Implicit Bias

Let Evil be Evil!

Cavan Bordelon Season 6 Episode 23

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Evil is all around and the Krewe attempts a new tactic to battle those who can't will the good of other for the sake of others. 

We'll feature a new #weeklywhisky from the Implicit Bias Liquor Collective a Woodford pick at 110 proof, as we try to solve this problem of the world with light hearted, sophomoric humor. 

We'll discuss how an assassination attempt at UFC at the White House is just an expectation now, and the pathetic "counter" from the left. 

Cars, Biolabs in Ukraine, and t-rex leather bags...all on this week's episode of Implicit Bias!

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SPEAKER_04

The following program is paid for by Pipe Dream Entertainment.

SPEAKER_09

Hour one of implicit bias is brought to you by Pipers Haven, 3916 West Congress in Lafayette, Louisiana, featuring Louisiana's only certified master tobacconist Renee Girard. Go there. He's got 553 square feet of walk-in humidor. The certified wizard of tobacco has everything you need. Cigars, pipes, pipe tobacco, cutters, lighters. It's all at Pipers Haven. 3916 West Congress. We are about to serve some truth neat. No ice, no chaser. The only thing more dangerous than our opinions, the weekly whiskey we chase them with. I'm Kavon Bordelon, your host. The crew has assembled like a liquored-up, crazy uncle version of the Avengers, ready to wrestle with big ideas. We've got nothing but sharp and questionable judgment. This is implicit bias radio. This particular show is gonna be dedicated to solving something that's a problem that maybe hits a little bit different in this age of doom scrolling and viral outrage. You know, the nuclear power of strategic kindness. You ever seen The Matrix? I mean, of course you have. Remember that moment when Neo finally sees the code? Well, that's what happens when evil gets called out. Not with a fist, but with a brutal, inconvenient love. Right? The kind that makes Agent Smith's circuits fry because it refuses to play by his rules. If you think about it, Jesus dropped a similar truth bomb in Matthew 5, 38 through 42. You know, turn the other cheek, give your cloak, go the extra mile. But let's be clear, this isn't about rolling over like a sitcom dad avoiding conflict. This is strategic kindness. You know, the kind that flips the entire script. Sure, but the world loves a good villain. I mean, Darth Vader, you know, that Harry Potter villain Voldemort, that middle school bully who stole your lunch money while quoting Scarface. Evil thrives on reaction shots and audience. It wants you mad, it wants you scared, or at least matching its energy. But what if the response isn't anger? What if it's handing over two sets of your lunch money with a note that says, Next time just ask? That's not nice. Nice is letting the bully keep the money to avoid drama. Kindness actually costs them something. Their narrative, their power, their ability to play the hero in their own little twisted story. Think the Dark Knight, maybe. You know, the Joker, he craves chaos. He wants Batman to break his one rule. But what throws him when someone chooses the unscarred side of the coin, anyway, that kindness, that refusing to let evil dictate the terms, that's what makes the difference. Jesus wasn't telling us to be doormats, he was saying that force them to see what they're doing by letting everyone else see what they're doing. When someone takes your tunic and you offer your cloak to, you're not surrendering. You're actually holding up a mirror to their greed while showing your freedom from it. And let's be honest, this stuff, it hurts. It's not a soft focus full house moment. It's more fight club, except instead of throwing the first punch, you're winning the game by refusing to play. Tyler Durden once asked, How much can you know about yourself if you've never been in a fight? Jesus flips the question How much can you know about evil if you've never disarmed it with kindness? It's a counter-strike, right? A quiet rebellion. For our Gen Zers out there, we'll go back to that Harry Potter reference. You know, Voldemort's fatal flaw wasn't power. It was that he couldn't understand love or sacrifice. Harry walking into that forest wasn't surrender, it was weaponizing grace. And that's the difference. Nice is Neville hiding from Snape. Kind is Neville standing up with a sword in his hand. One avoids the fight, the other ends it. Evil expects resistance. It's built for it. It's like a virus mutating against antibiotics. But kindness, that's the surprise system update that crashes the whole program. So when Jesus says go the extra mile, he's not suggesting you outpolite the Romans. He's saying make them carry the weight of their own cruelty. Let them figure out how absurd it is to demand two miles when you willingly give three. Here's the kicker. Kindness outlasts. Evil burns hot and fast, like a MySpace page in 2008. Kindness is the Wikipedia edit that sticks around for decades. You know, turn the other cheek and suddenly the other guy has to ask, Why am I still swinging? Evil can't sustain itself in the daylight. It gets exposed as boring and repetitive. You know, like another Grand Theft Auto mission with fresh paint. Think of the office. You know, Dwight's beat farm reference, that isolation, convinced he's the main character. Kindness is actually Jim handing him a fresh coffee after a rough night. Not because he's nice, but because he knows the moment Dwight feels truly seen, the power dynamic shifts. Kindness doesn't just disrupt evil script, it rewrites the genre. Remember, this is not weakness. This is the ultimate cheat code. Evil doesn't know how to handle someone who simply won't play its game. And the beautiful part, it scales. One guy giving up his cloak in ancient Judea inspires a million small acts of dignity today. Evil needs hierarchies and fear. Kindness kindness goes viral. So yeah, let evil be evil. Let it buffer and rage. Meanwhile, kindness is already streaming in HD, rewriting endings that no one programmed for. So on this week's episode of Implicit Bias Radio, maybe this one, maybe it lands a little too close to home. Maybe, maybe you should stick around for more of the show. Keep an eye out for our weekly whiskey pick from New News Markets because nothing pairs better with big ideas than a good pour. Until we come back from the break, try turning the other cheek this week. You might just watch the code start to glitch. We'll see you right after this. Cheers.

