Best of the Program | 11⧸30⧸21
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Summary
Glenn Beck sits down with Pat Gray, CEO of Kexi Cookies, to talk about inflation and how it's affecting his business and the average American's ability to buy food. Glenn and Pat talk about how to deal with inflation, the impact it's having on your day-to-day life, and what to do about it.
Transcript
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Hey, today's podcast is all about you listening to people all over the country, what they're
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I think you will really get a lot out of today's podcast.
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You're listening to the best of the Glenn Beck program.
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Pat Gray is joining us just for a quick second because he knows something about inflation.
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Because he has a cookie company called Kexi Cookies, and they are heavy in, let's say, butter.
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Yeah, you don't want to eat them while outside because it could congeal in your bloodstream,
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But I wanted to talk to you about what are you seeing in inflation?
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And for the first, you know, it's been going on for like a year or more.
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But then we raised the price to include shipping, though.
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And shipping is probably one of the most expensive aspects of it.
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But between the ingredients and the shipping, inflation really hurts.
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When butter goes up, when sugar goes up, when eggs go up, all that stuff goes into the cookies.
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I was telling Stu, I went into a Costco, and I picked up five steaks, you know, just a pack of five steaks.
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We get, we usually, we have a tradition that on Christmas Eve, we buy one of those steak roasts.
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But this year, they're, I don't know, $300 or something.
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So, we're just, I mean, we're going to get kibbles and bits this year.
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I mean, I don't know how the average person is having meat right now.
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Even if you can afford it, it's a value proposition, right?
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Like, do I really want to spend $80 on five steaks?
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Like, even if you can afford the $80, it just seems insane.
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Especially if, I mean, you better know you're going to eat them.
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Well, because sometimes you'll think, I'm going to go out, you know, I'm going to have
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And then something comes up, and then we don't have time to cook, or we're going someplace.
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And then you forget about it, and by the end of the week, you're like, uh.
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Now it's like, if you're getting meat, you better damn eat that meat.
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And then you couple that with the gas prices, and I don't know how.
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Do you see that they're releasing more oil from the energy?
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That is, first of all, it didn't work the first time.
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I love these people who just are pretending that this is meat and any kind of oil-based
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product is never coming back down, as long as these people are in charge.
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Pete Buttigieg, on Cut 6 here, kind of walks us through how you should deal with gas prices.
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Now there's talk about the Build Back Better Act, which is the, quote-unquote, human infrastructure.
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Are there things in that legislation that's now being cobbled together that is important
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Obviously, most of the physical infrastructure work was contemplated in the bill that was
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But there is more envisioned in the Build Back Better law.
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It contains incentives to make it more affordable to buy an electric vehicle, up to a $12,500
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discount, in effect, for families thinking about getting an EV.
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Families that, once they own that electric vehicle, will never have to worry about gas
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And then you just have to drive it $108,000 miles.
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If it's a dollar per gallon, you might be saving.
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Because you still have to pay for the electricity.
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But if you go through all of that, I mean, in a matter of multiple decades, you're going
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But is it really once we get rid of, you know, all of the coal electricity and all of
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No, it's going to be way cheaper once we get rid of that.
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Because I thought the Build Back Better bill seemed like a scam to control everyone and
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But you're not thinking that that's what that's about?
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Well, there are ways to make, sure, solar panels and wind energy a lot more expensive
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But what if we pass another multi-trillion dollar bill that just takes money from people
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who are producing in the economy and give it to people who would rather use that electricity
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so we get the same or more deficient product but for just a little bit more money rather
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That is how you solve a problem in this country.
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I mean, a lot of people in Washington, D.C. are going, right?
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Somebody on conservative radio saying the truth.
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By the way, have you heard about the new Jack from Twitter?
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We're going to talk about him coming up in a little while.
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Go to Twitter because if you go to Twitter today, you'll see right at the top, they want
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you to know, hey, those things that the new guy in charge here said, those are taken out
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It's a quote from a television show and it's a satirical take on stereotypes.
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Journalist report as part of a panel on The Daily Show from October 26, 2010.
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Which is why he didn't quote that it was from that because he was just joking around.
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And what was supposed to be evident to all of us.
