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March 17, 2015 - Jimmy Dore Show
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You're listening to the Jimmy Dora show.
Premium content.
Hi, let's get right to the letter by Tom Cotton.
First of all, welcome to this week's premium content.
I'm anxious to talk about things.
Yes, so welcome.
We've got a good one.
We're going to talk about Ben Carson coming up.
We got a phone call from Bill Cosby.
And the letter, everyone's going crazy about it.
Correct me if I'm wrong.
They say they keep referring to they sent it to the leader of Iran.
I don't think so.
I think they just posted it to Tom Cotton's website.
I'm trying to, I've looked all over.
I can't get confirmation, but as far as I can tell, they didn't put a stamp on it and send it to the leader of Duran, of Iran.
So unless the leader of Iran, Rouhani, I think that's how you say his name, is a regular reader of Tom Cotton's website.
I don't think it's that big of a deal.
But it's for the first time ever.
Here's the good news is it seems like the Democrats have been able to spin something in their favor.
So, I mean, this is, I think this might be much ado about nothing.
So, but it's the Democrats are so inept that they can't even spend giving health care to people in their favor.
That's still a negative for them.
Anyway, so that's how I feel about the Iran letter.
I think that the Republicans, you know, who signed it wanted, of course, it's just to whip up their base.
Look, I'm spitting in Obama's face again.
I'm standing up because that's how you get your bona fides.
And that's why it was Tom Cotton's idea because he's new to the Senate because that's how you earn your wings, right?
These days.
And as a conservative, you've got to kick a little sand in Barack Obama's face.
And that's what this was.
So that's, please, these are all my theories.
You're welcome to please share your theories with me and everyone else.
Okay, so let's get to this week's show.
What's coming up?
And of course, by the way, in the letter, you knew in the Tom Cotton letter, the open letter to Iran that wasn't sent to Iran.
They said that we were wanting to inform the Iranian government that the Senate must ratify all treaties by a two-thirds vote.
That is not correct.
Now, I don't want to get into the weeds and reap and quote you because I just did that and I read for like three minutes and I couldn't even understand it at reading it.
So I was going to explain it that the Senate doesn't actually ratify the treaty.
What the Senate does is they advise and consent to the treaty.
But they, when they get a look at a tree, they send it to the president and the president actually is the one who ratifies the treaty.
Or if he doesn't want to, he doesn't have to ratify it.
But it's the president, right?
So it's up to him.
He negotiates it.
He negotiates it, sends it to the Senate.
The Senate advises and consents.
And then the president ratifies it or he doesn't.
So that's the way it works, which sounds, I didn't know that.
I didn't know that's how it worked.
So good thing that Tom Cotton wrote that letter that means nothing that he didn't even send to the Iranian government.
He just posted at his web, an open letter to the, I think people are really overreacting to it and really making too much of it.
So that's what I think about that.
Okay.
So what's coming up on this week's premium content?
We got Ben Carson in the spotlight, sat down with Chris Cuomo over at CNN.
One of the N stands for news.
That's correct.
So they had a conversation and Ben Carson got to tell us that he thinks how gay people are made, that they choose it.
And proof is that when sometimes people come out of prison, they're gay.
Yes, I know.
I think maybe it, Jim, you just tipped it.
Yeah, whatever.
I don't want to bury the lead.
That's the lead.
Now we're going to get to the rest of it.
And then we have a phone call from Bill Cosby.
We're going to wrap it up with that.
Okay, so let's get to that.
Okay, so there's a guy.
Now, Ted, I want to ask you about, there's a guy named Ben Carson.
He's a black guy.
He's a brain surgeon.
And he's running for the Republican.
Does your race want to claim him?
Does your race want to claim him?
How do black people feel about Ben Carson?
Where is he from?
What state is he from?
I think he's from, I don't know, maybe a Carolina, maybe a Virginia.
I don't know.
Where is he from?
Look it up.
Go ahead.
You know, for me, I can't speak for all black people, but for me, where he's coming from is going to determine how I feel about him.
Oh, really?
More than any dumb thing he says.
His geography means more than...
I can tell you his bona fides, Yale undergraduate.
John Hopkins, I think he works at now.
He worked at Johns Hopkins.
I can't remember where he got his medical degree, but he was, I mean, he was like a professor and a neurosurgeon at Johns Hopkins.
