Cottman,Crawford and the Jersey guy.

Steering Through Chaos: The Role of Kindness in a World of Road Rage, Retail Wrongs, and Environmental Woes with Keny, Louis, and the Jersey Guy

February 21, 2024 Keny, Louis, Tom Season 3 Episode 6
Steering Through Chaos: The Role of Kindness in a World of Road Rage, Retail Wrongs, and Environmental Woes with Keny, Louis, and the Jersey Guy
Cottman,Crawford and the Jersey guy.
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Cottman,Crawford and the Jersey guy.
Steering Through Chaos: The Role of Kindness in a World of Road Rage, Retail Wrongs, and Environmental Woes with Keny, Louis, and the Jersey Guy
Feb 21, 2024 Season 3 Episode 6
Keny, Louis, Tom

Have you ever wondered just how far a small act of kindness can ripple through our hectic world? Well, saddle up with us—Keny, Louis, and Tom (your Jersey Guy)—as we spin the yarn of our latest episode, where we dissect the lost art of common decency and the chaotic dance of urban driving. We're giving you a front-row seat to the candid chatter about the simple power of a held door and the maddening surge of turn-signal neglect and road rage that's leaving skid marks on our collective patience.

As our banter takes a turn down the aisles of retail theft and driving pet peeves, you'll hear all about the gut-punching reality of entitlement in our communities, from slowpokes in the fast lane to bold-faced shoplifters. We don't hold back on the real talk, illuminating the struggles of security guards grappling with hands-off policies and the dawning era of tech-savvy stores like Amazon Fresh that are revolutionizing the checkout game. And we'll have you chuckling (or cringing) as we reminisce about our adventures in Walmart fashion and ponder the peculiar tech transformations reshaping our shopping experiences.

But hey, it's not all about the eyebrow-raising antics of society. We strip down to the heart of the matter, addressing the environmental faux pas that spoil our parks and the sprawling Great Pacific Garbage Patch. Wrapping up with a reminder that a dash of kindness goes a long way, we hang up our mics with an encouragement to pay the good vibes forward, hoping to sprinkle a little love and laughter into your day. Tune in and join our mission to steer this crazy world toward a kinder, cleaner, and downright cooler future.

Please Subscribe/Follow the Cottman, Crawford & The Jersey Guy Podcast.

Follow us on Instagram and Facebook.
https://linktr.ee/ccandnjguy

Email us all your feedback, comments & suggestions at: CCandNJGuy@Gmail.com

Show Notes Transcript Chapter Markers

Have you ever wondered just how far a small act of kindness can ripple through our hectic world? Well, saddle up with us—Keny, Louis, and Tom (your Jersey Guy)—as we spin the yarn of our latest episode, where we dissect the lost art of common decency and the chaotic dance of urban driving. We're giving you a front-row seat to the candid chatter about the simple power of a held door and the maddening surge of turn-signal neglect and road rage that's leaving skid marks on our collective patience.

As our banter takes a turn down the aisles of retail theft and driving pet peeves, you'll hear all about the gut-punching reality of entitlement in our communities, from slowpokes in the fast lane to bold-faced shoplifters. We don't hold back on the real talk, illuminating the struggles of security guards grappling with hands-off policies and the dawning era of tech-savvy stores like Amazon Fresh that are revolutionizing the checkout game. And we'll have you chuckling (or cringing) as we reminisce about our adventures in Walmart fashion and ponder the peculiar tech transformations reshaping our shopping experiences.

But hey, it's not all about the eyebrow-raising antics of society. We strip down to the heart of the matter, addressing the environmental faux pas that spoil our parks and the sprawling Great Pacific Garbage Patch. Wrapping up with a reminder that a dash of kindness goes a long way, we hang up our mics with an encouragement to pay the good vibes forward, hoping to sprinkle a little love and laughter into your day. Tune in and join our mission to steer this crazy world toward a kinder, cleaner, and downright cooler future.

Please Subscribe/Follow the Cottman, Crawford & The Jersey Guy Podcast.

Follow us on Instagram and Facebook.
https://linktr.ee/ccandnjguy

Email us all your feedback, comments & suggestions at: CCandNJGuy@Gmail.com

Speaker 1:

Cotman, crawford and the Jersey Guy podcast. Hey everybody, kenny Cotman, lewis Crawford and I'm Tom Remmage, the Jersey Guy.

Speaker 2:

Hello, hello, hello. What's going on, fellas?

Speaker 1:

What's up? What's going?

Speaker 2:

on How's everything going Good? We're good, we're going Excellent. So now we're live tonight, hopefully.

Speaker 1:

Hopefully, hopefully that it did it.

Speaker 2:

Hope everybody can hear us. So this is our first time doing it. Hi, kist. Yeah, right here we're video cast right Video podcast, I don't know Something like that. Yeah, something, but hopefully now everybody can hear us now and we should be good to go. Yeah, yeah, yeah. So, yeah, first shot out. Second shot. First one was kind of Fubar yeah, so it's all good.

Speaker 3:

Oh, happy birthday to my wife Tanya. By the way, happy birthday, tanya, yes.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yeah, yeah, for sure, For sure. Everybody's good, everything groovy.

Speaker 1:

Cool.

Speaker 2:

Listeners. Tom, you're going to have to read whatever. Yeah.

Speaker 1:

I'm going to keep an eye on the live feed.

Speaker 3:

We should get one of them If anybody is still awake by now.

Speaker 1:

There's a 30 minute delay on it though.

Speaker 2:

No 30 minute, 30 seconds. It wouldn't even be on now. What would be your shit, jesus Christ? Well, actually, now that you mentioned it, yeah, now that you mentioned it on me. Yeah, yeah, have fun with it, bro. Enjoy your shit Sound so good, so I think it's good. So what is our topic tonight, sir Lewis?

Speaker 3:

So I was thinking you know common decency, Common decency, Common decency, you know most people have seen a lot of crazy shit lately, people being totally rude and inconsiderate for no, god damn reason.

Speaker 2:

Yes, and some other fucking bitches.

Speaker 3:

Right, it's crazy, it's just you know Some old bitch.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, so I'll go ahead, give us some.

Speaker 3:

For instance, like you're walking out of the door or something. Usually I'm the kind of person that, even if I walk out of the door and I see somebody who was getting in, I try to get back there.

Speaker 2:

Right, you know what I mean.

Speaker 3:

Oh, I'm sorry, and then that's a kind of way of saying hey, listen, I'm sorry. You know I would have got that if I would have been paying attention or whatever it might have been. And that person usually appreciates that, because if they see that, at least they're happy. Yeah, not that you, it's not expected, but it's nice when somebody does that Right, exactly, or just holds a door for you.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, no, I'm with you.