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SPEAKER_09

Purchase all of your favorite spirits at your local Implicit Bias Liquor Collective store in Lafayette Ambassador Wine and Spirits, New News Markets in Young'sville, Scott Milton Maurice, Champines Supermarket in Abbeyville, Champines Market in Carrancrow, and Benny Supermarket in Opalousis. Hour one of Implicit Bias is brought to you by Pipers Haven. 3916 West Congress in Lafayette, Louisiana, featuring Louisiana's only certified master tobacconist Renee Girard. Go there. He's got 553 square feet of walk-in humidor. The certified Wizard of Tobacco has everything you need. Cigars, pipes, pipe tobacco, cutters, lighters. It's all at Pipers Haven. 3916 West Congress. The crew with a K has assembled in the Mr. Lester's top secret podcast layer. I'm Kavon Bordelon. It is weekly whiskey time. But first, let me introduce you to who's in the room, hidden somewhere in downtown Lafayette, Louisiana. I'll go ahead and start at the bar. K B is yawning over there, and I'm not exactly sure why. What's up, Grant?

SPEAKER_20

Good afternoon.

SPEAKER_09

Good afternoon. Okay.

SPEAKER_20

But why are we yawning? I don't know. I don't know where that came from. Am I that boring? No, not at all.

SPEAKER_21

It's entirely possible. Yeah, not everybody knows, but we usually record on Wednesday. Today's a Monday. Correct my day off. So I was doing honeydews, bro. That was a honeydew yawn.

SPEAKER_09

I get it. I can understand that. Got the lawn and stuff around the house. Correct. You actually had a birthday last weekend.

SPEAKER_21

I get really tired right around four or five o'clock without a nap.

SPEAKER_09

You need your nap and your prune juice. Needs a Syndrum Silver. Good to be here. It's a pleasure to have you sitting at the bar with KB, Grant Galatis, a big a bed of diamonds, filles. Is Daubearish. Yeah, I I really like that nickname. So let me give the background so people can understand. In the coming weeks, you will see that Implicit Bias Radio is rolling out its own Discord server for us to be able to communicate with people during the show, whatever, whenever. So you can actually see topics maybe before the show comes up, even maybe before we record the show, you can contribute topics. We'll explain that in a little while. But we're beta testing it right now. So of course, everybody has to have a handle, kind of like when you had a CB when we were kids and you had a handle on the CB. Everybody's got a handle on Discord. They call it a username, whatever they call it. And Eli's is Dobarish, which is only so fitting because he is Gambinos and Lafayette and Baton Rouge.

SPEAKER_14

Yeah, you know, I started using that name a few years ago with fantasy football and you know whatnot. Because, you know, if you know, you know. So if you know, you know.

SPEAKER_09

Seven layers. Kind of like an onion, but it's a little bit sweeter. A little bit sweeter. I heard you were sweet. Anyway, let's sorry, you walked right into that one. Walked right into that one.

SPEAKER_13

You mean he backed into it?

SPEAKER_09

That, of course, is the Rustic Renegade, Caleb Morse, your co-host. Caleb, it's great to have you back in the TSPL. And it feels like we have been recording episodes like stacking them lately, even though they're not.

SPEAKER_13

I'm all about blowing and going, though. Like we should keep on, we keep on hitting this. Oh, yeah.

SPEAKER_09

I I've heard that.

SPEAKER_13

The Walters over here dying.

SPEAKER_09

Yeah, because we knew we knew that you did that on purpose.

SPEAKER_13

I want to keep beating that to death.

