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Sept. 8, 2014 - Rush Limbaugh Program
35:40
September 8, 2014, Monday, Hour #3
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Half my brain tied behind my back just to make it fair.
Because that's what we're interested in here.
Fairness and equality.
And I have.
I well.
Sometimes I will even admit to being wrong when I'm right.
Just so I don't frighten kids.
Great to have you with us, folks.
800-282-2882, if you want to be on the program to email address.
Lrushbow at EIBNet.com.
You know what I got something wrong?
When I told you earlier today when I started a program, and I I paid no attention to anything that happened last week while I was away.
I was literally away.
I did not keep up with the news purposely.
I mean, I didn't avoid it, I just didn't go there.
Uh, and that I had to cram.
Yes, there was one thing I did hear about, and that was because I put her on tech blogs, and that was all these celebrities and their nude photos, supposedly hacked and put all over Reddit.
And I watched the uproar over that.
I must say, I know it's gonna sound smug, but I watched that with a little amusement.
Because people were saying all kinds of things they knew nothing about in describing how it happened and why it happened and what needs to happen to make sure it doesn't happen again.
And there was one alarming thing that bothered me.
Now, I don't mean to say that when I heard it I got alarmed and the day was ruined, and that I ran around, oh my God.
Nothing like that.
It just I um I heard people say, well, what are these celebrities expect?
That's what you get for putting nude photos of yourself on the cloud and on a phone.
No.
That's not the right way to look at this.
Tempting though it may be.
I mean, there's a lot of a lot of people with a lot of Schadenfreude, oh yeah, celebrity, oh yeah, these love to see these people get come up and say this kind of thing.
But the problem here relies, or not really, the problem here lies with these hackers.
Uh and people who are out there trying to invade everybody else's privacy.
Now there's a bit of a conflict going on because, as is well documented, people in great numbers have thrown off all pretense at privacy.
You know as well as I do that people are populating these social websites and literally vomiting everything there is to know about them because they're so desperate for fame.
They don't need to be hacked.
They're just putting it out there.
But these particular celebrities, okay, so they're taking nude photos.
Well, that may not be coolest thing to do, but it still doesn't give anybody the right to see them.
It doesn't give anybody the right to go hack their accounts and invade their privacy.
It just doesn't.
I don't I don't care what they're doing.
They certainly weren't breaking any laws doing it.
Now you could say, well, if they hadn't done it, then there would have been no interest and nobody would have published their picture.
Well, we don't know that, number one.
But number two, do you really want to go through your life not doing this or not doing that in case somebody might hack your account so that you don't do it, or would you rather focus on finding out how the hell this was done and preventing it?
I think what's missing here, I'm I'm gonna get a lot of grief for this, but I fully expect it.
It's my job to get grief.
In this day and age, hard cold truth and reality is simply not wanted.
And it certainly isn't appreciated.
But I think let me let me say it this way.
I am astounded at the high level of ignorance there is on the part of people using these devices.
I am astounded At the lack of curiosity to learn how they work, what can be done with them, and more than that, how to protect what's on them.
I can't tell you how many people that I've run into.
Now, admittedly, some of them are a certain age group to which technology is a new thing and it's scary.
And I understand all that.
But there isn't anything scary about it.
There's nothing scary at all.
All it is is a wonderful new world of possibility, innovation, mind expansion.
It's just it's the it's one of the greatest things going.
And I don't understand the fear of it.
But there's a lot of it.
I've told you the story that has been happened three times to people who got an iPhone.
Greatest thing in the world.
They just used to have a flip, like a Motorola flip phone, and they made phone calls and that was it.
Get an iPhone and they discover it's a camera and they start taking pictures of everything.
And soon they're using it as their only camera, but they don't have the slightest idea of the concept of backing it up.
Nobody has ever explained it to them.
They went out and bought the phone, they got and don't know a thing about connecting it to iTunes and even backing it up there.
I I've last week I asked people that I know.
Well, are you backed up to iCloud?
I don't know.
What's iCloud?
My mind boggles.
How in the world can you use one of these and not know what iCloud is?
But they don't.
And when I start to explain how these things work, I'm looked at because I understand it like I'm an idiot.
Like my degree of interest is skewed.
You care about this?
You know how this works?
They start laughing, making fun of me.
Honest to God, they do.
