Cash, gold, bitcoin, dirty man safes keep your assets hidden underground at a secret location ready for any crisis.
Don't wait for disaster to strike.
Get your Dirty Man safe today.
Use promo code DIRTY10 for 10% off your order.
Disaster can strike when least expected.
Wildfires, hurricanes, tornadoes, earthquakes.
They can instantly turn your world upside down.
Dirty Man underground safes is a safeguard against chaos.
Hidden below, your valuables remain protected no matter what.
Prepare for the unexpected.
Use code DIRTY10 for 10% off and secure peace of mind for you and your family.
Dirty Man safe.
When disaster hits, security isn't optional.
When uncertainty strikes, peace of mind is priceless.
Dirty Man underground safes protects what matters most.
Discreetly designed, these safes are where innovation meets reliability, keeping your valuables close yet secure.
Be ready for anything.
Use code DIRTY10 for 10% off today and take the first step towards safeguarding your future.
Dirty Man Safe.
Because protecting your family starts with protecting what you treasure.
All right, good friends.
What a beautiful day here in New York City.
73 degrees as we speak.
I was driving around today, tooling about, just going Lower East Side.
I mean, it was...
This was absolutely beautiful.
Chamber of Commerce weather, as they say.
Just beautiful.
Everybody out?
More restaurants than you?
You could spend the rest of your life just eating in restaurants here.
You can't...
You just can't believe.
New York gets a lot of grief.
People were happy today.
It was incredible.
More, more people than you could imagine.
Imagine.
More places to eat.
Anyway, how's everybody today?
How's everybody doing this fine, fine weekend?
Are you in a good mood?
Are you in a so-so mood?
You understand this?
You feeling good right now?
Right?
That's right.
There's Al Sanchez, everybody, cruising in the Yugo.
That's correct.
Today was a beautiful day, and invariably I learn and I find not to involve myself with people in their discussion of politics, because as you can tell, you know how it is.
People don't want to talk about this.
They kind of...
I always get sucked up into this, and instead of me saying, so, what do you, what do you think about that?
What about that?
Well, I don't know.
I said, okay.
And then I start, and then people will say, oh, no.
And I said, oh, here we go.
Now they're disputing me.
I love that they tell me this stuff.
But, you know, look, when you've been doing this as long as I have, I mean it.
When you've been doing this as professionally as I have, it is a wonderful, wonderful thing.
And let me just tell you something.
There is so much good stuff out there.
Oh, my God.
I'm still listening to some of the best, some of the best, absolute best lectures on AI, and I can't get enough of that.
I cannot get enough of that.
I think that is the most important, the most fascinating subject of them all.
Did you know that?
It's true.
In any event, what's on everybody's mind this evening?
What's on your take?
I don't want to hit you too hard with this.
I don't think you like hearing what I have to say.
So I'm going to kind of tone it down a little bit.
I'll just do my heavy stuff for the...
For the regular, you know, things.
By the way, please make sure you like this video.
You gotta like this video.
You gotta like it.
And you gotta subscribe to the channel.
Who has not subscribed?
Who?
Is there anybody?
You must have subscribed if you're here.
Is that true?
Is that how that works?
Because metrics mean everything.
Metrics tell everybody everything.
Metrics mean everything.
You understand what I'm saying?
Metrics.
Metrics?
We be metrics, as it were.
So let me ask you, what is it that you want to discuss?
Shall I go through a couple of things here?
Shall I give you a few things?
You know what might be good?
This is also kind of good for me to tell you.
This is good to discuss with people when you meet them.
And as you know, Americans hate history.
They have no sense.
And when you talk about If you're a DeSantis person, let's say you're a DeSantis person, or maybe you're a Trump, here's something interesting.
Look at three races for the nomination.
Three years.
In 75, right around this time, roughly, Jimmy Carter, Jimmy Carter, let me tell you, Hubert Humphrey was at 30 points.
George Wallace, At 20. Did you know that?
George Wallace.
Remember who George Wallace, one of his, I don't think it was that race, but in one particular race, who his vice presidential nominee was?
Curtis LeMay.
And he was, this was for the Democrats.
Anyway, 30% Humphrey, 20% George Wallace.
What do you think Carter was?
Less than 5%.
And he won!
Less than 5% wasn't even going to get his own nomination.
So keep in mind how that works.
How about this?
In 2008, Hillary, right around this time, so to speak, 48. 48 points!
What did Obama have?
21!
Here's one.
2007.
Who was leading it 2007 for Republican nomination?
Rudy Giuliani, 24 points.
McCain, John McCain, 17. How about that?
Isn't that something?
Isn't that something, how that thing works?