Speaker 3:

Well, you hold it for them and they don't say thank you. Yeah, you know like oh okay, yeah, you're welcome. Yeah, yeah, of course you have to say that. You have to say you're welcome, because it's necessary.

Speaker 2:

Well, let them know, if they don't say thank you.

Speaker 3:

Oh, absolutely you tell them yeah, no, you're welcome.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, you're welcome have a good day.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, exactly, yeah, come down bro.

Speaker 2:

No man, what you got, you got one.

Speaker 3:

Anything.

Speaker 2:

The driving is another thing.

Speaker 1:

The driving is crazy.

Speaker 3:

I haven't seen some of the craziest driving in my life. Yeah, people are just totally like off the hook, doing shit that I would never thought in my life even attempting to do. Well, you know what they say, that's from.

Speaker 2:

They said that it's from, it's left over COVID shit, so they just say listen, listen, listen listen, listen. What happened was that? They say? Because, people were driving, women driving for so long really weren't going anywhere. That now getting back in behind the car, behind the wheel, that now they're just running through and doing all kind of crazy shit because they just they forgot how to drive.

Speaker 3:

No bullshit, that's. Nobody gets how to drive.

Speaker 2:

They need a fucking excuse for something. No, no, no reason to say sorry, they didn't know how to drive. No, I'm saying, the other day I tried to pass.

Speaker 3:

I tried to go into the next lane and I looked at it. All my normal stuff, God to go in there and X thing. You know there's this car. I'm halfway in the lane right now. I have to pull back into the novel, ain't? Because I see him out of the out of my side. And now I have a car in front of me in the middle lane.

Speaker 2:

Right.

Speaker 3:

Now I got to hit the brakes at the same time. Yeah, so I'm like yeah. I was not.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, no, I'm crazy. You heard you.

Speaker 3:

Really what the?

Speaker 2:

hell, you know my shit. Yeah, driving lessons from people you can go back and check that one.

Speaker 3:

That's just um. Yeah, I mean I just, and it was like uh, on my way to work, was like 630, you know, six, whatever the middle of my drive. Right, Right, yeah, yeah, it's crazy.

Speaker 2:

They're saying the driving. So, like me coming out here today, there's a guy. He's sitting on and I'm saying for 18 wheelers. He's sitting at the tail and left side no driver's side of an 18 wheeler. Right, right, 18 wheeler can barely see. 18 wheel is moving, he needs to move over, but this guy's sitting right there. So now the 18 wheeler slows down, this guy slows down with the 18 wheeler. Oh yeah, so now the 18 wheeler can't even move over because this crackhead is sitting in the way but he doesn't get it to move out of the way, to speed up, back up and move over.

Speaker 3:

Let the truck let the truck over.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, they shouldn't be driving in the left lane anyway, exactly You're not supposed to be, unless you're passing Right and you're in that lane and especially the trucks Right. You, they can't see you. Right, they have more blind spots and they're further away from where you were in the mirror.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, just in case, people, there are signs on the back of the trucks. Yeah, do tell you yeah, where and where not to turn?

Speaker 1:

Yeah, yeah, it says like they have like little things right, they like make little jokes out of it, right, like one says, like I remember seeing one that said like of the left side said like El Paso, and the right side said, oh crud show, yeah, yeah, yeah you had to, but then still people don't pay. No fucking attention.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, but you're right, common courtesy People that are crossing the street. I understand pedestrians are supposed to go on the street.

Speaker 3:

I get that. You just don't thought out in the middle.

Speaker 2:

You don't thought out, but you don't take five fucking minutes across the street Like you're looking at me.

Speaker 3:

Of course you're an old El.

Speaker 2:

Paso person.

Speaker 3:

No, no, no, no no, no, and then you get out of the car and you're helping the process.

Speaker 1:

No, but also common courtesy when driving. Okay, here's one of them that drives me crazy. You see someone and they're driving slow and you see they're like looking like they're trying to find, but like they're a tourist right now.

Speaker 3:

They're like pull over.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, go somewhere else Like don't in the middle of the road, yeah. Or like someone's driving in the left lane.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yeah, that's what you just said. Yeah, in the thing. If it sucks and you get in over man, just go back in the right lane.

Speaker 3:

That's it. You could pass again. It's all right. There's no rules. Merge, merge, merge is not that.

Speaker 1:

And no, and not for nothing.

Speaker 2:

I don't know if you remember this shit. To get off the highway is on the right, yeah, but I think this is more like a big thing to me.

Speaker 3:

The biggest thing is to be honest. You know it's a big thing to me.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I've been driving around like a hundred times Right, I think, yeah, bigger. Every once in a while they're yeah, but it's in a bigger city. Yeah, parkway, come on man, like just yeah, I know.

Speaker 3:

But I said you guys know me and my I know you know. I just think you know just the way people are in stores or you know you see the deliberate people and they all look the same.

Speaker 2:

So just saying yeah pretty much.

Speaker 3:

This guy was walking around the whole store pulling every phone and tablet out of the the holder Of the kiosk, oh, popping the wires and everything and stealing what he had. A mask on his face.

Speaker 2:

Oh, that's what it was he was stealing shit.

Speaker 3:

He was stealing shit Right in front of it, blatantly Doing it in front of anybody. Mm-hmm, I'm like really.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, so technically-.

Speaker 3:

So that's allowed. Now you can do that. No, you're not allowed to do any of this but this is what I think is good. It's just an entitlement. It's like oh well, you know what, you know the. Probably the attitude is something to the effect well, this company has a lot of money anyway. What are they gonna miss?

Speaker 2:

out on. Well, no, you're thinking too much. No, it's just more on the lines of I'm just gonna take this shit and say it Because I feel entitled, right?

Speaker 3:

Well, it's that one too, you're entitled to that you're gonna call it under the-.

Speaker 1:

Well, you know what it is they really. Who's gonna stop them?

Speaker 2:

Right, so when you're a security guard, you're not allowed to stop them.

Speaker 3:

You're not allowed to stop them. No.

Speaker 2:

Exactly so. That's why, when you hear and see all these stories be that the security guard got his ass kicked, shot or whatever, and there's a whole big-.

Speaker 1:

Or like a situation with there was a a grocery store, a certain grocery store in Brooklyn, and they were I gotta be Brooklyn bro.

Speaker 2:

It's Brooklyn bro, plus it's always Brooklyn.

Speaker 1:

It's in Flatbush, oh, flatbush, and that guy was stealing and they fucking, they tackled the guy and the guy fucking had a heart attack. The guy that was in the back of the store, yeah, see.

