title The Rick Stacy Morning Show 4.23.26

description Southern Poverty Law Center indicted for fighting the racists that they paid to be racist, Iran attacked at least three commercial ships in the Strait of Hormuz yesterday, Rick received an unusual piece of mail, fake blueberries are now being used to save money, more cry baby Starbucks workers, a 15 year old is charged with bullying because she won't play basketball with an 18 year old male, and there’s a new “fake facelift” hack...

pubDate Thu, 23 Apr 2026 14:23:42 GMT

author Audacy

duration 8103000

transcript

Speaker 1:
[00:00] The Rick Stacy Morning Show with Jill and Smokestack. We just know how to tap in to everybody's emotions. Hey, having fun with the world gone crazy.

Speaker 2:
[00:24] All right, all right, everybody, calm down. I got the stories here. They're gonna make you go, what?

Speaker 3:
[00:28] I was gonna say, I need to calm down more.

Speaker 2:
[00:30] I so much stuff today. It's out of this world. All Electric Services brings you the update. Okay, now I'm gonna explain this as best I can. Not as very good at it, but I'm gonna try. So maybe you never heard of them. Southern Poverty Law Center. Southern Poverty Law Center is a nonprofit organization recorded in Montgomery, Alabama.

Speaker 3:
[00:54] It sounds like it's for poor Southern people.

Speaker 2:
[00:56] Basically, that's what it's supposed to be, whose mission, according to its website, they still have the mission statement up. During the beginning, it applied. They're a, quote, catalyst for racial justice in the South and beyond, working in partnership with communities to dismantle white supremacy, strengthen intersectional movements, and advance the human rights of all people. It sounds, do you have a gliss? It sounds like...

Speaker 3:
[01:24] It does sound very nice.

Speaker 2:
[01:25] So very wonderful.

Speaker 4:
[01:27] Does all people have an asterisk next to it?

Speaker 2:
[01:30] So when you watch the news and you see ABC, NBC, CBS, CNN, MSNBC, and even Fox News and Newsmax say, there's an uptick in white supremacist crime, you know, they get that information from the Southern Poverty Law Center, and they don't question it because it's the Southern Poverty Law Center.

Speaker 3:
[01:50] Well, they've always done studies and stuff on things like that, right? They always have the data they come out with?

Speaker 2:
[01:55] Yes. So yesterday, Joe touched on it. The story didn't really fully break till afternoon, but the Southern Poverty Law Center has been indicted 11 counts. I mean, I can give you the counts real quick. Federal grand jury charges Southern Poverty Law Center for wire fraud, false statements, conspiracy to commit money laundering, and possibly the actual money laundering through banks.

Speaker 4:
[02:24] Yeah, Cash Patel member came out and did the big announcement about how they busted them.

Speaker 2:
[02:28] Yeah. So that's what we gave you yesterday. But what we didn't have yesterday when we got on the air because the press conference didn't happen yet, the Southern Poverty Law Center is actually paying, well, actually Joe read the list, is paying the, okay, you ready? Is playing the Ku Klux Klan, the United Clans of America, Unite the Right, the organization responsible for the Charlottesville incident where that woman got killed, the National Alliance, the National Socialist Movement, Aryan Nations affiliated, Sadistic Souls Motorcycle Club, National Socialist Party of America, the Nazis. They pay all those people to do what they tell them and create racist events so the Southern Poverty Law Center can stay in business.

Speaker 3:
[03:16] Are you kidding me, Rick?

Speaker 2:
[03:17] This is unbelievable.

Speaker 4:
[03:19] We gotta keep up the bad stuff so we can keep fighting the bad stuff.

Speaker 3:
[03:22] Oh my gosh, they're doing politics, but at a slightly smaller scale. It's I'll set the fire in the back of the house and then run to the front of the house with a bucket of water.

Speaker 2:
[03:30] This is an organization doing it. We know that Al Sharpton and Crump and all these race baiting lawyers do it, but this is an entire organization, untouchable because they're black, because no ABC or NBC are going to say anything negative about them, because if they do, they'll be called racists, so they stay out of their way. It is unbelievable.

Speaker 3:
[03:49] And how many Crump's and those Latterney's get their stats from SPLC.

Speaker 2:
[03:53] Now, this also shines a light on the corrupt media in this country, because they report this stuff and now they got egg on their face. And acting Attorney General for the United States, Todd Blanch, was asked by a reporter, listen to the voice, the tone of his voice, this reporter. They become the most rude bunch of people ever, because now they look like idiots.

Speaker 5:
[04:17] You're alleging that the Southern Poverty Law Center was paying the leaders of KKK and other groups to continue their operations?

Speaker 6:
[04:28] Is that... I'm not alleging it. The grand jury return an indictment that says that. And so what the investigation found according to the indictment that was returned today is that they were paying... So the Southern Poverty Law Center is raising money, asking folks to give them money to dismantle racism. And over a very long period of time, they were using some of the money they raised from donors to pay to, they called them field, you know, basically to informants for information, for access, to just pay them for certain, to do certain things. And so yes, that's exactly what the indictment charges.

Speaker 2:
[05:06] A little more of the description of how they did it. They lied to banks. That's when the money laundering comes in. They would set up fake, we hear this all the time. Seems like everybody's in on it, except for us, because we're still working. They set up fake corporations, like a fake photography business, to money, to launder the money through. When the banks got suspicious in 2022, they closed the accounts. That was the first sign that something wasn't right. They were taking the money and spending it on hate groups that they fought against. But they really didn't. And the biggest part of the story is, do you remember the whole Charlottesville kerfuffle with Trump and, you know, there's fine people on both sides and people are still going with that, even though he never actually said that?

Speaker 4:
[05:50] Well, he had a disclaimer right after it, but they chose to edit that part out because it doesn't fit.

Speaker 2:
[05:55] Yeah, let me just play you that. This is Trump in Charlotte, Charlottesville. And this is what this went on for months. Trump is a racist. Now, the network didn't play the part I'm going to play you.

Speaker 7:
[06:07] And I'm not talking about the neo-Nazis and the white nationalists because they should be condemned totally. But you had many people in that group other than neo-Nazis and white nationalists, okay?

Speaker 2:
[06:18] And then they were talking, then Trump was talking about what actually occurred in Charlottesville. You see, the well-funded, Unite the Right, pretty much a racist group, was funded by the Southern Poverty Law Center to create this event. They paid the guy who ran it six figures. Wow. Because they were taking a Confederate statue down. A lot of people were upset because we're taking American history down. I agree. So it wasn't about racism. They just didn't want to see it happen. But then the Southern Poverty Law Center paid Unite the Right, this white supremacist group, to cause all the rioting that went on. The girl got killed, hit by a car during this whole thing. Then they distributed all this information, the false narrative to the media. The media ran with it because they hate Trump. And it was all to set Trump up. It's an amazing story. And now, I wasn't going to do this yet, but let's do it. This is probably the biggest story out there right now. ABC News, top stories this morning. This morning, 4:30 a.m., probably put it up last night. Teen Causes Death, a released D4, I don't know what that is, some rapper.

Speaker 4:
[07:30] Oh yeah, oh yeah, we remember this story.

Speaker 2:
[07:32] Juvenile arrested for murder of 10-year-old. Brian Hooker's attorney speaks out. 78-year-old woman dies from snake bite. Georgia wildfire destroys dozens of homes. Vehicle hits stopped Washington train. Two doctoral students missing. Veteran charged with shooting, dies in jail. No mention of the biggest story. NBC News. Democrats want FBI cash Patel to fill out alcohol. Alcohol use screening test. Take it, screening test. What America's revamped election map means for the balance of power in Washington. These are the headlines on NBC. Two dead in chemical release in West Virginia manufacturing facility. Apple's choice for new CEO suggest the company's cool would no longer be cool. NBC, I did NBC. CBS. Judge blocks Virginia from using new house maps. Trump administration reaches 1.25 million settlement with Carter Page. Family is heartbroken to learn Soldier's wife won't be released by ICE. And a breaking point inside the 68 day DHS shutdown. Those are the headlines on the three major networks.

Speaker 8:
[08:33] Wow.

Speaker 2:
[08:34] None of them are covering the biggest story, which is the Southern Poverty Law Center, which is an organization to fight racism, is paying the racists to fake fight them to get more money.

Speaker 8:
[08:45] Liar, liar, liar.

Speaker 4:
[08:48] And why would that be? What's the underlying cause to do all of this, Rick?

Speaker 3:
[08:53] Mommy, you're getting paid. Southern Poverty Law Center gets money to help stop these groups that they're also paying to start stuff.

Speaker 2:
[08:59] Well, it's all money. But at the second point, I mean, just frosting on the cake, is to get Trump. Now, they're trying to blame Trump, even today, for something he never said. You heard it. I just played it for you. I mean, first of all, you gotta understand.

Speaker 3:
[09:12] Didn't he sue him and win money for that?

Speaker 2:
[09:14] I don't remember. Biden ran on this. This is only one clip. But Biden said he ran for office because of Charlottesville, which was a false narrative. Here he is.

Speaker 9:
[09:26] I spoke to the mom who lost her daughter. It's the consequence of those neo-Nazis.

Speaker 2:
[09:32] Do you need an inhaler?

Speaker 4:
[09:33] I mean, can you believe he was in charge? Well, he wasn't really, but he was in charge of the country. You can't even talk.

Speaker 9:
[09:41] White supremacists come out of the fields in America with torches carrying Nazi banners.

Speaker 10:
[09:47] Oh, Nazi banners.

Speaker 2:
[09:48] By the way, there's a guy running for governor who's gonna win in Maine who has a Nazi tattoo on his chest.

Speaker 9:
[09:54] Singing the same sick, anti-Semitic bile.

Speaker 4:
[09:58] Oh, now you're against anti-Semitism?

Speaker 2:
[10:00] Anti-Semitic bile. Listen, yeah, now it's a problem. It's bile. Now it's not a problem.

Speaker 9:
[10:05] A song in Germany in the 30s, and when her daughter was killed, they press went to the then President Trump and said, what do you think? He said, there are very fine people on both sides.

Speaker 2:
[10:16] But they don't tell you what he said before. It's a lie.

Speaker 1:
[10:19] It's not what he said.

Speaker 9:
[10:21] I knew then. I knew I had to do something. That's why I decided to run, because democracy is literally at stake.

Speaker 2:
[10:28] Oh, shut up with the democracy at stake. For God's sake, say that one more time. I'm gonna come down there. Right. This is crazy. So anyway, yeah, so this was all a setup. January 6th, the Russia hoax. Now this, everything that you've seen over the last 10 years has been a setup to get Trump.

Speaker 3:
[10:46] Dude, Bubba Wallace.

Speaker 2:
[10:48] And it's getting no, Bubba Wallace. They're getting no coverage.

Speaker 3:
[10:51] Juicy Smollett.

Speaker 4:
[10:52] And here's the most frustrating part about all of it. Take all that, crumple it together. And the most frustrating part is that probably nothing's gonna happen.

Speaker 2:
[11:01] Well, right now, something has happened. The Grand Jury indictment, they probably will get convicted. I don't know what the result of that's gonna be.

Speaker 5:
[11:08] You do such a disservice when you lie about things like this. Right?

Speaker 2:
[11:12] I mean, it's just... Now, if you go over to MSNBC, this is the problem. This is what half of America, well, maybe MSNBC, maybe 1% of, you know, like nobody. But this is Simone Sanders. She's the linebacker on MSNBC or MSPMS, whatever it is now, with Mike Steele, who used to be a Republican, now he's a Trump hater. But listen to this.

Speaker 11:
[11:33] They've gone after the Southern Poverty Law Center, but not the KKK.

Speaker 12:
[11:37] They've gone after the people, the civil rights organizations, but not the actual...

Speaker 13:
[11:40] They just freed the Proud Boys.

Speaker 14:
[11:42] What do you expect them to do?

Speaker 2:
[11:44] First of all, she's uneducated, uninformed, and a liar, because the DOJ over the last year, the Trump Department of Justice, though this last year indicted eight different white supremacist groups for activities, for racist activities.

Speaker 4:
[11:58] But she can't bring that up because then she can't make her point and seem like she's, oh, look at how smart I am.

Speaker 2:
[12:03] Probably in those groups are some that were being paid by the Southern Poverty Law Center.

Speaker 4:
[12:11] She's probably clutching her fake pearls that they're even going after the Southern Poverty Law Center. Like she's probably like, how dare they?

Speaker 2:
[12:19] It's just, it's, it's unbelievable. I mean, really.

Speaker 6:
[12:24] The SPLC is a nonprofit entity that purports to fight white supremacy and racial hatred by reporting on extremist groups and conducting research to inform law enforcement groups with the goal of dismantling these groups. As the indictment describes, the SPLC was not dismantling these groups. It was instead manufacturing the extremism it purports to oppose by paying sources to stoke racial hatred.

Speaker 3:
[12:54] Dude, that is insane.

Speaker 2:
[12:56] Think about it. You have a charity. It's a, you know, they're a charity. So they're a 501C, I think of something like that. So they're a charity. So what happens when your charity, let, let, let's say, okay, I'll give you a good example. We always talk about cancer. Let's say they do find, or there is a cancer cure and it comes out. All the cancer's done. So we, any cancer can be killed by this thing. Pill, whatever. So all of a sudden, what happens to all the charities that were collecting money for cancer?

Speaker 3:
[13:24] You can name them.

Speaker 2:
[13:25] They just, well, what do you do? You have to keep your business going. There's people, there's CEOs making two or three million dollars as the CEO of a charity.

Speaker 13:
[13:33] American Cancer Society.

Speaker 3:
[13:34] If no one's racist anymore as much as they used to be, how are we going to stay in business? We got to make the racism.

Speaker 2:
[13:41] You got to make the racism. You got to make the cancer. What about the Red Cross? Let's say one day we're able to manufacture every blood type synthetically, and we don't need blood donations any longer. What happens to the CEO of the Red Cross that makes 680,000 without bonuses? What happens to them?

Speaker 14:
[13:58] What happens to them? Two!

Speaker 2:
[13:59] See, it's all money, dude!

Speaker 3:
[14:01] You know, if everybody's got a hose on their house to put out the fire, you don't really need them running up with a bucket of water, do you? But if they're the ones starting the fires, then you need them with a bucket of water.

Speaker 2:
[14:12] It's crazy. All right, Iran attacked at least three commercial ships in the Strait of Hormuz yesterday. By the way, I want to clear something up for people who don't get this, because they'll never tell you. Iran does not own the Strait of Hormuz. It is not their territory. It is not part of their country.

Speaker 3:
[14:28] That's international water in between everything, right?

Speaker 2:
[14:30] That's a key element of this story that nobody's telling you, because they want to give them...

Speaker 4:
[14:34] Well, the media wants you to think that we're invading. We're telling them what to do with their own area.

Speaker 2:
[14:39] They don't own it. They don't have any right to it. Everybody has a right to it. It's international, so just get that Strait. Now, they attacked three more commercial ships in the Strait yesterday. We're still in that ceasefire. President Trump extended this thing indefinitely. I don't know why. I'm beginning to think like some of these other generals come on Fox News and CNN. Let's get this over with. If it's boots on the ground, god forbid, but if it's that what it takes, let's get it done, let's get it over. It's been 47 years.

Speaker 4:
[15:08] I think that something else is going on that they're not telling us, which obviously, I think that's the problem with the American people. They feel like this entitlement, that you need to tell us everything that you're doing and when you're gonna do it. And it's like, maybe we know something you don't. We got a strategy going, just hang tight.

Speaker 3:
[15:25] You want a little Caroline Leavitt?

Speaker 2:
[15:27] Sure.

Speaker 15:
[15:28] They can't move oil in and out. They can't even pay their own people as a result of this economic leverage that President Trump has inflicted over them. So, he's satisfied with that as we await their response and we will see. The president has not set a firm deadline to receive an Iranian proposal.

Speaker 2:
[15:44] Okay, that was back-ass word. I should have told me, because now I was gonna explain, that's Trump's strategy now. He thinks we can choke them economically because all of a sudden now they can't sell oil. We're blocking all their oil sales. China is getting really antsy, because 90% of the Iranian oil goes to China.

Speaker 3:
[15:59] Well, that was part of Iran's plan, too, is to try to wait us out and let our stock market crumble before he, you know, finally, I guess we got to do it. He's like, dude, we have oil.

Speaker 2:
[16:07] Wait a minute, the stock market broke new records yesterday. I know. It's amazing. Look at your 401k. I look at it every day. It's like, wow, I feel like I'm on The Price is Right.

Speaker 3:
[16:17] I hope you bought the dip.

Speaker 2:
[16:18] Oh my God. It's awesome. So anyway, so that's where we're at with that. One good thing, I think it happened. Oh no, President Donald Trump said Wednesday that he asked Iran not to execute those eight women.

Speaker 4:
[16:29] I saw that yesterday. Great news. And if they followed through with it.

Speaker 2:
[16:32] Well, here's the thing. Four women have been released. This is all according to Iran, so we can't believe anything.

Speaker 4:
[16:39] That's the problem I had yesterday when I heard this. I'm like, so we're just going to take them at their word? Do we have proof that they're still alive?

Speaker 2:
[16:46] Four have been released, four more to go.

Speaker 4:
[16:48] Well, four are serving, was it a month in jail or a year in jail? What is it? They're making four of them serve time, but they're not going to execute them, and then four of them they let go.

Speaker 2:
[16:56] Yeah, and four of them will serve time. They're saying about a month.

Speaker 4:
[16:59] Okay, it's a month.

Speaker 2:
[17:01] Now, the caveat here is at the very end of the story, Iran's Judiciary Committee quickly responded to Trump's claims, denying that the women ever faced execution. And according to the Middle East-focused media outlet New Arab, Trump was misled once again by fake news, your fake news. Now they're trying to say that, no, they were never facing execution or jail time.

Speaker 4:
[17:23] No, I think what happens is they're like, yeah, these women are going to be executed. Trump's like, execute those women and they tune your entire country into a desert. And they're like, we're just kidding. We were never going to do that. What are you talking about?

Speaker 2:
[17:34] It's crazy. All right, speaking of crazy, I think it's time to go over to The View. There's... I'm telling you, I know there's people that don't believe me and think that, oh, you're just a radio station in Orlando. What do you know? You're not a journalist, blah, blah, blah. Okay, I can tell when people are not doing your jobs. I can just tell. Because not only have I been out in the morning. Trust me, he's very good at it. Not only have I.

Speaker 4:
[18:29] Smokes like I get busted morning after morning.

