Gun ban dies, Hunter loses, and a mailed cat (05-10-2024--Hour3)
The Pete Kaliner ShowMay 10, 202400:32:1729.61 MB

Gun ban dies, Hunter loses, and a mailed cat (05-10-2024--Hour3)

This episode is presented by Carolina Readiness Supply Colorado lawmakers kill a bill to ban semi-automatic guns; Hunter Biden loses two rulings and is now looking at a June trial; a mailed cat.

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[00:00:29] Final hour of the program down the str- oh, I don't think I can say that. Is that like one of those

[00:00:35] things where you can't say let's prepare to fight before but you can't say like

[00:00:42] I don't even want to get close to saying it because then they get you get sued for saying

[00:00:45] stuff like that. That's why he said like the big game instead of the Super Bowl. All right,

[00:00:50] final hour of the program, News Talk 1110-993 WBT. A couple of gun related stories. I thought this

[00:00:59] was interesting. By the way, I got this whole, a whole stack of stuff here, the prep pile,

[00:01:05] Pete's prep pile. It's bursting. It's a robust prep pile today. It's a lot of stuff from the

[00:01:12] last five days or so and I haven't gotten to it all so I'm just kind of going to go through

[00:01:17] them because otherwise why did I even read these stories and mark them up and highlight them? Why

[00:01:21] even bother if I'm not even going to get to them? So first up, AP News. A bill to ban the sale and

[00:01:31] transfer of semi-automatic firearms was nixed in Colorado's Democrat controlled legislature

[00:01:39] this week as lawmakers pressed forward with a slew of other gun control bills on the 25th

[00:01:45] anniversary of the Columbine High School massacre. Some Senate Democrats, again this is Colorado,

[00:01:54] some Senate Democrats are wary of the efficacy, so will it work right, and the breadth of the ban

[00:02:03] which prohibits the sale transfer and manufacture of semi-automatic firearms. A semi-automatic

[00:02:12] firearm is basically all of them. All of the guns basically. Yeah, I think that might be too large

[00:02:23] of a scope, you know, well not to use a gun related term there, but yes the breadth of the ban.

[00:02:30] Colorado's blue shift is evident in part by a number of successful gun control measures

[00:02:35] passed last year including raising the buying age for a gun from 18 to 21. Some half-dozen proposals

[00:02:45] are nearing passage this year including a bill to put a measure on the November 2024 ballot

[00:02:51] to tax gun sales and ammunition. I think they are already taxed as like any other item if

[00:03:01] you're buying or selling, right? But now I guess they want a special gun tax and ammo tax.

[00:03:10] Another would give the Colorado Bureau of Investigation more power to investigate gun sales

[00:03:16] that are already illegal. There are gun sales that are illegal. Really? So oh, I see. So the

[00:03:27] law enforcement, they just didn't have, they need more power to investigate gun sales. They

[00:03:31] haven't had that power. That's been the problem. Okay, the state's purple roots have frustrated

[00:03:36] attempts at a broader ban. A decade ago the lawmakers were, two lawmakers were ousted in

[00:03:43] the state's first recall elections over their support for bills that set limits on ammunition

[00:03:49] magazines and expanded background checks. So this is what some Democrats in Colorado are

[00:03:57] worried about. They don't want to get tossed either and they're like, oh we're so close to

[00:04:02] being a blue state, you know? On the committee that this measure came through sits Democrat

[00:04:09] State Representative Tom Sullivan who would have been a no vote along with the Republican

[00:04:15] lawmakers who have decried the bill as an encroachment on Second Amendment rights.

[00:04:19] Tom Sullivan's son Alex was one of the 12 victims killed in the Aurora Theater shooting

[00:04:28] in 2012 when the movie The Dark Knight Rises. So this guy's son was killed and he's a no vote

[00:04:39] on it. The tragedy catapulted Sullivan into activism around gun control and then public

[00:04:45] office where he has spearheaded many bills on the issue. Sullivan said the weapons that the

[00:04:50] bill seeks to curtail are involved in only a small fraction of gun deaths and injuries.

[00:04:55] Those firearms include a long list of semi-automatic rifles along with some pistols

[00:04:59] and shotguns with certain characteristics like a threaded barrel or detachable stock.