Speaker 2:

And they had a fire of a bunch of people and stuff like that.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 3:

So, like, what's the first rule? They tell you you cannot touch them.

Speaker 2:

Yeah yeah, of course.

Speaker 3:

I think they have to wait to. So let's say that same person. Now, you might know this. I worked for Target. They have to rack up a certain amount of money before they're actually apprehended. Yeah, yeah, yeah or it's considered like what grand grand auctioneer.

Speaker 2:

Is that right? No, not that I remember, not that I remember.

Speaker 3:

That's the way I knew it, like if they went over a certain limit, right right, so it's a felony. Right, and then they would just, and then now they can actually, if they seen the store, they can pick them Like if they have identified them and be like good, now the cops can come in Cause. Target always had that room with the metal chair and the glove, so if they work.

Speaker 1:

You know, lost prevention. They have to like, they have to see the person take it and they can't like take their eyes off them the entire time, because if they take someone's off their eyes off them, they're not even supposed to stop the person because technically the person could have ditched it. You know, if the person like took something and concealed it, like they're not allowed to. You have to have eyes on them the entire time it's concealed, otherwise yeah, well, I know that.

Speaker 2:

Right right, they said, I don't think there's a number, though I don't think there's a number on when you can and or can't get touched them, like you're not supposed to touch them at all.

Speaker 1:

No, no, that's the whole thing. You're not supposed to touch them you can't touch them Right.

Speaker 2:

so then it doesn't matter if they walk out the store with 10 grand worth of shit because they got people that go to the police.

Speaker 3:

Well, but it does matter because at some point no it does matter, because at some point if they get, when they do get identified, it's gonna happen, because they're gonna get caught when they do and they had that much already on there and they finally apprehend them and they take them to court and everything. It's not gonna be a slap on the wrist. No, it's gonna be a bad day for them, period.

Speaker 2:

We're talking about the security guards, not when they get caught, when they leave, because there's video cameras all over, but you can't turn around and just go in like the security guard. So if you're a security guard at Tarjay, you can't touch them. You can't touch them so they can get in the car. You can take their license plate down and there's the cameras and everything that's catching them. The police have to go and get them. That's what we're saying, right, but I'm saying that still, that we can't, so you can't stop them.

Speaker 3:

Bob, you can. Technically you are, because now they're getting caught by. There's a law. Eventually you get caught. Now you have that racked up. You have 10, 15, $20,000. You go in front of a judge you owe all this money you go to jail. Yeah, they just yeah, but you know what, though?

Speaker 1:

Most of those that are smart, they're not even gonna. You can't even get their license plate because they don't park. Right, they don't park, yeah they don't wanna be near the camera, they'll park in the parking lot next to the right. But here's the problem.

Speaker 3:

That's what you know. You see these things where. Okay, well, maybe he parked his car in this parking lot. You know, they're gonna think of that and go let's see if we can get the camera from all the places around here to see if we can pick them up, because they're gonna do that. At some point you would think they would. I know I would.

Speaker 2:

if I was a cop, I'd be like yeah, now it's good, yeah, every freaking store I'd be in.

Speaker 3:

I wanna see your video.

Speaker 2:

Exactly, exactly. It's freaking ridiculous.

Speaker 3:

It's just, it's crazy, and I think they hit what's the one up on Monroe, not Monroe, but Comments, the comments, thank you. Um, they showed I think it was one of the shoe stores was getting lifted.

Speaker 2:

They were like a bunch of people ran in.

Speaker 3:

It was like a bunch of people ran in all dressed with the same thing on covered heads like sweatsuits, and throwing shit in their bags. Fuck, I swear to God.

Speaker 1:

Like what are those things where the flash the flash mob? Yeah, it was like yeah, but it was a flash rob mob.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, flash mob Like fucking a rob mob. Fuck you know what they've been doing. It was a rob mob, Right, exactly.

Speaker 2:

You haven't seen that before. Tom looking at Tom.

Speaker 3:

You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 2:

I know it's the record.

Speaker 3:

You haven't seen that.

Speaker 2:

You are surprised, you.

Speaker 3:

You are social media all day, you see that.

Speaker 2:

They all fucking take like two items.

Speaker 1:

Exactly what it is. They just they take, no, they're loading in bed they're loading stuff in their bags.

Speaker 3:

It's not two items.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, they're going in yeah, they get like fucking 50 people. They're looking at them, bro, he's not happy. What the hell did you smoke, holy jeez.

Speaker 1:

We gotta catch up. It's called the raspberry parfait, yeah it's a safe indication, you know?

Speaker 2:

if you want to know what that is funny man but yeah, I'll have what he's having.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, you would take a real much of what you're having bro, Right, no shit that is funny.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yeah, yeah, all right, pick another one.

Speaker 3:

Let's do it. I'm just kind of just no, no, I'm saying you were going.

Speaker 3:

you were saying through things that so they get caught, they're gonna go to jail, right. And you know, just to blend it, like I think about when we were growing up, like I remember like if you walked into the house with a hat on in my house, right, you had to take it off. Take your hat off, right. And I'm like, okay, my father sends me every fucking time, Right, if your coat was on in the house, if someone came to my house and the kid, one of my friends or whatever he'd be, like you got somewhere to go, he's like, yeah, no, take your coat off, you stay in and you leave, right, exactly yeah, like that kind of thing.

Speaker 3:

They would say to you kind of thing. So it's just like you know. You know now, I think the hat thing comes from the military, because you're not allowed to wear your hat inside except for in the Marine Corps. But the action.

Speaker 1:

but, if I'm not mistaken I could look that up though- Part of it has to do with that, but the actual reason is because back in the day, before there were cars, that's right, everything was dirt road. Oh, and there was cobblestones in big cities, but everything was dirt road, right. So people all wore hats. Everyone wore a hat to keep dust out of their hair. So if you had that, dusty ass hat in the house. It was like considered disrespectful. It's like wearing like muddy shoes in the house.

Speaker 2:

It wasn't the same thing, because there was no toilet, so people used to throw there.

Speaker 1:

Oh, like that too. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. So I think it was all that stuff.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, that's that's. I'm pretty sure that's what it was.

Speaker 1:

That makes sense. I mean, that's why the military, they do it too, but they just keep doing it, you know Right, because that's just the rule.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, Tom, look it doesn't see you guys.

Speaker 1:

Oh yeah, you guys, you know the fact that he's like yeah, you're a fucking guy like Tom's bullshit yeah.

Speaker 2:

And that's hilarious, that is hilarious, but yeah, but that's a common courtesy. Take off your hat Right, take your hat off Some cultures. Take off your shoes when you walk in the house.