SPEAKER_09

Oh, Caleb, what are we gonna do with you? You know what we should do with you? We should have you taste whiskey and then continue on this week's topic, which is let evil run its course so everybody can see what it does. In other words, let evil be evil. But before we are evil, man, this one, this one's like Michael Jackson bad, this Woodford that we are tasting. So let me go ahead and walk you through our weekly whiskey for the week. As we always feature whiskeys from the Implicit Bias Liquor Collective, this one from really the original liquor partner for Implicit Bias Radio. We cannot thank New News enough for doing everything they've done over the years. And honestly, we love that they have all these barrel picks for us to taste. We had kind of gotten away from Woodford for a while. We've done some Woodfords on the show before, but I don't know that we've ever done just a straight Woodford pick. We've done a Woodford double oak pick, but not a straight Woodford pick. This one comes in at 110 proof, and I'm really curious to hear what people here in the TSPL think of it.

SPEAKER_13

This one is just wonderful. I don't know if you'll want me to go first or not.

SPEAKER_09

Y'all good? Uh no, I'll tell you what, let's start at the bar so that we can have the knows that knows give his review. We may even actually let Walker give a little bit of a review because Walker's a short timer. He's only got a few reviews left. We'll explain that in a minute. So we'll start at the bar, whoever it's gonna be at the bar. Eli, the microphone appears to be closest to you. So you get to go first.

SPEAKER_14

All right. Yeah, no, I I really enjoy this uh for Whitford. I um this has a very unique taste. It actually brought back some childhood memories for me. Um I tasted it and so it reminds me of it, has a very leathery taste. Okay. But for me, there's a specific taste. Uh, my dad, when I used to oil my baseball glove, not with the new oils they have now, but we had an uh a jar of mink oil. Okay. And that's when I sip this, I I've I taste that smell that that smell of oiling my baseball glove with with that uh that you know old mink oil. So, but no, I I really enjoy it. It's a it's a nice, nice, uh smooth flavor. Uh, for for 110, it's uh yeah, no, it's not bad.

SPEAKER_09

So, first of all, I have to agree with you 100%. At 110, this is so smooth for 110, it's not even funny. I would not have put this if I didn't know the proof, I would not have said, oh, this is over 107. I would have said this is probably 95 to 100, but man, just very, very smooth on the back end. And for uh Woodford, right? For a normal Woodford, this one gives you some of those double oaked notes, but I don't think brings it fully into flavor. And I think some of it is the proof and just how well it's done. Grant, what about you?

SPEAKER_21

Gotta love a 110 that doesn't drink like a 110. It's it's funny because I thought 98 to 100 when I first tasted it. So that that's always a plus. Uh either that or I'm just getting used to the higher proof, even what which is not a good thing. Uh very, very sweet on the nose. Yeah. Uh caramelli can't uh can't really separate and distinct from from the caramella, caramella or the vanilla, but you get a lot of it on the nose, not so much on the palate, but yeah, you get that it's got wood in the name, you know, Woodford. So it's good, let the little oaky. I get the leathery.

SPEAKER_09

I get the, you know, to go to Eli's point and yours, I absolutely get the leather on this. I get that that kind of fresh oil leather smell. And I don't know that I can go to mink oil, but I just, you know that that smell when you take your your baseball glove out of the closet after a couple of months, like first time in a couple of years. And I don't mean the outside of the glove. I mean like the inside where you put your hand. Right. And where your hand kind of, and I this is might sound gross, but where your hand sweats in there a little bit, but it softens it, it conditions it, the leather absorbs the oils from your hands. Just that, that nose is so much of what I get on the palate here. And to your point, Grant, I get that caramel with it. And it's not a lingering caramel, but it is a caramel nonetheless.

SPEAKER_21

Right. Yeah, it's funny because when y'all are talking baseball gloves, I remember I used to chew on little the little threads being out in the field. A little bored, so you just pick up your glove, kind of hold it there, and just kind of gnaw on this little uh, but it it's really good. It's it's a good, sweet, not overpowering 110.

SPEAKER_09

And again, I I gotta harp on this because at 110, I would have expected more kick, I would have expected more alcohol forward than this presents. And what I like about Woodford specifically in this pick is that it is not heavy. It's full flavored, but it's not overly viscous. Like it doesn't sit heavy in the mouth, it doesn't weigh you down, and it's not that deep chest warmth that you might normally expect. It almost drinks like a summer bourbon, but you know there is no doubt this is bourbon, and you could absolutely drink it in colder weather. So, all right, Walker, we're gonna let you participate.

