LET'S GO!

News Breakdown: U.S. Politics, Immigration, and Media Silence

Tim Fisher & Jordan Jemiola Season 3 Episode 182

Dani Cravatt and Sam Comalafe are back! Get ready to question the peculiar strategies of political campaigns as we explore the drama and distraction that define contemporary politics.

We have a discussion on immigration and national security, where we shine a light on the actions of political figures like Nancy Pelosi and Kamala Harris. From the alarming situation in Aurora, Colorado, to the broader challenges faced by Europe, we tackle the implications of unchecked immigration. We also scrutinize a proposed housing loan program for undocumented individuals in rural Colorado and California, weighing its potential impact on the housing market and state finances. Concerns about censorship and media control, especially the suppression of unfiltered news on social platforms, lead us to question the future of free speech and its constitutional repercussions.

With perspectives from minority communities and reflections on individual empowerment, this episode covers a lot of ground. Sam shares his personal experiences and insights on how political priorities can sometimes overshadow crucial issues like voting rights and economic stability. We round off our discussion with some ironies in American politics, humorous personal anecdotes, and a heartfelt reflection on the strong bonds we've built over the years. Tune in for a thought-provoking episode that promises to keep you engaged from start to finish!

Thanks for taking the time to listen in. Please leave us 5 stars on Spotify & Apple Podcasts with a review. THANK YOU!

Speaker 1:

welcome back everybody to season three and our first monthly review, back with the famous daniel cravat and sam comalafe. What's up, wow, what's up.

Speaker 2:

I like it.

Speaker 1:

Thank you, I like the motivation yeah that was totally a ridiculously fake clap, but anyways, we got Jordan Jimmy all on myself. I just want to say a huge thank you and I'm so stoked to have you, sam and Danielle, back. It's been a long time since we've done this and it means a lot to me that you guys are actually here doing this again, because both of you were such a huge part of the early stages of this podcast and it's just made our friendship so much deeper and stuff. Welcome back, you guys Really appreciate it.

Speaker 2:

Now we get to have these talks, not just behind the scenes.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, right so everybody knows. Quick before we start. I did want to show you guys something. I have this video.

Speaker 2:

The village to raise a child. But what if the village is retarded?

Speaker 3:

They used the R word.

Speaker 1:

Oh my God, I freaking love it I just had to put that up. Yeah, I wanted to show you guys that real quick, just because I don't know. I wanted to show you something funny and I found that and I wanted to show you real quick.

Speaker 3:

That's real shit. That's real shit. Yeah, dude. This guy was talking and he's African-American, but he also got in trouble for saying that he was.

Speaker 1:

You know it takes a village to raise a child, but what if the village is retarded? I was like you got a point Pretty much.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, that's a huge point.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, straight up.

Speaker 2:

Keeping it simple, stupid.

Speaker 1:

Anyways. So let's get this started. You guys, we got about 50 minutes to an hour. There's so much that we can go over and we actually might start doing these reviews a little bit more, just because there is so much happening and a lot of it to me is a little bit unbelievable and I can't believe we're actually in these times.

Speaker 2:

Um, our country is drama. We're dramatic yeah.

Speaker 1:

It's the best reality show you've ever watched.

Speaker 4:

Oh yeah, it's like a novella and it doesn't end and there's only like maybe 24 to 48 hours of like a little bit of a break and then something crazy happens again and it just keeps on coming. So entertainment value we're probably the most talked about in the world which is pretty dope.

Speaker 2:

I feel like you also have to pay attention. I feel like you also have to pay attention to how fast like a topic's already pushed to the side. So it's like is all this stuff happening intentionally or are we all just that dramatic in our world right now?

Speaker 3:

And then which topic is pushed to the side right? Yeah, exactly From the right or the left or whatever.

Speaker 2:

Well, yeah, I mean like three weeks ago or I guess it's almost been a month now the guy running for president got shot in the face and pretty historic, I would think, and you know, not at all talked about you know not brought up every day, but it's like oh yeah, by the way that happened, that's pretty, pretty crazy, blows my mind that there's no like magazines with something like that on, or news articles, or, if you do, it's really just like a one sided media that you see it on, like I feel like that's something you would easily see in the front paper like the next day, or big magazines, something like that. I know when I recently went to California to go to your think tank when I was, I was in the airport looking at the book section. I was waiting for like something like that to be on a magazine or a news article, just to buy, just to have for memory. You know this happened, not one, not one, but I see Kamala on time.

Speaker 3:

So just makes no sense. It's her time.

Speaker 2:

Let's not forget.

Speaker 3:

Exactly, exactly. She's an overnight success story. Oh yeah.

Speaker 4:

Oh yeah.

Speaker 4:

You know, I mean I don't know if you guys caught any of the DNC, because I was all over every channel for the week that it was on, but I was, I found, found myself like I don't know, I try to watch both ends of it, you know, and like not that I really like the rnc either. It's like okay, we can only hear so much of the same thing over and over again. And but what I thought was kind of crazy was the fact that, like, if you watch the rnc, like joe biden's name was like brought up, like you know, three or four times in total of all the people that were speaking, whereas donald trump's name was brought up, like I think it was like 400 and something, whatever times of like this guy is bad and blah blah blah, you know, and it's just like've you've been in charge the last four years, like you know, you can't.

Speaker 4:

I mean like, if you really looked at the scheme of things, uh, as far as, like, democrat policies has been running for the last, what is it Like 16 years of the last you know, or 12 of the last 16 years? So it's like when this, when the blame game is just like constantly, like, oh, it's gonna be bad, it's gonna be this, gonna be that you're thinking you're like, did you guys have been in charge for quite some time? You know, not saying good or bad, I'm just saying like it's weird how, like, this point of blame is the focal point and, you know, like fear-mongering, if you will, and not like, hey, we're looking to the future, we're looking to this. I thought it was a weird strategy when you're the group in power at the moment and you're just blasting something that happened over four years ago in preparation for the next four potential years of winning. I just thought it was like a weird campaign strategy.

Speaker 3:

I think also I mean it's partially because, like, you're gonna target the person, know the person, the person that's Evil. You're gonna, you know, really link everything you have around them because, whatever you're doing right now to your point, jordan sucks. You know, you've had, you've had the floor for a long time and and everyone knows that things are bad. However, what do you do now? You know, you look to the other person that's running and everyone knows, uh, where, everyone thinks that that person is is basically shit. So let's just ride on that. You know it's, it's us versus them, us versus him. You know, and he is the leader of this crazy, you know, um, uh, republican group. So I really think it's. I mean, why not just rest all the negativity, everything you have, on defeating that one person and just completely collapsing? You know, the Republican party.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I would have liked to heard some more on policy or what they're going to do no. Didn't hear any of that, really, they got it, I mean. I mean, if you're, gonna sell me like show me some items. What am I buying? Am I just buying to hate one person, or Exactly that's what you're doing, Denny.

Speaker 3:

That's a huge point. You're buying to hate that person.

Speaker 4:

And that's all you're doing, but it's a the I think it's like a common game plan with that a little bit, and I mean it's a lot of. It is in politics in general, like not even like it's a bipartisan thing where it's like hey, we promise you something and you know. It's like whatever side it is that goes, hey, okay, we're gonna do these steps, everyone's like oh, they got a real plan, you know. And or it's just like yeah, we're gonna're going to change it, we know what to do.

Speaker 4:

It's the same thing like when I don't know if you guys remembered when the Obamacare was being passed that it came like last minute in the middle of the night, and there was a speech that Nancy Pelosi said where she just said you're just going to have to trust us to sign it. And it was like you, that's a 12,000 page document. Like you didn't just skim through that and even if you had a team of people, you would have to have a lot of people to go over that together. And then the product of that was just trust us and sign it, because we have your best intentions. And and I'm not even saying whether it's good or bad, and I'm sure it did help some people, maybe hindered some others, but what I'm saying is saying whether it's good or bad, and I'm sure it did help some people, maybe hindered some others, but what I'm saying is just in general, in politics, when they're talking about like oh you know, we got your best interests at heart, I don't know like how much longer that can keep being like the sale point for a lot of politics, just in general, it's like I think people need to be fed up and be like hey look, we've heard the same song and dance essentially our entire lives. Like, when is that going to be? Like, when are we going to start seeing the things that you're promising. You know and I'm not saying one side's better than the other, but at least I could say there was things implemented during the smidgen of time we had with Trump that maybe whether you like him as a person or not, but at least least policy driven it seemed like there was being things that were pushed as opposed to.

Speaker 4:

My favorite thing to do is like look at reaction videos when they're, you know, people are interviewing like, oh, you're voting for Kamala Harris. What's the, what's the most favorite thing that she that you think that she's done since she's been in office, because it seems like most people to interview forget that she's been the VP and when they ask a question, there's nothing you can't. I mean like even myself I'd be like, well, I don't know what is she really done? You know, it's like we know that she didn't do a lot with the border. We know that this doesn't die like foreign relations. Like maybe she had a speech where she was talking about support of Ukraine once and that was early on in the in, and it's like, okay, well, now this lady is going to be the potential president of the United States. I would hope that she would have more to bring to the table as the commander in chief and not the second two. So it's a weird time.

Speaker 1:

Well, didn't Reagan have? I believe Reagan said something like that, Like what are four words you never want to hear from the government? I mean, are three words like trust us or I'm here to help?

Speaker 4:

or something like that. It's hello, it's the government and we're here to help.

Speaker 3:

I just want to be in the stands.

Speaker 2:

It's like prove it every time.