Speaker 3:

Right, that is true, I've got. I've had friends like that. When you had it, when you walked in the house, you had your hands off.

Speaker 1:

I know that's very, I know in the Asian culture. That's huge, but like but also you know like American people do it too.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, and some people.

Speaker 1:

My wife makes me, she makes us do that shit at the house oh my God, what the fuck you know we're like we don't wear shoes in the house, but if we have company, I don't enforce it.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, right, right, we just vac him up after Right. That's what I'm saying. That's what I'm saying. She's like yeah, I take off these shoes. I'm like, ah.

Speaker 1:

Jesus, I don't really enforce it Like you know what it is, like I have. If you come into our house, we got the shoe rack and everything. So most people if they see it, they ask Right, and I usually just say we don't. You know, if you don't?

Speaker 2:

want to mind. You know, most people say oh, you know, did you wear dirty socks?

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, a marine only wears his or her hat or cover hat inside. If he is armed. The marine will wear his cover outdoors at all times, and a marine only only slew its when covered.

Speaker 2:

Really.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, so he has to be wearing his hat when he salutes.

Speaker 2:

So inside when. Only Keep the hat on when when armed.

Speaker 1:

Okay, so if they're like, so like, if they're in.

Speaker 3:

If they're in MP or whatever.

Speaker 1:

Right, yeah, they're in MP, or yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 2:

Okay, all right, all right, all right, so okay.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, I remember they may have changed it through the years for different things, but I think it's normally the same through. You know, some things may have changed, but that was one of them too.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, so yeah, he's right as well.

Speaker 3:

So, samantha and Justin, yeah, well, I know army does. They don't wear, they have to take it off and they go.

Speaker 1:

Yeah they have to leave them on after armed, because that means it probably the same. That means they're gonna be maybe using them. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 3:

I don't know if it's just the same for the army, but that's probably it could be. No, maybe they're all doing it now I don't know, but still, you know, but whatever you know, there was weight. You held the door for somebody. Yes sir, no sir, kind of thing. Yeah, you know you, just, you, just, it was the way you talk to people.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, just don't know how to even communicate, even when you something stupid happens, if it's a little Misunderstanding or, you know, like an accident or something, whatever it might be, you know people flying off the fucking hand.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, there's no yeah.

Speaker 3:

To an extreme. That's unnecessary.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, it's got to the point where it's just crazy. Yeah, I watched a bunch of these.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I know you guys don't watch that's why I don't watch those things, because it just for me it's like, yeah, dude, there was one that I saw in this guy, just because he said the guy in front of him was break checking him. The guy wasn't, you couldn't see. He was in a truck so you couldn't even see in front of the truck in front of him, right, and you know, yeah, of course everybody's got the dash cams and shit now, and long piece of that show short Dude jumps out of his car as the truck in front of him is trying to make a left turn. He's just like pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, just unloading, shooting, shooting at the truck in front of him.

Speaker 2:

I don't think that he even hit the truck. You know what I mean. Wow, trooper.

Speaker 3:

But that's scary though isn't that scary to know that it's almost like society is like Slowly On ravelling, you know, like people were just like you know, I don't give a fuck anymore, I'm just what? Oh, you're breaking me, pop, pop pop, pop, pop, pop, pop.

Speaker 2:

You know, like oh. Okay, I didn't know that, but people are like wow, wow, well, yeah, pretty much wow, but nobody's. Nobody's taking, nobody's paying attention to what they've done right, you're not taking accountability for what they've done.

Speaker 3:

No accountability, none that.

Speaker 2:

I don't know what it's all me it's all about me, right? You mean you didn't hold the door for me, right? Yeah, what the fuck? You mean you didn't hold the door, right, like who? What are you doing? I said again, going back to the car, you know you're tailgating, am I tailgating? You're not even doing the speed limit and or you slow down, so that then now I am right there, by your ass it, the speed limit is 40 you're in the left.

Speaker 3:

30.

Speaker 2:

You're not doing it. You know, I'm saying like it's not my fault that you slow down, like get out of the fucking way. I'm just saying like, just like that I said right, people holding the door. Oh, you're at the store, you're in the aisle. I hate this shit man. You're in the aisle and you are walking up the aisle and people are just standing in the middle of the aisle looking at the shelf.

Speaker 3:

Stand to one side and look right like people get by and yeah, I never got that either. They just see I just being at work in what I used to do. I would just like you know I'm on a mission, so I kind of just go right and I kind of force, you know politely, mm-hmm you know me like it, cuz I gotta go somewhere, I'm not gonna stand here. We move so they have no other choice but to right. And then you go around them, right you?

Speaker 2:

know, you know, you're like morning.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, come on give the yeah. Um, excuse me, right, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, that's what I do. I'm like excuse me, excuse me. And so, jessica, she won't. She just like she will. She'll stay there and let the people do whatever. I'm like go and she's like they're looking.

Speaker 3:

I'm like, excuse me and they look at me like, oh you're, you're allowed to buy things and walk around.

Speaker 2:

Stand there, like you know, right, get out the fucking way.

Speaker 3:

Move.

Speaker 2:

I don't say Ludacris, then he'll pop up, but yeah, you know, just it's again like you said, lou, common courtesy, yeah.

Speaker 3:

If my kids, If my mother knew or I did any shit like that we saw now my man mm-hmm. Yeah, I mean, my friends used to get beaten, so stupid shit Could you imagine if they actually did like you know, I'm not saying like they were Anything like this right, not even close, but for that time right. But think about it now. Think about the hour time doing stupid shit like this.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, you imagine acting up, you're being disrespectful. Yeah, you know what I mean. Right, it's just being right. Don't be rude man. Let's say I don't know, I don't even. We can't even sit and say, oh, it's because of this, because of that, you know, I can make a joke.

Speaker 2:

I just feel like over the driving and shit. You know you could blame and say whatever about social media and whatever, but People, I think the I think the one excuse is entitlement. People just feel entitled now, like you, just do it for me, because I'm standing here and, right, I don't see another motherfucking light going from this business.

Speaker 3:

It's the attitude? Is it's all about me? You know I have something to do. I need to get this done. You know that not to care about or worry about anybody else around you right Without any, yeah you know, yeah, no, it's like now that's just not gonna that.

Speaker 3:

You know it's gonna finally come to a head at some point where they're gonna get on this shit. You would think mm-hmm right, and be like all right enough. Yeah, I think what people should do and I've done this before where you see a vehicle is not driving correctly and have the number, how am I driving? Oh, yeah.