SPEAKER_08

Okay. This one's really, really good. I get the um what Grant said about chewing on the leather of a baseball glove. Yeah, I get that big time. Um like after a long inning when uh your team's in the field forever, you just get bored and you start chewing on your the leather of the You had what, four or five errors in the end of the year.

SPEAKER_09

Yeah, something like that.

SPEAKER_08

Um But yeah, that's really really good. When I first drank it, I got some cola on it. Um and then well, it kind of went away, but then my second sip, I got bananas foster. A little bit of it, just uh a hint of it.

SPEAKER_09

That's interesting. I don't get I get no banana on this. I didn't get the banana porter like uh you get like the brown sugar the sauce from the bananas foster. So not bananas foster, just brown sugar melted in butter.

SPEAKER_08

Yeah, on top of bananas.

SPEAKER_09

All right, okay. So Walker I don't know why we even asked you. Anyway, no, Walker appreciates you. All right, Caleb. The nose that knows the the review to end the bourbon review of this new news pick at 110 proof. This Woodford. I'm curious as to what you think.

SPEAKER_13

So on the nose, definitely cooked brown sugar. Uh, I get a little bit of caramel, some toasted pecan in there. And then on the palate, I think Eli, you'll like this. Uh, when I was a little boy, my grandmother would make this dessert called Sin Pie. Okay. And there's a bunch of different renditions, but it was He's making this up. No, no, it was like vanilla, it was vanilla yogurt, chocolate. Uh someone in my family tried putting bananas in it, it was a bad idea. Uh, then she would make her own crust, and it was brown sugar and toasted pecans, and she would layer that back and forth, back and forth, back and forth. And that's what I get. I get that that light vanilla, that that homemade whipped cream, followed by chocolate, the toasted brown sugar with toasted pecans. It's a very, very complex flavor. And then you get the little bit of that Kentucky hug at the end. 110 proof, you would think it would come at you real hot, but it doesn't. It's gentle, it's warming, it's not overly viscous. Like even shaking in the glass, you see it, you see it fall off the edges. It doesn't stay around for a long time. It's here for the enjoyable moment. And it's like, all right, take another sip, let's do this again. So very, very good. It's fleeting, a little, a, a little bit more weight, I would appreciate out of it. But this this is a banger. I'm I'm really enjoying it. The flavor profile is wonderful. Like I said, I get that just dessert kind of flavor and scent off of it. This is very, very this is an after dinner drink, I think.

SPEAKER_09

You think because I get I'm gonna tell you where I kind of land on this one, which is that sip that you've just finished makes you want another sip. True. This one, this one to me could be more than a sipper. And this is where I think Grant is going with this. When you get a 110 that drinks like this, it doesn't make you want to sip it, it makes you want to drink it. And that could be water in my second glass. That is fun, but if not managed properly, can be an issue, which is why I I really like this. What's that look for?

SPEAKER_13

No, I'm just my I'm having a relapse of uh earlier episodes.

SPEAKER_09

Ah, yeah, well, it's happened to all of us. So this this Woodford from New News, I mean, I'm I'm just thrilled to see this. And there's not, I don't see an age statement on here, correct?

SPEAKER_13

I I didn't see one. I saw 110 proof, and this is uh a distiller select. Yes, uh so it's got the the the bottle number on there, like twenty five thousand or something like that, and they just picked a phenomenal one.

SPEAKER_09

Here's what I will say if you are a Woodford drinker, and I know a lot of people who like Woodford, this is your holy grail.

SPEAKER_13

Yeah, and most most Woodfords are that ninety proof area. Correct. So this 110, we're talking a 20 a 20 proof. That's a big jump. It's a huge jump.

SPEAKER_09

It's also a huge jump in flavor, which is what I really like about it. Because that 90-proof regular Woodford offering, it's not a bad drinker. It really isn't. But it's never essentially enough flavor for kind of what I think we look for as far as far as our flavor profile. This one, it gets there. Right? That 90, that 90 feels like that deep fly ball that gets to the warning track but can't quite get either to or over the wall. This one to me, it's if it's not over the wall, it's at the top of the wall and at the very minimum a ground rule double. An easy one at that.

SPEAKER_21

Yeah, they did a wonderful job.

SPEAKER_09

What's that, Grant? I see you laughing over there.

SPEAKER_21

I'm sorry, that was just well described. I like that.

SPEAKER_09

Oh, thank you. You like the analogy. Well, I see you laughing over there. I'm assuming it's at Walker, and that's okay. No, that was perfect.

SPEAKER_21

I like the description. That was a good descriptor.