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And I'm so glad to see they're setting the standard that when somebody says something
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as a joke, it's immediately at the top of everyone's Twitter feed.
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Again, also like you don't have to quote every joke that happens on The Daily Show.
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You pick the one you really like and you think is really funny.
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So when he said, if they are, if they are not going to make a distinction between Muslims
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and extremists, then why should I distinguish between white people and racists?
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Even if it's not his line, you don't quote lines.
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And actually, if you look at it from the other side of the aisle, if you will, into fantasy
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If you're not going to separate a Muslim from terrorists, which we always have, why should
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you expect anyone to say, well, white person isn't a racist?
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But what he's saying it, how he's saying it is that all white people will never, ever
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And so why don't we just say that all white people, which is not true.
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No, it's not one that is gleefully said out loud in public.
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So how he's offending, really, honestly, by saying that was a joke, he's offending everybody
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Because everybody on the left would go, yeah, all white people do stereotype Muslims.
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It is back from 2010, though, or maybe we made the distinction that some white people
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You know, back in those days, it was possible for someone with white skin to not have negative
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characteristics assigned to them, which, by the way, is the definition of racism.
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We now know that all white people are all racist.
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When you identify someone by skin color with negative characteristics, that's not racism.
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Just so we are clear, that is, I guess, the old school definition of racism.
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Oh, by the way, the guy who is in charge of the CRT classes and all of the, you know,
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And he's going to be, he's going to be making sure that Houston is full of equity now.
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People don't, might not know that who are in Houston.
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You should probably check into this if you're in Houston because they got rid of him in Virginia
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I just wanted to say that I, I run a small shed shop that has turned into a kind of a
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Now we're not quite there completely, but I've, I've done everything from modulars in
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And when I mean modulars, I mean climate controlled stick built 50 year homes.
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I think right now we're about six, $7 a two by four.
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I own one franchise, by the way, that I bought with my combat pay from one of my last deployments.
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I'm kind of more of the pointer dog at this point and work in the sales side, but I've
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watched this inflation and I've been trying to figure out what to do for homeless vets
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because we've got one of the highest per capita homeless vets in, uh, North America here outside
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of Asheville, North Carolina, where we've got one of the better VAs.
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So anyways, long story short, I got into the small home thing because I was asked every
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week, what does it take to turn one of these into a tiny home?
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And I had to tell people, no, you can't do that.
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Don't tell me you're going to live in it or I can't sell it to you.
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Now I'm personally in a, in a combat infantry vet.
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I don't think the government should tell you what you can and can't do on your own property,
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Um, the, uh, the thing that I wanted to bring up here is this, the small home thing is
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Um, it's no longer a trend and I, and I don't mean tiny home.
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When you say tiny home inspectors get upset because you're usually having to get a lot
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But, uh, we did our demographic test and looking at how many people are, are, are making money
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And I looked at the millennials and I looked at baby boomers and all that.
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And we still have, you know, what over 75% of the money is controlled by the baby boomers,
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but they only make up what, like 75 million like that.
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Now there's 96 million baby boomers in the market and a lot of them are still living
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And so me being a millennial myself, just, I'm a grandpa millennial.
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Um, the, the world of trying to figure out how do you do this?
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I got three kids, you know, I never got political till I started having kids.
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Um, but no, the, the reality is this has got to be something that we figure out because
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housing prices have gone through the roof and Asheville area is one of the most sought
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We have, I mean, tens of thousands of people have moved here from New York and from Florida
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and from all over, just trying to get out of the big cities.
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Um, but also to retire here because we're close to the mountains and, and right in the
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And so I'm just watching this and trying to figure out what do we do, you know, as far
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And I think one of the best things you can do is get out of debt.
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I mean, we sold, uh, our house downsized, lived in a fifth wheel for a whole year so that
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we could get out of debt and built a house that we just finished.
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That's half the size of what we originally had.
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So, but the thing is that it's doable and I just want to employ the audience.
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Getting out of debt is one of the biggest things that you can do, um, because of what's
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And most people aren't waking up or they're too comfortable, not, not thinking about, oh, I
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can't sell this house cause I've had it for a hundred years in the family or whatever.