Speaker 3:

I've actually done that once or twice where I thought, yeah, I had one, almost take me and my kids out and it was like one of those um buses Be sure to check out this video and watch out for hack perfectly what you need to be provided with. I was like what I got the number I saw. It was like the kids were gonna say, remember this, chotted the number down. They one remember three, the other one remembered the four right like. Calling them up number had the bus number and everything. No, kidding, yeah. I was like yeah, this guy, you're going down.

Speaker 1:

No, because do you it was totally blatant, not even paying attention. Speed and you know it's crazy, man, when shit happens like that.

Speaker 2:

Get nobody's, nobody's paying attention.

Speaker 3:

I tell people call that number. You see that number on the back of that bus, whatever. But don't listen, don't be that asshole. Yeah, just war the Karen. That's gonna complain about every Like. You just move slowly, or?

Speaker 2:

you know, whatever it might be, why you looking at me? Yeah, exactly, yeah, no, no, dumbass, that's not what we're talking about. Yeah, no Manager please, but definitely right, but definitely report if you got those people.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, the bad drivers and whatever. Whatever it is, yeah, you're in a bad store or some a restaurant. Yeah, uh-huh.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I, and even at the restaurant, even if you're I mean, I understand You're going in and you're paying for a service right, I get that, but there's no reason because that person, the whether it's the waiters and waitresses, the chefs, the bartender Right host, the hostess there, they're doing a job. There's no reason if you to walk in there and just be fucking nasty you know what I'm saying it's like. And even with that, still, courtesy, you're going. Everybody has been to a fast food restaurant. You're walking into whatever particular Restaurant, fast food restaurant. You know what the fuck you want. Yeah, why is it taking you an hour?

Speaker 3:

Yeah, Well, what about those? But in defense of some people, I'm not saying that there are people who go to the extreme, uh-huh, but I barely ever go in them. So if I'm there and I really don't know what's changed, okay, you know kind of don't stand on the line. Right? No, I don't stand on the line.

Speaker 2:

I usually stand back and I look at the thing and I figure it out. There you go. Yes, you get the other people that stand.

Speaker 1:

You know it's, you know it's the one that's really a mama then told me when someone has, like, a cart full of groceries and they're like, I'm good, going self-checkout.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

So now, I love that one out now.

Speaker 2:

They have the bigger ones, the bigger Registers or spaces for you to be able to do.

Speaker 3:

That said, then it's like an actual whole register, though, when they do it now.

Speaker 2:

Right, right yeah and now when the employees they're like you know, oh, you have that, you go on this one. You know the ones with less stuff come on these. So they actually have been kind of pretty good taking care.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, it depends on which store it is to all right, so for me I go to my grocery store Right, and they have those were set up and that, and they have the yeah and then that you know again, it's the courtesy thing. You know, right, if I have a cart full of shit, you know, and I see you that, come over, you come over. Go to express line with like one or two over. Yeah, listen, so really courtesy it's not a lot of people.

Speaker 3:

You know it's true because there's not a lot of people working on registers really much Like when you go to a supermarket, something you even Walmart for that matter. Mm-hmm. They got all those registers. They got barely anybody working on them, mm-hmm.

Speaker 2:

You know what I mean.

Speaker 3:

They can write, they can't get anybody.

Speaker 2:

Never, ever, ever, ever. I don't ever, and I used to work for them, sons of bitches and Ever.

Speaker 3:

Had enough people Working to register never, no, never, if I have gotten better. But you think everybody uses to check out thing now Well, because the whole thing I just never anybody everybody to register. They just do it themselves.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yeah, no, yeah, fuck that, bro. Listen, I'm not saying I love, listen, I love Walmart. I will go to Walmart just because what is people watching? Or to get anything that I need. They have all that shit there. You know what I mean. So right, I'm not talking bad about the store, like what it is. It's just the stupid shit that people do when they're in there, you know and and it's like, come on, get out the way.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, people just like a little world ever you ever see the website?

Speaker 1:

people Walmart calm. No, oh dude.

Speaker 3:

That's brutal man. Oh man Cuz you know, I see some cream People were and everything is like what. Like anytime.

Speaker 1:

Everybody goes to Walmart, I feel like. But like I feel like everybody goes to Walmart, bro, like some you see people and they like what? It's always always like strange people.

Speaker 2:

I don't know what it is. Well, yeah, yeah we'll see.

Speaker 1:

I'm like I'm coming with conspiracy theory.

Speaker 2:

Oh, here we go, yes it's the MIB conspiracy theory. Okay, go ahead, I'm listening, go ahead.

Speaker 1:

All right, because you know how like all these refugees live in the United States right, I'm feeling that there's aliens disguised, but like they have like a special card, like the food stamp card, but only for aliens.

Speaker 2:

But they have to go to Walmart though, and that's what happens, so you get all the weird people just weird with their fucking doing a big right there.

Speaker 1:

Do like.

Speaker 2:

Cuz they're hiding there a fucking alien head. Yo the cone heads. Yeah, okay, I'll go along with that one, tom, because I like this. They got a whole bunch of stuff on here where people dressed and yeah are you guys up now?

Speaker 1:

show yeah, Walmart fashion show 2023.

Speaker 2:

Yes, I love it, I did too.

Speaker 3:

Walmart shop is who failed the fashion? Yes, yeah. I know like, like the goodest dude, he's wearing, he's wearing. Oh my nice.

Speaker 2:

Lou, first time with a phone. Yeah, I think I just yeah, he was wearing a tube top.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, I'm the ones when we, the girls, won't.

Speaker 2:

We were growing up in Brooklyn, bro, I know a tube top. Yeah, he was wearing. Oh man, yeah, I was listening, but he was either drunk or smoked out.

Speaker 3:

No, something was up.

Speaker 2:

He was all math, yeah, yeah, and depending where it was, I was blue blue.

Speaker 1:

What is it called from? What was the name of the met, the blue meth from breaking bad, oh.

Speaker 2:

Breaking bad. Yeah, which TV's taking back?

Speaker 1:

know that they named it blue something, yeah, blue something.

Speaker 2:

Oh, nice, nice, yeah. Oh listen, he's becoming one with his feminists. I really nice. I like it. Yeah, I'm sure you do.

Speaker 3:

Needed for that trench coat, grandpa, here we go with one, with no socks on nothing on him. You know, this guy's wearing a disguise, wearing a bikini top listen, I swear Shit that's like on a bed. Yeah, you think so. I think some people are just off the wall. Man, I can go to Walmart, right now and yeah, they're gonna have me online, but you know what?

Speaker 2:

Nobody gives a fuck, I can do whatever I want. Man in a trench coat like that.

Speaker 3:

Yes, but there's no shoes bro.

Speaker 2:

No shoes but the dudes that are in there would like to be kidney top and shit like that. That's on the dare.

