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Episode 199: “(No) Brains, TrAns, and (Electric) Automobiles”       image

Episode 199: “(No) Brains, TrAns, and (Electric) Automobiles”

S4 E199 · AMATEUR NATION with Lou Santini
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62 Plays3 years ago

THIS WEEK:

*More proof that getting the untested gene experiment for their children could have been a mistake that Amateur Nation continues to ignore.

*Chevrolet: “The Heartbeat of China”.

*Amateur Nation has proof that men and women are the same! In 42 seconds! Via TikTok! Take that, biology!

PLUS:

*On “A la Carte”: Amateur Nation cries wolf, today’s TV remotes suck, and the Top 2 Amateurs-in-Chief continue to one-up themselves with their words.

*On “3 Pro Things”: a “3-for” in the world of auto racing, Amateur Nation gets exposed for hypocrisy—again, and back and neck pain sufferers 

Subscribe on Youtube for 60-second podcast previews every Thursday at 7 a.m. Eastern!: https://bit.ly/3wuyAWq
Watch the parody song: “My Prez” on YouTube! https://bit.ly/3iyNGpb
Watch the video: “30 Things That Are Like Driving a Prius”: https://bit.ly/3glKj7m
Watch the parody commercial: “Teachers Gone Wild!”: https://bit.ly/3TdQSHB
Watch the parody song: “He’s So Stupid (And We Hate That)”: https://bit.ly/3CGNRZa
Watch the parody song: “Oh, Say AOC!”: https://bit.ly/3ET17gc
Watch the parody song: “We Want LA”: https://bit.ly/3MCVcO5

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Transcript

Introduction to Amateur Nation Podcast

00:00:00
Speaker
Warning, the podcast you are about to hear is often based on true events and people.
00:00:06
Speaker
It chronicles the dialogue and actions of random, anonymous, obnoxious, self-entitled, unintelligent, self-centered idiots, attention whores, ignoramuses, dolts, clods, nimrods, douches, weirdos, drama queens, overly sensitive crybabies, and people who think they are better, more important, and special than the rest of us.
00:00:23
Speaker
In one word, amateurs.
00:00:25
Speaker
Amateurs.
00:00:27
Speaker
It's Amateur Nation with Lou Santini.
00:00:30
Speaker
We call attention to and call out the amateurs.
00:00:33
Speaker
The people who are doing life wrong.
00:00:36
Speaker
The speed bumps of life.
00:00:37
Speaker
The people that are in your way every day.
00:00:40
Speaker
The unintelligent, obnoxious, attention-whoring, self-entitled drama queen victim types who chip away at the moments of your life due to no self-awareness, common sense, manners or social skills, and are disturbing the flow of the pros.
00:00:55
Speaker
Hi, Mom.
00:00:56
Speaker
Oh, hey, Lou.
00:00:57
Speaker
Amateur Nation, it's not just a podcast, it's a movement.
00:01:00
Speaker
What have we got here, a fucking comedian?

Personal Anecdotes and Pandemic Views

00:01:02
Speaker
Yeah, you do, and this is episode 199, No Brains, Trans, and Electric Automobiles.
00:01:09
Speaker
Fans first, shouts out to Sherry Fultz and Kim Hill of Tennessee, the grandmother and aunt respectively, of my girlfriend Jessica, who were kind enough to put up with me and have me join them on what is normally a family vacation in Panama City, Florida, where
00:01:23
Speaker
where gas is way cheaper and people have the most freedom and love of America, where we enjoyed sand, surf, and more bacon, donuts, and seafood in one week than I've had in a year.
00:01:32
Speaker
Great weather and sights, of course, but most importantly for me is measuring my time by how much laughter I had.
00:01:40
Speaker
And we had plenty, and I really needed that a lot.
00:01:43
Speaker
So I really appreciate the invite and the hospitality, and I hope we can do it again.
00:01:47
Speaker
Hey, would someone please tell Greg Gutfield to put me on his show and or hire me as a writer?
00:01:53
Speaker
And can you believe we're almost at 200 episodes?
00:01:57
Speaker
It looks like nobody in your family is a rank amateur.
00:02:01
Speaker
Next week, we'll be a special one.
00:02:04
Speaker
Here's what's happening in Amateur Nation.
00:02:06
Speaker
Hit me.
00:02:07
Speaker
Topic number one.
00:02:09
Speaker
Let's talk about a subject that no one is tired of discussing.
00:02:13
Speaker
COVID and vaccines, he said sarcastically.
00:02:15
Speaker
Okay.
00:02:16
Speaker
Okay.
00:02:17
Speaker
having been on this planet 55 years.
00:02:21
Speaker
Besides the climate change hoax and the very closely connected electric vehicle hoax, the COVID and vaccine hoax tops the list as the biggest hoax, but in my opinion is especially egregious because it's also a crime against humanity.
00:02:37
Speaker
That's what puts it at the top of the list of the three hoaxes, because it's also a crime against humanity and
00:02:42
Speaker
And not to make light of the Holocaust, but I feel when it's all said and done, the body count of COVID and vaccines, both of which were created intentionally to harm humans, will be much higher, but hidden, because it will be done over a long period of time, and the method of death certainly isn't as violent, so to speak.
00:03:06
Speaker
Thusly, this hoax should be discussed immediately.
00:03:09
Speaker
Every time new information comes to light, including evidence of the crime of creating the virus and the incredibly faulty and unsafe cure and hoax itself, exposing names and evidence of people complicit in these crimes and also exposing evidence of the aftermath, problems and results of this unconscionable act on the human race.
00:03:35
Speaker
I rarely speak with such hyperbole, but as I said, I've never seen anything like it.
00:03:40
Speaker
The idea that there are people who have no opinion and shrug their shoulders with a, well, what can you do attitude sickens me.
00:03:54
Speaker
Friends of mine, past and present, who act or have acted that way, especially those with children, are a true disappointment.
00:04:05
Speaker
It's lazy.
00:04:06
Speaker
I hate laziness almost as much as I hate being treated with condescension.
00:04:10
Speaker
And the idea that people in my life are so easily manipulated, fooled, and lied to, and worse, are okay with it, as long as they have their Starbucks and their Netflix and they have the lights on still, makes it easier and easier to distance myself from those, I'll just say it, lesser humans.
00:04:34
Speaker
I truly believe Pro Nation is comprised of better people than those in Amateur Nation, and their lives are truly worth more.
00:04:45
Speaker
You've heard the expression, you're too stupid to live.
00:04:48
Speaker
Absolutely applies.
00:04:50
Speaker
Every day, more and more evidence comes to light.
00:04:54
Speaker
Evidence amateur nation chooses to ignore about the ineffectiveness and worse, the harmful and often deadly side effects to those who got the untested gene experiment.
00:05:08
Speaker
Oh, you want yet still more proof that you made the wrong, possibly fatal decision to listen to Anthony Keebler L. Fauci and the WHO and NIH and CDC amateurs?
00:05:19
Speaker
As you wish.
00:05:21
Speaker
But you won't listen.
00:05:22
Speaker
The pros listening to the show, listen, they already know this stuff.
00:05:25
Speaker
They're nodding their head in agreement.
00:05:27
Speaker
Or saying, yeah, I knew that a long time ago.
00:05:32
Speaker
Amateurs won't listen.
00:05:33
Speaker
Everything's a conspiracy unless you see it on TV by people paid off by China and Big Pharma.
00:05:43
Speaker
One of the most impressive voices is from RFK Jr., who mentions how the USA...
00:05:50
Speaker
is only 4.2% of the world's population, yet we have 20% of the global deaths from COVID.
00:05:58
Speaker
And yet, well, you know