Speaker 15:
[18:33] Smokestack liked your message.

Speaker 2:
[18:35] So, yeah, so I can tell when so I've been program director for 30 some odd years now. The view those people, Sunny Hostin does a little prep, but it's always it's not she might as well not do it because it's all garbage. But the rest of them don't do anything. They go home and they eat.

Speaker 4:
[18:53] I feel like I'm sorry.

Speaker 2:
[18:54] They graze.

Speaker 4:
[18:55] I feel like Elissa Farah Griffin does her does some research, but it's never really 100 percent accurate. OK, she's a fake Republican that's on the panel, by the way.

Speaker 2:
[19:06] So on Monday's edition of The View, Whoopi Goldberg cited a report from the Wall Street Journalist suggested that Trump was in a panic over the war and that he was seeking a way out. This is the new narrative now, by the way, that he doesn't know what he's doing. He's crazy. He got into this thing, doesn't know how to get out. I think he knows exactly what he's doing. War is messy. Not only is it probably the most horrible thing on earth, it's messy. Things change like on a dime. So you've got to be ready. You've got to dance. And Trump is the best dancer there is. That's why we need businessmen in office like this guy. So anyway, so he changes things as he goes, but we can't handle that because we're used to these P word people. We sent a sternly worded letter to the Iranian regime and we're waiting for our partners in the area to get back to us. Don't make us glare at you. And if they don't comply, we'll send them another sternly worded letter and follow it up with a certified piece of mail.

Speaker 4:
[20:02] I wish we had cameras in the studio so you could see Rick's flailing about animation.

Speaker 2:
[20:10] So anyway, that's what the Wall Street Journal said. And now for some reason, I don't have that audio, Joy Behar got out and go, yeah, that's why they're gonna draft people because they're running out of soldiers. And then Whoopi Goldberg says, oh yeah, they're gonna put the draft back in.

Speaker 16:
[20:27] And that's why they are planning on a draft. They're planning on a draft.

Speaker 2:
[20:32] Nice sweater.

Speaker 16:
[20:33] And you're bitching and moaning that there are women who are part of the Army, Navy, all the, and you get rid of people and you talk about who shouldn't be, what the hell are you people doing?

Speaker 2:
[20:43] What did she just say? Can somebody explain what she just said? Okay, here's what happened. So there's always been selective service.

Speaker 4:
[20:52] Correct. When you turn 18, when you actually when you apply for your driver's license, you're like banked. And then when you turn 18, you're you enroll in the selective service. I think it's mails between actually it's biological mails. And now it's saying it's also like illegal immigrants or people that aren't born here that have become US citizens.

Speaker 2:
[21:14] Fair enough. If you mooch off the country legally, you fight for it.

Speaker 4:
[21:18] 18 to 25. But I think what now they were doing is like used to have to sign up. But now the government just does it automatically whenever you get your driver's license.

Speaker 2:
[21:24] That's what changed. And that's what Whoopi, who didn't read the article, just saw it and said, they're re-instituting the draft. Here's a little more of this freaking idiot.

Speaker 15:
[21:31] And what it is, is they're changing that you no longer you have to opt, you just have to opt into the draft.

Speaker 17:
[21:36] Now it makes it automatic.

Speaker 16:
[21:38] It's a draft.

Speaker 2:
[21:39] It's a draft.

Speaker 3:
[21:40] I mean, it was a requirement to graduate at my high school. You didn't graduate if you didn't sign up.

Speaker 2:
[21:45] Ladies and gentlemen, if you have a friend that watches this show, please get them help. Get them help now.

Speaker 4:
[21:50] For pennies a day.

Speaker 2:
[21:51] For pennies a day, you can help your friend detach from this Wow. Just disgusting CalFest.

Speaker 4:
[21:59] Yeah.

Speaker 2:
[21:59] What?

Speaker 4:
[22:00] I have more of you when you're done with that. Okay.

Speaker 2:
[22:02] Oh, and we have more. Oh, hold on.

Speaker 16:
[22:05] I'm sorry, it's a draft. Because if you are 18 to 25, they're looking at you. Well, they're...

Speaker 4:
[22:12] Well, yeah, they've always been looking at you. It's always been males, 18 to 25.

Speaker 2:
[22:16] There's nothing new here. You're a moron and you don't do your homework. You go home and literally you get out of a trough.

Speaker 4:
[22:23] I love when they act like something's new. It's like when they got up in arms because they were like, oh, they're feeding the military with steak and lobster. Why are we spending all this money on this? It's like, you know how long they've been doing that? Okay, welcome tardy to the party. So she's like, oh, they're gonna start tracking guys and enrolling them in the service for 18 to 25. Yeah, that's been a thing. Welcome, welcome.

Speaker 2:
[22:46] The lack of knowledge on that show is just stunning. Stunning, and it's the number one news show on ABC.

Speaker 3:
[22:55] I still don't believe that.

Speaker 4:
[22:56] Speaking ABC, this gaslighting brought to you by Sunny Hostin and ABC, she's screaming about the war because of how much it costs, but the hypocrisy is dripping. Watch your wet wipes out.

Speaker 2:
[23:07] All right.

Speaker 4:
[23:08] Are you ready? Oh wait, hold on. I forgot to do something. Give me one minute.

Speaker 2:
[23:11] One minute?

Speaker 4:
[23:12] No, one second. Speak amongst yourselves. I forgot to click a button. There you go. Okay, you ready? So this is Sunny, of course, acting like she's all up in arms about the war.

Speaker 11:
[23:22] You know, I just read that this war is estimated to have already cost us $50 billion. $50 billion, which is more money than this country has spent since World War II.

Speaker 4:
[23:34] Actually, actually, we sent $200 billion to Ukraine. I don't remember you being a freakazoid about that and flipping out.

Speaker 11:
[23:43] And then in 2027, this president is asking for $1.5 trillion for defense, which would be more money spent in modern history on war. Why don't they just get rid of her? I think what the American people want is good health. They want good health care. They want good education. They want good housing. They don't want to spend $50 billion in a war of choice.

Speaker 3:
[24:13] There is the line.

Speaker 2:
[24:14] You can have good health. You can have great education, which I'm all for. I want new schools for all the kiddos, all that. We'll never see that because they're stealing the money. But you could have all that and you could live in a great town. Like you could live, for instance, you could live in the Hamptons in New York. And then one day, this thing comes out of the sky and evaporates your entire family, all the new schools and the health clinics, everything's gone.

Speaker 4:
[24:35] Then where are you at? Where are you at after that?

Speaker 2:
[24:38] So if we have to spend two trillion to defend ourselves from the psychos that live on this ball.

Speaker 18:
[24:42] That's fine by me.

Speaker 2:
[24:44] Yeah.

Speaker 3:
[24:44] Trust me, it's the only reason I would let half my paycheck get stolen is the protection from all that.

Speaker 4:
[24:50] But Biden can give Zelensky 200 billion, and I don't think they spoke about it once. In fact, I think they praised Zelensky.

Speaker 2:
[24:57] Get help for your friends that watch The View. It's my new campaign.

Speaker 19:
[25:01] I gotcha.

Speaker 2:
[25:03] Here's another thing that gets me up to here. No, up to here. So I went to, where do I go yesterday? I went somewhere to get a drink or something, and I looked, you know how they do, they shove the credit card thing in your face. That's the new thing.

Speaker 4:
[25:15] We're just gonna turn this around real quick. It's just gonna ask you a few questions. Do you want to tip us 80%?

Speaker 2:
[25:19] I was blown, yeah, I was blown away because normally it's like 15, 20, 25, or was.

Speaker 4:
[25:25] Well, it used to be 15, 18, 20. Then it was like 18, 20, 25. Then it was like 20, 22, 25. It's slowly creeping up.

Speaker 3:
[25:33] I hate their approach. It's gonna ask you if you're like, no, you're asking me the questions. You're just trying to blame it on the machine. Like it's asking me for money and you, there's nothing you can do about it.

Speaker 4:
[25:41] So what did your machine ask?

Speaker 2:
[25:42] It started at 20%. That's like the top tier tip.

Speaker 4:
[25:46] And here's the thing, people forget like dinner time. If you're out at a restaurant and it's dinner time, 20% is a nice tip.

Speaker 2:
[25:54] Yeah, if you do a good job.

Speaker 4:
[25:55] Lunch time, 15 to 18 is completely acceptable for a lunch, cause it's a smaller meal. You're probably getting less things. If you go and you're walking in to grab something, Rick, that's, it's basically one thing above a self-serve.

Speaker 2:
[26:10] It's your job to give me the coffee from behind you.

Speaker 4:
[26:13] That's what I'm saying. You took the cup and poured the coffee and handed it to me. I don't know the 20% is like what, you know?

Speaker 2:
[26:20] Did you get the beans? Did you harvest the beans? Did you grind them? You may have ground them. I'm not going to play you 20% more just because you put them in the thing.

Speaker 4:
[26:28] And you owned a restaurant. The problem is, is that these companies are like, I don't feel like paying them. You pay them. So they want you to tip them bigger so that they can get money because they don't feel like paying them anymore.

Speaker 3:
[26:38] Passing the savings on to you.

Speaker 2:
[26:40] Papa John's is under fire for guilt tripping with a message they put in their pizza box. Now you may think this is a little tiny type. No, it's on the side. It's in big letters, big, big letters. What does it say? It says, delivery fee. They added a delivery fee is not a tip. The delivery, the pizza fee, the pizza cheese installing fee, the pepperoni installation fee. Now we have a delivery fee. So they said, don't think the delivery fee, which is already a...

Speaker 4:
[27:07] Because a lot of times, if you order food, the delivery fee is like, it's like the tip. They'll go, oh, there's a delivery fee. And you're like, all right. So people don't...

Speaker 2:
[27:15] So yeah.

Speaker 3:
[27:15] What does the fee go to if it's not for the driver?

Speaker 4:
[27:18] Yeah, he's the one delivering. So you think the delivery fee went to the deliverer, but I guess not.

Speaker 2:
[27:22] No, it's just the way to mark up the pieces. Anyway, this one lady, people are pissed off. This one lady has made a video, of course, and it went viral. And here's what she had to say, reading the box off her dashboard.

Speaker 11:
[27:33] Delivery fee is not a tip.

Speaker 12:
[27:35] Please erode your driver for outstanding service.

Speaker 11:
[27:38] Tips aren't paychecks. Pay your employees, bitch.

Speaker 4:
[27:43] Please tip your employees. Stop telling me what to do.

Speaker 2:
[27:46] I'm with her. I'm with her. Well, people are getting pitied. The opposite is going to happen now, because yesterday, I didn't tip.

Speaker 4:
[27:51] People are going to get mad and they're going to go, you know what?

Speaker 2:
[27:53] I got mad silently. I didn't say anything. I said, you know what? No. It's enough. You just turned around and gave me a drink. You didn't make it. You didn't do anything. You poured it.

Speaker 4:
[28:01] You know what got me is I went to a self-checkout one time. It was one of those grab and go places where they have like the sandwiches and the fruit cups and all that. And then you can either go to the cash register or you can check yourself out.

Speaker 2:
[28:13] You pulled the food off the...

Speaker 4:
[28:14] I pulled the food. It was already made. I pulled it and I went and it was like, would you like to leave a tip? I'm like, to who?

Speaker 2:
[28:19] To yourself.

Speaker 4:
[28:20] Nobody did anything. Will you give me money back? Who am I tipping?

Speaker 3:
[28:23] Well, cause you know.

Speaker 2:
[28:25] And finally, a wide-eyed, Emmy award-winning journalist was arrested.

Speaker 11:
[28:30] Wide-eyed.

Speaker 2:
[28:32] Daryl Lee Vanestran, 40, this season anchor. He's a TV Emmy award-winning anchor.

Speaker 6:
[28:39] Really? Yeah.

Speaker 2:
[28:41] He installed cameras at the TV station to film people getting undressed at the TV station, which they do often. So Daryl Lee was booked after he was arrested for the use of photo or video equipment in a clandestine manner in a private, in private spaces at the TV station. The photographer and editor was nominated and won multiple Heartland TV Emmy awards last year. He was promoted according to court documents obtained by the Oklahoma and Oklahoma and janitorial staff discovered several video cameras in the private dressing room areas of KWTV News 9. I seen her boobies news.

Speaker 4:
[29:24] Now, I have a question. If you see a camera, because I feel like my initial reaction, if I'm anywhere in a dressing room or whatever, and I see a secret camera, I'm bashing it to bits. And then I'm going to go out there.

Speaker 3:
[29:35] We got to hang out of the evidence.

Speaker 4:
[29:36] But there will be pieces of it. But I mean, can you get in trouble for that? Why are people not more mad? Why are they not like, hey, there's a camera filming me?

Speaker 3:
[29:46] You can definitely get in trouble. That's destruction of evidence.

Speaker 2:
[29:48] I would definitely pull the camera out. No, because that's kept on the disk on the camera, right?

Speaker 3:
[29:52] Yeah, that's why you can't smash that. There could be other victims in there that don't know that they're being recorded.

Speaker 2:
[29:56] You need the evidence. They're paying us to run their promo. Sorry.

Speaker 20:
[29:59] Coming up on WPRV, it's the spy witness newscast with Pervy Peeping Tom, Daryl Lee Van Ostrand with headlines.

Speaker 8:
[30:08] Yeah, breaking news. I have some great footage of some ladies in their dressing rooms. Oh, also, huge news alert.

Speaker 20:
[30:20] Plus, pervy weirdo Daryl Lee Van Nostrand also with sports.

Speaker 8:
[30:23] There was all sorts of action at the baseball stadium, in the bathrooms. I put a camera in there, and there was some real hotties in that bathroom. You want to see the footage? Oh, yeah.

Speaker 20:
[30:33] And weird, pervy piece of s***, Daryl Lee Van Ostrand also on weather.

Speaker 8:
[30:38] Look for thunderstorms all throughout the day, and you know where you should take shelter from the thunderstorms, ladies? The fitting rooms at Burlington Coat Factory. Why? No reason. I definitely didn't put cameras in there. Ha ha ha.

Speaker 1:
[30:51] Yes, I did.

Speaker 20:
[30:52] The WPRV Spy Witness Newscast. Don't miss it.

Speaker 1:
[30:55] The Sunny Update. You're riding with Rick, Jelle and Smokestack on the tool-free Expressway to a world gone crazy.

Speaker 4:
[31:12] This is Crazy Talk, brought to you by All Electric Services. Let's start in Ohio, shall we? This is interesting. Ohio Bill HB 249. If passed, this would outlaw women from wearing bikinis and sports bras in public. At the beach? It's called the Intensive Exposure Modernization Act, and the proponents say it strengthens laws aimed at protecting kids from harmful and obscene adult performances and reinforces private spaces.

Speaker 3:
[31:45] I don't agree.

Speaker 4:
[31:46] So here's the thing, if you're going for a run and you've got on some sweatpants or some running pants, You better have a sweater on or a parka. Yeah, like you wanna wear a turtleneck and you have your sports bra on and you're running.

Speaker 3:
[31:59] Why stop there? Go right to the burka.

Speaker 4:
[32:01] Yes, you could be, it's gonna be illegal. And if you were at a beach or you're laying out, I mean, how are you supposed to go to a pool? I guess if you're in a certain area. But here's where I have the problem with it. Not only is that like, okay, that's crazy. So let's go over since we're in Ohio, and they're the ones that want to outlaw women from wearing bikinis and sports bras in public. Yet, I had to look this up. 24 hour fitness is all over Ohio. Several of those gym chains and locations in Ohio, including some YMCA branches, have policies allowing transgender women who were once men transition to women, they're allowed to use the locker rooms in these gyms. So that's not protecting kids in spaces like restrooms or locker rooms. You can have your dung hanging out, but you can't look at the lady running in her sports bra, God forbid. My dung.

Speaker 2:
[32:54] How do they reconcile that in their minds? Do they have any kind of... Do they think at all before they do these things?

Speaker 3:
[33:00] No, they're not going for fairness.

Speaker 4:
[33:01] Also, and look, I love drag queens. I think drag queens are hilarious. I think they're for adults, though. I don't think they're for children. Ohio has hosted Drag Queen Story Hour, now branded Drag Story Hour, many events primarily in the Cleveland and Cincinnati area. So you can have scantily clad. If you've ever been to a drag show, you've seen some really good ones, but they're pretty risky.

Speaker 2:
[33:24] Oh yeah, I've seen a bunch of them. In Key West, they're the best. They have a whole bar just for drag shows.

Speaker 4:
[33:28] But the biological woman that's going for a run in her sports bra, that's not allowed. What's funny to me is all the people that love to scream, women's rights, women's rights, women's rights, where are you? The weenie. When males control women's rights, you no longer have women's rights.

Speaker 2:
[34:04] How long did women fight through the feminist movement to get rights that apparently didn't have before, and now all of a sudden it's all trash, and they do nothing?

Speaker 4:
[34:14] Guys can take their shirts completely off, and it's acceptable by society.

Speaker 2:
[34:19] I agree, we should pass a law. Boobies for everybody.

Speaker 3:
[34:21] Some of them shouldn't.

Speaker 4:
[34:23] Yeah, I mean, it's funny, there's people in my neighborhood that go running, and I get it, and you go running and you're hot, and you take your shirt off, and it's fine. It's just so acceptable, right? But a woman should be able to run in her sports bra. I think that's ridiculous.

Speaker 3:
[34:33] Or topless, that's fine.

Speaker 2:
[34:34] Well, one thing I would fight for, though, is the new laws on the beach we need to implement, where if you're wearing a thong, you better have tight, tight cheeks, because I see some stuff that's, what are you doing?

Speaker 4:
[34:44] Oh, no, there's multiple individuals in my pool that will go out there with thongs, and it's like, girl got some confidence.

Speaker 8:
[34:52] Okay, go ahead.

Speaker 2:
[34:53] No, no, isn't the nice ones, it's the ones that shouldn't be wearing a thong.

Speaker 4:
[34:56] No, no, these shouldn't be. But they walk with confidence, so they carry, and you're like, oh, okay, you're feeling good about yourself. Girl living her best life over there, all right.

Speaker 2:
[35:04] There's not enough Dramamine to keep you from getting seasick looking at dolls.

Speaker 4:
[35:08] No, it's just, you know, I would never do it, but I mean, if you're feeling free, I guess go ahead.

Speaker 2:
[35:14] I still don't get the whole thong thing. Every time I talk about it, I feel it.

Speaker 4:
[35:17] Yeah, take your underwear and cram it up your butt crack real fast. See what it feels like.