[00:05:05] Their prohibition would not make much of a dent in gun violence, he argued,

[00:05:11] and the proposal takes up immense political oxygen in the state capital energizing the opposition

[00:05:17] and detracting from more effective and less controversial gun control measures. He says

[00:05:22] the narrative's all wrong, that's what they want you to believe that it's assault weapons in

[00:05:26] schools. It's not. It's suicides and domestic violence. And he's exactly right. I talk about

[00:05:35] this all the time. Whenever you start talking about gun control, you're talking about gun

[00:05:39] deaths, number one suicide, number two domestic violence, or I think that's actually number three.

[00:05:44] I think he may well I know he's omitting the other of the top three, which is street violence,

[00:05:49] gang violence, right? Urban youths if you will, right? That's those are the top three

[00:05:56] gun deaths and all three of those circumstances require different approaches. I've been saying

[00:06:01] it for years. So that's the first gun related story. Here's your second.

[00:06:06] Hunter Biden's latest attempts to throw out his federal gun case were rejected.

[00:06:11] And back to back rulings yesterday. This tees up a high stakes criminal trial

[00:06:17] next month in Delaware, which is just amazing in that what did we find out was that this week

[00:06:25] we've got like these three different cases against Donald Trump. They have all hit snags

[00:06:30] for the prosecution in various forms, right? You got Fannie Willis down in Atlanta,

[00:06:38] where there's an appeal of the judge's order that's letting her stay on the case. Got that?

[00:06:42] That could gum up their their works. You got the Jack Smith documents trial

[00:06:51] where the DOJ admitted that they were quote tampering with evidence because they like

[00:06:57] they messed up the order of all of these documents and apparently they brought props with them

[00:07:02] to stage for the photo op at Mar-a-Lago. And that judge put on, yeah, got rid of the May 20th

[00:07:09] start date of the trial. So don't know when that trial is going to start. So they got delayed there.

[00:07:16] And then what was the other one up in, oh, the Stormy Daniels thing where it's like

[00:07:21] you got her testifying to these salacious details about her sexual encounter with Donald Trump. He says

[00:07:27] didn't happen, but her story is that he romanced her so hard she passed out.

[00:07:36] And that's supposed to be, that's supposed to hurt him in the, just whatever. Okay.

[00:07:46] Okay. The president said, so you got all these problems with these trials that are developing up

[00:07:52] there. They still by the way, they still haven't found out like what's the underlying crime that

[00:07:55] they're trying to allege there was a concealment of? The prosecutor Alvin Bragg up in Manhattan,

[00:08:01] he still hasn't gotten around to describing what that underlying crime is. And so maybe he's

[00:08:06] going to give them just like a multiple choice sheet and they'll just get to pick whatever

[00:08:10] crime they want to and they'll just make stuff up. I don't know what the jury is

[00:08:13] going to be instructed. Anyway, the president's son Hunter Biden, he may actually stand trial

[00:08:20] and get convicted before Trump. This is not ideal timing to say the least for Joe Biden.

[00:08:30] The president's son had asked the third U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals to dismiss the

[00:08:33] charges by overturning prior decisions from the trial judge that let the case move forward. But

[00:08:39] the appellate panel instead rejected Hunter Biden's appeals, which related to his defunct

[00:08:44] plea deal and his claims that the case was tainted by political bias. Remember this?

[00:08:48] He was like, ah, it's just politics. That's why they're coming after me. It's like, dude,

[00:08:51] your dad is in charge of the DOJ. Hours later, the trial judge, Mary Ellen Norrica,

[00:08:56] rejected Hunter Biden's remaining motion to dismiss the case on Second Amendment grounds.

[00:09:02] They tried, they're trying to argue and maybe they'll get some traction on this after.

[00:09:07] They're trying to argue though that it's unconstitutional for there to be a prohibition

[00:09:13] on purchasing a firearm while you're addicted to drugs. That's their argument.

[00:09:20] Classic progressive argument, right? I mean, really finger on the pulse of the Democrat

[00:09:26] party there. Just, yeah. They really don't have, like when it comes to saving their own

[00:09:33] skin, they don't have principles here. They will now argue, he's now arguing that

[00:09:39] that drug addicts should have their constitutional right to buy a firearm protected. That's his

[00:09:43] argument now. I mean, it's a bold strategy cotton we'll see if it pays off for.

[00:09:51] Newstalk 1110993 WBT. I do have messages I will get to after the news.

[00:10:00] They've been piling up in the mail bag, in the mail sack over here. So I will get to them.

