Explicit The Canary in the Cage Episode 22 - Home Brewing Beer, Steganography
Ep. 22

The Canary in the Cage Episode 22 - Home Brewing Beer, Steganography

Episode description

Home Brewing Beer, Steganography

00:00:00 - 00:02:00 Monero giveaway results

00:02:00 - 00:09:42 DNC coverage

00:09:42 - 00:15:17 RFK updates

00:15:17 - 00:18:46 The PII database leak

00:18:46 - 00:26:19 Can Harris/Walz win?

00:26:19 - 00:28:49 The Colorado Venezuela connection

00:28:49 - 00:44:58 Dave answers a viewer question about FDR’s New Deal (the book about Madoff is No One Would Listen - Harry Markopolos)

00:44:58 - 00:52:44 Unrealized capital gains taxes & job reports

00:52:44 - 01:01:27 300,000 missing migrant children

01:01:27 - 01:06:01 Breakdancing at the Olympics

01:06:01 - 01:13:19 Dave talks about steganography

01:13:19 - 01:18:37 Ron talks about home brewing beer

Download transcript (.srt)
0:00

Alright, welcome to the Canary The Cage podcast. I'm Ron Morgan, I'm a co-host Dave

0:16

Havlicek. We're here to entertain you, educate you and maybe make you laugh, hopefully, and

0:23

just talk some shit about everything. So I heard we have a Monero winner. Well, okay,

0:29

so we had one guy submit tellurian and it was also last week's winner. But he had three

0:36

titles. So I still want you to vote on which one you think is the funniest. Okay, what

0:40

are they? So we got number one, How Do I.. so How to Assassinate Your Citizens and Still Get

0:45

a Nobel Peace Prize. Oh, good one. Number two, Can You Drone Strike a Wedding if it's

0:52

a Gay Wedding? Oh, I don't think you can. Well, but that's a great title. And number three,

0:58

The Invisible Columbia Student. So I didn't get this one either. So I had to go do some

1:04

research. Yeah. And there was a thing where Obama went to Columbia as undergrad. Okay.

1:10

And apparently nobody remembers him being there just like Harvard. Huh, weird. So yeah,

1:16

I looked at one up to but yeah, those are your three options. You know what though? I think

1:21

that's the winner. Would be animated sync. Oh, okay. It's short to that's a good joke.

1:28

When you you say something people like wait, what? And then you laugh because it was funny.

1:33

Okay, so let me do a last second check of our donations. We had zero before but you know,

1:38

maybe one coming in the last minute. Nope. So sorry telluurian but you will get the 0.01

1:44

Monero for The Invisible Columbia Student. Make sure you guys if you want to do entries,

1:49

go to the matrix chat room. You can get there from our website, thecanaryinthecage.com

1:53

Yeah, because we want to do some creative Monero giveaways. So play with us

2:00

because we're trying to play with you guys. So obviously the DNC is this week. Yep. And I think

2:07

my prediction came true has been mostly drama free. Drop. Well, there's no Biden secret last

2:12

minute coup. Well, that might happen tonight. Okay, but the protesting outside is has been

2:19

mostly contained. Yeah, like, you know, no bombs, no huge riots, no fires. So what you're

2:25

saying is fences do work. Apparently, there's no piles out there as well. I saw a video today.

2:32

There was a guy, I think he's a local Chicago news guy or radio figure or something. And he

2:38

found a Venezuelan dude. And he tried to Chicago. And he tried to get him into the DNC and they

2:44

wouldn't let him in. And then he tried to go get like the badge, and they wouldn't give him a

2:49

badge. Well, tonight's the night if anything's gonna bad, if anything crazy is gonna happen.

2:53

Why is it the last day today? Yeah, Thursday, Thursday, Thursday, the drugs gonna speak. Okay,

2:59

yes, we're all gonna make this a first word words. Now, four words more than I do. I heard

3:05

there's might be another surprise tomorrow, which is that RFK might be dropping out. Right. But so

3:10

get back to the

3:12

because I do want to I want to touch on this. So there is a surprise visitor tonight, according

3:17

to Don Lemon, who has less podcasts than we do. Just throw that out. That's true. Or is it Lamont?

3:23

Is it limited? I have no idea. I mean, he is kind of an uppity dude. So he's kind of

3:28

fruity, I think he's pretty. Hey, don't say that. A lemon is a fruit. What do you want from me?

3:35

So he is saying that George Bush is gonna show up tonight and endorse really Harris. Okay, that

3:42

that's bad for her. I would think I mean, what that's that's what I understand. It's like,

3:47

have they never figured it out yet? If George Bush goes, I'm against Trump, we're all gonna be like,

3:52

yeah, or for Trump, like, dude, did they did they forget that George Bush is like one of the worst

3:57

presidents we've had in modern history? Well, I would say that it was his VP Dick Cheney that

4:03

did all the bad shit. But he went along for the ride.

4:07

I mean, the whole Bush family is fucked. I mean, like, you do have you looked into their family?

4:11

Yeah. So Bush senior took over the CIA from the Dulles brothers. No, it's a CIA. We don't talk

4:18

about the CIA. After crashing a plane in the Pacific, I believe. Oh, I don't know about that.

4:23

Yeah, he was a pilot. I think it was World War Two. I don't remember off hand exactly. But like,

4:29

oh, yeah, he got eaten by cannibals. No, no, that was Biden's.., I can't give you a story. And then

4:36

Prescott Bush was like one of those banker dudes that helped set up the Federal Reserve. So it's

4:41

you got a whole fucking line of these assholes. Yeah, I mean, we're tired of guys. I mean, get real,

4:46

we don't like politicians anymore. No, like my slogan for me right for campaign is trying to get

4:52

politicians out of politics, not doing a very good job of it, though. Yeah, I haven't seen any

4:57

signs for you either. You were just okay. Okay. So a garage sale sign at Home Depot, that's this

5:03

size, you get yellow, it's visual. Yeah. Is it's like $1.99. $1.99? Yeah, for a garage sale sign. Okay.

5:10

If I want a political sign, yeah, $35. Of course. Well, why why can't you just buy the garage sale

5:17

sign? Because my name's not garage sale. Although I could change. Well, yeah, you just flip it around

5:22

to the blank side and right and sharpie Ron Morgan for some way district. You probably never saw

5:28

Oh, man, I got to find that picture. So two years ago, I wanted to be creative and well, funny. So I

5:36

went and bought a piece of plywood. And I painted, you know, Ron Morgan vote Ron Morgan for a Senate

5:41

District five, and I left a cut out in the middle for my fat my head. So I stood on this is my biggest

5:49

driver's sock. I stood on a street corner with my face in a hole. No, not one person even looked

6:00

they were just like, how do I get past this slow person? There's a guy doing 10 miles on the

6:04

speed. I don't get around to him. See, that's the signs don't work. Because that was funny, at least

6:10

to me. I don't care about anybody else. So so no, I do want to compliment the Democrats and the DNC.

6:17

Yeah, because they have realized they made a huge mistake and they are trying to correct it.

6:23

Unfortunately, it's just gonna take years to do it. So what they want to do is, well, so they have

6:29

a Have you heard of the taco truck at the DNC? I've heard of the vasectomy truck was

6:36

the second being abortion, but it looks like a taco truck. Okay, I would actually walk up and

6:39

order a taco, right, like a dead baby. I'm not I'm not even a dead baby. I don't know that might

6:45

be pretty good. I mean, like it's tender. Okay, maybe that that's wrong. We don't want to go down.

6:50

But they've realized that they've corrupted their base. Yeah. So what better way to handle that and

6:56

just to kill kill the future babies? Okay, yeah. So yeah, so they want to they want to cut the

7:02

balls off all the men who will progress some left, which I'm in favor of. In fact, that is free. It's

7:08

even better. Yeah. But you do get a reward for doing that. Oh, yeah. You get a gift certificate

7:15

to the Wiener Circle. Ah, Wiener Circle. Now famous in Chicago. Now in Chicago, it's made

7:19

out know what the Wiener Circle is, even though there was a TV show on it for like a season or two.

7:23

Really? It's a it's a hot dog place. I've about a mile from Wrigley Field. So it's so it's it's

7:30

close, but not walkable. And their gimmick is they insult you. Yeah. And they make fun of you.

7:37

Now, you have to walk in there and you have to order. Oh, by the way, do not order ketchup on

7:41

your hot dog. Yes, no Chicago, they will you will be taken to Indiana and dropped off. But so so you

7:51

so you have to present this coupon for free hot dogs saying that I'm a big wuss and I got my balls

7:56

cut off. And what can go wrong? Well, no, I used to wish a TV camera was there now. Yeah. That's

8:03

what I want to see all these fucking leftist progressive getting vasectomies. Oh, and they

8:08

show the truck. It's I mean, they had stirrups for men, stirrups for women. I know you're cutting

8:15

off you. Is that like sterile enough to do those kinds of operations? Well, actually,

8:20

funny you mentioned that because on the rooms are redacted. I forget her name. The wife of the

8:25

redacted guy. Sorry. She's like, Hey, those wheels aren't chalked. They didn't chalk the wheels.