Speaker 1:

I love you know, you know there's nothing under that fucking trench. Oh my god, yeah, no, no, no, no, no. I've wearing shoes. Yeah, yeah, Bacon, wow, ready, yeah hilarious man.

Speaker 2:

That is hilarious, all right. Next one Is he a flasher Is he like oh, you know what's funny.

Speaker 3:

I got a quick. I change the subject. But when I was a kid remember maple lanes, yeah, rolling alley bone my mother what used to ball on a leak, and it was this guy was coming in and flashing the women and they were all bugging out. What'd your mom do?

Speaker 2:

The guy came in.

Speaker 3:

The guy came in and did it. My mother what?

Speaker 1:

Just left out of row. He ran out of there like that out of hell bro come back.

Speaker 2:

That's crazy. My mother was nuts man.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, so the whole Walmart thing, that's nuts and just how people now we're checking our own, our own food, and then they have to check your stuff out. You bought it, you put it in your own bags and now you're leaving and now you have to show them the receipt. Yeah, wait a minute, I checked my own bags. Nobody helped me to do this. Like why should I be? You know? Like how come you're checking me? You know?

Speaker 2:

because people turn around and they'll scan something.

Speaker 3:

They don't check them things, they go on. One, two, three four, five, six, you know and the cameras.

Speaker 2:

Catch you now, the cameras.

Speaker 3:

Do not listen the cameras you know.

Speaker 2:

I mean the cameras will stop the register if it looks like that you scan something. Oh really, because everything is by weight, so in the computer everything is on a way. So let's just say, for shit to get who's taking this mic and the scan the mic and I put it on the the. It's a scale, the whole side of that scale. Right then, if I put it on there and it just wait differently because it wasn't in that particular box, now it looks like I stole something.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, wait down the computer first time went to it, I was like make sense stuff and I was like, oh, my bags, I got my back, so my bag, get well, I'm doing. I took it up and it's like up item was removed from scale. Please put item back.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, you know like yeah, mm-hmm, and if you? Go and if anybody listening, watching and all that good stuff. If you take your bag, you have to put it on or your bags put them on the scale, like when you would pack your your. That's normal on the screen. It'll zero out the the, the scale okay, said this way your bag is there. Your bags are weight on this. As you're scanning, you can put your stuff straight into the bag.

Speaker 1:

I'm just standing it up. It's a weird shit that I went to wait.

Speaker 2:

I was just for show.

Speaker 1:

Amazon fresh. Have you guys ever been to?

Speaker 2:

one.

Speaker 1:

No, went to the Amazon. Fresh is the weirdest. I was the one that was open, and by you, right, yeah, yeah, the one. Well, they never opened the one by me. But they open the one of parameters, okay, and you scan your Amazon code and A gate opens right, put everything in your fucking cart. And then when you leave, you scan it and the gate opens and two hours later they you get me in, mold the receipt and knows exactly what you put in your. And there's no, it's not special grocery cart, it's just they have like a thousand cameras Over everything, over all the items of the idols, and it's no exactly, you already have your car.

Speaker 1:

Oh, wow what you're picking a nose. You picked this is crazy and there was a couple items.

Speaker 2:

I was like.

Speaker 3:

I don't want this right off the car right and it wasn't on the receipt.

Speaker 1:

I knew that I took it out of the cart, like it just knows, like that. System you can't even fucking steal.

Speaker 2:

But now I was taking out buddy right out of your company like that, like we paid for cash, or is it like well?

Speaker 1:

you have, whatever you're, when you, when you set this up it, you know it's got to be your primary, it's you get, build out your primary. Card that you have on your?

Speaker 2:

yeah, amazon so not, yeah, cuz I'm saying like, like, when you do the movies, I don't think I don't know. When you rent the movie on Amazon, they do have.

Speaker 1:

You have a prime, so it's just you know if you're not an Amazon right yeah, or whatever, and you say you don't have a code right whatever, but you can still go through the regular way and have someone check you out Wow, that's, that's cool, that's kind of cool.

Speaker 2:

I'm gonna say this is really weird, it is shows you with technology is taking us right.

Speaker 3:

That's yeah, that's freaking great.

Speaker 1:

Maybe that'll help with the Readiness. You don't know how much you're spending. That's the problem.

Speaker 3:

Ah, until you at the end of the end, when you get the receipt in your email or whatever. Right two hours later. Right.

Speaker 1:

There's an error, you have to go back.

Speaker 3:

I don't have to go back we got to go online and it's right, you got to do right.

Speaker 2:

All right, that's craziness. Well, it's kind of cool. I like that, that's well.

Speaker 3:

It's definitely making things More convenient yeah, sure you know and maybe that'll help. But then people gonna get mint, they're gonna get angry with machines that right and they're gonna start taking it out on the machines and it's gonna be a whole new thing. Mm-hmm, being uprising yeah.

Speaker 1:

Cop you these daddy's. Oh, that is hilarious. All right, come on, courtesy another one.

Speaker 2:

Yeah. Oh, yeah, oh no talking on the phone, on speaker you.

Speaker 1:

Oh, I hate that.

Speaker 2:

Oh, someone's like in the middle of the story, like you can hear the entire conversation, yeah so he went to the store and he got, you know, he saw this stuff and he met up with this crazy looking girl and next thing you know he had to get a shot or you get like an old guy's like huh honey, why do you want?

Speaker 3:

me to get the parsley.

Speaker 2:

I think this is cilantro. Yeah, it looks the same to me, yeah.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, yeah, money's a lot. Or in the movies, when people go on their phones and they tell you to put your phones away and everything but dude. So now, and you see the glow in and everything. Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Come on, man, turn it off.

Speaker 2:

Now I think that they then they do a thing where you can't, you don't get reception on your phone.

Speaker 3:

I shut it off.

Speaker 2:

No, no no, you don't get good reception in the theater or whatever.

Speaker 3:

That'd be a smart way of doing it for sure.

Speaker 2:

I could have sworn a few times that we had gone to the flicks, that they couldn't get certain reception.

Speaker 3:

We couldn't get reception I don't remember, we just couldn't get reception, but I usually shut it off anyway. Yeah, me too. I'm that person, you know, I'm just that's again.

Speaker 1:

That's how we were taught. Yeah, you know, turn off your phone don't smoke.

Speaker 2:

Don't smoke. But you know what Smoking in the mood dude. Back in the day Back in the day, but not anymore.

Speaker 3:

I mean, if you were, you know you did both back in the day there was a couple of theaters growing up, you could do that.

Speaker 2:

I'm surprised we don't have fucking more things. Why is?

Speaker 3:

why is? Why is vaping not allowed in?

Speaker 2:

this place, I don't know.