SPEAKER_09

Thank you. I appreciate that. That means a lot. Not really. Anyway, no, it actually does. But this Woodford reserve for me is absolutely if you are a Woodford drinker, this is the grail for you. This is better to me than so many double oaks I've had. This is really just a great Woodford offering. And the fact that you can only get it at New News Markets and Young'sville, Scott, Milton Maurice, is is a huge deal.

SPEAKER_13

I mean, this would be out of the Woodfords I've had, this is probably the best Woodford I've ever drank. I would agree with that. So I mean, and I'm not I'm not just saying that because it's right here in front of me. I'm saying that because when I think about the other Woodfords, there's not a lot of memory. Right? Woodford, you tend to you drink it and you're like, oh, okay, that was a Woodford. It it's just it's very mild, easy to drink, where this one wants to be remembered.

SPEAKER_14

Yeah, I agree with that. For Woodford, this definitely has a lot more flavor profile. It's a lot, a lot more depth than than your standard Woodford.

SPEAKER_09

Where I was about to say is Woodford is one of those brands that if you are in a bar and they don't have your go-to. Woodford, just the normal Woodford bourbon, you're like, yeah, it's good. I I I'll take that. It's fine. You know it's gonna be consistent, but you also kind of know that a normal Woodford would be forgettable. This is not forgettable. This is something that you taste and you're like, man, that that meets the bar at the very least, if not significantly exceeds it. So that being said, it's time for us to play what would you pay for the what would you pay championship chain presented by Box Drop of Lafayette, and for us to rate this on the Morse whiskey rating code. Red, I would not drink it even if it was free. Yellow, I would only drink it if it was free. Green, I would buy this. Blue, I will seek this out. And the again the Morse Whiskey Rating Code is now going on six years old. Do you realize that? Really? Yes. I guess it happens fast. Years old. Yeah. They grow up so fast. They do. All right, let's start at the bar, except for Walker. Let's start at the bar. All right, Eli, you're gonna go ahead and jump in first. So, first of all, where would you rate this on the Morse whiskey rating code?

SPEAKER_14

This will be a solid green for me. Okay. Um, yeah, I'll I'll we'll probably run over to new news and buy a bottle. Um but uh but yeah, it's uh a solid green. I wouldn't I wouldn't go to the blue, but it's it's it's a a higher level green for me. Higher level green. Uh and I'm gonna say uh $74.95.

SPEAKER_09

$74.95. For those who don't know how the what would you pay championship belt chain presented by Box Drop of Lafayette works? It's just closest to the hole. Whoever is closest to the actual price of this bottle, that's who's gonna win and wear the chain for the rest of the night. Speaking of those who love to wear the chain, Grant Galatus, bigger beta diamonds for less. What's that look for? I know the chain weighs about 45 pounds.

SPEAKER_21

$3. It's I don't know. I've been kind of beating this around a little bit because I mean it's it's good for a Woodford, it's a step up uh above what they usually what we usually would do with them. I'm sure Caleb, I'm sure Caleb, you've had some good ones, but like you said, it's it's usually in the 90 proof range, so it kind of proofs itself out for you. Uh the analytics you showed me, I really don't want to give this a green. I want to drop it to uh to a yellow or no, just kidding. It's a it's a green for me, a wonderful flavor profile, an easy drinker 110 that hides itself well. So yeah, I'll green this and I'm gonna say $64.99.

SPEAKER_09

$64.99. So we've got what, $74.99 and $64.99.

SPEAKER_13

So this is a green for me. Okay. Uh like I want it to be a blue, but I want it to hang around a little longer. So a little more viscous, maybe, then we could talk about blues, but solid green. Uh I'm gonna go with $83. $83.

SPEAKER_08

Okay. Walker. Solid green, $65.

SPEAKER_09

So we have so we have $64.99 and $65.01. Yeah. Yeah.

SPEAKER_21

Brilliant. Brilliant, Walker. Hey, he protected me. I'm good. Yeah. Unless it's $64.98.

SPEAKER_09

Unless it's $59.99, which is what it is, which means that Grant go out of William S. Nakehol Jewelers, who gets big a bet of diamonds for less, is the closest to the hole and gets to wear the what would you pay? Championship belt chain. It is a green for me. This is an absolute beautiful, dark British racing green, green for me. That's how solid it is. I will buy this. I will put this on the bar. I will go ahead and put this in a cocktail. I will drink this neat and I will love this every day. And our recommendation is that you go buy it too. We're gonna come back. We're gonna talk about letting evil be evil and going the extra mile to let them do it on this week's episode of Implicit Bias Radio.

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SPEAKER_01

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SPEAKER_09

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SPEAKER_13

It's enabling behavior. That's what that is.