8:33

They're doing surgery in a truck. Oh, God, it's somehow bumps it. Yeah, they might make the wrong

8:37

cut, which I agree with her. She's right. But it is a leftist Democrat progressive in there. So

8:45

who really cares? Yeah. So it wasn't dick. Now it's a pussy. Oh, yeah, yeah, or a version of that. So

8:52

I least are trying to correct their mistakes by just getting rid of their future voters. Oh,

8:55

my God. Oh, Lordy, what else is going on? Yeah, it was kind of a slow week. So like last week,

9:02

you predicted fireworks at the DNC and well, so far, I've been shown right about this. Yeah,

9:08

I will see. It's a drama free so far. What do you think something will happen in between the time

9:13

we film this and upload it? So we're going to show up at the DNC. Yeah, my good first time. No,

9:19

there are protesters. There are some videos out there of protesters who are being arrested and

9:26

then being bailed out and back a couple hours later. So there's some weird, weird, weird shit going

9:30

on there. But well, yeah, let's talk about our case. So okay, this is interesting. So there's a

9:36

rumor going around that RFK might drop out and endorse Trump. I've heard it too. And I'm kind of

9:42

mixed feelings on this because on the one part, I want him to stay in and just fuck up the election,

9:47

right? Like, maybe make it so that nobody wins. But that would be great. Is he on enough states

9:52

actually? I don't know if he's had enough states to win himself, but he could still take enough

9:57

electoral votes so that nobody wins. But if he if he well, no, I'll get into that later on tonight.

10:06

Because the new Congress, the new House would then pick the president.

10:10

Okay, because it wouldn't be the old House. We would be the new house. I'm not sure.

10:14

Because the new house takes takes over before I think on January 1st. Yeah, the president takes

10:19

over on January 20. Right. So I think the new house would pick it. And we'll touch on that later

10:24

on. Although I am pro I am kind of pro this. And the biggest reason why

10:31

is the redhead libertarian you've seen her on. Yeah, I don't know who she is, but

10:35

some random libertarian post something that's kind of funny. And it's just said,

10:40

RFK, well, the CIA did kill my dad and uncle. Yeah. And then is it? Oh, yeah, Trump, would you like

10:47

to be their boss? So that's that would be funny to me. I mean, like I like I want to see the chaos.

10:55

But on the other hand, I understand that like, it's not my money. I'm not the one

11:00

Yeah, losing millions of dollars for this and losing my family and all that shit. So like,

11:04

I can understand why he would give up. Well, his speech is going to be I think it's going to be

11:10

fiery because interesting. They did him. They did a lot of things. Well, they don't lie. Yeah.

11:16

But one of the things was he was trying to get to a court case in Pennsylvania to be on the ballot.

11:20

Yeah. And you know, he flies commercially. Okay. His flight was canceled.

11:25

See, like, and they pulled shit here to Nevada, where so as an independent, he had to get signatures.

11:31

And he got the signatures, has his paperwork in or no, let's go back to before. So he's at the

11:39

office physically, or maybe his his where his assistants are. Yeah. And they are talking to

11:45

the Secretary of State and getting all the rules. Right. So I need this many signatures. It needs

11:50

to be, you know, validated this way, I need this requirement, blah, blah, blah, blah. So he gets

11:55

all the signatures, hands them in. And they say, Oh, you haven't selected a Vice President. You

11:59

have to do that. And he says, Well, this is not what you told me, you said I don't have to do it.

12:03

So, so like he ended up suing the Nevada Secretary of State and he won, but he still had to go get

12:09

the signatures again after having selected as Vice President, which he did. Yeah. You know,

12:13

how much money does that cause? I don't know. Well, it's very possible. I'm actually on that

12:16

on one of those because I did sign up for him. Yeah, I nobody passed me that. Well, no, I was at

12:21

he would area 15. Okay. And I had to be at area 15 for a different reason. I'm like, well, yeah,

12:27

I'll listen to him. And I mean, he is he is a good guy. I like I wouldn't vote for him because it was,

12:32

well, anti gun. And now in the sixties, pro gun, I you don't you don't have an epiphany at 63 and go,

12:41

Oh, yeah, I'm pro gun. So let me let me explain to you what they try to do to me.

12:46

And I'm running for Congress as a libertarian. And I go to the so they tell us in an email,

12:53

okay, you have to go to this office in between these dates. Right. So I go I'm like an anal

12:59

retentive of person. I always go early. So I go the first date available. And I go to the office.

13:05

And they're inside there like, Oh, no, you don't come to this office, you go to the other office.

13:09

And I'm like, Well, but the email you sent me says to go to this office. So I'm like waiting

13:13

there for like half an hour for them to confirm and talk who the fuck knows what they're doing.

13:18

So like, no, no, you have to go to this other office. Okay, so I go to the other office.

13:22

And there's a sign saying the office is closed. But like there's a bunch of cars parked and like

13:28

people walking around. So I don't necessarily trust signs, right? Like I want to see my

13:32

from my side. I am anti sign sign signs, everywhere the signs fucking up the scenery.

13:39

I love that song. Okay. So I go up to the building. And it's open. Even though the signs are closed.

13:46

So I open it and I talk to security guard. And he's like, Hey, man, the building's closed.

13:51

And I say, Hey, well, I'm registering to run as a libertarian. And they told me I have to come to

13:57

this building. And like, Oh, you're registering to run, you can go ahead in. So if I don't tell him

14:02

the sneaky bastard, I would have thought Oh, the building's closed. Sorry. Right. So then I finally

14:07

get in. And then I do all my filing fee and paperwork and I bullshit and it goes through.

14:11

But like, think about if you're a young 25 year old or whatever the limit for Congress is

14:17

right or trying to follow the rules. Yeah, you don't know any better, right? You're going to go

14:21

away. And then you just don't get on the ballot. And especially so if you're not an anal

14:27

retentive guy like me, and you wait to the last day, right? Yeah, you can't come back. Sorry,

14:32

you missed a deadline. Oh, not our fault is your fault. Yeah, right? Like this is what they do to us.

14:38

Yeah, well, no, we can't primary here in Nevada, which sucks, because I mean, you think that,

14:42

oh, you can't primary, but that's a great time to advertise and to get our names out there.

14:46

Right. And we can't even do that. So they want to keep us down. Vote for the man, the libertarian.

14:54

Yeah. We're like less than 1% this year. We have a very, very shitty presidential candidate.

15:00

Well, what can we do next four years from now? We'll see what we can do.

15:05

And they'll scam us again. And they'll get worse. It's not gonna be that simple. If, well, I'm not

15:10

going to go further, but okay, it's not gonna be a simple. Just have me that also fucking punch

15:13

up. Get your ass over next time. Maybe I will. I didn't realize they were going to scam us this time.

15:18

So, um, that's RFK. What else is going on? You asked about last week, the Social Security Database

15:25

League. Yep. So I was able to do some research on this. It is real. But it's not everyone. Oh,

15:32

and I couldn't figure out the pattern. So it seems to be mostly older people.

15:41

Um, there's a lot. So there's addresses in there and it's like address history. But it's only up to

15:48

a certain point. And I found that there were like fake birthdays and fake socials in there.

15:56

So wherever that data source got their data, people are giving fake info. So I often do this on some

16:03

websites when they go to hey, what's your birthday? Fuck you, I'd make something up, right? Well,

16:08

that's weird because I was getting emails today addressed to my wife. Yeah. And they use a really,

16:15

really, really old address. Okay, like 10 years ago. So it could have they could have she may

16:19

been compromised. Yeah. So, um, you know, check your credit scores, check your bank statements and

16:27

everything and just make sure no one's identity thieving you trash all the credits because

16:32

let's start over because your info is very likely out there. Everybody if you're American, if you

16:36

hackers want to do it, delete all the security information and the IRS stuff. And then we all

16:43

start over the 750 credit score. I might actually get a loan again. Maybe go buy a new car. I just

16:51

know you could buy a credit, a good credit score for like about a three to six month window.

16:56

What? So doesn't make any sense. No, no, there's a scale. It's a scale. You hire this company or

17:02

multiple companies. Yeah. And they will go after trans union and whatever the the credit rating

17:07

company mystery of them. And they will they will they have a way to make them check everything

17:14

your credit. But in the interim, it has to be removed from your credit. So for a for a three to

17:20

six month window, you actually have a really good credit score into all the people you owe money to

17:25

you go, no, that fucker sells me money. And then your credit source is going down. Weird. So if you

17:30

plan it right, I'm just saying, pay the right amount of money you're going to credit score.

17:35

Oh, and so we had a discussion about this after the show. I used to work for a payday loan company.

17:42

And that we know we change your mind on this. Do you remember? I changed my mind.

17:48

Okay, so you had a you had a very you had a valid point. So okay, so regardless of whatever

17:52

your opinion on that is, payday lenders do check your social security number. And they check your

17:58

name and your birthday and all that fun stuff. Right. So if you got your hands on this database,

18:03

you could take out a bunch of payday loans under other people's names. Oh, and then just never

18:10

pay them back. Because payday lenders have no recourse. For if you don't know, I'm not saying

18:15

don't don't do this. This is very illegal. We do not recommend doing illegal things on the canary

18:18

in the cage. But with the economy is bad. But if you did that, it would be pretty fucking funny.

18:24

I'm just saying it would be funny. Yeah, no, that would be funny. It's gonna be funny if the fucking

18:28

people I hacked the IRS and delete, delete, delete, delete. Just like you get that little bird

18:33

over sent to you is delete, delete, delete. Jesus, the IRS sucks. Oh my God. So we have very, very

18:40

real take actions to protect yourself. It's getting crazy out there. Dark web. You know what to do.

18:47

No, I mean, yeah. So get back to the Harris camp. And this guy I want to talk about tonight.

