spit i think it's like a love thing personally but
00:05:45.740 mm-hmm okay the other story i wanted to play this at some point this week so let's just do it today
00:05:52.540 i feel like i just want to like scoop up all the videos that i wanted to show you
00:05:56.460 okay because we want to start off with like a nice little positive vibe here um i love this
00:06:02.140 okay so without explanation oh can you hear hey can you hear i heard hey can you hear
00:06:12.300 no just hear a beep beep beep it's going up that's normal oh oh
00:06:19.580 so i'm technically hearing yeah so like everybody be quiet
00:06:27.500 i'm doing it but when i'm talking i can hear you can hear hey your hearing aid is off this
00:06:35.020 is just your cochlear implant wait i can hear you yeah no way can you hear me you can hear me
00:06:53.100 hey is it too loud does it hurt or is it okay is it okay it's okay is it too loud
00:07:01.100 it's good it's good are these happy tears what are they happy tears you're doing so good
00:07:13.260 it's good oh you know what that is that is like every time i've been in a podcast studio that's
00:07:23.700 what happens for you know 10 minutes before live to air every time can you hear me can you hear
00:07:28.780 can hear me i mean is that the sweetest so like you know that that's kind of that what we take
00:07:35.340 for granted that we can just hear you know or see or speak so i just love that i don't know
00:07:41.740 i love that kid and i'm not really a kid person so that was a uh shocking soft side of erica over
00:07:47.340 here shocking it reminds me of rush limbo maybe like the other viral one where the person hears
00:07:53.820 for the first time and it's a man in a doctor's office and he's next to his wife and he's like
00:07:58.060 do you hear her she's so loud it's so annoying
00:08:03.260 right out of the gate oh my gosh all right so you guys wasn't that sweet did anyone tell us
00:08:09.580 in the chat yet the difference between the alpaca and the llama llamas are larger as somebody said
00:08:16.780 that's not it though is it all right maybe the hair is different right because they use llamas
00:08:22.860 to make clothing for people in La Paz and Bolivia and stuff like that.
00:08:29.160 All right, Giada De Laurentiis with your accent.
00:08:32.400 I have alpaca clothing too, so I don't know.
00:08:39.880 Do you guys get that Giada reference?
00:08:42.020 You know how she'll just be talking like this and she's like,
00:08:44.340 and then today we're going to have spaghetti and mozzarella.
00:08:47.280 And you're like, whoa, lady, okay.
00:08:49.580 That was my Giada reference.
00:08:52.860 Okay. So, all right, let's move on to a story in New Jersey news. So we have a governor,
00:09:03.540 Andy Wang. Where are you? Where are you, Marge? Her name is, is it Mickey or Mikey? I won't know
00:09:09.340 the difference when you write it, but Mickey Cheryl, let's call her. So she's a hoot. I just 0.98
00:09:16.140 want to play this clip of her. This is just so typical of, I hate to just call it the Democrats,
00:09:22.860 Let's, but just, let's, let's just listen to, this is her talking about like her first
00:09:28.280 hundred days in office and how's it going?
00:09:32.100 I know you like to talk about President Trump.
00:09:35.020 Um, I don't like talking about President Trump.
00:09:37.840 Trump administration, Trump, Trump, the president, federal government, federal government, Trump,
00:09:41.820 federal Washington, Trump, federal government, federal government, the president, White House,
00:09:45.940 federal government, Trump administration, Trump, federal government, federal government,
00:09:49.000 Washington. Federal. Federal government. White House. The president. Federal government. Federal
00:09:53.520 government. Federal government. Federal government. Washington. Washington. Federal government. Trump
00:09:57.260 administration. His administration. I live for the day when we never talk about him. I would love that.
00:10:09.620 So good. Isn't that the best? You know what's funny about that? The whole, I mean, maybe I'm
00:10:16.060 wrong, but the 100 days after office, didn't Trump start that? I don't ever remember hearing a
00:10:22.280 president going over their first 100 days or making commitments for the first 100 days. I
00:10:27.140 think it started with Trump. So that whole premise comes from Trump. Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump,
00:10:32.500 Trump. I don't know. I thought Obama had 100 days. Yeah, I feel like it's a thing. I don't know.
00:10:37.960 okay could be 100 days of destruction with Obama
00:10:42.320 I think the you know it is a little bit of what Scott used to call like the new CEO effect where
00:10:49.900 it's like let's you know get a whole bunch of stuff go rolling in the right direction to set
00:10:53.560 the tone and get everything moving and so it's kind of like your initial accomplishments but
00:10:58.380 I know Trump did the same thing after the first year to talk about FDR started that
00:11:03.080 oh really yeah and they're smart um so honestly though new jersey's in the news a lot and i i
00:11:12.520 can tell you that i have made friends with an assembly person from new jersey and she's going
00:11:17.500 to be on this show with us i'm obsessed with her um and she'll be the perfect person to give us
00:11:23.180 like you know what's going on and like how things are really working and i can't wait to have her
00:11:29.040 on i'll talk more about her later but um owen we were talking in the green room that the doj is
00:11:36.020 suing new jersey and um here's a just a little graphic sandy thank you for sharing this with me
00:11:42.460 so basically oh and i'll let you take this from here yeah so the department of justice is suing
00:11:49.500 new jersey over some laws that are giving illegal aliens in-state tuition um and essentially treating
00:11:56.800 actual citizens as like second class. So this lawsuit recently challenging their state laws
00:12:03.960 that say illegal aliens would get in-state tuition and financial aid, saying it discriminates against
00:12:09.040 U.S. citizens. And I think similar lawsuits have been filed in many other states, including red
00:12:14.780 states. There was one in apparently Texas and Kentucky and Oklahoma that have already blocked
00:12:20.620 these kinds of laws and now they're pending as well in illinois and minnesota and california
00:12:27.100 so they're kind of going both ways with this apparently it's been happening all over the place
00:12:30.380 but new jersey is the newest one to add to the list where they're essentially giving better
