transcript
Speaker 1:
[00:07] Now, it's Red Eye Radio. Gary McNamara and Eric Harley talk about everything from politics to social issues and news of the day. Whether you're up late or you're just starting your day, welcome to the show from the Relief Factor Studios. This is Red Eye Radio.
Speaker 2:
[00:26] All across America, we are Red Eye Radio. He is Eric Harley and I'm Gary McNamara. Welcome and good morning. James Freeman's column in the Wall Street Journal, Ilhan Omar's Amazing Accounting. Investors want to know where to find assets like her. Now, we talked about this yesterday and I said, unless you're somebody like a billionaire, most of us could sit down with a pencil and paper and within probably a couple of minutes, have a good estimated, could estimate what our worth was.
Speaker 3:
[01:07] Our net worth, yeah.
Speaker 2:
[01:08] Our net worth. And it would be, you know, looking at your house, what's the assessed valuation of the house, the reasonable assessed valuation, what do I owe?
Speaker 3:
[01:17] Right.
Speaker 2:
[01:17] You know, the difference would be, you know, my wealth. Your car, if you got a vehicle, all right, what's the Bloomberg value of it, what do I owe on it, you know, what's the difference, that's what I owe. What do I have in my 401K? What do I have in my bank accounts? And boom, you know, you have it.
Speaker 3:
[01:35] And are these lottery tickets going to win?
Speaker 2:
[01:37] All that, all that. Right, exactly. And so, I'm just reading here. The bombshell report in the journal on Friday night has triggered a media feeding frenzy. Just kidding, the story is about questionable disclosures from a left-wing politician. So the partisan press corps is largely ignoring it. The journal's John McCormick delivered the scoop. Democratic representative, Ilhan Omar of Minnesota, is facing potential investigations pushed by President Trump and the House Republicans said she isn't as wealthy as documents she previously submitted to Congress suggests because there were major accounting errors in her filings. And Omar disclosure filed last year showed she and her husband held assets between $6 and $30 million. A massive rise in wealth from her previous annual filing, that jump triggered questions among Republicans eager to scrutinize a critic of the president. An amended filing viewed by the Wall Street Journal shows the couple's assets to be just $18,000 to $95,000. The forms don't require exact values, only broad ranges. Not nearly as broad as the differences between Representative Omar's old filing and the new one, from extremely wealthy to far below the typical household wealth in one amended filing. Some readers are asking if her account needs to attend a Minneapolis Learing Center to brush up on his math skills. But maybe it's everyone else who needs the learing, so we can all figure out how to get in on Omar-style investments. Mr. McCormick reported, Omar's husband, the former political consultant, Tim Minette, is involved with a variety of businesses. Those include a venture capital management firm and a winery in Santa Rosa, California, whose disclosure forms show. Those businesses had been previously listed as worth between six and 30 million. In the amended filing, they are shown as having no value once liabilities are factored in. Omar's amended filing showed between 102 and 1 million in 2024 income from the assets that she and her husband own. Documentation attached to a lawyer's letter shows 213,000 in distributions to her husband from his venture capital management firm in 2024 and 3,000 from the winery. Where does one find assets that have no value but can generate 216,000 in annual income? Inquiring investors want to know.
Speaker 3:
[04:28] I would love to know.
Speaker 2:
[04:30] Creditors to the winery and also venture capital management firm may also be interested in reading the new filing. They might wish to opine on whether outfits having no value should be distributing money to the owners.
Speaker 3:
[04:45] I want to know if... What I'd love to know is if they own any daycares in Minnesota. That would be one I'd check into.
Speaker 2:
[04:54] Or hospices.
Speaker 3:
[04:56] Yeah, exactly.
Speaker 2:
[04:57] Oh, I'm sorry. That's California.