[00:10:08] Let me finish this story though. This is from CNN. Marshall Cohen,

[00:10:12] headline back-to-back rulings against Hunter Biden pave way for June gun trial.

[00:10:19] The gun that he bought when he was doing drugs, wrote about it in his book and then

[00:10:27] like his girlfriend, which I think was, yeah, his girlfriend or his wife. I forget,

[00:10:32] or maybe it was his brother's wife that he was dating. I forget, but she took the gun and threw

[00:10:36] it in a dumpster, which happened to be next door to a school. Very bad gun safety protocol there.

[00:10:45] But the gun case, Hunter Biden now faces a legally and politically perilous summer

[00:10:53] with back-to-back trials while his father focuses on the 2024 campaign.

[00:10:58] The gun trial is slated to begin in early June unless the parties reach a plea deal or some other

[00:11:02] agreement to resolve the case, which is always possible. A separate tax trial is scheduled

[00:11:09] to begin in late June. Prosecutors claim Biden illegally purchased and possessed a revolver

[00:11:17] in 2018, which violated federal law because he was using illicit drugs at the time.

[00:11:23] He's pleaded not guilty to all three felony counts because he lied on the form

[00:11:30] when he was buying the gun. That's the key there, is that these laws and he lied on the document.

[00:11:35] He's also facing a federal tax indictment. That trial is slated to begin in late June in California.

[00:11:41] He's pleaded not guilty to all nine charges in that case, which revolves around millions of

[00:11:46] dollars that he made in Ukraine and China and other overseas deals. The decision from the Third

[00:11:54] Circuit panel of judges was based on procedural grounds. The three judge panel included one

[00:12:02] Republican appointee and two Democrat appointees, including one that was put on the bench by

[00:12:07] Hunter's dad. So obviously political targeting, right? Furthermore, the ruling could make it harder

[00:12:16] for Hunter Biden to appeal his loss in the Second Amendment challenge. That got rejected

[00:12:20] yesterday too by Judge Norrica. Hunter Biden's attorneys argued that three gun charges should

[00:12:26] be tossed out because the firearm possession statute used against him violated the Second

[00:12:30] Amendment, right? I should be allowed to be on drugs and purchase a firearm. That's going

[00:12:38] to be their argument. We'll see if it works. Next, the Justice Department released an indictment

[00:12:47] the other day against longtime representative Henry Cuellar, a Democrat out of Texas, along with his

[00:12:53] wife Imelda Cuellar, charging the pair with bribery and money laundering related to their ties

[00:13:00] with a bank in Mexico and an oil and gas company controlled by Azerbaijan. NBC News was

[00:13:07] first to report that the charges were coming. The congressman and his wife were each released

[00:13:12] on a $100,000 bond after a first appearance in federal court in Houston. Now according to the

[00:13:17] indictment from 2014 through 2021, so a seven-year period, the Cuellars allegedly

[00:13:24] accepted roughly $600,000 in bribes from two foreign entities in exchange for the

[00:13:30] congressman performing official acts. The bribe payments were allegedly laundered,

[00:13:36] pursuant to sham consulting contracts through a series of front companies and middlemen

[00:13:43] into shell companies owned by Imelda Cuellar, who performed little to no legitimate work

[00:13:49] under the contracts. Gosh, that business model sounds really familiar. Where have I heard this

[00:13:58] kind of thing before? A bunch of consulting contracts with foreign governments, front

[00:14:04] companies, middlemen, shell companies. I don't know, it's ringing a bell. The congressman and

[00:14:12] his wife each charged they got a bunch of accounts conspiracy to commit bribery, bribery,

[00:14:19] conspiracy to commit wire fraud, violating the ban on public officials acting as agents of a foreign

[00:14:23] principle, five counts of money laundering. Cuellars said quote, I want to be clear that both my

[00:14:31] wife and I are innocent of these allegations. Everything I've done in Congress has been to serve

[00:14:36] the people of South Texas. And as you know, my wife and I are people. I'm kidding, I just

[00:14:42] lay high at that last part. A defiant Cuellar also made it clear he will seek reelection quote,

[00:14:51] let me be clear. I'm running for reelection. There you go. All right NBC, you don't need

[00:14:58] to say the thing that he's saying. Okay, whatever. And he says he's going to win. He says he's going

[00:15:04] to win as well. Now I was driving into the studio today and I heard this very story. I said, oh,

[00:15:11] I pulled this story it's in my prep prep pack too. And I heard it on NPR. And they gave a couple