But when he was at John Hopkins, he was the valet.
He wasn't actually.
I'm asking.
No, he was.
I'm sorry.
So here's what he said.
Ted got mad at me for that joke.
Here's what he said.
I think I got madder at you for that joke.
We're making fun of Ben Carson.
It's okay.
What did he fucking say?
Ah!
For the love of God, just get to the stew.
I know he said something stupid and horrible about gay people.
So they asked Ben Carson about gay people, and he said this.
He's on with Chris Cuomo, by the way.
Chris Cuomo kind of did a kind of a good job.
So I'm going to kudos to Chris Cuomo.
He asked him the things that I would have asked.
He just did it in a little softer way.
And he was born in Detroit, Michigan.
Oh, he's born in Detroit, Michigan, Ben Carson.
He should know better, right?
He should fucking know better.
Yeah, okay.
I agree.
What an asshole.
He's a Seventh-day Adventist minister as well.
Well, okay, there's a setback there.
There's your setback, right?
Let's just be clear.
The problem with Ben Carson is not that he's black.
No, it's that he's batshit crazy.
Yes, he is.
So here's Chris Cuomo asking him, how does he feel?
How would you deal with gay marriage?
And here's what he says.
Okay, and I'm just going to go ahead and break in here because this is fascinating to me who Ben Carson is.
So the whole deal, yes, he was born in Detroit, Michigan.
His parents were Seventh-day Adventists.
And his father was a minister.
And his parents were from Georgia.
When he was eight years old, his parents divorced.
And he and his 10-year-old brother, Curtis, were raised by their mother.
So in an autobiography that he wrote, he said that in his youth, he had a violent temper.
And once, when he was in ninth grade, he nearly stabbed a friend during a fight over a radio station.
Instead, he broke the knife blade.
After that, he began reading the book of Proverbs, applying verses on anger.
And thereafter, he said he never had another problem with his temper.
Wow.
And so there you go.
The Bible did some good for him.
He attended Southwestern High School in Southwest Detroit, where he excelled in J-R-O-T-C.
Is that how you say it?
Or is it Junior R-OTC?
That's J-R-T.
Junior.
Okay.
He quickly rose in rank and was offered a West Point scholarship.
That's incredible.
You have to get a letter from your congressman.
Anyway, he then went to Yale University where he graduated and he majored in Get Ready for This Psychology.
Psychology was his major at Yale.
Yet he's a yet he is a black conservative, which to me is how do we say it?
It's a mental illness they haven't yet named or identified.
Okay, so he then he got his MD from the University of Michigan Medical School.
So here's where it gets really good.
He was a professor of neurosurgery, oncology, plastic surgery, and pediatrics.
And he was the director of pediatric neurosurgery, the director of pediatric neurosurgery at John Hopkins Hospital.
That sounds impressive, no?
Sounds impressive to me.
Well, here, wait, I guess the kicker, here's the kicker.
At age 33, he became the youngest major division director in the hospital's history as director of pediatric neurosurgery at the age of 33.
He became the director of pediatric neurosurgery.
He was also a co-director of the John Hopkins Cranofacial Center.
I mean, this guy is a heavyweight.
He is a giant, this guy.
He specializes in traumatic brain injuries, brain and spinal cord tumors, echandroplasia, whatever that is, neurological and congenital disorders, craniosynestosis, epilepsy, and trigeminal neuralgia.
This is pretty good, by the way.
I'm doing a good job.
Talking about big brains.
Carson, he believes that his hand-eye coordination and three-dimensional reasoning made him a gifted surgeon.
Wow.
Anyway, so he's a big deal.
Oh, here's the here's in 1987.
He successfully separated conjoined twins, the binder twins, who had been joined at the back of the head.
They're called craniopagus twins, cranio craniop, craniopagus twins.
The 70-member surgical team was led by Carson.
70-member surgical team led by Carson and 70 and worked for 22 hours.
The twins were separated and both survived.
Wow.
So here's and here's a crazy story about that.
I think this is interesting.
I think it's worth talking about.
One time Ben Carson was interviewed, and during that interview, he said, I was talking to a friend of mine who was a cardiothoracic surgeon who was the chief of the division.
And I said, you guys operate on the heart in babies.
How do you keep them from zanguanguating?