Speaker 3:
[05:00] It's a... There's so much to pick apart here. So much to unpack. I was just watching a documentary about the five families in New York. There's no such thing as the mafia. So we'll just say the five families. But one of the families was brought down through accounting forensics, which is a very interesting dynamic. In fact, I go through it with my checkbook every month. For those under 90, a checkbook is something we used to use. It's called paper. Look it up. But in breaking it down, like you said, I would love to know what... Give me all that information. Break it down because there's so much we're not learning here. So much that we don't know. I just, it's just, it just reeks of... I don't know about fraud. Again, I don't know where it becomes fraudulent and disclosure, right? But if you're talking about assessing assets, I would want to be accurate. I would want to be as close to the bell as you can possibly get. But they have no interest in doing that. What this sounds like is an old Hillary investment that goes from zero to, oh my gosh, in no time. And we've seen this before. You know, again, it reeks of money coming in. I don't know that this is the case, but it reeks of money coming in from no where. Hey Drivers, Eric Harley here for Catscale. You probably already know you can get guaranteed, accurate weights when you weigh on a Catscale. But did you know that you get those same guaranteed weights much faster when you use the Weigh My Truck app? Simply pay, weigh and get back on the road. It's that easy. Look for the iconic black and gold Catscale sign at truck stops and travel plazas nationwide. And remember, weigh what we say or we pay, guaranteed. Go online to create an account, watch the helpful tutorial and download the Weigh My Truck app today. Check out weighmytruck.com to save time on the road. That's weighmytruck.com. Do it today. That's weighmytruck.com.
Speaker 4:
[08:12] Hey there, I'm Paula Pan. I help people make the smartest money decisions possible. Do not ever worry about your salary. You need enough to make sure that you aren't in a bad financial position. Once you have that, your salary becomes moot. What matters from that point forward, upside gains. Any type of ownership stake or ownership potential, that's the money. Remember, you can afford anything, just not everything. Afford anything. Follow and listen on your favorite platform.
Speaker 2:
[08:42] Well, what I find, and I said it yesterday, I said, were they attempting to, there's only a couple of possibilities. One is they don't want the IRS or any congressional investigators to be looking at their assets.
Speaker 3:
[09:00] Right.
Speaker 2:
[09:02] And so they revised it, or they were just bragging in the beginning for the status that we're rich and we're not, because even if you own a business, it's not tough to figure out what you're worth.
Speaker 3:
[09:17] Right.
Speaker 2:
[09:17] You look, for example, and I guess you could use the old, your company is worth whatever your revenue is times seven. And then, with your life.
Speaker 3:
[09:26] Yeah, the multiplier, yeah.
Speaker 2:
[09:28] I don't know if anybody really uses that multiplier when they do leverage buyouts anymore. Yeah, I don't. But I'm talking about if you just want to get to the estimation on it, so you take the revenue times seven, you look at all your liabilities, which you have to subtract from that, because if you say this would be the selling price, well, this, you know, times seven, just for a rough estimation, which is all they want, and then you take out everything that you owe, that would be your net worth for the company.
Speaker 3:
[09:57] Yeah.
Speaker 2:
[09:57] Right?
Speaker 3:
[09:58] Right. Yep.
Speaker 2:
[10:00] And it's that. So none of this is hard. This isn't hard at all. This is something you can do in a matter of 30 seconds. You don't even need accountants to do this. You know what your revenue is. If I own a business and it's my business, I know what they're... You and I always talked about this with Bar Rescue. It's like, how did these people ever let... You know, well, we were bringing in 5,000. We were bringing in 10,000 a month, and now we're losing 4,000 a month. And you and I just said, if we're bringing in 10,000 a month, let's say in any business, and it went to 8,000 a month, you and I would be...
Speaker 3:
[10:43] That's a huge drop.
Speaker 2:
[10:44] We would be what in the world is going on. To get to the point...
Speaker 3:
[10:48] I'm doing a full audit myself.
Speaker 2:
[10:50] Right, of 10,000, and then it's down to 8,000. I wanna know what's going on. And if I'm pulling in 10,000 a month, if I'm pulling 10,000 a month in revenue, and my profit is 2,000 a month on it after expenses and everything else, and that goes down to 1,000, then I'm extremely concerned because I'm getting to the point where it doesn't matter what my revenue is, it's what is my profit. If I get into that negative area, I don't even wanna get near that point of a negative area at that point. And as an individual business owner, I would know that. I would know everything about my business. Otherwise, why be in the business?