Speaker 1:

Well, like you had a good point, right. Nancy Pelosi says just trust us, right Like trust you. The one who shut down helped shut down the economy in California, yet you could still go to a salon when you told everyone else they couldn't. I mean, that's just like a tip like a very minuscule thing of all the things that she's done right. How does she go in making a government salary and come out a millionaire a hundred times over? She only makes like 150 grand a year right.

Speaker 4:

So it's like All of them.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, all of them are like multi-millionaires, yeah, and they're saying trust us.

Speaker 1:

You want us to trust you. Just like, let's be real. What are they calling Kamala Harris, kami Kamala or something? There's a good name.

Speaker 2:

That's awesome, dude you don't want to hear my name.

Speaker 1:

It's like Kami Kamala or something else, but she's supposed to be the border czar, right? And we are seeing the most amount of infiltration by illegal immigrants in the United States, which is our country. Now, I say that you know, I don't mind if people come here and do it the right way. You come in, you become a citizen, you're contributing to taxes, you're doing just like the rest of us, but when you come in illegally and you're taxing the system to a max, which is affecting us and the future of my children, we have an issue. Not even just that, but the terrorists that are coming through. There's so many bad things that come with this whole border thing and you're seeing it right now and I think it's Aurora, colorado. I know we talked about this before coming on, but there is a is it a Venezuelan gang, right?

Speaker 1:

Yeah, that's taking over apartment complexes. I don't know if you guys want to talk about that a little bit, but the videos that I saw they're what? Is it Not ransoming? But they're swindling people for money extra rent, making them pay the gang to be there. How is that happening on US soil? That's the craziest thing to me. I'm like how in the world is this happening? And then Kamala and all these people and that governor of Aurora is crazy, or the governor or mayor, whoever it is. I'm like the news clippings or whatever. You see him on social media. He says it's fake.

Speaker 2:

Oh, that's not happening.

Speaker 1:

Well, of course, you're not seeing it, probably because, one, you're denying it and, two, you're in your gated community. What about the rest of the working class and those who are poor, who are struggling to put food on the table when inflation is already high? And now you got illegal immigrants and gang members from another country that are as bad as ms-13 taking over apartment complexes. But how dare you walk the?

Speaker 2:

capitol building on january 6th. How dare you walk the Capitol building on January 6th? How dare you be in the facility?

Speaker 1:

It's so frustrating to watch and I'm going to be a father soon and just to think of my baby girl's future, what's going to happen to her, and hearing not just in America, but what's happening around the world. Right, we're seeing it in Europe, in Germany, All these illegal immigrants. Right, they said, oh yeah take them on in.

Speaker 1:

This is the thing to do. Yeah, france Dude. The crime, the theft and the rape is through the roof. The stabbings of teenage women and adult women, kids raping. I mean, there was one article that came out the other day. It was like a 13 year old girl was raped and stabbed to death by like six dudes. No big deal. Who cares? I'm like dude what's happening. Anyways, I'm sorry I'm just going off on this, but it's been something that really, really frustrated me well, there's a lot of good points.

Speaker 4:

I mean, like I think, at the end of the day, I think what we're seeing is the virtuous feelings of what people think should be don't align in reality, and you know, and that, and I feel like the premise of like hey, we can all live together and have everyone come in, there's good people, like living your life like that, it's like it's. There's a certain amount of like naivety to it, you know, and I think.

Speaker 4:

I think that the premise isn't bad because it just means you probably have like uh, you feel like people are like, naturally have good intentions and there's a lot of people that do and like. That's like why this is conversations like. Every time I talk about it, I feel like I end up being like build a wall, keep everyone out, single file, line all this stuff you know and like and I'm not saying that, like I'm not saying that's wrong either, but there needs to be a vetting process that's effective, because what you see is like one we don't have one, or we don't have a very developed one, and you know, I mean I don't know, what the last numbers were, because, depending on what news you subscribe to you, probably you know there's 10 to 20 plus million people that have come over the border in the last you know four years, and whether that's you know, good people or you know, let's say, it's percentages of reality.

Speaker 4:

It's like not everyone's good. It doesn't mean that everyone's bad, but it means that, like, out of a hundred people, there might be two rapist killers, gang affiliates, whatever. And If we as a society are like you know what, that's not bad. Okay, it's not bad until it affects you. It's not bad until it's your kid that gets raped and killed. It's not bad until you have that whole situation. Then, all of a sudden, I guarantee you, you're sitting in a different tent, and I think that's the problems that we face moving forward. So that's like the idea of having a vetted system, and the unfortunate side of that is that means we're probably going to be turning people away too.

Speaker 4:

But again, pick what avenue you want to be virtuous in. Is it the homeless? Is it the people that actually need help? Are you talking to inner cities? Are we talking about people outside the country? Is it global conflict? There's so many things to be spread upon.

Speaker 4:

It's like we need to fine tune some important things here. Are we going to take care of us, the people in the United States, then start branching out, Because in my opinion, I think that's what's more important. We need to take favor with people that are here, you know, get that shit ironed out, and then we can start being the world police again, you know, because at the end of the day, we can't do both. There isn't enough money, there's enough time, there's enough manpower to be able to facilitate all these things, and I'm tired and I agree with you, tim, I'm tired of seeing that too. It's like look, even within our own country, we have those problems, you know, like rapist trafficking, all this other stuff that doesn't go away. Even if we did have a zero entry of the country, we still have those issues here, you know. So it's like stop overextending ourselves and having an inability to control what's within our own borderline. Saying that, I'm sure, makes me sound like I don't want people to come here. That's not true at all.

Speaker 2:

I'll put a no vacancy sign.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, or like hey, dude, give us like two fucking years, give us a little bit of time to iron some things out, and then we're like, okay, I'm betting process because look, at the end of the day, when people come here and they bring a good work, ethic and that attitude to it because they want to live out that american dream, I'm all for it. Like, do it because they're contributors to society and they're probably awesome people, you know. But at same time to just say, hey, that's not that big of a deal. Oh, you're misinformation, blah, blah, blah, blah. It's like I'm sick of hearing that and then seeing what you said, because I think the rape and stabbing wasn't that in the United States recently.

Speaker 1:

I don't know if it was the United States, but I've read a lot in France, Germany. It's pretty bad.

Speaker 2:

UK.

Speaker 1:

It's real bad. It's like here they're putting illegal immigrants over citizens. It doesn't make any sense. I got one, yeah, go ahead.

Speaker 4:

Sorry it's on topic. Did you guys hear about what they're passing in california for illegal illegal residents?

Speaker 2:

the 150 000 they're gonna get for a new home I was like gonna think which one yeah, because I've heard several things, which one yeah?

Speaker 3:

My God, we lost Jordan Come on Jordan.

Speaker 1:

Sorry, Sorry, it was stupid. No, that's another solid point. I'm trying to get off track here, but you know when you're going to put. You're putting other people from other countries ahead of your citizens. The collapse is coming. We're not going to be able to sustain that forever. I mean, you have people such as let's be real right Danny and her husband. They left California for a better life. I don't blame them. I want to leave California soon.

Speaker 2:

Freedom state.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, freedom state. Right, sam and Jordan, you guys are both working your butts off. Sam, your lady, she's in school working to do well for herself, right? And we're citizens of this state and in this country, you're going to reward others for coming over here illegally, which is the key word. Yet you are obeying the laws, paying your taxes, being a good citizen.

Speaker 3:

And what do you get? High interest rate, nothing, zero, you can't even like how are people look?

Speaker 1:

I'll tell you right now, in my agency, where I work as a firefighter, there are many of our young firefighters who cannot live in Southern California on our pay anymore because it's too expensive, yep, and that's crazy because it's too expensive, yep, and that's crazy because, let's be real, like the reality is most people in public service, we get paid.

Speaker 1:

Okay, we're not rich, we're not, you know, on the poor level, but we live comfortable, right, who you know? If you're putting 20% down on a house that are homes that are now as fixers, a million dollars, your house rich, cash, poor most of these guys are paying six, seven thousand dollars on a mortgage.

Speaker 4:

That's crazy that was going to be the point I was going to bring up about that is that, like I don't you know, of all the of all the information that's come out about it, it seems like they don't do any of the explaining side of what that legislation would mean. If this passes, so it passed in the assembly, but I don't think Newsom signed it into law yet. But if it passed in California Congress passed in the assembly, it's more than likely going to pass with Newsom. But what I'll say is that that information is kind of like it's still like an obscurity. So I did a little digging to see what that meant and essentially, like you said, so it's $150,000 up to for the 20% of a down payment. So that would put your value asset of what you can get into at about a hundred or 860, sixty thousand roughly right, which again would buy you a house in most places, you know, depending on where you're at. But what they do not list anywhere that at least I could find, was who's gonna be doing the funding on the bank loan. So even if, even if you, let's say you had a family member that was very wealthy, it was going to give you a down payment for a down payment. Let's say they're gonna give you $150,000. Even if you finance the rest of it which is I'm assuming what's gonna be happening is that your payment on a 30-year fix is still gonna be over five thousand a month minimum, and that's not including if you had any like. That's so crazy, because if any one of us were doing that, or if we couldn't come up with the 20% depending on what people know about mortgages and home buying, you're going to pay PMI, which is interest against your loan, until you hit the 20% equity in the house, and you still have to come up with interest on top of your loan to pay your loan plus interest, plus the state tax, which, depending on where you're purchasing, that, could be anywhere. I mean, if it's a $800,000 house at 2%, 16 grand extra a year, right? So now you're going to get qualifications on people that are potentially non-citizens. Qualifications on people that are potentially non-citizens, you know that are making that they can come up with five to six thousand dollars a month for a mortgage on top of everything else, right? So it's like it doesn't say anything that if you qualify for WIC or food stamps or any housing you know, or schooling, whatever, it doesn't say that you can only use one and not get this. It just says, undocumented, that you would be able to qualify.