00:12:36.440 treatment for college tuition to illegal aliens over u.s citizens so they're screwing suing for 0.73
00:12:42.420 discrimination and uh you know hopefully getting rid of these extra benefits that illegal aliens 0.87
00:12:49.500 get which i'm all for i mean i think i've said many times that one of the big reasons people 1.00
00:12:54.820 come here is for all the free stuff all the extra benefits all the stuff that we give away to them
00:12:59.620 everything from education to medical care to welfare to you know everything that they get
00:13:05.280 and um it doesn't make any sense to to give all these free benefits to people and i think other
00:13:12.680 people in the past have pointed out it's like you can't have open borders and all this free
00:13:17.120 financial aid and all this it's just it's overwhelming our medical system our education
00:13:21.500 system or you know welfare systems everything so um these benefits have always supposed to be a
00:13:28.040 safety net for citizens but it's been abused over and over again to give all these extra things to
00:13:33.400 illegal aliens so we're going after it um oh really someone said i believe trump is also suing
00:13:39.780 new jersey for a law saying ice can't wear masks i don't know about that i don't know if you guys do
00:13:44.940 but that's a bunch of bs also can you imagine i hadn't heard that for new jersey but i know
00:13:50.340 they did that in california yeah yeah i mean you can wear a mask to riot but you know but
00:13:57.160 like i think it should be you can't wear a mask to protest is personally how i feel but
00:14:02.580 i thought that was already settled in california where they just said they are allowed to wear
00:14:06.480 masks and the state law doesn't take effect because the federal law preempts it marcella
00:14:12.220 would know yeah that's what they decided i mean that's the law i don't know like a lot of times
00:14:17.960 these states i feel like they're like anarchists or something running amok because all these laws
00:14:23.920 already exist uh it's just trump enforcing them but it costs taxpayer money to go and have to sue
00:14:32.140 for the mass for the illegal alien money you know so it's it's um and joe biden you know president
00:14:40.940 and biden allowed all of this to happen because that's how it is it wasn't enforced just like
00:14:47.160 the border anyways it doesn't make any friday like illegal aliens should get in-state tuition
00:14:53.600 or you know financial aid that u.s citizens can't get i mean i i had to pay out-of-state tuition
00:15:00.000 for my son because my in-state school didn't accept him and the out-of-state school did so
00:15:07.360 you know and it cost me a lot of money i mean you know the difference is huge it's like
00:15:13.620 somewhere around 50 grand a year tuition that i've been paying and if i was in state it would
00:15:19.240 have been closer to 10 grand a year so it's like you know over a hundred thousand dollars
00:15:23.000 that's crazy just because they wouldn't give me in state tuition and if he was an illegal alien 0.86
00:15:29.360 apparently he might have gotten that in state tuition darn it darn it all right well listen
00:15:36.340 We're going to keep our eye on New Jersey because it's so fun and fascinating right now on an infuriating level because, you know, California has set the gold standard.
00:15:49.600 What?
00:15:50.700 I thought you guys were winning the New Jersey State.
00:15:53.160 Well, we're winning things, Marcella.
00:15:55.360 You're winning the overall, but we're catching up.
00:15:59.020 And thanks for emptying out Hollywood to my town.
00:16:02.480 You know what's strange?
00:16:03.760 I spoke at a conference maybe three years ago in Florida.
00:16:09.240 And one of the people, the person who spoke just ahead of me, was involved with the DeSantis administration and their crypto regulations.
00:16:17.160 And what he was trying to explain to people, I mean, we kind of knew we talked about this behind the scenes.
00:16:22.500 But what he was trying to explain to the crowd is we're at the point in the United States where the legislation doesn't matter.
00:16:28.500 because it's either enforced or interpreted depending where you are on the political spectrum
00:16:34.420 and everything is being kicked to the courts so he said all our legislation now is before a judge
00:16:41.000 and the judges don't want to deal with either so it's it's just total chaos there with what's going
00:16:46.100 on that we're at the point where legislation and law doesn't really make a difference it's really
00:16:51.380 frustrating to watch yeah yeah well and the other interesting thing i read about recently i don't
00:16:57.040 think i posted about this but it was that a lot of people are doing like um ai filings in courts
00:17:04.040 and they're kind of flooding the courts with it like they're a lot of times they're just frivolous
00:17:09.340 motions and things like they don't really have an argument but they're using chat gpt and they're
00:17:13.480 not hiring a lawyer and they're just going motion after motion after motion after motion and then
00:17:19.500 the judge has to you know look at it and maybe if the other side like if it's a divorce thing
00:17:24.540 the other lawyer has to look at it and so you're just draining money from your person you're
00:17:30.360 divorcing and you're wasting time of the courts and you're getting to the point where it's just
00:17:34.260 clogging up the courts to the point where they can't function and oh and there's also another
00:17:39.340 side of and maybe marcelli can weigh in on this uh you know one of the podcasts i produce is a
00:17:44.080 legal podcast guys that are you know uh victims of false accusations and the two things are
00:17:50.760 happening one is that there's another thing that's happening clients are now coming in
00:17:54.720 to law firms and saying it's okay i've done all the work we can we do this for like 500 bucks i
00:18:02.060 have all the time every day and they're all fading and the client's like no no no yeah i've got it
00:18:08.560 handled i just need you to sign here yeah yeah i could do marcella marcella i could do your job
00:18:15.380 Why am I paying you this much, Marcella?
00:18:18.320 I could totally do everything that you do.
00:18:21.660 Like, okay, go ahead.
00:18:24.120 Yeah, good luck.
00:18:25.320 And when you're in front of the judge, have fun with that.
00:18:28.860 Judges don't like that, do they, Marcella?
00:18:30.980 The whole chat QBT.
00:18:32.440 Judges don't like this chat QBT phenomenon.
00:18:35.120 Well, judges have been caught doing the same thing as pro-purse.
00:18:39.740 They've been, pro-purse are people that are not represented.