Speaker 3:
[35:21] Exactly. It's just permanent wedgie. Like most people don't want wedgies. That's why bullies do it to kids, because it's not fun.

Speaker 4:
[35:27] Well, when it's done on purpose, there's less material there. So when something is constructed, i.e. underwear or bathing suit, there's less underwear, there's less material back there. But wait, hold on. But if you were to take, like say your underwear, Rick, and cram it up your butt, it's a whole lot of material because that's not where it's supposed to go.

Speaker 2:
[35:44] So let me get this story. Maybe I'm wrong. Do women do that so there's no panty line just for men?

Speaker 3:
[35:51] Do you guys want everybody to think that you don't wear underwear? Is that like a secret thing?

Speaker 2:
[35:54] Yeah, this is a very controversial topic. I've always gotten hate mail and I understand it. But do you do a lot, not you, but do women do a lot of things just to have men look at their ass and their boobs?

Speaker 4:
[36:04] I don't know, maybe, but I can only speak for myself. The reason I wear that is because it's for comfort, believe it or not.

Speaker 2:
[36:11] The thong?

Speaker 4:
[36:12] Yeah, because I have my butt cheeks like to eat everything. So it doesn't matter.

Speaker 3:
[36:18] Oh, so if you got big underwear, they would just get wedged in there anyway. You might as well get the thin ones.

Speaker 4:
[36:24] Correct. Mine is just for salvation, really.

Speaker 3:
[36:28] But I never understood the panty line thing. It's like, oh, I can't have people think that I wear underwear.

Speaker 4:
[36:32] Well, sometimes your outfit, you want it to lay smooth and you don't want any lumps or bunching underneath. And that's a reason for it.

Speaker 3:
[36:38] Don't buy the lumpy ones. Okay.

Speaker 4:
[36:42] It just seems like... Sometimes it's like, look at my butt. It looks so good in this. Look at that, hey! Yeah. Which, don't act like you mind, because...

Speaker 2:
[36:49] No, no, no, I don't mind. But I find it curious that at the same time, if you do look directly at the boobs, like you would the sun and during an eclipse, you get yelled at.

Speaker 4:
[36:57] So I have a friend...

Speaker 1:
[36:58] My eyes are up here.

Speaker 2:
[37:00] No, you put those on display on purpose. Don't tell me not to look.

Speaker 4:
[37:03] So I have a friend, this is the funniest story ever, and she's got really big boobs and they're nice boobies.

Speaker 11:
[37:09] What's her name?

Speaker 4:
[37:11] And so she was wearing... We were out one time and she doesn't care. She's with her husband and she's like, I like to... My husband likes to show me off and they look good and he's proud and he doesn't mind if people... So anyway, we're at a bar in my neighborhood and a friend of mine is the bartender. So me and my booby friend walk up to the bar and we're sitting there. He had the eye daggers just directly at her eyeballs. Like he was fighting not to look down. You can tell.

Speaker 3:
[37:37] Why are you sweating?

Speaker 4:
[37:38] I'm fine. Yeah, you can tell it was a struggle, but he was doing it. So then she walks away and I'm like, I'm so proud of you. He's like, hardest thing I've ever done. I'm like, I knew you wanted to glance down so bad. He's like, I knew they were there. I could tell they were there. And I was like, don't look at him. Don't look at him. Don't look at him.

Speaker 3:
[37:53] Thousands of years of animal instincts.

Speaker 2:
[37:55] Yeah, you feel the heat coming off of them.

Speaker 4:
[37:57] It was great. This next story is very similar to the one that I just did, but this has to do with minors. And this is where parents get angry. So, you live your best life. Go be your authentic self. When you try to drag children into it, people get mad.

Speaker 3:
[38:15] Well, mines are dangerous places.

Speaker 4:
[38:17] This is a 15-year-old girl. She's a basketball player. She refused at her school. The opposing team had an 18-year-old biological male that identified as a female. So, the 15-year-old female says, I'm not playing. I'm not playing against an 18-year-old who at that point is a grown man. Right. I'm not playing against an 18-year-old biological male. And here's what happened. Now, the audio is not fantastic, but because it was recorded off of something else, but I had to get... This is her mom. They're on Fox News. Okay. It's the 15-year-old sitting next to her mom. They're asking her mom about what happened because the mother was there.

Speaker 13:
[38:55] We realized there was a boy on the team. And let me just say this person is 18 years old. So, he's a grown man at this point that was playing on a JV basketball game with 14 and 15-year-olds.

Speaker 4:
[39:07] So first of all, I don't know why an 18-year-old would be on JV 18-year-old is a senior. JV is usually freshmen and sophomores.

Speaker 13:
[39:13] I went up and I talked to the athletic director and I said, can you tell me if that's a boy on the team? And he said, I'm not going to say we do not discriminate based on sexual identity. And I said, well, President Trump just yesterday signed an executive order saying there's no boys or men and women's or girls' sports. And he said, we do not have to follow that, we follow Washington state law and WIAA. All right, so once that happened, and I realized that Francis was sitting out, it wasn't until towards the end of the game when she, there was a lot that went on between the time that we realized there was this boy on the team. And when she was leaving, she was so mad, she felt like she had been exposed, and it was just a terrible situation.

Speaker 4:
[39:58] And the mother's trying to excuse the girl's behavior. I don't think it needed an excuse. The girl walks by the guy and goes, you're a guy. That's what she said.

Speaker 13:
[40:06] Yeah.

Speaker 4:
[40:07] And which is accurate information, he is biologically a guy. She wasn't using slander, she was stating fact. And here's what happened.

Speaker 13:
[40:16] She walked by and said that you're a man. She was so frustrated in the situation. And that is why she has been now charged with bullying, harassment and intimidation.

Speaker 4:
[40:28] The school district charged the 15-year-old.

Speaker 2:
[40:31] Wait, wait, wait. But that's not it. You can't... It's a charge. Police can charge, but school can't.

Speaker 4:
[40:36] They're pressing charges of bullying, harassment and intimidation.

Speaker 2:
[40:41] Legally?

Speaker 4:
[40:42] That's what it says.

Speaker 14:
[40:44] How do you define that?

Speaker 2:
[40:46] I don't know. This has got to go to the Supreme Court.

Speaker 3:
[40:48] This needs to be pushed into fact and bullying. It's like...

Speaker 4:
[40:52] The 15-year-old girl has a right to feel safe. Again, you scream women's rights, but you don't care about them, actually. Then, here's what else happened. Her brother was there because she was playing basketball. She's a 13-year-old little brother, two years younger than her. He was filming. They confronted her, the people at the school, and the 18-year-old went over to the 13-year-old brother and said to him, you better think twice about doing that.

Speaker 2:
[41:16] That's bullying.

Speaker 4:
[41:17] That's bullying.

Speaker 2:
[41:18] And intimidation.

Speaker 4:
[41:18] Do you know what I'm saying?

Speaker 2:
[41:19] Yeah.

Speaker 4:
[41:20] That's actually threatening.

Speaker 2:
[41:21] I hope this family's smart. This is an opportunity to...

Speaker 4:
[41:26] So, that's why the mom went on the news. Absolutely. Your biggest weapon, I find, if you can't get help, is exposure.

Speaker 2:
[41:35] Absolutely.

Speaker 4:
[41:35] Go out like she did the right thing. She went on the news. She told her story. Expose it because somebody will see it. And somebody will go, oh, yeah, you got a case. I'll help represent you. Or I know somebody that can. If you feel helpless and you feel like you can't get anywhere, exposure is your best friend.

Speaker 2:
[41:50] Absolutely. Now she's doing the right thing.

Speaker 4:
[41:52] Yeah. And this story is great because we love a good Starbucks story because we have our our tried and true Starbucks employee that I don't know if you guys know this. It is really it's really hard working at Starbucks.

Speaker 19:
[42:10] Yeah. People wonder why we need a union at Starbucks. And I am literally about to quit. It's just like I get times like a full time student. I get scheduled for 25 hours a week. And on a weekend, they schedule me the entire day open to close up on the schedule for eight and a half hours, three and a half hours into my shift. There's so many customers and we have four people on the floor all day. Only five people were put on the schedule and somebody had to call out.

Speaker 21:
[42:41] I'm sorry, but it's no wonder why people accuse this generation of being hypersensitive.

Speaker 2:
[42:45] We need to put him in the military. You know what I'm saying?

Speaker 4:
[42:49] You're making coffee. You're crying because you make a coffee.

Speaker 2:
[42:52] Oh my God. We've had that for what? Three years now we've had that sound bite. Every time I hear it, my head wants to explode.

Speaker 4:
[42:59] So the reason I'm bringing it up is because Seattle is... There's people that work for Starbucks in Seattle that are resisting this relocation mandate for some of their employees that have been there for a really long time. I'm not talking part time workers. I'm talking like managers and stuff that this is their career because they've opened a new $100 million corporate hub in Nashville, Tennessee for Starbucks. So they want 100 members of the North American sourcing team to move to this hub. So you got to move from Seattle to Nashville. And they're pushing against it because of the political and cultural environment in Tennessee because they said that the left-leaning employees have expressed repulsion to move to a deep red state and they have concerns over Tennessee's political climate.

Speaker 2:
[43:46] Well, we don't want to move to your deep blue state, psychos.

Speaker 4:
[43:50] Isn't that something?

Speaker 2:
[43:51] I'm telling you, man, split the country in half, build a wall. I think it's the only answer. This is never going to be resolved. It's not because it did. You know what? Liberals and conservatives have become completely incompatible. You're just sowing division. Perhaps I'm not doing it, though. I'm just pointing out that it's already happening.

Speaker 4:
[44:08] Well, that's the thing that I said yesterday. It says Republicans will hate your opinion. Democrats will hate you for your opinion.

Speaker 2:
[44:16] Yeah, that's true.

Speaker 4:
[44:17] And finally, there's a new hack. If you don't want to go through the cutting and the stitches and the drains of getting a facelift, but you want to do something to pull the skin back a little bit, not Joan Rivers type, but, you know, just a little, I'm all ears, a little nip tuck here. Go on. There's a facelift hack and it involves pulling your hair back really tight.

Speaker 2:
[44:38] But then your hair falls out.

Speaker 4:
[44:39] I've seen people try to do this before they're not doing it right.

Speaker 22:
[44:42] You mean like this?

Speaker 4:
[44:44] You ever see someone with their hair pulled back so tight and you get a headache?

Speaker 3:
[44:47] Yeah.

Speaker 4:
[44:47] That hurts me looking at that.

Speaker 3:
[44:49] That looks like I hope you just greased it down. It's not just that shiny because you've yoinked it back.

Speaker 2:
[44:54] Not to get personal, but every photo you show me of Frank over the last year or so, he's got his hair tightly pulled back.

Speaker 4:
[45:00] It's not tightly, it's just because of his gel. He's got a lot of hair.

Speaker 3:
[45:03] Yeah. See, the gel makes it look tighter sometimes. Sometimes you can't tell if it's just gel down or if you just have it.

Speaker 2:
[45:08] Because it makes me nervous.

Speaker 4:
[45:09] His hair is long now. He's got a good hairline though. I don't think he's going to go in the grave with that hairline.

Speaker 2:
[45:13] But it makes me nervous to look at anybody with their hair pulled back. Because generally speaking, your hair starts falling out from the pressure.

Speaker 3:
[45:21] Or it makes you look angry because it pulls your eyebrows up a little too.

Speaker 4:
[45:24] Well, that's the whole point that women are doing it. There's the whole point women are doing it. Here's where this stemmed from. Apparently the other day, the new Devil Wears Prada 2 movie is coming out and Anne Hathaway looked like she got a facelift. So they were like, God, she looks really good. And so they were interviewing her and she said, no, I have this device under my hair. Her hair was down. She's like, and it kind of pulls my face back because it's pulling my hair back tight. So they were like, whoa. So now people are like, do I need to get something that pulls my hair? But we can't all afford the way Hollywood gets it. So you have to hire somebody to hold your hair back.

Speaker 22:
[45:59] Want to look younger without expensive creams and surgical procedures?

Speaker 4:
[46:02] I sure do.

Speaker 22:
[46:03] Introducing the personal hair puller.

Speaker 8:
[46:06] The personal hair puller?

Speaker 4:
[46:08] How's it work?

Speaker 22:
[46:09] It's easy. It's a guy that follows you around and pulls your hair so your face looks tighter and wrinkle free.

Speaker 16:
[46:14] The personal hair puller is great.

Speaker 4:
[46:17] Now I look 20 years younger and out. Too hard?

Speaker 16:
[46:20] Yeah, that was way too hard.

Speaker 4:
[46:22] Sorry, how's this?

Speaker 16:
[46:23] That's much better.

Speaker 22:
[46:24] You love the personal hair puller.

Speaker 1:
[46:26] Mom, Timmy just pulled my hair.

Speaker 4:
[46:29] You'll thank him when you're older.

Speaker 22:
[46:31] The personal hair puller, the guy that pulls your hair. Call now.

Speaker 1:
[46:35] Crazy talk. This is The Rick Stacy Morning Show with Jill and Smokestack, having fun with the world gone crazy.

Speaker 2:
[46:54] Okay, it's brought to you by All Electric Services. Here we go. The biggest story out there, you will not see anywhere. As a matter of fact, I'm looking at local news now, no coverage, ABC, NBC and CBS, no coverage. Just gonna take that in. So if you don't know who they are, the Southern Poverty Law Center is a non-profit organization, headquartered in Montgomery, Alabama. They neither help to fight poverty, feed anybody, or help anybody fight racism. But that's what they supposed to do. As a matter of fact, in their website, you can look it up, their mission statement is still up there. Here it is, quote, We are catalysts for racial justice in the South and beyond, working in partnership with the communities to dismantle white supremacy, strengthen intersectional movements, and advance the human rights of all people. So turns out, they're facing 11 counts from a grand jury. They've been indicted because the Southern Poverty Law Center, by the way, let me add one more thing. When you watch the news, any news at all, and you hear white supremacy attacks across the country, which by the way, I haven't heard in years, but they seem to keep saying they are. I just don't know where they are. We have a guy running, a Democrat running in Maine with a Nazi symbol on his chest.

Speaker 11:
[48:12] He's probably going to win.

Speaker 3:
[48:14] Okay.

Speaker 2:
[48:14] Anyway, he explained it away. He's a Democrat. He could say, well, you know, he explained it away.

Speaker 3:
[48:19] I got a permanent racist mark on my chest.

Speaker 2:
[48:21] I got a permanent schwa stick on my chest. I was at a tattoo parlor fell on me. So anyway.

Speaker 3:
[48:25] Oh, did you do one of those Dixie Chicks things where like, I thought it meant tranquility.

Speaker 2:
[48:29] Dude, if you just do it, I'm talking to the periphery now. If you don't know what that means, we have our main listeners and I love you guys. You're wonderful. Really. I mean, the support you show us is amazing. I don't thank you enough. I should do it more.

Speaker 4:
[48:40] We know we can always count on you.

Speaker 2:
[48:42] But we have a periphery that once in a while bounces around here. They're probably apolitical, maybe not Democrat or Republican, just kind of when they bounce around and they like some of the funny stuff we do, they may not like our politics or whatever. But really, if I could just get you just for a few minutes, few minutes a week, not even a day, just look something up, just be aware a little bit of what's going on because a story like this should move you to becoming active, just on weekends, to do something. Because the bottom line is every politician, every organization in this country that poses as, we're going to help fight racism, we're going to help fight this and cancer and this and that and the other thing, we're going to raise money for Children's Without Heads Foundation. They're all aggrift, they're all stealing your money. I'm repetitive, but it's true.

Speaker 3:
[49:34] It's sad, but it's true.

Speaker 2:
[49:35] Then this is the worst kind because this is Al Sharpton, as an organization. These are race-baiting people, and they do it simply for the money. And they enjoy some of the power they yield, because, okay, what I was trying to tell you earlier is when you watch the news and you see, you know, white supremacists is up in such and such a state, the Southern Poverty Law Center feeds the major media those stories.

Speaker 3:
[49:59] Yeah, because when you think about it, like, half of those incidents are always accompanied by data from the SPS, you know, Southern Poverty Law Center says, and people just hear Southern Poverty Law Center, and they go, oh, it sounds official.

Speaker 2:
[50:12] Lawyers, they must know, lawyers in poverty. So anyway, they're lying. They're making all of it up. I'll tell you why, because they were indicted because the Southern Poverty Law Center is paying the people they pretend to fight, the KKK, the United Clans of America, Unite the Right, National Alliance, National Socialist Movement, the Aryan Nation affiliated Sadistic Souls Motorcycle Club. They're giving money to the racists so they can pretend to fight them, so they can make more money through donations because they're a charity.

Speaker 3:
[50:47] Then, then, then, this hurts my head.

Speaker 2:
[50:50] And then, and then, they money launder money as a charity through banks. So they create all these, you've heard this story before, Biden knows this story really well. They create these LLCs, these corporations, they give them fake names, like one of them is a photography studio. It doesn't exist, but they were taking charitable donations, putting them in there, using that bank account to launder the money to give to the KKK. Then they would tell the KKK, we need you to go to this Trump rally and cheer Trump and we'll make a news story out of it. And that's exactly what they do. And then the media picks up on it because they'll go, oh, look at that, Trump's a racist, he's got the KKK cheering for him. It's unbelievable. Now let's just get down to the point here. Let's put Todd Blanch in here. He's the acting Attorney General for the United States of America to spell out what it's all about.

Speaker 5:
[51:40] You're alleging that the Southern Poverty Law Center was paying the leaders of KKK and other groups to continue their operations?

Speaker 6:
[51:52] I'm not alleging it, the grand jury return an indictment that says that. And so, what the investigation found according to the indictment that was returned today is that they were paying. So the Southern Poverty Law Center is raising money, asking folks to give them money to dismantle racism. And over a very long period of time, they were using some of the money they raised from donors to pay to, they called them field, you know, basically to informants, to, for information, for access, to just pay them for certain, to do certain things. And so yes, that's exactly what the indictment charges.

Speaker 2:
[52:30] Let's get down to some of the specifics. This is really important. Do you remember back, I guess it was in 2017, Trump was first year in office, first year as president. He went to Charlottesville, North Carolina. A woman got killed there by a runaway car. There was a, there was a, there was a Confederate statue that was coming. Remember when they were knocking all the statues down and everybody was saying, wait a minute, this is his-

Speaker 4:
[52:53] They're like, these are all racist, yeah.