18:54

Well, let's start with her. The Doritos commercial. I didn't watch the full thing, but I saw the whole

19:01

gist of it. And yeah, like they faked it. They were they kicked everybody out of the store. Yeah,

19:05

well, he always do that, right? Well, no, Trump doesn't. That's not a bitch. We're walking to a

19:10

fucking Chick-fil-A. And we like, Hey, I'm Trump. Hug me. I don't buy that because I'm pretty sure

19:16

that they like pat people down ahead of time. No, no, it's been verified that Trump won't

19:20

work. He'll the senior service will take your shots at him. Fucking idiot. What are you doing?

19:25

So there's a guy in Arizona that was trying to kill him. Yeah. And I was just the rate of like,

19:29

his name is Ronald. I'm like, no, no, no, something. I don't need somebody with the same name. Yeah.

19:37

Fucking trying to kill Trump. Because that's not who I would. I wouldn't actually try like Trump.

19:43

So I think I'll stop talking there. The next thing they might give me a visit from the

19:50

secret service. So the yeah, the Doritos commercial. I'm a secret service protection.

19:53

No. Also, I wouldn't get a sick. Okay. I am not threatening Chase Oliver. He's a basic bitch. He's

19:59

going to lose. He's going to get less than 1%. He's not even a tick on the radar. No, but it is creepy

20:04

to like film commercials as if you're an actor, you know, and we're going to take cut cut. We

20:11

got to do a different day. No, if you could act, it would come off pretty good. They can't

20:16

act. Sure. But why are you doing this anyway? That's creepy. It's weird. You're running for

20:21

office. Like it's you're not a fucking actor. I think they're using that to appeal to the younger

20:25

generation is like, I may be 59. Are they are they going to fall in for that? I hope not.

20:31

Like who falls for that? She's like, I eat Doritos like you do. And you're like, Oh my god, I eat

20:35

Doritos. I got to vote for that woman. What do you drink bottles and bottles of wine every night?

20:44

That's not a good combo, is it? No. But wait, so here's the thing. I can she win?

20:51

Of course, she has the cheating regime. Okay. So yes. But let's say cheating out of this for a

20:55

second. Can she win? Of course. Have you talked to people? They're fucking stupid. No, no, no, no,

21:01

people are not following this bullshit. People are actually waking up. And it's actually a pleasure

21:07

for me to see some signs that I'm seeing. But if she would have picked a moderate VP pick,

21:13

you know, or somebody really strong moderate VP, I'd go, Okay, she's gonna, she's gonna leave

21:18

another VP and she's gonna be able to pull this off. She picked the biggest fucking whack job goofy

21:25

hands. Whoo. But it's not mattering like it just like the polls are not accurate.

21:31

Their base is just nuts. I like, I mean, they are walking to a taco truck for a vasectomy and

21:37

an abortion. Yeah, they're nuts. And there's just that many people. There's that many of them. But

21:40

it's not I mean, you look at her, you look at any rally she has, it's all about the rally. Like it

21:45

doesn't matter that they like her. It matters that they hate Trump. I vote they're voting against

21:53

Trump. There is a video I wish I could show you. I didn't bother posting on the acts I should have.

21:58

It's some white dude in a Rastafarian hat. And he's like, No, this is the first black woman we're

22:04

gonna elect for president. This is great. Luckily, you know, luckily for me, my wife picked a black

22:09

boyfriend to have. Dude, that might be fake. I think a lot of people fake this stuff probably was.

22:18

But I don't care because it was funny. Because I mean, he had the whole thing. It's like the

22:25

U-Haul picture in front of the White House. I'm sure that was fake. But I don't care because it

22:32

brought comic relief is Joe Biden moving out. Does he even know he's moving out?

22:37

I mean, you know, they need somewhere to put all that cocaine.

22:40

I don't think a U-Haul is gonna carry that. Well, U-Haul doesn't ask.

22:44

No, but there's not enough space in the U-Haul for the cocaine. Yeah, you got to get the 18

22:47

Wheeler. So you think honors got like, oh, yeah, piles of cocaine in there. No, so with, I don't

22:54

believe a Harris and walls have an even a fighting chance. I'm walking on this road, walk down with

23:04

me. We don't have to hold hands. We just walk with me. So they're both very cringe. She can't speak

23:14

on her own for shit. And it proved that every once in a while, you'll catch her speaking off the

23:19

cuff. It's bad. So I mean, I'm sure the Democrats want her to win, but I think they know she can't

23:27

win. So I think they have a plan B in effect. Well, what would that be? They're going to cheat on

23:33

the congressional seats. So any congressional people get monitors there, get the phone numbers

23:39

all yours be ready because this is what they did in 2022. I'm telling you the red wave would have

23:44

happened but they cheated because again, New York, California, Oregon gave the house there because

23:51

all they have to do well, there is there is one speculation out there that they just won't certify

23:56

the election, which that would kick off. Yeah, shit here. Yeah. So so I'm sure that that'll go

24:02

through smooth. But if they can control Congress, those impeach them impeach fans. I mean, President

24:09

Hakeem Jeffery. I mean, is this not is this so absurd? I mean, like, it's just, I don't see a world

24:20

where they have the ability to do that, but also not cheat the presidency, right? They can do one,

24:24

they can do both. Well, no, because okay, so so President Trump in 2020 was the first president

24:33

to be running for reelection, who actually went up in votes and still lost. Okay, so he went over

24:39

like 68 million to 73 million. Yeah. And that was the 2020 Trump right the 2024 Trump, this dude's

24:46

fucking on it. He's, he's smarter. He's more savvy matter. And if the black community goes to Trump,

24:54

like it's looking like they're going to do they could say they could come out and say, Oh, the

24:58

Trump won the black vote first time since Lincoln, whoever the fuck it was. But Trump still lost.

25:04

But you would all take it. So hold on. You'll accept it. So that puts him above 80 million votes.

25:09

But you would still accept it. And that means Harris have to get above 90 to 100 million votes.

25:14

Okay. Are we really going to accept that? Yes. Yeah, we are a bunch of pluses. Nobody gives a

25:19

fuck like they don't even they can't do the math to even realize that there's not that many voters.

25:25

No, there is there's what 160 million voters. I don't know the exact number because

25:29

that would put more than voters. Because we have 300 million people in this country.

25:34

330. You have to factor in the under 18. You got to fact in some states the incarcerated,

25:40

right? And in other states incarcerated in the fall in so but yeah, so it was a 200 million.

25:45

Okay. I think, yeah, I don't think the debate is going to put a number out there that's bigger

25:53

than the number of people and nobody will care. Well, because the media may be like, yeah, that's

25:58

that's that's that's about right. Yeah, they wouldn't care. Nobody would care. Everyone would just

26:01

go about their days as if nothing ever happened. Oh, I mean, it's like Venezuela, right? They all

26:07

know Maduro cheated. And they just keep on keeping on. Like, did you see the straight line in the

26:13

Venezuela? Yeah, just like Joe Biden. Right. So speaking of Venezuela, have you heard of Aurora

26:20

Colorado? Yeah.

26:24

That wasn't that where they had the big shooting for the Batman movie?

26:27

Yeah, big walkie. Yeah. So the redheaded little freak dude did shoot up the movie theater for

26:31

Batman. But then a couple of weeks ago, they had that big protest. Because the wrong dude won

26:39

a Venezuela so they started shooting guns off like a traffic. Oh, but actually in Aurora,

26:43

Colorado, Colorado, you're right. Because that's exactly where I would go if I wouldn't protest

26:46

about it in Venezuela. Now the Venezuelan gangs have taken over two apartment buildings.

26:54

Nice. Same. We got to watch off these immigrants, guys. I'm sorry, illegals. I missed smoke. I got

27:00

a little frog in my throat either illegals. I don't know, I bet they're doing a better job than the

27:04

local government. Well, yeah, they got Polaris, Polis for governor. Jesus, he's useless.

27:12

You know, Colorado was a solid red state until the Californians kind of infected them. Yeah.

27:17

That was the first wave of Californians that left. Well, you still got the TABOR at least.

27:22

Who's that? The taxpayer bill of rights. No, Colorado does that's the real cool stuff like

27:27

that. Colorado does because there was a we had a surplus when I lived there and it was because

27:32

of the marijuana sales. Yeah, because we made it a billion dollars in taxes. Oh, wait, what? Who said

27:39

that? A billion dollars in taxes on weed. Why is it not legal everywhere? I don't know.

27:45

Huh, weird. I bet Colorado is helping keeping it. Well, no, I told this story before the governor,

27:50

the mayor of Denver, like, no, no, you don't want to legalize weed. It's been a problem. Yeah. A

27:56

billion dollars in taxes. So they had to get that back to the Coloradoans because that's how the

28:01

law set up there. And Colorado is being who Colorado, Colorado and Zara like, we trust you.

28:07

Do good with the money. Terrible decision. That was like seven years ago. I think now they've

28:12

been like, give us our fucking money. We don't trust you guys anymore. No, I think every state

28:16

should have a taxpayer bill of rights. So I do dig that. So that the way it works is if the

28:22

government wants to raise taxes, it has to pass a referendum, essentially, right? Now here in Nevada,

28:27

we have no state income tax at all. But we do have a sales tax. And they don't really raise it. But

28:33

you know, it would still be nice to be able to vote on that. Do you think we actually have some

28:37

control over our government here? Weird. Well, they're so far, they're keeping themselves in

28:42

line for some reason. I'm getting very wealthy. I not send that to myself. Okay, so I have a

28:49

topic I want to bring up. So we actually had a we had a question come in from a simplex user

28:55

called captivating virtuosity. That's just his name on the okay. And so last week, I made a snarky

29:02

comment that you can have all my monero if you name a government program that actually worked.

