It's D-Day for Fani: Arguments Heard Today Over the Trio's DQ and Possible Perjury
It's D-Day for Fani: Arguments Heard Today Over the Trio's DQ and Possible Perjury
It's D-Day for Fani: Arguments Heard Today Over the Trio's DQ and Possible Perjury
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Today is going to be one of the most important days ever as the summation is heard. | |
The final arguments in the disqualification motion. | |
Regarding Fannie Willis and the Fulton County DA. | |
That is what this is about. | |
And what nobody, and I mean nobody, is talking about is the unique, the unique composite of personality types that we are seeing. | |
We have never seen anything like this. | |
And what happens is because, and you know and I know, because you have three, well, you have a black DA who is going to be using the ready-to-use-that race card, like Ricky Jay, who would throw the card. | |
Remember him, the great sleight of hand? | |
He could take a throwing card at you. | |
She is ready to go. | |
That's all she's got. | |
That's all she's got. | |
I'm a proud black woman and you're coming after me and that's what this is about and it's Trump and MAGA and white nationalism and white supremacy and she is ready to move. | |
That's all she has. | |
Let me say this again to you. | |
Make sure you understand it. | |
We've got to be adults about this. | |
You've got to know the lay of the land or the lay of the lamb as this one salesman told me years ago. | |
This is what's happening. | |
And you have to understand, unpacking this, a term I hate, but delving deeper and plumbing the depths of this, you have to understand who this woman is. | |
This is a woman who is absolutely, positively, without a doubt, unqualified for this, who was placed by virtue, like many people, not the only one, and not because of race or anything like that, but she is there because she is a Democrat, and she is basically... | |
Unqualified, like many people throughout history. | |
Incompetence knows no demographic. | |
And what happens, and I want you to understand this today, and this is something maybe you can even tell your kids and maybe use as a tool, if you will, for the Jadrool, the Jadrool tool. | |
I want you to think about this. | |
All of this could have been avoided had she just told the truth. | |
She could have told the absolute truth. | |
Fannie, yes. | |
Did you hire Nathan Wade because you were having sex with him? | |
Yes. | |
Is he qualified to be the assistant DA? | |
No. | |
Were you having a relationship with him shortly after 2019 when you met him at that municipal judges thing? | |
Yes. | |
Did he go over to the apartment or the condo, whatever, that you were subleasing from Yurdy? | |
Yes. | |
No need for all that cell honks. | |
Did you ever go on any trips with him? | |
Yes. | |
Did he pay for it? | |
Yes. | |
Did you reimburse him? | |
No. | |
Did you hire him? | |
Did you put him on the Trump case so that you could, basically through kind of some unjust enrichment argument, basically take, use his money that actually Fulton County would be paying? | |
No! | |
No, no, no, no. | |
Now that's true. | |
I don't believe she said that. | |
I got an idea. | |
In order to go on trips to Aruba and Napa Valley, I'm going to hire this guy. | |
Pay him $650,000, $700,000 so that he'll... | |
No, I don't believe that for a moment. | |
No. | |
It was about... | |
That's all it was. | |
That's all it was. | |
It was all about poudite. | |
That's it. | |
Period. | |
That would have been the end of it. | |
Do you hear what I'm saying? | |
That would have been the end of it. | |
Because you could say, that's not... | |
You may have some ethics problem. | |
By the way, there's an ethics complaint going on March the 7th that the people are going to be, whether she violated the ethics rules based upon Georgia, whatever. | |
Okay. | |
Fine. | |
Whatever. | |
Fine. | |
so Terrific. | |
Fine. | |
Okay. | |
Okay. | |
Fine. | |
I mean... | |
Do you hear what I'm saying? | |
Do you hear what I'm saying? | |
Do you? | |
Do you hear what I'm saying? | |
Does this make sense to you? | |
I hope it does. | |
I hope it makes sense to you. | |
I hope it does. | |
Because that's the beauty of this. | |
That's the first thing you've got to understand about this. | |
Everything was self-inflicted. | |
These three idiots. | |
I mean, morally compromised. | |
If, I'm telling you, if Fannie Willis does not come out high on the psychopath spectrum, I would be. | |
And not because she's a killer. | |
It's the fact that she has no appreciation for consequence. | |
She thinks she can talk her way out of everything. | |
That's what this is about. | |
That's the part. | |
That's the critical part. | |
It's the most incredible story. | |
And let me say this again. | |
If I were Fannie Willis, I'm saying, or by representing her like Anna Cross, I would say, Judge McAfee, yeah. | |