Speaker 2:
[52:54] Yeah, but this is our history. You learn from history, okay? So there were people there, there were just parents and people who just were people. There weren't racist people, there were just people that were concerned about what was going on in the country with statues being torn down, especially after George Floyd, and they didn't want that to happen. Then in the other side, the Southern Poverty Law Center paid an organization called Unite the Right, a racist organization to go down there and be in charge of the Unite the Right Rally, which is what it actually was. It wasn't the Charlottesville Rally, it was the Unite the Right Rally. The man who put the whole thing together managed it, got paid six figures to do it. He was powered by the Southern Poverty Law Center. So he goes down there, the accident happens, or the guy steps on it, kills that woman, daughter, and we'll hear from the mother, and Trump's out there doing his speech. And then in the speech, he talks about how he's talking about just residents, people who are not involved in any racist group or anything. And he said, there's fine people on both sides. The media took that clip and ran with it. To this day, people think he actually meant that as a racist statement. But they didn't play the part after it.

Speaker 7:
[54:09] And I'm not talking about the neo-Nazis and the white nationalists, because they should be condemned totally.

Speaker 2:
[54:14] They left that part out.

Speaker 3:
[54:16] That's what Jen Psaki might call a cheap fake.

Speaker 2:
[54:19] To this day, people think that's what Trump meant. Chuck Schumer still goes out there. And nobody called white supremacists in Charlottesville a very good people has any right, any right, to lecture Jewish Americans about their personal political beliefs. And then Biden said he ran for print. Biden knew about... Biden was in on all this. This was all a setup to get Trump. Biden said he ran simply because of this.

Speaker 9:
[54:47] I spoke to the mom who lost her daughter. It's a consequence of those neo-Nazis and white supremacists come out.

Speaker 2:
[54:55] Can you speak up a little bit?

Speaker 20:
[54:57] You're a bag of crap.

Speaker 3:
[54:58] What?

Speaker 9:
[54:59] In America with torches, carrying Nazi banners, singing the same sick anti-Semitic bile.

Speaker 2:
[55:09] Where were you when Columbia was, UCLA and USC and Harvard and all those people were doing anti-Semitic protests? Where were you, Mr. President?

Speaker 3:
[55:19] I was with the bile, Jack.

Speaker 2:
[55:20] What a scumbag.

Speaker 9:
[55:22] I was sung in Germany in the 30s, and when her daughter was killed, they press went to the then President Trump and said, what do you think? He said, they're very fine people on both sides.

Speaker 2:
[55:32] Why is he whispering? What's wrong with him? So they're still going with that. People still think that actually happened. This is a complete lie. Here are the Latinos for Trump.

Speaker 20:
[55:41] I can't talk about how the media will take Trump out of context without talking about the original statement that kind of kicked off this idea that Trump is like this Hitlerian figure is when he said, very fine people on both sides. Do you remember that entire controversy? It's funny that to this day, there are people that still believe, oh, no, both sides had very fine people. Like they were very fine, like KKK white supremacists and then non-KKK white supremacists on the other side. That is quite literally not what he said.

Speaker 7:
[56:12] You had some very bad people in that group, but you also had people that were very fine people on both sides.

Speaker 2:
[56:20] Yeah, anyway. So yeah, so there's the whole story, but again, like I said, the media narrative has been planted, most people won't change their mind about anything they heard the first time and that's it. So now the Southern Poverty Law Center, which is accused of setting all this up, is facing charges like fraud, wire fraud, false statements, money laundering, conspiracy to commit money laundering, a slew of others, I don't understand, but I mean, they're indicted. So we'll see.

Speaker 4:
[56:49] Do you think something's going to happen?

Speaker 3:
[56:51] I mean, what happens when you indict a whole group like that? Who gets arrested?

Speaker 2:
[56:55] I don't know. I really don't know. I know that the, I just pulled up a story, just broke that the CEO of the Southern Poverty Law Center makes close to a million dollars a year. It's like we talk about most of these charities because they basically paid the people that they purport to fight against, to fight against them so they could keep their jobs. So it's like, it's like I said before, it's like the Red Cross, someday we come up with synthetic blood that can replace all blood types. We don't need the Red Cross anymore. We don't need any of their help, but yet they have to keep their jobs. So they come up with an idea to keep it going, because you've got to keep the scam going.

Speaker 3:
[57:29] Yeah, it's the arsonist firefighter.

Speaker 2:
[57:31] Remember when we found out that the Red Cross CEO, I remember that about five years ago, was making, was that the Red Cross? About 800 and, it was an enormous amount of money.

Speaker 3:
[57:38] It was Susan G. Komen that ripped my head apart, the Breast Cancer Foundation. The lady in charge of the Susan G. Komen Foundation makes $6 million a year.

Speaker 4:
[57:47] The CEO of the American Red Cross makes between $600,000 and $1.3 million annually.

Speaker 2:
[57:53] With a, it's a charity.

Speaker 3:
[57:56] For who? For them.

Speaker 2:
[57:59] Anyway, Trump's extended the ceasefire with Iran, and just another three to five days. But during that time, Iran has hit three ships in the Strait of Hormuz. And I want to make sure that everybody understands, because it's not told to me, because they want you to think, poor Iran, for invading their territory. They don't own.

Speaker 4:
[58:15] It's not theirs.

Speaker 2:
[58:16] They don't have any right to the Strait. It's just that it's there.

Speaker 3:
[58:19] Yeah, it's not the Strait of Iran.

Speaker 2:
[58:21] Yes.

Speaker 3:
[58:21] So it belongs to Hormuz.

Speaker 2:
[58:23] Before it's all said and done, it's going to be called the Gulf of Trump.

Speaker 3:
[58:26] Wow. Bigly huge.

Speaker 2:
[58:29] Anyway, but there was no meeting. Vance never left DC. We don't know who we're talking to. It's either the...

Speaker 4:
[58:38] Is there an Ayatollah over there somewhere that can charge?

Speaker 2:
[58:40] He's been shut down. And he didn't put up a fight because he's got no leg and they think he's disfigured. So he's barely speak from one of our bombs. And you know, that makes me happy. And then there's the crazy hardline Iranian army that it seems to be in control now. They don't know who to talk to. So he's doing what, you know, it sounds like a good idea. He's squeezing them economically because the only lifeline Iran has besides the army, which is about a million men, is that the oil is what keeps them going. We shut down their ports. They can't get oil in or out. China is getting irritated because China gets 30% of their oil and Iran sells 90% of their oil to China.

Speaker 3:
[59:24] Is that why China was sending those missile parts that we heard about?

Speaker 2:
[59:27] Then we intercepted a ship that had, what was it, about 1,200 boxes shaped like missiles. Funny how we never heard what was in them, but I'm assuming they said military parts.

Speaker 4:
[59:38] She said the box like the missile. They'll never know what's inside.

Speaker 3:
[59:40] Parts you use to build missiles from China.

Speaker 2:
[59:43] So Maria Bartiromo got into it with this guy. This is a guy that will, he has no morals, he has no red line, he will lie. Lying to him is just a tool in the toolbox, as they say in politics. But he worked under the Obama administration. I think, this is my guess, because of the way you're gonna hear in a minute, I think he's the one that Obama had an affair with. Oh, it could be. Really? Just listen to the way he talks about him. So the Obama administration transferred its fact, 1.7 billion in cash to Iran in cash on airplanes, because that's the way they would appease them not to build a nuke. And that didn't work out, did it? That's according to CBS News. The funds were delivered in cash, Swiss francs, euros and other foreign currencies, plus American currency, flown on pallets.

Speaker 3:
[60:32] That's how much money, pallets.

Speaker 2:
[60:34] Yeah. So here he is, Bartiromo gets into a brawl with... I can't read what I wrote because I get fined.

Speaker 4:
[60:42] You get serial killer.

Speaker 2:
[60:43] He's a California... Oh, he has a D in front of his name. I finished the word. He's a California Democrat. He's on the House Oversight Committee, and he's arguing with Bartiromo that that never happened.

Speaker 16:
[60:55] Are you suggesting that Obama's leadership on Iran was better? Because under President Obama, there were 14 wire transfers to a... Hold on, hold on. There were 14 wire transfers to a Swiss account linked to Hezbollah. Between 2014 and 2016, that was a total of $1.7 billion. This was after he left office. So, you know, it was almost like a shadow government. He also sent pellets of cash in a plane to Iran. Now, why would you send money to Iran?

Speaker 20:
[61:24] Barack Obama was a great statesman who left America much safer. I wouldn't put Donald Trump in the same paragraph. The reality is we didn't have 13 American service members dead.

Speaker 2:
[61:36] Well, first of all, that was Biden. But this guy, I'm telling you, I've never listened to him. He's one of the biggest liars I've ever heard in my life. But go on.

Speaker 20:
[61:47] The reality is we never had gas go up from $2.30 to $4. You know why?

Speaker 2:
[61:54] It's insane.

Speaker 3:
[61:55] Was he here? Did he just leave the planet for a few years and then come back?

Speaker 2:
[61:59] I think so.

Speaker 16:
[61:59] A lot of the things that you just said are just not true, Congressman. I mean, look, we have to look at this realistically. When President Obama sent money to the Iranians and what did they do? They resumed their build up of enrichment.

Speaker 20:
[62:14] That's not true.

Speaker 16:
[62:16] It is. What's not true?

Speaker 20:
[62:18] What's not true?

Speaker 16:
[62:19] What specifically about that sentence is not true?

Speaker 20:
[62:22] We were on a path to having a denuclear Iran, but what happened is it wasn't in Netanyahu's interest and dragged us into another war in the Middle East. They've hurt American people, and the American people are tired of it.

Speaker 16:
[62:34] Relax.

Speaker 2:
[62:35] They just used the money to further their nuclear program. They never stopped. They admitted right here, they gave the money to a terrorist group that attacks Israel Hezbollah. This guy's just an anti-Semite on top of it.

Speaker 3:
[62:48] Dude.

Speaker 2:
[62:48] I like his name, Adam, so stupid.

Speaker 3:
[62:50] Well, I know that's fine, please. Nobody needs to know who that is.

Speaker 2:
[62:52] No, you need to know. What a boob. Sunnyway, what?

Speaker 3:
[62:54] What a boob, how could you say that?

Speaker 2:
[62:56] And it goes on.

Speaker 16:
[62:57] Congressman, it doesn't change the fact that 10 presidents before President Trump all said the same thing. I think there's some connection issue. Congressman, it doesn't change the fact that 10 presidents before President Trump all said the same thing. Iran cannot have a nuclear weapon. They are the leading state sponsor of terrorism. They cannot have a nuclear weapon.

Speaker 20:
[63:22] One president delivered, and that was Barack Obama.

Speaker 16:
[63:24] No, that's not true.

Speaker 10:
[63:26] Barack Obama is the only one who delivered.

Speaker 16:
[63:28] You're talking fantasy. Obama did nothing about it. You're talking fantasy. Obama did nothing about it. Other than send money to the Iranians.

Speaker 10:
[63:37] Obama got the whole world.

Speaker 20:
[63:39] He didn't send money to them, that just factually folks.

Speaker 16:
[63:41] What?

Speaker 12:
[63:42] Are you kidding me?

Speaker 3:
[63:44] Turn my mic off, I'm going home. I can't.

Speaker 2:
[63:46] That's what I'm telling you. This is just, this is Ro Khanna.

Speaker 3:
[63:49] He must have had his, was he buried in denial?

Speaker 2:
[63:52] No, no, dude, he's lying, that's the new thing, to just straight out lie.

Speaker 3:
[63:56] Act like you haven't been here for the last four years while you listed everything he listed there that was Trump's fault was under Biden's administration. Wow.

Speaker 2:
[64:04] But everything was a lie. I mean, for instance, when he talked about gas, listen to this, the national average for a gallon of gas on President Trump's last day in office January 20th, 21 was $2.39. The highest national average gas during Joe Biden's presidency at the same time in his presidency was $5.01.

Speaker 3:
[64:21] Okay.

Speaker 2:
[64:22] It's just, they don't, there's no law against lying, except if you do it to Congress and even then you get away with it. Apparently, our Congress, it's just, yeah, I know it's a senator.

Speaker 3:
[64:33] Wow.

Speaker 2:
[64:34] All right. Well, Senator locally here, dissent is his challenge. Hakeem Jeffries. Oh, by the way, I didn't tell you in Virginia, they did that vote 51.1% voted for redistricting Virginia, where the most balanced state electorally has become the most unbalanced gerrymandered state in the country. Now Republicans stand, I think, 10 to 1 in the Congress, so they gain four seats if we go to the 2026 midterms, the way it is right now, but a judge struck it down yesterday immediately. Really? Yeah, it's good right now, but then it'll go to appeals court, and then they'll either say yes or no, and then it's going to end up in the Supreme Court, which is a good thing, because if the Supreme Court hears the case, I don't think they have heard a gerrymandering case of this type yet. Boy, that could have national implications for Gavin Newsome, and unfortunately even for Texas. We'll see. Anyway, so Huckin Jeffries was mentioning how Florida needs to be, he didn't say gerrymandered, he said redistrict.

Speaker 4:
[65:33] So they're trying to do it here, or they want to do it here.

Speaker 2:
[65:36] Yeah, so Governor DeSantis. I love DeSantis. He was invited, he invited Huckin Jeffries. Where's the Mexican music?

Speaker 3:
[65:53] Oh, I keep forgetting about the Huckin.

Speaker 2:
[65:56] He was invited by DeSantis to come down here, F around and find out on redistricting Florida. Yeah, here's DeSantis. I heard this guy Jeffries popping off in Washington about Florida.

Speaker 1:
[66:12] He wants to be Speaker of the House.

Speaker 23:
[66:15] And he's kind of like, you know, more liberal than Pelosi and all this other stuff from New York City.

Speaker 20:
[66:20] I just want to know, I just, oh Florida can't do it. We're going to go after Florida.

Speaker 23:
[66:24] Please be my guest.

Speaker 5:
[66:26] I will pay for you to come down to Florida and campaign.

Speaker 23:
[66:29] I'll put you up in the Florida Governor's Mansion.

Speaker 24:
[66:32] We'll take you fishing.

Speaker 23:
[66:33] We'll do all this stuff.

Speaker 2:
[66:35] There's nothing that could be better for Republicans in Florida than to see Jeffries, Hakeem Jeffries, everywhere around this state.

Speaker 4:
[66:46] Isn't that funny? And then Hakeem was like, oh, yeah, well, I'm going to say something back. Yeah. Do you have the Hakeem?

Speaker 2:
[66:52] No, I don't have the other one. Do you have it?

Speaker 4:
[66:53] I gave it to you.

Speaker 2:
[66:54] Oh, you did? Yeah. Today?

Speaker 4:
[66:56] Yes, I left it in there.

Speaker 2:
[66:58] Okay, okay.

Speaker 4:
[66:58] I get it.

Speaker 19:
[66:59] I get it.

Speaker 4:
[66:59] Okay.

Speaker 19:
[67:00] There you go.

Speaker 11:
[67:01] I'll play it.

Speaker 4:
[67:02] Here is Hakeem's response. Now, he couldn't get to the microphone fast enough.

Speaker 23:
[67:06] The Florida Republicans is F around and find out. They'll be fortunate if they get two or three. While in California, we are going to get all five. The Republicans are dummymandering their way into the minority before a single voter's cast, because they started this war and we're going to finish it.

Speaker 2:
[67:46] Dummymandering?

Speaker 3:
[67:47] Yeah, he's doing a Chuck Schumer. I come up with a silly thing that seems funny, because that's what kids are into, right? I made it funny.

Speaker 2:
[67:54] This guy's the dumbest person on earth. He called Trump dumb.

Speaker 24:
[67:58] Hakeem Jeffries, the Democratic leader, has called you a wannabe king.

Speaker 7:
[68:02] I call him a low IQ. He doesn't even know, and I watched him the other day interview, the guy doesn't even know what a tariff is.

Speaker 2:
[68:09] But there's been bipartisan criticism of the tariffs. Why wouldn't you just work with Congress to come up with a plan to push tariffs?

Speaker 7:
[68:18] I have the right to do tariffs.

Speaker 2:
[68:20] Anyway, he called him dumb, and then Hakeem Jeffries responded, saying that Donald Trump is the dumbest person ever, blah, blah, blah. He just said-

Speaker 23:
[68:27] Well, it's an extraordinary insult, but he continues to repeat it. And what's so ironic is that Donald Trump is clearly the dumbest person ever to sit at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue.

Speaker 2:
[68:37] Yeah, I wouldn't talk, say that too loud, Team Obama.

Speaker 4:
[68:40] Yeah, exactly.

Speaker 2:
[68:41] What a moron. I mean, don't you remember the statement he made just about three weeks ago about when we were shut down and he wanted to send ice to the airports?

Speaker 23:
[68:49] The last thing that the American people need are for untrained ice agents to be deployed at airports all across the country, potentially to brutalize or in some instances, kill them. We've already seen how ice conducts itself.

Speaker 2:
[69:03] To kill people at the airport.

Speaker 4:
[69:04] Careful if you go to the airport, ice might try to kill you.

Speaker 2:
[69:06] Still my favorite, Hakeem Jeffries. He actually didn't say anything. He didn't have to. He stood behind Chuck Schumer for during the first shutdown. You remember that?

Speaker 10:
[69:14] Yes.

Speaker 2:
[69:14] And they were all repainted. I guess somebody used AI and painted sombreros on top of Hakeem Jeffries with a moustache. And this is... No, I have the music's in the thing.

Speaker 10:
[69:24] Look, guys, there's no way to sugarcoat it.

Speaker 3:
[69:27] Nobody likes Democrats anymore.

Speaker 23:
[69:29] We have no voters left because of all of our woke trans bullsh**.

Speaker 2:
[69:33] Not even black people want to vote for us anymore.

Speaker 23:
[69:35] Even Latinos hate us.

Speaker 22:
[69:37] So we need new voters.

Speaker 23:
[69:38] And if we give all these illegal aliens free health care, We might be able to get them on our side so they can vote for us.

Speaker 2:
[69:46] They can't even speak English, so they won't realize we're just a bunch of woke pieces of s***, you know? At least for a while until they learn English and they realize they hate us too.

Speaker 8:
[69:59] I love AI.

Speaker 2:
[70:00] Isn't it great?

Speaker 8:
[70:01] That's too good.

Speaker 2:
[70:01] Well, the speech is real, but you know.

Speaker 8:
[70:05] I tell you what.

Speaker 2:
[70:06] I know. All right, here he is, President of the United States. Good morning, Donald Trump.