So, remember, when you talk to people about this, always keep them, bring them up to speed as to how this thing works.
How this thing works.
And if somebody tells you, well, you know, that DeSantis, that was a terrible, that was a disaster.
I don't think it was much of a disaster.
I don't think it was a disaster.
What was Trump's big town hall?
It was on CNN.
I thought that was excellent.
That was one of the best ones ever.
That was one of the best ones ever.
Now, here's the problem.
It's already forgotten.
It's already forgotten.
Does that make any sense to you?
Does that make any sense?
Do you want to hear that?
Do you want...
Bill Oliveri.
Billy, how are you, pal?
Glad to be back.
It's been a while.
Welcome back, Billy.
William says, that's not true.
I'm here, but not subbed.
William, why aren't you subscribed?
Who is not subscribing?
Who is not?
That's all people subs.
That's all they care about.
That is it.
To be subscribed, you must.
I've got new stuff coming up.
Oh, I've got more.
Oh, do I have stuff for you?
Want to hear some good stuff?
The Roger Waters thing is still one of those ones where nobody, but nobody, is going to understand the position you take.
Nobody.
Nobody.
If you...
Don't even try.
Here's what happens.
If you say, oh, you agree with him wearing a certain uniform?
Can't say certain uniforms.
Can't refer to certain things.
I'm just telling you.
I'm just telling you.
You can't say certain...
I'm just telling you.
You can't.
I can on my private channel, LionelMedia.com.
That's a different story.
But I just...
I did that one before about him.
And the idea of being criminally perhaps charged for something because of speech, I can't believe that.
Again, it's Germany, not here, but we're going to be next.
We're going to be next.
The other thing, deepfakes.
Oh, oh, oh, oh, oh.
Deepfakes.
How does that work?
How is that going to work?
How are deepfakes going to work with things?
Well, a couple of things are interesting.
Number one, from the legal point of view, it's going to be interesting to see how things kind of, sort of, maybe work, sort of, sort of, kind of, sort of work.
You know what I mean?
But, what's also very interesting to know, which I find of interest, is as follows.
You are going to have people, and you are going to have people who are suggesting That a fake is going to be tantamount to the actual thing.
We've already been through this before, and even though I've told you a million times, CSAM, child sexual abuse material, something that I find disgusting, I have a hard time explaining how somebody could theoretically be looking at criminal sanctions for what appears to be apparent digital CGI forms of whatever.
Now, in those two cases, let me stop you right there.
Most people, most Americans do not understand that you cannot penalize thought.
They don't understand it.
They don't understand it.
They're not interested in what you're saying.
They're saying, wait a minute.
You mean to tell me you agree?
No, I didn't agree with that.
No, I don't.
I don't.
No, no, no.
I didn't.
I didn't.
I didn't say I agree with it.
I don't think a person should be charged criminally for having something appear to be something when it is not.
Sorry.
That's a thought crime.
Sorry.
Sorry.
I just...
And if you can't explain that to people, I don't know what.
In the case of Roger Waters, what he did, personally speaking, I don't even understand it.
My worst...
Roger Waters is the John Lennon of that.
John Lennon to me was very interesting, very good.
Obviously, but he was so into being John Lennon and he said these things.
Okay, you know, I heard of sometimes on Dick Cavett and Mike Douglas and it was kind of disjointed, but that's fine.
Roger Waters, too, has some good points about Julian Assange.
Other things, he has a point about certain things, but his boorishness is so great in the way he attacks.
Now, why are you wearing, obviously, a certain uniform depicting a particular time?
And then, I just, you know.
It's to shock.
It's to shock.
It's to anger.
Still, should that be protected speech?
Absolutely.
Okay.
What's not protected?
Child sexual abuse material.
Libel.
Libel.
Something that is injurious by virtue of the words in action.
Trade secret violations.
National security.
Revealing secrets, things like that.
Short of that, we are a purist.
Now, good luck trying to explain that one.
Good luck trying to explain that one.
Good luck trying, and good luck trying to explain to people how hate is protected.
What is hate?
I don't know.
Now, a couple of things too.
This might be a little bit, but I'm going to tell you anyway.
I've been reading a lot of legal kind of stuff, and there are ways that are trying to be used to come after, to utilize.
What am I trying to say?
Statues and the like that are already here to meld into what we would normally call hate.
For example, the types of materials, the types of legislation and the like that was used for hateful and injurious How do I say this?
Depiction of people.
Let me give you an example.
As you know, non-government actors such as private companies are generally free to censor the speech of employees.
You understand that?
This is obviously true in view of Section 230 in particular, which shields from liability, from...
Cases permitting actions against defamation of individuals actually led the Supreme Court in 1952 to uphold the punishment of a speaker for disparagement of African Americans in general.