There's no evidence that Fannie had any stake in this, benefited from this, had a financial interest in it. | |
Nothing. | |
Nothing. | |
There's no evidence of any of this. | |
Nothing. | |
Nothing. | |
It didn't matter to her whether Trump... | |
No! | |
There is nothing that prevents... | |
In fact, Merchant... | |
Ashley Merchant and her husband are working together, right? | |
I think. | |
They're married. | |
They're lawyers. | |
So what? | |
Now, if Ashley, if Ashley, if Fannie Willis were, let's say, stopping Sadow, you know, Trump's lawyer, maybe that could be a disqualification, but it doesn't matter. | |
Do you understand what I'm saying? | |
It doesn't matter. | |
She created this. | |
Because she said, oh no. | |
She did that tail, you know, finger wagging, head shaking, talk to the hand. | |
Just kind of like this Karen, kind of a mean, nasty, arrogant, entitled, boorish, she just makes me sick! | |
Because she's special. | |
She's a princess. | |
She just makes up complete crap. | |
Totally makes it up. | |
Talks about her and creates stories that send us down the path that normally wouldn't even be of any relevance. | |
But you say, wait a minute, what? | |
What? | |
Yeah, that's right. | |
My father. | |
Wait, wait, wait, wait. | |
You moved out of your home, wherever it is, and you moved to Hapeville or whatever, in this condo, right? | |
Because of what? | |
Because I was getting all these threats. | |
Threats from what? | |
Threats from the Trump people? | |
Well, just threats. | |
So you let your father stay there? | |
So let me get this straight. | |
You moved, but your father stayed there to keep an eye on things? | |
And he didn't want to go out because he was worried about COVID. | |
In 2019, there was no COVID. | |
Her father anticipated to go. | |
They worried about COVID. | |
Oh, yeah. | |
When Nathan was laid up for the prostate cancer and couldn't, you know, no lead in the pencil kind of a deal. | |
COVID. | |
I mean, these people. | |
And if you look at Fannie Willis, they're the pictures of hell, aren't they? | |
I mean, they. | |
Especially Terrence Bradley. | |
I mean, they, you know, they exude healthy lifestyles. | |
And Fannie, wine, I'm a gray goose. | |
Okay, fine. | |
But COVID? | |
Oh, man, I am, I am. | |
18-carat COVID protected. | |
And her father, with this bullshit story, I'm sorry, about, well, you see, I always told my daughter, hey, see, Judge, it's a black thing to have cash. | |
$20,000? | |
$30,000 in cash? | |
Where do you get this money from? | |
Where'd this $8 million? | |
What? | |
$8 million? | |
How did this happen? | |
Wait a minute. | |
What? | |
Did anybody think? | |
Excuse me. | |
You find disclosures. | |
Don't people say, thank you very much. | |
Excuse me. | |
How much is... | |
Hey, Elon Musk, where'd you get this money from? | |
I own Tesla. | |
X space... | |
Oh, okay, okay, okay. | |
Okay. | |
That explains it. | |
And then she goes to the black church. | |
I think twice, right? | |
At least once, for sure. | |
Oh, please. | |
Do not, Sully, I understand. | |
I'm not going to look. | |
It's a free country. | |
The separation of church and state has nothing that prohibits the church. | |
From recognizing the state. | |
But she is such a phony. | |
She is this self-entitled, arrogant, boorish, no-class, harridan, termigan, virago, this malkin, grimalkin, this shrew. | |
She is the nastiest thing and just treats people like garbage. | |
She's better than them. | |
Don't ask me my question. | |
I'm not going to answer you. | |
Who in the hell do you think you are asking me anything? | |
I'm Fannie Willis, goddammit, and I'm going to do whatever I want! | |
And stupid Nate, and now he, basically, she locked everybody into this. | |
But here's the best one. | |
This is the one that's so weird. | |
Because normally you can diagram it. | |
You can say, okay, here we go. | |
This is, on a dry erase board, this is Fannie. | |
D.A. Fannie's going to lie to cover her ass. | |
Which, I'll let that go. | |
Anyway, she's going to cover her behind. | |
C.Y.A. | |
That's her. | |
Of course, she should have just, as I've said repeatedly, she could have just admitted this and nobody would have, nothing, this would be over with. | |
She'd be on her way prosecuting Trump, okay? | |
And do not think for a moment, ladies and gentlemen, that there's no evidence there. | |
Do not think that all he did was pick up the phone and say, hey, can you find those votes for me? | |
Yeah, there's more than that. | |
I'm not suggesting he's guilty, but if you think that's all it is, if you think, no, no, no, no. | |
There's something to this case. | |
There is something. | |
Especially when one guy's going to flip. | |
Don't forget, you got Jenna Ellis. | |
You got Kraken Lady. | |
And everybody else, they're flipping all over. | |
I mean, they're ratting. | |
And Jenna Ellis basically was crying. | |
She was all pissed off at Trump because this crew. | |