I don't know how to pronounce that word, but he asked, that's the question he asked his friend.
How do you keep the babies when you operate on their heart?
How do you keep them from ex-sanguinating?
So it's spelled E-X-S-A-N-G-U-I-N-A-T-I-N-G.
And he says, his friend says, well, we put them in a hypothermic arrest.
And I said, is there any reason that if we were doing a set of Siamese twins that were joined at the head, that we couldn't put them into a hypothermic arrest at the appropriate time?
And we're likely to lose when we're likely to lose a lot of blood.
And my friend said, no, there's no reason.
And I said, wow, this is great.
Then I said, why am I putting time into this?
I'm not going to see any Siamese twins.
So he totally just has this thought.
He asks his friend, who's a thoracic surgeon about, hey, if you had two conjoined twins, would you do this?
Kind of randomly comes up.
Get this.
And then he says to himself, why am I putting time into this?
I'm not going to see any Siamese twins.
So I kind of forgot about it.
And lo and behold, two months later, along come these doctors from Germany presenting this case of Siamese twins.
And I was asked for my opinion.
And then I began to explain the techniques that should be used and how we would incorporate hypothermic arrest.
And everybody said, wow, that sounds like it might work.
And my colleagues and I, a few of us, went over to Germany.
We looked at the twins.
We actually put in scalp expanders.
And five months later, we brought them over and did the operation.
And lo and behold, it worked.
That's just a crazy, first of all, that this guy is so gifted.
A, and then he has this random conversation.
Why would he even think to bring so that's why, although I know I say I'm not, I'm not religious and I don't believe, but there certainly is many other ways of, there are things, there are things we'll never comprehend about, you know, reality, existence, consciousness, ways of knowing.
So that's, is that a coinky dink?
Is that anyway?
That's that's wild.
I don't know what that is, but it's wild.
So get this.
It goes, it gets even better.
Ben Carson, he figured in the revival of the hemispherectomy, a drastic surgical procedure in which part or all of one hemisphere of the brain is removed to control severe pediatric epilepsy.
He refined, he, Ben Carson, refined the procedure in the 80s.
And he performed it many times.
He refined the procedure of taking a hemisphere of a baby's brain and removing it.
Wow.
He's accomplished this guy.
He's a member of the American Academy of Achievement, whatever that is.
I guess I've not achieved enough to know.
I guess if I was really achieved, I would know.
And he is the Horatio Alger Association of Distinguished Americans.
He's a member of that.
And in 2000, he received the award for greatest public service benefiting the disadvantaged.
That's an award given out annually by Jefferson Awards.
In 2008, the White House awarded Ben Carson the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation's highest civilian honor.
And in 2010, he was elected into the National Academy of Sciences Institute of Medicine.
Wow.
He's been awarded 38 honorary doctorate degrees and dozens of national merit citations.
In 2014, an American poll conducted by Gallup marked Ben Carson sixth on the list of the most admired men in the world.
This is unbelievable to me about this guy.
Yes.
This is fast.
To me, I'm fascinated.
And he wrote a he wrote a best-selling book, but it was kind of a Christian media published from a, so I don't really count those.
I don't know why.
So that was a bestseller, but I don't count those.
I don't know why.
That's not fair of me.
That's me being unfair, but I just think like there's a built-in audience.
You know, you're not.
Say, well, you write a political book.
There's a built-in audience.
It's not the same.
Right?
Am I right?
Okay.
right um But he wrote a book.
His book called Gift in Hands, the Ben Garson's story.
Cuba Gooding Jr.
Was in that movie.
I think he portrayed, yes, the Carson's book titled Gift in Hands, The Ben Carson Story, was released by Zondervan.
I guess that's publishers in 1992.
A separate television movie with the same title premiered on TNT on February 7th, 2009, with Cuba Gooding Jr. in the lead role and Kimberly Elise portraying his mother.
Wow.
Anyway, that's that's wow.
That's wild.
It is.
Okay, so now back to, I just wanted to stop and give you all of Ben Carson's bona fides and let you know all about it.
That's remarkable to me.
It really is.
Okay, let's get so now let's get back to our conversation.
Here's what I would do.
I would do what the Constitution says.
Constitution says civil issues of that nature should be determined at the state level.
Why does it say that?
Because the judicial system at the state level has to answer to the people.
Yeah, just like with Jim Crow.