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But I just, I see the handwriting on the wall and I really appreciate you articulating it
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the way you have over the last year and, and throwing the stats and the facts out there
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and letting people realize we're not returning to normal.
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And, um, you know, this new normal, unfortunately we're going to change the pendulum swings.
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I don't know if it's going to be undoable as far as the market.
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As a millennial, we, we, we watch, we watch the baby boomers lose, you know, a lot of my
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friends, older friends lose, um, big time in the market or in the real estate world.
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And, um, we're not willing as millennials to do that.
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And we kind of value things a little bit differently.
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So it's weird when we were doing the floor plans to do the surveys and to see that, you
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know, baby boomers like the big, big rooms with, you know, a double bath off there.
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And, you know, my crowd would rather have a small living space in a huge entertainment
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I mean, it's just different priorities across the board.
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Well, um, but seeing what we made Matt, you are absolutely on the right track.
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You, I mean, that is the best message you could give people right now.
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My grandfather always said the people who made money in the depression are the ones who
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had money in the depression because most people just didn't have any money.
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And so the people who survived were the ones that could afford to buy things, um, at dirt
00:17:02.340
Um, and people were happy to sell them at dirt cheap prices because they didn't have anything
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and they needed the money, but there is something different as well.
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We are living, um, we have lived for the last 20 years or so in what will be regarded as
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The houses that I see, um, that are built here in Texas, uh, and they've been built this
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way for really 10 years, 20 years, these giant, giant homes.
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Uh, I will tell you that I think that that is the great Gadsby home of the future.
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I think they are going to be kind of a little like, um, the Newport, Rhode Island homes.
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They're just not going to be, they're going to be set apart as some, as a time period.
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If you have a home with a formal dining room and a formal living room, that's a thing of
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We haven't lived that way since the practically the turn of last century, but that's when the
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homes were designed and everything is changing and he's right.
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Again, people that are younger do not want these big homes.
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So when you have people, my age downsizing because all their kids are gone and everything else,
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Because those big homes, the ones that are up and coming don't want those big homes.
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I was telling Stu during the break that, um, uh, this week, the podcast is with Andrew
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Yang and I just recorded it yesterday and he's fascinating.
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Now he was the guy who ran for, um, president as a Democrat.
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I mean, he, you know, he grew up a Democrat, but, uh, he doesn't believe in big government.
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He does believe in things like UBI, but we talked about that in the podcast.
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That's where everybody gets a thousand dollars every month, a check for a thousand dollars
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Just everybody gets a check for a thousand dollars a month.
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Um, however, we agree on the problem and very few people.
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I'm trying to think of another way of saying this because I know I've said it before and
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Very few people truly understand what we are on the threshold of.
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Well, the, the industrial revolution, which changed, changed us from a, a community of
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people that worked farms with our horses to the life that we have today.
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That industrial revolution took about a hundred years to fully flip and think of the changes.
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If you were in, let's say 1850, just at the beginning of the industrial revolution and
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you're in 1850 and in a 10 year period, 1860 by the civil war, all of the changes that happened
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from 1850 to 1950 happened by 1860 earth, shaking, earth, shaking, earth, shaking.
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They wouldn't, they barely understand the machines that they were to operate.
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And I've been telling you that the industrial revolution, that hundred year period is going
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to be compressed into a 10 year period and you're not going to like it.
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And people are going to be, the upheaval is, is going to be remarkable.
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And I talked to Andrew Yang about it and he said, you're exactly right.
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And I said, I think we, well, I think we're at the end, the beginning of this.
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And he again expressed kind of this frustration that I just expressed.
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Because if you don't understand the technology of tomorrow, if you don't understand AI and
00:22:09.480
at least a GI, you don't understand what they're actually working on for robotics, you have
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Google now has your call center and it will be better than a human.
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Have you ever, have you done yet a computerized call center?
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I mean, it's tough because I go back and forth on this because some of the stuff is so bad.
00:22:45.200
I mean, they can't recognize what you're saying.
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You know, some of some of it is really getting a lot better.
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Um, so call centers, he said that he said that right now Google has call center technology
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This upheaval is happening and it's going to happen in the banking sector.
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This is what build back better is really all about, but they're not telling you.