Anyway, back to Fannie. | |
So I understand it. | |
Wade. | |
Wade. | |
Wade's a schmuck! | |
Nathan's a schmuck. | |
He's a guy who walks around and says, you like my tailored suits? | |
Love the suits. | |
Not exactly courtroom material. | |
You look like you're a country gentleman. | |
You know what I'm saying? | |
He looks like he's going to be with Prince Charles on a fox hunt. | |
But look, that's okay. | |
Fine. | |
He's there and everything was like... | |
The way he would... | |
Pain is like, what? | |
He didn't remember. | |
I mean, it was so... | |
My favorite is it was suggested that when he, in actual divorce pleadings, he's asked under oath, did you have sex with another woman? | |
He's like, well, not when I was happily married. | |
This guy on his own decides I'm just gonna... | |
I don't think I was married. | |
In my mind, what I think is I don't think I was married. | |
I don't... | |
I don't think I was married. | |
I don't think that's me. | |
That's not the marriage I want. | |
So when you ask me questions about me being married, I'm going to say no, because I wasn't really happily married. | |
By the way, in 2015, according to him, Joycelyn put the horns, put the tarros on him, you know, cuckold at him. | |
He's a cornuto. | |
And, you know, by the way, that's what this is in Italian and Sicilian versus the hook 'em horns. | |
And versus the Malocchio, which is a different... | |
Anyway. | |
But Terrence Brady, let's get right to him. | |
This is the guy that I can't figure out what the hell's going on. | |
I can't imagine where this one goes. | |
He was at one point... | |
He himself was making a few bucks. | |
Doing, I don't know, something. | |
They were spending money on it. | |
You know how it is. | |
He was doing some kind of working a little bit for the DA. | |
Listen, it's great to be. | |
Look, when you're like this with the DA, your law partnering, your buddy is stooping the DA and they can throw some bone. | |
They always have extra And I think there was something where he was doing arraignments or something. | |
Here, you can be my special liaison. | |
Check out the names of the Fulton County DA. | |
Look at the names. | |
One was judicial, this and that. | |
Okay, fine. | |
So this is numbnuts, okay? | |
This is Terrence Bradley. | |
This guy looks like, well, he looks like he is one cardiac misfire from... | |
Face down in the oatmeal because he does not look well. | |
And the stress this is putting on him and whatever. | |
But here is a guy who, remember this, you think he would say, most people would say, I'm not going to say. | |
When Ashley Merchant tries to get a hold of him and says, listen, do you have any information about Fanny and Nathan and maybe they're... | |
He should have told her, get your ass out of here. | |
I don't know you. | |
Goodbye. | |
Are you kidding me? | |
This is the DA? | |
You want me to tell you? | |
Wait a minute. | |
What? | |
You want me to give you information to help you in your motion to disqualify the DA and my best friend who is... | |
Tagging this one or maybe they say last year they ended it or 2022. | |
Anyway, who knows? | |
But the point is, what? | |
I want to be the guy who was known as I didn't give anybody up. | |
I'm not going to rat anybody up. | |
I'm not going to pull a Sammy the Bull here. | |
No. | |
I may look stupid, but I'm not stupid. | |
What possibly? | |
What possibly? | |
In Fulton County, I... | |
I also, a proud Democrat, proud black man, proud attorney, whatever the demographic you want, you want me to go on the record of having helped Donald Trump and the Republicans and the what? | |
In this, with this office and this, are you, and I'm sorry, you've got to be politically cool. | |
You've got to be out of your mind. | |
I don't know you. | |
And you'd think he'd be on the phone. | |
And what I would have done if I was Terrence, I'd call up Nathan and say, listen, do me a favor. | |
You tell Fanny. | |
They're coming after you. | |
They're gunning after you, okay? | |
I don't owe them any kind of, you know, privilege. | |
But they're asking me questions about your relationship, and I didn't tell them anything. | |
So I'm just telling you, this is where they're going. | |
This is what anybody else would have done. | |
Why would you shoot yourself in the foot? | |
Or other places? | |
Why? | |
What was the point of that? | |
But, oh, no. | |
No, not him. | |
No, no, no. | |
He's on the phone with her. | |
He's got some axe to grind. | |
I guess. | |
And it's so weird. | |
And across. | |
The office is so strange. | |
Listen to this one. | |
This is my favorite. | |
If they're fighting, if they're saying, oh no, this is privileged communication. | |
What? | |
It's privileged communication. | |
Let me get this straight. | |
The DA's office, you don't want Mr. Brownlee to testify because it's privileged communication. | |
So are you saying it's true? | |
Are you saying it's true? | |