They make fun of me for knowing how these things work.
They ask me what to do to fix it, but they make fun of me for knowing how it works.
To me, it's only natural to want to know what these devices can do.
Okay, you can take pictures with it, fine.
How do you get them off?
How do you save them?
How do you transfer them to something else?
Does nobody ever think of it?
It boggles my mind.
Now, the whole concept of of protecting what people put locks on their desks.
People put locks on their doors.
Why people are intimidated to find out how to secure their devices and the data that's on them is mind boggling to me.
And I'm I'm not trying to sound uppity or pretentious here.
Don't misunderstand.
But I really think if you're if you're going to put nude photos of yourself on your phone, you better damn well understand how to protect them.
Instead of getting all piss ticked off if somebody hacks in and gets them.
It's to me, it's your ultimate responsibility because there are steps you can take.
There are measures you can take to protect that data.
Now, the best hackers can get through anything.
There's no question.
If you're a celebrity, I would think even more so.
Get a phone that's not in your name.
Get a phone that's not in your account in somebody else's name.
Or what I it just it boggles.
I can't tell you the number of people I run it that are afraid of this stuff.
You know, I'll try to teach somebody just the simplest of things you can do.
No, no, no, no, no.
I don't want to no, no, no.
I don't want to learn.
No, no, no.
Just I just show me where to take the picture.
Okay.
Well, do you know that you can take an HDR picture?
Do you know you can take slow?
I don't want to take slow-mo.
I don't want to take a picture.
I just want to take a picture.
Okay, okay, okay.
Well, do you do you uh do you know how to, if you mistype or you know how to edit it and correct?
I don't want to know how to correct, I don't want to write it.
I just want to just send me an email.
Okay.
Uh well do you know that your phone can do I don't care what it can do.
I don't know, no, I don't want to know it.
Do you know your phone's four years old and there's a bunch of no, I don't care, I don't care.
I don't want a new phone.
I don't want to it's amazing.
Sometimes I feel like I'm on an island with this stuff.
I would think that you would want to learn everything you could about protecting.
What are you laughing at in there?
Do you think I'm stepping in it here?
Oh Brian's laughing because I'm describing somebody he knows.
Uh To me, it's it's it's just fascinating stuff.
That's just me.
And I don't understand why it isn't fascinating to everybody.
Some people think global warming is fascinating.
I think it's a hoax.
But some people think Obama's fascinating.
I think he's joke.
But this stuff is fascinating.
It keeps you young.
It expands your mind.
It uh and staying ahead of the curve is a challenge.
Staying with the curve is uh is a is a challenge.
Look, a place I went last week, I could not get my computer on the internet.
Now there used to be a day I had to call somebody.
Hey, you know what my computer won't, what do I do?
I don't have to do that anymore.
I figured out a way to get some of this lousy internet, stupid password protection, found that, got the password, it still wasn't working for a whole host of reasons.
I figured out how to do it.
Just because it matters to me.
I'm interested in it.
I want to be connected to the internet, so I've learned how to make it happen when it doesn't happen automatically.
That's just me.
That makes me a nerd and an oddball and a kook to uh a lot of my friends.
But this stuff that happened, iCloud was not hacked.
That is not what happened.
You know what happened?
This is this is the scary part.
Law enforcement has an app, which in a way makes sense that allows them, if they can get your password and ID.
Let's talk iCloud for a second, since that's what I'm familiar with.
But it's the same with Google Play or Google Drive or anywhere else.
If if they can get your user ID and password, and in some cases the law will command that you provide it if you're under indictment or whatever.
What they can do with this app is download your backup.
And I'm I've discovered a lot of people do not even know that their devices are backing up automatically when they plug them into recharge.
That's when it happens.
They don't even know that.
Some people don't even know that they're being backed up, which is a it's a good thing that they're being backed up, but they don't even know it.
But but the cops have an app that can download backups.
Then all they've got to do is take that backup file and to some other app and get it translated, and they have access to everything that's on your phone.
So the key is one of the efforts to make sure nobody gets your password.
Well, there are any number of ways that you can do that.
There's all kinds of ways to create strong passwords.
You don't have to remember there are apps that do it.
You don't want to use the same password for every website or thing that you go to.
My point is the onus is on the user in a lot of these instances.
And the user is never held responsible.
The user always ends up being the victim because obviously the user does get victimized in situations, but there are things users can do.