29:08

And any responses to that? Well, that's what I'm talking about. He he I don't know if he's sorry,

29:13

sorry if I misgender you, sir, madam, whatever. So he asked, what about the new deal from the,

29:20

you know, 30s and 40s, the FDR is new deal. And I said, well, that's actually a big pile of shit.

29:26

And we're actually still seeing the negative effects of that today. So I kind of wanted to just

29:31

give a more detailed answer to him. Go have at it. So yeah, let's see here. Oh my god.

29:39

Yeah. So even like, left leaning economists these days have started recognizing that the new deal

29:45

actually made the great depression worse. Okay, even like Paul Krugman or

29:50

what's a good name like Larry Summers like all these sort of left leaning guys, like all of them

29:57

will say, yeah, the new deal didn't really work. So if you look at like unemployment stats,

30:03

unemployment was above 15% the entire time. So if unemployment is 15%, and you have a new deal,

30:12

and it's still above 15% for the next 10 years, it didn't work. Sorry, didn't work new deal sucked.

30:19

Real GDP per capita fell the entire time. So if you're looking at GDP per capita, adjusted for

30:26

inflation, those numbers fell, which means people are getting poorer on average. So again, the new

30:31

deal is not helping them. Let's talk about some of the policies that FDR actually implemented.

30:37

One of the things he did was he paid farmers to not farm land. We still do that now. We still do

30:44

that today. That policy still in effect. So for example, like if you grow corn, and you have 100

30:50

acres, they would say, we'll pay you to keep 10 acres fallow. And the reason was to keep the

30:56

corn prices high, right? Because they thought that if the corn prices fell, then the depression would

31:02

get worse, which it's, they're fucking stupid, food getting cheaper. Yeah, I don't press is going

31:08

to get worse. It doesn't make sense. Yeah, they tried to coerce businesses into keeping all the

31:13

prices high, or not rather not dropping their prices. And again, it just made things worse. It

31:20

made it last longer, deeper. So they raised taxes to absurd rates. The top bracket was over 90%.

31:28

Oh, Lord, yeah, I mean, I think only one guy ever paid that much, which was John Rockefeller,

31:34

because nobody else made that much on the top bracket. But the bracket like he introduced

31:38

like 20 brackets. And they all had higher it was fucking absurd. I mean, if you look at the tax

31:43

rates, ridiculous, man. So they mandated price controls on a lot of things like sugar, meat,

31:52

all sorts of things. And that workout, it didn't do very well. So here's the second same thing.

31:58

Yes, he is. Oh, we are probably not going to work this time either. They also had wage caps. So you

32:03

couldn't hire somebody for more than a given amount. And so a clever way that companies got

32:11

around this is they started offering healthcare programs, right? So they would say, okay, you'll

32:15

get the wage, but we can't pay you more legally, but we'll pay for your healthcare. And that's a

32:20

separate thing. It doesn't violate the law. So this is actually how healthcare got tied to employment

32:26

in America. Like everybody says, why doesn't make any sense? Why does my healthcare? Well, that's

32:32

why because FDR did these wage caps, and it kind of just went along, you know, the momentum just

32:38

kept going. So again, this is something we still see as a problem today. He mandated lower interest

32:46

rates, you know, with banks and the Federal Reserve, which essentially causes inflation,

32:52

right? Right, because lower interest rates means you're loading money out that you wouldn't have

32:56

loaned out otherwise. Yeah. And then that creates more money in the system. So that causes inflation.

33:01

He introduced the FDIC, which great, the FDIC is an insurance scheme. Yeah. On on savings accounts.

33:11

Yeah. So if you open a savings account with, I believe now it's less than $250,000.

33:16

It's 250. Yeah. Back then it was probably $10,000 or something.

33:22

And that bank goes under the government guarantees you up to $250,000 of your bank money.

33:28

So a lot of people think, Oh, well, what's wrong with that, right? Like, you don't lose your money

33:32

if the bank goes under. But it actually encourages banks to do more risky lending.

33:37

Right, because of the bank knows, well, Ron's money is safe. He's got the FDIC. I can loan money

33:43

to Venezuela to have a socialist dictator, right? What's what could go wrong? Right. And stuff like

33:50

that is what led to the housing crisis in 2008. The savings and loan crisis of 87. You know, it just

33:57

causes these bubbles, you speculative bubbles that eventually pop and then broke anyway. Well,

34:01

you know that bank that that collapsed six months ago in the Bay Area? A lot of silicon. Yeah.

34:09

Silicon Bank. Silicon Bank. Yeah. They a lot more than $250,000. Yeah. And guess what? That's

34:14

good. Biden stepped in and nope, Biden stepped in. Oh, God. It's all insured. Yeah. See, like,

34:18

that's the thing. And then you also like, you set up the precedent where, well, if no one can lose

34:22

their money, well, I have a million dollars, I don't want to lose my money. And then I do disagree

34:27

with only 250 being insured. Which would be nothing. No, no, if I if I put money in the bank,

34:33

or let's say it should all be insured. No, no, no, it should be insured by the bank,

34:38

by the private bank. FDIC is so nice. So like, if the banks are saying, okay, normally, Ron,

34:44

we would give you 5% interest, but you want this insurance. So we're all going to give you 4%.

34:49

That's fair enough. And then like, you might accept that deal, because we say, well, if they go

34:53

under, then I get my money back, right? And then that would be all self-rated by the private

34:57

market. And then, you know, you wouldn't have this system-wide blow up bullshit.

35:01

Well, that could have happened in Colorado, because although the dispensaries had, well,

35:06

let's just call it a billion dollars in taxes, they were making furniture out of tax cash.

35:12

And I'm not kidding. That's what they were doing for effect and anything else,

35:16

but they couldn't put the money in the banks. So I think it was a lady, she started a credit

35:22

union in Colorado, and she kept it, and she had a privately insured. So they were insured for

35:27

their full funds and not just an arbitrary amount. But they're paying for that, essentially,

35:31

lower interest rates. So they cared. A billion dollars in taxes. Is how much in sales? I don't know.

35:39

So they also created the SEC during the New Deal, which the SEC regulates assets, commodities,

35:45

and all that kind of stuff. So price fixing and price. Yeah, stock market. And these guys are

35:49

a bunch of fucking clowns, right? The regulations they make, like these are the guys that got D's

35:53

in economic school and business school. And they're trying to regulate the people that got A's,

35:57

right? They're always way behind. They don't know what the fuck they're doing or talking about.

36:01

And like, again, like think about 2008, right? Everyone says,

36:05

all the markets were out of control and agreed and blah, blah, okay, let's pretend you believe

36:09

that. Well, where was the SEC? Why weren't they doing their jobs? Right? Yeah. You know,

36:14

they didn't do shit. And they were warned multiple times. They were warned about Bernie

36:18

Madoff, for example. There's a book I read. Fuck. I can't remember the name. I'll post it on the website.

36:26

But it was a story of Bernie Madoff's Ponzi scheme. Okay. And this guy had detected it

36:33

like 10 years before. Oh, and he was writing letters to the SEC like, dude, this guy's fake.

36:39

It's a Ponzi scheme. You need to investigate this. And they just ignored it. They didn't let it go on

36:43

until it blew up. And government agency. Yep. There you go. So yeah. So here's a good one.

36:48

Private ownership of gold was banned. Yeah, I've heard about that. Yeah. So FDR issued an order,

36:53

I believe in 1934, saying you have to bring in your gold is illegal for citizens to have gold.

36:59

And we'll pay you because legally they have to pay you if they confiscate. And gold was valued

37:05

in about 20 bucks per ounce at the time. So people who were stupid, brought their gold in,

37:11

they got 20 bucks of paper dollars. And then the next day, FDR says, okay, gold is not worth $35.

37:18

So like he increased the federal government's war chest by what, like 50% essentially overnight.

37:26

Yeah. Despite making bullshit up and telling you that you can't own gold, which is real money.

37:33

So there's some gold you can still own. Yeah, well, you were allowed to have jewelry, gold and

37:37

industrial coins. No, not back then. Oh, no, really? There was no coins, no bullion. Oh,

37:46

they coined they got rid of the coins and bullion rule a while back. I think in the 70s.

37:51

But yeah, so that I mean, that's a horrible thing. It's interesting about that, right?

37:55

Like, how that helped the depression? Right? It wouldn't. It didn't. Social security was created

38:02

during the New Deal. So you know, the whole idea was, oh, we mom and pop aren't saving for

38:07

retirements. So we need to take money out of your paycheck. And by the way, he coerced employers

38:14

doing this for you so that because back then when you did your taxes, you did your taxes, right?

38:19

And they it was basically the honor system, because they had no way to verify it really.

38:24

But yes, with social security, they started coming up with the employer withholding. Yeah. So now,

38:30

instead of paying you what I owe you, I pay you less than that and then give some to the

38:35

Social Security Administration. Social security is another big Ponzi scheme. No, yeah, I actually

38:40

have a problem with social security, because I just found this out like two weeks ago. If my

38:44

wife were to pass away and I get her pension, yeah, that could affect my social security.

38:50

Probably. Yeah. But that's my money. It's not your money. It's money. They took out my paycheck,

38:54

but it's not your money. It was never your money. It's a Ponzi scheme. Why do we trust the government

38:58

to? Yeah, if you look at the way social security works, it's literally a Ponzi scheme, right? I

39:02

pay in now and that money goes directly to old people that are on retirement now. And then when

39:06

I get old and retire, assuming that the fund will be there, which it probably won't be,

39:11

the kids working that day will be paying my money. Yeah, Ponzi scheme. But the one thing I

39:15

don't understand, wages are higher than they ever been before. And we have a larger workforce now

39:19

than we have in the past. Well, larger raw numbers, yes, but not necessarily per capita or per

39:26

productivity. I don't know. I'd much rather would invest in my own security. Yeah, let people do

39:32

their own retirement. And you know, if you fuck up, well, get charity or suck up sleeping a ditch,

39:37

you know, like it's not my problem. It's America. That's what we do. So yeah, that's a bunch of

39:41

policies that came out that were disastrous during the New Deal summer. So with us today,

39:44

like social security and the farming bullshit. Some were struck down by the Supreme Court at the time,

39:51

who said, you can't do this fucking psycho. And and so FDR threatened to pack the court.