Speaker 3:

I guess because they can't look at it this way.

Speaker 1:

I know cause some people that have like the.

Speaker 3:

You can't say it's okay for one and the other in a sense you could, but she actually you know what? Yes, you could, but technically it's probably the right way to go about it. But I said, listen, there is no smoking period and the discussion that means anything. Actually, you know what I think.

Speaker 1:

You know what I think? Why, though, okay, actually, I do have a theory now, because, okay, I have, you know, I vape, you know. I was in my house and I was underneath the smoke alarm and I did a golf. I said it's not the fucking smoke, there you go. I bet that it's that cause these, you know.

Speaker 3:

No smoking has been for fucking years, and now people are in the vape and then it sets the alarms off.

Speaker 1:

So these smoke these, their smoke alarms that are probably more sensitive.

Speaker 3:

Right.

Speaker 1:

If this was you know back when? Yeah, 30 years ago, yeah, that would like 80s, 90s, when you could still smoke Right, right.

Speaker 3:

They probably didn't have like they didn't have that shit in there, they did it. It wasn't like that. They never went off, but the vape smoke is thicker.

Speaker 2:

Vape smoke is thicker than regular cigarette smoke. It's cigar smoke. So I will say that.

Speaker 3:

Well, that's why it sets it off so easy.

Speaker 2:

Well, I just didn't expect that big cloud going in front of the projector Right, and then it's like that whole blackout, and it's funny, cause I waved it out too.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, and it's still fucking.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yeah, yeah, no, all right, that makes sense. Okay, I could do that, I could see that.

Speaker 3:

So it's just, it just and it helps. It just makes it easier to have the people go oh, I'll come out again.

Speaker 2:

You can do this, didn't you? Like? You know, like, no, none, none, I didn't understand that. Do it before you come in the vapes, don't stink.

Speaker 1:

Just sit in your car Right, they smell fruity.

Speaker 3:

Take a couple of pits in your car and then you go in, that's all.

Speaker 1:

Well, not just regular vapes. Get your munchies and then you Just like the vape. Yeah, just the vape.

Speaker 3:

Like.

Speaker 2:

I used to vape. Right yeah, that too, I used to vape. I vape without the nicotine.

Speaker 1:

Oh, you just did like it was just the flavors. Yeah, just the flavors. Yeah, Okay.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, I never got into the whole vape. Oh, dude, it was just vape. Yeah, it was just crazy.

Speaker 2:

It was cool by me because again I was quitting cigarettes. Yeah.

Speaker 3:

Well, that's a good thing, you know, but when I quit. The vaping came much later and I was like, well, there's no point for me To me, it was just smoking, so I wasn't going to mess with the period, I was like, yeah, no, I'm not going to do that, yeah, you know it was all good by me.

Speaker 2:

Like I said, I was doing it, a couple of friends were doing it, and you know we would buy each other's flavors and stuff like that. It was a whole big thing on it for us when it first started and I mean I had to mod and the whole shit and it was great, you know.

Speaker 3:

But Right, yeah, but it makes sense to you know, block it out of certain things.

Speaker 2:

But that's another common courtesy thing Don't smoke around people like that, you know. Go someplace else. Go standing over there in the corner Right Like.

Speaker 1:

How about no, no?

Speaker 2:

no, no, I'm just saying, like some, now, a lot of amusement parks and such, they have a space that you can go and smoke and you could only smoke there.

Speaker 1:

You know, like you could only go, so that's ridiculous to what.

Speaker 2:

but you know what, If I'm not for nothing, if you're like at Disney and you got to, you know you got your kids and they're yelling, screaming and yeah, I get it.

Speaker 3:

No, I know, but you got to smoke in that designated area, right, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah only go over there because other people did so.

Speaker 2:

Out of 50 million people that go into Disney World, you know, there's only 10,000 that smoke, you know. So then take your happy ashes over there or keep your composure and go to. You know for that old day that you're gonna be there without having to fucking bogey. That's just. I'm just you know. But you know, look at what you're gonna say Trash.

Speaker 3:

Which part of it? All over People just throwing this shit, yeah throwing those and stuff and making everything look like crap and just shit on the earth.

Speaker 2:

It's gotten a lot of better, a lot of better, it's got. A lot better, it's got a lot better. You haven't really fucking seen that shit. It's a lot better than what it used to be when we were kids.

Speaker 3:

Nah, it's worse.

Speaker 2:

You think so. I don't know. I see a lot, it's way worse.

Speaker 3:

I get on the highway and I see it off. I'm driving on the because we're driving all the time you know, so they're on the weekend. I'm like man. What is the why? Yeah?

Speaker 2:

that's why Can't you just?

Speaker 3:

put it somewhere.

Speaker 2:

Like.

Speaker 3:

I know, a certain individual that you know tried to do that with me when we were in the vehicle and I was like no, I'm not having it.

Speaker 2:

You're not doing that with me in the vehicle. You're also the guy that gets out. Would get to shovel out of the bag.

Speaker 3:

I know and remove dead carcasses of animals and move them to the side of the road.

Speaker 2:

No, I haven't, bro, I'm telling you I'm like what are you doing? He like gets off the truck, goes over gets to shovel and throws it.

Speaker 3:

I just felt like there's no reason for it to be run over 100 freaking times. It's already dead, right, but somebody had a dead box, somebody's job. What do you do if it's a big box? Yeah, but nobody's picking it up in time. It's already part of the pavement by the time they get there. Oh yeah, but you know.

Speaker 2:

So what's the point? If you're going to do your job, do your job, go pick it up, right. But if there's somewhere else picking up, other roadkill on some, you know some other roads, I mean anyway, like five guys doing this shit. The track yeah.

Speaker 3:

There's not enough guys in the in the there's not enough people, right, that's not a, you know so yeah, Anyway, the trash the trash is particularly spent just to see who and just people, how blatant they are and just like they don't care.

Speaker 2:

Just throwing it. I'm like why I don't understand. You know what's the point.

Speaker 3:

What does you like? Living in crap, you know, like walking around and seeing that, like that, you know it, just it doesn't make any sense. No, it was bad when we were growing up too, but it you know it is way worse than it was when we were growing up especially with all the plastic and all the crap now which is even harder to break down.

Speaker 1:

Why don't they just build like miniature garbage pants, panels, that like build them into the cars, into cars? Why, why don't? Why hasn't that any car company done that? What do you mean? And what way? Like have like a little built in into, maybe into the console or somewhere like a.

Speaker 3:

built in Like a built in garbage and it'd have a bag in it and everything. Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1:

Why not? Why, I mean, we bought one.