Hackers are always going to find the the less protected, the least protected accounts and go there.
There's a there's another I don't know, a lot of people don't know what phishing is.
PH ISHING.
I almost get fooled by this stuff.
Uh the hacker will create an email that looks identical in a lot of ways to a service you already use.
And the email always comes with a sense of urgency or emergency.
There's a problem on your account.
Problem on your, and you've got to do this right away to make sure there's no interruption.
Well, people don't, I don't want my service.
They click on it, and all that does is provide their law gun information to the fisher, because it's illegitimate.
Uh so that's until you learn how to identify a phishing attempt, that's another thing that makes people uh vulnerable.
But even it's even at that.
Uh I'm just I'm I I really am kind of surprised at how much people do not even try to understand about these devices that they are buying and using.
And by the same token, let me be fair, I will also admit that the providers, the companies and so forth, don't do a very good job themselves of explaining what all's possible with their devices, unless you read third party people who are in love with these devices and just have blogs that do nothing but explain what all you can do with an iPhone or an iPad.
So it's it's amazing what these devices are capable of, and they're only going to improve and become capable of doing even more.
And a lot of people using them don't have the slightest idea of the power that they're holding in one hand with one of these devices, what all can be done with it.
And I'm talking about good for them and you know, enjoyable things.
But they also, because they're easy to use, you end up putting all kinds of important things on them.
And if if if somebody that that cop app, by the way, is now out there.
Some some somebody in law, and this is all it took.
One person in law enforcement to give that app to somebody outside law enforcement.
And then the app got copied and spread around, and now these hackers have it.
iCloud per se was not hacked.
In the sense it wasn't cracked.
What happened was that these celebrities login information was ascertained.
And there are all kinds of clever ways they have of getting that without even asking you.
There's there's clever ways of uh getting it.
The dreaded password reset is one of the most commonly used techniques by hackers.
They can reset your password if they know the answer to your security questions and your birthday, for example.
Some companies only require those two pieces of information to reset your password.
So a hacker, if you're a celebrity, they can find your birthday.
If they're a celebrity, they can probably find out the first school you went to or your grandmother's maiden name or what have you, and by trial and error they'll eventually be able to answer your security questions, and then they reset your password, and that locks you out.
They have control over your account, and who knows what to do to it.
Any number of things like this can happen.
But you can protect yourself against it.
If you know how.
But the bottom line here, the users are not at fault.
Jennifer Lawrence and these people, whoever got hacked, they're nudies.
They're not at fault here.
The hackers always are.
The criminal, the the the lawbreaker to me is always responsible for this.
Anyway, break time, be back after a brief obscene profit timeout, and continue with much more after this.
Don't go away.
Greetings, welcome back.
I don't, by the way, I don't want to be misunderstood.
There's no foolproof magic bullet that you can do to make sure you're never going to get hacked.
Uh some of the most accomplished uh educated computer type people have been hacked and have have written long articles about the six months it took.
Uh one guy got hacked via his Amazon account.
Uh I think his name is Matt Honan.
He was wired or something, magazine or wired.com.
It's everybody is subject to it.
And if if somebody targets you, uh depends.
That's what these celebrities learned.
And if you advertise yourself as a juicy target, like they did with nude poke.
Criminals are criminals.
And uh practical jokers are practical jokers.
And everybody has different ways of uh getting their jollies.
And hackers are just uh some of them are white hat, some of them hack to find out how things can be broken so they can advise people how to fix the vulnerability, others are black hat hackers and they're out there strictly to cause mayhem and havoc.
And one of the best things you can do is to never become known.
That way you're not gonna be able to just stay anonymous.
But of course, nobody's doing that.
Everybody's just practically broadcasting everything they can about themselves in the quest for a reality show.
Everybody wants a reality show.
Everybody wants to be a judge on TV.
Everybody wants to be a radio talk show.
Everybody wants to be on Real Housewives.
Everybody wants to be Duck Dynasty 2 or whatever it is, or on the Jerry Springer show, you name it.
In the process, you make yourself a uh a target.
Okay, look, we've got uh only a brief half hour of our busy broadcast remaining.
I'm gonna get back to some more phone calls when we get back.
Uh and we'll see, what?
Oh, yeah.
Michelle Obama's school menu is being tossed out by the kids all over the country, too.