The so-called group libel case.
This is the B-E-A-U-H-A-R-N-A-I-S.
B-E-A-U-H-A-R-N-A-I-S.
B-E-A-U-H-A-R-N-A-I-S.
It has never been overruled, but a 2017 case, Mattel against Tam, prohibits the government from denying trademarks that they consider to be disparaging to racial groups, suggesting that it's no longer good law.
But it's a very interesting issue.
It's a fascinating issue regarding spreading and expanding the notion of protections to groups, which might be, quote, hate.
Holder against Humanitarian Law Project in 2010 allowed the government to ban the giving of material support to a terrorist group.
Even though the support consisted of otherwise protected speech, that's interesting, kind of an expansion.
Don't forget Brandenburg, the case we talked about.
This is about incitement.
This is tough.
The court held that advocacy of violence can be punishable where it is directed to inciting or producing imminent lawless action and is likely to incite or to produce such action.
So, we are going to be seeing this.
What I'm trying to say, perhaps this circuitous discussion of such, Is that the courts, I promise you, are going to be going out of their way to find ways to extrapolate.
Ladies and gentlemen, Gretzky, thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
You are more than kind.
Lyndon LaRouche for President.
Lyndon LaRouche, at times, And I cannot say that I am particularly expert in a lot of his things, but at times said things that were absolutely, fascinatingly limpid.
But when you say his name, he is just immediately tossed to the side.
Especially when it came to oligarchies and the like.
One of his initial I guess, not acolytes, but students.
Webster Tarpley did excellent disquisitions on so many different subjects, up to and including World War I, Edward VII, I think it was.
So, yes.
You know, Gretzky, there are people...
I heard something the other day that was interesting.
You know that movie called...
What is it called?
The Rising?
The Rising.
They're rising all of a sudden.
I was talking about the notion of Bilderberg.
Now, Bilderberg, as you know, we've been talking about forever.
Bilderberg has been the subject of my awareness since the beginning of time.
Since the beginning of time.
And here's what's interesting to note.
When they were talking about this, the people who brought up Bilderberg at first, at least initially, was Alex Jones and I think LaRouche and maybe others as well.
And they were immediately discounted.
Nobody listened to what they were saying.
They were just discounted.
Oh, they're crazy.
Yeah, but what are they saying?
It doesn't matter what they're saying.
They're just discounted.
Now, you know and I know that some of the most fascinating things that have ever been said, some of the truest things that have ever been said, have been initiated and been proposed from people.
Who are considered to be sometimes very interesting.
Oscar Wilde was considered to be daft and crazy.
Alan Turing, because he was gay, was going to be outlawed.
He was crazy.
Copernicus Galileo.
I mean, just go down the list of people who just said, you are just out of your mind.
You're a nut.
You're crazy.
When Einstein was saying, you know, I think this Newtonian thing might be a little bit like gravity.
Time-space, time-space.
I know, granted, they like them.
I don't care what people are.
I don't care what people are, what people say, what people have done.
I listen to what they're saying.
And I don't care who they are.
But if they say something that makes sense, oh my God, I'm with you.
And I don't care about anything you said about anything else, ever.
I read one time, I've been reading, just going through the quotes of G.K. Chesterton, some of the greatest, some of the greatest, but fairy tales are not important to prove, not that there aren't, not that there aren't dragons, but that you can slay them.
I mean, just, just the, the, The quotes are fantastic.
He was considered a bit, not daft, but his one quote was, The true soldier fights not because he hates what is in front of him, but because he loves what is behind him.
I love that one.
He said, Humility is the mother of giants.
One sees great things from the valley, only small things from the peak.
My brain and this world don't fit each other.
And there's an end of it.
Private lives are more important than public reputations.
And it goes on and on and on.
It was a bit interesting.
Not crazy.
But once you are considered crazy, you are just dismissed.
They did this during the Soviet times.
Stalin did that repeatedly, much to my chagrin.
He just would dismiss somebody and remove them to...
The psychiatric confines because they were crazy.
Ross Perot had wonderful things.
Ross Perot wasn't crazy, but he sure was nuts.
He was wonderful.
Nobody's really crazy.
Nobody's crazy.
That's a word that you use.
Have you met anybody who's crazy?
Do you know anybody who is crazy?
I'm dead serious.
I'm going to ask you a question.
Do you know anybody who's crazy?
People who are either psychotic, not neurotic, psychotic, schizophrenic.
I've known a few, but very, very few.
People who are crazy.
I'm seeing a lot of people more and more who are demented, who have dementia, who have Alzheimer's.
That's not crazy.
That's a neurological disease.
