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Jan. 27, 2023 - Doug Collins Podcast
32:03
Friday Finest: Dirty Cities, VP Harris mangles The Declaration of Independence, and more!
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You want to listen to a podcast?
By who?
Georgia GOP Congressman Doug Collins.
How is it?
The greatest thing I have ever heard in my whole life.
I could not believe my ears.
This house, wherever the rules are disregarded, chaos and mob rule.
It has been said today, where is bravery?
I'll tell you where bravery is found and courage is found.
It's found in this minority who has lived through the last year of nothing but rules being broken, people being put down, questions not being answered, and this majority say, be damned with anything else.
We're going to impeach and do whatever we want to do.
Why?
Because we won an election.
I guarantee you, one day you'll be back in the minority and it ain't gonna be that fun.
All right, everybody.
Welcome back.
Today is a special day.
We've made it.
We've made it to Friday.
Yes, we have made it to Friday.
Today is Friday, the best of, the worst of, whatever we want to call it.
But we're just going to call it here, it is the Friday Finest.
The things that we have looked back through the week, and maybe even past week, We're just saying, hey, maybe this deserves a little more attention.
Some weeks is interesting.
Some weeks not as interesting.
Some weeks sounds funny.
Some weeks have some sad.
This week, though, I think James and I, we got a few things we're going to talk about.
I mean, we're getting close to the end of football season.
We've got a lot of stuff out there.
But James, the first one I have to take off with, and you now, and again, I'm I'm picking on my Texas guy who's from New Jersey and a study recently came out, I don't know how scientific we want to call it, but it was a scientific study that ranked the dirtiest cities in America and Houston, Texas, number one, New York, New Jersey, number two.
Do you know anything else on the list?
New York City was number 12. New York City is number 12, but there's nothing you can do about it.
There's too many people for not to be there.
I'm surprised in Houston.
I've only lived in Dallas for a little over a year now.
Barely.
And I've never been to Houston.
I've only heard good things about Houston.
But very surprised that it's arguably the dirtiest city in America.
Newer, however.
That is not a surprise.
I know you're from Jersey, but are you from...
The New York area?
I mean, is that sort of your area?
I'm 30 minutes out.
Not even.
30 minutes out.
Okay.
All right.
Well, Houston, to get into this a little bit further, and in some of these cities, and for some of you who may be on there, you know, you never know.
Houston, number one.
New York, number two.
San Bernardino.
I don't know what you did to get wrong, but San Bernardino is three.
Detroit, number four.
Jersey City, New Jersey.
Look at this.
New Jersey makes the top five at twice.
You know...
You know what?
I've been triggered and I'm offended.
Because New Jersey is not garbage.
And I get it.
First of all, Jersey City is actually a bit of a surprise.
And I'll say this.
I have plenty of friends that live in Jersey City.
And where they are is extremely nice.
So maybe there's a part I haven't visited yet.
Um...
But Newark has its flaws.
I don't want to be the guy to say Newark has its flaws.
I mean, Brick City is Brick City for a reason.
Wow.
You know, here's an interesting one.
Of 30 cities, and you think about this in terms of stuff, Texas has two of the top ten.
And that being San Antonio and Houston, again, two that I would have not really thought about.
California has two in the top ten, two of which I would have never thought of.
Bakersfield, I mean, and San Bernardino.
So two of the bigger states, California and Texas, have two places.
That makes sense.
But New Jersey, which is the size of my living room as compared to the map of the United States, I haven't heard you mention any places in Georgia yet.
Let's get down there, huh?
Well, first we've got to run through Fresno, California, number 8. Oklahoma City, number 9. So it's just populated areas.
Okay, Atlanta, Georgia, 27. You know what?
That's surprising for how busy Atlanta, Georgia is.
Yep, 27th.
And that's the only city we have on the list.
Denver, 74th.
Oh wait, Savannah, Georgia made 88th, which is, you know, pretty good.
Okay.
If you're out of the top, it doesn't matter.
I've got to firmly disagree on planting the flag.
Chicago, 96th.
San Francisco, 97th.
I'm calling bullcrap.
Yeah, San Francisco is the most homeless people.
Homeless people and crap on the street!
I mean, literally, we've talked about this.
San Francisco has a problem right now.
One of the problems in San Francisco is that the homeless population has no either access to toilets or they just decide that they would rather urinate and defecate in the street.