That's uplifting.
Well, that didn't take long.
The Baltimore Ravens have suspended they've terminated the contract of Ray Rice.
Number 27 running back.
They've gotten rid of him, terminated his contract.
He's gone, he's out of there.
That's because this video that was released earlier today shows him actually knocking his fiancee out.
The only video prior to today was of him dragging her unconscious out of the elevator.
There was no actual footage of what caused her to be unconscious.
This the assumption that he had hit her.
That resulted in two-game suspension.
The NFL says they did not see this new video before anybody else saw it today.
And so the uh this was it was only a matter of time because players from all over the league began tweeting that there's no place in our league for this.
Uh we can't have this.
This is uh you don't lay hands on uh on a woman and so forth.
And the and and the two-game suspension didn't sit well with people from the get-go, they didn't think it was enough.
Then it's video surfaces today, and it's brutal.
Uh they're arguing, getting on the elevator, they get on the elevator, the door closes, and she's feisty.
You know, and they're arguing, and she approaches him and he just decks her.
What looks like you have to see it in super slow motors.
It's it looks like a left hook, roundhouse hook.
And she goes sprawling and her head hits the railing on the inside of the elevator.
She's knocked out cold, and she's flat out on her face, and then Ray Rice hits a button on the elevator, it stops, and the door opens, and he starts moving her around so as to be able to drag her out of the elevator.
And then you see the feet of other people gathering around.
Now, who knows what he told those people what happened.
She done, you gotta help me.
She just collapsed.
Who knows what he told them.
But anyway, contract terminated.
I don't have any idea what financial this has got to be cause.
I don't know if there's guaranteed money still has to be paid.
I don't know any of that.
But the Ravens didn't even attempt to uh massage this any further.
It was falling.
Plus, you've you've you've got a you have a league here, which is making an obvious push for more female fans.
This kind of wouldn't help.
Uh in that regard, yeah, they're gonna rent there's gonna be a lot of pink in October.
Oh.
There's gonna be more pink than there has ever been next month in the in the NFL.
Speaking of which, see, I didn't know this until I started cramming last night.
I didn't know that the NFL, after Michael Sam was not picked up by the Rams for their practice squad.
I didn't know until last night that the league office was calling around various teams in the league asking them to put Michael Sam on their practice squad.
I'm thinking I have never seen this for a seventh-round draft pick that got cut.
For the league to call around and ask for essentially special treatment.
And there's only one reason why.
The league does not want the first announced gay athlete, not in this league somehow.
If it's practice squad, fine, but they got it.
So the cowboys.
Jerry Jones and the Cowboys.
Well, cowboy they um rose to the challenge, uh, so to speak.
That's not the phrase I was looking for, but it's uh it's it's close enough.
Uh cowboys rose to the challenge.
Uh oh, I don't know.
I if a deal was made with the cowboys to uh with the league to the cowboys, who knows?
I mean, I don't know that there wasn't a deal with the Rams uh on on the pick.
Uh the league denies all this.
They did ask teams to take him.
Cowboys are denying, by the way, that.
Jerry Jones, I think, no, no, no, we don't we would call this legitimate.
And then they call a press con I didn't know this the last day.
Called a press conference to it.
I guarantee you this.
There has never been a press conference in the NFL to announce a player picked up to the practice squad.
That has never happened.
Ever.
But the uh but the cowboys did it at a press conference, but an I and I'm kinda glad I didn't know this stuff last week.
It was it was nice to have a respite from it, because I had a good week.
I had a really good week.
This stuff would have ticked me off.
So Ray Rice is gone from professional football.
That's what that's what this means.
And now that the paycheck is gone, we don't well I I that will end with what we know and we won't speculate on what we don't know.
Here is Robin in Cody, Wyoming, as we head back to the phones.
Great to have you on the program.
Hello.
Well, greetings from Buffalo Bill Country Rush.
We love you up here.
Thank you.
Thank you very much.
Listen, your your comment earlier about technology being so far advan advanced.
Um technology has surpassed the general society, and there's so few people out there who know how to use what we have.
Um our education system is so far below the rest of the world.
You know, we need to be teaching kids how things work, not just handing them a toy to play with.
And that's kind of what I feel like we're doing with computers and iPads and telephones and I mean we're we are fast approaching that society that Ann Rand wrote about in Atlas Shrugged.