Remember how the states fixed that all by themselves?
Oh, I guess they didn't.
I guess the federal government remember how so if the states say it, a black guy should know better, right?
If the states say, that's why you wouldn't be able to vote if it wasn't for the Voting Rights Act.
The federal government had to come in and run your state.
History will show in America when the federal law steps in, it's usually because the states have ass fucked the situation beyond repair.
And by the way, anytime you hear anybody saying states' rights, it's 100% guaranteed they're defending some horrible thing.
Yes, it turns out, well, you know what?
I make the state's rights argument for medical marijuana.
Boom.
So it's starting to, it's funny, though.
It's like they're here.
Here's what he hears.
So he asked them this question.
Chris Cuomo says, what about Jim Crow?
What if people of the state vote for a law 100 to zero that winds up infringing on the rights of a minority, like happened very often with slavery, like many would argue is happening now with people who are gay.
And our Constitution was followed and we corrected those things.
Yeah, that's what we're doing now.
We're following our Constitution and we're correcting those things.
What do you think we're doing?
Following Paraguay's Constitution?
We're following our Constitution and we're correcting those things.
But by the way, we had to have a war to correct those things.
Oh, that's right.
We have to have the most bloody war in the history of this country.
That's right.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, that's right.
There was a little thing called the Civil War that happened over that.
That's right.
And all of those states had to be removed from the picture when we were voting on the amendment to correct those things.
So here's what Ben Carson, Chris Cuomo pushes back a little bit more.
Isn't that what's happening right now?
Isn't that what's happening right now?
Just what we said, isn't the Constitution working and they're changing this?
Same sex marriage is being corrected as a form of violation of equal protection.
No, you can't just say because it happened that way this time.
This is the same situation.
It's not the same situation.
It's not the same situation because gays make me creep me out.
That's why.
Slavery was a choice, wasn't it?
Yeah.
Well, you could choose to run away.
Yeah.
So how is this?
So here, here we go.
How is it different when people discriminated against blacks?
I mean, now they're discriminating against gays.
How is it different?
Ben Carson's going to tell you right now, Ted.
Because people have no control over their race, for instance.
You think they have control over their sexuality?
Absolutely.
Yes, yes.
And I'm a surgeon.
So Ben Carson, I have no problem he thinks that gays have a choice in being gay because he's a brain surgeon who chose to be a fucking idiot.
There you go.
You know, Ben Carson single-handedly made me not impressed with brain surgery.
He's killed though.
You can't say, oh, he's no brain surgeon.
Yeah, he's ruined that now.
Ben Carson has ruined that.
Yeah.
Did he operate on his own brain, by the way?
Because that's what's on.
He goes on.
He goes on, Frank.
You think being gay is a choice?
Absolutely.
Why do you say that?
Because a lot of people who go into prison go into prison straight, and when they come out, they're gay.
So did something happen while they were in there?
Yeah, what happened was they got raped by men who were bigger than them.
And people don't come out of prison gay.
People, they go, oh, you're in prison?
Oh, you're gay, I bet.
No, you come out of prison trying to forget what happened in prison.
What the fuck went wrong?
What you did to survive.
No, I think that what he means is that men come out of prison thinking, oh, man, it sucks that nobody's going to rape me anymore.
And by the way, prison theater would be much better if that's the case.
If they were actually gay.
You know, what's funny is that I know a lot of gay people who've never been to prison.
How did they become gay?
Yeah, that's a good question.
So the question that Chris Cuomo didn't ask.
Well, here, he's got, is that, well, he, Chris Cuomo, asked him one more thing.
Let's listen.
Ask yourself that question.
Never go to prison.
And you know there's a whole theory of dominance.
Wait a minute.
I said a lot of people who go in, come out.
Are you denying that that's true?
Yeah, I'm denying it's true.
He says to Chris Cuomo, I'm saying a lot of people, not all of them.
I'm saying, so he's just basically using, pulling stuff out of his bunghole.
This is not a study, like you said, Robert.
Do you have any empirical evidence?
Have you guys studied this?
How many people go in straight, come out gay?
You're a clinician.
Do you have anything clinical to back that up?
Well, the only gay factor that I would say in regards to prison is not that you come out gay, but it's the person that keeps getting re-arrested and going back to prison.
The repeat offender might be the person you might want to interview.