COVID-19 Impact: Perspectives and Critiques

00:06:00
Speaker
what?
00:06:00
Speaker
Let him tell you.
00:06:01
Speaker
In our country, all of the things that liberals care about, which is kind of an equal distribution of wealth, was around 30, 40 years of progress thrown out the window.
00:06:13
Speaker
It was a $3.9 trillion, trillion dollar shift in wealth.
00:06:18
Speaker
From the poor and middle class in our country to the super rich, we created 500 billionaires during the lockdowns.
00:06:26
Speaker
It was a war on the poor and a war on children.
00:06:29
Speaker
Blacks suffered 3.6 times the death rate as whites.
00:06:36
Speaker
And, you know, there's other countries, by the way,
00:06:39
Speaker
Our country had the strictest adherence to all of these protocols, including the use of remdesivir, which is enormously toxic and completely, utterly inefficacious.
00:06:49
Speaker
But, you know, it was Tony Fauci's pet drug.
00:06:53
Speaker
We were the only ones that had it for a year.
00:06:56
Speaker
And we, in our country, we have 4.2% of the global population.
00:07:01
Speaker
We had about 18%, almost 20% of the deaths from COVID-19.
00:07:07
Speaker
I was not a success story.
00:07:09
Speaker
We did everything we were supposed to in this country more than any other country except for Australia.
00:07:15
Speaker
And we have the highest body count of any country in the world.
00:07:18
Speaker
The death rate in our country was 3000 people dead from COVID per million population.
00:07:27
Speaker
In Nigeria,
00:07:29
Speaker
which has a 1% vaccination rate and where the entire population basically is on hydroxychloroquine and ivermectin for malaria and river blindness.
00:07:40
Speaker
They had a death rate of 14 people per million population.
00:07:43
Speaker
They didn't even have a pandemic.
00:07:44
Speaker
Yeah, myocarditis wasn't a common occurrence, especially in children.
00:07:49
Speaker
But all of a sudden, there are commercials targeted towards kids for that very tragic, unnecessary condition.
00:07:59
Speaker
Listen to this spot voiced by a very small child.
00:08:02
Speaker
I've been into fashion since I can remember.
00:08:05
Speaker
But one day I had a stomach ache so bad I didn't want to do anything.
00:08:10
Speaker
The team at New York Presbyterian said it was actually my heart.
00:08:13
Speaker
It was severely swollen.
00:08:15
Speaker
Something called myocarditis.
00:08:18
Speaker
But doctors gave me medicines and used machines to control my heartbeat.
00:08:22
Speaker
They saved me.
00:08:23
Speaker
So now I can become the next great fashion designer.
00:08:32
Speaker
Now here is Dr. Peter McCullough speaking about this very thing.
00:08:48
Speaker
It's not true.
00:08:49
Speaker
We have data by Avolio and colleagues from Finland.
00:08:52
Speaker
Before the COVID-19 vaccines, there were four cases for myocarditis per million.
00:08:58
Speaker
It can happen with a parvovirus or another virus.
00:09:01
Speaker
Four per million.
00:09:02
Speaker
The current estimates are now, from a prospective cohort study from Bangkok, Thailand,
00:09:09
Speaker
25,000 cases per million.
00:09:11
Speaker
25,000 cases per million.
00:09:13
Speaker
Yes, Charlie, it's through the roof.
00:09:15
Speaker
Myocarditis at this point in time is due to the COVID-19 vaccines until proven otherwise.
00:09:21
Speaker
I know, amateurs.
00:09:23
Speaker
What does he know?
00:09:25
Speaker
The only doctor that counts is Dr. Fauci, a doctor very few people even knew of until the pandemic.
00:09:31
Speaker
Well, he's an asshole, that's what.
00:09:33
Speaker
Oh, no question.
00:09:34
Speaker
Amateur Nation only trusts doctors they see on the TV.
00:09:39
Speaker
Here's an article from The Defender, colon, Children's Health Defense News and Views.
00:09:47
Speaker
This article was entitled Criminal Neglect, CDC Knew COVID Vaccine Could Cause Myocarditis in Young Males Months Before Telling the Public.
00:09:59
Speaker
Here it is.
00:10:01
Speaker
Two months after COVID-19 vaccines were rolled out to the U.S. public, a statistically significant vaccine safety signal for myocarditis in males age 8 to 21 was
00:10:11
Speaker
appeared in the Centers for Disease Control's Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System, also known as VAERS.
00:10:18
Speaker
But CDC officials waited another three months before alerting the public, according to a new study.
00:10:24
Speaker
The study, called Delayed Vigilance, a comment on myocarditis in association with the COVID-19 injections by Carl Jablonowski, Ph.D., and Brian Hooker, Ph.D.,
00:10:37
Speaker
was published on October 17th in the International Journal of Vaccine Theory, Practice and Research.
00:10:45
Speaker
The article continues.
00:10:46
Speaker
In an interview with the defender, Hooker, Chief Scientific Officer for Children's Health Defense, said, this important paper shows that a strong, statistically significant vaccine adverse event signal from myocarditis in males 8 to 21 years of age was seen on the VAERS database as early as February 19, 2021, just two months after the release of the COVID-19 vaccine to the U.S. public.
00:11:12
Speaker
Instead of sounding the alarm regarding this signal, CDC officials buried the connection between COVID-19 vaccination and myocarditis until May 27, 2021.
00:11:24
Speaker
By this date, over 50% of the eligible U.S. population had received at least one mRNA COVID-19 vaccine.
00:11:33
Speaker
Withholding this type of information is criminal.
00:11:39
Speaker
I get it.
00:11:40
Speaker
You wanted to protect your kids.
00:11:43
Speaker
You trusted the CDC.
00:11:45
Speaker
But as I mentioned recently on this show, the CDC is a vaccine company, not a public health organization.
00:11:53
Speaker
They make their money in vaccines, not being nice and offering advice.
00:11:58
Speaker
Now here's RFK Jr. again explaining why COVID jabs would be added to the pediatric immunization schedule.
00:12:07
Speaker