Speaker 4:

So my question was one how is the state gonna recoup cost on that? And what's that gonna do to availability? They don't put a cap on people that are like, oh, we're gonna do it for a thousand people, we're gonna do it for 10,000 people. It just says open, right, so okay, so that means everyone's gonna qualify. So what that? What will that do this system? They're gonna bog everyone down. Which banks are funding it? Who's gonna be coming up with the money? What's that gonna do to property tax? Is that how they're gonna?

Speaker 4:

offset it are we and everyone's gonna bump up 1%, which is a lot of money for a lot of people. As far as what?

Speaker 2:

yeah, I think for.

Speaker 4:

So it, there's there.

Speaker 4:

So there's so many questions that are left open-ended that are like holy crap, dude.

Speaker 4:

Not to mention if you are going to be a citizen here or if that's in the short-term potential or let's say, long-term potential of what you want to do. If you are undocumented here, you're going to be potentially screwing yourself over if you don't come up with that, because your name now, whether you're registered or not, is gonna be attached to a defaulted loan. Now it doesn't mean that everyone I'm sure there's gonna be again we're talking about percentages of masses of people. There are gonna be people that come over that get after it and probably make the payments, or maybe coming over here with money and they happen to be undocumented, but there's gonna be a lot of people that aren't. There's gonna be a lot of people, just like in oh seven, before the old Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac thing crashed, where you have people that were fry cooks qualifying for seven hundred fifty thousand dollar loan payments and then all of a sudden, when their balloon blown, went up, in three years they couldn't figure out how they were paying twelve hundred bucks a month and now own seven7,000 a month.

Speaker 1:

I would laugh.

Speaker 4:

And we got to see what that did. It decimated the market. Now it opened up some doors for people that had a little cash, but it foreclosed on tons of people. The government had to bail out billions and billions of dollars to defaulted loans. It's going to be the same thing, just at a different angle. So when I hear this kind of stuff, it's like dude, like, like again. And I'm not. I'm not saying that I'm broke, I'm not, you know, and I'm not rich either, you know. So it's like. But for me to try to invest in it to my future, when now it's like okay, well, because I'm a homeowner now, am I going to get screwed on the back end of this? I would guarantee that being the possibility, because how else are they going to get the money? Yeah, Unless they just bring up stay income tax, which would probably be the smartest way to do it and not take people out that already have homes here.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, Sam and Danielle, what are your thoughts on this, with what we're talking about, rural Colorado and California giving $ grand to people who aren't?

Speaker 2:

even citizens. Well, for starters, I think 150 doesn't even put a down payment on a house in California in reality, no, maybe a condo. You're looking for like a house that's like under 500. And is there any over there, unless you're like way out and the boonies?

Speaker 4:

realistically no, so even $150,000 will get you into eight hundred and sixty thousand dollar price zone, so that's roughly what 20% is that's so not even a fixer in my area a thing.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, my area now you guys know our little fixer. My area now is over nine hundred thousand dollars I was gonna say I believe it I believe it but, but what you said, I don't know, uh, condos.

Speaker 4:

So that's gonna be like I? I would assume that that would be like the target purchase uh, you know, if you're gonna apply for this and you're gonna be able to qualify and not live exactly where you want, but maybe close to you without being out in the sticks somewhere. That's probably what it's going to be at condos. But again, now you're talking about association fees and all these other things like and is the government? What would be interesting with that is is that would the government, or at least the California State government, be? Well, they have to override the ability to say, like, cause, like, if you have association stuff, they can. They can tell people no and move things around, which is messed up if you're just trying to buy a standard.

Speaker 4:

But in this case it's like well, I can kind of see if they're like okay, they're qualifying for this loan that we have zero information on, and then are they just gonna tie into this? And we all know in California your squatters rights are ridiculous. So, basically, like there's just I can't believe it's happening. There's a ton of problems that could be associated with it and there's not a lot of clear text on how they're gonna do it. There's a little bit on talking about making the money back which they said they owe 20% of the equity that they'd achieve over 10 years. That's on the assumption that it would be higher in 10 years than it is right now. But it's just bad. I don't know. I think it's bad policy.

Speaker 3:

So I don't know. I was going to say I'm not hopeful. Jordan, you mentioned that there are undocumented people that come over and maybe they have a little money, and then there are the other ones that are just completely broke. And I think one of the reasons for coming to America is because you need better stability, a better life. Where you were coming from was horrible. So part of what makes you come here is just a lack of resources, you know, and you're going to get them when you get here and you know that. You know, so that's why you come and then.

Speaker 3:

So if we're going on that assumption, then what do you have? You have nothing, you know. So I just I'm not hopeful. That you know. I just I don't know what the banks are going to do. It's going to be just a complete shit show because these people aren't going to have the means to gain or pay back. I mean, I mean really, you know, if we realistically think about how they can, I mean a lot of people will succeed, you know. I just, with these particular loans, I don't know.

Speaker 4:

I don't know how that happens, you know what I would, what I would say is like look at, look at how, like the welfare system is set up.

Speaker 3:

Right.

Speaker 4:

Right.

Speaker 4:

So like there are like caps on certain things, but they're not like like zeroed out at a time, like you can reapply and qualify and if you're on, that's why we see a lot of you know there's a lot of abuse in that because it's not, it's not stringent, it's not like, hey, we can put you on welfare and you have five years and then if you haven't figured it out in five years, that's on you, like there's not, there isn't, that doesn't exist here in this state.

Speaker 4:

Right, because and again doesn't mean it's for everybody, and it just means that like, and you know, they're going to be the, the people that rise up, and then there's going to be the people that are like this is good, like this is better than where I'm from and we have nothing, and now we get this and now I know how to work the system, and there's people that do that. So the corruption that is associated with that is like you you know, in my opinion doesn't really end, nor do we have any incentivization to get out of it. So that's where I see, like you know, it's just we're just adding another layer of complexity, problems to the state, in a state where we're already seeing big vendors, big people. They're like you know, I mean like Musk got out of here. There's a couple other. You know what was the? What was one of the one of the gas companies is leaving, or they're like shutting down one of the refineries and moving to.

Speaker 1:

Texas. Oh, that's Chevron. Chevron's moving the headquarters. Oh, wow, I think it's Elsinore Torrance.

Speaker 4:

It's north of that. I think they have a Bay Area headquarters where they're going to move that over to Texas. But what I'm getting at is that there are big players in this that see riding on the wall that there's no benefits of having massive corporations and again, I know it's the people with the big money but typically those coincide with massive numbers of jobs and creating sustainability within the areas that they work. People might get pissed. They're like all these rich people. They're paying low taxes, blah, blah. They're also providing jobs for tens of thousands of people.

Speaker 4:

So again, you know, what do we do? You know, and it's just like the only way is to either limit things or stop things from coming in and trying to take care of the people that are already here. You know, because either limit things or stop things from coming in and trying to take care of the people that are already here, because it's a laundry list of problems and we're gonna keep running into the same thing. But we're in election season and everyone's got the answer for the next four years, when the reality is dude, we're on like a hundred year path of trying to actually fix something. Most of the things that we're talking about in this very moment won't be fixed in our lifetime. So it's, it's going to be, because I mean, look, it's government bureaucracy, it's slow moving, it's all these other things that we won't see the change in our lifetime and the hope is, like tim, like we were talking about your, you know your kids, and like my kids, your guys' kids, everybody.

Speaker 4:

The point is is to try to change the trajectory to have a more solid future. And I know that doesn't sound very fun, because it's not. It's not going to be fun and it's not going to be helping everyone all at the same time, even though that may be a nice feel good goal. The reality is is that they do? You know, it's know it's like look, no one likes rules. I think that's very simple, right, or at least growing up we didn't like rules. You don't get like to get told what to do, and some of us take that attitude into our adulthood and then some of us realize that like, hey, even though I don't like it, there's shit that I have to do to be successful, moving forward and that's not a fun conversation and it doesn't hit every category of who's listening, but that's the reality to make things sustainable, moving forward in hopes to generate a better society and you know and go ahead and going back. I dude, I'm so sorry I cut you off with the whole the home buying things.

Speaker 2:

I still want to talk about the Aurora that's where I was going to head on to, aside from my bad math with the 20%, but back to Aurora. That's like a perfect example if vice president and I say vice president because I want people to hear vice president Kamala as much as they can so they can realize this is our Vice President right now. So so many of these things can be I don't want to say so many, but like things can be fixed because she is our Vice President present. It's not we're waiting to bring you in, you are in, like that should be perfect.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, you've been in, so where have you been?

Speaker 2:

But, um, she does win this election. Like to me, what's going on in Cal, colorado is the perfect example of what our country can be like if under completely under this control. I mean, she's already in the administration, you know, like if we want to get a little nostalgia, yeah, I love that.

Speaker 2:

But, that's what I fear more than anything. I feel like I'm honestly feeling like I'm prepping myself for that happening because, even though it sounds so much like you got it in the bag, it's like you can't underestimate them. I know they like seem really stupid on the surface especially her but it's like they're good at cheating or they're good at somehow weaseling their way to get what they want, and if they don't, they throw a tantrum and destroy things. So it's like it's. It's absolutely ridiculous. It blows my mind how some people you don't have to even really study any of these things is. All you really have to do is look at your environment, look at the differences between blue states and red states. Like it's.