But the word crazy means a lot.
Crazy?
No.
No.
Absolutely not.
And nobody really wants to talk about this, but the first thing that is the most interesting, I think, is being a detective.
And I loved the work of my used to be, I haven't talked to him in a while, but my great friend John Douglas.
John Douglas is the Is the serial killer profiler.
And I loved...
One time he came into my show on WABC and he never left.
Had him on the whole time.
It's the most interesting thing I've ever seen.
And I asked him these questions and I said, I want you to do me a favor.
I want you to do me a favor.
I said, I want you to think like somebody who wants to abduct a child.
Tell me what they think.
Tell me...
Tell me how they think.
I did the same thing one time in a weird way with somebody from the Weather Channel.
I said, you're a hurricane.
Tell me what you think.
Tell me how you develop.
Tell me what low pressure, high pressure.
Tell me what that is.
Tell me what you want.
And one of the things is that you have to understand what it is that people want.
What is it that people want?
And John Douglas and I were talking about, and I am still in love with the subject of the serial killer.
Hate them, love the subject.
Because it's like a personality cancer.
It's something that's, whatever.
Well, what is this about?
It's about a conspiracy.
But they don't really conspire.
They can't, because they're by themselves.
Conspiracy means, remember what conspiracy means.
Conspire.
Like respire, conspire, to breathe with.
Two people or more breathing together in concert.
That's all it means.
You're acting in concert with somebody else.
And that's it.
And the conspiracy is the confederation, the thought, the planning, the agreement, the organization.
And it's separate and distinct from the actual act itself.
Conspiracy, remember, two things.
There's the murder, and then there's the agreement for the murder.
It's very interesting.
Laws have these things called inchoate, I-N-C-H-O-A-T-E, inchoate crimes.
Attempt, solicitation.
Not the act itself, but things around it.
Asking to do it, trying to get somebody to do it, attempting to do it, participating in it.
These are crimes that are participatory.
And there are conspiracies.
I was listening to some beautiful lectures today about...
John Foster Dulles and, I mean, Alan Dulles and Wild Bill Donovan after World War II.
Absolute!
This is criminal what they did.
Gladio, stay behind programs.
This was done, the country had no idea.
That is a conspiracy.
Conspired to breathe with a confederation.
And the word today has been so misused.
So misused, like the word hate.
That's a hate crime.
I don't hate anybody.
Can you hate somebody?
What does hate mean?
How about to despise, to hate?
To hate?
It's not even the word.
It's not even the word.
When somebody uses words racist, anti-Semitic, what does that mean?
Unless it is an objective, unless it objectifies, unless it turns into an actual act, it does not matter.
It doesn't matter.
You can think whatever you want.
If you hate people, if you hate Alsatians, Aleuts, Inuits, if you hate Papua New Guineans, you despise them.
You think they should be removed from the earth.
You just despise.
Spies these people.
And you're writing constantly about how you hate them.
You hate their culture.
You hate who they are.
So what?
Just don't do anything.
Yeah, but what if it inspires?
What if somebody reads that and what?
What if somebody reads it and does what?
And it hurts somebody?
Yeah.
So what?
What do you mean, so what?
So what?
Remember, under Brandenburg, is it likely to incite?
And is it intended to incite?
That's all.
Two things.
Likely and intended to.
If I say, if I'm writing something and I say, listen, I want you to do me a favor.
I want you to make sure that you're going to go out and you're going to meet me and we're going to do something.
We're going to meet at the mall.
We're going to do terrible things at the mall.
We're going to rob people and we're going to do this at the mall.
Meet me at the mall.
Come on everybody, meet me at the mall.
We're going to meet.
Come on, you can do it.
Bring clubs and bats and things like that at the mall.
Okay?
Bring it.
Bring.
Meet me.
Here's what we're going to do.
I'm going to give you instructions.
We're going to take four quadrants of them all.
You're going to start here, here, here.
We're going to do smash and grab.
We're going to take things.
We're going to meet up.
We're going to divvy up.
This is what we're going to do.
Now, that's, that, is that likely to inspire?
Is it intended to inspire?
Yes.
Is it likely to?
Yes.
Is that hate?
No.
But that's like, wow, you're basically arranging a smash and grab?
Yeah.
You are?
Yeah.
That's real serious.
Did you mention anything about race?
No.
Did you hate anybody?
No.
I want you to understand something.
I don't know what hate is.
Do you hate anybody?
Do I hate?
Do I hate?
When I hate something, I've lost.
I don't hate.
I don't hate.
That word is so overused, I don't even know what it means.
Do I hate cancer?
Do I hate it?
No, I want to get rid of it.
Do I hate these people?
It's a word that, it's part of our vernacular.