They're never going to market a vaccine.
00:12:09
Speaker
people access to a vaccine, an approved vaccine, without getting liability protection.
00:12:16
Speaker
Now the emergency use authorization vaccines have liability protection under the PREP Act and the CARES Act.
00:12:25
Speaker
So as long as you take an emergency use, you can't sue them.
00:12:31
Speaker
Once they get approved, now you can sue them unless they can get it recommended for children.
00:12:56
Speaker
a liability protection.
00:12:58
Speaker
Why aren't you livid, amateurs?
00:13:01
Speaker
Your life and your children's lives are at stake.
00:13:05
Speaker
You were literally lied to and fooled by
00:13:11
Speaker
They committed not only a crime, but the largest crime against humanity since the Holocaust.
00:13:18
Speaker
And I'm in no way downplaying the Holocaust.
00:13:20
Speaker
Just because people weren't rounded up and put into trains at gunpoint doesn't make it less heinous.
00:13:27
Speaker
Why would you think they'd do things the same way?
00:13:30
Speaker
Why can't you wrap your head around the idea that not only does evil live and thrive, but now it's new and improved?
00:13:37
Speaker
Evil is smart, not dumb.
00:13:40
Speaker
Evil is patient, not hurried.
00:13:43
Speaker
Evil is planned, not random.
00:13:46
Speaker
Evil is well-funded.
00:13:50
Speaker
If you got your child vaccinated, get him or her checked for myocarditis.
00:13:55
Speaker
Get out in front of it.
00:13:57
Speaker
And if they're harmed, hire an attorney.
00:13:59
Speaker
Do it today.
00:14:01
Speaker
If you were scared enough about a virus that didn't kill any children, you can be scared enough to drop the hammer on a criminal organization that may have certainly harmed them intentionally and or recklessly.
00:14:12
Speaker
And by the way, if you say, well, it's not all children are people, so it's a fluke.
00:14:16
Speaker
You don't think the powers that be didn't think of that?
00:14:21
Speaker
Seriously, if it harmed everyone or killed everyone instantly or around the same time, yeah, that might raise some suspicion.
00:14:29
Speaker
Just like how everyone who got COVID was indeed affected differently due to different biological makeups.
00:14:35
Speaker
The untested gene experiment worked in the same way.
00:14:38
Speaker
I mean, for example, I've said this before.
00:14:40
Speaker
I cannot take Benadryl.
00:14:41
Speaker
That's an allergy medication.
00:14:43
Speaker
Many people have an allergic reaction to something.
00:14:45
Speaker
They take Benadryl.
00:14:46
Speaker
I cannot.
00:14:46
Speaker
I'm allergic to that.
00:14:48
Speaker
Does that mean Benadryl is bad?
00:14:50
Speaker
Of course not.
00:14:52
Speaker
It means my biology simply doesn't respond well to it, but at least I won't die from it or be stuck with a lifelong condition that will affect the quality of my life.
00:15:02
Speaker
Sidebar, I recently was on vacation, as I said, and I had two flights to get to Florida, two flights coming back.
00:15:10
Speaker
All four airports, of course, I saw amateurs wearing masks, or as I call them, stupid people detectors.
00:15:16
Speaker
And I had no problem walking around the airport with my girlfriend.
00:15:20
Speaker
And as these people would walk by, I'd go, there's one.
00:15:22
Speaker
Oh, there's another one.
00:15:23
Speaker
Oh, there's one.
00:15:25
Speaker
No, I'm calling you out.
00:15:26
Speaker
I'm done.
00:15:28
Speaker
We all, Pro Nation got screamed at and fist-fighted with and assaulted and shamed and kicked off social media because they wouldn't wear the useless mask.
00:15:39
Speaker
I cannot believe that here we are at the time of this podcast, mid-November,
00:15:45
Speaker
By March, we will be three years since the pandemic started in March of 2020.
00:15:52
Speaker
And these people walking around with masks, do they really think, A, I'm safe now?
00:15:58
Speaker
And B, does that also mean I'm willing to go the rest of my life with the lower half of my face hidden?
00:16:08
Speaker
I wouldn't even do this if I was like 90 years old thinking, all right, I'm lucky if I get 10 more years out.
00:16:13
Speaker
Frankly, if I lived to be 90, I'd be like, I've earned the right to take a risk.
00:16:17
Speaker
Like, screw it.
00:16:18
Speaker
What's going to happen?
00:16:19
Speaker
I lived to be 90.
00:16:20
Speaker
I won.
00:16:22
Speaker
They still think germs hit that mask and bounce right off of it like an animal hitting an electric fence.
00:16:32
Speaker
They don't think that germs get in and around those openings properly.
00:16:38
Speaker
They think that the mask is made out of the same material they make bank safes out of as opposed to being porous.
00:16:48
Speaker
They think germs travel directly in a straight line.
00:16:51
Speaker
Well, it's better than nothing.
00:16:52
Speaker
Those are the dumbest people on the planet.
00:16:56
Speaker
They are literally the dumbest people on the planet.
00:16:59
Speaker
And they were from the time they wore those masks.
00:17:03
Speaker
They were from the time when we knew they didn't work.
00:17:07
Speaker
I'll grant you the grace period of the panic that everyone felt, myself included, when the pandemic started.
00:17:13
Speaker
We all thought it was like the movie Contagion or the movie Outbreak.
00:17:17
Speaker
But after everyone calmed down and thought it through and cooler heads prevailed and people who had critical thinking went, hang on a second.
00:17:27
Speaker
After that, all bets are off.
00:17:28
Speaker
You're stupid.
00:17:30
Speaker
You were stupid.
00:17:32
Speaker
And are.
00:17:36
Speaker
Here's another thing I wanted to mention.
00:17:39
Speaker
Let's say you feel like you're about to catch a cold, right?
00:17:43
Speaker
You're a little stuffed up, maybe your nose is running, you're sneezing more, coughing more, you feel a little tingle in your throat.
00:17:48
Speaker
You have that period where, uh-oh, I think I'm catching a cold.
00:17:51
Speaker
You don't feel your lousiest yet.