You know, your your example of the camera phone earlier about I just want to know how to shoot a picture, I just want to know how to shoot a picture.
Right.
Well, think about the terrorists who now are in possession of U.S. military equipment overseas.
They just want to know how to shoot people.
Right.
You know, I mean, uh it it's a really scary thing.
Well, i in in that with that perspective in that context, yeah.
You're right.
Uh it is.
I'm glad, yeah.
I'm I'm glad that maybe the technology is beyond, you know, the average person, but what's scary is you're putting it in the hands of child, basically.
And they're gonna point it at people they don't intend to point it to or I just I just see devastation happening.
Okay, you you but you are referring specifically, I guess, to military uh grade.
Military, yeah.
The the new cars scare the head devil out of me.
I mean, if if I'm if I'm driving on a freeway in Wyoming and a tumbleweed it, you know, is flowing before me is my car gonna lock up its brakes to save me from the tumbleweed.
You know, it all the technology that we have on the city.
Oh, that's ourselves.
I mean, everything.
I mean beyond a in Houston, Texas.
I got to have something, you know.
I just see horrible things.
We we are so far beyond, we don't we don't have a clue what we're dealing with with our technology.
We really don't.
There's no question.
And we're putting it in the hands of people who can actually do harm to one another.
Well, certain technology, yeah.
Now I d are you worried about the technology that's in a smartphone being able to be turned on people.
Aside from aside from hacking.
I have friends who have been in the business of developing those smart cards, you know, the smart credit cards that you can wave over something and it'll bill your account.
Yeah.
Well, that's nice.
But when you think about that, that little chip in that card is going up to a satellite and they can Locate you.
You know, you talk about the smart bombs going out and assassinating people.
Well, when you have things like that on you, we know where you are, what you're doing, and where you've been, where you're traveling.
Those little smart credit cards can trigger all the way down a freeway.
Your car is embedded with these smart chips as well.
I mean I'm afraid to go to the doctor and get a vaccination because now you got robots that you know if you're required to get a vaccination, they may start implanting these things so they can locate you.
Yeah.
I mean it it you know, people say, Oh, that's a conspiracy theory.
No, it's not, it's fact.
That's our science today.
We can do that.
And the good things about it are nice.
The bad things about it are worse.
Because when the bad guys get in control of that technology, they're gonna wreak havoc on people.
Well, some would think the bad guys already are.
Well, they uh yeah, well, lots of us have that opinion.
Well, the i it's it's I know.
The the the the location uh technology, GPS and that kind of thing.
That's been around a lot longer than people think it has.
The ability uh to be tracked.
Uh I can't the number people, for example.
No, no, man, I don't have my location services turned.
No way.
I'm sorry to tell you that your phone pings a cell tower, even when it's off.
If somebody wants to find you, they can.
Whether you've got your location services turned off or not.
So you may also turn them on and Yeah.
Well, I mean, if you go down to Vegas and you and you go to the techie guys, you know, the techie guys have their great convention all the time, and uh they're always telling us what's what's around the corner, what's being used right now.
You can have your phone off and people can turn a listening device on your smartphone and record your conversation.
Law enforcement can, yes.
No, not law enforcement.
My hacker friends can do that.
So, you know, yeah, law enforcement can legally, I guess, if they have a court order from some judge, but there's a lot of hackers out there and they know how to do all that stuff.
Who do you think taught law enforcement?
Uh true.
But but I i I it's it's the thing is there's no stopping it.
Yes, there is.
You don't carry a smartphone.
You get an old car.
You don't get a new car.
You know, I'm I'm I'm looking for the oldest car I can find that's still running because I can keep it running.
Well, of course, if if if you all right, if you're gonna look at it, but of course there's a way.
You you can you can you can try to not have stuff that's made in the modern era.
And well, you can get away from it, I think.
You know, it's like if you go into the Yellowstone Park right now, you can get into the middle of Yellowstone Park, and guess what?
You don't have cell service and your GPS doesn't work and your cute little map app don't work.
And if you don't know where you're going, you just have to fly by the seat of your pants.
And and you know, it's fun to do that sometimes in your life.
But somehow the rescue people always find you.
How do they know where you are if you don't?
Well, sometimes they don't.
I I hate to say, but you know, they kind of bring it on themselves and they go tubing down the the waterfalls and stuff like that.
