Just Two Good Old Boys

025 Just Two Good Old Boys

Subscriber Episode Gene Naftulyev Season 2023 Episode 25

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Gene

Good morning, Ben.

Ben

Good morning, Jean. How are you?

Gene

I'm all right. I'm going on a little, little bit of a light sleep, but other than that, pretty good.

Ben

Yeah, me, me too. I was up a little later than usual last night and yeah, but

Gene

that juice mission on the Woods way to Jupiter. So, you know, stuff takes a while.

Ben

See I was up late last night looking at land, but that's me.

Gene

Yeah, I did that during the day, so,

Ben

Yeah.

Gene

And did you find anything interesting?

Ben

Yeah, actually I did. So, yeah, I actually, the reason why I was running a little late this morning was cuz I was on the phone with my mother who's a realtor in this area, and asking her to take a look at a piece of property for me and see what she thinks.

Gene

hmm.

Ben

So,

Gene

Now this is cow related property.

Ben

Sure we'll go with that.

Gene

Okay. Well, I mean that's, people know that you were looking at getting some cows at some point

Ben

Yes. And we are progressing on that both with my parents' property and some other options too. So yeah,

Gene

and it, what I was surprised by is you, we were talking about like how much land does a cow need

Ben

it totally depends on what area in Texas you're at.

Gene

Yeah, but it could be like a hundred acres. You said if it's out west,

Ben

Oh, yeah. Easily.

Gene

shit,

Ben

Yeah. It hold on, let

Gene

man. At that point you might as well raise kangaroos,

Ben

Something a little more drought tolerant. Yeah.

Gene

or camels. I don't know. Did they eat camels?

Ben

I don't eat camels.

Gene

I've never had camel meat. I wonder if they do eat'em.

Ben

I'm sure the. I'm sure that some civilization at some ti point in time has eaten camel

Gene

taste that good then, because you

Ben

well, I mean,

Gene

hear that as delicacy.

Ben

I dunno, people say, you know, that shit horse, you know, people, some people love horse, but

Gene

Well, I don't know about love, but it's definitely something you can get Mongolia.

Ben

yeah, so the, there, well, and the, I believe the Spaniards as well, but

Gene

Mm, okay. Yeah.

Ben

I don't know. But anyway, it's just one of those things that's not a very popular meat cuz the animal has other utility.

Gene

Right. But Camel, I mean, people don't really use'em anymore.

Ben

You, you don't think,

Gene

Well, not, I mean, other than for Photoshops mostly,

Ben

hmm.

Gene

I, I don't think anyone's choosing to. Spent thousands to buy a camel when they can buy a Toyota truck. You know what I mean?

Ben

Sure. So South Texas Plains.

Gene

Yep.

Ben

Yeah. Anyway I'll have to find the I'll have to find the Texas land. Oh, here it is. Yeah. Depending on where you're at in Texas one cow per acre in East Texas up to parts of West Texas, 150 acres per cow.

Gene

Okay.

Ben

So basically four cows per perception per

Gene

I'm trying to, you

Ben

which is insane.

Gene

I don't even know what the ratio was in the Midwest. I gotta imagine it's even higher.

Ben

Mm. I mean, getting down to one acre per cow.

Gene

Mm-hmm.

Ben

Basically not, not feeding it is, I mean, you're really not gonna get much better than that. You know, in, in, you know, in, in Idaho you could, you could do, you know, about a acre per cow ish, but you're supplementing feed in the winter. You know, in Texas, if you're rotating the pasture correctly, you're not,

Gene

that's a good point, is winter is definitely gonna be an issue, but in Texas it, it's almost the other way around where there's green grass in the winter, but there's brown grass in the summer.

Ben

There's still grass, you know, and if you're doing improved coastal or something like that, it's not gonna be brown. It's not, it's not like that. It's still

Gene

I lived in Dallas, it was pretty damn brown.

Ben

Yeah. Well that's Dallas and we're talking about East Texas and Dallas would have a different cow per acre ratio than the area I'm talking about. That's the point.

Gene

if. They like you in insulting they're women that way. Whoa.

Ben

Oh, gene. Well, you know, hey if, if the Moomoo fits,

Gene

Yeah, exactly. Exactly. All

Ben

I got, I gotta tell you, I had a pretty special lunch yesterday.

Gene

oh, what'd you have?

Ben

You know, the restaurant I go to pretty often, Babylon over here. Yeah. So I, I go there and the

Gene

where your Middle Eastern handler is?

Ben

Yeah. Yeah. The, the owner was there and anyway, a couple of his buddies were there and they were cooking something kind of special for their lunch. And they had this big feast of different dishes and stuff that they had put together. And anyway, they invited me to join them and holy crap. Was it good? Oh man. There was this yogurt that they had made as a dipping sauces, and they had these beans and yogurt and then beans and oil that were fried, and then liver and onions and stuff. And just this

Gene

my refrigerator.

Ben

this this meat loaf, I don't know how, what you would call it, but it was sliced almost like lunch meat, but it was a compressed meat that had pistachios and olives and all this stuff in it. And oh man, it was just delicious.

Gene

Olives. That's interesting.

Ben

Yep.

Gene

No, that sounds quite tasty.

Ben

Oh yeah, it, it was definitely a how do I put it? A welcome surprise, you know, I was going there to eat lunch anyway, and they just, ah, come on, eat with us. Okay.

Gene

Mm-hmm.

Ben

Yeah.

Gene

Yeah, that, you know, that is one of the things I do miss in being someplace that has more of a Russian community versus Austin. Is our, our one and only Russian restaurant shut down when the special military operation started.

Ben

Mm-hmm.

Gene

And, you know, that's, that's it. So the closest thing I can do now if I want some ethnic food is I gotta drive up to Dallas

Ben

Well, when you say ethnic food, you mean Russian ethnic

Gene

Yeah, yeah, yeah. Cuz it,

Ben

of ethnic food

Gene

there. Well there is a lot of generic ethnic food. Absolutely. But a particular type of ethnic food. It's and, and you know, there's grocery stores and there's Russian restaurants in Dallas and there's actually, well there used to be quite a few. I have

Ben

that are surviving. Wow.

Gene

Yeah. I don't know what's left. I do know

Ben

going on Dallas? Why have you not shut this?

Gene

yeah. Shut down the Russians.

Ben

All Russian things. Ah,

Gene

The one grocery store that I used to go to when I lived up there that's owned by a Beru dude. So that hasn't been shut down, which is good. But your story about eating when the restaurant just reminded me there was used to be a place well, it's probably still there. Called Moscow on the Hill in St. Paul, Minnesota. And they had pretty, pretty good food, but they also had homemade vodka. And in my twenties I guess my late twenties. But I used to go there pretty regularly. Got to be good friends with with the owners and the waiters and stuff used to party with them and quite often I would head out there around 10 o'clock get the restaurant, eat some pi, drink some vodka. And, and incidentally, those were always a if I went there with a, a friend or a, you know, some other people I knew were there we'd usually just get the vodka by the bottle.

Ben

Mm-hmm.

Gene

And the Americans were always freaked out about that. It's like you got a whole bottle. Because I think it's a lot less common to get liquor by the bottle than wine by the bottle.

Ben

Yeah.

Gene

you know, I mean, you, you typically drink at least half a bottle of person, so why would you not get it as a bottle? Plus, if you get it as a bottle, you can, when people ask you about it, you say, oh, would you like a drink? They're here. Let's get them a couple of shots. Because, you know, bottle of vodka has got, I don't know, 30, 40 shots, depends on the bottle size, I guess.

Ben

Depends on the bottle size and depends on your pore.

Gene

Yeah, yeah, yeah. So do that whole thing and then I would close out the restaurant, so at about 2:00 AM the the place would be closed, and then all the staff and the owners and me would stay after and then have like a family style meal because that was the best way to sober up before driving home. And so, you know, that was like the, the end of the night was having a meal with a dozen people that work at the restaurant. And I'd do that at least a couple times a week.

Ben

well this, this was a, you know, it was just a neat experience and, you know, I've known the owner for quite some time and

Gene

I view the

Ben

got to meet some of his friends and people in from Chicago and, you know, it was just a pleasant surprise to be invited.

Gene

I'm sure it's not the last

Ben

Oh, I'm sure. But, you know, well, we're speaking about Russia,

Gene

Hmm.

Ben

dude. The leaked documents and the guy I arrested.

Gene

Yeah. A 21 year old.

Ben

Yeah. And you know, apparently a actual patriot and a Christian and believing what we're like and doing is wrong. So he, you know, people are like, why would he throw away his life? Well, you know, he stood up for his beliefs. I don't know. Seems like a pretty admirable thing to me.

Gene

Yeah. And they're not treating him as a, a what do you call it? As a whistleblower,

Ben

No, absolutely not. They're not treating him as a whistleblower. They're treating him as someone who violated his security clearance.

Gene

likely to get death penalty out of this.

Ben

I don't know about death penalty, but, you know, Bradley Manning esque

Gene

the death penalty, I'm pretty sure this guy's getting the death penalty.

Ben

I'm sorry.

Gene

If Trump's getting the death penalty, I'm pretty sure this guy will.

Ben

Trump's not getting to death penalty.

Gene

We'll see.

Ben

Mm-hmm. Anyway so it, it's interesting because as this story has unfolded, they've said, oh, well, some of the documents were doctored and so on. Ah-huh. But when you look at the death numbers on the Ukrainians versus the Russians, you know, it's all pretty damn, you know, right. In line with what kind of we've been saying this whole time. And,

Gene

reports the numbers every week

Ben

right. But I, I, I'm saying the Pentagons document backs that up,

Gene

yeah, exactly. Exactly.

Ben

you know, so, oh, you can't trust Russian propaganda. I'm not, I'm trusting, trusting the Pentagons and own internal documents. So it's pretty clear that I don't know. I, I think it's part of me wonders if this isn't part of just wrapping up the Russia, Ukraine narrative.

Gene

Oh, you think it was a like an actual si up?

Ben

I mean, that's what the Russian foreign minister said as soon as it happened.

Gene

Yeah, I think that's, cuz that's what they're expecting. I don't, I don't know that they expected the actual numbers to be in there. It's funny cuz I don't know, man. I think there, there's a little too much of thes up pill, in my opinion, floating out there.

Ben

Okay.

Gene

what I mean by Sia pill is that I think I've heard somebody throw out, oh, it's just a siop about literally every single topic comes up in the news

Ben

Fair enough.

Gene

that that's typically like good news stuff, or at least not negative news for our side. And by our side, I mean, Of course the Republic of Texas. So every time I hear that, I'm like, oh, Jesus fucking Christ. Will you guys just take the w I mean, not everything has to be created just to fool you because no one gives a shit about most of these people. So could it be a siop? Sure anything can be, but is it likely? And I think so far what I'm seeing is, no, it's probably not likely because the typicals iop, while it does have some damage to the United States, all the F B I officer are usually closed and empty.