[00:15:19] of lines about the story. And they let me know that this proves that see the DOJ is not

[00:15:29] is not targeting Donald Trump. See proof they went after Henry Quay are two. That's what it proves

[00:15:38] to NPR or at least that's what NPR would like you to believe. So there you have it. Newstalk 1110

[00:15:43] 99 3 WBT. Thank you, Steve. He says basically Pete, you are a teacher. I learned something from you

[00:15:49] every day noon to three and sometimes even during the Friday hangover. Well, that's

[00:15:55] all right. That's my fault then because I'm definitely trying not to educate anybody

[00:15:59] about anything during the Friday hangover with Brett Winterblom, which by the way won't be happening

[00:16:03] today because Brett is off. Chad Adams going to be filling in for him and so stick around

[00:16:12] and participate in the show with Chad. He'll be here until seven and then breaking with Brett

[00:16:18] Jensen. Let me go through a couple of the messages here that I've got. This is going back over

[00:16:23] the some of these topics are going over the last two hours worth of content and material but

[00:16:28] Russ says so this was we talked about teacher, teacher pay.

[00:16:35] Yeah, teacher compensation, teacher pay. Russ says I don't know a single teacher

[00:16:38] who switched for more money. I know a lot who took less money for better classroom discipline,

[00:16:43] better administration or to get away from bad mandatory curriculum or speech environments.

[00:16:48] Yeah, working conditions in other words. Yeah, absolutely.

[00:16:52] Let's see here. This is from Stan who says most of the things government funds are bad enough.

[00:16:59] We were talking about the budgets budget proposals that are coming through at the

[00:17:03] city in the school district level here in Charlotte Mecklenburg. He says but thank god that so far

[00:17:10] through funding for the arts there's no such thing as government music.

[00:17:14] The thought of that just hurts my brain and ears just thinking about it.

[00:17:17] The new government city council album number 123 is releasing tomorrow. You could download

[00:17:22] your copy for free. Yeah, no thanks. I do wonder are they funding any kind of

[00:17:31] like music creation? I mean, no they probably I mean they do they fund festivals and where

[00:17:36] music is played but Bob says Pete your equitable ends where my equitable begins.

[00:17:43] Okay, fair enough. Pete love the show from an insider please let me encourage you to watch

[00:17:49] Spectrum News Capital Tonight this evening. Kathy Manning commenting on Donald Trump

[00:17:55] interview is golden. It plays the oldies like a time life infomercial. Have a good weekend.

[00:18:02] Okay, all right. Appreciate the heads up there. This is from Tim. He says when my wife,

[00:18:08] we're talking about teachers and having their summers off, when my wife worked for the

[00:18:13] schools, I would catch her looking at the calendar like all the time and I asked her if her co-workers

[00:18:19] stood around looking at the calendar at work and she said yes. It's true. They do countdowns and

[00:18:27] stuff. It's look it's part of the culture and I'm not denigrating. I'm not attacking. It's

[00:18:36] it's just one of those things. It's a built in benefit, you know, much like we're

[00:18:43] watching out for WBT news and brews that's on the calendar. Everybody knows it right? We're promoting

[00:18:48] it. Anyway, Mike says Pete my wife and I moved to Charlotte from Winston Salem in 1999. She grew

[00:18:57] up here although the exact timing may be off. I remember around that time the Republican

[00:19:01] majority on the city council decided against using city taxes to fund the arts. This became their

[00:19:07] hill to die on and they did at the next municipal election. Am I close to accurate here?

[00:19:15] Well, yes and no. So if you're talking about the Angels in America

[00:19:23] debate scandal, whatever, this was a play that was touring the country and it simulated gay sex

[00:19:31] and I think there was nudity also. And when the Arts and Science Council brought the play to Charlotte,

[00:19:36] the Mecklenburg County commissioners, they called it the gang of five,

[00:19:40] they cut the arts funding because of that play. There were four Republicans, I believe,

[00:19:46] and one Democrat and all but one of them lost in their elections. Republicans did eventually

[00:19:55] retake a majority on the county commission but it was a short-lived affair because

[00:20:03] just the demographics of Mecklenburg County were shifting and so after a few, I mean when I was

[00:20:09] a reporter here in the early 2000s to mid 2000s covering county commission like through like

[00:20:16] 08, 09, I want to say, they were, the Republicans still were competing and they did have a

[00:20:22] majority for a couple years in there. The city council had fights over the arts package that

[00:20:28] was coupled with the arena deal and some city council members lost their elections because they

[00:20:33] were boosters for the arena deal that got voted down and then they did it anyway and it included

[00:20:38] a lot of art stuff in it. Do you ever have a cat? Do you have a cat? You have cats. No,

[00:20:46] you have dogs. You have a cat too, George? All right, he's one of each. So we had cats.