SPEAKER_09

That is true. That is very, very true. I mean, I can think of some whiskeys that are not literally once in a lifetime because it's a barrel pick. That you pay $50 for one pour, much less just buy the whole bottle. And it took me a second because last week on last week's show, you said, oh, judging by 50 bottles through the first like week and a half that they had it. Oh, yeah, they they've been running through it. 50 bottles gone in the restaurant in a week and a half. Kaiser Sose, they're gone. Beautiful to see. So go down to Mr. Lester Steakhouse, get your reservations. And you know what? If you don't have reservations, you actually still have time because our Father's Day giveaway is going to run through the terrestrial airing of this week's episode. We're going to announce the winners on Father's Day on social media. We will reach out to those who entered and won on social media on Father's Day to make sure that you win and get one of those prize packs. The prize packs, by the way, are fantastic. So Box Drop of Lafayette put up a bar. Ciro de Saison put up an old-fashioned kit. We have a Sonos Move to speaker from Superior AV from Piper's Haven. We have a Cohiba pack with a lighter. And Mr. Lester's put up in that gift package a bottle of implicit barrel, that single barrel $17.92. We have a suppressor put up by the Rustic Renegade. And then, you know, we have one other maybe you think it's cool, maybe you don't. We hope you think it's cool, you know. Two tickets to summer supper at Mr. Lester's on June 27th. We cover food, hotel, and drinks for the night. The crew will be there. You can have a blast at Lester's, eat to your heart's content. We will cover your beverages at that beautiful, now, in my opinion, top five whiskey bar in the state of Louisiana. And to me, it's not even close. But you gotta enter to win. Go to our Facebook page, find the video that's pinned at the top, watch the video, enter, and we will announce winners on Father's Day. We'll do it via social media, be tons of fun. In the meantime, this week's episode is let evil be evil. We are definitely not being evil, being that we are giving what we are giving on this week's episode. But I mentioned actually in the monologue going that extra mile. And we brought Jesus, obviously, in the Romans. And Caleb, you had a really interesting comment about going the extra mile and what it meant. We mean that you should go an extra mile to let evil be seen. Let them do what they do to a point, right? You have to protect people, but these evil people, they're just gonna keep doing it. And it's really why I think we are maybe awakening societally today as we are to the corruption, to the graft, to the grifting, because we've just kind of let them do what they've done. And it really goes to that old saying of give them enough rope to hang themselves, and they will, and they kind of have. But going the extra mile factors into this for those who don't understand what going the extra mile meant.

SPEAKER_13

Well, and and back then, when you know, when we read the Bible today, we read it from our 2026 point of view, right? You have to under the understand the dynamics and what was going on at the time, uh, politically, societally, everything else. So back then, a Roman citizen, a Roman uh military personnel can go to member the Roman Legion. Yeah, the member of the Roman, well, others do, but the Roman Legion, a legionnaire, could go to any citizen that they had occupied their territory and say, Hey, carry my bags. And their bags weighed about 60, 85 pounds, what they can is what they weighed. And they could force that citizen to carry it for up to one Roman mile. So they would force you to carry their own pack, which was meant to degrade and humiliate you because they're an occupying force forcing you to carry their items for up to one mile. So when Christ said, go the extra mile, carry it another mile, it wasn't just him saying, hey, do this because it's the kindness of your art. He's saying do it because it was asked of you. Go the extra mile to show that you're giving more effort, and they will pay the price because they're the ones who committed an injustice upon you. Because they legally could do that, but it was meant to humiliate and degrade you. If you went that second mile, that member of the Roman military force could get in trouble for allowing you to carry that pack, the second mile. So it's more than just saying, hey, give out of the kindness of your heart and do more. It's Christ's way of saying, look, give unto Caesar that which is Caesar's, but at the same time, let Caesar know he's not welcome. Caesar's on the hook for it.

SPEAKER_10

Yeah.

SPEAKER_09

If you take it that extra step, that extra mile, if you let evil expose itself, all of a sudden, they are on the hook for it. And it's one of the reasons why I love the conversations we have here because so much, I think, of where we are politically, societally today comes from people being able to see what evil has done. I mean, think about the fraud in Minnesota. It's not like they went, oh, you know what, we're gonna keep this under the radar. They swung for the freaking fences. We're talking billions of dollars in fraud annually, trillions over time, if you really add it up. Well that's the thing. If you cut that off when it's just a little thing, well, it's only forever just a little thing. But if you wait until the evil grows, everybody sees it. And that's kind of the question that I have for the crew here in the Mr. Lester's TSPL this day, as we record this episode. Do you think more people are seeing it than ever before? Because, in my opinion, the regular citizenry is done. That's my question.