Speaker 10:
[70:12] Well, good morning, Stacey, Jill and Smokecrack. And hello, America. It's your greenest president ever, you know, because Earth Day was yesterday.

Speaker 2:
[70:20] Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 10:
[70:20] Are we still fighting global warming? It's still happening and we can't let up. So do your part today by putting your air conditioning on high and opening all the windows. Do it from other nature, won't you?

Speaker 4:
[70:32] Well, we will. I definitely always have the air on. So what have you been up to since we last talked to you?

Speaker 10:
[70:36] Well, thanks to me, Jill. The formerly bankrupt Red Lobster is bringing back their endless shrimp promotion. I did it. My economy helped bring them back. America's staple of fine seafood dining is back. I've said it before, shrimp it ain't easy. All right.

Speaker 2:
[70:52] Let's begin with the serious stuff. So you extended the ceasefire three to five days with the rabid. Apparently, they're not interested in a second round of peace talks, but you sent your son-in-law Jared Kushner to Pakistan to hold the talks. What's going on with all that?

Speaker 10:
[71:04] Yes, I sent my son-in-law, which is a bold move because, frankly, if there's one thing the world respects, it's unsolicited advice from a son-in-law. But I will tell you, right now, there's no easy fix for Iran. It's not the same easy fix as eating your weight in Big Macs. That always fixes things with me, but not with Iran. Maybe they'll come around if we cease the ceasefire. Who knows? We'll see what happens.

Speaker 4:
[71:29] A new NBC poll, news polls, found that your approval rating dropped a little bit to a new low over rising costs in the Iran war. Any comment on that?

Speaker 10:
[71:38] Yes. If you believe the fake news, my approval rating is now officially below a Kardashian IQ in popularity. On the bright side, at least something's coming down. Even my poll numbers are trying to cut costs.

Speaker 2:
[71:50] Oh boy. Well, next question. Nancy Sinatra criticized you for posting a video of her father, Frank, performing his song, My Way on Truth Social this past week. She responded, this is sacrilege. You got any comments for old Nance?

Speaker 10:
[72:03] Low-energy Nancy, I like to call her. Sorry, Toots, but My Way is also how I approach copyright issues. Seriously, Nancy Sinatra is such a loser. She is the Kamala Harris of Meghan Markle's of Ellen DeGeneres'.

Speaker 8:
[72:17] That's pretty bad.

Speaker 4:
[72:19] And finally, you're commemorating 250 years of the Bible in America with public readings. I saw one the other day of the entire Bible over the course of one week. Have you ever read the entire Bible?

Speaker 10:
[72:29] Have I read the entire Bible? Did Biden join his high school Spanish club just so he could take a siesta every afternoon? Yes, I'm a big fan of reading the Bible. Matter of fact, I've always have at least two Corinthians with me at all times when I do it. Now, seeing as how all this reading is being done in Washington, Congress might have to skip over the thou shalt not lie part.

Speaker 2:
[72:52] What's your favorite version of the Bible?

Speaker 10:
[72:54] Oh, without a doubt, the Trump Bible. It's an incredible Bible. It's way better than the Pulp Fiction version. And it still has all your favorite books in it like Genesis, Exodus, and the rest. And believe me, I am scholarly enough to know that Phil Collins wasn't in Genesis at the time. But it's a great Bible and not just because it's covered in the finest Corinthian pleather. Be sure to get one autograph from me for only $6.99, available at the White House online store.

Speaker 2:
[73:24] Well, we have to go now, but thanks for calling President Trump.

Speaker 10:
[73:27] Later, Stacy. By the way, I'll be reading a Bible verse about humility tonight. Maybe the Pope should do that too. He's not as good at humility as I am.

Speaker 1:
[73:36] The Sunny Update. It's today. It's me, depressed. With Rick Chill and Smogstack. Yeah, having fun with a world gone crazy.

Speaker 4:
[73:52] It's Crazy Talk, brought to you by All Electric Services. Well, we're getting to that time of year again, where it gets really warm, and it's making its return. I'm talking about Vibrio vulnificus, otherwise known as flesh-eating bacteria.

Speaker 3:
[74:07] Oh, it sounds way dirtier.

Speaker 4:
[74:09] It sure does. Now, it's not here yet. Right now, they're dealing with it in certain waterways. It's up in Long Island. Bacteria that usually goes to warmer water. It's usually not really in the oceans, but it's more in rivers and brooks and things of that nature. So there are certain ponds. This was a Stony Brook University professor. He's like an ecologist within the School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences. He announced last week the team found evidence because they go around, they test the waters of some certain hot spots and some certain ponds and stuff like that. So he made that announcement. That always scares me because I know it was over in New Jersey. We had stuff going on down here for a little while, remember?

Speaker 2:
[74:53] I got one for you.

Speaker 4:
[74:54] Oh boy.

Speaker 2:
[74:55] In California, they just found an invasive jumping worm that can't be killed.

Speaker 3:
[75:00] It's a jumping worm?

Speaker 2:
[75:01] Yes. Nearly impossible to eradicate once they establish in gardens. There are currently no registered pesticide products for those jumping worms and they can make you really, really sick.

Speaker 18:
[75:12] How far do they jump?

Speaker 4:
[75:13] Is this a land worm or a water worm?

Speaker 2:
[75:15] It's a land worm.

Speaker 4:
[75:16] Oh God.

Speaker 2:
[75:17] They say it's in California, but these things can spread. Somebody brings a plant in their car after vacation from California, all of a sudden we got it here. I'm telling you, man.

Speaker 3:
[75:25] We did one movie shoot here and there's an island full of monkeys in Florida now, so you really gotta be careful.

Speaker 2:
[75:29] They say if you see one, kill it on sight. It's got a hammerhead. Do not chop it up.

Speaker 4:
[75:36] Why not? Does it regenerate?

Speaker 2:
[75:38] No, because it becomes even more toxic. Pour salt and vinegar or alcohol on it. I mean, they haven't been spotted in Florida, but we're probably one of the most likely states where it would be spotted. They jump.

Speaker 4:
[75:49] Have you ever tried to kill a bug and you don't really have bug spray so you pour everything you can think of on it? You're like, here's some Windex, here's this, here's some bleach. I'll spray it, maybe it'll smell nice. Here's some hairspray. And you just throw everything at it until it just starts to shrivel up and die. Do that with my wasps nests outside sometimes.

Speaker 2:
[76:06] Wasps, they get in my mailbox.

Speaker 4:
[76:08] They're everywhere.

Speaker 2:
[76:09] I open the mailbox, grab my mail. I had to run.

Speaker 4:
[76:11] Well, because they'll build a nest. Like we have, I have brick walls outside, and they love to attach their little nest to the brick wall. And they're hard to see. So what you have to do is you almost have to like lean against the brick wall and look at it like a flat surface. And then you'll see the little bumps and you can go and like knock them down. But I started having to keep on my outdoor light. You know, you have like a little light outside your front door. This is outside my back door because if the light stays on, then it stays hot in there and they won't build. But during the day, they go in there and they fly up and they squeeze themselves in there and they build a little nest right inside there.

Speaker 2:
[76:44] Yeah, I'm not putting up with that.

Speaker 4:
[76:46] Hey, have you checked your blueberries? Do you eat blueberries or get blueberry waffles or blueberry?

Speaker 2:
[76:50] Talking about my old phone.

Speaker 4:
[76:53] No, that's a blackberry.

Speaker 2:
[76:54] No, no.

Speaker 3:
[76:55] I'm liked by blueberry.

Speaker 4:
[76:56] So we talk a lot. I've become, I can't help it. I know I talk a lot about food and the food industry and the poison and how they're poisoning us and how everything's fake now, but it's, it's getting worse and it's everywhere. And now, a lot of the stuff that says it's blueberry flavored, whether it be a bagel or a waffle doesn't actually contain blueberries. Did you hear about this?

Speaker 21:
[77:18] Mothers are going viral after finding simulated blueberries in their kids' food.

Speaker 11:
[77:23] Why is there a rubber blueberry in my toddler's snack?

Speaker 17:
[77:28] It's a silicone blueberry. So I picked up the blueberry bagel bag and it says simulated blueberry bagels. It was like simulated, simulated blueberries.

Speaker 4:
[77:37] It's not an actual fresh blueberry. It's something called imitation blueberries. The ingredients are sugar, corn syrup, corn cereal, modified cornstarch, hydrogenated vegetable oil, artificial flour and synthetic color. Seven ingredients engineered to replace one piece of fruit.

Speaker 3:
[77:58] Why would they do this?

Speaker 4:
[78:00] Money, seven ingredients, because it's a calculated decision they made.

Speaker 3:
[78:03] To put rubber in food.

Speaker 4:
[78:04] Yep, because real blueberries are expensive and perishable. So they use these fake pellets. They're cheap, they're shelf stable, and they're indistinguishable from the front of the package. And they don't bank on you flipping that bag over, which I think more and more people are doing now.

Speaker 2:
[78:22] You got to.

Speaker 3:
[78:23] Oh my gosh.

Speaker 2:
[78:24] You got to look at the stuff.

Speaker 3:
[78:25] Just don't make blueberry stuff. If you don't have blueberries, you don't get to make blueberry stuff. Can it be that simple?

Speaker 2:
[78:30] You know, you can kill yourself if you want, but don't do this to your children. Again, every time I go to Walmart, I just get upset because I see these people with three kids and dragging three kids behind, little kids, and I see just the garbage that they're feeding them, just crap.

Speaker 3:
[78:43] That's good for them.

Speaker 4:
[78:45] You know, it's good for the cancer industry. You know what it's in mostly that I noticed when it's in like baby stuff.

Speaker 2:
[78:52] Yeah, no, no, it's horrible.

Speaker 4:
[78:53] Like it's all the baby, like, here's some banana baby yogurt. There's not a real banana in it. There's no banana. It's banana flavoring.

Speaker 8:
[79:00] Here's some fruit pout.

Speaker 4:
[79:01] They have fruit in that.

Speaker 2:
[79:03] Why don't we make fun of, you know, we can make front of France for a lot of things. But I mean, you can't do that there.

Speaker 4:
[79:09] A lot of people will buy blueberry muffin mix. Or let's say you're making waffles in the morning. And like some people will just buy blueberry waffle mix. It's like, no, just get regular waffle mix, get some fresh blueberries, throw them on there, close the waffle maker. And there you go. But if you ever sifted through the dry mix, you'll have like a little blue speck. Have you ever picked it up and eaten it? It's tasty, but it's just sugar. That's all it is.

Speaker 2:
[79:32] It isn't anything else.

Speaker 4:
[79:33] It's not even a blueberry. Well, like this mother, that was crazier because she picked it out of her kid's food and opened it. She's like, this is a silicone fake blueberry.

Speaker 2:
[79:42] God, it's not even like food.

Speaker 18:
[79:45] It's pretend.

Speaker 4:
[79:46] They're doing it with our chocolate. Smoke, didn't you say you had a weird avocado the other day?

Speaker 3:
[79:50] Oh, yeah. Some of the white ones is like I couldn't cut it.

Speaker 4:
[79:53] Yes, rubber. It was rubbery.

Speaker 3:
[79:55] Like it just had too much flex. It didn't mush. It flexed.

Speaker 2:
[79:58] You think it was a fake avocado, really?

Speaker 3:
[80:00] It didn't feel like avocado.

Speaker 4:
[80:02] I think they're they're modifying them for sure. I cannot find for the life of me. I cannot find melon, good melon anymore, like a cantaloupe.

Speaker 3:
[80:12] Oh, good melons are always hard to find, Jill.

Speaker 4:
[80:14] The past couple of cantaloupes I found, one I cut open and it was it's shredded like meat, like it's it's it's shredded like sinew.

Speaker 22:
[80:24] Silent green is made out of people.

Speaker 4:
[80:27] And I was like, what is this texture? And then the other one I had was nice and juicy. And I cut it and it just smelled like chlorine. Chlorine? Yeah. And I was like, and then I took a bite because I was like, hmm, maybe it's rinsed it. I took a bite. No, it tastes like chlorine too. Great. What are we going to do? I don't know.

Speaker 3:
[80:44] I had a cantaloupe that I, it started getting weird on the bottom, but you couldn't tell. Okay. From like the top. And Taylor and I were like, what is that smell? It's, I poured bleach in every trash can because I didn't know what it was.

Speaker 7:
[80:58] And she's like, dude, it was the cantaloupe.

Speaker 3:
[81:01] And I'm like, what happened to it? She was, I don't know. The bottom was rotted, but I've never smelled fruit rot like that. I thought I had a dead rat in my kitchen.

Speaker 4:
[81:08] Have you ever smelled, my husband introduced me to this. Actually, he didn't introduce me. He told me about it, and then it kind of manifested. Whenever I buy like a bag of potatoes, baked potatoes, I always leave them on like the pantry floor. I don't put them in the fridge because they're not refrigerated at the store, so you have to refrigerate them at home. I guess a couple of them were rotten. And he used to always tell me this tale of how bad rotten potatoes smell. And I was like, rotten potatoes? They just turned black. I've never smelled a rotten potato.

Speaker 2:
[81:35] It is death.

Speaker 3:
[81:38] Yeah, it smells like a dead body or like roadkill.

Speaker 4:
[81:41] Yes, I opened up the pantry and there's a Spanish name for it that he calls it. I forget what he says, but I opened up the pantry and I was like, and he was like, oh, that's whatever, papa, whatever it is. And I'm like, oh my God.

Speaker 2:
[81:52] Papadogini?

Speaker 4:
[81:52] No, it was some kind of Spanish thing.

Speaker 3:
[81:55] Yeah, you know the Spanish, Rick, tell us the Spanish.

Speaker 2:
[81:57] I don't know. I can't. I know the curse words.

Speaker 4:
[81:59] Potato.

Speaker 2:
[81:59] Well, I can't say it.

Speaker 3:
[82:00] Make the Spanish at us.

Speaker 2:
[82:01] No, I can't make that Spanish. That's clean Spanish. I can make the bad Spanish.

Speaker 4:
[82:05] Okay, gotcha.

Speaker 2:
[82:06] Yeah.

Speaker 4:
[82:07] Yeah, it was nasty. Moving on to Stephanie Fritch. Do you know who Stephanie Fritch is?

Speaker 2:
[82:11] From the Fritch Corporation. Yeah. Who's that?

Speaker 4:
[82:13] Stephanie Fritch is the election official in charge of elections.

Speaker 2:
[82:19] Oh my God. Wait till you hear this.

Speaker 4:
[82:20] It's gonna pop.

Speaker 2:
[82:21] No, no, no. Now I know who it is. Oh my God.

Speaker 4:
[82:23] Wisconsin Township, Pennsylvania is complaining that, ready for this? He may have to travel to Thailand. Now, the reason I say he is because Stephanie is a man, a biological man that is trying to transition into a woman. And he's complaining that having bottom surgery, which is having your pee pee cut off, is too expensive in the United States. Now, this guy is an election official in charge of elections. I just feel the need to say that.

Speaker 2:
[82:49] That, that, that in itself right there, it's, it's just, why?

Speaker 4:
[82:53] Now, now I'm going to play you this audio, but then I got to say something right after it. So, this is, this is her, him, him.

Speaker 14:
[83:00] For me, I'm a transgender woman who lives in America. I have tried for a very long time to get my bottom surgery, but unfortunately, it's been out of my affordability level for a very long time. In America, I am on, I'm disabled on SSDI.

Speaker 4:
[83:21] And he's disabled. What kind?

Speaker 14:
[83:24] I only get Medicare for my health insurance. I'm grateful to have Medicare, but at the end of the day, it's not enough. I have tried for years to get my bottom surgery and the bottom line is I choose that fund, but it will be cheaper for me to go to Thailand or Canada to get my bottom surgery than in America. My total pay is 20% because I only get on Medicare. That's all I get. I didn't qualify for Medicaid. I would have paid all these costs. So on my limited income, what I'm trying to do right now is actually raise some money so I can go to Thailand and actually get my medically necessary procedures.

Speaker 18:
[84:09] Medically necessary.

Speaker 2:
[84:11] I wouldn't go to Thailand to get waxed. I just wouldn't.

Speaker 3:
[84:17] I wouldn't say that's medically necessary. So, cry me a river, you want to get a boob job and you're mad that no one else is going to pay for it?

Speaker 2:
[84:26] Yeah, it's an elective surgery, but at the same time, I can't believe that Medicare actually pays 80% of that? Is that what he said? Do we consider that necessary surgery?

Speaker 4:
[84:35] I don't know, but the comments, here's where the question comes in. There's concerns about who's overseeing our local elections. This is not a stable individual. Now, you say that because he's transgender, you're just a bigot. No, let me just paint a picture for you. Do you ever, I think this happens more with girls than with guys, but do you ever, like for me, if I see someone that has a really cute outfit on or like a really cool look, I'm like, oh, that's so cute on them. Let me see if I could try it. And then you get it and you try and you're like, mm, it's not my look. I can't pull it off.

Speaker 3:
[85:09] I can't do the yellow pants.

Speaker 4:
[85:13] Do you think that there are men that want to transition into a woman and they do the things and they put on makeup and they grow their hair out and they put on a wig and they put on the outfit and they stand in front of the mirror and they go, mm, maybe not.

Speaker 3:
[85:25] Yeah, I thought it would work, but.

Speaker 2:
[85:27] My other question is, and you'd have to go to, before you jump and go, need to buy a dress, 10 years ago. Um, look at the surgery and what happens post surgery for the rest of your life with that type of surgery.

Speaker 4:
[85:41] Why would you want that?

Speaker 3:
[85:42] It doesn't seem worth it.

Speaker 2:
[85:43] You could be a woman all you want, and I think you could make yourself happy if you do it because really, if you're a mess before you get surgery or any of those identity changes or anything, you're going to be a mess afterwards no matter what. You're going to be more miserable when you have to inject yourself constantly, and it's not what you think it is. You don't automatically get a vajayjay. Not bad. It's a fake. Go look at it.

Speaker 4:
[86:04] Just look it up. It's pretty barbaric.

Speaker 2:
[86:06] It's insane.

Speaker 4:
[86:07] And it's painful and it's forever.

Speaker 2:
[86:09] You know, you got to learn. This is okay.

Speaker 4:
[86:12] You don't have to describe it.