00:17:53
Speaker
Then you have the part where you are full-fledged having a cold, head stuffed up, coughing, sneezing, chills.
00:17:59
Speaker
Pick one.
00:18:00
Speaker
Then you have the part where you feel like, hey, I think I'm turning the corner.
00:18:03
Speaker
I think I'm losing this cold.
00:18:04
Speaker
I'm past the contagious stage, right?
00:18:08
Speaker
You know, they always say to judge what color your phlegm is.
00:18:11
Speaker
I'm sorry to be gross, but yeah, you realize, all right, I've turned the corner, back to the gym.
00:18:15
Speaker
I'm just got to finish the rest of this out, but you're not contagious to anyone anymore.
00:18:19
Speaker
Okay, the three stages of a cold.
00:18:22
Speaker
You're telling me when it comes to masks,
00:18:27
Speaker
You're still wearing it.
00:18:28
Speaker
But one day, maybe you'll decide, I think I'm done.
00:18:31
Speaker
That's the day you think, I officially am in no danger.
00:18:35
Speaker
And if so, what time of the day?
00:18:37
Speaker
At midnight tomorrow, I'm going to stop wearing my mask and then I'll be in the clear.
00:18:45
Speaker
I saw people in the airport wearing it all through the airport, but then they would take it down to talk on the phone and sit at their gate and have something to eat before they got on the plane.
00:18:55
Speaker
They're still not understanding the complete lack of logic from that.
00:19:00
Speaker
Like, well, I can't get COVID because I'm now sitting down and eating.
00:19:03
Speaker
These are the people that had no problem with wearing a mask from the front of the restaurant to their table and then taking the mask off to eat.
00:19:10
Speaker
These are the people that thought those little plastic shields at the restaurant
00:19:15
Speaker
between the tables was saving their lives.
00:19:18
Speaker
I had a restaurant that I used to love in Los Angeles in Toluca Lake, California called Hungry Crowd.
00:19:23
Speaker
Michael, if you're listening, I still love your restaurant.
00:19:25
Speaker
I talk about it all the time.
00:19:27
Speaker
I felt bad for this guy.
00:19:28
Speaker
He was an independent restaurant owner with some of the best Asian fusion food I have ever had.
00:19:32
Speaker
It was my go-to restaurant when I didn't quite know what I wanted to eat because he had a little bit of everything, right?
00:19:39
Speaker
First time I went there during the plandemic, they didn't have any plastic menus, the laminated menus or the paper menus, whatever he had.
00:19:47
Speaker
Nothing you could hold in your hand.
00:19:48
Speaker
You had to scan one of those barcodes and the menu would pop up on your phone.
00:19:52
Speaker
So let me get this straight, I told him.
00:19:54
Speaker
I can touch the table, the chair, my fork, the plate, the glass that I'm drinking out of, but these deadly menus are things that are killing us, right?
00:20:02
Speaker
And he goes, oh, don't even get me started.
00:20:05
Speaker
But this poor guy was trying to keep his business open, a thriving mom and pop business that was really starting to gain traction.
00:20:11
Speaker
And all of a sudden, you know, way fewer people because everyone in California, especially, they were on full on shutdown.
00:20:18
Speaker
I was telling my friends, my girlfriend, my mom, there was a part where they said, we don't even want you going outside.
00:20:23
Speaker
I would go take a walk in my neighborhood, four-way stop, 25 mile an hour roads, little, you know, sidewalk neighborhood, streetlights, beautiful, safe neighborhood.
00:20:32
Speaker
I remember being on the phone talking to my mom.
00:20:35
Speaker
taking a walk because no one was outside.
00:20:38
Speaker
And there were two women out taking their walks.
00:20:39
Speaker
They were masked up.
00:20:41
Speaker
They were okay standing right next to each other with masks.
00:20:45
Speaker
They were literally catty-cornered, diagonal to me at the street corners.
00:20:49
Speaker
I'm going north, they're going south.
00:20:50
Speaker
I could hear them say, wait, let's see what direction this guy's going.
00:20:54
Speaker
I purposely cut right across the intersection, walked diagonal towards them, and they ran across the street to get away from me.
00:21:00
Speaker
And I had some fun and I went right back to where they were sitting.
00:21:02
Speaker
And they said, you need to give us space.
00:21:06
Speaker
Two grown women, masked up right next to each other, air getting in and out of the sides.
00:21:12
Speaker
I'm 50 feet away, 20 feet away from them, not wearing a mask, outside.
00:21:19
Speaker
And they thought I was going to kill them.
00:21:21
Speaker
Those are the dumbest people on the planet.
00:21:24
Speaker
Masks, especially now, are absolutely stupid people detectors.
00:21:30
Speaker
If you see someone wearing a mask, that person is stupid.
00:21:36
Speaker
No, there's no grace, period, that you're a stupid person.
00:21:40
Speaker
You're a surgeon operating on someone, wearing those surgical grade masks, totally different story.
00:21:46
Speaker
But I don't bend on this.
00:21:48
Speaker
You're stupid.
00:21:49
Speaker
You embarrass yourself.
00:21:51
Speaker
You embarrass the human race.
00:21:53
Speaker
You certainly embarrass me as your friend if I know you.
00:21:55
Speaker
I'm embarrassed to have known you.
00:21:58
Speaker
I'm judging you.
00:21:59
Speaker
Why can't I judge you?
00:22:01
Speaker
The people who fought the masks and the vaccines and spoke out against this COVID hoax.
00:22:07
Speaker
We had 2 million or however many million, 20 million cases of COVID in America, 2,000 cases of the regular flu in one year.
00:22:15
Speaker
You don't find that odd?
00:22:18
Speaker
I can't believe people choose to ignore basic facts, basic logic, basic common sense.
00:22:29
Speaker
And you know, we're not done discussing this on this show.
00:22:32
Speaker
Because as long as new information comes to light, this matter is not closed.
00:22:36
Speaker
Topic number two.