SPEAKER_13

I I do believe more and more people are seeing things for what they are, but at the same time, we also have people that are viewing it from one lens and one lens only. And I think we all fall guilty to that, where all of our own lenses for life are dirty and chipped and scarred by our own uh our own point of view. Theses. Yeah. Yeah, that too. Uh our own point of view and and how we identify, right, as an individual. Uh when I say that, I mean that in every context, not just that context. But oftentimes we it's hard to look at things and realize, okay, look, I'm not 100% correct. There's a my side, their side, and the truth. And just because we have an opinion doesn't mean it's fact. And it's really, really hard for the for any human being, myself included, to disconnect self from our own opinion.

SPEAKER_09

Oh, you can't. I mean, the the very first rule that they teach in journalism school when they talk about bias in any story that's written is that you cannot write an unbiased story. Right. That every story that is written has bias in it, no matter what. And I think that's one of the reasons why this show is named what it's named, because we are embracing the bias that we bring to the table. And we're saying, hey, things got so far out of whack with bias on the other side. They just want you to believe their bias. We want you to hear the other side of the story and it's ours.

SPEAKER_13

Well, and like you were talking earlier about the must fee and everything else. Look at the IPO, right? So he's what now worth $1.2 trillion, I think is what they said. Something like that. Yeah, so $1.2 trillion. But yeah, people don't they don't put two and two together and they say they could they they're calling for him donating money and giving money. That's fine. He doesn't have that much cash. It's all caught up in stock. But let's say he did. Let's say he wanted to pay off one group's fraud. Out of his $1.2 trillion, he would spend approximately nine billion dollars just to pay off and catch up the state of Minnesota.

SPEAKER_09

At the end of the day, where where we go with this is the evil that is in the world today has gotten so pervasive, and this is gonna be a great transition, no pun intended, to the the next story, right? But the evil has gotten so bad that it cannot see the evils of its own doing, and here's what I mean by that. So we recorded this episode on a Monday evening, like Grant said, normally we record on a Wednesday this week because Walker asked, we are recording on a Monday, and yes, y'all now all know that, and we're outing Walker on the radio. Well, we're telling about Walker on that on the radio, anyway. We all probably watched some, if not all, of the UFC America 250 fight, I did in front of the White House and the conversation around oh, this is so degrading, this is so terrible, and I I gotta tell you, I find it hysterical because the evil cannot see how evil it was. Do I like maybe White House lawn? Maybe if it was on the National Mall, I mean, there there's maybe a different place to do it that might have been a little bit easier. I get why the White House, because literally you have changing rooms, you have walkout rooms, I understand that. But on the same hand, the mall, maybe. But the flip side of that is this. So wait a minute. When your husband was abusing interns in the White House, nobody had an issue with that. When you got voted out of office after your second term, I say voted out, when your term expired, it's well documented that you stole silverware from the White House, you stole China from the White House, right? When the last administration was there, literally the ground was basically desecrated. You had human beings who are not supposed to be shirtless, shirtless on the White House lawn. Don't talk to me about desecrating the people's home, because we all needed to see that evil for people to realize just how crazy the left had become.

SPEAKER_21

And they it they seem to have forgotten about that. Oh no, they didn't forget. Look, that's that's a that's a visual you cannot forget. Uh the the transitioning people on the front lawn of the White House exposing And please don't believe us on this. Go look it up on X, it's all over. You can find it. But it's it's it's very poignant, actually. I mean, you you couldn't have a more clear descriptor of the differences between the two administrations. You've got uh baseball, hot dogs, apple pie, Chevrolet, and UFC right there on Trump's.

SPEAKER_09

Actually, it was Dodge Ram. It was Dodge Ram. It was UFC, not baseball. Yeah, right? But I get I get what you're saying.

SPEAKER_21

It's it's it's Americana. It's the difference between the two administrations. So you got grassroots Trump, and you've got uh the a whole entire flock of uh transitioning people.

SPEAKER_09

Ring the bell. And and here's why I'm having you ring the bell. Great takeaway that I saw someone post, so I can't take complete credit for it. What was put out there, and we're we're gonna come back to this because we'll talk more about the event. But the previous administrations catered to, for lack of a better term, the Brie and Cheese crowd. This administration caters to the fist fights and some. Suds crowd. And you know what? There's a heck of a lot more of the fist fight and suds crowd than there are the Brie and Cheese. And with that, we'll come back with more implicit bias radio.

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SPEAKER_09

Drink Kacheri's Coffee, the official coffee of Implicit Bias. Available at LaCrapery on Kali Saloon, at the Rustic Renegade, Automotive Gear on Judson Walsh and Opalousis, and The Chill House, the dessert destination in Maurice. Kuchari's Coffee, the official coffee of Implicit Bias.