00:18:42.060 it um there's been uh you know judges give opinions just like we have the supreme court
00:18:47.920 opinion or whatever and it's been um either their legal research or whatever uh writes it out and
00:18:54.460 they've used chat gpt or wherever they use um and they have you know wrong citations as well
00:19:02.400 so it goes you know it's and i think um who was it they um a friend of mine is in the news business
00:19:10.980 and the news people had like a conference um this are people they're hated by trump or whatever
00:19:18.000 but they are worried about all the articles because they're writers some of them they're
00:19:25.180 worried about all articles being written by ai and them being replaced so yeah which is
00:19:31.740 most likely going to happen i mean all right there's another good use for ai um so all right
00:19:39.780 so let's move on. And also what, you know, AI, AI is going to definitely force some problems. I
00:19:45.540 mean, this is a, we could do five weeks on AI and what potentially could go wrong. Um, but you know,
00:19:52.500 even like Taylor Swift, now I heard that she's Taylor Swift. Yeah. You know, Taylor, she's saying
00:19:59.020 she's going to be replaced by AI. No, ma'am. She is working on a contract that protects her from AI.
00:20:07.900 um oh yes yeah those pictures pictures music all of it her lyrics um you know so it it can be a
00:20:18.700 problem when people just want to steal your likeness and use it for their own gain um all
00:20:24.220 right so let's move on to something else um this is exciting i really like i really like these
00:20:30.260 things that trump is doing i know he did the one with michael dell for the um i don't remember the
00:20:37.140 of it but it was like to put a thousand dollars in like a savings account for kids under a certain
00:20:41.860 age and let it grow with interest does anyone remember what that was called um americans
00:20:48.580 something oh i forget i'll look it up in a second but let's so anyway this is another opportunity
00:20:54.340 now for people that maybe don't have jobs where you can um deposit money into an ira for savings
00:21:01.540 they're creating something here uh that we'll talk about on the other side for people to have
00:21:06.260 the same opportunity for savings um and getting matching so let's let's look at this and i think
00:21:12.980 we should probably all take advantage of it if you qualify beginning at the start of next year
00:21:17.780 every american will be able to go to trump ira.gov and open a new low-cost ira account you'll then be
00:21:26.740 able to access the same type of retirement accounts that federal employees enjoy through the thrift
00:21:33.060 savings plans which are incredible as part of the federal savers match program low-income
00:21:39.500 americans will be eligible to receive up to one thousand dollars per year in matching funds
00:21:45.080 deposited directly into their accounts it's a great thing for millions of americans who lack
00:21:51.920 employer-sponsored plans this will be really revolutionary because they'll be covered nobody
00:21:57.880 thought that was possible. For example, if a 25-year-old who is eligible for a Savers match
00:22:03.440 program invests just $165 a month under the matching federal contributions, they will have
00:22:10.560 an estimated $465,000 in their account by the time they're 65 years old. In other words, they'll be
00:22:19.540 rich. And there's something awfully nice about that. But this is only the first step. I was
00:22:26.400 talking to Kevin Hassett a little while ago and the people standing right behind me we're going
00:22:32.380 to take it to the next level and the next level Kevin you're going to mention something but
00:22:37.040 the next level will be necessary to have congressional approval what you just heard
00:22:42.420 we don't need congressional approval and it'll never be terminated because the terminated if
00:22:48.160 somebody else is in office to terminated you'd have to take that money away you'd have to you'd
00:22:54.120 You have to really take away something that's so positive.
00:22:57.620 I don't think any politician would do it.
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00:24:26.600 for details. Please play responsibly. I like this. I think the differences I saw some people
00:24:33.580 asking is that there's going to be matching. So if you work for a company, you know, they'll match
00:24:39.600 a portion of the money you put into the account. They're like, okay, you put that in and we'll
00:24:44.560 match it. So I believe Owen, he's saying here, we'll match a thousand dollars a year.
00:24:51.140 I think so. I mean, the actual text of it just says $1,000, so I don't know if that
00:24:55.840 means one time or annually. It doesn't really say annually, so maybe it's just one time,
00:25:00.420 but I'm not sure. Yeah, but I think it is. I don't know what the official name was for
00:25:07.360 the kid accounts, but everybody just called them.
00:25:09.140 Oh, Trump accounts.
00:25:10.420 Yeah.
00:25:10.700 Trump accounts.
00:25:11.700 But this seems to be like a similar thing for adults, and honestly, personally, I'm kind
00:25:19.040 conflicted on this one like a one thing that i think is clear to me is that this is a way of kind
00:25:26.000 of keeping the stock market up because it's essentially getting more people to invest in
00:25:30.740 the stock market than otherwise would and put more money into the stock market than would
00:25:34.240 otherwise go there but the other thing is like it you know it's yet another thing that's like
00:25:40.360 only for people under a certain level of income and so it just seems like you're just giving money
00:25:46.260 to, you know, lower income people, which is obviously taxpayer funds, right? Like that's
00:25:53.220 the only place it can come from. So, you know, I personally think it's a bit more of redistribution
00:25:59.400 of wealth, which I don't really like. So, well, but I mean, okay, so where is this money coming
00:26:06.160 from? Like, I mean, if he wants to let people save money, you know, like I would be all for it
00:26:13.620 if you just said, okay, IRAs, the limits are too low. Let's raise the limits, like let people
00:26:17.440 invest more. I do think there's a, you know, inequity there sort of to say, if you work for
00:26:24.400 somebody and you have a 401k, you can put in however many, you know, I think it's like 16 or
00:26:28.800 18,000 a year or whatever it is now. And, and, but then IRAs is much lower than that. You know,
00:26:34.320 it's like one third of that or something. And so I think that should be addressed, but I think
00:26:37.920 saying we're going to match your savings. It's like, okay, I get that as a benefit for my employer
00:26:46.860 and I understand that and I like that, but that's part of my compensation for my job, right? I mean,
00:26:52.840 if they weren't giving it to me in my 401k, they might just give it to me in salary. It's coming
00:26:56.620 from the company that I work for. I guess I'd really have to understand, is it a thousand
00:27:01.520 dollars a year or is it a one-time one thousand dollars as an incentive um but i like the idea of
00:27:10.000 of people having somewhere to put their money to gain some interest and then have it later in life
00:27:16.080 instead of having like bigger medicaid or medicare problems um later in life i don't know marcella
00:27:24.080 do you have an opinion on this well i'm with owen i think it's wealth distribution as you guys know
00:27:30.560 I'm a capitalist laser fair person. So but I what I do think is I think this is for people that don't have employers that are self-employed.