Speaker 3:

It's that simple for just common sense right, yeah, just go ahead, sam, you have something. Well, I was just gonna say so. You guys have seen the video, the video of the of the venezuelans in that apartment complex. Yeah, I've seen, you know, huge rifles. Yeah, man, and it's just, it's it's crazy because you, if you, you know, you pan up those videos that pan out and show the whole complex and it's it's a very, very rough neighborhood, you know, and and I've heard that it's multiple complexes and what's so crazy is that, tim, you mentioned the governor, you know, saying whatever, he's saying some crazy shit. And you know you have the governor. They're asking him what's going on and they're saying well, danny, what is the main? Because they're not really highlighting the Venezuelan impact. It's more of a what is it? Code. The buildings aren't up to code, so we're gonna shut down the buildings. You know, and allegedly you know, this has been happening for months, but now that the Venezuelans have taken over, it's shut everything down, you know, and they're not even talking about why you know they're

Speaker 3:

just saying. So we were just going to, you know, and there's been several teams in Zoom meetings where that's all they're talking about and then they're shutting the conversation down. And one of the interviews that the governor had that really that really stuck to me was he was like you know, we really got to see where this nonprofit money is going, you know, and and maybe it may be going to Aurora. Then that's probably how you're getting. You know, tons and tons and tons of Venezuelans that are flooding that particular area in Colorado. You know, and then if you have such a crazy impact, so many people, I read something that Call that Aurora has the most migrants per capita.

Speaker 3:

You know it's obviously a smaller, a smaller region, but I don't know, I read it, but really I wrote, yeah, the most per capita. You know it's obviously a smaller, a smaller region, but I, I, I don't know, I read it, but I wrote, yeah, the most per capita. So if you have all these people Jordan to your point, that may, you know, have some money. Some may have some money, most don't how are they going to get money?

Speaker 3:

You know they're, they're good, they're going to rob, kill building inspectors. Yeah Right, man, I mean it's almost like it's, yeah.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, it's bound to happen, you know I'd be terrified to live in any of those buildings with my children I couldn't imagine. I couldn't imagine the fear of some of those families are going through.

Speaker 1:

Well, it's terrible because I remember I was watching some article. So I'm actually on Twitter, which is now X, and I go there for a lot of news now because people post stuff that you will not see on mainstream media. And I'll say this right, it's wild still, there's some crazy stuff on there. So watch what you search, but you see there's more than just two videos. Yeah, be careful what you search, dude. I'll sit there sometimes at night. I'm just like, I'm just going to keep going and you'll flip two videos.

Speaker 1:

Oh my God, yeah, someone's getting their head cut off by the cartel. It's like, why is that on there? Yeah, but you're seeing there's more than two videos in Aurora, colorado. There's a lot on X that is not shown on our national news networks and it really is suppression. I don't know how you want to say this. They're controlling the narrative. Right To me, there's a bigger purpose behind what's happening.

Speaker 1:

Right, they're pushing all those. There's a reason why all those immigrants are at aurora, colorado. That's like the highest intake of them, right, like, what are they trying to do? And what you're seeing and I'll say, you're seeing it around the world right now, in, I think it's in brazil, they just banned x. They don't want, they want to control the narrative. Like the people don't have free speech anymore. The UK all around the world, they're banning X in certain social media sites for news because they don't want the truth out. They want to control the narrative.

Speaker 1:

And if people don't think that that's coming for America, especially if Harris gets in, you got something coming, coming for America, especially if Harris gets in, you got something coming. I really believe if Harris does get in, we're already in hard times. More hard times are coming. Things will change big time and you will see a very, very big push of people taking away free speech, actually probably the constitution. I know that sounds crazy to a lot of people, but you're seeing it play out around the world. If you don't think that these governments are talking to each other and trying to figure this out, you know they just arrested, um, the guy who made telegram telegram not telegram, right because he's not moderating it like they want him to and he's like dude. Uh, this is free speech. People can say whatever they want. I'm not gonna sit there and tell people what they can and cannot say. French is like really, how about we arrest your butt?

Speaker 2:

Do you think he'll? Go after Zuckerberg. He's kind of coming out a little bit.

Speaker 1:

He did kind of reveal a bit much. I don't think they will. I think it's Elon. I 100% think they're going to go after Elon Musk because if you look at X, he's bringing back people that they originally banned before he bought it right. What's his name from Infowars? What's his name? Alex Jones. He's got his account back and he is blasting. Some of the stuff is crazy, right. You don't think it's going to be real and the next thing you know you're like hey, he was right, it happened.

Speaker 2:

He was right. With so many things. It's like what more do you need? How much more do you need? How many kids need to go missing for you to bring up the Epstein list again? Come on, how is none of this happening? That's what drives me mad.

Speaker 1:

Under Kamala Harris, over 300,000 children have gone missing and into sex trafficking across our border. Wow, 300,000. I just read that the other day and no one's saying anything about it. Whatever, dude, it's okay. But, the children in cages. Oh my god, uh, look, there's that's what I know.

Speaker 2:

They care more about if they can go get an abortion than they do about these kids. But you know what? A few years back it was all about the children in cages, but let's forget about the 300 plus thousand kids that are missing, and I want to make sure I can get an abortion too.

Speaker 3:

At the same time so it's like yeah, danny, have you seen that that trump ad? Oh sorry, jordan, I was just gonna have you seen that?

Speaker 4:

trump ad with uh, with kamala, uh, it's called kamala versus kamala and she's saying she said something you know or she's like flip-flopping yeah exactly, and it's like oh shit I mean I don't know if you guys saw at the, at the dnc they were, they were doing free. Uh, I think they were doing oh my gosh mastectomies and abortions. Yeah, that's like a promo thing to me.

Speaker 3:

That feels like that feels, like a religion thing like that's.

Speaker 2:

That's what like the satanic rituals do is like you sacrifice, you end that. That's what it feels like, because because, what is what is infertility or whatever any of that have to do with politics? Technically, when you think about it, that's a great.

Speaker 4:

You know what I mean yeah, like to me it feels more like it's just like a cult thing yeah, that's, but that's one of the major, that's one of the major running items, though, like if you had to say what is like, like, uh, like, what's kamala harris gonna push like her top three things. Oh, I mean that top three, and one of them is gonna be like the road versus weights, that yeah well, yeah, but I mean, I gotta fall under that class.

Speaker 2:

Yeah right.

Speaker 4:

So it's like that's what's so important Is to be enough. And I'm not saying that it's not important because there are, you know, choice and all that stuff there's, there's a level of importance to it, because our you know choice and all that stuff there's, there's a level of importance to it. But when your campaign slogan is going to be like this is one of the major things that I'm fighting for, I think that's a weird priority.

Speaker 3:

When we have a lot of issues.

Speaker 4:

I would think that a lot of people are very, you know, very important. And again, like you know, the abortion rights and everything like that like, obviously, everyone's got a different opinion on them and I'm not gonna even try to explain mine. I just I feel like there is a level of importance to it, but it's like, in the big picture of where we're at as a country, I think that's a little bit lower down on the list, you know, because, again, right, the Roe v Wade overturning and all that stuff, and they're trying to be like well, according to Project 2025, trump's going to do this and it's like no, what everyone, or at least what he has stated, is going to fall back on the state. So, if you don't like what your state's rights are, then move, you know, or try to go somewhere else if you really need that. And I don't want to get too deep into that, but I just mean, like priority, it should be at the bottom.

Speaker 2:

It should be towards the bottom of the list with what we have. On top of that, if they have things their way, majority of the stuff's going to be stripped from us regardless. So you're going to be constantly fighting for a right somewhere with them right, but I just feel like that's such a and this is coming from a woman.

Speaker 2:

You know that, I know, but that's what I identify as so, um, I don't know why I'm looking around, but you know, like, but, um, but it's like really, it's just like so many other things are going to be stripped from you that are more important, that you need to survive and that's your priority.

Speaker 3:

Like come on, yeah, so we're not talking about exactly low hanging fruit and we're not talking about, like, the big picture, Right, we're talking about. You know, what are these families, people, going through today? And it's well, they're going to need abortions all the time. So let's just target that and then let's target this. But these huge things, like I mean like illegal immigration, that's just, that's way too abstract, that's way too big. You know, let's focus on these small things, one after the other, and then you know, if that's still there, maybe we'll talk about it. But no, I don't. I don't think. I think the, the, the audience that they are uh focused on, are dealing with those issues that you brought up, Jordan. I mean, it's, it's or they're not dealing with bigger issues, that I'm sorry. They're dealing with the smaller things on a day to day basis. You know what I'm saying. So it's like, uh, you know they're going to continue to focus on that.

Speaker 2:

They're keeping it simple stupid.

Speaker 4:

Exactly, keep it as simple as possible. A hundred percent. And it's again like I use the term the low hanging fruit, because if as long as you can deflect with virtuous situations, then, it's going to keep like, look like, at the end of the day, like whatever base you're talking about, like whether you're Republican, democrat or Trump, or you're in favor of Kamala or anyone that was not technically elected but appointed to the position of the candidate, which that's crazy, by the way, you know democracy works.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, you let the other guy pick it for you.

Speaker 4:

You know, and I just think that, like it's it's the unfortunate side of this to me is like I think it's going to be a lot closer, because I just think the the way up we're already kind of seeing, you're starting to see there's certain states that are like we're going to try to pass like voting rights laws or we're not going to agree to something I think it was Pennsylvania said that they're already committing to, like nine days after the election, before they have to submit their final numbers.