Yeah, that's pretty insane.
Okay.
I mean, I know we're starting off for a while here on Friday, Friday, you know, finest, but you're telling me that 97th is the ranking for San Francisco where they're actually defecating in the street?
This list is rigged.
This list is brought to you by San Francisco.
Well, are Washington, D.C. at 107?
Okay, I spend a lot of time in Washington, D.C. I ain't gonna say it's 107. That's for darn sure.
Um...
The cleanest is Virginia Beach, Virginia, and Norfolk, and Sunnyvale, California.
Hold on.
I have to ask this just because...
Is the Jersey Shore on there in any way, shape, or form?
I've been there a hundred times, and that is...
Jersey Shore.
There's no...
I don't see a Jersey Shore on there.
Asbury or anything like that?
Well, alright.
I mean, I guess it is what it is.
Maybe they've cleaned up the beaches, but when I was in high school, they didn't clean up anything.
Oh, and Jersey City is closing up.
When is it?
So anyway, folks, if you want to add in to the discussion today, we'd have to have you go to the DougCollinsPodcast.com, click on the email button, and tell us which city you think is the dirtiest, and tell us why.
If you disagree with some of these, just let us know.
We'd love to hear from you.
Las Vegas, number 19, Fort Lauderdale.
You're telling me Fort Lauderdale is dirtier than...
San Francisco?
Oh, give me a freaking break.
It is Florida.
Oh, well.
Okay, we're not knocking on Florida here.
Come on.
Pennsylvania, 26th?
I mean, come on.
Pennsylvania has only Amish people.
Pennsylvania's fine.
Yeah, whatever.
Anyway, they got it all.
But moving right along, we'll start it off there.
Also, we talk a lot about politics and this thing, but I'm going to take a detour politically-wise.
There's one thing that if you really want to get into this, folks, and I think those who follow this podcast a long time, you know that I am not a political fan of the vice president.
She has really trouble speaking.
She has trouble expressing herself.
She just breaks out into hysterical cackles most all the time when she doesn't really know what to say.
But now she's went to...
And James, I mean, wouldn't you think that somebody of the vice president's stature could afford a speechwriter that actually she could read from?
I mean, don't you think after two years you could find one?
Well, first of all, she should have one, regardless if she can afford it or not, considering she's the vice president.
Yeah.
Well, let's get into this.
Okay, her latest speech, just a few days ago, was talking about, it was one of her speeches on, I think around the Roe v.
Wade issues, around the life issue.
Anyway, interestingly enough, she quotes the Declaration of Independence and she discusses that the American people basically are endowed with liberty and the pursuit of happiness.
Are we missing something here?
It's life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
I mean, in a time in which, you know, really we look at this, James, how do they let that happen?
I mean, that's got to be intentional at some point.
100% intentional.
No question about it.
I mean, so my question is, is to all the folks out there that are either supporters of the vice president or others, is, okay, what you got against life?
Is not life a prerequisite for liberty and the pursuit of happiness?
Well, Doug, I would hate to be this guy, but I think I'm 100% certain why it's left out.
Because if she says she's a fan of life, then she can no longer say that she's pro-abortion.
Well, you know, because that would actually be admitting that life is actually part of it.
I'm no doctor.
But you know, have we come to the point in our society today that a medical procedure ending a life is now more important than the very life that we have been given?
Preach.
I mean, I'm at a point now to where, I mean, this is, I mean, the Democrats, I mean, look, the Democrats accuse Republicans of guns and everything else.
But, you know, at the end of the day, I've never heard a Republican, you know, from a conservative perspective, actually take away the very fact of people living.
We may disagree with positions and anything, but when you get to the point to where life and birth and these things of the pursuit of this life is not something that you can...
I think we've got a problem here.
And again, for a Vice President of the United States who consistently does this stuff, I mean, this is not new.
I mean, this is, I mean, you go back and just look at the past year and some of the speeches she's given and to leave out life?
Very intentional, and you know that, and she knows that, and her speechwriter knows that.
Well, again, it just shows that if you like a long-term picture in this, and you start looking at where the presidency race is the next year, I mean, if Biden continues on and keeps her on the ticket, to me, it just shows the dearth of the Democratic Party actually having anybody to run with.