00:27:41.740 I think at least that was the notion. So instead of giving them a thousand dollars, I would tax the like less taxes in order to put more to our savings or allow,
00:27:53.840 like Owen said, the IRA limit to be expanded or something like that. So I think it would serve
00:28:04.620 better for the public, the taxpayer, for all of us. It would help so much more and it would create
00:28:11.080 less inflation. Even if it's one time, it's quite a lot at one time and it could cause
00:28:18.880 further inflation but i'm not an economist so i'm just marcella so well all right bj your thoughts
00:28:27.720 by the way it does look like it's annual based on the annual okay yeah i believe it's up to a
00:28:33.780 thousand but just some additional context uh this it upset a lot of people because this came out of
00:28:39.360 the bitcoin community uh the idea was uh as they were trying to court trump into understanding
00:28:46.440 crypto and Bitcoin. The goal was because Bitcoin, whether you like Bitcoin or not, the thesis of
00:28:53.120 Bitcoin is that it's a hedge against inflation. And the idea was you put $1,000 in the hands of
00:28:58.740 young people. And when they go to retire, well, we see what's happened with Bitcoin. I've been
00:29:04.600 begging people to buy Bitcoin since it was $1,500 a coin. It's now, what's it, $80,000 today? So the
00:29:10.760 idea was over the long term, it would be a very valuable hedge against inflation. And Trump was
00:29:15.800 on board. And then somebody whispered in their ear, they realized, you know, it's too early to
00:29:22.000 use Bitcoin, I guess. And they just decided to switch it over to fiat. So the thesis with Bitcoin,
00:29:27.360 if you put a thousand dollars in Bitcoin, you have 50 years in the future, then yeah, okay,
00:29:30.820 that's going to end up significant upward volatility over your life. But with dollars,
00:29:36.400 because of inflation, doesn't really have the same effect. And I think that's why it doesn't
00:29:40.280 land as well as it was initially intended. Okay. So Morgan, thank you so much. It says
00:29:46.560 individuals with a modified adjusted gross income of 20,500 or less will be eligible for federal
00:29:55.800 match of up to $1,000, which is 50% on the first 2000 in annual contributions to a workplace
00:30:04.300 for retirement plan or ira based on their 2027 tax returns 20 500 or less per a year yep
00:30:17.020 i mean that seems really low to the point where i don't know how many people would qualify for
00:30:22.260 that if it was really that level oh you'd be surprised no this is what the point of it is
00:30:28.960 if you only make less than 20,000 a year are you going to have a thousand bucks to put in
00:30:36.860 this account so it can be matched I don't know you might have a roommate you might have a
00:30:41.160 boyfriend or girlfriend you live with and you're combining your incomes who knows but if one
00:30:46.100 person's making the 20,000 I listen I don't like wealth redistribution either but if it's like
00:30:51.380 these people are working and they're not on the dole in some other way and they're honestly just
00:30:56.480 trying to like get it going. Listen, and if, and then, then if they start doing better and then
00:31:00.200 they get out of that bracket, they're out of that bracket. But if they're in it and they're working
00:31:04.500 and contributing to it, I don't know. I mean, I don't, I don't know if I like it or not, but
00:31:09.660 that's just what's happening. Um, the young end of the age limit. I don't know, Bev, I think it's,
00:31:16.700 I think it's just working people and that that's their, yeah, it's adjusted earned income. So,
00:31:22.420 you know, maybe it's just something you do at the start of your career and, you know,
00:31:27.580 nobody wants to stay at 20,000. It's not enough to incentivize you to keep a crappy job or not to
00:31:32.840 want to grow, but it's something because you don't get like an IRA advantage when you're
00:31:39.800 in a company like that. So maybe it's just, it's another way to start saving your money.
00:31:45.120 Maybe you're working like at a, uh, you know, like you're 19 and you are working at McDonald's
00:31:50.940 as your first job. We always used it, used to use it as a reference. So I'll continue to do that.
00:31:55.320 But, you know, working at McDonald's is not supposed to be a career. It's supposed to be
00:31:59.820 a stepping stone. Like that's, you know, you're young, you're starting out, you work at McDonald's,
00:32:03.960 you're like still educating yourself, putting out your resume and you keep stepping up.
00:32:07.860 But in that beginning part, it would be great if you had a way to, uh, have like an IRA based
00:32:14.020 situation for lack of a better word, you're only making $19,000 at McDonald's. And so here's a way
00:32:20.700 to put some of your own money in and start saving um i don't know maybe that's good but who knows
00:32:27.240 all right so i didn't think it would be this controversial feeling but it feels that way
00:32:31.640 anyway um i mean again i i'm all for encouraging people to save and i do see that benefit that you
00:32:39.640 might get some people to put money away for retirement that otherwise would not and so i
00:32:43.600 like that and i wish it was also coupled with some kind of phase out of social security
00:32:47.720 because it would be a much better system than social security and if we could get people to
00:32:52.820 actually save it even if we made it mandatory for them to save like social security is mandatory
00:32:56.880 if they could at least put it in the stock market and it wouldn't be in a fund that congress can go
00:33:02.020 spend on whatever they want then you know i think it would be a much better system but
00:33:06.140 i am kind of against the whole point of like oh let's just give matching funds to the poor people
00:33:11.640 and not allow anybody who's actually making their own living to have the same benefit to me that is
00:33:16.920 wealth redistribution it's just saying let's take some money from the taxpayers and give it to the
00:33:21.360 people who are probably aren't paying taxes so i don't like that part of it okay all right so let's
00:33:29.000 move it on because there is more news okay this is my last clip and then i get fully involved in
00:33:34.840 the chat you guys love it just kidding all right so in today's potential conspiracy theory news
00:33:44.140 Okay, so you know that Trump is saying, like, release it all about the UFOs and the aliens, blah, blah, blah.
00:33:54.200 I'm saying allegedly my opinion.
00:33:56.020 My signs are here.
00:33:57.460 So what happens when he says release the dogs?
00:34:01.960 Look at this.
00:34:03.440 Well, in the span of 24 hours, there have been 17 earthquakes near Area 51.
00:34:07.900 It started with a 4.4 magnitude quake just two and a half miles underground.
00:34:11.560 The area is normally not prone to earthquakes this shallow, and it's leading to theories of nuclear testing or even UFOs, because it all happened after President Trump said this.