Speaker 4:

And you know, like I mean, look at oh, oh, oh, I I got one, I got one, I'm so glad I got one. Um, I know another thing, uh, and I and I and I only am saying this because when I first read it I thought it was like like a right-wing kind of propaganda piece and, um, it was basically stating that like there had been some I don't know if it's legislative changes or whatever like constitutional changes to what the criteria of voting rights would be, and stating that something was changed in the last year or so that allows for non citizens to be able to vote.

Speaker 4:

And I was like Bull, like bullshit, there's no way like I mean like, okay, you got my interest, what's this all about? So I did a little digging and was just looking on the it's like judicial gov whatever it's our judiciary website from the government that says under the voting rights that it starts off by saying that if you're not a citizen, you can't participate in the general election. It's under perjury of law. Time, you would be fined. After this, spend five years in prison, yada, yada, yada. At the bottom, underneath the subcontext, states what parameters of citizenship means.

Speaker 4:

Parameters of citizenship means and on the last bullet point, states that if you believe it to, be true at the time of voting as a citizen that you can vote on there and I wish I could post up the little snap because I was going to post this and be like you gotta be kidding me Like someone. Please prove this wrong kind of thing If you believe it to be true Jordan, you got to say that again. So it says at the time of casting the vote if you believe it to be true that you are a citizen, you could move and do so, and so on and forth.

Speaker 2:

It's like why even have the question? It's like why even have the question? It's like why, even have the question I always believe it.

Speaker 1:

It's almost going along with, Officer.

Speaker 4:

I thought I could steal his money from the bank. I thought everyone said I could take it. That's actually happening right now.

Speaker 1:

I'll talk about that later. Do you guys know that whole chase hack?

Speaker 4:

No.

Speaker 1:

It's happening in the hood. It's hilarious. There's a bunch of people in the hood that have found this chase hack, but the bank can trace that you screwed them over and their bank accounts show like negative 10,000, 20,000. We'll talk about that later. It's almost like for them. What you're saying, jordan, is they identify. It's like everything else, right, identify as a man.

Speaker 1:

Identify as a woman, identify as a man. Identify as a woman. Identify as a cat, identify as pansexual right? Well, I identify as a citizen, so I should have the rights of a US citizen.

Speaker 4:

That's crazy. I mean, that's how I read that.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, so let's get down to the nitty gritty of this right. The entire reason they want an influx of immigrants is because they want their vote. That's it. They want power. This is all about power and control.

Speaker 1:

But what most people don't realize is, when this happens, you're going to see the collapse of our societies. We can't fund hunt millions of immigrants coming and not giving to the system paying taxes. How's that going to work out for us? I mean, think about just California right now. I think California is going to crash and burn eventually. All these major corporations are gone. You got Tesla, you got Chevron. You think it was a Toyota. There's so many big companies that are gone and small businesses that are leaving. You're talking about billions of dollars of revenue gone. That now, danny, you're gone, falls on me. Jordan, sam, everyone else who's paying taxes here. That's just going to continue to climb up on top of the more taxes they want to bring, which I'm sure you guys have heard. This too. Kamala Harris is talking about taxing unrealized gains. Okay, meaning meaning this is great is great. Okay, say, you bought a home for 500 000.

Speaker 1:

Now it's worth a million dollars you don't really have that money in the bank account right until you sell that house. Now she wants to tax you on that equity of 500500,000 25% or so I think it's like about 25% oh yeah, they want to tax you on unrealized gains. This is a big deal right now. That means how work. Say, I have a, I have $500,000 in equity. Where am I going to come up with 25% of that Exactly?

Speaker 2:

Sounds like you're going to be my neighbor soon.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, you're either going to owe them hundreds of thousands of dollars, or you're going to sell your house and you're going to be gone, right, no one's going to be able to own a home, right? But if you think about communism and the tactic to get there, that's it. They want government control. They don't want anyone to own anything. You have equity. You own home. You have power. You have a little bit of power. You have a little bit of say-so. You're a contributing, taxpaying citizen. You have equity. You have a home that you can pass down to your children. That's kind of wealth in a way. You take that away. You have a home that you can pass down to your children. That's kind of wealth in a way. You take that away. What do we have? I'm just a renter renting someplace and, let's be real, no one's going to afford a home. So eventually it's going to fall to the government. Government's going to own all this stuff. Now we pay them on top of our taxes. It's a mess like I and this is the first time in my entire life I've ever heard my father talk to someone.

Speaker 1:

I've never heard him say this. I think I told this to you, danny. Yeah, he told me a few weeks ago he was saying like if Kamala gets in, we're going to have to leave California. We're not going to make it. Oh damn. And.

Speaker 1:

I was like coming from a lifelong surfer right, he never wants to leave the beach.

Speaker 2:

But he sees the right. The best part is too. I was just talking to your parents kind of about that, um, when I was at your house last, um, when we were, we were inside in the kitchen and like I was refreshing their memory where I lived and everything like that and your mom, oh, yeah, I remember you know like and um.

Speaker 2:

then your dad was like, oh, oh, I could never leave. So it's like, just like, within that short amount of time of like realization, like remember you remember when Scar killed Mufasa? Yeah, how Scar's like pride looked. Looked like shit. That's what he still looked like.

Speaker 4:

So, you know, yeah, my daddy Lion King reference Nice.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, that was good. I'm team Simba, well.

Speaker 1:

I think you know you know, especially like you, danny and Jordan and Sam. I know you have, you know, children with your lady and I'm going to be a father soon and things just kind of hit different for me now. You know you have to look at. I look at life very I try to realistically. Okay, I ain't going to live forever. Okay, I'm 38. Trust me, I feel it Cause I put a lot of use on this body, skydiving and surfing and running stupid amounts of miles.

Speaker 2:

Um, things change when you get older real stupid.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, why, why? Why?

Speaker 1:

yeah, trust me, and I'm paying the price I'm like I feel it, man, but like you start to understand your, your mortality right? The average lifespan of a human being in the united states is 70 years old. Okay, so if I think that my life is more than halfway done, I'm just having my first child. You know what's the future look like for her. Like my time, the reality is my time on this earth will end my success, the things that I have promotions, bank account, homes, this podcast. When you die, it don't matter, it's over. So what am I passing to my kid and what's her future going to look like? There's no way she's going to live in California, Maybe even the U? S as a whole. Who knows? I don't know. But that as a parent, like thinking of being a parent soon. It worries me like Whoa. What's going to happen to my girl? I want her to have her best.

Speaker 1:

I want her to have opportunity. I want her to be able to find someone and marry someone and have kids and be able to afford a home what they call the American dream. There will be no more American dreams soon. It's not going to happen. So, like, how do you change that? What do we do? And I tell people it's voting. You've got to like are you better off now than you were four years ago? And you can't. No one can tell me without boldface saying to me that you think you're better off right now. Right, it's insanely expensive for everything. Luckily, I got my home years ago, so my interest rate's like 2.25. That mess is like 7 plus right now. Yeah, Right.

Speaker 1:

I got in at 3, so I just barely made that cut. You know, this is not I don't want to sound crazy or weird, but you know these are things I think about. Now is a is like a middle-aged dude. Oh my god, like what's that? What's gonna happen for my child?

Speaker 2:

I don't know in that way though, too, because I do think, with you know, I guess, kamala's side there's a lot of women that are supporting that because they're jump shot and, you know, banking on the vote for me because I'm a woman, no, because personally I think it's chick. Think is what got us into this mess, okay, okay.

Speaker 1:

You bring up a good point and that's somebody who identifies but um uh so. Chick think.

Speaker 2:

I mean I gotta admit it.

Speaker 3:

No, I like it. But, that's.

Speaker 2:

That's literally what's going on, and then you have the beta males going along with it. So chick think is really what's? I personally think that's like messing a lot of these things up. It's like we can't go off of feelings. You have to go off of policies, which is why I am excited which I am excited that RFK and Trump are coming together, because I'm hoping that that that helps the moms, you know, like come on over to that side that are thinking, because it's not just, not only like crime and everything, but look at all the things that they're doing to our just regular home products, as far as food, cleaning stuff. Just what are they putting in the air?

Speaker 2:

Like, I think I've completely changed, or at least I'm tempting to trying to get my kid off. Like things like Lunchables and Goldfish, you know, because I'm really thinking more and more. I'm trying to homestead in my backyard, you know, like things like that, because I never was that type of person, like never. And so if you see me now, it's like I'm a completely different person from just from when we all reunited four years ago. Pretty much, yeah, I think all of us have changed completely.

Speaker 4:

Did you hear the speech that he had talking about the? Uh, he was using the. Make America healthy again.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, and yeah, yeah, there's a, look, there's a there. You know there's a lot to that, but everything that you listed, like I totally agree, you know every other. My wife and I were talking about it with one of our kids, cuz, you know, out of convenience and just feeding them whatever they'll eat, kind of thing, and just you know they're like a lot of time we're programmed that like, hey, this is okay, do this, do this, blah, blah, blah, and we can get into, whether it's food, health care, whatever you know. The reality is that a lot of corners are cut and supplements are being used. The potential for long-term problems statistically are a real thing and I think that you know and that and hearing that it's awesome, you know. But it's like you have one side talking about, like bringing these topics up and I really hope that the alignment with RFK.

Speaker 4:

I don't agree with a lot of his policy outside of like healthcare. I agree with him a lot of stuff when it has to do with that. Other than that, like you know, I have some difference of opinion on things. Um, I think it'd be great that that became a focal point of moving forward, which once was. I mean, I don't know if you guys remember right, like whether it's talking about the food pyramid which we come to find out. There's a lot of falsities in that, but oh yeah, cereals at the top grains, baby grains you know, but just processed foods and sugar.