It's just at this point, it's just like, are you kidding me?
I mean, this is what we put up.
But that's what we get here on Friday's Finest.
We want you to know about it because this is where we're at.
Moving along, because I just can't stay.
I mean, beating on the vice president here has just got, I mean, she doesn't want to change, James.
I mean, it's, I've never seen someone in a prominent position that That doesn't even seem to want to go take a lesson, you know?
I mean, everybody could use some constructive criticism.
Me, you, everybody else.
I mean, nobody seems to want...
I mean, she must be not a happy person to take constructive criticism.
What do you think?
I think most people at that height don't take it well.
To be honest, I just...
You know?
I mean, I just...
I always feel like people at a high position can't take constructive criticism.
They've ignored it most of their lives, and that's how they get to the top.
Yeah.
I guess so, because that's where it's at.
All right.
Cool story of the day.
This is where we need to play our, you know, from our Friday bonus, this is where we play our NASA theme.
Okay.
An asteroid is passing as close as 2,200 miles above Earth.
It passed last night.
2,200 miles above the Earth's surface.
And it's the size of a delivery truck.
You know, James, I have a question.
I mean, terrifying and awesome, but...
It is.
I mean, now they're saying if it had got any closer, it'd burn up and you'd have some small meteorites, that kind of thing.
You know, this is somewhere at 11...
Eight feet across as it goes, and it's looking and saying, but you know, I've been watching and listening, and I think you and I got into this the other day about the fact that the city of Atlantis last Friday, we discussed city of Atlantis maybe in the, actually the Sahara Desert.
But we talked about these craters that we see on the earth.
You know, there's these deep craters.
Antarctica has one.
There's one in the Indian Ocean.
You know, you see them in some of the deserts.
You see it out west.
Okay, here's your question.
Did you know that most geologists, I think this is the way, and if I'm wrong here, folks, I know you can, but it's a massive, like, fault, volcanic area around Yellowstone.
I mean, like, thousands of miles kind of thing around Yellowstone.
Have you ever heard of that?
I've never heard of that, but that doesn't surprise me in any way whatsoever.
I don't think...
I guess the way I see it is nothing surprises me about what they say about the earth prior to us being here.
Like, they always say what this part of the country was connected to.
This part of South America was attached to this part.
I believe all of it.
Because I know nothing.
And I believe that things move and crazy.
The tectonic plates and all that stuff that I barely learned in high school.
All that stuff fascinates me, but I would never be surprised by any of it being true.
Okay.
Well, as we were sitting here and I looked this up, and this is out of the National Park Service.
Now, this is where it really gets in.
So if you're walking, you're trembling, look at this.
This is off the National Park website.
The most diverse history is formed, and it says 4.6 billion years ago, however you want to do it.
And it goes into this area, but approximately 30 million years ago, we got closer.
Yellowstone is a restless giant.
The Yellowstone supervolcano is one of the planet's restless giants.
It could erupt in our lifetime.
And they monitor it every six minutes.
I mean, it is huge.
This is a massive area.
The caldera of area is, I won't say, let's see how many miles it says here.
This eruption was one 2.1 million years ago.
It's like 5,000 square miles.
This is just a massive...
Mount St. Helens is part of this.
Recent activities show that it actually is growing.
The Yellowstone Caldera.
Think about this.
If that thing erupted, the whole thing erupted, could you imagine?
Yeah, imagine you're just sitting there, all of a sudden a wolf passes over your house.
Yeah, I mean, because if it blows, and actually Yellowstone is a volcano.
Within the past two million years, some volcanic eruptions have occurred in the Yellowstone areas.
Three of them were super eruptions.
The Caldera, Yellowstone Caldera was created by a massive volcanic eruption approximately 631,000 years ago.
Later lava flows fill in much of the Cadera, which is now 30 by 45 miles.
The rim can be seen from the Washburn Hop Springs Overlook South and all around.
Look at that!
You're just saying, so basically, and again, I feel foolish for not knowing this, but you're saying that there's just an active volcano Yeah.
in 5,000 miles wide in the Yellowstone?
Yeah, approximately 174,000 years ago, creating the western thumb of the Yellowstone Lake, and there have been more than 60 smaller eruptions since then, and the last being, and the last of the 60 to 80 posts Caldera lava flows.
I mean, this is, yeah.