It means I really despise them.
You know, I hate this.
I hate, I hate.
God, I hate this.
I hate when it's this weather.
I hate, hate, hate, hate, hate.
Love, love, love, love, love.
I've got a friend.
Love, love, love.
Oh, I love you.
I love, love.
The love means nothing to this woman.
Nothing.
She loves you.
Love, love, love, love.
Love, love, love.
Meaningless.
Silly, syrupy, anodyne, garbage.
Meaningless.
Absolute meaningless.
Hate.
What does that mean?
I don't know.
I don't know.
Do you know what I despise, though?
What I really don't like?
Types of people.
Types of people.
And I've seen them.
And you can say, now here's something.
If you say, here's something that I don't like.
I don't like people who do such and such.
Now, I don't like this type of person.
What happens if they happen to be Alsatian?
Everybody you mention happens to be an Alsatian.
Well, okay.
What, do you hate Alsatians?
No, I don't hate Alsatians.
I just don't like people who...
Yeah, but they happen to be.
Well, that's okay.
If somebody says, I hate the Mafia.
I hate the Mafia.
What, do you hate the Sicilians?
No, I don't hate the Sicilians.
Well, they're all Sicilians.
I know, but that doesn't mean I hate Sicilians.
I hate the Mafia.
I don't like organized crime.
I can't stand these people.
You see what's happening?
But do you hate them?
Do you hate them?
No.
No, you don't hate.
Lose that word.
And understand something too, my friends.
It is possible for you, believe it or not, in this country of ours, to think anything you want.
That's all.
Now, some other stories too.
By the way, this is at mylinelmedia.com coming up.
Deepfakes.
Deepfakes will force courts to determine whether the First Amendment protects troublesome thought.
Oh, scary alternatives to the First Amendment to enforce hate speech prohibitions.
Oh yeah, that's a good one.
Chinese social credit score horrors are a preview of what's to come.
And going after, going after, going after, going after comics.
Comics.
Stop for a second.
Back up.
Scoring.
When did we start judging everything?
When did we start saying, would you give me five stars?
Would you rate my...
Hi, thank you very much.
By the way, here's your ticket.
Here's my name at the bottom.
Right here, here's my number.
Would you...
Would you...
Yes, I will.
Thank you.
Would you...
Jackie Mason had a routine where he would say...
He said, everywhere I go, they're going to judge this, judge this, judge this.
The waiter came.
I didn't give him a tip.
He says, where's my tip?
He says, I gave you five stars.
When did this happen?
When did judging?
Well, I gave you a five star, one star.
Oh, is it Uber?
Oh, well, I got a...
I got...
I don't know about you, but I've got like less than five stars in Uber.
I'm a passenger!
How do I get less than five stars?
I don't understand.
What did I do?
I didn't do anything.
I didn't even talk to these people.
Nothing.
I would say, hi, how are you?
I'm normally very nice.
How did I get...
Okay, fine.
I don't understand it.
And then Yelp came along, and then this came along, and then that, and how many stars, and how many...
And then all of a sudden, people started to say, well, you know, it's five stars.
It's five stars.
There's nothing less than five stars here.
What do you want to go to eat?
Well, you know, this place looks pretty good.
It's got five stars.
Really?
On Yelp?
Let me see the pictures.
Forget the Zagat survey.
That's all people want to talk about, is the stars.
Hey, you know, by the way, how are you doing?
Pretty good.
What do you do?
I got a YouTube channel.
That's your channel?
Yeah.
Got two million.
Two million?
You just indicated you didn't like it.
Well, you know, you got two million.
Yeah, but you didn't like it.
Well, it doesn't matter.
You got two million.
People think Taylor Swift is good because of how many people show up.
Graham Murphy says, Hi.
Great to see you.
We're still going strong.
Graham Murphy, Graham, where have you...
Oh, my God.
The voices from the past.
Graham.
Son of a gun.
Good to see you going strong?
Still going strong, my friend.
Still doing it?
By the way, good to see you.
Oh, then, remember that starting off, the names of them, they just kind of go away sometimes.
I feel like we know each other.
We've been through so much.
So, as I was saying, perhaps circuitously, perhaps in a desultory way, We're saying something brilliant.
Okay.
A couple things here.
this is important for you to let you know.
Let me see this.
Let me see this.
Let me see.
This is a moop.
This is...
Oh, oh, oh, oh, oh.
Here we go.
This is a...
Oh, I forgot to tell you this.
The funniest thing I've ever seen...
I found this...
If you go to my Twitter, Twitter at Lionel Media, I found the original 1970s National Lampoon piece on terminal flatulence.