Speaker 3:
[11:35] Well, and that's what it comes down to is is that this is a matter of, for me, it's a matter of survival or it would be in the case. And my wife and I have owned businesses before and we did okay. We realized our strengths, our weaknesses and everything else. And in some cases, we did better than others. Early on in my life, I owned a video rental store, Action Video, and actually had an idea where we were going to allow delivery because we were next to a pizza chain and we were going to have stores next to pizza chains. So if you ordered a pizza, you could also order a movie. And the name of that company was QuickFlix. And now we have something called Netflix. And apparently they're doing very well from what I heard. And but we, I didn't have the experience, the knowledge, and also Blockbuster came in literally across the street and pretty much closed us out. We couldn't, they had the leverage, we didn't. But in going through all of that, I knew where our strengths and weaknesses were. And I was fighting for that survival. I wanted it to work. And you know this in your life as you're building a business out. So, you presented the idea of, or possibility of them maybe bragging about making up that, oh, we're worth this. And maybe to get some kind of status within the community to gain some kind of political profile. Maybe, I don't know. I have no idea. But you certainly know where it's at. And if you've got something, again, a business that's worth nothing and it's producing hundreds of thousands in income, please tell me how that works. In fact, tell everybody how it works. You could do a late night infomercial and probably sell your system as they used to call it on infomercials, to make that work for everybody and make people wealthy where they only have to work two hours a week from their home. It's this, but we know what this is. We've seen this before. And what it reeks of again, is money coming in for nothing, which means political influence and or fraud in many cases. I don't know if that's the case here in either.
Speaker 2:
[14:29] When we talk about what Justice Jackson did not say was constitutional in that stop, because you look at the totality of that traffic stop, and you apply it to her financial filings, anybody who would look at this would say, something is suspicious. You don't go from saying you're worth six to 30 million to saying you're worth 18,000 to 95,000.
Speaker 3:
[15:00] Right.
Speaker 2:
[15:02] It just doesn't work. That raises the red flag right there. And as we've said, it's so easy to find out, for example, one of my assets that I have. Now I paid cash for my 2003 vehicle, and I often have said, I wonder what it's worth. It's got. 250,000 miles on it. I just, you know, you look it up. What's the blue brick value? Probably, they say between $1,175 and $2,225 in the blue book, depending on the condition and what the trim is, the trim on my 2003 vehicle.
Speaker 3:
[15:45] Right, yeah. The trim, it has doors and wheels.
Speaker 2:
[15:48] It has a cassette, it has a cassette, it has a cassette and CD player in it.
Speaker 3:
[15:55] Cassette and CD?
Speaker 2:
[15:56] Cassette and CD, that's the trim that had there. There is no trim in a tube. The trim's all gone.
Speaker 3:
[16:03] Somebody breaks into your car and leaves you a bunch of cassettes.
Speaker 2:
[16:07] And so-
Speaker 3:
[16:08] Sorry for you.
Speaker 2:
[16:09] And so I just looked it up right now. I wonder what, I just looked it up right now, like, I get $2,000 for it?
Speaker 3:
[16:17] You gotta see if you can order some cassettes. Helen Reddy, The Las Vegas Years. Ron, look that up for me.
Speaker 2:
[16:23] There's a cassette available? I don't even know what the cassette is that was in there and it froze in there and I've never been able to get the cassette out and then the CD player stopped working about 10 years ago.
Speaker 3:
[16:32] Oh, no.
Speaker 2:
[16:33] Well, you know what I have in it? I have one of the, you know, one of the little FM things that attaches to my phone.
Speaker 3:
[16:39] Oh, okay.
Speaker 2:
[16:40] The FM, you know, that you plug into the cigarette lighter.
Speaker 3:
[16:42] Right, yeah.
Speaker 2:
[16:43] Works really well.
Speaker 3:
[16:44] Yeah.
Speaker 2:
[16:44] But the sound is horrible, I mean, compared to my new vehicle, which is nine years old and I consider it a new vehicle.
Speaker 3:
[16:52] Yeah, yeah.
Speaker 2:
[16:53] But it is like a new vehicle.
Speaker 3:
[16:54] Yeah.
Speaker 2:
[16:54] But I, that's been a great vehicle. I mean, I've just burnt that into the ground. And independent Bob once told me, he said, you just don't want to give it up because you're loyal. And I went, no, it works.