As opposed to saying, go ahead and testify. | |
It's nothing. | |
It's ridiculous. | |
And by the way, when you take the stand, Mr. Brownlee, we're going to bring up why you left the law firm and the accusations of sexual misconduct. | |
And how you settled. | |
So go ahead. | |
So they're both, they don't want him to testify because I guess he's telling the truth. | |
And then they're saying what he's saying isn't the truth. | |
It doesn't make any sense. | |
None of this makes any sense. | |
So there he is with Ashley Merchant. | |
Yeah, sounds good. | |
Sounds good. | |
Absolutely. | |
So you're saying they were, he had a relationship? | |
Oh yeah, absolutely. | |
Okay. | |
Sounds good. | |
Looks good to me. | |
You sure about that? | |
Absolutely. | |
Looks good to me. | |
Okay, alright, there you go. | |
What the hell is this? | |
What is going on here? | |
It's nuts! | |
It is crazy! | |
And then he gets on the stand, and then he doesn't remember. | |
But he's so bad! | |
Who doesn't answer? | |
Who takes 10-15 seconds to answer a question? | |
With no sound. | |
Do you know how long that is? | |
Let me show you something. | |
I'm going to give you an example. | |
Here's my watch. | |
Here we go. | |
Mr. Bradley, did you say they had a relationship before 2022? | |
Is that what you're saying, Mr. Bradley? | |
Thank you. | |
That's just 10 seconds. | |
That's just 10 seconds. | |
Who talks like that? | |
He's doing 15, 20 seconds. | |
I mean, this is the weirdest thing anybody's ever seen. | |
And Ashley, excuse me, are you the same Terrence Bradley who is texting me? | |
I've got these. | |
Are you? | |
What are you doing? | |
What the hell's the matter with you? | |
It's me, Ashley. | |
Remember me on the phone texting? | |
Absolutely. | |
And I would say to you, hey, look, I don't know if this is a good idea. | |
No, go ahead. | |
Be brave. | |
We're going to do it. | |
In fact, talk to so-and-so. | |
Talk to Yerti. | |
Talk about this. | |
Ask about Napa. | |
Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa. | |
And then he says, wait a minute, I've got to be careful because I called the Georgia Bar Association to get an idea. | |
Excuse me, now you're worried about privilege? | |
Why are you on the phone? | |
Why are you texting, you schmuck? | |
Why are you texting to the lawyer and Trump's lawyer, kind of in unison, say thou, why? | |
Why? | |
Why? | |
What is going on here? | |
Now, if this were reality, if this were planet Earth, Judge, our friend Mr. Judge McAfee, Scott McAfee would say, excuse me, yeah, I don't even know why we wouldn't have the hearing. | |
I'll tell you right now what I'm going to do. | |
Just save yourself some time. | |
I'm going to disqualify this office. | |
Now, unless you want to put on something to rebut, Madam District Attorney and Mr. Wade and Mr. Bradley, well, you're not even really a part of this. | |
It's the office of the DA. | |
That's the party here. | |
Not Wade. | |
Wade's not on trial. | |
Bradley's on the trial. | |
Your office is not even you, Madam Prosecutor. | |
You arrogant, arrogant, boorish, bully. | |
You self-entitled, know-it-all, arrogant queen of arrogance. | |
No, you're not. | |
It's your office. | |
Unless you want to address that, I'll tell you right now. | |
I'll give you my... | |
I'll tell you right now. | |
You're disqualified because I've done this before for less. | |
There's no way I'm going to allow this. | |
You have mucked this up had you just told the truth from the beginning. | |
No, but you dug yourself into it. | |
And Wade, oh, remember when he said, I think I was there maybe 10 times? | |
They got the phone, 20,000 calls, the text, and they show him driving. | |
In the middle of the night for a booty call. | |
And then she had... | |
This is the best. | |
Then you have the DA basically going on record that says, well, you know, this cell technology doesn't really mean much of anything. | |
Excuse me. | |
Hi. | |
Yes. | |
Madam D.A., yes. | |
I represent somebody who you put away in large part based on this technology, which, let me get this straight, let me quote, you say this doesn't work? | |
And you use that? | |
As an officer of the court, you used this before? | |
And I think we're going to do a motion to set aside the plea. | |
We're going to do a new trial, newly discovered evidence. | |
I want to retry this now. | |
I didn't know that. | |
I thought that when you put in information, you vouch for it. | |
That's like me being a prosecutor, and I'm saying, you know that guy who analyzed the drugs that, you know, the fellow who said that your client had cocaine? | |
Well, guess what? | |
He doesn't know what he's doing. | |
And I know that. | |
Now, wait a minute, what? | |
We pled guilty believing he was qualified. | |
Oh, no, no, not at all. | |
And we pled guilty thinking that this sell hawk, and now you're saying it doesn't work? | |