Speaker 4:

Essentially, you know, and there's so many complications that come with that, and these are like statistics that we see. You know it's like you want to talk about. You know some obscure numbers of things, but, like they said, like it was back in like the early eighties or maybe it was late seventies, where it says like one in every 1200 kids had a diagnosis for autism, where now it's just saying it's like one in 22 you know, and again I understand.

Speaker 4:

I understand the medical field as far as spectrums of what is, sometimes things get expanded. So where it's like you know, maybe back in the 70s, if some kid was a little bit more quiet or socially awkward, it was just like, ah, they'll grow out of it, you know so they don't get attention in that way and maybe it was the more real, like you know, kids that have issues with these things, you know, that are a little bit more definite versus now.

Speaker 4:

There's a name associated with everything, because there's got to be a diagnosis for something across the board you know, and but a lot of those attributes are because of what we're putting in our bodies and a lot of times the hard part is is that, like dude, we all can't. I mean we talk about inflation costs. I mean, even that same bowl of cheap cereal costs three times what it costs five years ago. But if you're going to make the switch over to some organic supplementation of that where it's a cleaner eating, you know, $15 box of cereal spoon.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, exactly yeah, I was like nine bucks and the box is like half the size of the regular box that's on sale yeah box, that cereal is on sale.

Speaker 4:

You know, you know. So it's just look again election season. We're gonna get a lot of information from both sides, but I did want to leave it with one thing that I thought was pretty crazy that kamala harris stated and again, I don't think she's was it unburdened no, no, she has a.

Speaker 4:

She does have a unique gift though I will give her. That is that she's able to talk in a circle over and, over and over again, with trying to use big words as, like, the bridge to landing points, even though she doesn't land a point, you know. But she just kind of keeps rambling and then stops, laughs and everyone applauds um you know, that's a unique, that's a unique skill.

Speaker 4:

But what I did think was interesting that she stated is that she had two. She had two interviews or I'm sorry, they weren't interviews, they were um, uh like speeches, I guess whatever she was talking at both times yeah, she doesn't do interviews well, she doesn't do it by herself you know she wants the buddy system, I guess but the emotional support animal yeah, she stated twice that 220 million people in the United States died of COVID in the last five years. Wait, hold on 220 million.

Speaker 1:

That's a lot 220 million.

Speaker 4:

Correct.

Speaker 1:

Where the heck did she get that number?

Speaker 4:

I don't know, because if you look at the census, we didn't lose that many people, and I'm not saying that people didn't die from that.

Speaker 4:

And again, I don't mean that as in people are affected or that didn't have loved ones or family members or anyone pass away. That had covid I'm not saying that at all. It that was a thing. But 220 million would have been like we lost cities of people, you know, and it wasn't just a snafu on a clerical error. One time she said it again at a different thing.

Speaker 4:

So what I'm, what I'm getting at is that the policy, the, the short-term future changes. There's another thing like that. What it is is it's fear-mongering, it's be afraid of this one guy and look at all the things that have happened and don't worry, we're gonna help you, you know. And which is pretty crazy because all of us sitting here are stupid for not being in politics, because we could make a lot of money and sell just absolute bullshit and people will listen, you know. And it's crazy because, like I used to think that, like you know, like oh, and I hear like party differentials and stuff, it's like, look, people are just playing the game but doing their thing.

Speaker 4:

But it's like that attitude on my end has probably been bad too, because I feel like I'm not alone in that feeling and we allow this as a society to take place, you know, and I'm not. I'm not pitching one side versus the other, I'm just saying just government in general. You know, it's like when we we buy into the BS of being told that like hey, we got you, don't worry, hang in there. This and that and whatever. And at the end of the day what happens? Things cost more, you don't make more and now you owe more and that unrealized tax on I I forgot how you would call it Unrealized gains tax?

Speaker 1:

Unrealized gains tax or capital gains? Yeah, unrealized gains or capital gains.

Speaker 4:

If that goes through, if that does, if that's a true statement that she really wants to get done, help us all if that happens, because anybody out there who's nickeled and dimed their way to get any assets, any kind of value, putting yourself and your family in any position of long-term gain or wealth or prosperity whatever term you want to use that shit's gone. I mean, look, bringing up your parents is a great example, because I mean having an unsubstantiated claim without anything behind that is frightening. Because if you said you're like hey, look you like, let's say, your parents, the way they bought their house, let's say in the seventies.

Speaker 1:

No, they did. I'll tell you right now. They bought it in 78 for a $98,000.

Speaker 4:

Okay, and now?

Speaker 3:

let's say their house is worth a million.

Speaker 4:

They have to pay $250,000 of whatever they have in equity and have to come up with that, Because again, we're not talking about like, Ooh, there's a game plan for this. They're just saying, I mean, look, dude, it's the same shit as her saying we're going to stop corporate gouging and we're going to be a make food affordable.

Speaker 4:

Again You're like, well, what the fuck does that mean does that mean you could have done this this whole time yeah, you're like, you've had the opportunity to now people to lower the cost. Now, you know why? Now, oh, because you're trying to get elected the next three months and let's say that happens, you know. And on the short term, does that sound cool? Yes, but what that does is now we have other government subsidies that are going to control the ability of what food cost is. Now, I don't know if anyone knows, but that's what communist countries do, and what that does is it drives it. Well, it drives disparity, because now you have resource issues, you have inabilities for farming to keep up with the vendors costs, because now if you said, hey, you can't charge more than 50 cents for a carton of eggs, well, if we have an egg crisis then?

Speaker 4:

they'll just be like hey, sorry, there's no eggs. Exactly, you know, and I'm not saying that having lower food causes it wouldn't be a massive help, because it would. But in the long term that's horrible. Because now we get rid of cat, because now that takes out the capitalistic approach of anything, because the idea is that we want, we want, uh, people to fight over the cost of items, because that's going to drive prices lower comp, thank you.

Speaker 4:

I could not think of that word economics bro economics, yeah, but yeah and that's and that's what it is, and it's like again we have someone who's a front runner for president talking about these things, just saying stuff while they're out there. We're like whoa, is anyone gonna check this person?

Speaker 1:

right and I'll say the same things to trump.

Speaker 4:

If trump makes an unsubstantiated statement where he's just like, yeah, we're gonna do this, I'll be like whoa buddy. That's not what we should be doing, like if you're gonna.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, that's how I talk.

Speaker 4:

You know, I was like that was probably the whitest thing that I've ever said. Listen here, buddy, I'm gonna stop you right there. You know so. But you know, at the end of the day it's just again. I think it's just, it's publicity stuff, it's just saying things to make people feel good about it. Of course you're gonna be like, yeah, we want to lower costs, we want to do this how. No one says how or and if or. So if someone does have a little bit of a game plan or at least a track record on showing things, I really hope people take that into consideration when they go to vote, and that's that's if your vote even gets counted. But we're not going to go down that route.

Speaker 1:

That's true look, dude, I I you bring up a good point like I'm typically 50, 50, there's a lot of things, at least before all this madness for the democrats I kind of support. With democrats I'm like, yeah, that sounds great. And there's 50, it's like with the republicans, yeah, that sounds pretty great. But now you know you want to think in reality here. What's going to be best for your future and the future of your children, if you have some, or your future children, or your business, and what's not going to be. It's a simple question. I always say Are you better off now than you were four years ago? It's not about race, it's not about male or female in the president's seat. What is going to be the best for the future? That's it. And I do want to ask this you know separate questions to Danielle and Sam, and Sam being African-American, you know typically historically right for our families, because I'm mixed, as everybody knows. Right, and your dad is an immigrant, right, sam? Right, he worked his butt off. Right, I think, is your mom immigrant too.

Speaker 3:

No, she's from here.

Speaker 1:

Okay, how do you feel? Um, you know, as far as you know, typically, historically, african-americans vote democrat. You know, yeah, for sure. But how do you feel about that where sometimes you hear people like we're? You know, biden said it right, you ain't black if you don't vote democrat. You know.

Speaker 1:

So, in my opinion, and I don't want you to say this, but I I do think that there's a lot of communities african-american, hispanic that have been used as pawns in politics by the democrats and nothing's been done for them. And I will say for a fact Trump was the one president that actually did something in the hood. Yep, yep.

Speaker 2:

And I think he's a brother.

Speaker 3:

Exactly. And African-Americans and all minorities realize that. You know, they realized wow, you know what I've always wanted to to come up with something and maybe make my have my own business. And you know, in these four years I was able to do that and I was able to succeed. You know, and maybe they've tried in the past, you know, with other Democratic presidents and it just didn't really, you know, come to fruition.

Speaker 3:

And to your point about minorities man, it's sad, bro, it's so sad and I think a lot of it is that when we focus on us, you know, on me, how can I really gain? What do I need to do to get better? I think it's. I think a lot of people aren't necessarily thinking about, about you know me working my ass off and doing what I need to do. It's more of you know me, my family and my community. How can we all grow? And that's good, right, but not when it's at the expense of some, or when taxes are going up, because they're going up for a lot of people, and when I wanna eventually be in that group. That's gonna fuck me, that's gonna hurt me. But they're thinking about now and I don't think they a lot of minorities historically, have had the capacity to think about the future. You know so, if you can't, then you're only thinking about today. How am I going to eat today? Where am I going to live tomorrow? What am I going to do in these, in these, in these upcoming times? And so you're not thinking long term abstract.