Speaker 3:
[17:07] It gets you A to B. I mean, it's not your everyday driver, but it gets you A to B.
Speaker 2:
[17:12] You know, and here's the thing. I drove it to work tonight.
Speaker 3:
[17:14] Yeah.
Speaker 2:
[17:15] Like one night a week.
Speaker 3:
[17:16] I bet you get more than that blue book. If you put it like on, what is it, there's a site called, I think it's Bring a Trailer. Wow. And I think you get, I think so. Because you've got all the records, you've got all the maintenance records.
Speaker 2:
[17:29] Oh, yeah.
Speaker 3:
[17:30] There's somebody out there that is, you know, that would want that, you know. Like my dad has a Ford F-250 diesel, 2003. It's got 63,000 miles on it.
Speaker 2:
[17:45] And 2003?
Speaker 3:
[17:46] Yeah, because the only thing he used it for, he put a fifth wheel in the back. They pulled their RV back in the day. Oh, they haven't RV'd in a long time. And so he drives it once a week or so, just to drive it, start it and drive it. But man, there'd be a market for it. That thing could bring a little more money than usual, probably.
Speaker 2:
[18:08] The point is most people, even if you own a business, yeah, you can sit down and within a matter of minutes, you can estimate what your net worth is. Yes. It's not hard to do.
Speaker 3:
[18:18] Right. Yeah.
Speaker 2:
[18:19] We are Red Eye Radio.
Speaker 3:
[18:21] Brought to you by FPPF, Fuel Power Max.
Speaker 5:
[18:24] Least owner operator should be aware of four common revenue myths. Myth one, concentrate on increasing revenue because costs will take care of themselves. Myth two, more revenue per mile is the answer to all problems. Revenue per mile really doesn't change much from company to company. Myth three, all you have to do to be successful is run a lot of miles. In reality, revenue is only half of the profit equation. Myth four, you can tell how well you're doing by the size of your settlement check. The settlement check is only a part of the success picture. Miles driven, loads hauled, conditions, mechanical problems, time off, and especially costs all have to be considered. Owner-Operator Business 101 is provided by Overdrive's Partners in Business Program. Go to overdriveonline.com to the Partners in Business section of the website for more details on this and many other topics. Brought to you by Shell Rotella. With advanced synthetic technology is designed to help keep your rig running with more mileage and less maintenance.
Speaker 1:
[19:21] Get in touch with Red Eye Radio, toll free at 866-90REDI.
Speaker 2:
[19:42] We are Red Eye Radio, he is Eric Harley, and I'm Gary McNamara. Yeah, so Alan Dershowitz put a op-ed piece in The Wall Street Journal yesterday, Why I'm Becoming a Republican. I first registered as a Democrat in 1959. The party's hostility to Israel is just too much. Look, don't be surprised at that. It's all part of the identity politics.
Speaker 3:
[20:02] And it's been going on for quite some time with the left.
Speaker 2:
[20:06] Yeah, and the number one reason for him is Israel. The Democratic Party has become the most anti-Israel party in US history last week all, but seven Democrats voted for an arms embargo against a Jewish state and an avowed enemy of Israel. Abdu'l El-Sayed is gaining ground of the Democratic campaign for US. Senate in Michigan. There's no denying that the hard left, the anti-Israel wing of the Democratic Party, has moved from the fringe to the mainstream. He means, until recently there was an age gap with younger voters more strongly opposing Israel. A recent poll suggests the trend now includes Democrats of all ages. They're the party of racism and identity politics. They promote it all the time. They've been doing it for decades.
Speaker 1:
[21:22] And you're listening to Red Eye Radio from the Relief Actors Studio.
Speaker 2:
[21:28] We are Red Eye Radio, he is Eric Harley, and I'm Gary McNamara. Welcome and good morning. Download our Red Eye Radio app today, and you can listen when you choose. Oh, man, conspiracy theories.
Speaker 3:
[21:39] Okay, here we go.
Speaker 2:
[21:40] The new one, I've got a few friends have said, what about the 11 scientists or the five scientists or the seven scientists that are missing? What's going on? Who's wiping them out? And this all came because of a Daily Mail, which is a tabloid. Yeah.