39:57

Really back then? Yes. That was the whole origin. So there's a phrase you might have heard

40:02

called a stitch in time saves nine. So the nine is the nine Supreme Court members. Oh,

40:07

and the stitch that saved them was them coming around after our because they were saying they

40:13

were struck down his rules and his policies. Oh, if you don't stop doing this, I'm going to

40:17

pack the courts. That's actually educated. So suddenly they had a change of heart, and they

40:21

started approving like they approve the Social Security and the Farm Act and all that bullshit.

40:27

So the last thing I want you to do is actually, this is this is a great exercise for everybody.

40:31

Go look up the Great Depression of 1920. Okay, you've never heard of it, right?

40:36

Wait, the Great Depression of 1920.

40:40

I've heard of one that happened during that time. No, no, you've heard of the Great Depression of

40:44

1929. Okay. But the Great Depression of 1920. Almost nobody's ever heard of. You don't get in

40:50

any classroom. Most history books will never touch it. It's just something that never happened. Okay.

40:56

But it but it's real. So in 1920, there was a huge stock market crash. It was worse than the one

41:02

in 1929. Okay. GDP fell faster than 1929. Unemployment went higher than 1929. But the

41:12

but there's a reason you've never heard of this depression is because the government did nothing

41:16

and it fixed itself in about 18 months. So so that means it's also 1929 we had a huge

41:23

what so we get my number straight in my head. In 1920, we were in the depression.

41:29

That was the start. Yes, October, October, Black Monday, and we came out of it in the early 30s.

41:35

No, 40s. There's a 46 I believe. I thought we I thought we so I've always been under the impression

41:42

that prohibition the ban of prohibition or the canceling of prohibition actually got us out of the

41:48

Great Depression. No, it caused a slight turnaround but then it went worse again.

41:53

Oh, I didn't know that. And we didn't get back out until after World War II.

41:57

And essentially what happened there was a lot of people say, oh, the war spending

42:01

stipulates an economy. And that's what got us back on track. We know that's bullshit. What happened

42:05

was, we won the war. And we were the only people that won the war. So like there was the allies

42:11

and the Axis, right? But Britain was bombed to shit. France was bombed to shit. Germany was

42:17

bombed to shit. Everybody was fucking bombed to shit. And we weren't. So we were really the only

42:22

winners of World War II. And we basically had leverage over every other country in Europe.

42:28

And that's where the Bretton Woods deal came where we took all their gold, right?

42:31

Gee, I wonder if that would stimulate the economy getting a bunch of gold, right? Oh,

42:36

and everybody had a turn to us for manufacturing goods and services, because again, all their

42:40

shit was bombed. They had nothing. They had to rebuild from scratch. So anything they wanted,

42:44

like steel, we had to make it. Interesting. Okay, that I did not know. Essentially, that's what

42:49

got so the removal of all the price controls and the wage caps and all the after the wartime

42:56

bullshit, the removal of that combined with us being the only source of goods. That's what got us

43:01

out of the Depression. Interesting. But yeah, if you go read about the Depression of 1920,

43:07

it modern economists have no explanation because the government did nothing and the problem fixed

43:12

itself. And the economists who are Keynesians or modern monetary theorists, well, that's impossible.

43:19

That can't happen, according to the theories. And yet it did happen. Right. So they just ignore it.

43:24

They don't tell you about it. So government getting out of the way is a good thing. And the funny

43:27

thing is during 1920, you know, the president was? No, Woodrow Wilson. Okay. And he was possibly the

43:35

most interventionist president that we've had, maybe behind FDR. Like this guy was a huge progressive,

43:42

wanted to micromanage every little thing. But the economic theories to manage depressions didn't

43:48

exist yet. Because I think Keynes wrote, and I believe in the late 20s or early 30s. So there

43:54

was no Keynesian economics yet. So the only economics what Wilson knew about was why let the

44:00

economy work. I don't know. I'm just Woodrow Wilson. I'm just a Princeton academic. So yeah, Woodrow

44:07

Wilson did nothing, which is kind of shocking. And Harding took over so Harding was elected in

44:14

November 1920. And he took over in January. And Harding actually wanted to intervene in the markets.

44:21

So they came up with this plan of all these policies, which were similar to New Deal. And

44:26

like, we're going to do these policies and fix the depression. And by the time they came out with

44:31

these policies, the depression was fixed on its own. So there was nothing to do. So go read the

44:35

Great Depression of 1920. And that's how you know the New Deal is bullshit. Oh, nice. Okay. So there's

44:41

a little educational segment for you. Yeah. And that was entertaining and educational. So that guy

44:46

does not win anything because it was not a good government. Sorry, buddy. So look at the government

44:50

program that actually was good. Where are we at here? Let me see. So that's all my shit. Huh? That's

44:58

all my shit. What is this unrealized capital gains? Oh, okay. So what the fuck? Yeah, for people that

45:05

don't know what that means. Let's say you buy a stock at $100. And at the end of the year, the

45:10

stock goes to 150. But you still have the stock, right? The government says you owe taxes on that

45:15

$50. But you don't have $50. You have a stock that's worth $150. And then the next year when it

45:23

crashes, you'll get the no, you get nothing. You'll get nothing back. No, no, no. But so that here's

45:27

the fucked up thing. If all you have is a is a stock worth $150 and you owe taxes on $50 of income,

45:34

where are you gonna get that $50? Yeah. Well, where are you gonna get it? No, you're not. Well,

45:39

you can. There's one way. Sell your stock. Sell the stock. What happens when everyone sells their

45:43

stocks? Oh, Lord, the price goes down. This is going to cause a fucking market crash. Other

45:49

countries have tried this, I believe Sweden tried it. France, I think tried it. It never fucking

45:54

works. What is wrong with these people? Who knows? Because even they're now saying Harris's housing

46:02

plan is a rip off of Trudeau. So now she only still has Trump, she's still stuff from Trudeau now.

46:07

Well, what a show. She got nothing else. The other thing I want to talk about about this

46:11

capital gains shit. So they're saying, Oh, it's only gonna be on rich people. Why are you mad?

46:16

Right? It's only on 100 million. I own a house. Well, no, it's a 100 million net worth or higher.

46:21

No, I okay. So the chart that I saw, it had yearly income and then it had a breakdown of

46:27

percentages. And I believe I was in there. And I don't make income tax. No, but they were saying

46:33

on the property tax or but they were they were trying to explain this because it's a fucked up

46:38

thing. Well, I thought my house would be no no no. The proposal they're coming out with

46:43

says that these capital these unrealized gains taxes will only apply if you have 100 million

46:50

or more. I mean, I'm close. Oh, okay. But you want to know a funny story, another history

46:56

history lesson? Sure. Why not? When they came out with the income tax in 1913. They said the same thing.

47:03

They said it's only going to apply to the 1% rich second apply to you regular guy. Oh,

47:07

that's cool. Yeah. So you should vote for it. But I pay income tax. Technically, I guess in

47:13

Nevada, we don't but no, but you know, yeah. So again, like they said, oh, it's only going to apply

47:19

to the top people. So why are you mad? Why are you against this? Well, but they send about income

47:24

tax and now we all pay income tax. So a bunch of greedy bastards leave it back then. Do you really

47:29

think they're not going to do this to us in 50 years? Of course they will. They're going to fucking

47:33

tax everything they can do. They'll have a spending problem. If Harris gets elected,

47:37

they'll be done in four. No, I mean, the other thing is the Supreme Court will absolutely rule

47:42

this on constitution constitutional. You cannot justify well tax and then they pack the court

47:47

with the Democrats. I think the system breaks down before they can collect. It just won't,

47:51

it won't survive that. Okay. Well, hopefully that's true because that's that's that's government

47:57

going out of control. And I believe that's what the second amendment is for. Yep. So let's talk

48:02

about the jobs report. Okay, about this. I heard about the revisions to the jobs report.

48:06

800,000 jobs. Yeah. So funny thing, like every month, they come out with a jobs report, which says

48:12

how many jobs were lost or created in the previous month, right? And like it's all just a model. It's

48:17

a mathematical model. They're not counting jobs. They're just literally making it up out of a math

48:21

equation. Right. And then every month when they do this, they go back to previous months and revise

48:29

them. Right. And I'm doing air quotes. So the front page is the the jobs report that was put out.

48:34

Yeah. And the revision is on the last page in the lower left hand corner. Yes. Okay. And if you go

48:38

look at the revisions, we've basically lost jobs. Because they always revised down. Now,

48:45

you would think if it's a if it's a good economic function, then the revisions would be 50 50

48:54

up or down, right? Right. Because you'd be you know, sometimes you guess right, sometimes you

48:57

guess wrong. But they revise it down, I believe 20 out of 21. Yeah. So now, how can you tell me that

49:04

this is a good mathematical equation? So the only thing that's kept us out of what they call a

49:10

recession was the jobs. Yeah, but the jobs have been resized down. So so that we must have been

49:16

already had two quarters of negative gain, right. And that is a traditional way of putting us in

49:21

a recession. Yes. But yet the job market is strong. Yes. And yet we've been lying about the job market.