Electric Vehicles: Criticisms and Concerns

00:22:39
Speaker
Now let's talk about one of my real favorite subjects, the electric car hoax.
00:22:45
Speaker
Way back in 2006, there was a documentary called Who Killed the Electric Car?
00:22:50
Speaker
Answer, General Motors.
00:22:52
Speaker
The movie was directed by Chris Payne that explored the creation, limited commercialization, and subsequent destruction of the battery electric vehicle in the United States, specifically the General Motors EV1 of the mid-1990s.
00:23:08
Speaker
I've always hated them, but at the time, people especially, surprise, Hollywood loved them.
00:23:13
Speaker
But you couldn't buy those cars.
00:23:15
Speaker
You could only lease them for what I believe was $500 a month.
00:23:19
Speaker
That's a lot of scratch then.
00:23:20
Speaker
All right?
00:23:22
Speaker
Even now.
00:23:22
Speaker
But back then, you know, mid-90s, $500 a month to lease a vehicle?
00:23:26
Speaker
That was hideous and not well-appointed.
00:23:30
Speaker
It was literally, strictly, point A to B transportation electric car.
00:23:35
Speaker
Well, eventually...
00:23:36
Speaker
General Motors recovered all those EV1s that they had leased and literally sent them to the crushers.
00:23:45
Speaker
No electric vehicles for you.
00:23:46
Speaker
Now get out there and buy gas and oil.
00:23:50
Speaker
Flash forward to today.
00:23:52
Speaker
Same situation, but reversed.
00:23:55
Speaker
What a difference three decades makes, huh?
00:23:58
Speaker
Now here's a reporter asking General Motors CEO, Kristen Zimmerman,
00:24:04
Speaker
where the charging electricity comes from for their new Chevy Volt as she stands in front of a charging station.
00:24:15
Speaker
Keep in mind this woman is a CEO.
00:24:19
Speaker
Her answer?
00:24:20
Speaker
Evasive?
00:24:21
Speaker
Yes.
00:24:23
Speaker
Stupid?
00:24:24
Speaker
Absolutely.
00:24:25
Speaker
Give this a listen.
00:24:26
Speaker
No, the battery in this particular design is a T-shape right down the center and across the backseat area.
00:24:36
Speaker
Because everybody thought we killed the electric vehicle.
00:24:39
Speaker
No, we didn't.
00:24:40
Speaker
It's a lie on the road.
00:24:42
Speaker
So what's charging the batteries right now?
00:24:44
Speaker
What's the source of electricity?
00:24:46
Speaker
Well, here.
00:24:47
Speaker
It's coming from the building.
00:24:48
Speaker
I mean, is it, what's our mix of power?
00:24:51
Speaker
Oh, actually, Lansing feeds the building.
00:24:53
Speaker
What's that?
00:24:54
Speaker
Lansing feeds power to the building.
00:24:56
Speaker
So I don't know.
00:24:58
Speaker
I bet they're a bit of coal.
00:25:00
Speaker
They're heavy on natural gas, aren't they?
00:25:03
Speaker
Her answer to the question to where the electricity comes from for the charging station initially is, well, from here, the building.
00:25:12
Speaker
The same way amateurs think meat comes from the grocery store.
00:25:15
Speaker
She's a CEO of a company, one of the biggest companies on the planet.
00:25:19
Speaker
Now here's the clip again, and this time listen to the correct answer to that question from J. Peter Lark, who works for Lansing Board of Water and Light.
00:25:30
Speaker
No, the battery in this particular design is a T-shape right down the center and across the backseat area.
00:25:40
Speaker
Because everybody thought we killed the electric vehicle.
00:25:44
Speaker
So what's charging the batteries right now?
00:25:49
Speaker
What's the source of electricity?
00:25:50
Speaker
Well, here.
00:25:51
Speaker
It's coming from the building.
00:25:53
Speaker
I mean, what's our mix of power?
00:25:55
Speaker
Oh, actually, Lansing feeds the building.
00:25:57
Speaker
What's that?
00:25:58
Speaker
Lansing feeds power to the building.
00:26:00
Speaker
So I don't know...
00:26:03
Speaker
I bet they're a bit of coal.
00:26:05
Speaker
They're heavy on natural gas, aren't they?
00:26:07
Speaker
Right now the car is charging off of your grid.
00:26:10
Speaker
Right.
00:26:10
Speaker
It would be charging off our grid, which is about 95% coal.
00:26:17
Speaker
Yeah, she says a bit of coal, mostly natural gas.
00:26:20
Speaker
Her answer reminds me of the idiot played by actor Joe Bob Briggs, the man Robert De Niro's character Sam Rothstein hires in the movie Casino.
00:26:30
Speaker
De Niro...
00:26:32
Speaker
hires this guy as a favor, and Joe Bob Briggs' character allows several wins on slot machines to the tunes of tens, maybe hundreds of thousands of dollars, and Robert De Niro's character, Sam, has to fire him.
00:26:48
Speaker
He says, look, either he's stupid and he let it happen, or he's in on it.
00:26:54
Speaker
This CEO either knows the answer is coal that is supplying that charging station and thinks you and the reporters are stupid.
00:27:04
Speaker
Like you're going to go, oh, so the charging electricity comes from this building.
00:27:09
Speaker
No further questions.
00:27:11
Speaker
Which means she's either avoiding the reality and covering up or she's stupid.
00:27:20
Speaker
It's both.
00:27:21
Speaker
Stick spicy food up her butt.
00:27:23
Speaker
Then she has the gall to brag.
00:27:25
Speaker
Everyone thought we killed the electric vehicle.
00:27:28
Speaker
We didn't.
00:27:29
Speaker
No, you just yanked it, buried it for 30 years, then forced people to buy it now.
00:27:35
Speaker
Strike one, two, and three.
00:27:37
Speaker
I will never buy a new electric Chevy.
00:27:40
Speaker
Ever.
00:27:41
Speaker
Not to mention their cars, except for the Corvette, are ugly and boring with poor fit and finish.
00:27:50
Speaker
I'm begging you to subscribe to Lou Santini Entertainment on Facebook and YouTube, where every Thursday is Sneak Peek Thursday with a 60-second video preview.
00:27:59
Speaker
I'm not above begging.
00:28:00
Speaker
I'll totally beg.
00:28:01
Speaker
Also, check me out on Truth Social.
00:28:03
Speaker
I'm just starting to build up my account there.
00:28:04
Speaker
My Truth Social handle is LouSantini3.
00:28:07
Speaker
If you follow me on Instagram, it's Lou.Santini3.
00:28:11
Speaker
On Getter, it's at LouSantini.
00:28:14
Speaker
We have one topic to go.
00:28:15
Speaker
That's number three, and it's next.
00:28:18
Speaker
Hey, pros.
00:28:19
Speaker
Lou Santini here.
00:28:20
Speaker
They're running out and half off.
00:28:23
Speaker
No amateurs, men's and women's t-shirts.
00:28:25
Speaker
Normally $22.95, now just $11.48.
00:28:28
Speaker
The men's tees are a soft, high-quality, pre-shrunk cotton poly blend in sport royal blue.
00:28:33
Speaker
Displaying the no amateurs logo with the waving American flag set at the top.
00:28:37
Speaker
The women's tees are a lightweight, super soft, high-quality, pre-shrunk cotton poly blend in royal blue.
00:28:42
Speaker
blue and are fitted displaying the no amateurs logo with the waving american flag t-shirts just 11 48 please add 6.95 for shipping and handling for all orders inside the u.s spend 50 bucks or more and your shipping is free available at lou santini.com slash shop be a pro say no to amateurs and order your half off no amateurs t-shirt today
00:29:03
Speaker
There's been an odd shift in human behavior over the last 15 plus years.
00:29:07
Speaker
A sense of entitlement.
00:29:08
Speaker
A constant need for attention.
00:29:10
Speaker
Ironically coupled with the need to be left alone.
00:29:13
Speaker
A desire to be treated the same as everyone else.
00:29:15
Speaker
Stupidly combined with the mindset of, I'm special, so treat me accordingly.
00:29:20
Speaker
Introducing the book, Amateur Nation.
00:29:22
Speaker
The Decline of Common Sense, Manners, and Social Skills.
00:29:24
Speaker
The Second Edition.
00:29:26
Speaker
Inside, you'll read...
00:29:27
Speaker
The Amateur Mission Statement.
00:29:28
Speaker
The 30 Truths About Amateurs.
00:29:30
Speaker
The Four Stages of Being an Amateur.
00:29:32
Speaker
Amateur Habitats and History.
00:29:34
Speaker
Social Media plus Me, Me, Me equals Amateur.
00:29:37
Speaker
Technology and Amateur Behavior.
00:29:39
Speaker
With dozens of real funny photos, weird signs, and laugh-out-loud real-life accounts and actual conversations vividly showing how us pros are surrounded by Amateur Nation every day.
00:29:50
Speaker
Download the expanded second edition of the e-book, Amateur Nation, The Decline of Common Sense, Manners, and Social Skills.
00:29:56
Speaker
The second expanded edition, available now.
00:29:59
Speaker
Be a pro.
00:30:00
Speaker
Go to Amazon.
00:30:01
Speaker
Type Amateur Nation.
00:30:02
Speaker
Topic number three.