[00:20:50] Cats love boxes. Are you aware of this? They love boxes, they love jumping into little things,

[00:20:55] tight spaces, right? So there's this cat from Utah, a six-year-old house cat named Galena.

[00:21:03] Like all cats, it likes hiding and playing in cardboard and then

[00:21:08] it disappeared on April 10th and the owner, Carrie Clark, reported the cat missing. They

[00:21:14] searched everywhere in the neighborhood. They put up flyers, posted notices on Facebook,

[00:21:18] all over Lehigh, Utah.

[00:21:22] Quote, not knowing what had happened to her was pretty excruciating, Clark said. I cried my eyes

[00:21:28] out for seven days trying to figure out what had happened. Ten days later she gets a text

[00:21:34] on April 17th saying Galena's microchip had been scanned. So Clark knew that the cat had

[00:21:42] been found somewhere. Soon after she gets a call saying that her cat is near Riverside, California.

[00:21:51] From Utah the cat is now in California. It was found in a box with steel-toed boots

[00:22:02] which had been returned to an Amazon warehouse. Clark's husband had ordered several pairs of

[00:22:09] boots, kept one and then returned the rest in a very large box on April 10th. Oh, so I see. So

[00:22:19] you're going to blame the husband here. That's how that goes? You're blaming the husband?

[00:22:24] That's what it sounds like. Also who does this? Is this normal? You buy several pairs,

[00:22:30] you try them on and then you send them back. I've been shopping all wrong apparently on

[00:22:34] Amazon. This cat went six days without food and water. They were lucky to get the cat

[00:22:40] back because the weather was not too harsh so it wasn't really cold or hot. The box was torn

[00:22:48] at one of the seams and that allowed the cat to get more air. The Amazon employee that found the

[00:22:57] cat took her to a vet, scanned her for the microchip and so that's how they discovered her.

[00:23:03] Now the first thing I said was didn't anybody hear the cat? How would you not

[00:23:09] think you're packing up the box? How do you not hear the cat? Well, apparently the cat is a quiet

[00:23:16] cat. It does not meow and so that's why no one knew the cat was in there. Although I would think

[00:23:22] that when you pack it up and you start walking around with this box to put it like nobody realized

[00:23:27] that something was alive in this box. Right. So my lesson here is like apparently you can ship

[00:23:34] cats. I did not know this. I always thought that that would be cruel or something but now

[00:23:39] apparently it can go for six days without food or water all you gotta do is just like make a little

[00:23:43] slit in one of the seams and give it some extra space and a boot to sleep in and you're fine.

[00:23:50] I don't know any other moral of the story well or just don't have any boxes in your house.

[00:23:55] I don't know what else to tell you. That's the lesson I got from this story.

[00:23:58] All right, do the current world events have you wondering whether we are teetering on the

[00:24:02] edge of catastrophe? Are you concerned it's going to reach our shores? Okay, so what are you doing

[00:24:07] about your concerns? Let me help Carolina Readiness Supply at carolinareadiness.com whether you're

[00:24:13] looking to expand your emergency preparedness supplies or you have no idea where to even begin

[00:24:18] Carolina Readiness Supply can help you food water purifiers tools first aid kits

[00:24:24] instructional materials camping and hiking supplies even because being prepared is just

[00:24:29] smart Carolina Readiness Supply has 2000 square feet of supplies and educational materials that

[00:24:34] you'll need for any kind of emergency in Waynesville and always at carolinareadiness.com veteran owned

[00:24:41] Carolina Readiness Supply will you be ready when the lights go out? There's talk 1110 and 993 WBT

[00:24:49] 704 570 enough time to be fair to another caller.

[00:24:53] There's one other story I need to get to here just in case if you are planning on heading down

[00:24:59] to the coast of Georgia just a heads up a Pennsylvania man who credits an alligator named Wally.