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What they're telling you is we have a golden opportunity to change the world.
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And in 10 years, you won't own anything and you'll like it.
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How do you get a country and a whole Western culture that is based on ownership?
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Now I want to, I'm going to take a quick break and then I want to come back and I want to
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tie this back to the original statement about buying a home.
00:24:08.180
Well, if you're trying to buy a home right now, especially in a place like Texas, which
00:24:14.240
one of my new employees is, she can't find one because she was just outbid by $75,000.
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You know, you're used to, you know, okay, I'll give you a $5,000 more.
00:24:30.440
No, this, this person, quote unquote, came in with $75,000 over the asking price.
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Almost one in every five U.S. homes sold in the third quarter of this year was purchased
00:24:55.700
by an investor entity rather than an individual that is looking to live in or rent out the
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One in every five homes that have been sold are going to a big investment firm.
00:25:14.580
Investors bought more than nine, 90,000 homes, totaling more than $63 billion, representing
00:25:30.120
Increasing home prices fueled by intense housing shortage have created opportunities for investors
00:25:37.560
These same factors have pushed more Americans to rent, which also creates opportunities for
00:25:43.260
investors because investors typically turn their homes they purchase into rentals and
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Rent for single family homes surged by more than 10% in 12 months through September, the
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Nearly 77% of all homes were bought in an all cash transaction.
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And these investment firms like BlackRock are going in and buying entire neighborhoods.
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They are the people that come in and say, I'll give you $75,000 over the asking price.
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Why would investment firms think that they are going to just be able to make money on, on
00:26:54.560
paying something $75,000 over the asking price?
00:27:06.220
They know, as the great reset states, that in, by 2030, you will own nothing and you'll
00:27:18.380
Well, that implies someone owns something and you're paying Mr. Potter in the end to live
00:27:27.520
Well, this is exactly what happened in It's a Wonderful Life.
00:27:36.920
Is the big guy who has money, is he going to come in and swoop in when there's problems
00:27:43.880
and buy up everything and then make them rental houses or make these people enslaved to him
00:27:58.800
But I don't think it means the same kind of equity they think.
00:28:13.980
We ask Americans to do what I think is damn near the impossible.
00:28:18.080
Because if somebody comes in and offers $75,000 for your house, $75,000 over asking price, are
00:28:36.020
But the only way to stop this is to not sell to these big investors.
00:28:44.780
You have to send the money or you have to send the message.
00:28:48.720
No, I actually care about the little people, not you, who's just gobbling up my whole town.
00:28:59.940
But literally, I have an employee that cannot find a house within any sane distance from our
00:29:19.960
If we leave the little people behind, you know, the normal people, we don't have a very
00:29:32.940
We have to try to convince each other and hold each other's hands we're in this together.
00:29:58.900
Speaking of Frank Sinatra, you know where there is not a picture of Frank Sinatra?
00:30:12.060
They might like one, but they probably had to buy it.
00:30:17.900
Although he may have spent some time with Mario, I got to say, back in the day.
00:30:27.460
This is, you know, I started off with the Andrew Cuomo thing, and Andrew Cuomo was awful.com
00:30:33.820
and thought to myself, there's no way that he's going to step down.
00:30:37.520
He's going to get thrown out of office because I am a pessimist.
00:30:41.140
You know, I just, even though he obviously deserved to be thrown out of office.
00:30:50.640
You know, when you happen to kill thousands of old people, generally speaking, that's the
00:31:01.280
He wound up getting thrown out, you know, kind of more related to the sexual harassment part
00:31:07.100
Which is so much more important than the killing of old people.
00:31:10.100
Yeah, both are important, but the killing of old people usually, you know, just the whole
00:31:14.480
life and death thing tends to outweigh almost anything he does.
00:31:20.240
Anyway, he was, of course, thrown out of office.
00:31:23.280
And one of the things that popped out of that little scandal was Chris Cuomo's assistance
00:31:33.140
People kind of gloss over it, but the first words you heard from Andrew Cuomo about this
00:31:40.100
scandal that CNN was covering in real time, they were.
00:31:45.200
When he made that speech, those words were written by Chris Cuomo.