00:34:22.380 Do you have an update on the UFO files and what might be, what we're going to be seeing?
00:34:26.540 Well, I think we're going to be releasing as much as we can in the near future.
00:34:31.340 They want to find out about the UFOs and anything having to do with UFO or related material, and we're going to be releasing a lot of things that we haven't.
00:34:41.560 I think some of it's going to be very interesting.
00:34:44.880 So I just now have to respond, Dr. Stephen Greer, UFO researcher in a retired position.
00:34:48.980 Great to see you, doctor.
00:34:50.060 So are these earthquakes just a version of burning the files at an embassy when people got to get out?
00:34:57.120 Well, you know, the thing that lights up in my mind is that back in the 1990s,
00:35:01.200 I briefed a man who worked and designed the security apparatus at some of the facilities out there,
00:35:07.040 particularly the ones up near Groom Lake and Pahoot Mesa.
00:35:10.600 So, and he explained that on the top of those complexes underground were like bunker busting
00:35:16.460 type bombs, but underneath them were thermonuclear devices.
00:35:20.120 So that if anybody was getting close to those facilities, and by this, it could even be
00:35:25.940 the legal government of the United States, they could collapse those facilities.
00:35:29.240 Now, I don't know that that's what happened, but I know for a fact those security systems
00:35:33.260 are out there.
00:35:34.240 So that's one consideration.
00:35:36.540 Now, it could just be a cluster of earthquakes, or they could be doing some legitimate underground testing out in that region.
00:35:43.120 Yeah, there are a lot of mountains out there, so earthquakes are not out of the question.
00:35:49.120 All right, BJ, I don't know why, but I'm coming to you first on this.
00:35:53.040 I just can feel it pouring out of you.
00:35:55.920 Tell me what you think.
00:35:58.480 I was watching this thing from Whitney Cummings, who is a comedian kind of on the left side,
00:36:04.580 And she was explaining she was invited to a roast of Trump in New York many years ago.
00:36:11.520 And so she went up and insulted him, made fun of his hair, was really ruthless, like really cruel.
00:36:19.140 And but she said Trump, to his credit, was just there laughing and she was shocked.
00:36:23.660 And he said she came up to me after and she said, that was amazing television.
00:36:30.060 And I think that's what you're seeing.
00:36:31.120 I think you're seeing the showman who understands how to get people emotionally engaged in, you know, this is the George Norrie coast to coast stuff that, you know, Scott would talk about having a recreational belief that, yeah, it's fun to play with.
00:36:46.100 It keeps people entertained.
00:36:47.860 Is it serious?
00:36:49.140 No, I don't think so.
00:36:50.100 And I think it's also we often forget correlation does not imply causation.
00:36:54.860 And guess what?
00:36:56.120 When you're close to a fault line and there's lots of mountains there, then earthquakes are going to happen.
00:37:00.640 i think that's all it is marcella i mean i i think i told you um just to erica that i i had a quake
00:37:09.920 while the show was going on i think monday so it's um unfortunately hope i'm hoping it's the ufos
00:37:17.500 area 51 and it's the big one's not coming because that really doesn't uh but what i also thought it
00:37:24.480 It could be like whenever Iran, no, not Iran, Russia or somewhere else, they have like an earthquake the size that is not really necessarily like expected.
00:37:41.060 They think it's might be weapon related testing.
00:37:45.740 So I wouldn't put it past them that they're testing some kind of nuclear, some kind of weapon.
00:37:52.700 um owen well clearly they're just moving all the flying saucers out because they know the
00:37:59.220 disclosure is coming so you know they got to get it out and it creates a bit of seismic activity
00:38:04.620 as they're making all these gravity powered crafts take off you people laugh but something's going on
00:38:13.040 i mean you know i i think the interesting one of the interesting parts is that it's relatively
00:38:22.900 shallow they're saying that's uncommon i don't know if that's true but you know it sounds like
00:38:26.900 fracking issues no if it's like two and a half miles underground i don't know if they actually
00:38:31.540 go that deep with their facilities it'd be interesting to know that but maybe it's all
00:38:34.860 too secret and um it's hard to know exactly what's going on there but um you know i i as far
00:38:41.820 as the ufo disclosures i'm still going to stick to i don't think anything or shattering is going
00:38:45.760 to come out of that just based on how they're rolling it out i just think if it was proof of
00:38:50.940 aliens and proof of extraterrestrials we're not alone sort of stuff i don't think it would happen
00:38:55.920 the way that it's happening i think it would be some kind of official announcement from the white
00:39:01.160 house from trump and he would have a whole team kind of like with covid where they'd be presenting
00:39:06.200 things and trying to reassure people and might even be coordinated with other countries and
00:39:11.840 other leaders and none of that's happening right they're just saying we're going to release a bunch
00:39:15.500 of stuff oh it's interesting to me that means it's probably just going to be a few more videos like
00:39:20.120 the other ones we've seen where it's not really going to prove anything it just looks like maybe
00:39:24.560 something's there might still be some grainy photo maybe it'll be better quality you know video but
00:39:30.180 like it's not going to be proof because i don't think they would do it this way all right in the
00:39:35.260 chat do you think mostly okay the majority of aliens are up in the air like we when we look
00:39:45.740 up for a ufo or in the water like under the sea so say air or water or sea i just want to know both
00:39:55.420 well i want to know what they think the majority is the majority water or air
00:40:01.020 um and oh and do i know we know scott's actually i don't want to i don't want to sway them air
00:40:09.400 water sea all water caves
00:40:14.480 thank you for thinking past the sale with me um so we know scott did not oh inside the earth
00:40:26.560 ooh under the water i start thinking about it now when i'm on my boat i'm like
00:40:31.700 what if like a ufo launches out from under the ocean now and my boat's right here and like we
00:40:37.740 go flying and or what if it like comes and like eats the boat anyway these are things i i i think
00:40:43.780 like this okay y'all um we know scott does not believe that there are ufos and aliens um
00:40:51.060 he didn't believe in that oh and do i know what you think
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00:41:50.560 um i mean i honestly like i i probably mostly agree with scott i don't really expect to see
00:41:58.740 proof in my lifetime at least of that but i think um i'm certainly open-minded to it