And uh there you're in Yellowstone National Park, you know, there's still you're the lowest thing on the food chain, and you're still the slowest thing running, so if a bear's running after you, I don't care what app you have on your phone, it's not gonna pull you out of that one.
No, no, no.
You just have to turn around and tell the bear that you are for global warming, and it will stop and hug you.
I saw that in a TV commercial.
A polar bear tracking on a guy driving an electric car to give him a hug for not destroying the planet.
Didn't you see that?
No, there's no reason to fear animals.
As long as they know you're looking out for them.
No worry, HR.
Don't worry, HR, not going to say that.
Here's um here's Roger in Seattle as we head back to the phones.
And I'm glad you Roger, I'm gl I I meant to get into this today, and you're gonna take me there.
I'm glad you called.
Absolutely.
This is uh the nemesis of Frank Borman and Frank Lorenzo.
Oh, I I Roger, my old buddy from New York, the Union rep. Yes, sir, I remember member.
How are you?
Good.
Listen, I want to become the EIB director of industrial and labor relations for EIB.
Well, we don't have any relations with labor here.
Well, you have to c you know what?
You have to create it, because you know what?
I can bring a bridge between you and you know uh my kid, 97.2%.
You you took me down from 98.8% to 97.2%.
Okay.
Well, we can talk about that, but time's running short, and I want to Okay anyway.
Uh, how do you feel about uh the the Hawks?
You know, the uh the owner.
You know, I this is amazing to me.
He's so the Atlanta Hawks owner.
Don, did you hear about this?
The own the owner of the Atlanta Hawks is going to sell his interest in the team.
He self-reported a racist email he wrote two years ago.
Uh maybe longer than two years ago.
It was a marketing email to other members of the franchise explaining problems selling tickets.
Essentially, the audience, the the the crowd was too black.
Uh, it looked uncomfortable to whites.
Uh he said the black population of his crowd was much greater than in other cities.
Anyway, he self-reported the email, and he admitted it was a horrible thing that he had done.
Horrible, horrible words he had written, and he was angry at himself when he went back and looked at it.
And he's gonna sell his interest in the team.
And I I think I I think this uh is kind of like the the fear of the authorities is come full circle now.
You self-report your crimes to get out of uh out of jail in advance.
And I was also wondering, did Donald Sterling uncover you know, Sterling is running around saying, hey, I've got emails from all of these owners, and you wouldn't believe the racism and this it's not just me.
And I'm wondering if uh if if Sterling had access to this and was threatening to release it and the Hawks owner I'm just speculating on this, I have no idea.
But I think it's fascinating.
I I I just this is to me uh this this kind of self-reporting on yourself indicates a a fear of a totalitarian state come to get you, and this is what you do to uh avoid any kind of problem whatsoever.
I just think it's amazing.
What do you think about it, Roger?
Well, I think it's terrible.
You know, because hey, listen, people say things, and uh sometimes it's taken out of context, you know.
And you know what?
You have to talk amongst each other.
And what what uh uh gives me pause is if you go on uh MSNBC, first of all, Sharkley should be in prison in Arizona in a hot desert someplace, you know.
But they pay him big money, and you know, it's unfortunate like uh uh you call it F. Chuck Todd and everything like that.
They don't report the news.
They give you their version of what it is.
They're hardly reporters.
And it's very frustrating.
Yeah, but but the Bruce Levinson, by the way, is who we're talking about, is the majority owner of the Atlantic Atlanta Hawks.
There's there's no misreporting on this.
He released the email that he wrote.
And it is what it is.
Uh now some could say, hey, he's just being, he's just honestly assessing his market and his challenges in promoting the team and so forth.
But that's that that wouldn't fly.
Uh it's it's he doesn't think he could survive if this thing came out.
So he's just beaten everybody to the punch here.
And uh and asking for mercy and forgiveness in advance.
And and he's the first to beat himself up over it, which will help mitigate the other punches thrown by other people.
There has to be more to the Bruce Levins and the story of the Atlanta Hawks owner than uh just that email.
He's either being blackmailed, Sterling was threatening to release it, who knows?
Because he was talking about it.
Maybe he just wanted out, who knows?
But there's more to this than meets the eye, and this is an attempt to well turn something bad into something good.
See you tomorrow.
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