Ben

Hmm. So what do you think about the way they arrested the young man? Because it's being reported that it was the F B I that arrested him. But it's pretty clear from the footage that they released that the military was there too.

Gene

Yeah, well the, the FBI definitely was there. I do know that. Were they the only ones there? It doesn't look like it.

Ben

No, and then,

Gene

the actual arrests may very well have taken place by an FBI agent.

Ben

yeah, and it's pretty interesting how it was the news media that hunted him down.

Gene

Oh yeah. Well, that's, yeah. It's interesting in a perverse kind of way.

Ben

Oh yeah. In totally. In a perverse kind of way.

Gene

Yeah. This is literally like all the curtains are down and you can see the, the guy behind the curtain operating the machinery. There,

Ben

there's just no e even illusion, right?

Gene

Yeah. There, there's zero illusion left that as Trump accurately put it on the on the public radio, but frankly should put it on all the other American news channels, is they are operating as state media.

Ben

Yeah. Thank you. Thank

Gene

zero independence there.

Ben

thank you Elon Musk for creating that tag.

Gene

Oh, yeah. Well, he didn't create the tag. The tag's been around for a long time. It's just never been applied to American companies until now. So

Ben

Well, Amer hold on. Hold on. He applied it to NPR and the BBC and both freaked the fuck out about it, which they are both state run media literally,

Gene

I was watching the, the voice of America a few days ago.

Ben

which is absolutely state run

Gene

which is, yeah, it, it, it is literally a channel created by the State Department to combat the U S S R and

Ben

Well to Pravda to combat Pravda. Yeah.

Gene

well, what do you mean profit?

Ben

Wasn't, wasn't that the U ssrs?

Gene

The official newspaper? Yeah, but that was not for foreign market. The voice of America was created strictly for the foreign market. It was not for US domestic consumption. So it was, it was a it is similar to a dropping leaflets from an airplane campaign, except it was done through airwaves. And I remember back in the day, back in the seventies there was always a I guess it'd be a radio war going on in the sense that America would keep broadcasting Voice of America on different frequencies. And, and the U S S R kept trying to block those frequencies as quickly as possible. So there were, there were jamming transmitters around Eastern Europe and And so it was a constant ongoing battle because if you wanted to listen to The Voice of America, you weren't sure what frequency it's gonna pop up on it. It was gonna be on short wave, but you have to scan every day

Ben

Hunt for it. Yeah.

Gene

because it's not like it's gonna be on the same one as it was last week.

Ben

You know, I remember growing up my parents had a short wave radio and I remember listening to lots of different things on short

Gene

fun, isn't it?

Ben

Yeah. I, I wonder, man, I wonder is, is, is short wave still has to be in use still and I, I, I kind of want to get a radio just to see what's out there.

Gene

Yeah. Yeah. You should be able to. You know, I, I got a Hamra license a while ago, and in fact I think it's, I should have renewed cuz I'm, I'm pretty sure it's expired at this point. But,

Ben

have a grace period?

Gene

oh, do you? No. Well, clearly I've been so interested in doing it that I've completely forgot about it, but it's a, there's an awful lot of crap out there, but I just haven't found much interesting things. The, the most interesting sound thing, I think, is software defined radios,

Ben

Oh yeah, I've got a couple of them.

Gene

Oh, you do? For what?

Ben

So I've had software defined radios for a few years, but usually. What I've played around with mostly is when the smart meters started coming out. And some of'em are on licensed and some of'em are on unlicensed spectrum. And the city I was living in at the time this was in 2000 and I wanna say 2008, 2000, between somewhere between 2008 and 2010. And you know, they, the way the smart meter was working at that point in time at this particular city is basically, it was a pole IO system. So the tower would pull the meter, the meter then would respond. And the response was very interesting because the way the packet was formed, basically you had the serial number of the meter, which was where you could see it on the meter as the address too, and the address from. On the packet going back and forth. And then the only variable was really, you know, the kilowatts used

Gene

that mean? So

Ben

I'm sorry.

Gene

how often was it something?

Ben

It was on a polled ratio, so it depended on how often they were polling it. They could pull it instantly, or it was on a scheduled pole. I forget the timing,

Gene

The meter was listening the whole time.

Ben

correct the meter just sitting there listening. It's not transmitting until it gets pinged with its serial number and then sends back. The interesting thing is now if they wanted to shut off your power, they would send a signal with the serial number and the power, and then if you wanted to turn on the power back on, they would send the signal with the, with your serial number and so on. And then you'd have to take a remote out and hit a little IR thing to turn the power back on.

Gene

hmm.

Ben

A TV remotes power button, basically some IR signal to at pointed at the meter so that, you know, it wasn't just turning on in, in unsafe

Gene

need to put a little jammer next to the meter and you're done.

Ben

Well, actually one better is. So none of this was encrypted. None of this was authenticated. So you could spoof and send different signals back, or they shut off your power. You could locally with a s you know, software defined radio, send the turn back on signal and power it back on.

Gene

Yeah.

Ben

And since it's not pulling out as far as they know, the powers shut off there.

Gene

Mm-hmm.

Ben

So anyway, it, it was a crappy design, but that was me playing around with software defined radios

Gene

me ask you this, you're kinda in the power of business there. Why would you even need a smart meter? Why would you not monitor or put, put the, essentially the meter instead of on the house, put it on the distribution center

Ben

because you want to charge per house,

Gene

but how are the houses connected?

Ben

What do you mean

Gene

Okay. I guess my, my question is, so there's a power line that's coming underground to the house

Ben

our overhead? Yep.

Gene

and it comes in or overhead and it comes into the house, right?

Ben

Correct.

Gene

Why would you not have the meter at the very edge of that line to the house on the place that it breaks off from the master power delivery.

Ben

I mean, you could, you could have it at either end, but there's no technical, there's no technical reason why you couldn't have it at either end. It's just a practical reason of really legacy. You know, you used to have people going around doing meter reading and you know, you didn't want'em have to climb a pole to read the meter. And usually where it came into the house was easier,

Gene

but you would think you could put like the well, if it's over, if it's overhead. I guess it is kind of that style, but I was thinking,

Ben

which is what the legacy was. And you know, underground is fairly new. And what a lot of people don't realize about underground power is it's great until something goes wrong. And underground is very, or you have to expand or change. Underground power is extremely expensive to put in. And for distribution, like here in my subdivision, it's all underground power for a subdivision that's built out, it's done. And you have a planned community, that's fine for distribution. Underground is plenty good in most cases. But when people start talking about transmission lines and things like that going underground, no, that's just the, the it is extraordinarily cost prohibitive.

Gene

Yeah. I don't know. We, we ought to just all have Tesla coils at neighborhoods doing power distribution.

Ben

Yeah. Well talk, let's not, you know, let radio waves, huh? Yeah. We don't, we don't need anything wireless. Why, why would we need that?

Gene

Yeah. I just,

Ben

I mean, you're basically talking about jamming pretty much everything.

Gene

Well, not so much jamming, just you know, the, the all that should be going through fiber.

Ben

Hmm. Yeah. Well,

Gene

Just flip it. Flip it.

Ben

do you use wifi in your house?

Gene

Yeah. Use wifi of course.

Ben

Okay. Yeah.

Gene

But you know, that's cuz the houses should have a different build code that includes a

Ben

Fairday Cage.

Gene

cage in every house. Absolutely.

Ben

Well it's funny because actually modern construction is somewhat doing that with the Mylar coded decking material that is being used in lots of houses now. Yeah, my, I mean my house that I'm in right now and the previous house I owned and outside of College Station the Mylar decking on the both. The walls and the roof create a fairly effective fairday cage. You can see that just from cell signal

Gene

So, where's this Mylar? I, I don't, I don't think any of the houses I've been have that.

Ben

so it's fairly new, but basically the plywood decking that they use for the substrate, for the roof one side is coded with Mylar

Gene

Hmm.

Ben

and then

Gene

for heat reflectivity or what?

Ben

Correct? Yeah, it, it's, it's basically just a part of the insulation of the house. It's energy efficiency, so when they use that decking on the roof and then the walls as well where you're putting your brick facade or whatever masonry facade it might be. You know, that again creates a fairly effective fair deck cage. Now your windows and everything else are penetrations into that, but you can just watch, like if I, before I install, I actually had to install a cell phone booster in this house. Not because where we live has weak cell signal, but just to bring the cell signal into the house. So if I'm standing outside, before I installed the booster, I'd have four or five bars full lte now 5g. And if I walked inside the house, I'd go to one bar, one x. So,

Gene

By the way, I gotta say as a total aside here, but I'm very impressed with 5G speeds.

Ben

Okay. I, I typically have it disabled, but Sure.

Gene

I have, well, when I've done speed tests, it's running between 200 and 300 megs per second.

Ben

Oh yeah. Especially like if you're down in Houston with the ultra wide band stuff and everything else, they can really get some stuff through. The problem with 5G has, isn't the protocol, the protocol's fine? The question is the frequencies that it's operating on and the the distance that those signals can travel because of the frequencies that it's being utilized.

Gene

So you mean they're too short?

Ben

Yeah, they're pretty high frequency.

Gene

Yeah. Yeah, yeah. But isn't that what you want? You want shorter distribution of of those waves?

Ben

I mean, it depends on what you want. If you're living rurally, then generally no, because you, you know, have the infrastructure that's required for it is significant,

Gene

and I, I guess that's why I

Ben

towers and everything else.

Gene

literally making the argument for the opposite of that, which is the the more infrastructure they have to build, the fewer nodes there are per tower.

Ben

Right, which allows you to optimize bandwidth if the towers have home runs back. But a lot of times what ends up happening is you have infrastructure to, for instance, one tower and then you'll have point to point links between the towers for back haul bandwidth, things like that.

Gene

Okay.

Ben

So in theory Sure. Does that always happen? No.

Gene

Hmm.

Ben

Depends on the design of the network.

Gene

Sure. Yeah, that makes sense. That makes sense. And I

Ben

get from Russia to this?

Gene

I, it's a wave of consciousness going on four hours of sleep. I dunno.

Ben

it's gonna be one of those episodes. Sorry guys.

Gene

Yeah, yeah. No, they, they enjoyed this, these styles of episodes. I think It's a kinda episode where most of the time my eyeballs are closed and so I'm just sitting here in headphones talking into a microphone. But I'm not actually looking at a computer screen.

Ben

Okay.

Gene

It's is, you know, we we're podcasts, so we don't really need to look at pictures. Oh, my food deliveries here. So y'all won't have to wait for it. I'm gonna hit the pause and the record button and then be right back. All right. That's all set.