Speaker 3:

But I mean, my dad has always done that, obviously, to plan to come from Nigeria, to come to America. You're gonna, you're thinking about not just, you know, oh, I want to get to America. No, it took him seven years he's been planning this. He's like yo like why Right? He's like why do I want to come here, why do I want to be here? Well, I got friends that are coming here. We all want to. We want to get into whatever business sector we want to do. You know so. And so I really think you know the problem is focusing on today. But I think that problem is because we don't have the means to focus on the future. And so I think you know to every, to Jordan your point, to Tim, your point it's kind of understanding how we can put, how we can solve both of those problems together at the same time. You know without you know fucking everyone else, you know, and I think that's, that's the main, exactly, man, yeah, yeah yeah, that's why I've kind of wanted to ask that.

Speaker 1:

It's like how do I say this without sounding racist? That's all I was worried about. I'm like I don't want to say anything.

Speaker 2:

That's stupid. You have me ask the question. That's how? No, no.

Speaker 1:

It's great inputs, sam, the whole reason. I love having everybody on here because there's such good perspectives. Everyone's background is so different. Everyone brings so much to this. That's why I can feel like, oh, I can ask Sam this it's good You're in the community. You know, dude, you, most of us came from nothing with our parents, right, it's not? We all came from money we had. We struggled to get to where we're at. We fought for the american dream, which is being taken away from people now dan.

Speaker 3:

American nightmare, bro.

Speaker 1:

American nightmare, that's what it is if they do that unrealized tax, the unrealized gains like oh my, we're all losing our homes. It's over, dude.

Speaker 2:

My grandpa would say he was a wire cutter. That's how he got here and then that's how we all got here. He's not a wetback. He says he was a wire cutter.

Speaker 1:

My man, my man. I just want to ask Danny a question real quick.

Speaker 4:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

Being a female and a minority. There are some videos that I have watched on social media of different podcasts and you see them people going out and talking to people in cities, whatever and they've been questioning a lot of women hey, who are you voting for? And they ask them why. And a lot of them were voting for Kamala. And they asked them why. And a lot of them were voting for kamala and they asked why, what is she done? And I want to say 99, we're just like well, that's it. It's just a woman.

Speaker 2:

Absolutely ridiculous.

Speaker 1:

That is the dumbest thing I've ever heard like do you want to crash and burn? Um so I asking, as someone who's a minority and a woman, what is your thought on that? As far as a female president, Kamala or somebody else in the future, what are your views on that?

Speaker 2:

I mean to put it blunt, like I just said, kind of like a chick think type thing. I feel like you need not saying that women aren't strong because we are, but I do feel, you know, we think a lot with feelings on the softer side and you have to kind of be a little cutthroat. You can't please everybody, so you do have to look at what's going to help the majority and to and to me. You know, like when I see Trump's policies, I see that helping the majority of things, along with what's my number one priority, will always be my kids, and I see much better outcomes with what he's trying to lay down versus her. I mean, I haven't heard anything else other than how the wheels on the bus go around and that she hasn't been to Europe. So that's what I've heard.

Speaker 3:

I just wanna add to that point. I think a lot of it is also not just because she's a woman, but because she's black. And because she's black, you know, we can, we can kind of dovetail.

Speaker 1:

She's not Right.

Speaker 3:

Right, true Right.

Speaker 2:

When I when I want to know about how to make a mean dish of curry, then I'll hit her up, but until then it's like that's. That was another thing that I was sitting there thinking about when you were asking Sam the question. Aren't any of them offended that they're making them look dumb? I know they're making cultures look stupid. Why aren't they pushing for Asians to vote that way or other ethnicities? You only see them targeting Hispanics or Blacks. So are you looking at us head on like? These are the dumb ones, these are the ones who don't know.

Speaker 4:

Honestly, yeah, you know what I mean. I'm really glad you said that. Oh, sorry, I mean I'm not glad you said that because it's bad that we're in that situation, but I do find that like kind of the irony of the situation is that, like, the push of like, like, like civil rights, of like we're all equal, you know, regardless of what we look like, and I feel like we've kind of had this like weird flip back into like a segregative opinion piece where it's like because you are you and which is not like me, you're sitting, you're you're, you're more valued than my statement, or how I feel about something and it's like, or the way things are proposed, as far as how it's being talked about it, like as a, as a minority female in that way, and I'm I don't mean that because of what you said, tim I mean like when you're watching these videos and you're seeing how things are proposed, you're like, ooh, because you're in this group. How does that make you feel?

Speaker 4:

instead, of just being like hey, as an american, or you know you're, you're a woman. What do you think about this solid point? You know, like it's, it's the way things that are pitched, and it's like it's like this indirect way of keeping people back into a group right right now and it's like it's like a reverse, it's like a reverse segregation thing back into a segregative uh uh outlook and it's like and then it keeps you segregated.

Speaker 4:

Yes, yes, and it's like, oh my god, dude, like, at what point does it like not matter, like can I ask you a question because your sam or danny or tim or myself, like it has nothing to do with that. It has to do with, like, yo, dude, what do you think about this?

Speaker 3:

you know, and it's just sam, do you have an id?

Speaker 2:

why do you have a?

Speaker 4:

computer successfully.

Speaker 2:

I'm glad to see that because, because I I heard that you know certain ethnicities can't get id, so or don't know how to do.

Speaker 4:

I think what gretchen whitmer stated was that the african-american community has a hard time because they don't really know how to use it yeah, that's so bad so sam, I'm glad. I'm glad we were able to do this successfully together and prove this.

Speaker 4:

You know you're like right like dude, but like okay, but I we joking about this because it's funny, but the truth was is that this is a. This is a governor of a state made that statement in an interview of talking about why we don't want voter ID issues because we're worried about certain communities inability to be able to access a computer or not. I'm sorry, not even access is when she said. She said use a computer. So it's not even like hey, you might not have enough money to have a computer, which that would have been a better way to say it. But instead of stating it like oh, because of your inability to use a computer, you're like okay, and again, there might be people out there that really don't know how to use a computer, but they probably could use a phone, because that seems to be pretty universal at this point.

Speaker 1:

Well, to your point, dude. There was a podcaster who went around. He took that same thing.

Speaker 2:

I'm going to disappear for a quick second, but I can still hear you. Yeah, go for it.

Speaker 1:

And he interviewed people in the hood. He went to Detroit and down to LA somewhere right, and he said hey, this governor said this. He was asking African-American people. Right, we can still hear you, Danny.

Speaker 4:

I bet she's going to the bathroom. That'd be hilarious.

Speaker 1:

But he asked them do you know where the DMV is? And they're like yeah, like do you know how to use internet and log on a computer? And they're looking at him like he's crazy. They're like, yeah, we're like, well, hey, this is what this governor said. Boom boom, boom, boom, right. And they're like that's ridiculous, like we're not dumb. He's like I got a phone. He put his phone up. One of the guys he's like DMV's over here on 256th and 3rd Street. He's like yeah, I can log on internet anytime and I'm registered to vote. It's just kind of crazy, dude. I'll say this and I want to go back to you, sam, because I know you had something to say, but they do think people are stupid. And I think people are catching on. I really do, because there's more people that I know that are African-American, like family members and friends, that they ain't voting for Kamala dude.

Speaker 1:

They're like no, we're done. They haven't done anything for us. We're out. It's different, but go ahead. Sam, I know you had something to say.

Speaker 3:

No, I was gonna say, like you know, to your point, tim, um, people are catching on and I think, uh, it just goes back to that group mindset. You know, um, you know, african-americans, we've, we've had a lot of, um, just, uh, you know, persecution, whatever you want to call it. You know a lot of, a lot of races, have you know? But in America it's been, it's been just crazy, right. So you're going to focus on the group. If you want things to move forward, and move forward meaning you know, hey, you want some money, vote for me, like to your point, jordan, just just keep panning out and I can keep getting that vote.

Speaker 3:

But when you start to realize, well, I am a part of a group, but, like, what about me?

Speaker 3:

Like, I have, I have there, there are random people in the world that have dreams you know the American dream, that want to do better, and maybe that dream is bigger than the group, you know.

Speaker 3:

So then they start to have this abstract, uh, you know, uh, realization, like I can do fucking better. And so then they raise above whatever the group is doing and then they start realizing, well, shit, I mean, what can I do to contribute to my life, danny, to your point to my family, to my kids how can I make my little group better than what it was four years ago? Well, the way that I can do that is by focusing on me, and when you focus on yourself, a lot of the times, everybody that does that. That bigger group ends up being a better group, because you're all thinking about well, I have something different than you do, but then how do we work together to be a better group in the long term? So I don't know, man. I just think it's really seeing ourselves pulling ourselves out of that group and seeing what is better in my life and what I need to be better, as opposed to thinking on the macro, the global scale.

Speaker 1:

The biggest thing I want to.

Speaker 4:

You're not defined by a group Exactly. That's the reality of it. That's what the push was. That's what the civil rights movement was about is that you are not defined on what the it's your character content. I know I've said that a thousand times on this and it's like I'm not saying that as a white person trying to quote Martin Luther King.

Speaker 1:

I'm just saying Boy, you Sam people, what do?

Speaker 2:

you mean? Why?

Speaker 4:

Exactly you Sam people, son, which we're going to go low key here, because what my ethnicity is isn't super popular in the world right now, but what I mean is that it's like again we fall under election time. What does that do? It's you're trying to whatever. If you want to label it as minority communities or what, what have you? You are in the spot because the system let you down right. There's no, you know, or because of the persecution, everything. It's like dude. No one's questioning the fact that shit was fucked up a while back. No one's questioning that.