One of the funniest things I remember this, and I was going through it again, and I want to share it with you.
Terminal flatulence.
Sometimes silent, always deadly.
What is TF?
TF is the nation's number one killer.
And there's a picture of a toilet bowl shattered.
Here are the six of the 140 warning signs of TF.
Localized cloud formation.
Peeling wallpaper.
Lack of friends and acquaintances.
Defoliated trees and shrubs.
Scorched mattresses.
My favorite.
The one that killed me.
Unaccountable pet deaths.
TF.
It's not to be sniffed at.
For further information.
And then, there's this other one where this little girl says, little Julian has TF.
So does little Jesus.
Little Julian spends all his days connected to a 23-foot EMCON catalytic converter compressor, otherwise known as a TF machine.
Luckily, his family is rich enough to afford one.
They cost $18,500 a piece.
And, of course, it's connected to him so that when he flatulates, it is contained within this.
One of...
I remember this.
I think it was high school or early college.
Killed me.
So anyway, I'll tell you that one.
Here's a little bit of advice also if you're interested in going.
There is a Peter O'Toole documentary.
Peter O'Toole.
And it is a documentary.
It's got a very interesting name.
It's on BritBox.
Have you heard about that?
BritBox?
It is called Along the Sky Road to Acaba.
And I think it's BritBox.
That's what I'm going to be watching later on today.
Did I tell you my Peter O'Toole story, by the way?
I just saw the movie Hannibal with Ray Liotta.
Ray Liotta was one of the victims.
And as you remember, there was a Scene that apparently made everybody ill, in which a certain part was being cannibalized.
Anyway, so I was sitting at this Irish pub, talking to a friend, and lo and behold, Peter O'Toole, whose son I think was attending NYU at the time.
He was in Wonderful Man.
So, here's the first thing you should always do.
Whenever you meet anybody who's famous, never, ever, ever say, hey, can I have your autograph?
I'm a big fan.
No!
So I sat there and I said, I don't know how we came, I don't know how we came, but I just came back, it was from the IMAX.
Upper West Side, and I said, I just saw this, and there's a couple of things I think were wrong with this.
I said, I don't want to be too particular and too specific about movies, but I would think that if you are in one particular area, and I noted very carefully, right around this area that was being consumed, this would have been Wernicke's area, or Broca's area.
And speech would have immediately been affected.
Immediately.
I mean, this is like the biggest ischemic attack ever, to have portions of the language center immediately.
And he says, you're right.
I said, yes.
I said, that ruined it for me.
And we were talking about, well, where would I have approached this?
Well, it would have been a lot easier to go more.
Cortex here, this is organizational.
This wouldn't have affected voice and things like that.
I said, don't forget the poor bloke who had the railway spike.
Anyway, had the best time with Peter O'Toole talking about which part of the brain we would consume.
That's my life.
I'm not proud of it.
Now, coming up, as of course you know, Some big things are happening this week, and I want you to be aware of them as well.
Number one, did you hear anything about, do you have anything to say about the debt limit, the debt ceiling, the debt compromise?
What is the issue to be asked regarding the debt ceiling, compromise, and the agreement?
What do you need to know about that?
Answer my question.
Simple, simple, simple.
Do you need to know?
What's the first question?
What's the only thing you want to know regarding the debt ceiling compromise?
What is it?
What is it?
Lionel, I'm shopping for a new acoustic guitar.
What should I get under a thousand bucks?
Well, I will tell you, you have to play them.
I don't care.
Go to a store.
If you can somehow figure out how to get a Martin, Martin, Taylor, Larrabee, I don't care what they are, play it.
Don't worry about that sound, play it.
I've heard graphite guitars that are great.
Play it.
Two guitars, and don't ever, ever feel about, don't go for new necessarily.
Pre-owned, I think, are better.
Because the wood's broken in.
You've got to play it.
It will be passed just in the nick of time?
No.
It was going to be passed.
That's not the issue.
What is the only issue that you should be concerned with?
I'll tell you.
What's in the compromise?
What's in the agreement?
They're going to attack on something that has something to do with sustainability, bailing out BLM.
I'm just saying.
What's in the agreement?
That you don't know about.
They always Christmas tree effect.
They always Christmas tree.
They do things.
Let me give you a little bit of constitutional law here.
Most, and this is the theory, so it gives you an idea.
Most, a lot of jurisdictions have this thing called the one subject rule.
And it means that in order for you to pass a law, there has to be one You can have a subject that deals with traffic lights, traffic controls, traffic, whatever, traffic.
And I might deal with maybe a surtax for parking unit.
Okay, that's tax.
And maybe there's lights.
Okay, that's parking.
And maybe something about the speed limit.
Okay, that's traffic and parking.