Ben

Yep. Now that you got your T N,

Gene

I know it's like my my groceries are over 50% iced tea, and I know people say, well, why don't you just make it a home? I do. I do. But as we get into the, the summertime, the warm period, I just find that the process of making iced tea takes you that long.

Ben

Oh, so see, growing up, especially as it gets warmer, have you ever made sun tea?

Gene

Yeah, yeah. Yeah. I have.

Ben

Let's see, that's my, that's my favorite type of tea to

Gene

Mm-hmm.

Ben

It's just, but you know, that's, yeah. We used to have a special, you know, Caffe for it.

Gene

Yep.

Ben

Just put

Gene

No, I remember

Ben

jugg of water and tea on the back porch and

Gene

yep.

Ben

let it make

Gene

Yeah, you can also make it in your fridge.

Ben

Yeah, but the point is that, anyway, nevermind.

Gene

No, I, I'm making fun of the fact that it's called sun tea, but you don't really need the sun.

Ben

Well the point of the sun is that it does heat it slightly, right? It's not just cold brew.

Gene

Right,

Ben

just letting it soak and just cold it, it is heating it up to, you know, actually if you have it in direct sun, you know, well over a hundred degrees.

Gene

Fahrenheit. Yeah. Yeah. It's, it, you know, it's lukewarm water tea.

Ben

Luke, warm

Gene

I'm making it. I used to make it, but I, I, I will tell you this. If you get well, depending on the type of teabag, but either one really large one or a bunch of smaller ones into a pitcher of water and preferably distilled water, you stick it in your fridge overnight, you will have really nice, completely bitterness free iced tea.

Ben

Well, that's the entire point of sun tea as well.

Gene

Mm-hmm. I'm just saying you don't need the sun to do it.

Ben

Okay, gene.

Gene

It works.

Ben

Ah,

Gene

But I am partial to the GU Peak brand of tea,

Ben

mm-hmm.

Gene

The zero sugar sweet tea. So it's pre sweetened with fake sugar.

Ben

God, that's so bad for you.

Gene

No, it's totally not.

Ben

What do they use for sweetener?

Gene

Let's see here. I think it's called liquid cancer, but I'm pretty sure it's good for you.

Ben

Exactly.

Gene

They use asam.

Ben

Oh God, no. That's terrible for you.

Gene

Eh, it's not that bad.

Ben

It literally is, but, okay.

Gene

but it tastes very good. I wouldn't use ASAM if I was making the tea, but this tea has a very nice, consistent real tea flavor to it. Like every other pre-made tea that you buy does not, so it's somewhat unique in that aspect. Now, aside from asam, there is one more sort of, annoying thing about it

Ben

Mm-hmm.

Gene

is it's owned by Coca-Cola.

Ben

Mm-hmm. Yeah. Lots of things are owned by Coca-Cola.

Gene

the most you know, consumer oriented, non-small batch thing you can drink.

Ben

And that surprises you. I mean,

Gene

it, it does, because I'm surprised they got the flavor so well.

Ben

Hmm. We should talk about another beverage company.

Gene

Yeah. Which one?

Ben

Well, I would say InBev.

Gene

So what?

Ben

InBev,

Gene

Yeah. So you wanna talk about beer? I

Ben

well, in general. Yeah.

Gene

don't know. Do they own any liquors too, or just, is it just

Ben

As far as I know, they just own beers,

Gene

Okay.

Ben

but you know, could be wrong.

Gene

So

Ben

The whole Dylan Mulvaney thing

Gene

yeah. Yeah. Why don't you go ahead and start us off on

Ben

Well, I, I think, I don't wanna beat it to death because I think everybody's pretty. Aware of what's going on. They did put out a press release, so we're recording this on a Sunday. They put out a press release on a Friday basically saying, Hey, this was a mistake. This wasn't how this was supposed to happen. We did, you know, this was just an influencer campaign. This was not being spokesperson, you know, da da da, da da. So they kind of back down. But that's that's about where we

Gene

that's for sure. They just basically said, oh our, our left hand wasn't sure what the right hand was doing

Ben

indeed. And that is, okay. Do, do you accept that or not? That that's up to each individual person? The problem with InBev is if people do want a boycott, it's not just Budd Light, it's Melo Balta, it's, I think Shiner B is now owned by them. So you really have to go through as

Gene

all the shitty beers,

Ben

Shiner. Box's not a shitty

Gene

right? It's pretty much shitty beer.

Ben

You know, as soon as you move into real Texas, you're gonna have to. Change your opinions otherwise pitchforks might come out, gene.

Gene

Dude, it it is, it is the, the Bud Light of Texas.

Ben

Sure. But it's still a Texas beer. Anyway, there, there are better beers out there. But my point is InBev owns a ton of beers worldwide. And you have to consider that and if you're gonna boycott, boycott, but yeah.

Gene

Well, and I, I would say, you know, just cuz it's made in Texas does make it good. After all, Tito's vodka is made in Texas and that's not even vodka. It's made outta corn.

Ben

do you believe vodka has to be made outta potatoes?

Gene

Yeah. And in Eastern Europe, either potatoes or grain. But it it, if you're gonna drink vodka, Don't buy something that wasn't made in Eastern Europe.

Ben

Is Austria Eastern Europe?

Gene

No, that's not a black country. It's basically the Slavi countries.

Ben

Hmm. Well, there's a Austrian vodka that I like that's a potato vodka. That's pretty good. But

Gene

Yeah. The potato is the Polish influence. The, the, the grain is the Russian influence. But, but it's not just Russia. Like Finland's got really good vodkas, but you know, Finland was also part of Russia for

Ben

Anyway, back to the news story.

Gene

Oh, I thought we were talking about other stuff now.

Ben

Yeah, with that press release, their stock rebounded quite a bit. So it'll be interesting to see what happens come tomorrow, Monday if boycott and everything still continues and basically people don't accept that answer. What happens to the stock then? Because I, I think while they may rebound right now based off of, Hey, you know, we, we did put out a statement. We said this wasn't really the intention that a bigger deal has been made out of this than it should have been. You

Gene

Of course they would say that.

Ben

okay, fine. But the point is, if people just stay pissed off about it and continue to not buy Bud Light, let's say, you know, people are still buying Milo Bulter or whatever, but are really pretty serious about Bud Light. I don't know, man. I think that could severely hurt their stock price.

Gene

You, you already saw what happened with this with the most Like in your face moment of this with the week, immediately after the Malini ads came out where everybody and their mother-in-law was making a video saying that they're pouring out all their Bud Light.

Ben

Or kid rock taking a, you know, fully automatic to it.

Gene

Right. Which is the more fun thing to do, obviously, but all of that, and it only dropped at about five points or 5%.

Ben

That's a significant drop.

Gene

Not really. It's, it's not the kind of drop that makes the company change its business decisions.

Ben

I

Gene

people are like, whoa, one down 4 billion. Here's the thing, people don't understand what the price of stock is. The price of stock is what speculators think your company's going to do by the end of the

Ben

yeah. Hold on, hold on. The, the, the stock price isn't the thing, the distribution the places saying I'm no longer carrying this. I mean, there was a big backlash, especially in rural areas that they

Gene

a 5% impact.

Ben

5% to the stock price. Sure. We do not know what the impact was to actual sales.

Gene

No. And until,

Ben

it'll be a quarter before we do, and it'll be very interesting to see what the impact was.

Gene

yeah. And, and I think that the impact will probably be similar to them coming out with a risky new flavor that doesn't sell well.

Ben

Yeah. But you, you, you're thinking about this wrong, bud Light is the biggest beer brand in the world.

Gene

You know, for soft drinks, I guess. Sure.

Ben

No, it, it, it is the most sold beer in the world hands down.

Gene

You.

Ben

Like there's not a lot

Gene

So what you're, what you're saying is it'll have absolutely zero impact because there are more people drinking Bud Light in China than there are in the us.

Ben

My point is that the breweries and distribution here in the US that is feeling this backlash. I would not be surprised if they, if Bud Light takes a 10 to 15% hit on its sales for this quarter, would not be surprised at all.

Gene

I think that's an interesting thing, and I'm all four people boycotting it, and I'm all for people just not drinking beer in general. It's a crappy way to spend your money, but unless you're

Ben

my

Gene

like good beer, but I just don't, I don't know how much impact it's gonna have, like you said. It's the most popular beer in the world, and the world is much bigger than the us.

Ben

If the US sales drop by 10 to 15% in this quarter, they will notice and they will adjust their strategy based off of it.

Gene

Well, their first adjustment was hiring this 30 year old chick to take over the

Ben

Yeah. And clearly 100% should be fired. Like

Gene

Oh, yeah.

Ben

there, there should be no excuse right now. Fired on the spot.

Gene

Mm-hmm.

Ben

Did you hear the clips of her or that? I think Adam had where it took 41 years to get to here for a woman to be in this and you know, it's like, beer's been around a lot longer than that. And just cuz you're 41.

Gene

to, to ruin it.

Ben

Right. Well, I mean, it's just the, the narcissism.

Gene

one. That's surprised.

Ben

I hadn't look her up,

Gene

Hmm.

Ben

but I I did you see the so she said she wanted to change the frat boy culture. Did you see the leaked photos of her at a frat party?

Gene

reposted those. Yeah. Uhhuh.

Ben

Yeah. Drinking out of a condo. Like, who does that? Jesus

Gene

Yeah. Who does that is right? I should as hell don't remember anyone when I was in college doing that. Kinda, that's

Ben

I mean, it's just disgusting.

Gene

But then again, these days, kids actually will like, inject vodka with syringes into their assholes, cuz that way you can get drunk without having to drink it.

Ben

Yeah. Yeah. I guess you could pass a breathalyzer at that point too.

Gene

I never thought about that.

Ben

you wouldn't, because it's blood alcohol level that's measured,

Gene

Well, the breathalyzer that's pulling shit outta your lungs, so,

Ben

But the, the capillaries in your lungs are going to give off

Gene

so you're gonna, you're gonna

Ben

alcohol level.

Gene

are you, do you think,

Ben

Yes. That, that was a joke.

Gene

hi, it sounds like a science experiment to me, man.

Ben

Well, I You get a breathalyzer there.

Gene

I've got one somewhere. I bought one a while ago. I

Ben

Yeah, take, take, take some vodka and a syringe and let me know what

Gene

I don't drink anymore. I'm gonna have to find a

Ben

this wouldn't be drinking gene.

Gene

a syringe and, and preferably one who's like 23 and female. That would be ideal for the typical candidates that we're talking about here. So that's the only reason I would go for that demographic. But so, bud Light does 7 billion worldwide.

Ben

Yep. It's like 27 million barrels of B beer a year.

Gene

It's 330 million cases.

Ben

Right. I was measuring in barrels, not cases. It's an insane amount of beer.

Gene

Yeah. Well, it's quite a bit of beer. And then Milo does roughly half that.