00:42:03.700 you know it would be cool i'd like to see it a little bit like joe rogan where he's like i'd
00:42:07.680 like to believe i'd like to do it but it's interesting with him that he kind of the more
00:42:12.320 that's coming out the less he trusts it like you know for a long time he's like oh it's it's out
00:42:17.520 there they're just hiding it from us but then once the government actually starts releasing stuff and
00:42:21.240 saying oh yeah maybe we it is actually true now he's thinking oh this is all disinformation and
00:42:25.360 they're not you know really telling us the truth and um so i think it's much more likely that it is
00:42:31.580 um just you know something like we've often suspected where they just use it as a distraction
00:42:37.520 or even a way to discredit people and um you know a strategic disinformation weapon basically to
00:42:44.920 um control people to some extent or control the people they you know that are in that community
00:42:50.460 that they want to discredit but um you know again i i can't say for sure i know there's been lots of
00:42:57.040 theories about maybe it's some interdimensional being or some spiritual thing or angels or demons
00:43:01.500 or other things and so who knows it's hard to know exactly what reality is um and you know if
00:43:07.900 we are in a simulation that still would open the possibility that there could be aliens in the
00:43:12.620 simulation you never know well i know marcella and i both have uh seen something that was
00:43:18.820 unidentifiable right i i have more than once all right i feel like i know what you're going to say
00:43:24.600 bj but what is your thought opinion theory do you believe in other life out there or alien
00:43:32.160 ufo stuff you know like i'm i'm kind of an astronomy nerd so uh i wish i wish that were
00:43:39.760 the case and you know maybe in far off galaxies uh the odds of probability is uh likely since
00:43:47.320 we've now found an abundance of h2o uh all over the universe now at this point but they're never
00:43:54.580 going to get here i mean time distillation just makes it impossible um i don't know how i just 0.94
00:44:02.580 don't believe any of this sort of stuff i think i think what we're seeing is you know when trump
00:44:07.700 before he got elected in 2016 he got uh ivanka yes ivanka and his uh ivana trump his um i think
00:44:17.460 it was eric trump and one of the other kids they spent like four weeks on the news and talk radio
00:44:23.380 just scanning all talk radio. What are people interested in? What do people want to hear me
00:44:28.300 talk about? Because remember, it's a salesman. And this is a very big part of online media is this
00:44:35.860 whole astronomy, space sailing, conspiracy stuff, you know, coast to coast went on for how many
00:44:40.960 decades, right? It's still on. It's still on. Yeah. And I love George Ornery. It's great. I
00:44:45.480 love to listen to it. I don't believe it. It's a recreational belief, right? And I think this is
00:44:50.360 Trump understanding how to tap into just regular people and give them give them a little bit of
00:44:56.420 entertainment. You know, let's let's make this part of the Trump show. I think that's what we're
00:44:59.920 saying. What about Tim Burchett and Anna Paulina Luna saying that they've seen crazy stuff in the
00:45:05.300 skiff? What's crazy stuff? It's that it's that whole ambiguity that until I hear some specificity
00:45:14.440 because crazy stuff can be subjective, right? Because we all have different framings of the
00:45:20.060 world and that's you know that's that persuasion tactic of of the curiosity gap where they say
00:45:26.980 crazy stuff but then you don't know what it is so what do you do we fill it in with oh it must mean
00:45:32.540 that there are aliens amongst us which is not necessarily the case maybe her interpretation
00:45:37.820 of crazy stuff is we've seen weird things in uh in the atmosphere and we can't explain what they
00:45:44.600 are you know i wish listen i i am team alien if we if we have them great i would love i would love
00:45:52.520 it i am a star trek nerd i don't see all right all right you're saying i believe that they've
00:45:58.860 seen crazy stuff and they may have seen crazy documents where it might have explicitly said
00:46:03.060 we have extraterrestrials and biologics and all the other stuff that has been rumored for such a
00:46:07.120 long time but i you know again how do you know if that's the truth or disinformation how do you know
00:46:12.500 if that's something that is real like is you know you can't necessarily know just by either
00:46:17.380 watching a video or reading a document whether that's the truth or whether that's just something
00:46:22.000 somebody put in a document and um so it's really hard to know but i would say when people make
00:46:29.640 that argument that you made bj about like oh there's no way they could get here i just think
00:46:34.240 that's kind of limited because you're basically saying we're basing it on the physics as we
00:46:39.380 understand it yeah like like you're ruling out the possibility that there's a wormhole or there's
00:46:43.980 other things that we don't understand or they might be able to get here instantly as opposed
00:46:50.740 to traveling the pyramid coordinates and all of those things and yeah what about that
00:46:56.600 well i mean that's a mystery i mean it is i i don't know i don't think anyone really understands
00:47:04.540 when those were built or how they were built or any of that so but I think that you know I think
00:47:09.740 even Scott said at one point if there was something it's probably more likely some ancient civilization
00:47:13.880 as opposed to somebody who came you know from Alpha Centauri or somewhere further away and
00:47:19.420 I tend to agree with that too that I think if there was some other species of intelligent life
00:47:26.340 to me it would probably be much more likely just probability wise that it was an ancient
00:47:31.860 civilization that was wiped out at some point and maybe there's still remnants of it or
00:47:35.800 I think Scott maybe even said it could even just be drones that are left over that are kind of
00:47:40.260 automated where they just you know there isn't actually life but there's some kind of machine
00:47:44.680 that just keeps going. Somebody said I forget it might have been on Rogan I forget but you know the
00:47:51.620 the little etchings into the walls inside of pyramids and ancient ruins and they were like
00:47:57.900 that could just be a menu like people are like oh like they were trying to tell us something and
00:48:02.920 they're like well maybe it was like a menu for a restaurant like we have a little yak today and we
00:48:07.240 have this and that like you know we don't know that it was some big secret message bj were you
00:48:11.920 going to say something yeah yeah related to that and i think this is kind of the positive impact
00:48:16.800 of ai you know i talked about this on my stream that you know gobekli tepe for example which dates
00:48:22.740 back what 15 12 000 years ago we didn't know what it was and in the western world we favor religion