49:27

The other funny thing, like, so Kamala Harris is telling us that we need to elect her to fix the

49:33

economy. But also, it's the strongest economy we've ever had. But we need to elect her to fix it.

49:41

Well, I don't say this service kind of over had but the day to day living of the people is it's

49:47

well, yeah, well, she acknowledges that grocery prices have gone up. But it's the strongest economy

49:51

we've ever had. And then and she's to thank for that. But we need to elect her to fix the problems

49:58

of her economy. But my question is the strongest economy. Is she a viewer on our show? Maybe.

50:04

No, we had this conversation. I said grocery is a price calendar. You said they're not. Yeah. And I

50:09

said they are. And you said you heard it here first. Kamala Harris agrees with Ron. So now you

50:16

guys can take that however you want. He agrees with Kamala. I don't. So if she is taking my advice,

50:26

maybe I'll give her some more advice. Okay. Drink lots and lots of wine tonight,

50:31

which you're already going to I get it. And you'll be slurring away through the thing and

50:35

bring that cackle back. Because I really missed that because yeah, we need cackle. I'm like,

50:40

oh, she's like, I cackle and she cackles. Oh, we cackle together. So I want to be your friend now

50:48

because we cackle. And we get drunk and say stupid shit. So maybe her and I can become friends.

50:56

But I want that wall guy hanging around. He's creepy. Yeah, my dog or something.

51:01

He's a weird dude. But weird. The weird thing is that he's a gross dude. That's what he is. He's gross.

51:09

What else can we talk about? Little notes I got over here. So no, Trump. So actually,

51:16

I did want to bring this up. So Trump has changed. He is he's getting more savvy. Okay, he's realized

51:22

that his first term, he was abused. He was taken advantage of. And he did a good job. So I'm not

51:28

putting down for that. But no, I mean, overall dude, my big account was was fatter. My groceries are

51:35

cheaper. My gas was cheaper. Interest rates were cheaper. I like that life. But like he said now,

51:44

he's refusing to sit in on the classified debriefings. Because no, no, because he's afraid that they'll

51:51

say he leaked something. Or you know, so he's actually being he's he I think he's understanding

51:56

how corrupt, yeah, and disgusting our government actually is. Yeah. And he's actually playing smart.

52:03

Instead of just going up there being a blowhard, you know, just shouting down people, which I kind

52:08

of dug that till yeah, but but you gotta know when to deploy it. Right. So so I there is some

52:13

signs of a good future for him. If you know, interesting, you can get past the cheating. Well,

52:18

if he puts RFK in charge of the CIA, that that will be I mean, okay, I like the idea on paper,

52:25

but just disband them. We don't need to see you. Right. No, no, no, I agree. We don't. But if you

52:29

can be charged because I believe Harris is already trying to release her cabinet picks.

52:34

Oh, it was Holder. Oh, yeah, yeah. And right. Oh, yeah, Roahm Emmanuel. He was he was always good.

52:42

Oh, Lordy. Um,

52:45

sweet lordy. So not only did we lose 818,000 jobs, we also lost over 300,000 children.

52:54

What? The migrant children. There's there's over there's over 300,000 missing.

52:59

Missing where like, that's a very good question. Where the hell you lose 300,000 children? Well,

53:05

you hold an auction. But wait, where are these options? I mean, it could be anything from

53:10

sex trafficking. I mean, like, how, how, okay, how big of a house, small of a building do you need

53:16

to fit 300,000 children? Like, what does that look like? Well, it's not what it's not like

53:20

they all went to one place. Like I'm saying, but is that a Walmart? I'm seeing that it's not that

53:25

big for 300,000 kids. I don't know about that. I don't think 300,000 would fit there. No, no,

53:29

I said it's not big enough for that. Well, yeah. So they had to hold the auction and they put them

53:33

in lots of my 10. That's, I mean, that's a lot of people to keep quiet. Like it's just kids. No,

53:39

but the people that are buying and selling, you know, I actually, I don't know how many children

53:44

that is like, is that a Walmart where the children is there an Amazon warehouse? Like, what is that?

53:48

What does that look like? Well, no, I do like your your theory is that, you know, you got to look

53:54

at a big picture. But I kind of lost that passion for government because I don't trust them and they

53:59

fucking lie to us all the time. And they could be these kids could have been sold off to sex traffickers,

54:04

could be in Ukraine right now. Okay, how many? I mean, you do how many kid fuckers do you think

54:10

there are in the world that can afford a kid? So I'm guessing 301,000 that can afford a kid.

54:17

Like, it's not okay. I'm sure there's people out there. It's not like jerking off on their laptop.

54:21

But they can't afford a kid. And I'm saying they can only get the photos. They can't afford a kid.

54:25

The term kid fucker was funny. Disgusting, but so funny. No, no, but you can sell them off to like

54:30

build iPhones and shit. Like, oh, okay, workers pick pick cherries and apples. I think China's

54:37

got enough people for that. They don't want more people. I mean, I this is the you this is the

54:40

report from the United States government. I don't trust the government. Why do you trust the government?

54:45

Because no, that's good question. But but but see when the story comes out that makes them look bad.

54:52

I couldn't believe it. But that just that number just doesn't compute in my head. It's like,

54:58

how do you can't lose that many people? It's they didn't lose them. They auctioned them off.

55:02

No, but they're saying they lost them like we can't account for them. No, no, the government is

55:07

trying to do a checks and data like, okay, Jose, Jose, Jose, Jose, check Jose.

55:14

Maybe they all the same name and they just got confused. Okay, there that could be what it is.

55:18

No, I don't know. I mean, because I still go back to

55:23

crucified if you want. But I still say there's 2000 kids missing on Hawaii as well.

55:28

I mean, you would think that if there's that many children, you would occasionally see one.

55:34

You know, right? Well, what are the odds?

55:39

I don't know. I'm just I'm reporting the news that I get and I tend to fall to where it's

55:49

probably true, because it's disgusting. And yeah. Oh, Jesus. But it doesn't matter. No,

55:56

that matters. I think it's more likely that they just like fucked up their spreadsheet

55:59

by 300,000 numbers like, fuck, I forgot to carry the one. Yeah, it's 30 kids missing. Yeah, I mean,

56:05

no, but you're looking over like, but this is going back to like Obama days. So you're looking

56:11

over like a 12 year period. Okay, well, a lot of them aren't kids anymore. But they still lost them

56:15

though. I can't even say I just can't because it's disgusting. All right, so but no, I but no, so,

56:25

so I was watching the interview of the lady who runs the nonprofit for missing and exploited

56:32

children. Yeah. And she did say when there's a natural disaster, in a lot of cases, kids come

56:38

up missing in those. Well, I assume a lot of those are just dead and we can't find the bodies.

56:44

She had a different opinion on that. Well, I'm not getting into that. I don't know enough about

56:48

the job depends on there being more missing kids. Right? I get more money with this business for

56:53

the kids. And that's a valid argument. But I mean, if you want to ask me this five, six, seven years

57:00

ago, be like, but then FC Island came out. Yeah, he did. He came out the P. Dittler came out.

57:06

Well, how many kid fucking victims were on Epstein Island? Well, the ones that were on there are

57:13

being shut down by the media. Right. But how many was it even 100? I don't know. Well, yeah,

57:19

that you had the low lead express. You had you had them in the air on the flight. You had them

57:24

at the mansion. Okay. But I mean, first we have to realize, is that the only place that people are

57:31

well okay, so enjoying themselves there. And appropriately, there were people who spy think

57:38

fuck, I think Alex Jones talked about Epstein Island before anybody knew about it. Yeah. So like,

57:44

it's not like people weren't aware of it. Right. So so if there's other islands, were you

57:52

was the man was the was the massive I never really listened to Alex Jones that much. Yeah,

57:56

I don't either. But a lot of people do. But I also wouldn't believe what he said either. I might

57:59

have. Well, okay, that's the kind of claim I would have looked into. And then I would have found,

58:03

oh, shit, that's probably right. I mean, the dude, if you see him in an interview, when he's not

58:07

running the show, you kind of see the in character character in character, character, whatever I

58:14

talk about, Alex Jones, he's wrong 90% of the time. But he's but the 10% is fucking massive,

58:21

right? Yeah, the 10% where he's right. Wait, wait, you're not going to sue. I don't have billions

58:27

of dollars to get to the same people. Yeah. Well, so the Canary in the cage corporation is in Ron's

58:32

name. So make sure you see him. And I got shit. So so like, you can have my laptop, I guess. My

58:38

point is like, if nobody's like Alex Jones is talking about Goldberg Island, then probably there's

58:45

not a Goldberg Island, right? But you don't think Ukraine is now the new Epsom Island? Because

58:50

there is room for that. I don't know if it's true or not. I'm sure it goes down. It goes on everywhere.

58:55

That's not that's not an issue. Right? The issue is like, are there these secretive islands where

59:01

you could hide hundreds of kids, which I don't I never would have believed that but but yet there

59:06

was one. Well, there's one. There was one. Oh, tell me Justin Bieber wasn't fucked in the ass.

59:11

I don't follow that. 15 years old. That kid. Did you see the interview? No.