00:31:51.480
Chris Cuomo was writing speeches that his own network were covering out of the mouth of his
00:32:09.840
I don't think they knew it at the time because there is slight doubt that maybe they knew
00:32:15.780
It's one of those things that they didn't know it on the record at the time.
00:32:22.880
Now, what's interesting about this is that more and more detail has come out.
00:32:29.900
And we, of course, saw multiple statements by Chris Cuomo on the air.
00:32:35.760
Where he addressed and said things that he did do and that he did not do.
00:32:39.800
Stuff like he did not use sources, for example.
00:32:43.860
To go after the women who were accusing his brother of wrongdoing.
00:32:50.160
By the way, they released some texts from Andrew Cuomo, or from Chris Cuomo, directly
00:32:56.160
to Melissa DeRosa, who is the top aide slash henchman of Andrew Cuomo.
00:33:02.340
Well, he said he was using his sources to get information on women who were accusing.
00:33:08.440
Isn't that what he told CNN that he wasn't doing?
00:33:11.620
And in fact, the quote, one of the women, it's going to be very difficult for the average
00:33:16.200
person to keep track of all of the women that made accusations against Andrew Cuomo.
00:33:19.760
And Chris Cuomo, who was also accused, and that just seemed to have gone away completely.
00:33:23.960
But Andrew Cuomo was accused by a woman who did not accuse him of some of the criminal
00:33:33.320
type stuff that went on with some of the other accusers, but accused him of making her feel
00:33:53.320
A woman who did not know Andrew Cuomo, but just was like a supporter and a fan, wanted
00:33:58.720
And then he, of course, took advantage of that situation because he's a piece of...
00:34:10.220
Three days later, Chris Cuomo texts Melissa DeRosa, the aide, and says, I have a lead on
00:34:20.320
Could have been a completely different wedding girl.
00:34:22.940
Maybe they needed a girl at a wedding and he was looking to book someone.
00:34:27.940
Of course, what he says is, no, he was checking with his sources, but just trying to understand
00:34:33.700
when new information might be coming out, not trying to dig up dirt at all.
00:34:38.380
So, what are the vaguest odds on him losing his job with CNN?
00:34:44.960
I think the tide is turning, just like it did with Andrew.
00:34:48.680
Now, of course, Chris has committed all sorts of various sins against journalism and against
00:34:57.740
I don't think CNN has any journalistic integrity when it comes to Chris Cuomo.
00:35:04.900
There is a part, though, at some point, a person embarrasses you so often, so dramatically,
00:35:19.800
Well, let me clarify, because you will have insight in this, and I hope you are discreet
00:35:26.260
in the way that you talk about this, is what I will say.
00:35:38.980
So, first of all, CNN has launched another investigation.
00:35:42.880
They're going to go look through all of these texts and see what Chris has done.
00:35:49.280
But I will say, if they are honest, obviously, they would fire this guy.
00:35:54.060
Not only has he broken every journalistic rule and made a mockery of journalism, he also has
00:36:00.240
lied to his employer multiple times and embarrassed them multiple times.
00:36:03.620
And in addition to this, does a terrible television show.
00:36:07.200
And CNN should look at this as a blessing from God to get out of the contract.
00:36:13.080
Like, just as an excuse, just fire him because you could say, gosh, we didn't know he was
00:36:22.260
What you were saying here is that somebody in the hallway should go, huh, right?
00:36:32.260
I want to take a step that I think you're going to understand here.
00:36:35.000
Maybe not the entire audience will understand the specifics.
00:36:44.660
And you see the hosts have on great guests from time to time.
00:36:49.580
You're like, wow, I like when Glenn Beck comes on the show.
00:36:54.660
And then the next guest comes on and you're like, wow, that person is a real expert in
00:36:59.840
And then, every once in a while, someone like Jeffrey Toobin comes on the air.
00:37:06.000
Here's a guy who was in the middle of a Zoom call and whips the
00:37:09.980
thing out and goes to town and is back on the air in like a couple of months.
00:37:17.400
Well, because it does make everybody a little uncomfortable when you're like, isn't that
00:37:22.980
And when he tries to say, oh, can you believe what an idiot this person was?