[00:25:07] So Wally the Gator, Wally the alligator he's a bit of an internet sensation apparently Wally is

[00:25:13] and that he's an emotional support alligator sorry an emotional alligator is completely

[00:25:19] different but for helping he is credited with helping relieve this man's depression for nearly a decade

[00:25:28] and Wally is now missing and so Joey Henney is searching for Wally

[00:25:35] after a vacation to the coast of Georgia because they're from Philadelphia.

[00:25:40] Henney has thousands of social media users following his pages devoted to Wally the

[00:25:44] cold-blooded companion that he calls his emotional support alligator. He has posted photos and videos

[00:25:51] online of people petting the five and a half foot alligator like a dog or hugging it like a teddy bear

[00:25:57] Wally's popularity soared to new heights last year when the Gator was denied entry

[00:26:03] to a Philadelphia Phillies baseball game now Henney said he is distraught well it makes

[00:26:12] sense because if this is an emotional support alligator then you don't have him anymore

[00:26:19] I imagine you're not getting emotional support right so that makes sense.

[00:26:24] So he is distraught after Wally vanished while accompanying him on an April vacation in Brunswick

[00:26:31] Georgia about 70 miles south of Savannah. He said he suspects that somebody stole Wally

[00:26:39] from the fenced in outdoor enclosure where Wally spent the night on April 21st. In social media posts

[00:26:48] Henney said pranksters left Wally outside the home of somebody else who then called the authorities

[00:26:55] resulting in his alligator being trapped and then released into the wild.

[00:27:00] All right so he takes so Henney takes Wally to Brunswick and apparently I guess it's near B&B

[00:27:10] or something and they've got like an alligator pen out back I don't know so he puts them in this

[00:27:16] enclosure and somebody apparently comes along and swipes them and they think for a laugh

[00:27:22] let's put him on someone else's front porch or something and so that person's like oh my gosh

[00:27:26] there's an alligator out here so they call the animal control people the Georgia Department of

[00:27:32] Natural Resources confirmed that somebody in the Brunswick area reported a nuisance alligator on

[00:27:38] April 21st the day that Henney said Wally went missing and a licensed trapper was dispatched to

[00:27:46] capture it. The agency said in a statement that the gator was released in a remote location

[00:27:52] but it's stressed it does not know if that reptile was in fact Wally or not.

[00:27:58] Like my question was did it start trying to hug you or something? Right because that would be a

[00:28:02] dead giveaway. It's illegal in Georgia for people to keep alligators without a special

[00:28:07] license or permit and the State Department of Natural Resources said it doesn't grant permits

[00:28:11] for pet alligators. Pennsylvania though has no such state law against owning alligators

[00:28:17] but it is illegal to release them into the wild.

[00:28:53] a long redneck mother any blues I have before gone

[00:29:01] another working week is over no chance to stand sober I can feel a good one coming on

[00:29:11] yeah we're gonna roll all night we're gonna get the feeling right

[00:29:18] we're gonna keep this party right until the break of dawn

[00:29:24] yeah I can feel a good one coming on by the way the neighboring state of Florida has an estimated

[00:29:31] 1.3 million alligators so it might be kind of hard to determine which one might be Wally

[00:29:38] where's Wally?

[00:29:48] I can feel a good one coming on

[00:29:53] yeah we're gonna roll all night we're gonna get the feeling right

[00:29:59] we're gonna keep this party right until the break of dawn

[00:30:05] yeah I can feel a good one

[00:30:09] feel the good one coming on

[00:30:11] yeah I can feel a good one

[00:30:17] feel like a good one

[00:30:20] I can feel a good one coming on

[00:30:24] all righty so just a heads up if you're going down to the Georgia coast

[00:30:29] and an alligator comes up to you and tries to hug you it might be Wally

[00:30:35] or not it might be just trying to kill you so just choose wisely on that one

[00:30:38] all right that is it for me have a great weekend everybody I will see you on Monday

[00:30:43] don't break anything while I'm gone

[00:30:45] yeah we're gonna roll all night we're gonna get the feeling right

[00:30:51] we're gonna keep this party right until the break of dawn

[00:30:57] we're gonna roll we're gonna keep this party right until the break of dawn

[00:31:10] feel a good one yeah feel like a good one

[00:31:48] all right that'll do it for this episode thank you so much for listening I could not do the show without

[00:31:53] your support and the support of the businesses that advertise on the podcast so if you'd like

[00:31:58] please support them too and tell them you heard it here you can also become a patron

[00:32:01] at my patreon page or go to thepcalinarshow.com again thank you so much for listening

[00:32:07] and don't break anything while I'm gone