59:17

I don't either. But I was following clearly. No, the P Diddler story. And they were showing

59:21

this interview when he was like 15 and he was hanging out with the P Diddler and just say,

59:28

yeah, I'm sure there's like Hollywood mansions that that's where that's what they do. But even

59:33

Britney Spears said that there was a guy in Florida that was sex trafficking doing some weird

59:38

shit with her. But and that's where that's where G4 the ricker contract would become famous. I don't

59:43

know. I think I want to do the Epsteins dead. Epstein killed himself or died somehow. I'm

59:50

mysterious with the cameras are off. But yet there's other people like him. Right. But I'm just

59:56

saying I don't I don't think you can account for 300,000. It's just like you're not going to get

1:00:00

those kind of. It's a government they could be they could have got to carry the one. But again,

1:00:06

it doesn't matter because we're all gonna be dead by monkeypox here in a few months. Oh, yeah,

1:00:09

that's right. We got the monkeypox. Oh, no, I'm sorry. I'm racist. M-pox. Oh,

1:00:15

M-pox. M-pox. Well, I'm vaccinated against M-pox. Are you? Yeah. So my take it right now.

1:00:21

Well, I have a better plan. What's that? Don't suck dicks.

1:00:26

That's my plan. But well that's sexist. I don't care. I'm not getting

1:00:31

M-pox. Yeah, but but it might not be a dick. It might be a big clit. Well, I'm not sucking those

1:00:36

either. Well, that's that's disrespectful. I don't care. I'm disease free.

1:00:41

Yeah. Like one dude went to like Africa. I got like COVID monkeypox aids. And then like, yeah,

1:00:49

he was literally fucked by 45 people while he was there in a week.

1:00:54

My God, I don't know what are you gonna do? Oh, what else is there in this crazy,

1:01:00

crazy world we're living in? Actually, it's very possible right now. George Bush is on stage in

1:01:06

endorsing. Come on. Oh my God, let me let me pull it up. I did is not me saying that this is the

1:01:12

bottom. That's Le Mans theory.

1:01:18

Also live channels.

1:01:23

What else do we got going on? We get some dead air here. Dead air is not good. I'm out. I'm out.

1:01:27

We never talked about this, but this is keeps coming up. What's that? The break dancing in the

1:01:31

Olympics? Oh, Raygun. Is that was the girl? Her stage name? Was that a bit? Is it a

1:01:39

comedian and she was just trying to be funny? I don't think so. So she's like a PhD in break

1:01:45

dancing. And now I don't I don't know this for sure. But people were saying that her husband

1:01:53

was on the judging committee for the Australian Olympics team. Okay. And he snuck her in. I don't

1:02:00

know that for sure. For sure. And I so people were saying if not true, so he hates his wife.

1:02:06

I mean, what else did you do that? I don't do people are deluded about their own talents. I mean,

1:02:11

this chick was not good. No, that was the assignment cows version of that. He was like,

1:02:17

yeah, people like the family's always Oh, you're great. You're a great scene. You're a great singer

1:02:22

and you suck. Yeah. But your families are pretty tall. You suck right.

1:02:25

Oh, yeah, that's like a national embarrassment, I would think for Australia.

1:02:30

I mean, is it really though? I mean, is it a kind of like full of white people?

1:02:35

Did you expect the break dance or I don't know, Australia to come out and like,

1:02:39

no, but I would expect something that that's not that I mean, I guarantee you like the Lithuanian

1:02:46

team did better if they had an entry. Sure. Why not? I mean, it's just like what the

1:02:53

fuck was that? I mean, I don't I don't follow break dancing, you know, like, but I could look at

1:02:58

that and say, no, that's that's terrible. Yeah, but I mean, it really is. It's it's a she did

1:03:03

destroy a national treasure over here, though. No, she did. It's not really fair because she took

1:03:08

the limelight away from the hot two girl. We've seen her yet, have we? She's gone. She's gone.

1:03:16

Her 50 minutes. 15 minutes. And the white break dancer of Australia's got her 14,

1:03:21

13 minutes. Yep. Okay. Now, it's other people were saying that she actually hates break dancing

1:03:28

and wants it removed from the Olympics. It showed. So like, this was her way of getting

1:03:33

a protest. Yeah, the protest. I don't know. Okay, if she went out there and thought she did a really

1:03:39

good job. Yeah. That's bad. Yeah. If she was doing it for some comedy or some protest, they put us

1:03:47

the Olympics. Like, how do you even get that far? You know, like, there should be checks and

1:03:50

balances preventing that. You're white from Australia. I'm sure that break dancing line.

1:03:56

Like, they had a Jamaican bobsled team and they weren't that bad. That was a movie with John. No,

1:04:02

that was real. And they weren't as bad as this woman. So I used to work with a guy from Bosnia.

1:04:09

Okay. And he came over here, another refugee program. Yeah. I go, oh, why did you choose America

1:04:15

for? He goes, well, the line was the shortest because everyone wanted to say it's close to

1:04:20

the can to Bosnia to see their family, but they didn't apparently was so they came to America.

1:04:24

And they go, I have a feeling it's kind of like that. She won't be the Olympics. And she's like,

1:04:28

No, who's the bobsledding javelin throwing. Oh, I penis knocking off. What do you call that thing?

1:04:35

The hijab bar. That guy should be really popular. I guess he's get some ads for it. And she's like,

1:04:40

Oh, break dancing. Break dancing. Because over there does her weird shit.

1:04:46

Oh, you're in. You're in. We got nobody else. Sorry. So but no, but if it was done for some kind

1:04:51

of protest, then that's awesome. But if she actually thinks she's good at it, because she was actually

1:04:57

mocking the other guy. The other dude was doing she was doing this. I think that's part of the

1:05:03

routine, actually, like that that's like part of the culture. Oh, you you mocked like you mark

1:05:08

the other. Yeah, it's kind of like like rap battles. But before you mock someone, you really

1:05:12

should be well, you may be better than that. Yeah, but not disgustingly worse than that.

1:05:18

That's just the way the way we know whatever. I think they they docu points if you don't mock

1:05:22

the other player during their their dance. Well, now that's so this was okay. So now I have another

1:05:27

problem. This was her mocking. You know, really? Oh my god, she's bad. I mean, she's not clever.

1:05:34

It's a white mock good, I guess. I don't know. All right, what else? I think that's really about

1:05:38

it. I mean, you know, unless George Bush is actually turned Democrat on this. Yeah, I couldn't find a

1:05:43

live feed. So yeah, I don't know. I don't waste that much time on it. I don't want that shit in my ears.

1:05:49

No, because I mean, no, yeah, yeah, whatever. He doesn't really want. We don't like him. He

1:05:54

doesn't like us. Good. Let's move on. Welcome back, President Trump. All right, I guess we should

1:06:01

move on because we're already over an hour. So what do you got? Yeah, this one's going to be

1:06:04

short and sweet. I'm going to talk about steganography. And you've probably never heard that word before.

1:06:11

So think about stegosaurus, geography, wait, stegosaurus, the dinosaur? Yes. Okay, but steganography

1:06:19

has nothing to do with dinosaurs. It's just how to say the word steganography. Now I'm confused. Stegan.

1:06:22

Okay. So steganography is hiding messages in plain sight. Okay, on the base of it. I'm going to

1:06:28

talk about it in terms of technology. So usually what happens is you take maybe a photo or a mp3

1:06:37

file, or a video or a binary executable file, okay, and you hide your message in there. And so

1:06:45

like the average person will look at the photo and say, Oh, that's the photo of a cute cat. And

1:06:49

then move on. So it's online? Yes. Okay, so it's not like a dead drop outside of the internet.

1:06:54

Right, correct. So you're so it's essentially you're putting it out to the public. And the

1:06:59

person who knows it's there will know how to do the analysis on the image. Okay, whereas everybody

1:07:03

else will just see a cute cat and then swipe, right? So yeah, so you use the you pass secret

1:07:11

messages over public channels, essentially, nice. And actually, a couple of famous musicians have

1:07:17

done this on their music. So there was like a Nine Inch Nails album, where if you loaded it up in a

1:07:24

oscilloscope, it would draw pictures, you know, the sound file would draw pictures. Okay, so

1:07:31

that Nine Inch Nail has done that Aphex Twin has done that a couple of others have done it too.

1:07:35

But it's an interesting little Easter egg for the fans. People who load it up in software and

1:07:40

they can see the images that you made. So the other thing you can do with it is you could place

1:07:45

watermarks on your images. Yeah. So if you're a photographer, or if you do any kind of art,

1:07:50

or if you're a musician, whatever, you could put these steganographic watermarks to know if somebody

1:07:57

is plagiarizing you. So like, a lot of people will do this on Twitter, right? Like if you post a funny

1:08:03

meme on our account, and we have 100 followers, and then let's say catturd steals it, right,

1:08:09

you can open up that image and see the watermark and say, Hey, you stole our image. And here's the

1:08:13

proof, right? Don't still air images caturd, give us credit. And so the other thing is you can

1:08:20

password protect these things. Okay, so if someone like a hacker knows that you might be passing these

1:08:25

images, they can look at them and see the message, right? But if you password protect it, they can

1:08:30

see you put something there, but they don't know what it is without the password. Okay, so that's a

1:08:34

good option to use if you're actually engaging in this. So I'm going to go over a couple of tools

1:08:40

that that are that you can Google for. OpenStego, a good one. It's made in Java. So you can run it

1:08:46

anywhere. It has command line and GUI interface. It does do password protection. This one is for

1:08:52

PNG files, which are images. It could generate read and also do the watermarking. Nice. wavesteg,

1:09:00

which is something you do for audio files. It can both generate and read. It doesn't do password

1:09:05

protection or watermarking. It's written in Python, which again will run anywhere.

1:09:10

This one does wave files, which are a type of audio. Yeah.