But, you know, they've said that, you know, I've heard this before growing up, you know, talking about the Yellowstone Caldera, which is, and we've gotten sidetracked from our asteroid here, but also the...
Earthquakes and stuff, that one of the biggest ones is around the Mississippi-Missouri River Basin.
And then if it actually went off in an earthquake, it could just cause massive issues in the Midwest and the East Coast.
And we don't think about that.
I feel like, yeah, that's not talked about enough.
I mean, obviously, I would assume, on the one hand, there's nothing we could do about it, so why bring it up?
But also, it must not be that prominent.
I mean, we'd be discussing it constantly if it was a problem.
I mean, it would be no different than discussing an asteroid coming to Earth, right?
If two parts of America were about to collapse because of a volcano or volcanic eruption...
I think we'd be talking about it the same way we'd be talking about an asteroid coming to Earth.
Well, they talk about the New Madrid, which is called the New Madrid Seismic Zone, which is in lower Missouri, western Tennessee, northeastern Arkansas, southwestern Kentucky, around New Madrid.
And the New Madrid fault line has been around a while.
In 1811 to 1812, three earthquakes measured between 7 and 8 out of a magnitude of 10 originated in this fall, and tremors were felt as far away as Connecticut and were damaged as far away as Ohio.
That's insane.
Yeah.
Yeah, they calculate a 7 to 10% chance such an earthquake happening in the next 50 years, just as concerning the chance of a 6.0 earthquake, which is hugely destructive, a 25 to 40% chance.
That's crazy.
That's crazy.
Charleston, okay, as we get into this, you know, adventure today on Earthquake Adventure and Asteroid Adventure, I got you one.
You know, what is the city we most think of?
A couple of cities, really, but what city is most thought of when we think of earthquakes?
Los Angeles.
Or San Francisco, you know.
In 1886, did you know that a 7.6 magnitude tremor hit Charleston, South Carolina?
No.
No one knows that.
Not even the people in South Carolina do.
Yes.
1886, it felt over 2.5 million square miles and caused damage as far away as 200 miles.
Did you know?
I got you one.
Now, I know this.
Did you know that North Georgia, where I live, about every...
I mean, there's small tremors all the time, but about every six to eight months, you'll have a tremor that I've actually felt.
It'll be like a 1, 1.5, but in North Georgia.
I've never been a part of an earthquake.
It seems terrifying.
Yep.
Every time you see in the movie, everyone has a panic attack, but everybody ends up being fine and lights just shimmer.
But I'm sure it's not that.
It's much more devastating to people's homes.
One morning I woke up and I asked, Lacey had gotten up early.
This has been about 25 years ago.
We're in another house and Lacey had gotten up earlier to get ready to go to school.
She was a teacher and I was still in bed.
And all of a sudden, I sort of felt something, and I said, did you slam a door?
And she said, no.
I said, well, did somebody hit something outside?
I thought maybe one of the kids had went outside and done something.
She said, no.
And then about that time, I turned the TV on, and they said, well, three minutes ago, there was a report of an earthquake in northwest Georgia.
I was like, wow.
That was pretty cool.
But it actually did, it actually caused a little bit of a, you can see in our, you know, I think over time it was a shifting that we had, I had a little, after that happened, I could see a little place in one of our pieces of sheetrock.
That's insane.
See, the only thing I've ever dealt with is floods and hurricanes.
Yeah.
Back around now in this trip on this issue of the asteroids, but my question, which we got us off on a wonderfully side note here of discussing earthquakes, is, you know, These things happened millions of years ago.
They're still out there.
You know, does it ever wonder, you know, we did all those movies there in the late 90s of, you know, Armageddon, Apocalypse, all these with the asteroids.
Yeah, you forget the most important one is Deep Impact.
Deep Impact, exactly right.
Deep Impact, I just watched it like a week ago.
So does, I mean, are we the only ones that that ever occurs?
You know, could this actually happen again?
You know?
Doug, I'm telling you this right now.
Did you see the movie Don't Look Up?
I don't know if you did.
Yeah, I did.
It wasn't a great movie, but it had a hilarious ending.
I think the idea is, and this is what's so...
If it ever happens, think about what happened during the pandemic and during riots.
And these are small things.
I mean, I guess a pandemic is not a small thing.
I don't want to call it a small thing.
But people went kind of crazy.