Speaker 3:

If anybody's paying attention, we I mean we bought one for our cars because you know we got the kid and you know Right. Well, we always kept the bag in the car when I was driving.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, what we do is just it clips onto the console. The clip goes in the console when you close it down. So it hangs in the back, there in the middle, right in the middle.

Speaker 3:

Why don't you just throw it out?

Speaker 1:

It sits on the floor and there's a little like hole for like kind of like a can.

Speaker 3:

Very cool.

Speaker 1:

And you put a little garbage bag. Yeah, so I'm saying why?

Speaker 3:

are you throwing it out the window?

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 3:

Just because it's not at your house or where?

Speaker 2:

you're at yeah.

Speaker 3:

You're being disrespectful to not only to everybody who lives there, but to the planet as well.

Speaker 2:

Right, right, I get it, I get it.

Speaker 3:

It's just ridiculous, I don't I just you know like what it's a point.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I've seen a lot of those, that's. That is annoying.

Speaker 1:

The crazy part, though, is like we see that right, and like I think it's me getting close to them. We see that, and then look at like the great specific garbage patch, and you're like holy crap, yeah, all that plastic you mean, yeah, all that plastic.

Speaker 2:

Now I'm surprised that they haven't gone in there to try to get at it.

Speaker 3:

The garbage patch they are. They clean it up as much they clean it. For what I understand, there are groups and people that try to clean up as much.

Speaker 1:

But I know, I know we discussed it when Suzanne was in there, so, but you know what the biggest polluter to the ocean is Fishing industry.

Speaker 3:

Right, all the nets and everything. Right, just cut them. Yeah, just leave them in the ocean. It's crazy, right, yeah, why. And that should not be allowed. There should be a rule or something that they shouldn't be allowed.

Speaker 2:

Right, but how are you going to pass through? Congress and freaking take care of that. But then how are you going to go? Who's going to patrol the waters? Yeah, exactly, international. But whatever I'll say who, they won't do that.

Speaker 3:

Well, I'm just saying, whoever is, obviously, and what is that they're at, obviously, I'm thinking, because we live in the United States.

Speaker 2:

So you know I'm thinking that way.

Speaker 3:

But yeah, I get what you're saying. What?

Speaker 2:

the hell is that? I don't know. It's not that I don't know what that is. I don't know, it's not me, it's not me.

Speaker 1:

Sorry Again. We'll feed back. We apologize, sorry about that, yeah.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, no, what's the point of that?

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 3:

You know, just it's got to if the countries take. But you know everybody's got. I guess the hand in pocket or whatever is going on. So it must be hard to pass those laws, or to even to be fair, probably to be able to patrol the waters enough to be able to stop them from doing that, right?

Speaker 2:

That's the reason, yeah yeah, because you can't prove who belongs to whatever fishing net.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 3:

Right, Unless of course you come up on them and you know, and then you know yeah there's got to be a way for them to do it. But yeah, but you know, just the fact that they're doing that is just sad too you know and then, of course, what's bad about the nets, too, is this not only are they polluting, but they're also killing animals, because they get caught in them Right, and then they can't get out.

Speaker 1:

I'll think of all the ones at the bottom of the ocean floor call around that just got netted Right, exactly, and can't get out, and can't get out Right, and can't get out Right.

Speaker 3:

So it's horrible, you know it's just not, you know, it's just a disregard for life regardless of what kind of life it is.

Speaker 2:

Well, listen, you know, we could sit here and think about all the stuff that we do different. You know, I just hope that our kids or our grandkids will.

Speaker 3:

What did Neil DeGrasse say? He said he said about how we want to go to another planet to make it look or be like Earth, Right, and when he says when we could just stay here and work on this planet.

Speaker 2:

Right and make it like Earth Right yeah.

Speaker 3:

Which means, well, you're going to go to another planet and shit on that one too, and by the time you get over there, you're going to get that one better.

Speaker 1:

We're going to take a shit on that, the shorts. Definitely we're going to pollute it more than we pollute this planet.

Speaker 2:

We're going to keep planning hopping.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

It's like come on bro.

Speaker 1:

So they're doing Star Wars. We're going to have a planet we just mined from Right, exactly.

Speaker 2:

Okay, yeah, neil, neil DeGrasse Tyson, degrasse Tyson. Yeah, yeah, yeah, that goes yeah.

Speaker 3:

I want to make sure I get his name correctly. But yeah, yeah, so like, do it here. You know what I'm saying. It's not a used car and I know we're done with this one. We're going to go to the next planet. Yeah, we're going to go to the next planet.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, random shit to the ground. Yeah, it's crazy.

Speaker 3:

It's been on this though, Anyway, but so I think there's a lot of stuff that people need to work on. Yeah, work on yourself.

Speaker 2:

Pay attention. You know this goes back to all of the conversations and all the other stuff. Right, you know it's show, love, love one another. Peace to everybody.

Speaker 3:

I don't even care. It's love, bro, just be polite.

Speaker 2:

It's just a way to say.

Speaker 3:

I know what you're saying.

Speaker 2:

I'm saying that you say that to somebody else is going to hear it differently too. That's true, yo, be nice to one another. I don't care, as long as, like I said, don't do anything to hurt other people, right that?

Speaker 3:

person has done with your bad day.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, exactly None of it. Smile to somebody because when you're opening a door you smile Like, hey, how you doing Good morning. Whatever Hold the door, Because it'll be that one thing that just starts the ball rolling for that person.

Speaker 3:

You know what?

Speaker 2:

I'm saying it could have just been like you said. You never know if anybody's having a bad day. You never know what they're going through at home. So always do what you can just to be nice to somebody, because it could be that one thing that you did that it's funny as it sounds. I don't want to say funny, funny, but that just saves a life.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, heck, you never know. You know what I mean, sure.

Speaker 2:

And not being rude and not making a joke, but it's just that one person that now they can move forward in their day, that they're going to have a good day.

Speaker 3:

Pay us forward on that.

Speaker 2:

Right, exactly, exactly, pay forward Exactly, so I get it.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, but so be it that.

Speaker 2:

There you go. Don't be a man, I'm a sugar Draco. Yeah, yeah, but I'm being about a fucking boom, oh my.

Speaker 3:

Oh, my oh my.

Speaker 2:

There you go. So, with that being said, forget about. That is our show for today. So thank you, guys, for being here again. Appreciate to all of our followers, our fans.

Speaker 1:

And hopefully this live went well. Yes, hopefully Find out.

Speaker 2:

We're going to start doing our stuff with the video and getting the shit rolling, so yeah, so with that, thank everybody. Love you guys, love peace and hair grease. Live long and prosper.

Speaker 3:

And go vegan Hello.

Speaker 2:

We can't even hear music. Well, no,

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