1:09:13

There's one that does both the image and audio called steghide, steghide. So again, it generates

1:09:21

and reads. It has Linux packages. It has command line interface does password protection. It doesn't

1:09:28

do the watermarks. This one can do JPEGs, BMP files, wave files, au files. And then there's also

1:09:35

some analysis tools. So like, let's say you're surfing the web, and you just want to look and say,

1:09:40

hey, does this stuff exist here? Because actually, people have websites that look like normal websites.

1:09:47

But if you do this kind of analysis, you realize, oh, fuck, these people are some shady ass fucking

1:09:51

people. It's fascinating. It's what about the internet? Yeah, crazy people on the internet? Crazy.

1:09:56

Oh, so there's stegsolve. So that'll just look at an image and try and find anything that's in there.

1:10:05

There's a Linux app called strings. And that'll tell you all the strings that can find in any

1:10:09

file. It'll just list them all. So, for example, if you have a game, like a video game file,

1:10:16

you might have like the character dialogue as a string, okay, and it'll print that out. And if

1:10:20

you had a hidden message, you would also print that out. Nice. And then you would have to hunt

1:10:23

through and figure out what's what. exiftool, which is another Linux app. This looks at metadata of

1:10:30

things like images, audio files. So for example, when you take a photo with your phone,

1:10:36

it actually hides your geocordinates in that photo. Right. So if you share that photo,

1:10:41

you just told everybody in the world where you were when you took that photo.

1:10:44

I'm on vacation. I'm here. My house is there. Yeah. No one's home. So exiftool can scrub all that

1:10:50

data or can look at the data that somebody else has put in there. So it's a good thing to have

1:10:54

on hand. Okay. zsteg. This will detect hidden messages in image files. And then stegcracker

1:11:02

is something that will crack, it'll try to crack passwords. If someone has password encrypted,

1:11:07

they're, they're steganographic stuff. Okay. So if you find an encrypted one,

1:11:11

run it through stegcracker. And if they have a common password, it'll find that really quick.

1:11:15

Really? Yeah. So and this brings me to our Monero challenge. Let's rub it off on you.

1:11:23

Our Monero challenge this week. Somewhere on our website, there's going to be an image

1:11:28

with a Monero phrase in there. So no, so you to find the Monero phrase and get yourself the wallet

1:11:35

and steal the 0.01 Monero. There you go. So you actually, my, my, remind me of a story. Yeah,

1:11:41

I've been doing that. Well, not now, but back in the late 90s or early 2000s, I was actually doing

1:11:46

that. Oh, really? So I was doing a lot of drawings in CAD. Okay. And my CAD teacher taught me early on

1:11:54

pick a common area of a building or a parking lot and put your name in it. Okay. And so if I was

1:12:01

doing just like the, the foot print of a building with the roof structure, I'd always use the AC unit

1:12:07

in the northeast corner. Yeah. And then if I was doing it with a parking lot, I'd always do it in

1:12:13

the closest parking stop to the door. So the parking stop is the concrete barracks. We have to

1:12:19

draw those in. Yeah. With CAD, it was kind of cool because you're kind of drawing in, in, in

1:12:25

that there's no scale of CAD. Right. If I do, if I want to draw 10 feet long, I draw 10 feet

1:12:29

long. That's actually why CAD works really well for me because math in my head, it doesn't work.

1:12:35

But I can put my name in a parking stop, zoom in and then zoom out. It looks like a parking

1:12:39

stop. Yeah. Okay. What's my name or in the AC unit? Yeah. I would put it on there as part of the

1:12:43

AC unit. Okay. So I can always go back to my CAD drawings and go, yeah, I drew this. Right. No,

1:12:48

you didn't. Okay, zoom, zoom, zoom. That's weird. Because there's my name. Yeah. And apparently,

1:12:54

my teacher said that that happened to him where somebody was trying to pull off his drawing and

1:12:58

he goes, well, no, my name's in that drawing. No, it's not. He goes, well, zoom in right there.

1:13:03

And that's where I learned it from. So there you go. Yeah. So we were more integrated there. But

1:13:07

now I mean, that's that's more like this using the zoom guide. But these modern methods use the

1:13:14

encoding mechanisms of like the JPEG format, and they actually hide it in the extra bits.

1:13:19

Okay. Yeah. All right. So what I want to talk about is home brewing beer. We've talked about

1:13:25

other stuff, you know, home brewing, you know, doing distillation and stuff like that. Distilling

1:13:29

home brewing comes into very the first steps of kind similar to each other. I do recommend though,

1:13:35

if you're going to start home brewing, maybe start with the extract, which can cause problems

1:13:40

where you're brewing, but learn about it, and then go to the full grain extract is basically all the

1:13:47

is a big slime of all the grains that you would normally extract and you pour it in. It's your

1:13:52

boil up hot going to boil over if you don't watch it, but learn how to do it first. It's

1:13:56

really not that hard. But so you can go from extract to grain. And once you get to the grain,

1:14:02

you can kind of play around with it and make that beer your own versus doing the extract,

1:14:06

get the grains you like, you know, the sugars and the starches that you want out of them.

1:14:12

So it's important because if you're making your own beer, well, okay, so you're not going to save

1:14:18

money by making your own beer. If you make your own beer, it's good. You're going to be paying about

1:14:22

50 cents a beer, including, you know, everything involved where it's cheaper than

1:14:26

well, I mean, but Budweiser. Well, yeah. But if you want a quality beer, you're going to save money.

1:14:32

You're going to have some loss because you're going to do it. You're going to fuck up a few

1:14:35

things and bottle fuck, but capers are popping off on you. It's going to be a real sticky mess,

1:14:41

but your dog's going to be really happy and drunk. So no, but, but kind of learn, kind of sit back,

1:14:48

take some classes. There's, there's a great books on home brewing. There's different recipes you

1:14:53

can try. And the reason this is important is once you get actually at least the semantics,

1:14:59

and you can actually, if, if, if the, if there wasn't issue in this country where money is not

1:15:06

necessarily king anymore, if you're distilling or you're home brewing, that could be cash too.

1:15:12

You can trade that kind of stuff. So you can trade your skill for something else that gives you

1:15:16

a steak, you know, whatever. So it's, it's kind of stuff you can work with. So I do, I do encourage

1:15:21

people to home brew. It is fun. Basically, I always say, if you can make pasta, you can make beer.

1:15:28

It just takes a little, it just takes a little bit longer. So with the beer, once you, once you move

1:15:34

past the extract, which I do recommend you start with, just to kind of learn the process, and then

1:15:40

move to all grain and the grain will replace the extract. And then you can start extracting stuff.

1:15:47

What you need, and you, if you really want to get into it, you can look at your different grains and

1:15:51

see what the best temperature to extract the stuff you want out of it, and do separate boil pots and

1:15:56

do that, and then combine them all together at the end. So there's a little bit of, you can kind of

1:16:01

play around. But again, so the most important thing about home brewing is everything needs to be clean.

1:16:06

You do not want bacteria or any all flavors in there. So, so work with that. But you know, there's

1:16:12

a lot of videos online. There's home brew stores in every city. Ironically, we only have one here,

1:16:18

which I don't even understand. And maybe we'll get more as the, you know, more people move in.

1:16:23

If home brewing, it's dying off right now. But, but the reality is, if there is an issue, it can't

1:16:29

be something used to barter and trade with. Right. It's a great currency. If you, because I mean,

1:16:34

again, I got a block of gold, I'll give you a three shavings for a gallon of milk. I don't get that.

1:16:40

So use tangible goods, beer, whiskey, and if you have to make yourself, make yourself, it's not that

1:16:45

hard. It's fun. So if you guys do want, if our listeners want us to get into more detailed classes,

1:16:53

we're willing to do it. Just let us know. And we'll get more, I don't want to spend,

1:16:57

you know, another hour on home brewing, but I'm just going to tell you the importance of it. And

1:17:02

then if you want to learn more about it, the World Wide Web is out there for you or contact us and

1:17:08

we'll do it. We'll do a class on it. So, because I think we, I think once the heat leaves Vegas,

1:17:14

we're going to have, we actually going to have some demonstration classes. Yeah. And once we

1:17:18

on self-defense, on defense, only not offense, but, but no, honestly, I want to do a butchering class.

1:17:25

Yeah. So we're going to, we're going to butcher a pig, right?

1:17:28

If we can get one, I can catch pig. Even if it's greased, you just got to know how to grab it.

1:17:37

Now, so, so, so interact with us. Let us know what you guys want to spend more time on because

1:17:41

we can, I guess, I can set up a little still side or my home brewing site.

1:17:45

Because I'm going to be doing some distilling here very, very soon for the barbecue that we're

1:17:49

having at Dave's Pro Pool. September 21st. I'm going to have a little surprise, you know,

1:17:54

it's going to involve us. It's not a surprise anymore. No, no, no, no, no, no surprise. Yeah.

1:17:58

You don't be surprised. Get your hospice pees in, people. Yeah. So, yeah, so let's, so let's learn

1:18:06

together. If you guys want to at home brew, look it up, talk to us. Anything else we talk about?

1:18:11

Let us know. We'll do a little deeper into it. So I believe this is a show. We are at

1:18:18

an hour 18. That's not bad. Cool. Glad you said we went to hour 45. So I think we're in good shape.

1:18:23

All right. That's it. That's it. That is it, people. Enjoy your weekend. We'll see you next week.

1:18:29

Thank you for joining us at the Canary and the Caged podcast. Don't forget to like,

1:18:32

subscribe and share us to help build the community. You can find us at Odyssey, Rumble,

1:18:37

YouTube or your favorite podcast app and even on the dark web at I2P. Thanks for listening and see you next time.