Ben

Which Mc Lobe is owned by the same

Gene

I know, that's why I said it. And then Bush is also theirs, right?

Ben

Yeah. Anheuser-Busch.

Gene

Yeah. So that's 1.7 billion.

Ben

Yeah. Yeah. Anheuser-Busch in Bev owns a lot.

Gene

I, I think the impact to these guys, while it will be an impact and it certainly should justify firing that whole department I don't, I don't think anyone's really gonna get punished out of this. That wasn't directly involved. It's not, I think this is, this is vastly different than going over after a niche company where if you can manage to boycott their niche, They're completely fucked. This is such a mass market company that the impact is gonna be very small.

Ben

Well, time will tell. I think that that a lot of people are doing things pretty publicly held. Tim at his little event he held here in Aus there in Austin, didn't have any Anheuser Bush products available.

Gene

You mean at the bar?

Ben

Yeah, yeah. O obviously what's his face brought in one end, but Yeah.

Gene

Yeah.

Ben

Which, that, that, that bit he tried to do was just so, just

Gene

Alex what both Alex's were there? So Alex Jones, but Alex Stein, I've been saying this for a while. He's just not that funny. He's gonna get canned off of his TV show probably within three months.

Ben

Yeah, I don't think he's very funny either.

Gene

He's not, he, he's not a sketch comedian, which is what you need if you wanna do comedy on a recurring basis, you need to do sketch comedy. That's what people like. That's what creates enough interest. And he is just all about what, what, what is that style called? It's, it's like shock jock, right? It's like what's the next crazy thing he's gonna do?

Ben

Mm-hmm.

Gene

But you can't do that daily. It just does not work. You, you can't maintain that level. He's not gonna go and chase down a o c every week. Right. So consequently, he, he either has to change and learn how to be a different type type of comedian, or he is gonna get his ass fired.

Ben

Did

Gene

And I,

Ben

footage of a o c getting heckled in her district and she's just sitting on stage and

Gene

No, I didn't see

Ben

dancing around to it, like, fuck y'all. I don't care if you hate me.

Gene

She doesn't really care. She's gonna be running for president now

Ben

You think?

Gene

or something. Maybe. Senator.

Ben

I don't think she'd be brazen enough to run for president this time around.

Gene

Old enough.

Ben

Yeah. I would love to see a debate between Trump and aoc. I, I would say that I would love to see that,

Gene

Well, if that happens, she would be talking about how Trump was instructing people to chase her down and rape her.

Ben

like I said, I would love to see it.

Gene

Yeah. From the entertainment value. I totally agree.

Ben

Absolutely.

Gene

Mm-hmm. So, anymore on beer or is this about it?

Ben

Yeah, I'm, I'm good. I've said my piece.

Gene

Okay. I'm not a beer drinker as most people know. I, not only do I not drink alcohol, but I hardly ever drink beer. It was just not my style of drink to begin with. So I am a little biased in the sense that I think that you know, drinking beer is, is 10 amount to drinking soda.

Ben

Yeah. I, I like beer.

Gene

Mm-hmm.

Ben

a lot.

Gene

But you don't drink shit beer, though. I hope

Ben

It depends, depends on what's going on and what I'm doing.

Gene

so. The, my shit beer of choice was Corona.

Ben

Yeah.

Gene

If I needed to go somewhere where there's a, like a two drink minimum or something like Joe Rogan's Club,

Ben

Mm-hmm.

Gene

Which I can't believe, how did they get away with having a, a minimum order of her drinks? That sounds somewhat illegal to me.

Ben

I think they tie it to the ticket. It's an agreement. Same way Uber gets around legal tender laws, which I had an argument about that earlier to this week. We can talk about that.

Gene

we should get into that. But either way, if I was gonna do something like that, then I would just order a Corona because I don't particularly like the taste of it. So it would take me about an hour per bottle to drink and it, it's a form of punishment because we're there not a minimum order. I would get something much more expensive.

Ben

Well see. I don't mind Corona. It's, you know, I don't think it's a great beer, but it's.

Gene

Well, of all the ship beers, it's my drink of choice

Ben

Hmm. I I definitely, you know, for me, I really like IPAs, so,

Gene

Yeah. Yeah. I don't like the bitterness.

Ben

not really mass market IPAs. Well, it depends on the ipa, whether or not it's better, but I, I like a better flavor, so that doesn't bug me. But yeah.

Gene

I just don't like hops. That's what it comes down to is like,

Ben

Okay. So you don't like beer, Jean?

Gene

if they don't put hops in beer, it would taste better.

Ben

Then it wouldn't be beer.

Gene

and that's the stuff that I like is malt liquor with no hops.

Ben

No. No. Jean, just, no.

Gene

Mm-hmm. It's, it's the only reason they put hops there. I remember watching a video that talked about this. It had something to do with preservation, not flavor.

Ben

Okay.

Gene

like hops wasn't there for the flavoring, but people are so used to it now.

Ben

I mean, okay.

Gene

German days. Anyway, so what was the other thing you, you mentioned,

Ben

Oh, just the legal tender laws and you know, someone was saying how it's not, you know, it's not illegal for companies to not take cash. And I'm like, eh,

Gene

Oh yeah.

Ben

there's some ambiguity around that. So, you know, there's no federal prohibition, but

Gene

Mm-hmm.

Ben

you know, when you have a legal tender that is ha must be taken for any debts, public and private. You know, unless there's, this is the way Uber has gotten around it, by signing up for their app or whatever you agree that they will that you will pay through, you know, cashless payments through their app. But if you walk into, let's say a restaurant that doesn't have it clearly posted and you sit down and they come and give you the bill and you hand'em cash and they say, oh no, we don't take cash. Well, too bad sucks for you. So,

Gene

Yeah, I've had that happen. I mean, you should do in Austin, I don't think any place takes cash anymore.

Ben

yeah. So if they don't have it clearly posted, I would 100% be a dick about that.

Gene

I think there's a little sign when you enter the city border.

Ben

Austin is now a cashless city

Gene

Something to that effect. Yeah. You are now leaving the state of Texas,

Ben

in entering the communist republic of.

Gene

Yes. The commonwealth of Austin and before Warren, that the legal tender currency of Austin is plastic.

Ben

Yeah, I really hope that you know that this session, that our Texas state legislature does just dissolve

Gene

That would be

Ben

the city of

Gene

funny.

Ben

I don't think it'd be funny. I think it'd be actually useful legislation.

Gene

Sure. But I, I think, can you imagine the butt hurt coming off of that?

Ben

The what?

Gene

The butt hurt?

Ben

Y okay.

Gene

Like, how many people would be saying that's so unfair that I can't believe they could do that. That's, that should be illegal to do.

Ben

Well, it's not, and I

Gene

stole my city. Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm.

Ben

Jesus just makes me happy. are some pretty interesting bills out there. There are some succession bills. You know, so, yeah.

Gene

So that's the other thing that where it kind of makes me think that either Alex Stein doesn't know what the fuck he's talking about, or he actually is paid opposition because in the conversation about succession, his take is that it's on the American succeed. And

Ben

Yeah. Well, he's an

Gene

America, you shouldn't be seeding.

Ben

He's an idiot. This country was literally founded with succession. Like what, what the f do you think the declaration of Independence is? It is a declaration of succession, literally what it is.

Gene

Yep.

Ben

And, you know, and here, here's the other thing that pe people like him don't understand. Saying I'm an American, to me is like saying I'm European. I'm a Texan. I'm from Texas. That's where I was, you know, lived it. It. N I, my,

Gene

or, and bread.

Ben

l I'm sorry.

Gene

Born and bred.

Ben

Yeah. My, I, I, I would have no qualms over handing over my US passport for a Texas passport. None whatsoever. And I would have no problems using a Texas passport whenever I needed to go into Oklahoma, Louisiana, or Washington DC or anywhere else.

Gene

I think Oklahoma's technically part of Texas,

Ben

Well, you know, if, if if yeah, if, if we succeed, I have a, a sneaking suspicion that couple states would go with us,

Gene

Yeah. I think there's definitely gonna be an inclination towards that. What do you think about Louisiana? Are they gonna stay or go?

Ben

That would be interesting. I would, I would say parts of Louisiana might, parts of it might not. Depends. Louisiana kinda. It kind of vacillates because the city, the state of Louisiana is pretty torn outside of Baton Rouge and New Orleans. It's a pretty conservative place.

Gene

Yeah, it's got you know, more gators than people.

Ben

Oh yeah.

Gene

Those

Ben

So, so there's a there's an interesting bill in front of the Texas the Texas House right now on relating to the definition of a sexually oriented business.

Gene

Oh, really? What did they talk about?

Ben

They're modifying the, this, if past would change the definition US code or the Texas code. For now, this is normally what this portion of the code sexually oriented businesses would be, you know, adult shops strip clubs, things like that. And you know, we're currently in the code entirely unclosed and or showing parts of ariola, stuff like that. And buttocks and things like that are what requires a definition. So if you had a go-go dancer, it wouldn't be considered that in the state of Texas. It wouldn't fall under that. But now they're purposefully adding a definition around drag performances being sexual.

Gene

They've always been sexual. This is a part of that I don't understand

Ben

it, but but my point is it's classifying it in the code as part of the definition for a sexually oriented business.

Gene

just adding in or drag shows.

Ben

Pretty much.

Gene

Yeah. Well that's, yeah, that makes sense. I, I have to say that they sort of libertarian leaning side of me is like who gives a shit? On the other hand, where I have a problem with it is, number one, kids have no business being in drag shows, but also secondly, This has always been an adult activity. Now, in some parts it may have been banned because of its homosexual leaning, but it hasn't been banned in everywhere because of that. But in all cases, it was assumed that adults and, you know, maybe not the most straight of adults would be going to see drag shows,

Ben

right. But this would make it you know, require 18 and up. You couldn't have a seven year old at that.

Gene

which a seven year old has no business being at a drag show and a drag performer, regardless of their sexuality, has no business performing in front of kids.

Ben

Hmm.

Gene

It's not a, I think there's a difference between and incidentally, this is, I'm, I'm. There's some stuff that seems to have gotten lost. We used to have transvestites anybody that's seen Tim Curry in what's that movie? Yeah. What the hell's that movie about the, it's the way everybody sings and they're in Trans Mania.

Ben

Oh Rocky Horror Picture Show.

Gene

Horror. Yeah. Yeah. Anybody that's seen Rocky Horror Show, which at this point I'm gonna assume everyone has at some

Ben

Never watched it.

Gene

except for you.

Ben

It never interests me. I've seen enough about it to get the

Gene

like transvestites. We get it.

Ben

care. Yeah.

Gene

But Tim Curry is playing a transvestite in there and you know, it's basically

Ben

for everyone.

Gene

a guy who enjoys dressing like women. Which a lot of the current generation of transgender folks I think

Ben

what would today just be called a cross dresser.