Trans Identities and Societal Issues

00:30:06
Speaker
For the 80 hundredth time, I could care less who was trans or who identifies with or as what.
00:30:14
Speaker
It's one of the few times I'd actually agree with the trite sentiment, you do you.
00:30:19
Speaker
However...
00:30:20
Speaker
The second, any amateur wants A. Special attention, B. Special consideration, and C. The rest of the world to celebrate them and their delusion, which is what this is, then I'm out.
00:30:35
Speaker
Trans men and or women can scream as loud as possible for as long as they want, but it will never, ever, ever change biology and chromosomes.
00:30:45
Speaker
I said this before and I'll say it again.
00:30:47
Speaker
No, it doesn't make you a bad person.
00:30:50
Speaker
You can feel like you're in the wrong body.
00:30:53
Speaker
You're allowed to be attracted to whomever you want or identify as any sex you want.
00:30:59
Speaker
Doesn't make you a bad person.
00:31:00
Speaker
However...
00:31:01
Speaker
Just because you say something, or in the common case of amateur nation, just because your emotions are so strong about something that is simply not a scientific fact, doesn't make it so.
00:31:15
Speaker
Disclaimer over.
00:31:16
Speaker
Now, let's hear yet another example of an amateur trying to justify their mental illness, mental condition, or delusion.
00:31:24
Speaker
How you label it is up to you.
00:31:26
Speaker
This audio clip from PragerU features what is clearly a man, complete with 5 o'clock shadow, and over-the-top makeup worn in a manner that most women wouldn't wear in an effort to really drive home the point that he feels like he's a woman.
00:31:38
Speaker
In fact, he doesn't feel that he is a woman.
00:31:41
Speaker
He is!
00:31:42
Speaker
But the best part is his rationale, his reasoning, his scientific proof.
00:31:47
Speaker
He says the word proof in his explanation that literally, boys and girls are the same.
00:31:54
Speaker
No different.
00:31:55
Speaker
Now keep in mind, it's 2022.
00:31:58
Speaker
And this average everyday human being with no science background has solved an end of the debate of whether or not boys and girls are different.
00:32:07
Speaker
Decades of hacky comedians who start their bits with, but men and women are different, aren't they?
00:32:12
Speaker
Are now null and void.
00:32:14
Speaker
Centuries of science and medicine eradicated thanks to this TikTok amateur who in 42 seconds,
00:32:23
Speaker
has closed the case, ended the discussion with a mic drop.
00:32:27
Speaker
Oh, and by the way, this man isn't addressing smart adults with fully developed brains and reasoning, but rather chooses impressionable, naive, less intelligent children as his target audience.
00:32:42
Speaker
Hi kids, there's no such thing as a boy or a girl, and I can prove it.
00:32:49
Speaker
Who's usually taller?
00:32:53
Speaker
Oh, boys, okay, but you've met some short boys, right?
00:32:56
Speaker
You met some tall girls, so usually boys are taller, but not always.
00:33:01
Speaker
Okay, who likes the color pink?
00:33:05
Speaker
Girls, okay, but you've met girls who don't like pink, and you met boys who do like pink, so usually girls like pink, but not always.
00:33:16
Speaker
Everything you can think of that makes a boy or makes a girl is usually, but not always.
00:33:29
Speaker
Yeah, except for those pesky chromosomes and DNA.
00:33:32
Speaker
Did you know, cats and dogs are the same animal.
00:33:36
Speaker
Dogs usually have four legs.
00:33:38
Speaker
So do cats, but not always.
00:33:41
Speaker
Dogs usually have tails.
00:33:43
Speaker
So do cats, but not always.
00:33:45
Speaker
Dogs usually have fur.
00:33:48
Speaker
So do cats, but not always.
00:33:50
Speaker
Dogs sometimes have testicles.
00:33:52
Speaker
So do cats, but not always.
00:33:55
Speaker
Crap, there comes that pesky DNA again.
00:33:58
Speaker
I've heard amateurs on social media videos saying, but that's dogs and cats, not people.
00:34:03
Speaker
A dog or cat can't feel like the opposite sex or act like a different animal.
00:34:08
Speaker
If only animals could talk.
00:34:11
Speaker
Wait, what about furries?
00:34:13
Speaker
Well, we're waiting.
00:34:17
Speaker
Okay, okay, let's get back on track.
00:34:19
Speaker
I think, no, I know, we've placated and humored amateur nation long enough with this nonsense.
00:34:26
Speaker
And more importantly, why do only few people, by that I mean those in pro-nation, find this mental illness alarming?
00:34:34
Speaker
Why don't more people find this worldwide delusion and or mental illness or mental condition more alarming?
00:34:43
Speaker
People think mental illness is only bad if a person harms oneself or others or they're sad or angry all the time.
00:34:50
Speaker
Amateurs see trans people posting happy TikTok videos and marching proudly and think, well, they seem to be happy, so what's the problem?
00:34:56
Speaker
It doesn't affect me.
00:34:57
Speaker
No, their right to exist as trans does indeed not affect you directly, but again...
00:35:03
Speaker
Once they demand special privileges, special holidays, special treatment, special consideration, and most importantly, when their beliefs and ideologies are preached, propagandized, and target impressionable underage children as truth, those children who absorb everything they hear as truth, then it's a problem.
00:35:24
Speaker
When men are in women's locker rooms naked, it's a problem.
00:35:28
Speaker
When men are demolishing women in sports and taking away hard-earned athletic scholarships, it's a problem.
00:35:34
Speaker
When people are hired simply because they are trans and not because they're qualified for a job or they're put in powerful positions because they simply are trans, it's a problem.
00:35:46
Speaker
When trans people are being introduced into society as a third sex, it's a problem.
00:35:52
Speaker
When trans people can infect underage children's minds with their delusion as a way to make themselves feel okay with their situation, it's a problem.
00:36:02
Speaker
What is particularly alarming in this audio clip from this Dr. Kerry McGregor, a psychologist of gender multi-specialty service at Boston Children's Hospital saying that kids know they're trans from the womb.
00:36:20
Speaker
Amateur Nation argues that a baby in the womb is, quote, a clump of cells, yet a baby in the womb can affirm their gender?
00:36:28
Speaker
Here's the audio.
00:36:29
Speaker
So most of the patients that we have in the GEMS clinic actually know their gender, usually around the age of puberty.
00:36:34
Speaker
But a good portion of children do know as early as seemingly from the womb.
00:36:38
Speaker
And they will usually express their gender identity as very young children, some as soon as they can talk.
00:36:43
Speaker
They might say phrases such as, I'm a girl, or I'm a boy, or I'm going to be...
00:36:47
Speaker
a woman or I'm going to be a mom.
00:36:49
Speaker
Kids know very, very early.
00:36:51
Speaker
So in the Jens Clinic, we see a variety of young children all the way down to ages two and three and usually up to the ages of nine.
00:36:58
Speaker
When they come into the clinic, they'll see one of our psychologists and we'll be talking to them about
00:37:03
Speaker
their gender.
00:37:04
Speaker
We'll be talking to their family about how to best support that child and how to make sure that that child has the space and support to explore their gender and do well throughout their development.
00:37:15
Speaker
And we'll be answering any parent questions.
00:37:17
Speaker
A lot of parents do have questions, and so we answer those questions.
00:37:20
Speaker
The biggest piece of advice I give parents who are coming through the gender clinic at Boston Children's Hospital is to just be supportive.
00:37:27
Speaker
Sometimes you might not understand, sometimes you feel like you don't know the terms, or you don't
00:37:32
Speaker
get exactly what the child means when they say that they might be this gender but the biggest thing you can do is just love your child and support them and just allow them to express themselves that's the biggest protector as well against negative mental health effects such as depression suicidality anxiety that we worry about for our gender diverse kids and young adults so that support from a parent is one of the best protective factors and one of the best things they can do
00:37:58
Speaker
Why would a child as young as two be at a hospital talking to a psychologist?
00:38:02
Speaker
Answer, bad parenting.
00:38:04
Speaker
Just because a child says, I'm a girl, or I'm a boy, or I'm going to be a mom, doesn't mean they know anything about themselves.
00:38:14
Speaker
Or what it means to be a man, a woman, a mom, a dad, a father, a mother.
00:38:20
Speaker
Many children say they're going to marry their mommy or daddy too.
00:38:24
Speaker
The first profession I wanted to be was a professional frisbee player.
00:38:27
Speaker
Not to mention I've been around babies and small children all my life and never once have I heard a child utter such phrases or hear that they did from their parents.
00:38:36
Speaker
This falls under that category you hear parents all the time.
00:38:39
Speaker
You just need to listen to their children.
00:38:40
Speaker
They can teach you so much.
00:38:42
Speaker
Children can't teach you shit.
00:38:44
Speaker
Got it?
00:38:45
Speaker
Said the guy who doesn't even have any kids.
00:38:48
Speaker
You know how I know?
00:38:49
Speaker
I was a kid once and I never once had my parents say, I never knew that.
00:38:53
Speaker
I learned so much from you today, son.
00:38:55
Speaker
Never happened.
00:38:57
Speaker
Parents know more than kids.
00:38:58
Speaker
Case closed.
00:39:00
Speaker
That's it.
00:39:01
Speaker
You want to learn about your kids?
00:39:03
Speaker
Sure.
00:39:04
Speaker
Listen to your children.
00:39:06