Speaker 3:
[21:57] Yeah.
Speaker 2:
[21:58] Then and finally, because I'm looking, I'm going, okay, anybody got a story on how this is actually connected? You know, there's not any really legitimate stories on it.
Speaker 3:
[22:07] Right. Right.
Speaker 2:
[22:07] And finally, I was reading National Review yesterday. I'm like, okay, finally, someone has it. Are the 11 dead or missing US scientists really connected? The narrative first emerged in the Daily Mail story published late last month. The mystery of five missing scientists sends chill across America. Three are dead and one troubling link is now under scrutiny in DC. Now, are there any chills being sent through America that you know of? No.
Speaker 3:
[22:39] No. No, there are.
Speaker 2:
[22:41] You see the story and you're like, oh, I wonder what's happened here. The story describes a, quote, a chilling pattern, pointing first to two missing person cases involving a retired general and a NASA aerospace engineer, both major figures in Air Force laboratory research. The report explains with the general have overseen the other person's work designing futuristic metal for rocket engines. Within eight months of each other, both vanished without a trace while hiking in the southwest. The general's reported ties to a secret UFO program, and the other work with space age technology used to advance propulsion had led many to claim without evidence that the pair are fleeing from parties that wish to silence them because of what they know, that's a quote from the report, without any evidence to back that up. The Daily Mail then goes on to connect those disappearances to the deaths of three scientists in completely unrelated fields of research, one an MIT physicist who was murdered by a former classmate in Portugal, an astrophysicist who was shot to death on his front porch, and another assistant director of chemical biology at a drug maker whose remains were discovered last month in Massachusetts. While the Daily Mail reports that independent researchers and even a member of Congress fear there is a connection, nobody can find the connection. Since the story's publishing, concerns about dead and missing US scientists have only picked up steam with the count now up to as many as 11 scientists. The story graduated from dark corners of the internet to outlets with large followings as the Daily Mail, the New York Post, and Fox News, Joe Rogan recently fanned the flames on his massively popular podcast. All of the media attention has just to produce any hard evidence of a connection between the disappearances and deaths, but it has drawn the attention of the White House and Congressional Republicans. Well, it got the attention of the White House because a reporter asked, oh, what's her name last week? I got mine blank on her name. The White House spokesperson.
Speaker 3:
[25:11] We both get mine blank at the same time. Yeah. Yeah.
Speaker 2:
[25:20] Last week. And so she goes, oh, I don't, you've heard about it, but we'll look into it. House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer appeared on Fox News on Sunday and warned that something sinister could be happening. My God, the Republicans are desperate for any damn thing right now, aren't they?
Speaker 3:
[25:35] Well, you don't know. OK, in the case of one of the scientists, this is Michael David Hicks. Died July 30th, 2023. Worked at NASA, at the JPL. He passed away at 59. His cause of death was never made public. Sometimes it's not.
Speaker 2:
[26:05] No, it's not all the time. You see it constantly. But Comer said he first saw the situation as some kind of crazy conspiracy theory, but about learning more of the details behind the cases has changed his mind. What has? Give us what's changed your mind on it. Why won't they? On Monday, Comer teamed up with Congressman Burchette to send letters to the FBI, Department of Energy, NASA, and the Defense Department. And it's okay to investigate these things, but the fact is how these things start is a conspiracy theorist jump on it, pound it, and then you're almost forced to say, well, we've got to look and see what's behind this, even if there is no evidence of any connection at all. Let me see here, Fox News reported that the scientists who are tied to US secrets have died or vanished and further described the dead and missing researchers as mainly tied to the US nuclear and space research programs. While there are details in some of the cases that may be enough to give a skeptic pause, several of the 11 scientists actually have no ties at all to nuclear or space research or to each other.
Speaker 3:
[27:23] Were you earlier begging reference to the current White House press secretary, Caroline Leavitt?
Speaker 2:
[27:31] Caroline Leavitt, no, no, I'm sorry, Caroline Leavitt.
Speaker 3:
[27:33] I remember a few months ago, I did the same thing. I said Kayleigh McEnany.
Speaker 2:
[27:39] Yeah, Kayleigh.