Speaker 4:

I think the reality is where we are now moving forward, not getting rid of the past. Obviously, use it as a learning tool, you know, but to keep like to keep segregating groups of people, of saying you're this because of this, look what you need, not, who are you as the individual and how you're going to get yourself better. And I think what you said, sam, was really awesome, because I think that that's the truth. The truth is is that the focus isn't like oh, I look like this, therefore, I am this, it's. What am I doing as me, as the individual, and how am I trying to better my situation? You know, whether that's for your personal gain for your family, for your friends, or maybe the community that you're in and growing within that community, because that's what's contagious having that attitude trying to, you know, make yourself your situation better. Therefore, everyone around you hopefully picks up on that and tries to do it and, lo and behold, everyone's in. You know what?

Speaker 4:

I mean so on and so forth but this victimhood mentality of being like oh, it's because of X, y, z is why you're where you're at now, that does happen. You know again, it's not saying that it's not everybody, because that's dumb, we can't, we can't generalize everything in that way, but to say that, like you're always going to be this because of what you look like, it's like oh my God, can we, can we get past this a little bit and just be like? You know, everyone out here is trying.

Speaker 3:

You know exactly.

Speaker 4:

You should start freaking, trying, because there's a lot of us that are and we want to make this place better, you know, and and that's what it boils down to.

Speaker 4:

But again we're in political times.

Speaker 4:

No one wants to hear that, because again, that's whether you want to call it low-hanging fruit or it's easy things to poke at or whatever to make you look like, yeah, we should do this because of you know, it's like, look, because of inner cities, because of illegal immigrants, because of this, you know, and it's just like, okay, yeah, but in those groups there are people that are actually trying. So why don't we help these people out, not just making it, you know, and again it's. I mean, they're all sound redundant and how I talk about that. But you know, at the end of the day, I think, stay informed, try to better your situation, vote for what's gonna make it best for yourself and your immediate family, and if we do that, then I think the right people get into office. And I'm not even talking about this next four years because, honestly, if I'm, if I'm being truly honest, I think one of two things is going to happen. One if Kamala wins, the whole right side side is going to be crazy for a little while.

Speaker 4:

And then I think again if Trump wins, I think we're just going to see kind of what happened in the first four years of Trump, whether it's trying to impeach him or he's going to have bad deals or this and that and whatever and it's going to get drowned out with any policy that's actually trying to drive forward to make the American people a better society, policy that's actually trying to drive forward and make the American people a better society. Yeah, and you know. So I'm talking not this next four years, I'm talking eight, 12 years down the line. You know. So keep that. You know and everyone would. You know, hopefully everyone sticks to.

Speaker 4:

That is like we got a vote to make the situation better for us. You know, and I mean that as American citizens, trying to make our families the best that we can, moving forward Because, like Tim and you nailed it with a lot of things that you said earlier where it's, like you know, living in this state, it's crazy you know, and the way things that are getting pitched and all this stuff, and it's like, oh my God, dude, if that happens, woo, yeah, I guess I'll be moving somewhere else.

Speaker 2:

America, stay awake, stay alive at this point.

Speaker 1:

Oh, I love it, we've got to wrap this up you guys, you say America go woke, stay awake, stay awake, oh awake.

Speaker 1:

Stay awake, stay alive, you guys all had really really good things to say. We've got to wrap this up. We went way over than I thought we were, but it was so good I wanted to keep it going. But the last thing I do want to say what? What I thought is really, really hilarious and just poetry in motion and Danny, you brought this up on these topics and I wanted to talk about it I'm just going to say it Is the fact that we have open borders, but at the DNC they put up fences, what, what happened? And then they weren't letting people in who didn't have ID. Really, really, I thought we didn't need ID. Really, really, I thought we didn't need ID. What happened? You know, what I like, too, is at the DNC when they're sitting.

Speaker 2:

Go ahead. Oh yeah.

Speaker 4:

The booths at the DNC were $150,000 a booth Per night.

Speaker 3:

Well, if they come from California and get that?

Speaker 2:

handout on top of all the sweets that that the whole thing was riddled with million billionaire, whatever you know, rich people, and then they're saying oh yeah, let's go, let's, let's tax you guys more. You know like come on like hypocr to gouge these people in charge. But don't worry, we're going to have Megan the stallion Me I, I'm telling you.

Speaker 1:

I just thought it was hilarious when I saw the like well, we're not letting anyone in who doesn't have ID and we're putting up fences.

Speaker 2:

I'm like oh, that's ironic. I just don't understand how people don't see the hypocrisy. It's like, just admit it, you got bent over, you fell for it, so come on, there's nothing wrong. Just humble yourself and be like come on, we got to come about this a different way.

Speaker 1:

I'm going to say this and I don't mean to be rude to people, and this is just because I've been in my career field for 17 years. But straight up, Danny and Sam, you guys have probably seen this, but the average person is pretty stupid, Honestly.

Speaker 2:

Retired Retired level.

Speaker 1:

That's why I'm just like and they'll read headlines and they won't read articles.

Speaker 3:

They'll just take.

Speaker 1:

Oh well, the news said it, the government said it right. I remember a guy where I work he's well, the news said it, the government said it right. I remember a guy where I work he's a captain. He said I don't get it, why doesn't everyone just do what the government tells them Right? And the whole table went quiet and I just looked and went like this, what, what? And I was like I guess you know what Sarge you would have been on World War II, yeah.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, he got pissed.

Speaker 3:

Pissed, yeah, pissed, oh yeah, yeah, he didn't talk to me for a minute.

Speaker 2:

Well, if we do that, there will be World War.

Speaker 3:

III. So that's good, that is good yeah.

Speaker 1:

Anyways, here I'm going to drop this video in here for you guys real quick. I want to show you I don't know if you've seen this. Okay, it's freaking, it's so dope. You guys seen this?

Speaker 2:

No what is this Ha ha ha, Get him Vinny.

Speaker 3:

He's the one. Ha ha ha. Wow, look at this. That's crazy.

Speaker 1:

Best part, best part, it gets better. You guys remember matrix right shoes.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, oh yeah, let's go in the shoes. Yeah, wow, I love it.

Speaker 1:

Whoever made this was amazing Wow, I love it. Whoever made this was amazing Wow. I just wanted to show you guys that I thought it was pretty hilarious. That's pretty dope. I want to end this on a line-up because we hit some pretty heavy stuff. But real quick, there's another one I want to show you. I don't know if you've seen this to block the camouflage.

Speaker 2:

Oh dude, if that was me you'd be missing some eyes, I would freak out.

Speaker 1:

I'm sorry, I saw those. I'm like Straight for the sockets.

Speaker 4:

Poop, I think.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, but thank you guys so much for taking the time to be on here. This has been, like I feel so energized from doing this with you guys because it's been so long and I wanted to tell all three of you you almost said four, because there's four cameras but, um, I love and appreciate you all so much. Um, you guys have been such a big part of just my, like, daily life and growing and being friends. You see me through good and bad, and to be back on her doing this right now is just awesome, and to know that I'm having a child and you guys are all going to be around and be aunts and uncles to her is just super special. So I love all of you and I just want to thank you so much for wanting to be a part of this and keep going on and doing it and it's just awesome. It's been so much fun just chatting on here and laughing and doing this again and I love you guys. I really appreciate it. So thank you so freaking much.

Speaker 2:

We love you too. It it's kind of wild. It's been four years.

Speaker 4:

This is awesome.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, four years.

Speaker 2:

It doesn't feel like it. It feels like we kind of all just came together like within the last year, but it's like within the four years we've kind of reunited and got to know each other more. It's like I think it's wild how far we've come, Like just the different scenarios that have happened in each of our lives in the last four years.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, yeah it's pretty cool.

Speaker 4:

I was so pumped for today. It's been way overdue and. I love talking to you guys and you know I just appreciate our ability to do this kind of stuff and then that like this like I mean not well I know, like you guys knew each other a little bit before, but it was like just coming together and just how this is grown has been such an awesome thing to be a part of and you know I just I miss you guys and uh so you know, like I this morning I was.

Speaker 4:

Well, you're out of state, dude yeah, we're in commie form.

Speaker 1:

I didn't, I didn't mean that in a bad way.

Speaker 2:

I meant ouch, I hurt my heart. I was so touched.

Speaker 4:

Oh yeah, Well, you know it's like we have a lot of fun doing it. It's cool to it's, it's just I don't know. Anyway, I always look forward to it. I'm glad we're able to do it via this, and then, obviously, Tim dude, thank you so much for setting this up, and yeah, um, it's just I. I can't wait for the next one. Yeah, it's cool.

Speaker 1:

I'll tell you what, though, If anyone asks me to be a part of their wedding. Ever again, I'm not doing it. I'm over it. I'll never be a part of another wedding.

Speaker 4:

I'll leave it at that.

Speaker 1:

It's all your fault. Yeah, I'm like all your friends were hammered. Anyways, you guys ready to get a? Let's go in three. Yeah, we got to. Were hammered, anyways, you guys ready to get a? Let's go in three. Uh, yeah, we got to do it. We got to do it. Let's get it. One, two, three, let's go, let's go. Bye everybody. Thank you so much for listening in. If you liked what you just listened to, please leave us a five-star review on Apple Podcasts and on Spotify. Please follow us on YouTube, on Instagram and on Facebook. And a big shout-out to Stephen Clark, our sound editor. He's a huge part of this team. That is unseen. It's 8ix9ine Barbers, our first sponsor. Look good, feel good, be great. That's two locations Orange, california, and Long Beach, california. Book your appointment online 89barberscom. Bye everybody.

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