00:48:28.260 so you know when when all you have is a hammer everything becomes a nail right so they gave
00:48:33.300 all the data around uh gobekli tepe to i think it was grok if i'm not mistaken spent a few weeks on
00:48:38.980 it and what it discovered is gobekli tepe was not an ancient ritual site as what our bias would be
00:48:46.340 it's a calendar and it's a calendar that showed all of these different um environmental effects
00:48:54.760 that had occurred you know uh storms and earthquakes and all that sort of that's what
00:49:01.200 gobekli tepe is it's just explaining the history of what's gone in that region and then all the
00:49:06.760 other tepes whatever because there's a whole bunch of them they're the same thing this is what was
00:49:11.480 going on in terms of weather patterns in this region so I think we just our imagination gets
00:49:18.880 the best of us and I I love it I am a sci-fi nerd by the way Picard over Kirk any day but only the
00:49:25.260 TNG Picard um but I think it just our imagination gets the away from us we gotta just dial it back
00:49:32.400 a little bit and when people say I saw crazy things it's great I think we should defer to
00:49:37.540 well I don't know great crazy things until I know what it is I'm just not going to have a conclusion
00:49:43.500 or an opinion on this until I know further that's that's at least how I operate well that's smart
00:49:47.960 that's smart it's it's kind of like we're just playing that if I won the lottery yeah what would
00:49:52.800 I do yeah for sure this is this is Friday fun days right that it is Friday fun day it's fun
00:49:58.240 I do remember that Brian Romelli said it's coming though I know he made a reference to that on one
00:50:03.080 of our prior streams here in july oh yeah in july in july y'all all right i'm a little excited
00:50:10.920 a little nervous getting those getting those buckets of meals ready um okay so owen or marcella
00:50:19.600 i know you guys cultivated some stories here uh curated some stories i should say um is there
00:50:25.160 anything that we really need them to know the the sippers before the weekend gets going
00:50:30.480 something super important that you have i'm waiting for owen to say i don't know i mean i
00:50:38.580 you know comey apparently has been indicted again so he's been indicted for um you know some kind of
00:50:47.100 like um classified document leaking things like that so it looks like he's in a lot of hot water
00:50:53.500 and uh i think he's now sort of playing the victim after this next indictment so i think he's going to
00:50:59.620 be going through the ringer here, which frankly, I think he deserves. So, um, you know, I, I know
00:51:05.260 a lot of people have been kind of saying that this 86, 47 thing isn't going anywhere, but I think now
00:51:12.360 it looks like he's, I think it's three States now he's been charged in. So he's got lots of stuff
00:51:17.880 to deal with. And, uh, I'm sure again, the process is the punishment, even if he doesn't end up
00:51:23.500 convicted. So I think he's going to be facing a lot of consequences financially, if nothing else.
00:51:28.100 marcella does this last one seem more sticky yes it does okay because this was like leaking
00:51:35.680 classified information yeah i mean it's more leaky yeah and on top of that um you know the
00:51:44.620 cost of defending all this this is gonna uh this is gonna push but because of because we're having
00:51:53.200 elections like eventually you know we're gonna have another president we're gonna have midterms
00:51:59.280 they might be used comey's situation might be used to get the dems out you know oh do you want
00:52:07.900 a state like this you know so i can i can see it being detrimental to the j what do you think about
00:52:14.520 this latest one with comey i think this is a political negotiation and they're going to put
00:52:20.460 maximum pressure on him and they're trying to get something on their side you know this goes back
00:52:25.840 to the we only see 30 percent of what's actually going on behind the scenes and there's often you
00:52:32.760 know shots across the bow and there's also active negotiations not just Trump that does Trump just
00:52:38.300 does it very effectively because he's a good negotiator in business but this is standard issue
00:52:42.840 in politics across the board but I do think he's going to they're going to do what they did to
00:52:48.360 General Flynn, they're going to do to Comey as well. And we'll see. We'll see what happens.
00:52:54.600 He's not going to go to jail. There's not going to be any. This is just how the political class
00:52:59.400 works. And I know it sucks. People don't like it. I don't like it either. But it's very, very, 0.99
00:53:05.080 very rare that somebody in that inner circle of or the top tier of politics will ever see any sort
00:53:13.260 jail time, because it becomes an embarrassment to the entire institution, to other FBI informants,
00:53:18.760 it kills morale and that sort of stuff. It's bad enough right now. So I could be completely wrong,
00:53:24.640 but I think that's what we're seeing. And also never forget the Dilbert filter, you know,
00:53:30.700 how much of things are just stupidity and incompetence, which often plays into things, 0.99
00:53:36.160 but no, no, we'll see. Speaking of the Dilbert filter, I pulled this up. I just, 0.98
00:53:42.420 i love this today so this was my mood today so you see dilbert and dogbert and dilbert says
00:53:49.060 maybe i should become a teacher so i can educate the leaders of tomorrow and dogbert says maybe 0.93
00:53:54.660 you should educate the morons of tomorrow so they'll stop believing in the leaders of tomorrow 0.98
00:54:00.260 and then dilbert says maybe i'll just eat this donut and go to work and dogbert says do you 0.99
00:54:04.420 have any more dreams i can crush it's just i i don't know like that was like my mood today i
00:54:09.940 love that it's so perfect but uh i don't know the the dilbert filter you're right we have to remember
00:54:16.580 to put that on everything um speaking of which i have two quick clips if you guys don't mind if i
00:54:23.620 play them um i wasn't going to but we all could use a little victor davis hansen moment don't you
00:54:30.580 think um and here he is i just wanted to play this he's talking about hakeem jeffries although
00:54:37.380 he calls him something like Hockum, which I don't know. I don't know how he said it,
00:54:40.940 but I love it in the beginning. Just kind of talking about the pattern of the left. And then
00:54:46.420 I'm going to play another clip right after of what we all long for. And some of you may have
00:54:50.780 already seen it, but let's go. Hockum Jeffries just came out and said, right before this,
00:54:57.400 he said, we're in a maximum war. And then remember during the big, beautiful bill,
00:55:03.840 he did his little braggadocio where he said, we're going to stop this. And he got a baseball
00:55:07.680 bat, like he was going to club somebody. And then he came out after the attempted assassination.