Speaker 2:
[86:13] No, no, no, I'm not going to describe it. I'm just saying that before, and this is, look, you're over 18, do what the hell you want. I'm just saying because somewhere deep inside of me, way, way inside where you can't even find it, I do care a little bit about people that are ill and do things to themselves that they really should have missed in to before they did it and it's too late. Just look at what you're doing. You're a man, right? You're biologically a man, and that's what you are. You can't change that. I don't care how much stuff you-

Speaker 4:
[86:40] You can change yourself to feel like a woman if that's what you're comfortable with.

Speaker 2:
[86:43] You can do all that. Again, I keep saying this guy, by the way, I tried to call him last week. I wanted to bring him on the show. He hasn't called me back yet. Maybe he heard the show. But a friend of mine in LA, he's been transgender forever, forever. Great guy. What, he won't come on? No, no, no, he just didn't call me back. Hope he's okay. But yeah, if you're gonna do that, man, even as an adult, you really got to see the unemotional part of what you're getting yourself into. I mean, it is not what you think it is. I know people get into, I'm gonna be happy and I'm gonna be this. You know what? You may be satisfied that mentally, what's the word? Logically, you explain yourself, this is gonna be great because I'll be fully what I authentically am.

Speaker 3:
[87:26] Yeah, after about three years of therapy and the medication and the surgery.

Speaker 2:
[87:29] Yeah, but it's not just that. Then the incontinence and all the other medical issues you're facing, it's a disaster.

Speaker 3:
[87:35] It's very, there's a lot of complications.

Speaker 2:
[87:38] So the thing is, it's just, you know, sit down. First of all, again, you know, is it Thailand? It's South Korea. Where's the-

Speaker 3:
[87:44] Thailand, I think.

Speaker 2:
[87:45] The girly boys, no, the-

Speaker 3:
[87:47] Oh yeah, it's Thailand.

Speaker 2:
[87:47] The lady. The lady boys. Is it Thailand?

Speaker 3:
[87:51] Yeah.

Speaker 2:
[87:51] They're very happy. And you know what? They don't have issues like we have in the United States. There's no protesting and the transgender bigots. None of that's going on. These guys admit they're guys, but they dress like women and some of them are gorgeous. And they're happy. They've done what we're trying to do here, but we go overboard. We get all ridiculous on this.

Speaker 3:
[88:10] There's a difference between living your truth and then trying to get someone else to live your lie.

Speaker 2:
[88:14] That's true. And there's all that pressure.

Speaker 4:
[88:16] But here's a very logical question. If having certain genital organs doesn't make you a specific gender, then how does cutting it off affirm that gender?

Speaker 23:
[88:28] You know what I'm saying? Why the need to...

Speaker 2:
[88:30] Why are all people, women especially, saying we need a female president? I thought we didn't distinguish between biological females and males.

Speaker 4:
[88:39] I'm all for having a chick president if she's qualified. I don't need Kamala Harris up there mumbling with her word salad, going to the salad bar every other day, telling me what to do. I don't need that.

Speaker 3:
[88:50] And if you want everybody else to tolerate you, tolerate yourself first.

Speaker 2:
[88:53] Oh, that's a good one. That wasn't bad smoke. That's pretty good. I don't have a philosopher's smokestack jingle, but I do have the professor.

Speaker 4:
[89:02] All right. Let's go to Tucker Carlson. What is going on? I have, I, I feel like it's invasion of the pod people, like the, the body snatchers, like somebody actually said that it's Megan Kelly, body snatched Candace Owen, body snatched Tucker Carlson, body snatched. What's happening?

Speaker 2:
[89:20] I don't know about Megan Kelly. I know the other three, especially Tucker. I used to watch him all the time, man. He's smart. He campaigned for Trump. Either somebody got to him. You know what I mean?

Speaker 4:
[89:31] Like that's what I am holding. You can't see me. I'm holding my hand to God. I'm like, that's what I'm saying.

Speaker 2:
[89:36] Yeah. But then you look at Tucker Carlson, his family's freaking wealthy. He's wealthy. They don't need the money. So what is it? What happened? Because first of all, he's speaking illogically. He never explains himself, but he does have one thing that I hate to say this would be the root of it all.

Speaker 22:
[89:53] He hates the Jews.

Speaker 2:
[89:54] And it's apparent when you listen to him, if you listen in context, the things he's said over the last two years.

Speaker 4:
[89:59] Well, he's very anti-Israel for sure.

Speaker 2:
[90:03] But you might as well be anti-Semitic because that's what it is, saying one and the same.

Speaker 4:
[90:06] But he came out with this big apology. Did you hear this?

Speaker 2:
[90:09] Yes, yeah. You and I and everyone else who supported him, you wrote speeches for him, I campaigned for him.

Speaker 18:
[90:15] I mean, we're implicated in this for sure.

Speaker 4:
[90:17] He's talking about Trump.

Speaker 25:
[90:18] Yes. It's not enough to say, well, I changed my mind or like, oh, this is bad, I'm out. It's like in very small ways, but in real ways, you and me and millions of people like us are the reason this is happening right now. Yes.

Speaker 2:
[90:33] So I do think it's like a moment to wrestle We'll be tormented by it for a long time, I will be. And I want to say I'm sorry for misleading people.

Speaker 25:
[90:48] It was not intentional, that's all I'll say.

Speaker 2:
[90:50] But anyway, the question does present itself immediately, like what is this? I'm glad he did what he did, because also you open your eyes to a lot of stuff that perhaps we wouldn't have known if it weren't for you, but then it comes into question, how come you got fired at Fox News? We still haven't gotten the answer to that. And really, who's got to you? Because you never give any details as to why, what is this? You're asking, why? So what's going on?

Speaker 4:
[91:18] I don't know, I wish I knew.

Speaker 2:
[91:20] Everything's out in the open. I mean, whether you like Trump or don't, whether you like his policies or don't, it's there. It's not like something secret. You know what's going on in Iran. You know, if we were under Biden or especially Obama, you wouldn't know anything. They would tell you, we're winning, it's almost done, blah, blah, blah. It would be totally, totally covert. You wouldn't know anything that was going on. And then they would tell you what they want you to think. The reason people are disturbed now, I really believe this, is that everything's out in the open. They don't like the transparency they always clamor for. Oh, we want transparency. You're getting it and now you don't like it.

Speaker 4:
[91:54] That's true.

Speaker 3:
[91:56] I think there's a lot of people, though, that we're all excited about Trump saying, hey, no new wars. And then when he does it, they're like, oh, well, I guess he's just like everybody else. Say one thing and do another.

Speaker 2:
[92:06] If I were to give Trump advice, though, that was an unrealistic statement to say, considering we're the United States and everybody wants to hit us. You know, every single buddy in the world wants to hit us.

Speaker 3:
[92:15] But how many people did that sell?

Speaker 2:
[92:17] Yeah, but there's a definite difference. And you know what the difference is. Afghanistan got us nothing. We lost 7,000 soldiers, 11, 19,000 injured and nothing. We got nothing. As a matter of fact, we made it worse and we were there 20 years.

Speaker 3:
[92:34] That's what I'm saying. I think people just have PTSD from that. So anytime you go back over to the Middle East for any military reason, everybody goes, oh great, here we go again.

Speaker 2:
[92:41] But if you have a country that's been for 47 years and they started the war 47 years ago when they took our hostages and nobody did anything. Every president from then till now, 10 of them said, we have to do something about Iraq as a nuclear weapon and then it turns out they have enough uranium to make 11 nukes and the first ones they would hit with is Israel and secondly would be us and they were very close and they lied about everything, including the reach of their rockets.

Speaker 4:
[93:07] Then it's time to pay attention.

Speaker 2:
[93:08] Then you better pay attention to what Marco Rubio said last week was the bottom line, it's there. It was imminent. It wasn't imminent that they were going to nuke us. It was imminent that we couldn't stop it at a certain point. There would be a point where they had so many missiles and so many drones, there was no way even us for us to go in there successfully and get the uranium. This was our last chance.

Speaker 4:
[93:28] And I've never seen so many people, you know, you played we played Sonny Hostin earlier on The View, and we're going to play her again in just a little bit about. I've never seen so many people against the protection of the country in which they reside. It's mind blowing.

Speaker 2:
[93:44] It's treason.

Speaker 18:
[93:45] Many Americans are asking why did the United States have to attack Iran now? Well, let me explain. Iran wants to have nuclear weapons. Of that, there is zero doubt. If what they truly wanted, which is what they claim is nuclear energy, well, they could have nuclear energy like all the other countries in the world have it. And that is you import the fuel and you build reactors above ground. That's not what Iran has done. They build the reactors and their facilities deep in mountains away from the public glare. And they want to enrich that material. The same equipment that they could use to enrich material for energy, They could use to quickly enrich it to weapons grade. So it is clear that they've been offered every opportunity to have a nuclear program that allows them to have energy, not weapons, and every single time they have turned it down. But why the attack now? Well, what was Iran trying to do? Iran was trying to build a conventional shield, in essence have so many missiles, have so many drones that no one could attack them, and they were well on their way. We were on the verge of an Iran that had so many missiles and so many drones that no one could do anything about their nuclear weapons program in the future.

Speaker 2:
[94:49] That's it, that's it, encapsulized. He's brilliant, man. I hope he runs for president.

Speaker 4:
[94:53] There it is. And finally, we got news earlier this week that the Apple CEO, Tim Cook, is stepping down. We have a new Apple CEO, his name is John Ternes, but he came out yesterday, he had a big press conference, to assure you that they're going to stay on brand and truly focused to fulfill the real mission of the company.

Speaker 7:
[95:14] Hi, I'm new Apple CEO, John Ternes, and I'm proud to continue Apple's mission of providing products for people who think they're better than everyone else. I was hired because of my ability to give PowerPoint, I mean, keynote presentations, while wearing a black crew neck t-shirt, but also because I understand that your blue text threads give you a sense of superiority. And I promise to continue charging more for the same technology our competitors offer as I carry on Apple's legacy of stroking your self-inflated egos with our sleek device brand. Thank you for making Apple what it is today by trading up to project to everyone that you're heading up to the top of the social hierarchy. Thank you.

Speaker 1:
[96:05] Crazy Talk, The Rick Stacy Morning Show with Jill and Smokestack. What am I doing? Hey, having fun? Hey, we're having fun with the world gone crazy. You should join.

Speaker 2:
[96:28] We're gonna skip over the Southern Poverty Law Center's story for next hour, we'll do it next hour. We've done it so many times this morning, but you definitely have to hear that story. It's mind-blowing. So an hour from now. We'll start with this, this is local. Orange County, four people are facing extortion charges after being accused of running a fake immigration law office. That's crazy.

Speaker 3:
[96:49] This is my mess.

Speaker 2:
[96:50] Let me ask, let me do the story first, then I gotta ask you. Legacy Immigre, I guess, promoted itself as a full service agency with attorneys who handle immigration and asylum claims for undocumented illegal immigrants, seeking lawful status, according to Sheriff John Mina. Here's the reporter.

Speaker 3:
[97:09] Investigators say the company called Legacy Immigre targeted immigrants.

Speaker 25:
[97:14] And some of them have saved money, all of their life savings, and now have been defrauded out of that money.

Speaker 3:
[97:21] The four people arrested went in front of a judge on Tuesday. Sheriff John Mina says the investigation started when a real lawyer called them, saying that he'd gotten multiple complaints about Legacy. The company allegedly claimed that it had attorneys that could help people get legal status in the US., but they weren't lawyers. Investigators say Legacy would take clients' information, create email accounts for them, where they would receive immigration documents like passports, and then use those accounts to shake down the victims.

Speaker 25:
[97:49] And then withheld documents and told victims they would not receive their paperwork, and unless they paid a dish or money.

Speaker 3:
[97:56] Mina says most of the victims were from Brazil, each losing between $2,500 to $2,500,000. They believe the accused ringleader, Wagner D. Almeida, got rich off this scheme, pulling in $20 million over the past three years.

Speaker 10:
[98:11] Oh my God!

Speaker 2:
[98:14] I gotta ask you though, it seems to me, maybe it's just the business we're in, it's like, is everybody a crook? Is everybody a crook?

Speaker 4:
[98:21] Everyone's trying to get money, get rich quick, get more money, get more money, get more money.

Speaker 2:
[98:25] You know, I was on the fence about this, you always heard the phrase, well, most people are good people. And I'm thinking to myself, no, the evidence is not there to support that anymore.

Speaker 4:
[98:33] I wouldn't say most, but I'd say there are still good people out there.

Speaker 2:
[98:36] Oh yeah, yeah, no, I can agree with that.

Speaker 3:
[98:37] It's hard to find.

Speaker 2:
[98:39] If everybody was bad, then what would be the point of being here, right? But yeah, so it's like, it's just, can anybody do the right thing ever?

Speaker 4:
[98:47] Do the right thing.

Speaker 2:
[98:50] The new phrase is, given the opportunity, and I think this has been proven, given the opportunity, people will choose the bad choice.

Speaker 4:
[98:57] You think?

Speaker 2:
[98:58] Yeah.

Speaker 3:
[98:58] Yeah, a lot of times, well, think about how much stuff that people will do if they get away with it. If they know they can get away with it.

Speaker 2:
[99:06] Dude, but it's not always the, what did Barney Five say? You know, yeah, all the looks, what's that thing you always play?

Speaker 3:
[99:12] Oh yeah, it's not always just the look.

Speaker 14:
[99:15] For my money, it's got all the facial characteristics of a criminal.

Speaker 2:
[99:18] Yeah, it's like, you always think it's gonna be those kind of guys or, you know, it's normally, but you got people like nurses and nurse last week. She faked being a nurse for four years.

Speaker 14:
[99:28] You know, the narrow chin and the eyes close together and slack jaw, the prominent overbite.

Speaker 2:
[99:34] You got grandmothers running extortion rings.

Speaker 4:
[99:37] And again, why do most people do it though? Money.

Speaker 2:
[99:40] And it's not the root, the love of money is the root of all evils, right?

Speaker 4:
[99:44] Money is not the root of all evil. The love of money is the root of all evil.

Speaker 2:
[99:47] But money is a thing, it's like the gun thing, the gun argument.

Speaker 3:
[99:51] It's just an object.

Speaker 2:
[99:53] Yeah, the gun didn't do it, the money doesn't do it, you do it. If money were dirt and dirt represented value, you'd be obsessed with dirt. The love of dirt is the root of all evil.

Speaker 4:
[100:03] You love money because money gets you other things. That's what you're obsessed with.

Speaker 2:
[100:06] First you get the money.

Speaker 4:
[100:07] I knew it.

Speaker 3:
[100:08] Then you get the power.

Speaker 2:
[100:09] Then you get the weenie.

Speaker 4:
[100:11] It's my fault.

Speaker 19:
[100:13] I walked right into it.

Speaker 2:
[100:14] Here's another one that loves the money, Ilhan Omar.

Speaker 3:
[100:17] Oh boy, does she ever.

Speaker 2:
[100:19] If you don't hate this biatch before, you gotta see the video.

Speaker 4:
[100:23] I didn't edit the thing.

Speaker 2:
[100:25] Oh no.

Speaker 4:
[100:26] I know.

Speaker 2:
[100:26] I think I got it.

Speaker 4:
[100:28] No, do you have him edited though? Did you edit conservative aunt?

Speaker 2:
[100:31] No, no, I'm not gonna play him. No, I didn't edit that.

Speaker 4:
[100:33] I don't have a wig. I'll tell you what, I'll get it for tomorrow because it's worth it. You could do it again tomorrow. I have to get it because it's totally worth it.

Speaker 3:
[100:40] I can play a whole week for a minute if you want.

Speaker 2:
[100:42] I'm an editing expert. I'm gonna edit something real fast, but this version of conservative aunt on this topic, Ilhan Omar, I listened to it and I was like, I might as well just put a whole beep through it. It's like an NWA song.

Speaker 4:
[100:55] It's a scene from Goodfellas, but it's very indicative, if I may, of how everybody feels when they look at her and hear her speak.

Speaker 2:
[101:05] But this video, you have to see Ilhan Omar, she's going to her office in Washington and a reporter from Lendel Media, yeah, Mike Lendel, Lendel Media, approaches her for the second time this week about all of a sudden she went from being worth, well, first she was worth $40,000, her and her husband, my net. Then weeks later, we found out that her disclosure to Congress, because you have to disclose your assets, she's worth about anywhere between $9 and $30 million, right? And then all of a sudden the investigation from the Somalis in Minnesota and the fact that she hasn't gotten involved at all, because you think as a politician looking out for America, the taxpayers, she would be the point person to investigate the Somalian grift that's going on in Minneapolis to the tune of $19 billion, and she's not.

Speaker 4:
[101:52] Well, when you're part of it, it's kind of hard.

Speaker 2:
[101:54] Right. She's actually defending it. They threw her a party that cost $30,000. Yeah. And all of a sudden she's worth all this money. Just like, let's be fair, just like Marjorie Taylor Greene. Nobody seems to be looking into her. All of a sudden, after just a few years in Congress, she's worth millions. Wow. And then she quits. She picked some subject matter to use for quitting, but it really wasn't relevant. She just had to get the hell out of there because she was going to be the next Ilhan Omar on the Republican side. So anyway, Ilhan is approached by Lendel Media. Again, this girl apparently asked her about the money about a week ago.

Speaker 23:
[102:27] Why are you a fraud?

Speaker 2:
[102:28] Omar called her stupid back then for asking the question. Now she approaches her again.

Speaker 21:
[102:35] Omar, the last time I spoke to you, you said that I was stupid for asking you about your financial exposure.

Speaker 17:
[102:40] But there's some discrepancies on there.

Speaker 21:
[102:42] Would you like to explain that? How do you make such a big mistake?

Speaker 12:
[102:44] I'm like the leading person before asking me anything.

Speaker 21:
[102:47] I am? Well, what about the American people who are wondering how you make such a big mistake?

Speaker 12:
[102:51] Explain to the American people.

Speaker 11:
[102:53] What's the explanation?

Speaker 12:
[102:54] I have given them the explanation.

Speaker 21:
[102:55] Do you want to tell our viewers?

Speaker 19:
[102:56] Because I don't want to tell you jack***. How about that? Okay. Okay.

Speaker 8:
[103:01] Have a good day, thank you, Carson.

Speaker 2:
[103:03] How she didn't smack her in the, that was a girl fight. The primer was there, the lighter was lit.

Speaker 4:
[103:09] And her little crap-eating grin on her face was like, I don't want to tell you anything, okay?

Speaker 17:
[103:14] Great, have a nice day.

Speaker 3:
[103:15] Is that the same reporter that did this, the like, a couple weeks ago?