I mean, it's like layer upon layer upon layer, and then this gets deeper, and this gets deeper. | |
And it just, and not only that, Wade's looking at maybe perjury in the divorce case, maybe perjury from the Bar Association, maybe sanctions, and then you have the ethics department, and then... | |
What's her name's got? | |
Perjury. | |
This is perjury. | |
And if the 65 project applied to Democrats, the way it applies to Republicans, that would be it. | |
It's unbelievable. | |
It's unbelievable. | |
It's a new world out there, my friends. | |
It's a new world. | |
And what this is, is not so much the You know, the story about you said this and you said this. | |
This is a story about everything. | |
Now, I want to add this one little change of subject for those of you. | |
How many of you happen to catch Joe Rogan and Cat Williams? | |
I'm changing the subject now because a lot of times you get very upset about it. | |
Are you changing the subject? | |
Yes. | |
How many of you, did you see this? | |
Did you see any of this? | |
Okay. | |
Please do. | |
I don't watch Joe on Spotify. | |
Well, this was a YouTube channel. | |
I think this is the first time that Joe introduces this long form on his podcast. | |
Okay, no. | |
Nobody saw it. | |
I can't believe it. | |
Okay, mystery saw it. | |
This was the case that This was incredible. | |
Joe Rogan, who was, I think, the most powerful person on the podcasting platform, basically did a shout-out and said, I want Cat and Williams. | |
Why? | |
After the Shannon Sharp Club Shea Shea explosion. | |
I mean, it was the biggest thing anybody has ever seen, ever. | |
And it was great because I think they were drinking and they were up and they were like mean and it was great and it was the most riveting. | |
It set the world on... | |
Kevin Hart was going crazy and Steve Harvey and oh, it was great! | |
And Monique, she was good too, but nothing like this. | |
So finally I said, oh my god, look at this. | |
On YouTube. | |
Here's Cat Williams with Joe Rogan! | |
Whoa! | |
Wow! | |
I don't know how stoned Cat Williams was, but it was like two mumbling stoners. | |
Joe, by the way, I think he's got a better tolerance. | |
But I'm listening to this and I'm thinking, this is going to be great! | |
Uh-oh, Laurie Cuck saw it. | |
Well, that's enough. | |
She saw it. | |
And this is what I heard. | |
You know, there's a time when the voices that one hears from Hollywood is not necessarily that which is resultant in a way of understanding that. | |
What? | |
What? | |
Raul saw it too. | |
What was that? | |
Did any of you ever... | |
Did any of you ever... | |
What? | |
If ever was it kids? | |
Yes. | |
Let me tell you what marijuana does to you. | |
This is Cat Williams. | |
This is one of the most successful, one of the sharpest minds. | |
Here he is on Shannon Sharp, Club Shay Shay. | |
Boom, boom, boom, boom, boom. | |
About the wrist. | |
I love that. | |
Thank you. | |
Yes, indeed. | |
This is... | |
Look how fast he is. | |
Look at the energy. | |
Back and forth. | |
I love the way Cat Williams uses the stool. | |
Kind of as his thing. | |
Jumping on the stool. | |
Fantastic. | |
Back and forth. | |
Sweat dripping fast. | |
Rapid fire. | |
F and MF. | |
I mean, it's just like machine. | |
It was beautiful. | |
And when he was in Club Shaysha, it was perfect. | |
I mean, it was great. | |
And then we get this. | |
Anyway, like, was it Thelonious Monk or something? | |
What is this? | |
And you see, time. | |
And Joe was really trying. | |
And you know what I found great is the fact that, you know, they've got, look at this. | |
Look at this. | |
Here's proof of the flood. | |
Here's some aerial photos of silt patterns and erosion patterns, which certainly are indicative, I think, of what could be consistent with a diluvian or a flood. | |
A Noah asked, well, you know, it goes to show you sometimes what you think may not be true is in fact sometimes the opposite. | |
What? | |
What the hell is this? | |
Now, I think... | |
If Joe can get Fanny Willis on, oh, I'm there. | |
I'm there. | |
Oh, let me do it. | |
Let me interview her, please. | |
But it's like, what is this? | |
It's like, Kat, are you out of your mind? | |
You just had the chance to go and lay out. | |
You've got a, and I don't know if you know your, you could bring into the fold. | |
You've got. | |
Every conspirator in the world to talk about the evil, dark recesses of Hollywood and how they wanted to emasculate the black man. | |
They wanted to wear a dress and as part of a bigger... | |
And you called it... | |
You didn't say Illuminati! | |
What is the matter with you? | |
Did you hear what he said about his ducks? | |
I don't know if I got that one, Lori. | |
I don't know. | |
All I have is my Trump duck. | |
This one I have here. | |
This is part of my collection for the museum. | |
It was the most... | |
What is this? | |
You schmuck! | |
You could have had people say, I like this guy. | |