Gene

Yeah, that's another, that's another definition of a transvestite, but transvestite literally means trans different Tite clothing. So it's somebody that flips around their clothing. It could be theoretically could be like Camille Paglia back in the seventies wearing men's clothes. You know, that could fall into the definition of Transvestism as well. But there was a the idea of going to see drag in a lot of ways was, let's go watch some transvestites, because at least back in the eighties when I remember going to see drag shows back then there was at least half of the performers and probably quite a bit over half, frankly. We're not gay. They were definitely on the kinky side. They were definitely into wearing women's clothing and into putting on makeup and doing all that jazz to make themselves look amazingly passable as women, but they weren't necessarily fucking guys. Now, some of'em were, but that was always kind of considered like, like in every other group, the amount of people that are homosexual, that enjoy the company of people just like themselves is a minority. It's always been the case. It has to be the case. Otherwise reproduction doesn't happen. So drug drag shows have been around forever, but they've always been an adult thing. So I don't understand why or how they've been allowed to emerge into this. Hey, let's go do it in front of kids kind of mentality, which is just retarded. Well, it is groomers, but it, it's a.

Ben

you know, you know, here, here, here's the effed up thing of this. So, back in the day when there was the Defensive Marriage Act that Barack Obama supported, Nancy Psi supported, everybody supported, I was lobbying Congress against that because I don't think government needs to be in the business of marriage at all. So, My entire point and stance was, you know, no. Get government out of marriage. And then there is no issue. You know, if people wanna get married for a religious reason, great, go do it. If you don't have a civil contract between the two of you that has the same legal rights as marriage does today, let's define that and move on with our life. And then who cares, right? And I've, I've never been against gay marriage because quite frankly, what someone else does, does not diminish me or change what I am doing. People can get offended and say, oh, well, it's not a marriage, it's not this from their own religious standpoint, but okay, I, I truly believe in, in a society where I am free to believe what I wanna believe, and you're free to believe what you wanna believe. So that's never impacted

Gene

I think it's silly to have a conversation about being inclusive with marriage, without having polygamy be legal in all 50 states

Ben

and again, what adults do, I don't

Gene

with other adults.

Ben

Correct. And here, here's the problem. Like I, I have no problem with polygamy, biy or whatever imy you want to go down the road. I personally, you know, group marriages, things like that, I personally, yeah. Not gonna work for me,

Gene

Eh, don't knock it to a tribe.

Ben

anyway

Gene

the thing, most people don't think about it. It's like,

Ben

a great book

Gene

all the pressure off of you by giving your one wife another wife to fucking, you know, spend time with and, and bitch about stuff too.

Ben

And other

Gene

it easier

Ben

potentially and so on. Yeah.

Gene

Well, nobody said anything about that.

Ben

yeah, well, a, a good book to read and get an idea of how something like that could work would be The Moon is a Harsh Mistress by Henline. He's,

Gene

It's on my list.

Ben

yeah, it's, he, he Highline's such a fantastic author. But anyway, Regardless. At the time a lot of the Christians were saying, oh, what's next? It's gonna be a slippery slope. And you know, e e even as conservative as I am, I'm sitting there going, oh, it's of course we're not going to accept, you know, this next horrible thing, but I'll be damn

Gene

Well, I'm, I think of the paths we've been going down. We're gonna have bestiality performances for kindergartners before too long.

Ben

well, you know, especially with this other kin stuff that people are going down. I mean, Jesus, if you identify as whatever, then is it even bestiality at that point?

Gene

Yeah, well, the whole identifying

Ben

identify as

Gene

somebody's gotta put

Ben

if I, you know, go screw, you know,

Gene

And I don't mean the government, I mean like if there's any worth at all to churches being around. Let's start with that. Let's start by telling people like religious people or people not, not even religious, but at least are going to church saying that there, there is no such thing as identifying as.

Ben

Well, and, and that's where I think Succession would really probably jumpstart a lot of that because I, I know people right now that are fairly liberal that feel like you know, the abortion issue is a great example. They feel like their rights have been taken away from them, and they, they're just a few steps away from Handmaid's Tale here in Texas, which I think

Gene

And by the way, what's wrong with handmade tale?

Ben

Hold on. They are literally moving out of the state,

Gene

Well, that's good.

Ben

and I'm like, great. You know, I mean, I, I, I, I, I, I like this person and

Gene

me throw you a going away Purdy.

Ben

Well, and it's, it's, it will drive that natural okay, well, we're succeeding. We're gonna run this country the way we want. And if you don't like it, then, you know, right now is a great time to leave and go to, you know, the United

Gene

A where you can't drive an electric car, but you can't buy Nonelectric car.

Ben

Anyway.

Gene

Yeah. So, so I think Handmades tale is, is underrated. I think that that is not nearly a dystopian future that people make it out to be.

Ben

What do you mean?

Gene

But I think it, I think that it's, it's a it's a society that has figured out that in order to survive they need to change the rules and then so they've adapted and that that should be something that is congratulated not looked down upon.

Ben

Yeah. Well, I, I think I, I don't think we're headed towards a Handmaid's Tale version of dystopian future,

Gene

Plus, I kinda like the outfits.

Ben

A the children the children of men sort of dystopian future, I think is far more likely.

Gene

Yeah, I, you know, people have been afraid of a mass a mass in ability to have kids or a mass sterilization events for probably a thousand years. At least hundreds of years people have been writing about

Ben

Yeah. But we are actually having that.

Gene

Right. And that's my point is you're, you're, you're stepping on the the main point here, which is that as much as people have portrayed it as something scary in the future we sure as hell seem to be enjoying moving through. It actually happening. Like there, there is no, there's no pushback or very little to pushback. I mean, basically it's just like Tim. Pool telling everyone to get married and have kids versus the rest of the world saying, don't bother. And

Ben

I think there's a lot of people saying

Gene

well he's the main voice that I'm hearing on this topic, but it, it's a, it's something that people seem to have been afraid of for hundreds of years or if not thousands, but nonetheless are completely, don't want to do anything to prevent it from happening. And, and you're right, he's not the only one. Peter Zion's been on the march to repopulate the world by not doing it himself.

Ben

Yeah, there's a, yeah. There's quite a few voices

Gene

By the way, I think he's actually bi. I don't think he's actually gay, cuz

Ben

Why do you say that?

Gene

I have heard him flirting with chicks.

Ben

Okay.

Gene

I watch way more of his videos than you do clearly.

Ben

Clearly. Anyway, the you know, there, there are plenty of voices out there. The Hoover Institute had some people talking about the demographic collapse, which I'll send you the video there. There's been, there've been

Gene

I think you talking about the one from last year. I think I've seen that one.

Ben

Maybe there have been plenty of people calling both academically and religiously for people to, you know, we, we need to stay above replacement rate. If we don't want to go the way of Japan. And luckily in the US we have fairly decent demography

Gene

with the US though, and this is something Zhan and I agree with, is that if you subtract out the illegal and illegal, which is a bigger chunk, immigration out of the US we're absolutely crashing.

Ben

Well, and a large portion of that is also right now with this trans stuff where people have pointed out you know, we, we went from body dysmorphia being less than a fraction of a percent of the population and almost entirely male to generation Z. Hitting around, well, no, it's not that high

Gene

No, that's what, that's what the stats say.

Ben

The stat

Gene

of Gen Z say that they have body dysmorphia right now.

Ben

Well, okay. Depends on how you classify it.

Gene

haven't had surgery, if that's what you're

Ben

Okay. So if you're saying the they thems and the queer identity and all that, sure. But actual Female to male, male to female, that sort of thing where it's defined and really going down the hormone blocker route and everything else. It's around eight and a half to 10%.

Gene

Which is still way too high.

Ben

well, and here's the other thing. It's almost entirely female, which is not historically what this actual disorder was. It was almost all male. In fact, other than Buck Angel, there were literally just n, the amount of male to female versus female to male is thousands to one under natural conditions.

Gene

And, and I think part of it too, if you look at it like, who wants to be a girl? Right now, you look at all the, all the trophies that women have been winning for the last couple years. They've all been won by men, miss Universe the swimming, the weightlifting, the wrestling, like all the top athletes in the world, all the top women athletes in the world are all men. So, yeah, I mean, with that kind of pressure, It would seem that you, you'd be better off to be a man, wouldn't it?

Ben

Yeah. Well, what I think is that fe women and people are gonna probably roast me on this, but women are far more susceptible to, especially teenage girls, are far more susceptible to social contagion than anyone else.

Gene

Yeah. Do that name, bend that camera, or something like that.

Ben

Dude named ben.com. Yes. And it's just a thing, whether it was bulimia or anorexia or cutting or whatever the contagions have been throughout history. It happens and it happens for a while. And then the next one comes up. The problem with this particular social contagion that it is, is when you have a large number of girls going on puberty blockers or hormone replacement, they are sterilizing themselves.

Gene

Yeah,

Ben

Same thing with men. The problem is men one dude can follow a bunch of kids through a bunch of different checks

Gene

but let's, let's face it though, we don't need as many men as women.

Ben

cor That's my point. And when you are talking about. A already going to be small generation in Gen Z. And then you have, let's say 5% of the girls end up sterilized because of this.

Gene

Mm-hmm.

Ben

That's a massive reduction in the next generation that it would otherwise produce

Gene

Absolutely.

Ben

It's a much larger impact.

Gene

Well, and you combine that with the, the decline in religion and the decline in,

Ben

likelihood to calf kids and everything else, it's just a snowball trend that's coming

Gene

So the people that do have kids are gonna have one kid.

Ben

maybe. We, we, I'm seeing some, you know, I'm seeing quite a bit of push out there. There's a documentary about childlessness that's pretty good and how women have been lied to, and that, you know, the, the, the statistics that I found that I, I had no clue on that was just shocking to me is if. A woman does not have a child by the time she is 30,

Gene

Yeah.

Ben

she is not likely to,

Gene

Yeah.

Ben

which is astonishing. But anyway,

Gene

true.

Ben

And it's not just about fertility, it's about finding people and everything else. There's a lot of information coming out about how hormonal based birth control screws up women's preferences. They don't care about masculine traits as much when they're on hormone based birth control. Their sexual preferences change and deviate because of it. There's lots of things. You know, the millennials, my generation, it's going to be interesting to see how many kids we have because the millennials are the second biggest generation. And we've got, you know, we've got one shot to really save this demographically. And that's, that's happening right now.

Gene

and way more percentage of millennials are living in the gig economy than of previous generations,

Ben

Right. And I mean,

Gene

a gig economy.

Ben

between my wife and I, we've had four, you know, we've had four kids, so we are doing our job. Others need to do theirs.