Speaker
Spend time with them.
00:39:07
Speaker
Talk to them.
00:39:09
Speaker
With them.
00:39:09
Speaker
And sometimes, yeah, parents, at them.
00:39:15
Speaker
Notice how this alarming information is softened by the trite, obvious advice of just love and support your child.
00:39:27
Speaker
Just be supportive.
00:39:28
Speaker
Translation, don't question anything.
00:39:30
Speaker
Just let them express themselves, take whatever they say as gospel, law, and rule.
00:39:36
Speaker
The same rationale amateur parents have when their child throws a temper tantrum on a crowded airplane or at a restaurant that I just witnessed many times traveling.
00:39:44
Speaker
Also note how they admit that suicidal thoughts and or depression are components of this delusion.
00:39:50
Speaker
Shouldn't that be the focus of the parents?
00:39:52
Speaker
Address that issue first.
00:39:56
Speaker
By the way, this video has now been deleted by the hospital.
00:40:02
Speaker
Here's friend of the show, Chad Jackson, posting on Twitter.
00:40:05
Speaker
He says, Perfectly said.
00:40:27
Speaker
You can't embrace the absurd while claiming to have values.
00:40:31
Speaker
You can be tolerant of the absurd.
00:40:34
Speaker
You can ignore the absurd.
00:40:35
Speaker
You can be okay with the absurd.
00:40:39
Speaker
But while you embrace it, you cannot say that you have values.
00:40:45
Speaker
You can't sit there and say, you have to love everyone.
00:40:47
Speaker
No, you don't.
00:40:49
Speaker
Who says?
00:40:50
Speaker
Hallmark?
00:40:51
Speaker
You saw it on a poster?
00:40:52
Speaker
You saw it on a meme?
00:40:54
Speaker
You don't have to love anybody if you don't want to.
00:40:58
Speaker
You have to have standards, amateurs.
00:41:01
Speaker
ProNation has standards.
00:41:05
Speaker
You cannot embrace the absurd while claiming to have values.
00:41:12
Speaker
That goes along with my sentiment of how sad and disgusted it makes me when I see friends and associates, who I earlier respected as moral people with common sense and values and standards, shrug their shoulders and say, Oh well, what can you do?
00:41:26
Speaker
There's drag shows in elementary schools now.
00:41:29
Speaker
Oh well.
00:41:30
Speaker
What can you do?
00:41:31
Speaker
You can deny it.
00:41:33
Speaker
You can stop it.
00:41:34
Speaker
You can speak up.
00:41:35
Speaker
You can help someone.
00:41:36
Speaker
You can choose to not participate in another's delusional behavior.
00:41:41
Speaker
Where do you draw the line?
00:41:43
Speaker
Oh, when it affects your kids.
00:41:45
Speaker
You mean like making them wear useless masks and receiving untested vaccines?
00:41:49
Speaker
Sometimes what happens in here is like taking a shit.
00:41:52
Speaker
This one's a heavy one, I won't lie.
00:41:54
Speaker
I guess the best way to describe this episode would be appalling, right?
00:42:06
Speaker
Okay, that music means one thing.
00:42:08
Speaker
It's time for a la carte.
00:42:11
Speaker
Isn't it sad that college is now a scam?
00:42:16
Speaker
Funny how, now that Elon Musk bought Twitter, celebrities of Amateur Nation are characteristically emotional in screaming how they're leaving Twitter.
00:42:24
Speaker
You know, the same way they said they were moving to Canada once Trump got elected.
00:42:28
Speaker
Some will leave Twitter, and some of those that left will return because emotional attention whores need their heroin.
00:42:34
Speaker
Attention.
00:42:34
Speaker
But most amateurs won't leave Twitter for the same reason.
00:42:38
Speaker
They're the tree that falls in the woods and they need someone to hear them or else they don't matter, which they don't.
00:42:44
Speaker
As Ryan Fournier said on Facebook, Twitter employees finding out that their pronouns are was, were.
00:42:53
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I've come to the conclusion that remote controls for TV and Amazon Fire in particular and all streaming services suck.
00:43:00
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The ones at my house suck.
00:43:01
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The ones in the condo we stayed in in Panama City, Florida suck.
00:43:05
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Seriously, if you want to do something as simple as change the channel or increase the volume, you got to make sure you have fresh batteries and contort your body in bizarre positions.
00:43:14
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Get up off the couch and walk directly towards the television and press the button with both hands.
00:43:19
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Back in the day, you know, before technology improved our lives, you could have the remote control in the crack of your ass and it still would work.
00:43:26
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Tech sucks.
00:43:30
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Recently, I was waiting for a connecting flight in Nashville coming back from Florida and it hit me.
00:43:35
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A gentleman's club in the airport.
00:43:38
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Suddenly, your three-hour layover doesn't suck.
00:43:41
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Please send me money to buy into my idea.
00:43:45
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Doesn't the ingredient riboflavin sound like it was invented by Professor Frink?
00:43:49
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Riboflavin!
00:43:52
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Here's a quote from President Coloring Book before he was full metal amateur.
00:43:56
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I've done some dumb things, and I'll do dumb things again.
00:44:00
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Only time in his life he's been honest.
00:44:02
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He said this in a press conference.
00:44:04
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When and where exactly, I admittedly don't know.
00:44:07
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But you can find it on Instagram and anywhere else.
00:44:09
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And what does it matter?
00:44:10
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What politician says that?
00:44:12
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At least in mixed company, in front of the press.
00:44:15
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But what do you expect?
00:44:16
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That act in and of itself is a dumb thing.
00:44:20
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But you can't be at the top unless you surround yourself with amateurs that make you look reasonably intelligent.
00:44:26
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Cue Kamala Sling Blade Harris.
00:44:28
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Will she expound on the border crisis?
00:44:30
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Inflation?
00:44:31
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Censorship?
00:44:32
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Climate change?
00:44:33
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Gas prices?
00:44:34
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Silly amateurs.
00:44:35
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Brains are for pros.
00:44:37
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You know, I've played a lot of clips from this black hole of an entity, and I gotta say, I don't know which is funnier.
00:44:42
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The subject matter?
00:44:43
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The subject matter being discussed, considering the world is on the brink of World War III, or
00:44:48
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or the lead-in, the setup for this monumental proclamation that the dumbest woman in power ever has said.
00:44:56
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And just like President Coloring Book, Kamala Harris says this at a press conference.
00:45:01
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This was an overheard conversation with her dog, which is the only way this would make sense.
00:45:06
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Brace yourself.
00:45:07
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You ready?
00:45:08
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But here's the thing.
00:45:10
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Who doesn't love a yellow school bus?
00:45:13
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Can you raise your hand if you love a yellow school bus?
00:45:17
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There's something about, and most of us, many of us went to school on the yellow school bus.
00:45:25
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And it's part of our experience growing up.
00:45:29
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Here's the thing.
00:45:31
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That's how you start any press conference or speech?
00:45:34
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As vice president, that's your lead-in to discuss the burning issue of yellow school buses.
00:45:41
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Why can a reporter raise their hand and be called on to ask, Madam Vice President, did you just hit your head?
00:45:50
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Thank God every week I'm able to find at least three things that are pro in this world.
00:45:57
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Here's number one.