He said Illuminati. | |
He said he didn't care. | |
You're not... | |
What are you doing? | |
What are you doing? | |
Dear God, I don't... | |
Understand anything. | |
I don't understand anything. | |
I always thought when it comes to people and their career, they never let anything get in the way. | |
You understand this? | |
And this is a part of this. | |
Oh my God. | |
Let me explain something to you. | |
Let me see if I can put something into perspective here. | |
I always look to people to, number one, maintain their career and their image and their whatever it is, whether it's Fanny, whether it's Wade, whether it's Kat. | |
And this was a chance for him. | |
Look at this. | |
Raul says, Cats should have done this show sober. | |
Well, yeah. | |
And let me explain something to you. | |
This is... | |
I don't know if it was weed or what, but I think Joey even said, hey, this is powerful stuff. | |
And first of all, let me explain something to you. | |
There comes a point, I think, when you... | |
I don't know how old... | |
I really don't know how old these people are. | |
And you know, by the way, I think Joe is 56 years old. | |
Okay? | |
And Cat, Cat Williams, he's 52. See, you've got two 50-year-old guys here who are talking about getting stoned. | |
Now, I don't want to go into detail. | |
I don't want to tell you about my own particular research in terms of what I've read and what I know about this. | |
But here is the thing. | |
When you spend more time enjoying the fact that you're stoned versus explaining, it's a different story. | |
Lori says, I wish Kat was like on Larry King's show. | |
Yes, yes, yes. | |
He was wonderful. | |
Correct. | |
When he was on Larry King, he was terrific. | |
He was interesting. | |
That showed a depth. | |
See, he didn't have... | |
This was his chance. | |
You know they were laughing. | |
I'll bet you somebody. | |
I'll bet you Steve Harvey. | |
I'll bet you... | |
I have Kevin Hart. | |
I'll bet you... | |
Who else? | |
Oh, God. | |
Who's the other big macher? | |
Anyway, I'll bet you they were laughing their ass off. | |
They're saying this was it. | |
Because you're in that audience. | |
You're in that audience. | |
If you're going to go on that AM morning show in Atlanta, some urban hip-hop station, you're going to be different than you are if you're going to be on Meet the Press. | |
This makes sense. | |
Doesn't it make sense to you? | |
Doesn't it make sense? | |
I can't believe this. | |
I am so disappointed. | |
He was at the height. | |
He had this audience. | |
Joe did his best. | |
Joe was saying, you know, I'm going to do my... | |
He was. | |
He was doing everything in his power. | |
Everything in his power to say, come on, to bring him back and to talk about how cool things are. | |
And you could hear there was like a nervousness. | |
And I think that Joe was so profoundly surprised at how boring he was, or how stoned. | |
And let me tell you something, my friends. | |
I've got news for you. | |
Remember something. | |
I know you're not going to listen to me, but trust me when I tell you this. | |
Drugs do not create an opening into the portals of your imagination. | |
Drugs create the perception that you've opened up the portals. | |
Certain drugs give you the feeling that what you're saying is of such incredible import and impact. | |
You just realize, my God! | |
I understand. | |
I see. | |
I believe. | |
Okay, you understand it? | |
This is the thing which is the most important. | |
This is the critical. | |
It creates this. | |
Let me also say something, and I want you to listen. | |
And I want you to listen to me and listen good, okay? | |
And you can turn me off if you don't, you're not going to like what I'm going to say. | |
I have absolutely no belief whatsoever that these drugs should be made illegal, that people should face, you know, Jail or whatever. | |
I understand that. | |
And as we talk about and look at Joe Biden and his brain and everything like that, okay, fine. | |
But let me explain something to you very, very carefully. | |
Very, very clearly. | |
I I'm telling you this. | |
I am telling you that when you use powerful, powerful, heavy THC-laden drugs. | |
Smoke, whatever it is. | |
Either ingestibles or whatever. | |
And your brain is going... | |
It is not necessarily elastic. | |
Where it returns to normal. | |
You are not going to be able to do that on a regular basis and not have it affect you permanently. | |
And when you get older, when you get older, dear friends, when you get older, please, Kat and Joe. | |
When your friends start to go like, when you're making fun of Biden, you're going to ask yourself, how much does a joke, remembering a joke means? | |
How much does remembering names mean to you? | |
How much? | |
When you're in that position and you feel like, you know, I'm not really, things aren't, you're going to wish, I should not have perhaps maybe accelerated the deterioration of my brain. | |