Speaker 3:
[27:39] That's all right.
Speaker 2:
[27:42] The one employee, the pharmaceutical employee, is working on using chemistry and biology to discover and produce new medicines, including potential treatments for cancer. That's it. They're trying to get rid of him because he has a cure for cancer. The lone-ling theorists have made the other deaths and disappearances is that this man had active contracts with the Department of Defense. Thomas disappeared on December 12, 2025. His remains were discovered in Massachusetts. Local police said the cause of death still needs to be determined. No foul play is suspected. It was on his remains discovered on March 17th. The most recent name to be added is a list of Amy Eskridge, an Alabama-based researcher who died by suicide in 2022. Yet as Richard Hananya reports for UnHerd, nearly everything about Eskridge's background raises red flags about any narrative that might include her in the list of important scientists. She co-founded the Institute for Exotic Science, where she claimed to be working with gravity modification research, which as Hananya points it, is not recognized as a branch of science. Furthermore, Eskridge apparently believed that she was facing harassment from shadowy figures who had fired a direct energy weapon at her, according to the report, which also relayed that Eskridge had apparently never published a peer-reviewed paper in her life. Yet Fox News portrayed Eskridge among other esteemed scientists and has treated her gravity modification research as a real topic of study. The outlet for sure, however, to note that there is no publicly available evidence linking her death to any of the other cases. Authorities have not indicated any connection between her work and the circumstances of her death. Also cause for skepticism is the fact that the cases span at least four years and several states. As Hanadiya notes, there are some two million researchers, research scientists in the United States, and some are bound to fall victim to unfortunate events. The researchers also mostly worked in different fields, held different positions, had no connections to each other, and lived in different parts of the country.
Speaker 3:
[29:59] There you go.
Speaker 2:
[29:59] But this is the society we live in. I'm going to jump on a conspiracy theory because it means I know something that you don't. Even if you don't. Yeah, it's...
Speaker 3:
[30:16] You can develop, you can create a pattern in a number of things, right? We once joked about, I think this is back in 2017. I think it was, and we joked, a new poll shows that a new poll of newborns shows that Trump is the best president of their lifetime. Because he was the only one. You know, it's... So the question is, now show the correlation. They're part of, as you mentioned, they're part of a group that is 2 million people?
Speaker 2:
[31:10] Yeah.
Speaker 3:
[31:12] I bet you could find more than 11 that have passed.
Speaker 2:
[31:16] Probably could find 200.
Speaker 3:
[31:17] Yeah.
Speaker 2:
[31:18] Probably 1,000 out of 2 million in a period of four years would probably have died.
Speaker 3:
[31:24] Yeah. Yeah. Safe to say.
Speaker 2:
[31:26] Well, look, you and I dealt with Jade Helm 15.
Speaker 3:
[31:29] Yeah.
Speaker 2:
[31:29] 15?
Speaker 3:
[31:30] Yeah. Jade Helm 15. Yeah. Yeah. Remember that? Yeah. Yeah.
Speaker 2:
[31:33] Remember how stupid that was? And we sat here with people calling us going, you guys are hiding it. Hiding it? Look, remember the Chamber of Commerce in those towns?
Speaker 3:
[31:46] Oh, man.
Speaker 2:
[31:47] The Chamber of Commerce in those towns where the Jade Helm conspiracy was going on actually did what the economic benefits were going to be from the counties. For the counties from you had, you know, special forces and stuff using private land to mirror foreign countries to do exercises on.
Speaker 3:
[32:11] Yeah, right. Oh, you should have seen the local, this is several years ago when they were actually filming parts of Top Gun 2 in South Lake Tahoe. And you talk about the Liberals in California, and it looks like military vehicles are moving in because there's one scene, if you've seen the movie, where Tom Cruise and one of the other pilots has to steal a Russian plane. Was it a Russian plane? I think it was a Russian plane. From this old dilapidated airport. That's actually the Lake Tahoe Airport that was going through renovations at the time. Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. All right, so there's, most people fly into the Reno Airport, but if you're in the know or you have the money, you fly into Lake Tahoe Airport, it's a smaller airport. Anyway, so all this stuff was being brought in and they couldn't, what's going on? What is all of this military activity? And of course the conspiracies were going around for a while until it was shown that, no, Tom Cruise, this is how you settle liberals. A celebrity's in town filming a movie and then they get all happy about it. They're all impressed about it. But you can form, I don't know how many different patterns or conspiracies based on statistics where there really isn't a correlation, certainly not a causation.