Okay, all right, all right, all right.
But, if all of a sudden, in this bill, it says, we're going to raise the salaries of whatever, of the commission, you say, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa!
What does this have to do with it?
Because the bill is going to pass, so the Christmas tree, as they say, they tack it onto something that's going to pass, and you end up paying for that.
That is, we actually had a case thrown out years ago in law school, just as in a clinic, And it was an obstruction of justice statute that was...
It was ridiculous.
To make a long story short, what are they signing?
Because these people are crooks.
All of them.
Every single one of them.
And the higher up you go, the bigger the crook you are.
You don't get to be Speaker of the House.
Worrying about what's right and wrong.
You've made deals that you hope to God nobody will find out about.
The whole system is corrupt.
Corrupt, I'm telling you.
Do you hear what I'm saying?
Corrupt.
That's what I want to know.
What was signed?
Let me see this.
Let me go through this.
Have somebody read this.
Explain to me what this deal has to do.
That's all.
That is it.
That is all we have to think about.
That is all you've got to worry about.
The debt, yes, they're going to extend it.
Yes, I understand this.
I understand this.
I understand.
Where does this money come from?
Where are these billions going to Ukraine?
Who gets them?
Who gets the money?
How much does Zelensky pocket?
Notice how I go like this to add to the verb pocket.
How much does he pocket?
Where is he going to?
Who's going to follow later on?
Who is going to say, hey, look at this guy.
The guy with the t-shirt?
The one who was doing the work?
He's got this billion dollar home in Miami.
It's a billion dollar.
Is that going to happen?
Of course not.
Whatever happened to Nancy Pelosi's husband?
Whatever happened to that guy?
Let's play.
Whatever happened to?
Whatever happened to that story?
The PayPal guy.
San Francisco.
Wait a minute.
What?
Why is the Attorney General in Texas?
What did he do that was so bad?
Why did they want to impeach him?
Why him?
Why now?
What's going on?
Come on.
You don't impeach.
When was the last time anybody was ever impeached or removed short of this?
What is going on here?
Come on, Fox News.
You don't watch that garbage, do you?
Did you see who was number one?
I love this.
Number one?
The five.
Number one show.
The five.
That?
Monstrosity.
Monstrosity.
Some of these other ones didn't even show up.
These other...
I forget what it was.
There's something called News Nation.
Nobody.
Nothing.
Nobody.
Twelve people.
I think the people watching in the control room were counted for this.
What is the purpose of this?
What is happening?
Who watches MSNBC?
What is going on here?
Why is this on TV?
It's for advertising, obviously.
It's incredible.
Okay?
Now, how are the likes doing?
Somebody brought up a very good question.
The likes.
128 likes.
Look, this is a weekend.
I know it's Sunday night.
I'm not going to waste your time.
You're so beautiful to be here.
I appreciate this.
But I want to know.
That story, if I were that detective, oh, I want to know.
I want to know.
Who was this guy?
Who was he with?
Who was the guy?
What do you know?
Come on, tell me the truth.
You're not telling me something.
What about the fellow who jumped out of the window?
Remember Bed Bath& Beyond?
Out the window.
What was that all about?
There was another guy, too.
Some big-time, big billionaires out the window.
How can you tell the difference between jumping out of a window and being thrown out of a window?
That's called defenestration.
Does anybody ever know anything about this?
How do you have a billionaire jump out of a window?
And nobody cares about this?
I'm the detective.
I'm not a conspiracy theorist.
Don't you want to know?
Whatever happened with Las Vegas?
With Paddock?
Did that make any sense?
No.
Shut up and move along.
I love when they say, Cold Case Squad.
Well, we got a cold case.
Here's a case that's not even, it's lukewarm.
Why don't you care?
Why doesn't anybody care?
Why doesn't Jesse Waters say, Hey!
This doesn't make any sense.
Graham Murphy says, whatever happened to Oh!
Mifsud or the Awan brothers?
Yes!
Yes!
I don't know.
Joseph, yes, Mifsud.
Who is Joseph?
The Maltese Professor Mueller.
Is that it?
The Curious Case of Misfood's Lost Passport.
This is interesting.
Remember the two brothers?
The Boston Marathon Bombing Brothers.
Remember their jokes?
What was it?
They called them...
Speed bump and...
No.
Flash bang and speed bump.
Remember that?
Remember when they found...
Remember...
Ladies and gentlemen, you don't remember this to you.
The...
The...
What are they?
Well, the brothers.
You know who it was.
The Boston Brothers Massacre.
One guy was...
They ran him over.
The Boston...
Oh, Zocar.
Zocar...
Sarnayev.
Sarnayev.