Because even though it was seemingly fun at the time. | |
Laurie says, only stone people think stone people are profound. | |
Could not have said it better myself. | |
Raul says, especially under the influence of cocaine. | |
Well, thank God that wasn't the case there. | |
That would have been horrible. | |
Let me just explain something to you. | |
And I mean this. | |
If you really want to access your brain, You've got to make sure your brain is intact before you access it. | |
There's not this clogged vessel that you can clear out, you know what I mean? | |
Like a bezoar, like some hairball that you can pass, and then, whoa, there's the portal to, hey man, you know this is great. | |
No, no, that's what you think. | |
But this, I was so profoundly, now, The good news is that, of course, America has the attention span of a banana forgets because, of course, it's stoned. | |
Number two, that doesn't really matter. | |
Number three, it showed you that that long form... | |
I'm surprised it could go that long, being that beat they out the whole time. | |
But I was... | |
I thought this is going to be one of those... | |
Those moments of kind of an anti-drug message. | |
I want you to go back and I want you to recognize the fact this is very important, very, very critical, my friends. | |
Very, very, very, very critical. | |
I want you to listen to me that this stuff is serious business. | |
And don't think for a moment, don't think for a moment, and I mean this, that people who come along with this and advocate this kind of jazz. | |
Now, some other stuff. | |
Next subject. | |
Are you seeing the fires that are happening in Texas? | |
Does anybody believe that the proliferation of fires in the past 10 years? | |
From Northern California to Lahaina that we have completely forgotten. | |
Completely forgotten! | |
Why? | |
Because people are stoned. | |
They have no memory. | |
Do you think for a moment? | |
Do you think for a moment that this is natural? | |
Do you think for a moment that any of this, any of this is remotely Remotely normal. | |
Any of you? | |
Now I know this. | |
I know that one of the favorite, favorite methodological theories of all fires are direct energy weapons. | |
These Magical, mystical, mysterious things that people swear they exist, either in satellite or whatever forms, that can take, for example, a home and immediately encircle it with flames, leaving the home intact but burning everything around it. | |
They believe this because they've said this. | |
Or can target a home and leave the surrounding areas. | |
People believe that there are these... | |
They talk about lights and lights that we're not really sure. | |
I think I saw one light or two lights. | |
Then we go to the Marjorie Taylor Greene thing and all this kind of jazz. | |
But there are people who believe like you and you ask them, where do you get this information? | |
Show me. | |
Where can I go? | |
Well, you know, I've read it. | |
Where? | |
Well, you're not going to read about it. | |
Well, tell me about the directed energy weapons. | |
Where are we going? | |
Lori says, Roseanne interviewed a Lahaina politician. | |
I love your Lahaina politician. | |
I like that. | |
That's called cuck speak. | |
It's like Orwellian. | |
Now, there's a lot of stuff that's very funny. | |
Very interesting. | |
Very about Lahaina. | |
Very about who, which one. | |
But all you have to do is say, just wait five minutes. | |
Why? | |
Just wait. | |
What do you mean? | |
Listen, we're going to go burn this area. | |
Why? | |
Just wait. | |
Why? | |
They're going to find out. | |
No, no. | |
They're going to release the directed energy weapon crew. | |
They're going to completely derail it. | |
Watch. | |
What do you mean? | |
Whenever we burn something, this is me in a kind of imaginary conversation. | |
Whenever we burn something deliberately, these people come out of the woodwork and they just swear to God there's these things called directed energy weapons from 9-11. | |
They don't really know. | |
They can't explain it. | |
But it sounds good. | |
And it's this blue light or something. | |
And they swear they got pictures of it. | |
They swear. | |
Hey, that was weird. | |
And somehow once the fire starts, It doesn't say, oh my god, what happened? | |
Hey, remember that fire that we, or that house we were trying to save? | |
Well, it burned down. | |
Why? | |
Because we burned everything around it, and it came in. | |
Oh, that's right. | |
Now, if we could send asbestos in a wave or ray, that might be something. | |
So anyway, believe me, I've heard this stuff. | |
I've heard this, and there are these, and you know, what are you going to do? | |
I mean, there's this. | |
Why don't we talk about 9-11? | |
Well, there's that Russian who said there was nuclear weapons underneath. | |
Remember that guy? | |
How about the KGB agent? | |
Remember him? | |
Who I think died from cirrhosis? | |