If people know that the Earth is ending, and then all of a sudden they're just like, we're just declaring martial law?
Yeah, okay.
The panic that would ensue, and the crazy...
I would...
Forget it.
I would go out and steal stuff.
You gotta just go live life, right?
I just...
I think about that movie, and I think about Deep Impact.
God, that could never...
You're telling me, like, if they told America only a million people are going to survive this thing?
Yeah.
Yeah, okay.
Yeah, that'll be a good idea.
You shouldn't tell anyone.
Yeah, what was that movie?
What's the movie where they do the...
For one night, you can go out and kill everybody.
Oh, The Purge.
The Purge.
The Purge, yeah.
But it brings up a question here, and here's a question that you can go to the Doug CollinsPodcast.com, click on that email button and send me an email.
If you knew that an asteroid was going to hit 10 days from now, what would you do?
What would be your...
Last 10 days.
I don't think we want those answers.
There's going to be some really nasty stuff on there.
We're keeping it PG, right?
You've got 10 days to live.
What do you do?
I mean, the only answer is probably for me, skydive at least once.
And then just, I mean, I know this sounds so corny, but you just got to spend time with people that you love.
I know that's the corniest answer ever, but what else can you do?
Are you gonna go rob the zoo?
Yeah, I mean, I think I'd eat.
I'd go get some.
I would eat.
I'd want to have all my family as close by as possible.
Yeah, exactly.
I'd spend time with my wife, do that kind of...
But I mean, it is something to think about, but I take it in a bigger stance.
Shouldn't we...
Okay, James, and you and I both experience loss, and you have as well.
But shouldn't, and I know this is tried, and I know people talk about it, but shouldn't we always live every day as if it's our last?
Yeah, 100%.
Absolutely.
But since it's not, and we never will.
That we know of.
No, it's true, Doug.
You just don't know.
And like, yes, you should try to spend as much time with the people you love and do the right thing and be around good people and do the things like, hey, I didn't think I was going to make it tomorrow.
I'm going to go do this.
Yes, we should.
But once you start thinking about that stuff...
Your mind races, right?
You know, you're like, okay, what am I going to do?
You know what I would do?
If I knew 10 days and then somebody needs, you know, I don't know, I would just go stay in an empty Airbnb in Italy and then just go live there for the last 10 days.
You know, because they're all empty.
All these Airbnb's are empty.
What are you going to do?
What are they going to do?
Go to their separate second houses?
Or go to Alaska.
Or go to Hawaii.
Or go to somewhere and just say, hey, I'm just going to hang out here.
But, I mean, the chaos that would ensue.
I mean, again...
Oh, yeah.
I mean, I would just...
I mean, also, I would probably just...
Unfortunately, we'd have to hear from all the people that were like, you know, I built a bunker 10 years ago.
And you're like, I know, you're in that case.
I probably would go find them and go, all right, I'm here.
Let me get some bunker space.
I'll help feed the family.
I'll cook.
Whatever you need, just let me live.
I'll sell it all out.
Well, you know, this is what happens, though, on Friday's Finest when we get off of it.
And this is exactly why we do this, folks.
And, you know, we get our Friday's Finest because we look at things from dirtiest cities to Kamala Harris not knowing the Declaration of Independence to the fact that, you know, what is the next big asteroid going to hit or earthquake going to hit?
And by the way, how many of you actually knew that there was a big fault in St. Madrid in the middle of the country and at Charleston and Georgia has big fault lines as well?
Okay.
No one did.
You know, Doug, I will say there's one more thing.
Yeah.
I would be interested as long as I could stay safe and people I like stayed safe.
I said the zoo before.
It would be pretty interesting to release all the zoo animals at one time and just see what happens.
I know that's a horrible thing to say.
Yeah, that would be it.
If I was a dog anywhere close to a zoo, I'd be gone.
Just open up the Bronx Zoo and let's see what happens.
No, that's a horrible thing.
It's like Night of the Museum.
All right, before we get going, though, we do want to remember this week's the third anniversary of one of the greatest ever played the game of basketball, Kobe Bryant Mamba, the Black Mamba.
If you still go on today...
His daughter, Gigi, and all the other nine.
Yeah, and the rest of his kids and everybody else there.
But if you still go to...
And I like to do this.
I'm an inspirational kind of person.