You mean the guy who keeps going back?
Yeah, this is my surgeon.
He's shaking his lips.
I'm going back.
That's the guy you want to talk to.
He's the one you want to interview.
I want to get back with Tyrone.
So listen, listen to how he pushes.
So listen to how.
So Chris Cuomo asked him the question, and then Ben Carson confuses.
Are you denying that that's true?
I am denying that that's true, but I am denying.
He's not denying that it's true that people go in straight and come out gay from prison.
Chris Cuomo.
So he just dropped the ball right there.
He goes, I'm not denying that's true.
What?
People go into prison straight and come out gay.
They changed their sexuality midlife because they got incarcerated.
Yeah.
No.
No.
That's why in a lot of parts of the country they call it the gay house.
Are you going to the gay house?
You go to the gay house?
Maximum security gay house.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
Gay Max.
Yeah.
That's as a basis of understanding homosexuality.
If in fact that is the case.
So here, let's play this whole.
I want to play this whole thing because it's good.
You hear them all at once.
Ask your question.
Never go to prison.
And you know there's a whole theory of dominance.
Wait a minute.
I said a lot of people who go in, come out.
Are you denying that that's true?
I am denying that that's true, but I am denying that that's as a basis of understanding homosexuality.
If in fact that is the case, then it obviously thwarts what you just said.
Okay, he just made no sense.
It obviously thwarts what you just said.
What?
What he just said.
That's not how you use the word thwart.
Yeah, no, it doesn't thwart what he just said.
So that's Ben Carson.
Now, he's the leading.
So now, Ted, as a black man yourself, how do blacks view, I mean, maybe there isn't a way they view it.
I don't know.
Is there a way that the black community views people like Herman Kane and Ben Carson who become Republicans and actually join the group that's suppressing them?
I mean, Colin Powell gets a pass for some reason for being part of a party that's suppressing the black vote all over the country.
And he knows it.
And he even talked about it.
Yet he still remains in that party.
Powell gets a pass for the Iraq War.
And he gets a pass for the Iraq War, too.
So what do you, my question to you, Ted, is there a way that the black community views black Republicans?
Because I know how I view them.
Yeah, no, I've met a few myself, and I've never met a black Republican that I did not want to smack with my dick.
Yeah, were you in prison?
I didn't mean any black Republicans in prison.
I've met them out walking about in the world.
And I think the consensus is that they're just lost.
They're supporting a party that is not interested in their well-being or their benefit or their prosperity in this country.
And that, to me, is just how do you back a horse that wants to see you die?
How do you do that?
It's like voting for Hitler because he's against abortion.
You're a Jew voting for him.
Oh, he's against abortion, so I'll vote for him.
So that's what, guys.
I bumped into when I find a black Republican, it's usually that.
They're religious.
And if I can stay in the case of the case.
Unless he's super dumb, like who's the basketball player, the round mound of rebound?
Charles Barkley.
Who's pretty dumb for a grown-up guy with a lot of money?
He's really dumb.
And it's obvious he doesn't read books.
He's too dumb to shut up.
I don't even think he can read a street sign.
But he is pretty dumb, Charles Barkley.
He's very dumb.
But he's a great basketball player, and he's got a lot of personality.
So let's put him on TV.
Fantastic.
You know, really free.
Oh, you know what?
Let me just break in here.
I like Charles Barkley.
And that sounds a little too negative.
You know, I think he's a basketball expert and a very colorful announcer.
And I enjoy listening to him talk about basketball.
So, but just everything else is when it really hurts that he's in a position to be listened to and he has the opinions that he has and he shares them and people give it credence anyway.
So because it's used by people who are the enemy of the people.
Okay, so that's what I'm saying about Charles Barkley.
But fantastic, one of my favorite, all-time favorite basketball players.
And I love him as a sports announcer.
Okay, now back to your regularly scheduled conversation.
In my lifetime, the Republican Party has trotted out roughly four black candidates of this particular type who are very smart, have a good resume.
But then once you get them in front of a mic, they turn out to be batshit insane.
So it was like Alan Keyes, Herman King, Herman Kane.
Who's the Florida congressman that's Alan West?
Alan West.
And now this guy.
By the way, Alan Keyes makes Ben Carson look like Langston Hugh.