Gene

Yeah. Yeah. It's It's gonna be interesting. I won't give a shit cuz I'll be dead. But it's gonna be interesting to see what kind of impact this has. And this is where I think China is better positioned to deal with this than the US is because that's command economy.

Ben

Yeah, but

Gene

they can actually do things like the government importing wives and having a government run structure built specifically around having kids.

Ben

That's not how that's gonna work though, because even if they import wives and so on, I, first of all, I, I just don't think that's gonna work because you still have such an inverted pyramid of demographics. The only, the, now this is something China could do to save its economy and that's enforce a mandatory euthanasia program

Gene

Yeah. Mandatory retirement.

Ben

no, no, no euthanasia.

Gene

No. Well, it's not gonna be called that. It'll be called retirement.

Ben

Okay. But literally what they would need to do is kill off huge swaths of the old people in order to not

Gene

I don't see a problem with that. I mean, they already know what to do with Covid.

Ben

Yeah. Well, anyway the, the question also becomes,

Gene

but I'm just saying they're a much better positioned to do it than the US is. While the US did surprise everybody, I think certainly surprised me into how compliant people were into clearly illegal government actions. When, when people start realizing the government's actually shutting people down and, and making them forcibly retire out of this particular life I think that that is gonna create an uprising that's not gonna be limited to Texas. It's gonna be. Across the entire country in China. That will create some resentment for sure, and there'll be some protests, but in the grand scheme of things, they could get away with it a lot better than the US could.

Ben

Hmm. Well, you know, we will, we will see what ends up happening. I think there are limits to what the Chinese can do because I think that, you know, they have a control. But I, I, I, I don't know if they can really. Push it. I mean, Lindsey Graham was talking about blockading China's access to mid, mid east oil. That would be an act of war, but I think it would be an act of war that, you know, a lot of people might be okay with.

Gene

Well, a lot of people clearly want to have the nukes take care of the problem rather than any other means.

Ben

I don't know. Did you did you happen to see Vic's speech at,

Gene

you sent it to me, but I have not read it. No.

Ben

so you, you really need to watch Vic's speech at the nra. It's only about 17 minute speech. It is well worth well worth listening to. He's, in my opinion, on fire the entire time and he made a great su suggestion on how we How we handle Taiwan.

Gene

Mm-hmm.

Ben

And his, he, his suggestion was working with the government of Taiwan and shipping the Taiwanese citizens weapons and arming the citizenry and letting it be, huh

Gene

gonna do shit.

Ben

Okay.

Gene

Yeah. They're gonna trade those weapons in for food. The only real solution that we have to Taiwan not becoming part of China, which is almost a notable, it's just a question of when is if Taiwan petitions the United States to become a 51st state? And then the United States approves of that. Essentially we do with Taiwan, what they're trying to do with Ukraine and Europe. Make Ukraine officially part of the U and then it's Russia versus the U instead of, versus Ukraine, a country. If we make Taiwan a 51st state, then it's China against the United States

Ben

I mean, we could just make it a protectorate,

Gene

no, that ain't gonna, that's

Ben

class as Puerto Rico.

Gene

It's, but it's maybe the same class, but no one's looking at absorbing Puerto Rico right now. And if they were, I guarantee you that'd be a, a big movement towards making it a state. It, it, it sends a very different message to when, like, the world has a history of seeing what happens when you attack a state of the United States. Even one that's freshly minted like Hawaii. What happens is retaliation in a massive scale, nuclear weapons that, that is not the same message that would be sent by a territory.

Ben

you, when, when was the state of Hawaii attacked?

Gene

Well, Pearl Harbor, so what? 41.

Ben

Yeah. State Hawaii didn't become a state till 59. Dude.

Gene

Oh really?

Ben

only a protector at, at the time.

Gene

Okay. Well nevermind that whole theory

Ben

See, you made my

Gene

we're, apparently we would go after the protecting a territory as well. I don't know. I I just think that

Ben

Sorry, I just,

Gene

No, you're right,

Ben

going a newly when I'm like,

Gene

yeah, it wasn't a state yet. That was totally not a state. So what the fuck? That was just a stupid move by the Japanese.

Ben

Actually it was their only possible move to

Gene

instead bomb, like, you know, one of the other US territories out there?

Ben

it was about the naval base,

Gene

Yeah.

Ben

which, you know, in a, in a way actually because we had the manufacturing capacity, we did they basically cleared out the Deadwood for us.

Gene

Mm-hmm.

Ben

So yeah.

Gene

Hmm. Yeah, I don't know. I guess it's, I just think things are so different with. With the world right now that, and I know that you, you and Darren are both on the other side of this argument. I just think navy's irrelevant right now when you have missiles that can fly halfway around the world. Navy is completely unnecessary except for submarines. S

Ben

I,

Gene

are extremely expensive. They're basically floating targets full of people that can all be killed with one hit.

Ben

but they can't.

Gene

Well, they can absolutely,

Ben

Oh.

Gene

the, the, if you look at the missiles that have been flying over Ukraine, and when that missile hits it, it takes out an artillery piece or a tank and if, if it's fired at a building, it'll take out a good chunk of that building. Those are fairly cheap missiles that have been Do you know, over 20,000 of them shot one of those missiles. Not anything fancier hitting the side of a ship, sinks the ship.

Ben

Yeah. So just just to point out in I think it was what, 2005? Which, what class was that? Kitty Hawk. So yeah, 2005 U the US San, the aircraft carrier America in the Atlantic Ocean. It was a Kitty Hawk class aircraft carrier as part of the development of the Ford class, and it took over four weeks to sink a Kitty Hawk class carrier, which the Nimitz and the Ford are presumably better. This includes torpedoes, everything else, multiple direct hits you know, missiles, bombs, everything. So short of a nuke. Yeah, you're not taken outta aircraft carrier with one hit.

Gene

Yeah. Or you could just say that shows the ineptitude of the Americans to actually sing something.

Ben

It was literally deco. Dude. I think you're un you're overestimating the ability. An aircraft carrier is an extremely hardened thing. It is not lightly armored. And not only that, you're assuming that the entire air wing isn't capable of intercepting something before it gets there. You're assuming that the missile defense systems on the aircraft carrier and its fleet of ships around it, cuz it's a carrier group, can't take out

Gene

Dude, I, I play this awesome simulator called The World of Worships, and I can definitely tell you that even the a wing with a dozen ships is not capable of taking out air attacks. It, it's a, it's a numbers game. One side has humans, the other side has missiles. Which side would you rather be on?

Ben

So both sides have missiles?

Gene

Yeah. Except one side doesn't have a navy. So what are you gonna shoot at those missiles? You're gonna have land targets. The other side has a navy and you're gonna sink that first

Ben

How are you gonna sink it without a

Gene

the missiles. Wow. You gonna sink it?

Ben

Okay, so you're gonna fire a missile from several hundred miles away.

Gene

No, I'm gonna fire a hundred missiles at the same time.

Ben

Okay, fine.

Gene

And out of that, let's say only 5% make it.

Ben

Yeah,

Gene

Yeah. Okay. There, there's one of two aircraft carriers dead.

Ben

No. Read about the Kitty Hawk.

Gene

Mm-hmm.

Ben

Read about the Kitty Hawk class carrier, the, or the America, the Kitty Hawk class carrier that they sunk, and the amount of ordinance it took and the amount of time it took to sink it without any human repair crews or anything else going on, on deck. So, no, I, I think that, and look at the aircraft carriers in World War II that were far less survivable than what we have today. They were not easy to sink.

Gene

Yeah. And we didn't have the munitions in World War II that we do now.

Ben

Our munitions haven't really advanced short of nukes.

Gene

They have tremendously the no, they're, they're using plasma. They're not using they're, they're literally melting through metal. They're, they're not using

Ben

So the Tungston Penetrators and things like that,

Gene

fertilizer.

Ben

the explosives technology has not changed. Now you can talk about penetrators and things like that and so on, but again, that's. A a fairly narrow

Gene

Okay, so here we go. First of all, you, you know about the effects of a what do you call those? The something barrack bomb you know what I'm talking about, right?

Ben

Like the Moab,

Gene

Yeah. Like the Moab, right? So first of all, that just kills everybody by ripping their lungs apart, right? So it's not a super fast death. It's not like being right underneath a nuke, but it is very guaranteed. With you. If you're within the radius, you all you need is one of those on an aircraft carrier and literally every human on that ship is dead.

Ben

Again, sealed compartments. That's not necessarily true.

Gene

Okay. Sealed

Ben

we, we

Gene

It's not necessarily true, but we'll see.

Ben

Okay. We very well may. See that's the scary part.

Gene

I'm just getting sick and tired of people not believing me. I'm all forcing it at this point. I'm like, you fuckers. You need to see exactly what I'm talking about. Demonstrated

Ben

Okay. Anyway,

Gene

remote detonating. Technology will always win. You wouldn't the, the thing is you need people to capture territory on land.

Ben

Mm-hmm.

Gene

You don't need people to capture territory et sea for submarines.

Ben

Yeah. Again the problem you that China has is that they import pretty much fucking everything to survive,

Gene

Mm-hmm.

Ben

and they don't have the Navy to guarantee those supply lines. That's where a Navy is

Gene

Okay. Peters ahan.

Ben

It's not Han saying that it's the freaking facts, dude,

Gene

Yeah.

Ben

you, you go put one aircraft carrier group in the Straits of Malka and China is done. And what are they gonna do about it?

Gene

We'll find out.

Ben

Also on, on the currency bit. It's gonna be interesting to see what happens there as well.

Gene

Yeah. Well, and that's the other option, right? Is that technically. China, which historically plays the long game. They don't need to invade Taiwan. They just need to keep enough pressure

Ben

So where does this notion of China playing the long game come

Gene

China's always played the long game.

Ben

No, they haven't.

Gene

8,000 year old history of the country.

Ben

Yeah. History of multiple different empires and countries. And this is something that you have to remember, is that China is not a uniform group. It is an empire of different states cobbled together under a totalitarian rule.

Gene

every other empire,

Ben

Yeah.

Gene

it's how you,

Ben

they haven't been around very long. And you can't equate former dynasties and things like that to the ccp. Especially not Xi Ping, who

Gene

is absolutely a dynasty.

Ben

he is a dynasty, but he has collapsed all power into himself.

Gene

Yeah.

Ben

Yeah. And we'll see how

Gene

Annie's a good friend of Donald Trump.

Ben

So that's fine by me.

Gene

Did you hear Trump's interview with?

Ben

did with, with Carlson. Yeah. In fact, I think I sent you that

Gene

G g nice, really smart, super bright guy.

Ben

I fully believe it, but I don't care how smart you are taking full control of a country and basically everything running through you, and no one really having authority to do anything other than the will of the dictator.

Gene

is sold the correct way to do it. If I was a dictator of a country, that is exactly the way I would do it.