Speaker 21:
[103:18] Recently stated that the American people should be afraid of the white man, they should be fearful of the white man.

Speaker 12:
[103:25] I never said that.

Speaker 21:
[103:26] Yeah, you're on video saying it.

Speaker 12:
[103:27] Our country should be more fearful of white man across our country because they are actually causing most of the deaths within this country. Oh, I did not.

Speaker 21:
[103:40] Yes, you...

Speaker 12:
[103:43] Again, this is like what I said, you need to prepare yourself because you can't continue embarrassing yourself like this.

Speaker 2:
[103:51] Embarrassing yourself, she just played you, you on the video.

Speaker 4:
[103:54] Yeah, she has nothing else to say, that's why she has to say that.

Speaker 3:
[103:57] How much of a moron could you be?

Speaker 2:
[103:58] Can somebody please get her out of the country? Get her out of this, she hates this country, give her what she wants, her country back. Go to Somalia, they want you, they're looking for her there. They're actually talking about extraditing her. Get her out, get her out of here. She pulled some crap in Somalia, her home country.

Speaker 4:
[104:15] That's why they don't want her, and then we don't want her.

Speaker 2:
[104:18] They want her back for prosecution.

Speaker 7:
[104:19] There's a slob, there's a real slob. This is one person.

Speaker 2:
[104:23] What a thief.

Speaker 24:
[104:25] In May of last year, the Democrat from Minnesota claimed she and her husband, Tim Minnett, held assets worth between $6 million and $30 million. However, an amending filing reported by The Wall Street Journal last week put the couple's wealth at between $18,000 and $4,000 and $95,000. The lawmaker claimed the initial filing was riddled with accounting errors.

Speaker 2:
[104:47] You know what you should do? Ilhan, if you want to make yourself look good, why don't you spearhead the investigation into your own accountant? Call for a national federal investigation into the accountants that took care of your thing.

Speaker 4:
[104:58] Can't do that.

Speaker 2:
[104:59] Were they the ones at the Walmart, right by the cash register? H&R Block or whatever? No?

Speaker 4:
[105:03] H&R Block.

Speaker 3:
[105:07] Dude, she's blaming it all on an accounting error?

Speaker 2:
[105:09] Yeah.

Speaker 15:
[105:10] So Ilhan Omar's net worth just supposedly dropped from about $30 million to less than $100,000 after her office cited an accounting error for why it was originally reported so high. An accounting error for the difference of more than $29 million. Now look, I'm no mathematician, but I don't know of an accounting error that would inflate your net worth by more than 300 times, and you wouldn't catch that.

Speaker 3:
[105:37] You know what I'm saying?

Speaker 2:
[105:38] What? How? I was worth 30, I'm going back to bed. Oh, now I'm worth 90,000?

Speaker 4:
[105:43] My bad, it was a glitch.

Speaker 15:
[105:45] Like if I were filing my taxes and I got to the end of it and it said I had assets worth more than $30 million, I know I've screwed up somewhere, but now Omar's office says she's only worth between about $20,000 and $95,000 because the accountant made a boo-boo. Wow.

Speaker 3:
[106:02] Can you believe that crap? No, I really can't hear. Where's the guy?

Speaker 2:
[106:07] Oh, stellar record of honesty and competence. Last year, Ilhan Omar's financial disclosure revealed skyrocketing wealth. It showed a whopping net worth of up to $30 million, a 3500 percent increase in wealth compared to just two years prior. Now she's trying to convince the world that she's actually only worth $95,000, still quite a jump from two years ago.

Speaker 3:
[106:36] But in an eye popping revision of her disclosure, Ms. Omar is saying the multi-million dollar discrepancy was nothing more than an accounting error.

Speaker 2:
[106:47] Right. All right. Moving right along. So this is what I want you to picture. Again, I'm bad at analogies, but I'm going to give it another shot. Picture this. Let's say ABC, NBC, and CBS, CNN, MSNBC, whatever it's called, PMS, Snow, whatever. They have little, you ever see a pressure gauge? You know what I'm talking about? Just the needle in there. If you have a pool, you have one for the, you know, the filter there. Imagine the pressure gauge is the gauge of a story that'll help you politically as a newscaster because they're all lefties, right? Okay. And each gauge has a component. One is ethnicity. The other one is how will help me politically. And the third one maybe is making Democrats look bad. Anyway, the gate, I told you I was bad at this, but let's say ABC, NBC, and CBS have those gauges. And there's a story that comes out. Well, these gauges were pinned. They favored everything. Oh, this is our great story. It contains guns. He probably got the gun himself.

Speaker 3:
[107:41] He's got sugar, spice, everything nice.

Speaker 2:
[107:43] Yeah. He's probably white. We're going to rush to the news and we're going to tell everybody, this is a blah, blah, blah, blah. And he's got a gun and we got to do it with the guns and all that stuff. Turns out Shreveport, the horrific story about this man that killed eight children, seven of them were his, Shamar Elkins, hit the news hard the day we found out about it. Then all of a sudden, with most of these stories, it went bye-bye. If this were anybody else, if this was a white guy who maybe didn't even vote for Trump, just a white guy.

Speaker 3:
[108:11] I did not see a follow-up.

Speaker 2:
[108:12] It would have been, this would have continued for two weeks. We need to go and gun control. Gavin Newsom came out immediately without even knowing the guy, what skin color he had was like, we need to go to gun control. We need to take everybody's citizens, legal citizens' guns away. Turns out Shamar Elkins, as we all know now, is a black man, which shouldn't matter, but it does in our society today. Everything is gauged by skin color. Sorry, Martin Luther King. They didn't listen to you.

Speaker 3:
[108:35] Well, if you're the Southern Poverty Law Center.

Speaker 2:
[108:37] So he's been charged, he's been charged, I'm sorry, listen. He's been charged with the murders of eight children, killed eight children in Shreveport on Sunday. Another man, Charles Ford, has been charged with being a felon in possession of a firearm. And then he made false statements to the feds about the gun. See, originally, Shamar said that, well, he didn't say it, his girlfriend or friend said that the gun was stolen.

Speaker 22:
[109:09] This sort of thing ain't my bag, baby.

Speaker 2:
[109:11] Now, the guy, Charles Ford, who originally has been charged with the gun charge because he gave the gun to Shamar, if he gets convicted, he's gonna face 20 years in prison. According to the attorney's office, the woman who initially purchased the firearm legally told law enforcement she gave it to Ford. Ford claims Shamar stole the gun out of his truck. Whoa. Well, that was a lie, but that was day two, that's when the story went away because now the gun doesn't belong to Shamar, the guy who gave it to him, it wasn't stolen, he gave it to him. So, prosecutors allege Ford lied about the possession of the weapon before admitting that he had it. He later told law enforcement he believed Elkins had taken it from him, that wasn't true. So, Shamar Elkins, 31, is accused of shooting and killing seven of his children and one of his cousins early Sunday morning. According to Shreveport police, Elkins also shot and injured two other women that morning. They're gonna make it. A knife child escaped safely while jumping from the roof onto the back of the house and running. So, this story blew up at first because to them, they rushed to judgment. It met all the criteria they needed for gun control, you know, speeches. And all of a sudden, all of that fell apart. And the story, which is just a horrible, heinous story, went away.

Speaker 4:
[110:29] Yep. They didn't need it anymore.

Speaker 2:
[110:31] All the gauges went down. This doesn't benefit us politically and we can't argue for gun control because we gave them the gun.

Speaker 4:
[110:37] Do you want to know something crazy?

Speaker 2:
[110:39] Oh, and the guy that gave them the gun is also black. This is how the media thinks. This is how racist they are. The Democrats who run the media out are more racist than the people they charge with racism.

Speaker 3:
[110:51] Well, you got to get people stoked up about something, don't you?

Speaker 2:
[110:53] Isn't that amazing, though?

Speaker 3:
[110:54] And maybe the Southern Poverty Law Center is kicking you some cash to do it.

Speaker 4:
[110:58] The one of the moms, she's the mother of three of the children that were killed.

Speaker 2:
[111:02] Right.

Speaker 4:
[111:02] She is going to make it. She's one of the women.

Speaker 2:
[111:05] She's in the hospital.

Speaker 4:
[111:05] She has neurological sciences. Fascinating. She still has a bullet lodged in her face. And it's triggering on and off. Like some days she'll wake up and think the kids are still alive. And then some days she'll wake up and know that they're gone. But it goes back and forth.

Speaker 2:
[111:21] Oh, that's torture.

Speaker 4:
[111:22] Isn't that awful?

Speaker 2:
[111:23] That's terrible.

Speaker 3:
[111:24] You're so fragile on the inside, you know, like one little pressure in the brain and like, oh, don't know English.

Speaker 2:
[111:32] Why do you speak French?

Speaker 4:
[111:33] No, it's crazy. It's crazy.

Speaker 3:
[111:34] Well, you hear those people get a head injury. They wake up speaking Spanish for two weeks and go to sleep.

Speaker 4:
[111:38] The piano, like they're a pro piano player.

Speaker 2:
[111:42] I want that. Smack me in the head and see what happens.

Speaker 18:
[111:43] Oh, it's still in her face though.

Speaker 3:
[111:45] Oh my gosh.

Speaker 2:
[111:45] But there you go. Networks not caring about the 98 dead children or caring about the woman that's injured or the two other injuries, caring more about the skin color and the ability for them to talk about gun control if the story met the criteria, which now it doesn't. So it's gone. You haven't seen anything about it.

Speaker 3:
[112:01] No, you're absolutely right. It was so huge. And then you're right, I did not see a single follow up today.

Speaker 4:
[112:06] Did you see them talk about Lake and Riley at all ever? No, because it hurt their narrative. So they just never talked about her.

Speaker 2:
[112:13] Nope. So yesterday, Smoke, I don't know what we're talking about here on the air, but you said that the concern about radical Islam and, you know, Sharia law, and I kept pointing at Dearborn, Michigan, where the mayor there says Christians and Jews aren't welcome in that city. And you said, well, that's just a little part of the country. That's not that important, right? Remember that?

Speaker 3:
[112:31] I mean, it's more prevalent up there.

Speaker 2:
[112:33] Yeah, I'm not putting you down for it.

Speaker 3:
[112:34] I don't think it's enough to take over everything now.

Speaker 2:
[112:36] Right, you minimized it. But that's okay. You minimized it, but that's okay. Well, you know, funny, because one of the states we have in this country is Idaho, that is very, I sound like Kamala Harris. It's a little country. No, Idaho is a part of Idaho, huge part of Idaho.

Speaker 3:
[112:50] It's a state with potatoes.

Speaker 2:
[112:52] It's very conservative. So all of a sudden there's concerns over radical Islam taken over there. They're marching in the streets. They're marching in the streets for Sharia law. Does that sound to you like 10 people? No.

Speaker 3:
[113:14] It doesn't sound like Idaho.

Speaker 2:
[113:15] It's thousands, thousands of people, women marching with head coverings. Men march.

Speaker 3:
[113:22] Well, they're not allowed to march without them.

Speaker 2:
[113:23] Marching for Sharia law in Idaho, Bonner County.

Speaker 4:
[113:28] Trust that none of those women want to be doing that, but they'll be killed if they don't, so they're forced to do it.

Speaker 2:
[113:37] We are now literally in an ideological war with radical Islam, and no one is paying attention. The people who should be paying attention and telling us what the dangers are right now won't, because they'll be called bigots and racists and Islamophobes.

Speaker 4:
[113:52] Well, they go, you don't look at that. You look that way, because if you look at this and try to question it, yes, exactly, you're an Islamophobe. You don't want to be called that name, do you? You mind your business.

Speaker 2:
[114:00] Now, I've been playing the Imam. I'm not going to play him again, so you can relax, but the Imam here in Florida who's going church to his holy job as a radical Islamist is to go from Christian church to Christian church that is going out of business. What?

Speaker 4:
[114:13] Because I have some of him too. Oh, okay. I just have a different part of him.

Speaker 2:
[114:17] Buying churches, because soon, as he says, and I can play in the audio, Jill has got more of it, every church in Florida will eventually be a mosque, and every person in Florida will eventually be Muslim. So they got to prepare for that.

Speaker 10:
[114:33] I want to see, inshallah, one day governor of the state of Florida, the Muslim. Everybody say, inshallah.

Speaker 14:
[114:39] The house has Muslims in there.

Speaker 1:
[114:40] Say, inshallah. Senators, Muslim senators, say, inshallah.

Speaker 4:
[114:44] And he went on.

Speaker 2:
[114:46] And right now in Michigan, there's a possibility, what's the possibility? He's going to get elected. He's a radical Islamist, anti-Semite, who wants to see America fail. He wants this country to go down. He's going to get elected.

Speaker 3:
[115:01] As what?

Speaker 2:
[115:02] Senator, from Michigan.

Speaker 4:
[115:04] When your religion chants, death to America, and you live in America.

Speaker 3:
[115:08] Don't you get in trouble for being here?

Speaker 4:
[115:10] Maybe pay attention.

Speaker 2:
[115:11] No, we're not doing the job. We're not, we need to ship these people out of this country. They're incompatible with Western civilization. DeSantis said no Sharia law in Florida.

Speaker 3:
[115:20] No, we'll do millions for public safety, millions for education, but never one red cent for jihad.

Speaker 5:
[115:31] So the legislation we'll sign today is the strongest action Florida has ever taken to protect its people from this influence.

Speaker 2:
[115:42] And obviously, it spans finance, it spans political, it spans culture, and then of course, it can be overt acts like we've seen in Old Dominion and other places around the country. I'm proud to be able to sign the bill today.

Speaker 5:
[115:56] I think it's something that we asked for many months ago.

Speaker 20:
[116:00] And I know there were a lot of folks in the legislature who were very strong and wanting to deliver something really meaningful.

Speaker 5:
[116:06] So this will help the state of Florida protect you.

Speaker 2:
[116:09] It'll help us protect your tax dollars. It'll help us protect things that should not be happening in the United States of America, but certainly shouldn't be happening in the free state of Florida. God, him and Rubio would be great pair to be president and vice president.

Speaker 4:
[116:24] What's going to happen when he's not governor anymore?

Speaker 3:
[116:27] The law is there, so.

Speaker 2:
[116:29] That's what I'm afraid of.

Speaker 4:
[116:29] But can a governor come in and change it, though?

Speaker 2:
[116:31] There's a radical Islamist running for governor of Florida.

Speaker 4:
[116:34] I know.

Speaker 3:
[116:35] Well, I mean, he's going to have to get the whole house to undo all that.

Speaker 2:
[116:39] Keep writing it off. I'm telling you, man.

Speaker 3:
[116:41] We have a bill.

Speaker 2:
[116:42] This is the war we're in. We don't even realize it. Don't make me play Mark Levin again.

Speaker 3:
[116:46] Well, I mean, if you want to go to terrorist camp, I guess go ahead and try, at least in Florida.

Speaker 2:
[116:52] I feel sorry for our grandkids. I really do. Anyway, finally, people visiting one of the holiest Hindu temples in India's Himalayan mountains must consume cow urine to get in.

Speaker 4:
[117:03] I'm sorry, in a what now?

Speaker 2:
[117:04] So if you want to go into this very well-visited temple in the Himalayan mountains in India, you have got to drink the cow urine. It's what you got to do. New entry rules for the Gangotri temple in, oh brother, Uttarakhand. I'm sorry. I got Uttarakhand. Look at it, you got any lotion? Uttarakhand make it compulsory for every visitor to consume Panchgabhaya, a ritual concoction made from five cows products, milk curd, ghee, honey and their urine. If you can't drink it, you don't get in. Let's see.

Speaker 10:
[117:39] Why, why, why, why, why would they do this?

Speaker 2:
[117:42] And they point out to the tourists, if you're a true believer, you'll have no problem consuming the beverage.

Speaker 3:
[117:47] I bet they don't have an immigration issue.

Speaker 4:
[117:49] I'd rather not.

Speaker 9:
[117:50] Drink the pee and you don't come in.

Speaker 2:
[117:52] And oh, there was one more story. That's right. We forgot somebody's mail. And I appreciate this mail. Because usually we have hate mail. This is medical mail.

Speaker 3:
[117:58] Medical mail? Don't ask us for medical advice. We don't have any.

Speaker 4:
[118:01] No, no, no, they're concerned. Cause we'll talk about things that are going on with us on the air. And you know, I'll joke about my paramedicine, my hormones that I'm on. And then Rick will talk about his health issues that he has. And I guess the other day-

Speaker 3:
[118:12] Where do you go when you get injured on vacation every time?

Speaker 4:
[118:14] Yeah, you do. Rick gets hurt on vacation every single time. So we joke about, cause you do commercials for life imaging, which you have gone to yourself. You talk about your heart health and so do I. So somebody heard you talking about your stomach. I guess you were having stomach issues. I talk about that? I guess the other day you were having-

Speaker 2:
[118:30] No, I was sick for like, remember? Yeah. I had some kind of flu or some crap.

Speaker 4:
[118:34] And people write in and they'll be concerned. I didn't get people help with me. They'll go, hey Jill, I heard you do this and maybe try this. And they're nice. So someone wrote in and they had a little suggestion for you. It said, Rick, I know you're really good about getting yourself checked out heart wise, but I want to make sure you're considering having a colonoscopy. My husband had a similar stomach issues as to what you discussed on air. He put off getting a colonoscopy until it was too late. Men don't talk about these things and many women don't talk about them either. But colon cancer is running rampant in our society, especially with young people. I'm 100% convinced it's all from the fake ingredients we eat. Yes. But please take care of yourself. So they just wanted to say, they wanted to make sure you were getting your colonoscopy.

Speaker 3:
[119:13] Check your butt, Rick.

Speaker 2:
[119:14] Well, thank you for the email, first of all. And I got a fast pass for colonoscopy. I think I've had like three, four.

Speaker 4:
[119:22] It's like a punch card for yogurt. The next one's free.

Speaker 2:
[119:25] The next one's coming up this year.

Speaker 9:
[120:14] The Sunny Update. Yeah, The Rick Stacy Morning Show with Jill and Smokestack.

Speaker 2:
[120:19] Making you cry every morning like they do me.

Speaker 9:
[120:23] Having fun with a world gone crazy.

Speaker 3:
[120:27] Crazy Talk is brought to you by All Electric Services. This is the craziest thing I've ever heard. You know, every so often we talk about like a rare disorder or a rare disease that like some person has. One girl was allergic to water. Remember, she couldn't sweat or drink any water.

Speaker 2:
[120:42] That's a rough one.