Maybe. | |
I don't know. | |
There are these themes. | |
There are these themes. | |
Did you hear the latest? | |
George Soros is buying all kinds of radio stations. | |
God, if he can save the AM band, God bless him. | |
Good luck with you. | |
Good luck. | |
Well, he wants to make a bunch of talk show hosts. | |
I think he's buying a lot of Spanish. | |
Uh-huh. | |
Okay, good. | |
That's good. | |
Couldn't hurt. | |
Because talk radio people will swear talk radio is the biggest, best function. | |
Anyway, that's enough. | |
And finally, finally, let me throw this one at you. | |
You're going to love this story. | |
Obesity overtakes hunger as the biggest threat to world health. | |
A billion in weight battle. | |
Drugs won't solve the problem the World Health Organization warns. | |
If you want to have fun, talk to people about why there's an obesity problem in this country and you will love it. | |
Love it. | |
Lori says, she said she got an email three months ago. | |
Prior to fires, talking about chemicals over Lahaina. | |
I'm sure she did. | |
I'm sure she did. | |
Oh, by the way, this is our friend. | |
Listen to our friend Dane Wigington from geoengineeringwatch.org. | |
There's all kinds of stuff. | |
You know what's going to happen with this storyline? | |
Nothing. | |
You think anybody's going to follow up on this? | |
Nope. | |
Nope. | |
But when it comes to obesity, let me tell you what happens. | |
People will say this. | |
You know, when we were kids, we were playing all the time. | |
We were always riding our bikes, climbing trees, and running around. | |
That's the problem today. | |
Kids are too sedentary. | |
They sit around on their machines, and they say the same thing. | |
They always imagined that when they were kids, they were always running. | |
Always. | |
They were always running. | |
It's a little bit more complicated than that. | |
Ozembic and Wagovi. | |
Is it Wagovi? | |
That is going to be the story, especially when people are on TV claiming, hey, here's this healthy eating franchise, Weight Watchers or whatever. | |
Use them. | |
And then they're using, you know, Ozemba. | |
Watch what happens with that one. | |
Because let me explain to you. | |
Let me explain to you something. | |
Let me explain to you something. | |
Obesity, to most Americans, is something that's a cosmetic thing. | |
It's not healthy or unhealthy. | |
They stopped, really stopped smoking, to their credit. | |
They really stopped smoking, which is terrific. | |
But, when it comes to other things, no. | |
Not, no, not, sorry, not... | |
Not any, what am I trying to say? | |
We're not going to have any kind of a problem in people losing weight. | |
That ain't going to happen at all. | |
Forget it. | |
Don't worry about it. | |
Nobody cares about that. | |
Nobody. | |
Nobody. | |
Nice try. | |
Because if anybody tries, you know, oh, I'm not going to eat that. | |
Lab meat? | |
Who's talking about lab meat? | |
I don't know. | |
I'm on the paleo diet. | |
What? | |
I'm on the paleo. | |
I'm a Neanderthal. | |
I eat meat. | |
I'm on the Jordan Peterson all meat. | |
You're eating meat only? | |
Also called the Atkins diet. | |
Also called the Scarsdale diet. | |
Also called the Stillman diet. | |
It's been around forever. | |
The Drinking Man's diet. | |
Low carb. | |
Please. | |
So don't worry about weight. | |
Just don't worry about... | |
Nobody's interested. | |
All right, dear friends. | |
You have a great, great day. | |
You were fantastic. | |
And to all of our dear friends who weighed in today, oh, this is Laurie and Raul. | |
Thank you immensely. | |
You were terrific. | |
By the way, check out... | |
Okay, alright. | |
Check out Kat and Joe. | |
That was something. | |
Something for the angels. | |
Alright, my friends. | |
Don't forget to follow Mrs. L. Listen to me. | |
Her YouTube channel, Lin's Warriors, is absolutely without peer. | |
Go there and check it out immediately. | |
Do you hear what I'm saying? | |
Immediately. | |
Lin's Warriors. | |
On YouTube, you do it. | |
And on X or Twitter, Lens Warriors as well, okay? | |
All right, dear friends. | |
You are terrific. | |
We're going to be watching later on. | |
I'll be following up on the Fanny case. | |
Oh, that's just so terrific. | |
And thank you for making it such a great, great and successful format. | |
Thank you so much. | |
And by the way, thank you so much as well. | |
How did we do on our likes today? | |
400 likes. | |
I would have preferred 800, but look. | |
You've been good, and I'm grateful for that. | |
Thank you. | |
It takes a lot of effort for you to like what you're doing. | |
I know you've got to, like, push a button and poof! | |
That'll wind you. | |
And I appreciate what you've done. | |
All right, my friends. | |
Have a great and glorious day. | |
See you tonight at 7 p.m. | |
And don't forget these final words. | |
The monkey's dead. | |
The show's over. | |
Sue ya. |