Ben

But here's the thing,

Gene

Trump who

Ben

you can't be right a hundred percent of the time if you're not right a hundred percent of the time. Those mistakes will have far greater consequences than if you had a distributed system of

Gene

Yeah, I

Ben

which is why, which is why communism ultimately will fail always cuz

Gene

Communism will fail, but not because of that Communism fails because it, it

Ben

doesn't work.

Gene

it's a system where people's personal interests are at odds with communism.

Ben

Because of human nature.

Gene

in,

Ben

cannot work

Gene

Yeah. Well, communism works in, you know, in small small sizes. It works like a family,

Ben

Sure.

Gene

a family size unit can be a communist. It kind of is. Your kids don't really produce anything, but yet you give'em shit.

Ben

They produce lots of things.

Gene

Mm. I don't know about that.

Ben

Trust me, the durge diaper supply around here is very

Gene

Yeah. Yeah. That's the kind of shit that you don't, they produce shit, but they don't produce shit that's valuable. Bum pump. So,

Ben

They themselves are value, though. So that, that's the thing about having Is it, it's a very long-term investment.

Gene

for not necessarily a payoff

Ben

you know, I, I. When I am old and invalid, like some people, I won't have to pay strangers to take care of me.

Gene

Yeah. It's at least it's the hope, but your kids just likely hate you for whatever reason.

Ben

I would hope not.

Gene

You would hope not, but there's no guarantee of it. So my my point is simply that when you have a system where you're willing to do stuff and include your kids in the bounty that comes in, but even if you don't get anything back out of it, like that's the form of communism. And I think at that size, it, it can work. You could, you could make arguments saying, well, I'm actually only doing this because I think my kids will take care of me in the future. Oh, you can say that, but really, that's just a hope. That's not, you know, it's not an actual trade. You don't, unless you have a contract with your kids that say, Hey, by the way, Billy, I'm providing you food today. And in trade for that, you're gonna change grandpa's diapers or your dad's diapers when he's in his seventies.

Ben

Yeah, so what I would say there is, again, communism. I will seed to you that, okay, if you wanna call a family communism, that it will work at that level as soon as you add in another family. I think it breaks down

Gene

I agree. And I think the more people you add, the, the less possible it is. It's an, it's an inverse relationship to the number of people involved because it effectively requires that everybody be willing to to be, what's the opposite of selfishness? I don't even know what that word is.

Ben

egalitarian.

Gene

Okay, there you go. Yeah. It requires everybody to be that. And as disgusting as that may be that is what actual communism is going to need. And that's why there's really no communist countries never has been in the world. There are communist ideas, but there have never been a large communist organizations because people's nature gets in the way and people's nature is the opposite of egalitarian. It's actually very much in the self-interest.

Ben

Yeah, then you end up with the looters.

Gene

Yeah. And so you can't call it communism. I mean, you can't certainly, but it's not quite accurate to call China's the U S S R Cuba, any of these dictatorial countries as communists because while they may espouse communist ideas, their actions are certainly not communist.

Ben

Yeah, so this is the idea that communism has never, that that wasn't real communism. Communism hasn't really been tried

Gene

it's been tried and it's failed every single time because it doesn't work in a large group.

Ben

because the very notion, yes, so let, let's, but let's not say it's not communism. It is communism. It's communism with humans, and guess what, until there aren't any humans

Gene

it, no, it's not. It's, it's not really communism because if the humans are pretending to be communists, it's not really communism.

Ben

it's communism.

Gene

It's kind of like, you know, being, being around a, a group of people that call themselves Christians but are for abortion and have rainbows and you know, kid trans kid whatcha you call it, shows

Ben

Hey, there's a church in Denton like that.

Gene

That's not a fucking church.

Ben

No, it's not.

Gene

not a church. That's what I'm saying about

Ben

well, I mean, it may be a Satanist church, but I wouldn't call'em Christian.

Gene

No, but, so just cuz they call themselves Christian doesn't mean that they're actually Christian. Just like China can call itself communist. Doesn't make it actually communist.

Ben

But it, it, it doesn't call itself coming. It's, it's a republic, the Republic of China.

Gene

Yeah. It's the People's Republic of China.

Ben

Yep.

Gene

So it sounds like a you know, sounds like a, a corporation to me, actually.

Ben

Anyway. Did you watch the wifis this Thursday?

Gene

No. I, I did not. I was busy. I know. It's something that I've been posting a lot of. Did you watch'em?

Ben

Yeah, I did. It's eh, an eh

Gene

It was in the air. Okay. And this was on vampires or what

Ben

No, it was on exorcism.

Gene

Oh, that's right. Exorcist. Yes.

Ben

No.

Gene

So not as good as some of their previous ones.

Ben

The ones that I think he does the best on are really the

Gene

The government one. Yeah.

Ben

I do like heckle fish, by the

Gene

Oh, heckle fish is fucking awesome, man. He's great.

Ben

It's funny.

Gene

Yeah. I, I, I didn't get why he has to be a fish, but I've kind of gotten used to him,

Ben

Yeah.

Gene

Even though his mouth is upside down. I don't think the guy's animating him. I've ever have seen a real goldfish. But

Ben

I don't think it matters, dude.

Gene

I know it matters to me. I just, I, I prefer accuracy in my anatomics even with talking

Ben

It's an

Gene

Talking fish,

Ben

talking fish.

Gene

yes. That's why I never got into SpongeBob, but just

Ben

Oh

Gene

aren't square.

Ben

yeah. Yeah. You know, all I can tell you is, you know, my kid, I, I, I've let him watch some SpongeBob and I've forgotten how weird and stoner esque that show is.

Gene

I've heard that. I've never actually watched it, but I've seen clips obviously, but I,

Ben

it is a, it's right up there with Ren and Stimpy level of weird, but not quite as gross.

Gene

Well, rather than Stimpy was just a kind of a Tom and Jerry Takeoff.

Ben

Yeah, but very Ren and Stimpy was not child appropriate when when it came out?

Gene

I'm trying to remember. I think that was an M T V when it first

Ben

No, it was Nickelodeon.

Gene

Was that The Odeon Really? Holy shit. That is surprising. Well, there are a bunch of

Ben

So was SpongeBob. So,

Gene

What?

Ben

so was SpongeBob.

Gene

Oh, yeah, yeah. That was on the Colonial.

Ben

Yep.

Gene

Well, at least that pretends to be more of a kid show.

Ben

Yeah.

Gene

But yeah, all these things are, I mean, I think if I was gonna have a kid watching cartoons, I would just get'em started on South Park and just stick to that.

Ben

Oh my God. Yeah. So I, I definitely, the older cartoons is is a thing. We've, we, we, we are very wary of what new cartoons are being watched just because of all the current issues.

Gene

So you watching like Carmen San Diego?

Ben

I, Hey, I, I did watch that as a kid, actually.

Gene

Mm-hmm.

Ben

We're in the world. Yeah. Yeah, we've he watches my, both my kids watch Dora. Some yeah. Peppa Pig is Elizabeth's favorite.

Gene

heard of that one.

Ben

It's a British one.

Gene

Oh, that figures.

Ben

It's been around for a while. It's pretty good for the most part. There's a couple episodes we skip.

Gene

watching Chinese cartoons?

Ben

I'm sorry.

Gene

Winnie the Poo.

Ben

No, we ha. But anyway, we're, we're, eh,

Gene

I watched winning Depu when I was a kid.

Ben

What's that?

Gene

I watched it when I was a kid winning Depu,

Ben

Well, I never watched

Gene

the original Russian version anyway.

Ben

yeah. I never was a fan of Win the p

Gene

Hmm. Yeah, I kinda appreciated that. He was he had a lot of friends and he liked to eat honey

Ben

Yeah. He and very timid and Oh no.

Gene

but he had it, it was kind of a,

Ben

the little boy's name?

Gene

Don't recall, kind of an incidental character.

Ben

The main character, but, okay.

Gene

Nah, not, not a, I don't know. Well, who do you think is the main character in South Park?

Ben

Stan?

Gene

Carman, obviously

Ben

No,

Gene

Absolutely. The whole show's about Carman.

Ben

no, it's not.

Gene

It is, it is you, you just try watching it with a critical eye. You'll see.

Ben

Okay.

Gene

It's literally the story of Carman and how all these bad friends that he has keep getting him in trouble.

Ben

Jesus. Okay,

Gene

Mm-hmm.

Ben

well, what else we got, Jean? Anything?

Gene

I don't know. I mean, I guess,

Ben

So.

Gene

we did a recording like four days ago, so it hasn't been that long.

Ben

Yeah, I will say that there are a couple other bills in anyone in Texas needs to pay attention to. So there's House Bill 37 32, which is would require voting machines to have a paper trail, a printed paper

Gene

Why don't we just use paper? What's wrong with paper voting?

Ben

I, the Scantron machines make the most sense to me, but anyway.

Gene

That blank piece of paper makes the most sense to me.

Ben

Okay.

Gene

You wanna vote for somebody, you better know their name.

Ben

okay. The other one related to voting, though, it's important 34 49 is related to restricting mail-in voting and requiring some you know, rationale and reasoning for absentee voting.

Gene

have you ever done that

Ben

What?

Gene

mail-in voting?

Ben

No, I always, I always vote in person.

Gene

I haven't either. I've, I've always thought about doing it, but then I, I forget about it until the election day.

Ben

Mm-hmm.

Gene

But it seems like that would actually be a more convenient way to do it.

Ben

Yeah. Well, anyway, if this passes in the state of Texas, you would have to prove that you'll be out of state essentially during that time period.

Gene

Hmm.

Ben

anyway if, if anyone's interested really good way to keep track of this is legi scan L E G I scan.com/texas. You can, they've got some RSS feeds on the bills and things like that,

Gene

Nice.

Ben

so, yep.

Gene

Yeah, I, I don't know the whole voting thing. And so I was, I think I told you I've been having conversations on TM pool's, discord quite a bit lately. Umm, I'm kind of enjoying it cuz I get to be like the oldest guy in there and then I can explain how things actually are to everybody which is surprisingly enjoyable.

Ben

Interesting.

Gene

I was telling somebody about the this, this concept of knowing who you're voting for and people were all like, no one had ever heard of that idea before. They were all surprised.

Ben

Wow. I, yeah, I, I've been on that bandwagon for a very long time.

Gene

Mm-hmm. Yeah. And so it's,

Ben

I, I don't know that I'll go as far as you with a fill in the blank sort of methodology, but I think that removing the d or the R next to people's names would be pretty useful.

Gene

Yep. Ram, remove the deer there. But yeah, I think the, fill in the blank, it's, it's literally the least amount of effort that somebody should make in, in order to cast a vote.

Ben

Well, then you have people's handwriting, then you have people's spelling and

Gene

You type

Ben

Okay, so you type it in. What about, you know, misspellings and so on and so

Gene

They don't count easy. Don't have to worry about'em.