Achievements and Changes in Technology and Sports

00:45:59
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And this one is a threefer.
00:46:00
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The world of auto racing had a big weekend a couple weeks ago.
00:46:05
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Let's start with Formula One.
00:46:06
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Balls of steel owner and current F1 world champion Max Verstappen winning the Mexico City Grand Prix, making it his 14th victory of the season.
00:46:16
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A record in Formula One winning.
00:46:17
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with still two races to go.
00:46:19
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Red Bull Racing has already won the Constructors' Cup with two races left.
00:46:24
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Actually, they won it last week or one race ago.
00:46:27
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And unless something major happens to Max, it looks like back-to-back world championships are in his grasp.
00:46:34
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It's official.
00:46:35
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Max Verstappen broke Lewis Hamilton's brain.
00:46:39
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And team captain for Mercedes Total Wolves, too.
00:46:43
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Now, moving to my favorite racing, the NHRA, Erica Enders clinched her fifth Pro Stock World Championship in Las Vegas one week prior to the final race of the season as her points lead became insurmountable.
00:46:56
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She's a machine.
00:46:57
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She may not be the warmest person in interviews, but neither is Max Verstappen in F1, which begs the question, do you want to be known as a champion or as a nice guy or girl?
00:47:07
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I'm sure both drivers had their days of smiles and laughs, but they're all business on their respective tracks, and that's why they get the big bucks and what keeps their focus.
00:47:18
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I've always said there are life lessons in racing.
00:47:20
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The one I take away this time is while you should always strive for good manners and social skills, there's a time to be nice, and there's a time to put the brakes on nice and focus on the task at hand and get to work.
00:47:34
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And finally, NASCAR and overall racing legend and now NHRA team owner Tony Stewart.
00:47:40
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In an impressive debut, Tony Stewart won his first two elimination rounds to reach the semifinals in his NHRA top alcohol dragster debut at the Nevada Nationals.
00:47:54
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He's a member of five auto racing halls of fame.
00:47:59
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Coming up with a Mount Rushmore of the greatest men in motorsports could be one of the more difficult conversations.
00:48:05
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So many good drivers, unsung heroes, team owners, etc.
00:48:08
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Not to mention so many of those within multiple types of auto racing.
00:48:14
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Tony Stewart just might have to be in that conversation.
00:48:18
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The man who's driven just about everything on four wheels got his NHRA accreditation the same way us mere mortals might go about it, going to Frank Hawley's drag racing school and working his way up through the various classes.
00:48:28
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He actually drove a top fuel dragster a couple times and said that it was too much.
00:48:33
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When a man who has made his living cheating death said, I'm going to hold off on top fuel for a while, a machine his wife, Leah Pruitt, drives, you know that land missile packs a punch.
00:48:45
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Now, admittedly, I've never followed NASCAR much, but always had respect for it and the drivers except for Bubba Wallace.
00:48:51
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But Tony Stewart, current contender to win the Funny Car Division as a team owner with Matt Hagen as his driver in the NHRA.
00:49:00
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Ready for a world championship, and now NHRA top alcohol driver and contender himself.
00:49:06
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Number two.
00:49:09
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Of course, you have to mention it.
00:49:10
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Elon Musk.
00:49:11
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You gotta love a bonafide African-American buying the formerly fascist Twitter, shutting up the whiny racist amateurs, but even more so when he recently locked out Twitter engineers and has his Tesla staff review software code, preventing Twitter engineers from making further changes.
00:49:30
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He fired top executives, including the CEO, the CFO, and the head of legal policy, trust, and safety.
00:49:36
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Even the company's general counsel was canned.
00:49:39
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all of them escorted out of the offices in San Francisco.
00:49:44
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He plans to remove Twitter's permanent blacklisting of accounts that were banned.
00:49:50
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Number three.
00:49:54
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I suffer from chronic back pain and some neck pain.
00:49:57
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I'm predisposed to arthritis in my back and a little in my neck.
00:50:00
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Been that way since my late 30s, as a matter of fact.
00:50:03
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I feel best when I exercise or when I keep moving, so if I'm stationary for too long or at my desk for long periods of time, I get a stiff neck and back, particularly around my shoulder blades and trapezius muscles.
00:50:15
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While I have a fantastic chiropractor and I stretch before I'll exercise, I highly recommend Fix Your Back Pain.
00:50:22
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It's a profile on Instagram with the handle at back underscore pain fix.
00:50:28
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At back underscore pain fix.
00:50:32
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Lots of helpful, easy to follow tips to help ease back and neck pain with daily physical therapy and advice.
00:50:38
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I mean, after all, we all want to do what we can to stay away from the medical profession, right?
00:50:45
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Episode 200 next week is going to be special.
00:50:47
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Please listen.
00:50:48
Speaker
Just as importantly, text or email one friend about this show if you like it.
00:50:53
Speaker
Get in on the ground floor of something different from the other podcasts.
00:50:56
Speaker
If I read your email to me on the air, you get a free No Amateurs t-shirt.
00:51:00
Speaker
My email is lou at lou santini dot com.
00:51:02
Speaker
Subscribe to Lou Santini Entertainment on Facebook and YouTube.
00:51:06
Speaker
Truth Social, Lou Santini 3.
00:51:08
Speaker
Instagram, lou dot santini 3.
00:51:10
Speaker
Get her at Lou Santini.
00:51:12
Speaker
Amateur Nation is not just a podcast.
00:51:15
Speaker
It's a movement.
00:51:16
Speaker
Remember amateurs?
00:51:17
Speaker
Oh, we see you.
00:51:18
Speaker
And you're not at home.
00:51:19
Speaker
Don't do life wrong.
00:51:21
Speaker
Go pro.
00:51:21
Speaker
Don't be an amateur.
00:51:23
Speaker
For Amateur Nation, I'm Lou Santini, and this has been a Big Major production.