Oh, boy, I bet there's people who know who Langston Hughes is who's really enjoying that joke.
Poets are prize-winning.
I understand that he's famous and popular and that smart people know who he is.
I'm saying I'm dumb and I'm uncultured.
Okay.
And now there's Ben Carson, and I think that pretty much for every presidential cycle from now until eternity, or basically until the Republican Party implodes, you can look forward to the next Ben Carson.
And they will always have this beautiful bona fetus of being like a surgeon or a CEO or a colonel in the army.
And then once you get to talking to them, you'll realize like, oh, they're crazy.
But what happens is that the Republican Party trots them out the same way they trotted out Sarah Palin going, Well, on paper, she looks great.
She's going to help the party.
And then everybody goes, Oh, that's why there aren't black Republicans.
You know, I just want to point out our president took a while to weigh in on this very subject about gay rights.
Yes.
In our country, it took a while for him to do that.
And one more thing about Ben Carson that I found out that among he compares same-sex marriage to pedophilia and bestiality.
Yeah, he's one of those guys who actually believes all homosexuality is directly related.
He's one of those guys.
All right, we got to move on.
Robert, you said, oh, can I?
If I can take a moment to speak on behalf of the black community, oh, sure.
As a white privileged male, people like Herman Kane and Ben Carson are genital thwarts on the community.
Genital thwarts.
That's how you're supposed to use it.
I like that.
All right.
You know, speaking of bestiality, I saw a movie about bestiality the other day.
Oh, yeah.
We fucked the zoo.
You didn't see that movie.
You didn't see it.
*music*
Boy, I didn't realize the level of animosity towards Bill Cosby that was out there.
It seemed like there were a lot of comedians just waiting to fucking jump up.
Well, he's an I hated him.
They wouldn't print what I wrote about him.
I wrote it.
They asked me to write a thing for when we did the DC Festival, anyway, for the paper, but they wouldn't put it in because what I said about Bill Cosby.
You know, I was just jokes about how he goes around the country now that he's a millionaire telling poor black people to pick their pants up.
And that's why we had Jim Crow and women are slightly all this.
He's fucking, there he is, raping people, wagging his finger, raping fucking women, and wagging his finger at fucking single black women in the inner city.
What a fucking piece of shit he is.
He is.
The only way I've been able to cope with it is that for me, he died when he did that second sitcom after the Cosby show.
So he's been dead to me since the Cosby mysteries?
No, no, he had another one.
Yeah, he went to CBS and did another sitcom.
I don't even remember with Flush Results.
Really?
And so he died to me then.
He's been dead since.
So that must have been horrible because I don't even remember it.
Ready?
Okay, here's the.
You know, the only place these days where they'll sell the CDs is Sleepy.
Okay, ready?
So I got a call from Bill Cosby.
And we talked about Oklahoma.
Hello, Mr. Cosby.
Jello.
Yes, listen, I just wanted to get your take on the horrible racism that was revealed at Oklahoma State.
All the dokey-dokies on the bus saying the scene.
And yeah, they're chanting the N-word saying that blacks should be hung by a tree and they'll never be allowed in their fraternity.
It's the fault of the old rap and the band sang and down what?
The white people pick it up and take the death to 2,000 students.
Are you saying it's you're blaming rap music and the way they wear their pants?
They'll debases the dire culture.
The whites and debases the blacks.
You're saying that it debases.
It debases all the wackety wags.
Okay.
All right.
I really am having a hard time understanding what you're saying.
You're saying it debases the culture.
She-bo.
How's that again?
How you gonna be surprised the white people's on the bus singing the hacks?
How are you gonna be surprised?
The white people on the bus singing the song about the blacks.
That's the culture that we're raised up to be in.
They're just responding to the environmental schisms of them.
Okay, Bill, but any last words about this?
Skizzles.
LAUGHTER Okay, that was Bill Cosby.
Yeah, Bill Cosby.
He has not lost his name.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Okay, that's our premium content for this week.
Hope you enjoyed it from the bottom of our hearts.
Thanks for being a premium member and not one of those people who are stealing the bonus content.
I'm flattered and hurt at the same time that you would steal from me.
You'd like me.
I'm flattered you'd like me so much that you'd become a criminal to hear my bonus content.
It's flattering, but at the same time, it hurts.
Anyway, but thanks everybody who is a premium member.
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