Ben

a lot of people,

Gene

People can't spell it. Correct.

Ben

well, you'd be encouraging politicians to change their name to Smith.

Gene

you would. Absolutely nothing wrong with that.

Ben

The Vic. The Vic Ramaswami would be

Gene

Vi Vic is fucked. He he should be Vic Ram. Vic. Ram. V i c r a m. That's his new name.

Ben

No. Mm.

Gene

Vic Ram Vikram. Vikram there. There you go.

Ben

Yeah.

Gene

just gave him a new name. Yeah, I just think it's a brilliant idea because I thought of it, but also I'm not the first person to think of it. I'm not gonna claim that title. But

Ben

So,

Gene

if you have zero test whatsoever for people to be able to vote,

Ben

mm-hmm.

Gene

then you get what we have right now.

Ben

Well, you know, the Tocqueville real, have you ever read

Gene

No.

Ben

the, the Tocqueville's America?

Gene

No.

Ben

Okay. In there, he, he very much calls out that America will survive only as long as it takes for the people to realize they can vote themselves whatever they want.

Gene

Mm-hmm.

Ben

So,

Gene

That's true of any country, I think. And this is, I mean, you, again, you're mentioning one of the problems with communism is that it, it's the, except it's not voting in what you want. It's using bureaucracy to get what you want and then making sure that nobody can come in through the same door after you're in. And it's just human nature. It's, it's human nature. And in a lot of ways, communist ideas they create a playing field where one side is trying to follow the communist guidelines, if you will. And the other side is just letting human nature do what human nature does. And that's the side that ends up winning.

Ben

Well, I, I, I think a Texas is an order. I think it's what we should do. I think if we get out now, then it will be better for Texas. That said, I think the US in general in Texas, Needs to onshore, onshore, onshore and build out our manufacturing capacity as much as possible, because at the very least, the dollar may not be the reserve currency of the world. But you know what? I don't know what would replace it. I think we're going to a world where there is no such thing as a universal reserve currency. We're going back to imperialism.

Gene

Yeah. Don't disagree with you on that at all. What was the currency of Texas? Was it just Texas dollars or what?

Ben

That's a, actually an interesting question. I, I don't know. I don't know if it was a Texas dollar or if it was a peso.

Gene

well, next time you're in town will, will have to get together. We go out to the Wizard Academy and meet up with the chancellor there whose great great grandfather was on the some denomination of Texas bills during the Texas republic phase.

Ben

Hold on.

Gene

I would hope it's not the Texas peso,

Ben

I'm sorry.

Gene

I hope it's not a Texas peso.

Ben

Why?

Gene

That would just be, that would devalue it immediately.

Ben

No.

Gene

I always like

Ben

the so-called Texas Redbacks.

Gene

the redbacks.

Ben

Yes. And it was dollars.

Gene

was dollars. Yeah.

Ben

Yeah. It was a Texas dollar, but it, they were, they were red.

Gene

would, does it say if they were tied to the US dollar at all or not?

Ben

I would have to do some reading. It wasn't, I don't think,

Gene

Hmm.

Ben

yeah. Anyway. I mean, we could, the Texas dollar could tie itself to the American dollar or not.

Gene

Or

Ben

In fact, I think it would be very smart of us.

Gene

rubble

Ben

Well, no, no, no. And if the Texas wanted to have stable currency tie tower oil.

Gene

Oil. Backed oil. Yeah.

Ben

And anyway, what I, what I see, so I, you know, people are freaking out that, oh, the Chinese you know, are gonna replace us as the reserve currency. I don't see that at all. The, given the history and the way China devalues its currency, you would have to be insane. And I think that Saudi Arabia is gonna be a great experiment. We'll see how long they trade oil in me,

Gene

I haven't bought any remin, but I think probably as if there's a big drop, I'll probably pick them up.

Ben

Okay. Why

Gene

It'll go back up.

Ben

it show me when it has ever done that?

Gene

It just did it in the last couple of years. If you look at the charts, you could see that it does go up and down.

Ben

Okay. Well, I, I think China's facing a lot different problems than you want to acquiesce to. I think their real estate market's gonna be very interesting to see how they try and survive that one with a decreasing population when most of the wealth of the citizenry is tied into real estate.

Gene

Mm-hmm.

Ben

So,

Gene

Well, there'll be folks that are losing money.

Ben

Yeah. And that typically ends up in regime change.

Gene

Not really. I. I don't, I don't see that happening anytime soon.

Ben

Okay.

Gene

got a good, long life ahead of him,

Ben

Maybe

Gene

we'll see what happens. But I just think there's an awful lot of bravado for, for the us which is unfounded

Ben

I don't disagree.

Gene

tempering that bravado and acting in the interest of the citizens of the United States and not in the interest of a bunch of multimillionaires that are running the country right now.

Ben

Yeah. Well,

Gene

Cuz they're all very globalist. They're globalist from a a NeoCon perspective.

Ben

Yeah. I, I, I, I think we are headed towards de-globalization and I think we're going into a multipolar war world 40 and slip there.

Gene

A little bit.

Ben

Yeah. We are going into a multipolar world now. What that multi pol multipolar world looks like. I don't think China or Russia surpasses the US as the hegemon. I think it'll be regional hegemons. I think that China will have its fear of influence, but I think they're gonna butt up against the Japanese and the South Koreans pretty quick. Russia, I think, is going to have its swim

Gene

Korea has a very big problem, which I learned about recently.

Ben

its demographics of, compared to North Korea

Gene

Uhhuh. Exactly. North Korea will way outnumber South Korea within the next 20 years.

Ben

Yeah, the, you know, there's a very big technological disparity there. I think what you're gonna see in South Korea, if the Koreans can quite frankly get over their racism I think you'll see a Dubai slash Singapore esque model of immigration come to Korea.

Gene

Oh, kinda like China.

Ben

Huh?

Gene

Kinda like with China.

Ben

What do you mean with China? China has no immigration.

Gene

no, but that's what China's gonna be doing, is you're gonna be importing wives, workers, everything else.

Ben

Yeah. I don't think China can do that. Who wants to live in that system?

Gene

People that live in Africa.

Ben

Okay.

Gene

Well, who wants to live in the Middle East? People that wanna live in India or don't wanna live in India. I mean, it's like if you look at, there's always places that are worse off than you are, and I don't, I don't care where you are. There's usually some place that's worse off

Ben

Okay.

Gene

You, you got a lot of different places to draw from. The thing that China has that most other countries don't, is they've made a lot of inroads towards trade and infrastructure in everywhere else in the world, not just the place everyone wants to be. So it's not just, you know, relationships with the big European markets or the United States. They have those, but they also have relationships with all the small markets, and I think that will translate into more gains for them.

Ben

Uh uh. I think they're gonna have a real hard time, but we'll just have to see how it

Gene

I think they will have a hard time, but I, I think that the average political pundit out there is completely discounting their ability to be able to do that whatsoever. And I, I think a lot of, there, there is a. Getting to be almost as much sinophobia as there is Russo phobia to where it blinds people from believing that that country can possibly at all win.

Ben

I.

Gene

And I'm not a fan of China. I'm just saying that I'm surprised by how many people are not giving it the the credit that it deserves for having achieved what it has and not more worried about what's gonna be happening in the future. It's, it's almost like we need to do something with China. We need to, you know, go turn off the spigot in China or something. Like, dude, China's gonna be in a position where you literally can't do that in this, this whole, oh, American Navy. American Navy. I'm sick and tired of cuz that's useless.

Ben

Again, if China was a self-sufficient country, sure. But yeah.

Gene

Well, we buy 10 times as much Chinese products as they buy our products.

Ben

True, but China imports its food. China imports its energy. China cannot function without imports. The US can,

Gene

Uhuh no way. This is, this is where I totally disagree as well. There's no way the, the amount of products that don't have a Chinese component in them is probably 1%

Ben

and this is why Onshoring will be critical. But here's the thing. Our food and our energy is produced here. Everything we need

Gene

Yep.

Ben

can be produced here.

Gene

Mm-hmm.

Ben

China cannot say that.

Gene

No, I, I agree. China cannot say that. But my point is that I think when you have a 10 to one imbalance in trade and all trade ceases, the country that is importing 10 times as much product is gonna feel a much bigger pain than the country that's importing one-tenth as much

Ben

Well, we'll see.

Gene

cuz any, anything that approaches a military action between China and the United States for any reason, whether it's, you know, our ships getting a little too close to their shore and then we get into a shooting war, whatever it is, however innocently it starts out there it is ridiculous to think that trade with China is going to keep going while the US is shooting bullets of China.

Ben

No, of course not.

Gene

Trade will all cease. We had slowdowns during covid and store shelves were empty.

Ben

Not of food.

Gene

Oh. Of food. But not because of China, but we don't buy that from them. But the actual shelves that the food is sitting on are made in China.

Ben

yeah. Here, here's the thing, gene. You're right. When you say if war breaks out between the US and China, that there will be no trade with China, the part you're missing is that no one will be trading with China because the,

Gene

completely wrong.

Ben

lanes will be blocked.

Gene

No, they won't.

Ben

What's gonna stop the US from blocking shipping to

Gene

The soon as the US actually blocks shipping, the ships that are blocking the shipping will be sunk

Ben

How?

Gene

with missiles. How many times do they have to say this?

Ben

Please go read a about what it takes to say, get aircraft carrier please,

Gene

God,

Ben

please.

Gene

dude, the US hasn't been in the naval war in a hundred years, almost 80 years. And yet there's this, this myth about American dominance with the navy. You don't need the Navy.

Ben

Okay, well, we disagree. And on that note, I think we can wrap it up.

Gene

All right. Long enough. I think we're about two hours. We'll be back next week. Hopefully. Everything going well and you know.

Ben

as mushroom clouds don't pop up.

Gene

Yeah. And that's the other, the other thing that I think goes without saying is that I think people have an amazingly unrealistic view of the improbability of nuclear war.

Ben

Hmm. I think a limited, so tactical? Sure. Strategic. No.

Gene

This is the cool thing that you can do when you're the, the sole dictator of a country. You don't have to consult with anybody before launching.

Ben

Okay.

Gene

So actions have consequences. And right now a lot of moves are being made with no regard to the consequences. So we'll see what happens, but meanwhile you know, we gotta deal with our own problems here.

Ben

Meanwhile, I'm looking at property in the middle of nowhere Texas to move out to.

Gene

Yeah. And that's, I think, a better place to be. And. As much as I can disagree with you on America being self-sufficient, at least in the short term I can definitely agree that individuals and family units that are communists can totally be self-sufficient.

Ben

Well, I'm gonna work on it.

Gene

All right, well, you enjoy your communism.

Ben

Yep. We'll see you Gene.

Gene

All right. Take care.

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