And one of them, the Zokar, remember the brothers, Zokar and one of them, one I think was on, he was in Death Row, is he not?
Did he get there?
Brothers Zokar, yeah, Zokar, here we go.
He is currently, he's incarcerated.
And let me see.
Criminal penalty death.
Don't know what's going to happen with that one.
Let me ask you a question about this.
This is a question that I want to know.
And this is a question that I've never understood.
I just want to know, because maybe there's a reason for this.
Why would you shut down Boston?
Because of these two people.
Why would you shut down Boston?
Why would you shut down Amtrak from Boston?
To New York.
Why?
For these two people.
Why?
Why would the great people of the great city of Austin say, thank you!
Alright, get in your home!
Remember the cops were going down the street with their equipment on and their military gear?
Why would they do that?
Why?
Why did they do that?
What was the purpose of that?
Why did they shut down a city and Amtrak for two people?
Why?
Remember when they found the guy in the boat?
He was in a boat.
And inside the boat with a magic marker, he's writing notes.
Inside the boat on the what?
And then when he finds it, okay, you can come out.
Yay!
Remember that?
This is the tough people.
Can you imagine if they'd have gone through New York and said, go inside?
Excuse me?
Get inside.
Get inside.
No.
No, we're not going to get inside.
What do you mean?
Who are you?
Who?
What are you, with the army?
Excuse me, why is the army involved in this?
What about posse comitatus?
What are you talking about?
Remember that?
They just sort of just said, okay.
And they clapped.
Anytime you can do a beta test.
I'm not suggesting anything as to the authenticity of the claim or anything.
Regarding the bombing of people, I'm not talking about that.
I'm talking about why would you shut down, especially when one guy is run over, for this guy to shut down a city?
They don't do that for anybody.
For serial killers, they don't do that.
Ted Bundy, they didn't do that.
And nobody questioned it.
And they clapped.
They clapped their captors.
Anytime you can beta test anything, they'll do it.
Absolutely.
Don't think I'm...
Don't think I'm being...
Let's give this a shot.
Let's do it.
Let's see if we can shut down Boston.
Shut it down.
What?
You never know when you might want to.
Let's see the logistics.
How many people do you need?
What happens if you don't?
Who authorizes this?
What is this?
Is it martial law?
Is it martial law?
What is it?
Have we suspended this?
People don't really understand what martial law is.
You kind of suspend the civilian aspects of it in order to...
Proceed with this.
You basically suspend courts and police and it's the military in charge of the domestic.
And posse comitatus will prevent that.
So anyway, just another example.
I'm not going to belabor the point.
But so many.
Now you see what I just showed you right now.
You probably didn't realize this.
This is called curiosity.
That's all it is.
And nobody in Main Street or Mainstream media care anything about that.
So let me just say that to you.
Gretzky, thank you so much.
Gretzky, do me a favor.
If you could, drop me a line.
Lionel at LionelMedia.com I want to thank you personally.
And you can always drop, always, if you want, anytime you got a question, you comment, you got a thought, Lionel at LionelMedia.com Please speak relatively cogently.
Please, if you could, just if maybe, oh, I don't know, words.
Words might be good.
Lionel at lionelmedia.com.
Grutsky in particular.
I want to thank you for your emane courtesy.
Graham, don't worry about calling me.
Just kidding.
You were from the beginning, my friend.
And I never get to see really anybody's face.
I see these tiny, little, tiny pictures.
These tiny, little, little, little faces.
These little faces.
Oh, there he is.
Oh, there he is.
Enjoy seeking the truth ever since building...
Okay.
Gotta be careful.
Can't talk about that.
Can't talk about that.
Can't talk about that, Graham.
You know how it is.
Can't talk about that.
I talk about it on my private channel.
Can't talk about that.
No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
Can't do that.
Can't do that.
But I'm with you, babe.
I'm with you because you know what?
Curiosity killed the cat, and nobody cares about your curiosity.
That's all I'm going to say.
Oh, you have no idea this stuff I'm talking about.
Oh, so many.
I'm just a detective.
I'm just a detective at heart.
I'm saying, you know, that doesn't make any sense.
All right, dear friends.
Have a great and a glorious night.
Don't forget to follow Mrs. L at, at, at LinzWarriors on YouTube.
And at LinzWarriors, L-Y-N-N-S underscore warriors.
At Twitter.
And on Twitter for me, I'm at Lionel Media.
You have a great and glorious day.
We're going to go watch the Peter O'Toole documentary, which I will report to you about tomorrow.
Again, think of Memorial Day.
Don't say Happy Memorial Day.
Think of what Memorial Day means.
And remember Memorial Day, which is, I think, the purpose behind it.