00:55:16.220 We got to lower the rhetoric. And then people said, yeah, you should lower the rhetoric. And
00:55:20.260 then he went berserk, said, I'm not going to back down. There's something wrong with that guy. You
00:55:25.460 know, when you look at him, his eyes spin when he's thinking for a thought, like he's a deer
00:55:30.860 in the headlights. It's really funny. So I don't want to suggest it's autism, but there's something
00:55:36.060 he's not connected. He's like Swalwell. Both of them don't seem connected to the surroundings.
00:55:43.160 You know, the people. I got a sense he tries to mimic Obama's cadence. He does, does. Yeah. And
00:55:49.900 he's, I'm glad he's a majority, a minority leader because he's pretty inept. 0.83
00:55:57.100 i just love that there's just a couple things i want to point out you guys know scott always said 0.91
00:56:03.240 it's the eyes right it's like they have those crazy eyes and did you guys do you guys notice
00:56:07.940 that with him i i noticed that he's almost like expressionless like he's like just vacant and he
00:56:14.980 is so monotone he never makes an expression but he manages to just say the most i don't know just
00:56:24.800 oh i i don't i can't think of the right word like it's not like vile but like incendiary just
00:56:31.380 i don't know like i just find him so gross and i totally from day one was like this guy thinks
00:56:37.480 he's obama the cadence the whole thing and that's why they call him timu obama but do you guys have 0.67
00:56:43.740 that same vibe with him i'm gonna go to you first ellen i think he's a clown i'm kind of glad he's
00:56:51.440 their minority leader because i'd rather have him than many of the other potential alternatives that
00:56:55.500 might be more effective i don't really find him compelling in any way i'm kind of surprised that
00:57:01.140 the democrats seem to look at him as a leader because i don't see him getting much done i don't
00:57:05.240 see him getting doing much other than complaining all the time what do you think marcella i mean
00:57:12.040 you know the he's part of the designated liars he came out uh after like uh like it was said
00:57:22.120 in the clip that he came out after the assassination attempt um where he went crazy 0.52
00:57:28.760 because they were like lower your rhetoric he's like no and like he looked possessed 0.63
00:57:33.380 he does look possessed because he's more he's a little possessed of the designated liar he adds
00:57:39.400 more than uh chuck wood and uh nancy um so i think he's gonna go far in the democratic party
00:57:47.780 because he has that possessed that evil possessed that what's the word you're saying possessed
00:57:53.480 no uh yeah he's possessed but that sass that that like okay like i don't know it's like
00:58:00.120 like there's this energy in his eyes and it's like really he's like possessed
00:58:06.420 he's possessed with his pizzazz okay bj i mean i think i think he's dangerous like i i know that
00:58:15.860 he's you know like owen feels that way about him but i feel like i don't like him being where he 0.95
00:58:21.280 is because if we lose the majority he's he does not give a crap about anything that has to do with
00:58:28.720 keeping this country civilized what do you think bj um i i like victor david henson i disagree with 0.67
00:58:35.360 him a little bit i think he's not stupid i think he's very intelligent he knows exactly what he's
00:58:41.240 doing and you know kind of the indicator that if he's part of the designated liars then you know 0.95
00:58:46.900 this is a strategy right and the strategy is reciprocal extremism or reciprocal radicalization
00:58:53.340 and they tried to do that to us in ottawa i've seen this many times in politics in canada they
00:58:58.400 try to say the most extreme things because they know they can get away with it and they are trying
00:59:05.260 to foster a reciprocal response to grow, oh, see, look, look at all these right-wing militias.
00:59:12.100 Look at all these right-wing extremists. That's what Trudeau tried to do. Even though it wasn't
00:59:15.860 true, he tried to even state that to us. And I think that's exactly what he's trying to do. He's
00:59:21.940 trying to make Republicans angry. And my suggestion is don't take the bait. 100%.
00:59:28.700 debate, just keep just cool, calm and collected. That's what they cannot argue with. That's why
00:59:34.960 with us, peace and love and freedom, they didn't know how to deal with that because they're only
00:59:40.240 prepared for the opposite side to get more extreme than they are. I agree. And especially now that
00:59:46.840 the jig is up with, you know, the Southern Poverty Law Center we know is, you know, buying this kind
00:59:53.260 of hysteria they're paying for it so um so i just wanted to play one last clip you guys i know
00:59:58.880 there's a minute left um this is this is how you handled life back in the day and what i miss and
01:00:05.440 long for so badly this is after there was an assassination attempt on ronald reagan 0.97
01:00:11.020 and this is how johnny carson handled the situation unlike our freaking losers of like
01:00:19.040 the jimmy kimmel like okay here we go thank you very much ladies and gentlemen i'm sure that all
01:00:24.780 of you here and most of you watching tonight understand why we delayed this program for 24
01:00:29.940 hours because of the incredible events of yesterday that old adage the show must go on
01:00:36.460 seemed relatively unimportant the academy abc television and all of us connected with the show
01:00:41.880 felt because of the uncertain outcome as of this time yesterday it would have been inappropriate
01:00:47.080 to stage a celebration.
01:00:49.740 But the news today is very good, as you know.
01:00:51.700 The president is in excellent condition at last reports.
01:00:54.340 He's been conducting business.
01:01:05.540 And he happens to be in very good spirits.
01:01:09.340 After all, you must remember this is a man who yesterday,
01:01:12.380 while he was in the hospital unable to speak,
01:01:14.340 wrote on a sheet of paper,
01:01:15.340 all things considered i'd rather be in philadelphia so tonight the show does go on
01:01:22.120 i love that all right you guys listen the show goes on tomorrow owen you're doing your after
01:01:28.700 spaces i am the after party tomorrow after spaces i don't know that's a new one all right so you
01:01:35.040 guys tomorrow owen will be on x uh at the after party bj are you going on right now yeah i'm
01:01:41.460 starting a stream right now it's gonna be a shorter one but i'm gonna start in about five
01:01:44.540 minutes okay everybody thank you so so much have an awesome weekend we will be back monday and we
01:01:50.220 thank scott and shelly for keeping this show going please be useful be kind and um let's have a
01:01:56.380 closing sip to scott say your goodbyes you guys we have to run okay to scott to scott thanks
01:02:03.020 Awana, Marcella. Thanks, BJ. We love you. Love you all. We'll see you soon.