Speaker 3:
[120:43] There was a, there's been numerous ones. This one is called Auto Brewery Syndrome, otherwise known as ABS, which causes this guy's, I need to put my glasses on.

Speaker 9:
[120:55] Isn't ABS the bowel thing?

Speaker 3:
[120:56] That's IBS.

Speaker 2:
[120:57] No, that's automatic breaking system where it doesn't-

Speaker 9:
[120:59] Oh, that's right.

Speaker 2:
[121:00] Yeah. Keeps your brakes from locking up.

Speaker 9:
[121:02] And then you have to go to the bathroom, right?

Speaker 3:
[121:03] Anyway, this causes his body to ferment its own alcohol from carbohydrates and sugar.

Speaker 2:
[121:09] Wait, he's his own distillery?

Speaker 9:
[121:12] Yeah.

Speaker 3:
[121:12] Yeah, so because of this, he can become legally intoxicated and experience symptoms like slurred speech and dizziness, like he's drunk without drinking a single drop of alcohol.

Speaker 2:
[121:21] That would be great. He's just like, I'm drunk.

Speaker 9:
[121:24] Saves money.

Speaker 3:
[121:25] Oh, suddenly I'm good. So he didn't know what was going on before this was diagnosed. He would just all of a sudden he'd be like, why do I feel I'm dizzy? I feel like I'm drunk, but I haven't drank anything. He was arrested twice.

Speaker 2:
[121:36] Oh, cause he shows up on a breathalyzer.

Speaker 3:
[121:37] It does? For a DWI.

Speaker 2:
[121:39] Oh my God.

Speaker 3:
[121:40] He lost his job. How? As a high school athletic director because colleagues and parents repeatedly smelled alcohol on breath even though he hadn't drank anything. This resulted in legal fees, job losses, forced him to sell his home and his car. His own family member suspected he was a closet alcoholic before this diagnosis was confirmed.

Speaker 9:
[121:59] So much for your family. Did they apologize?

Speaker 2:
[122:02] I was going to say, can you sue the city after you confirm your diagnosis?

Speaker 3:
[122:04] I don't know.

Speaker 2:
[122:05] I don't get your license back?

Speaker 9:
[122:06] Absolutely.

Speaker 3:
[122:07] In one instance, just crumbs from a cookie his son was eating were enough to push his blood alcohol contact to a.09, which is above the legal driving limit. So here's how it works. When this occurs, there's an overgrowth of yeast or fungi in the gut and it ferments regular ordinary foods into ethanol.

Speaker 1:
[122:25] Oh my God.

Speaker 9:
[122:26] Wow.

Speaker 3:
[122:27] So the way he manages it, he lives here in Florida. He has to have a very strict lifestyle in what he eats. He has to do a low carb diet. He has to avoid foods like pizza and pizza, pizza, pizza. That's a combo between pizza and pasta. He has to avoid pizza and pasta that triggers the fermentation. He takes roughly 30 pills and supplements daily, including antifungals to prevent the yeast from forming in his gut. And he has to use personal breathalyzers regularly, especially before driving to ensure that he's safe to be on the road.

Speaker 9:
[123:00] So does he have a card that he carries with him now just in case?

Speaker 3:
[123:02] I got ABS.

Speaker 9:
[123:04] Yeah, but there's something that he can handle a cop, no?

Speaker 3:
[123:07] Well, even if you have the blood alcohol level and you're impaired, it doesn't matter why.

Speaker 9:
[123:11] Oh my God, no.

Speaker 2:
[123:12] So if he drinks actual alcohol, does he get like alcohol poisoning?

Speaker 3:
[123:15] He hasn't drank. He said he hasn't drank in years.

Speaker 9:
[123:18] Hasn't needed to. I want to know what Smoke asked. I want to know if he's gonna get his-

Speaker 3:
[123:21] Did his family apologize? Did he get his job back? That's a great question. I don't know. His name is Mark Mangiardo.

Speaker 9:
[123:30] Wow.

Speaker 3:
[123:31] He lives here in Florida.

Speaker 9:
[123:34] The family threw him under the bus immediately.

Speaker 3:
[123:37] It just says they suspected that he was a closet alcohol.

Speaker 9:
[123:40] Right, right.

Speaker 2:
[123:41] Well, every time we go in, he's watching Billy Dee Williams.

Speaker 3:
[123:50] From alcohol to weed, this girl Tatiana Sanchez, I didn't know that this was a trend. This wasn't- I would never even have thought to doing this when I was pregnant, just because. A lot of people, when they get pregnant, smoke. I don't know if Taylor went through this or not, but when I was pregnant, I had severe morning sickness from the start to- it was the whole first trimester. Second trimester, I got better, but so bad, they tried to give me medication. I was like, I don't want to take medication. Then I even tried those little pressure point bracelets that they gave you, that are supposed to make you not nauseous. And nothing really worked. So this woman, Tatiana Sanchez, had severe nausea while she was pregnant. She was throwing up all the time. No treatment seemed to work. So she had, there's regular nausea when you're pregnant, and then there's really severe that you can actually be hospitalized due to so you don't dehydrate. So she exhausted all of her options, and then she turned to something that moms are using while pregnant to help combat their nausea, and that's weed.

Speaker 9:
[124:59] Okay.

Speaker 2:
[125:00] Interesting. I mean, Taylor had like, she would get sick, but I mean, it was really only in the beginning, and then like certain foods or certain smells.

Speaker 9:
[125:07] Right.

Speaker 2:
[125:07] No, no, no, no, no.

Speaker 9:
[125:08] Then Dr. Smokes died, gave up and prescribed some, you know.

Speaker 2:
[125:12] No, she was, she already did that before I showed up.

Speaker 3:
[125:17] Mine was-

Speaker 2:
[125:18] But she's done now.

Speaker 3:
[125:19] The smell of coffee, which is the great smell. But when I was pregnant for some reason. Yeah.

Speaker 9:
[125:24] When you're pregnant, you just get all kinds of weird.

Speaker 2:
[125:26] Can you do it now?

Speaker 3:
[125:27] No, I like smelling coffee now. That all went away. How long did it take?

Speaker 2:
[125:30] Just as soon as Ellie popped out, you're done?

Speaker 3:
[125:32] I know it took a minute.

Speaker 9:
[125:34] Yeah. She did a little screaming, a little pushing and said, ah, get me coffee.

Speaker 3:
[125:37] That and the smell of popcorn. Both of those two set me off. Like I was doing a morning show at the time and my cohost was so sweet. If anyone were to brew coffee or pop popcorn around me, he went and read them the riot act because he was like, she's gonna get sick.

Speaker 2:
[125:51] I need her here. That was one of Taylor's weird requests.

Speaker 1:
[125:54] She'd be like, I need hot flaming Cheetos.

Speaker 2:
[125:56] I need popcorn from the movie theater.

Speaker 1:
[125:58] Nowhere else cinema needs a Gatorade.

Speaker 2:
[126:00] Hurry.

Speaker 3:
[126:01] My go to order was Wendy's fried chicken sandwich with honey mustard, french fries and a Frosty. I wanted sandwiches. I liked Italian subs. I was like Joey Tribbiani. I just wanted sandwiches, sandwiches and carbs. I'll give me all the bread. I wanted bagels. I wanted bread.

Speaker 2:
[126:16] Taylor wanted like meat. She'd go through Vaser's like, I need meat. I'm like, what do you want? She's like, I already ordered it from Kobe. It's too big bucket to meet. One chicken, one beef, they'll get it. I'm like, oh, okay.

Speaker 3:
[126:25] Isn't it funny? It's funny. And now I have to...

Speaker 2:
[126:28] It's like Jurassic Park. I'm like, where's the goat?

Speaker 3:
[126:30] Oh, I had, did I take a picture of this? I don't know if I snapshot of this. It was so funny. It said, it was this guy, it went viral. Let me see if I can find it. This guy went viral because he was placing a pizza order for his girlfriend. I wasn't going to do the story, so I got to find it now. It was a pizza order for his girlfriend. Kind of like you said, Smoke, she ordered it from Kobe and you had to go pick it up. And he went viral for his order because the order was so crazy that he had to tell them, hey, I'm not nuts. Let me see. Pregnant pizza order. Here it is. Okay, ready?

Speaker 9:
[127:08] Yeah.

Speaker 3:
[127:09] It says here, it's one large hand tossed pizza, triple pepperoni, extra cheese, banana peppers, light jalapenos, half chicken, half mushrooms, half caramelized onions, half olives, light sauce.

Speaker 9:
[127:21] Oh my God.

Speaker 3:
[127:21] And the customer request under it says, bro, yes, I know this looks insane and you're probably like, who is this dude? I'm a dude who has a very pregnant wife. I'm done questioning what she wants. I'm scared of her and honestly, at this point, you should be too. I promise this is the order. Thank you and Godspeed. I thought that was so funny because it's so accurate.

Speaker 2:
[127:38] Oh yeah, I definitely had to qualify a few purchases because I'm like just buying all this weird stuff and they're looking at me like, what are you cooking? And I'm like, she's pregnant. Oh, oh, in that case, you're going to want more of these.

Speaker 3:
[127:50] Now I feel the need to point out that doctors have long warned against marijuana use during pregnancy.

Speaker 2:
[127:55] Yeah, you're not supposed to do that.

Speaker 3:
[127:56] Exciting health risks, so please don't do that.

Speaker 2:
[127:58] Yeah, you're not supposed to do that.

Speaker 3:
[128:00] A new survey came out. More people are working from home because gas prices are too high. I can't come to work today because, you know.

Speaker 2:
[128:07] Right, I didn't think of that, Rick. I gotta stay home tomorrow, gasoline and all.

Speaker 9:
[128:10] Gas prices were over $5, 20, what was it? 20, 22. You went to work, didn't you?

Speaker 3:
[128:17] Well, that was right after COVID, so I think people still had the COVID excuse where they could be like, I'm just gonna stay home because, you know, masks.

Speaker 9:
[128:23] Okay, the prices suck right now, but it's nowhere near what it was.

Speaker 2:
[128:27] I have a vaccine in my car, I can't go.

Speaker 3:
[128:30] 12% of people, it's not that high, but 12% of people said they started working remotely more often to avoid commuting because of how expensive gas is.

Speaker 2:
[128:37] That's for me, it's the tolls, man.

Speaker 9:
[128:38] Well, I've always said that. We talk about all this climate change and the global this and the disaster that's coming, and yet we have these skyscrapers in most cities, 47 floors of offices with air conditioning running and everything, but we won't let the people work at home. Which, you know, we could do this. The thing is we could do this at home.

Speaker 3:
[128:58] Oh, I have friends that are on morning shows that all three of them are in three different cities.

Speaker 9:
[129:02] Yeah, and there's one in New York. WKTU, a friend of mine, they're all like one's in California, one's in the middle of the country, and they're the ones here in Florida and Tampa.

Speaker 2:
[129:11] So they all have different times they wake up for the same show?

Speaker 9:
[129:14] Yeah.

Speaker 2:
[129:15] Oh, gosh.

Speaker 3:
[129:16] Yeah, but they do it, they're still there together.

Speaker 9:
[129:18] They sound like they're together.

Speaker 3:
[129:19] I never knew until I was told. One was in Florida, one was in North Carolina. I forget where the other one was.

Speaker 2:
[129:24] You must have nice equipment to not have to do the delay.

Speaker 9:
[129:26] Bad morning shows who do that, you can tell because they'll refer to somebody, oh, there you are. I've heard that so many times.

Speaker 3:
[129:34] Have you really?

Speaker 9:
[129:35] They screw up, they don't realize.

Speaker 3:
[129:37] Technically, you could, unless your company was a stickler and they're like, no, we want to see you every day, you could live anywhere you want and do the show in any city.

Speaker 9:
[129:49] Absolutely. I mean, where are you going?

Speaker 3:
[129:51] Through the, well, through the-

Speaker 9:
[129:52] Smoke will move to the woods in Colorado, I'll move to Tennessee and you'll still be here because you won't leave Baldwin.

Speaker 2:
[129:57] Yeah, I'm not leaving Florida, that's for sure.

Speaker 3:
[130:00] Well, it's funny because, well, I do other shows. I do a show in Miami, I do a show in Cleveland, I do a show in Madison, Wisconsin.

Speaker 9:
[130:06] Yeah, but it's not this kind of show.

Speaker 3:
[130:07] Right, no, no, yes, not a morning show.

Speaker 9:
[130:08] You're not with people.

Speaker 3:
[130:09] But you could feasibly could do that.

Speaker 9:
[130:12] Yeah, but I'm not leaving Florida.

Speaker 2:
[130:14] There are a lot of companies that like they saved a bunch of money and they didn't want to have to bring people back. Because I mean, think about it, I don't have to pay for internet if you're using yours. I don't have to pay for electricity here at my office. If you're using yours, I don't got to get a new water cooler, no more paper cups and spoons.

Speaker 3:
[130:28] Realistically, we could, God forbid anything happened to us here, we realistically could be like the new morning show for a radio station in Colorado and still live here.

Speaker 9:
[130:38] Yeah, they would never have us in Colorado. You're kidding me.

Speaker 3:
[130:41] Or anywhere that would be Texas. Let's say Texas.

Speaker 1:
[130:44] The authentic self-morning show in Colorado.

Speaker 3:
[130:46] Okay, everybody. The authentic self-morning show, yeah.

Speaker 2:
[130:51] And that's what we'll be every day.

Speaker 3:
[130:53] Well, and you know, money's different. So I don't know. I think that companies would maybe try to justify, well, you're not actually here, so we can pay you a little less. I know you're doing the same amount of work, but you're not walking through our doors. So therefore.

Speaker 2:
[131:09] Yeah, you're using your own ballpoint pens now.

Speaker 3:
[131:12] I had someone, it was a friend of mine, that was told they were doing the work, they were working remotely, and they did all the work. And they wanted her, they gave her an option, and she said, well, you could start coming in to work if you want. And she was like, well, I've been doing it from home all this time. Right. If I come in, is there more pay? And they said, well, we're not going to pay you just to show up. She's like, well, what are you paying me for? I'm still doing the job, but now there's an extra. Then why would I come in? And they're like, we're not going to just pay you to walk through the door. She's like, then why did you ask me to?

Speaker 2:
[131:50] Yeah, it sounds like that's what you're asking me to do.

Speaker 9:
[131:52] Why did they ask her to do that?

Speaker 3:
[131:53] I don't know, you know companies these days.

Speaker 2:
[131:55] Well, you need to look at you.

Speaker 3:
[131:56] I have to be here, therefore, you need to be here. I need to make sure you're doing your things.

Speaker 9:
[132:00] It's the opposite here. Most people that work here aren't here. We're the only ones here every day. It's true.

Speaker 3:
[132:06] We're here five days a week. Only the on-air people, we're the only people here five days a week. But speaking of money, it must be nice to have this amount of money. You ever look at rich people and you go, wow, that's crazy that you have that much money you can buy and then they it's like something that is obviously meant for disposable income that you could never buy.

Speaker 2:
[132:27] But I've seen a couple of those new Lexuses out there, like $85,000.

Speaker 9:
[132:31] That's nothing.

Speaker 2:
[132:32] That's even if you're taking a payment, that's like two grand a month.

Speaker 9:
[132:35] You got two or three kids and they're young and your parents, you need a Denali. One of those, what do they call it? Suburban? It's 100,000 more.

Speaker 3:
[132:44] Not only that, I have one of my best friends has three kids, they're all in sports. And so on the weekend, it's and they have multiple cars because who's going to take, which parent's going to take this kid this way, which parent's going to, but when they go places together, you're right. So they had to have, I forget what they have. It's a mat, it's massive. It's not a minivan, but it's a big ginormous SUV because they have to be able to fit all of the kids and their sports equipment and the dog.

Speaker 9:
[133:09] And it's like, yeah, the Ford Eventide, it's 27,000 feet long.

Speaker 3:
[133:15] So big, but now rich dog owners, you know, the little fruffy ones, rich dog owners, people that have their animals and they wear like, you know, the collars, like the Paris Hilton dogs, right? They've been splurging on these diamond collars for their dogs, because I guess that's a status thing. Yeah. So it's, I'll mug your dog.

Speaker 2:
[133:33] Watch me.

Speaker 3:
[133:34] The collars are like a hundred and fifty thousand dollars.

Speaker 9:
[133:38] Why would you do that? Your dog's going to...

Speaker 2:
[133:40] You're not letting them out in your backyard, are you?

Speaker 3:
[133:42] Well, I think about that.

Speaker 2:
[133:43] Is it legal to mug a dog?

Speaker 3:
[133:45] What kind of dog is it? All the dogs I've had, as soon as I give them a bath or anything and try to make them look cute and smell good, they're out in the yard, they're rolling around the grass, they're in the mud, they go for the first puddle they see.

Speaker 9:
[133:55] Right.

Speaker 3:
[133:55] You know, and it's just, it's pointless. So what kind of froufy dog do you have where it's like, yes, I like to stay clean. I'll stay here right on mom's lap. And they don't go play and they don't go...

Speaker 9:
[134:04] Miniature poodles?

Speaker 3:
[134:05] I guess the smaller ones.

Speaker 9:
[134:07] I don't know.

Speaker 3:
[134:07] But where do you even get... Where do you go?

Speaker 2:
[134:11] Well, if you go to the back room at Petco, they get out the champagne and the leather couch and they bring out the different collars.

Speaker 3:
[134:16] I don't think they do this at Petco. I think you have to go to an actual jeweler.

Speaker 1:
[134:19] Want to show your dog how you really feel? Then give your furry little friend the gift of jewelry from Pooch's Jewelers.

Speaker 9:
[134:26] Hey, honey, I have a question.

Speaker 3:
[134:28] Will you please move out of the way so I can give this diamond ring to Pepper, our schnauzer?

Speaker 9:
[134:33] Huh?

Speaker 3:
[134:33] Yeah, get out of the way. Here you go, Pepper.

Speaker 1:
[134:35] Who's a good girl? Who's a good girl? Your dog will love the jewelry you give them from Pooch's Jewelers. And check out this bracelet.

Speaker 3:
[134:42] Oh, my goodness. Are those rubies and sapphires? That's gonna look great with my...

Speaker 1:
[134:47] This is for the dog, too.

Speaker 3:
[134:48] But she doesn't even have wrists.

Speaker 9:
[134:49] Yeah, she kind of does.

Speaker 1:
[134:51] Not like you'd notice. It's Pooch's Jewelers.

Speaker 3:
[134:54] He went to Pooch's, unfortunately.

Speaker 1:
[134:57] See you soon.