I like to do the motivational stuff.
It just keeps me focused.
And some of his quotes, some of his discussions, speeches, were some about just bringing...
You know, some amazing focus.
I mean, the man had a focus for the game that was just unreal.
If I can give a quick story that people tell, real quick.
You know, does everyone know Allen Iverson also played in the same era as him?
Played for the Sixers.
Probably one of the most talented six-footers.
And in general, he's pound for pound, arguably the best player that's ever played.
Pound for pound.
And there was a time where Allen Iverson was headed out to the club at 3 a.m.
And Kobe Bryant was waking up at 3 a.m.
too, and he goes, where are you going?
And Allen Iverson said, we're going to the club.
You want to come with us?
And Kobe goes, no, I'm going to the gym.
And that's the difference.
Kobe Bryant spent his mornings and his nights and his afternoons and in between family time literally in the gym.
It's hard to live like that, but if you can, all you get is excellence.
Five championships, MVP, 30 plus thousand points, that's what you get.
That is it.
Well, God bless him.
He made a direct impact in so many people's lives and still You know, going through the videos and everything else.
But, James, as much as we, you know, go about it, we find all these stories.
There's things.
The playoffs are this weekend.
You got KC. You got the Bengals.
You got San Francisco.
We got Filler.
We're going to have to get Coach Gailey back on to talk about who's going to be set up in it.
Before we go, though, let's get some picks.
All right?
Pick it out.
KC and Cincinnati.
Who you got?
Oh, my God.
You know what?
I'm scared of the bum ankle from Pat Mahomes.
Give me the Bengals.
I'm going to go Bengals as well on that one.
I was going to go Bengals either way.
I think Burrow has got Kansas City's number.
And by the way, if you did not see the little spin twirl of Burrow just throwing it...
Is he not the coolest human being on the planet right now?
I mean, he comes from such a humble background.
He's just a great guy.
He's the coolest guy on the planet.
And then it brings me to the game that I really, frankly, could care less about.
But San Francisco and Philly.
I will say this.
I don't know if you missed it this week on Friday's Finest.
Maybe, James, you could include a little clip or a laugh from Stephen A and the Dallas beatdown in San Francisco.
100%.
I'll happily do that.
Yeah, put one in.
We just need to put one in for it.
San Francisco, Philly.
Who you got?
Give me Philadelphia.
I hate to say it out loud, but give me Philadelphia.
I'm going to take Brock Purdy and the 49ers.
I'm looking at a Purdy-Burrow Super Bowl and the first Super Bowl championship for Mr. Joe Burr.
The number one pick and the last pick.
The last and the first.
What a time.
Wouldn't that be a story?
The Super Bowl, the last and the first.
That is it.
All right, folks.
Well, that's what it is here for Friday's Finest.
Thanks for listening with us.
If you ever have any ideas for the next Friday's Finest, let us know.
Go to the website, duckonspodcast.com.
Hit the email button.
Let us know if you have any ideas for Friday's Finest.
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Hey folks, MyPillow is excited to bring to you their biggest bedding sale ever.
For a limited time, you're going to get the Giza Dream bed sheets for as low as $29.98, a set of pillowcases for only $9.98, and rejuvenate your bed with a MyPillow mattress topper for as low as $99.99.
$99.99 to get a mattress pillow topper.
Look, they come in all sizes.
They've got all kinds of stuff.
Blankets, they've got duvets, they've got quilts, they've got comforts, they've got body pillows, they've got bolster pillows, they've got all that big, big discounts.
And also, they're extending their money-back guarantee for Christmas until March 1, 2023, making them the perfect gift for your friends, your family, and for everyone you know.
Folks, and just from a personal note here, I have the Giza Dream Sheets.
They're on my bed right now.
I slept on them last night.
Some of the best sheets that we and Lisa and I have ever owned.
They are worth, I mean, at this price, they're a steal.
My wife and I have bought bed sheets, linens, at much higher cost.
It's supposedly much higher quality.
These from MyPillow are at the highest of quality, and at a price like this, you can't beat it.
So go now to MyPillow.com, use promo code Collins, C-O-L-L-I-N-S, or call 1-800-986-3994, and you'll get huge discounts on all the MyPillow bedding products, including the Giza Dream bed sheets for as low as $29.98, and get all your shopping done while qualities last.
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