Speaker 2:
[33:51] What was the one, remember the train load of military equipment with the millions of body bags for American citizens who are going to be put in concentration camps? Was that in Minnesota or Michigan or something? Or am I confusing the second red dawn for that one?
Speaker 3:
[34:11] It wasn't, I think Jesse Ventura was a part of that actually. I think on his show Conspiracy Theory, I think there were, why are they having, why are they moving all these body bags?
Speaker 1:
[34:24] This doesn't make sense. They're preparing for something huge.
Speaker 3:
[34:31] And, you know, it was, I think he dealt with that. I don't know if it was the body bags or there was another thing that had some kind of container storage thing. And growing up as a military brat, as an Air Force brat, I mean, you see this kind of movement in those military towns all the time. That activity is always going on. But then, again, you go into a situation like this with these 11 scientists.
Speaker 2:
[35:07] That was the FEMA camps.
Speaker 3:
[35:09] Yes. Yes. Yeah, that's what it was.
Speaker 2:
[35:11] Yeah, the...
Speaker 3:
[35:12] I think that was separate from the......conspiracy, their venture works to prove the existence of so-called... Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah...
Speaker 2:
[35:16] .FEMA concentration camps to be used as part of the US government plot to round up and imprison millions of Americans.
Speaker 1:
[35:23] Why do they need barbed wire on their fence?
Speaker 2:
[35:26] So that unnamed elites can establish a dictatorship.
Speaker 3:
[35:30] Yeah.
Speaker 1:
[35:34] This is why I moved to Mexico, in the Baja.
Speaker 2:
[35:38] Remember that?
Speaker 3:
[35:40] I moved to the Baja.
Speaker 2:
[35:41] Off-grid.
Speaker 3:
[35:42] Off-grid. Yeah, he's always on TV. Okay. Okay.
Speaker 2:
[35:51] I'm old enough to remember the excitement when he ran for governor of Minnesota. Yeah.
Speaker 3:
[35:57] Oh my gosh. Through the roof.
Speaker 2:
[36:00] We are Red Eye Radio.
Speaker 1:
[36:02] Coming up, more with Gary McNamara and Eric Harley. It's Red Eye Radio.
Speaker 2:
[36:21] He is Eric Harley, and I'm Gary McNamara. We are Red Eye Radio. And then things like, when the NHL playoffs had begun, and Buffalo played Boston the other day, and on social media, I don't know if you saw it yesterday, but just people, what's going on in Buffalo? Why are they singing the Canadian National Anthem? What's going on? And a lot of it was started by David Portnoy, who's a Bruins fan, and then a writer from the Boston Globe. What's going on? And now they're singing the Canadian National Anthem. They've always done that. They've done that at Sabres Games, they've done that at Bills Games, they did it when they had the NBA team. They've done it for, well, at least half a century, 60, 70, 80 years they've been doing it, because they're right on the border. And thousands of fans come from Canada to watch those events.
Speaker 3:
[37:11] Yeah, you've talked about that before.
Speaker 1:
[37:23] This is Red Eye Radio on Westwood One.
Speaker 6:
[37:28] Hi, I'm Joe Salci. I hosted the Stacking Benjamin's Podcast.
Speaker 7:
[37:31] Most economists agree, small amount of inflation is actually good. 2% is what you're going for. But why is everybody freaking out?
Speaker 6:
[37:38] Oh, because it's the fallout. People don't track their budget. You have this slow slipping that happens every month, till all of a sudden you go, man, I don't have any money. The reason is now two people go to a restaurant, the bill is 60 bucks for two.
Speaker 4:
[37:50] Two guys walk into a restaurant.
Speaker 6:
[37:51] They start screaming, isn't that hilarious?
Speaker 2:
[37:53] It's 60 dollars.
Speaker 6:
[37:54] Stacking Benjamins, follow and listen on your favorite platform.