00:37:32.280
And you'll notice it particularly with legal analysts on cable news channels.
00:37:41.320
And a lot of people chalk that up to, oh, well, he's liberal.
00:37:48.320
I'm beginning to think I might know a story that you don't want me to tell.
00:37:55.580
So what happens often at cable news networks is there are lots of executives who work there
00:38:03.960
and they have issues in their own personal lives, which need legal attention.
00:38:13.660
And it's sometimes convenient to pull in a legal expert who happens to work for the channel
00:38:22.460
up to your office to have a little conversation and throw out maybe a little personal legal
00:38:27.640
conversation, a little consultation off the books in a normal, friendly way.
00:38:33.480
And often might even be incentive to keep their mouth shut on things that they've done by just
00:38:46.400
What if we book you on all these shows all the time?
00:38:49.980
And that's good because really your legal analysis is important.
00:38:55.760
About my personal life that's sensitive and so often, and I know no specifics here, of
00:39:03.240
course, but sometimes these legal experts have a way of worming their way into these
00:39:10.320
networks because they give legal advice to very important people who are there.
00:39:13.360
Now, if you happen to be executive at CNN and you happen to, let's say, take legal consult
00:39:22.760
from a Chris Cuomo at some point while he works there, it might be difficult for you to fire him
00:39:32.500
because he's giving legal consult and PR consult about a sensitive issue to someone else.
00:39:38.160
Because if you fire him, he might just bring up or leak that information to the media.
00:39:46.180
And believe me, he in particular would not be above such a thing, in my opinion.
00:39:52.760
So now you might notice this happening from time to time where you see, wow, this legal
00:40:02.440
It's, you know, what's weird is I have a very specific example of this happening.
00:40:14.840
The point is really, man, let me just see if it's the same one you're thinking of.
00:40:24.380
There's no reason to go into specifics on it at all.
00:40:27.920
My point here is that this is a common occurrence and may be at play with both Jeffrey Dubin and
00:40:38.040
I think that's crazy unless you know what has happened to us.
00:40:44.080
Well, again, where what where I was doing an interview with said legal analyst that is
00:40:51.580
not said and we taped it in advance and it was one that was suggested that he was a good
00:41:00.820
guy to go to and I ripped him to shreds to shreds.
00:41:13.520
I threw him out of the studio and said because I said to him during the interview, are you
00:41:21.020
That is completely and it was just odd and and and I threw him out and he said, do you realize
00:41:33.060
That strangely never aired there was somebody in the control room that said that is not ever
00:41:43.940
airing and and it went and we realized that's why that guy sucks so much and is still on the
00:41:54.240
So these things do they do happen her and and look, I think it's possible.
00:41:59.820
Well, Chris Cuomo has finally pushed far enough to for whatever protection he's been able
00:42:10.240
He may it may not be able to protect him anymore.
00:42:12.840
I mean, this is so far over the line, not even just as a journalist, but as a human being.
00:42:22.260
But if they don't, I will have a couple of guesses as to what is occurring.
00:42:48.440
If they invite you to go fishing on a lake, don't do it.
00:42:54.460
I just want to offer that little bit of advice.
00:43:07.140
Uh, yeah, I mean, you know, we gorged ourself with Thanksgiving and then Black Friday and
00:43:14.200
Can you think about someone else other than yourself for just a second?
00:43:22.240
This is actually the biggest day for nonprofits to be able to get people to give.
00:43:30.880
It's not like it's not like if I heard me talking about me and I know me.
00:43:35.660
It's not like if I heard me talking about it in my car that I'd be like, you know what?
00:43:51.220
Uh, today, um, if you are feeling generous, no, no, no, let me say this.
00:44:00.900
You are thinking about giving lots of money to Mercury one.
00:44:07.140
You are thinking I should get on the Internet right now.
00:44:12.160
I'm going to get on the Internet and go to Mercury one dot org.
00:44:18.500
When I snap my fingers, you're going to put everything you have into that little donation
00:44:24.900
box, everything and you will forget we ever had this conversation.
00:44:47.360
Go to Mercury one dot org right now and and help in many, many of the projects, you know,
00:44:55.580
feeding people, preserving and teaching history and helping rescue slaves all around the world.