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SPEAKER_09

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SPEAKER_14

Yeah. I mean, it's got to be a good thing. You gotta get the microphone. I didn't realize how how well it was gonna catch on, but yeah, yeah.

SPEAKER_09

Yeah, Dobearsh. It kind of sounds like that kid that you picked on when you were in middle school. Okay, yeah.

SPEAKER_10

Yeah.

SPEAKER_09

Doesn't it? Doesn't it? But but but it also, to the point, if you know, you know. So you've got that nuanced old school New Orleans, and it's really not Dobarish. It's Dobash. It's Dobash, Darling, right? Which is the way it gets said in New Orleans.

SPEAKER_14

Yeah, New Orleans is definitely Dobash. D-O-B-A-S-H. Hey, baby, you got a Dobash cake?

SPEAKER_09

Yeah, yeah. And then of course, sitting next to him is our friend from Kennebra, K and B Grant Galatis of William S. Nay called jewelers, big a beta diamonds for less.

SPEAKER_21

Three dollars.

SPEAKER_09

Nope. You won the what would you pay? Championship belt chain.

SPEAKER_21

We don't do that every hour?

SPEAKER_09

No, not nope. We don't do that every segment. No, we'll do it again.

SPEAKER_21

Don't worry. Yeah.

SPEAKER_09

And that is the rustic renegade. He is the co-host of the show, of course, as you know that voice. All right. So let's get back to America 250, UFC on the White House lawn. Caleb, I know you had some thoughts about it because we got into the perspective cost of this, which is the estimate's what, 60 million, and that's the private cost.

SPEAKER_13

Yeah, roughly. And then you have to think about it, right? So the Secret Service, they're going to have more than just their standard guys there. The advance is already done, but they have to bring in more personnel. I don't know if y'all saw the personnel on the rooftop. There was there was a ton of people on the rooftop. Then you have to have your QRF force, everything else around there, your additional security out in the in the crowd. Because throughout the entire thing, you're going to have one Secret Service agent or at least one applicable agent, uh, probably every 25 square feet for that many people that we can get eyes on and have a good response time. Because anything could have gone wrong at any time.

SPEAKER_09

All I could think when Trump walked out onto the balcony at the White House was, are they going to try it again?

SPEAKER_13

I thought you were like, you were thinking, look how thick that door is.

SPEAKER_09

No, I was not thinking about the door. I'm thinking sitting there thinking, they've tried to kill the man, what, at least three times that we know of? At least three. And I'm thinking, are they going to try again?

SPEAKER_13

See, and I thought that too, but I was taken back. I'm like, look, there's the door. You can see the angles and everything else. I was upset how it's an inward opening door. It should have been an outward opening door, in my opinion, but there's a reason for that. Um but it was the perfect opportunity for something to go bad. But I think that the reason that we didn't get that kind of response, I didn't really see any Democrats there.

SPEAKER_09

We're gonna talk about that in a second. Grant, go ahead.

SPEAKER_21

Uh uh I agree a hundred percent. As soon as he walked out onto the balcony, it just you you almost kind of flinch a little bit and just it's it's hard to watch. But uh I don't know if you'd know this though, Caleb. They they have to be taking some special precautions for for drones.

SPEAKER_13

Oh, yeah, that's all that's a restricted airspace.

SPEAKER_21

So uh, but yeah, think about it though. Think about the size of some of these things. I mean, it's the little handheld drones and stuff. It's it just I'm worried more about that because they had 80,000 people watching from the from the parade grounds. Trevor Burrus, Jr.

SPEAKER_13

Yeah, but depending on where what kind of drone you have, it'd have to be a homemade drone. Uh it wouldn't even take off. If it has any kind of electronics that are hooked into the FFA FAA, it wouldn't even take off in that area. You can't get it to come off.

SPEAKER_14

I was gonna say, even if they get it airborne, I know what you're saying, Grant, but that they're gonna jam all the electric channels. There's not nothing before.

SPEAKER_09

I'll give you a perfect example of this.

SPEAKER_21

I just wonder if they took that precaution.

SPEAKER_09

We were well, so I will tell you that absolutely they do. So here in Lafayette, we were actually doing some video production for someone, and we went to go get some some aerial drone footage off of Kali's saloon, which for those who are not in Lafayette, Louisiana, is not far from the airport. It's in the flight path. Because the drone is signed in without all the proper credentials through the FAA, the drone won't fly. Like they're all tied in now, and that's to Caleb's point, that's why it would have to be homemade. Now, to that point, 80,000 people. Now, his rallies, you don't have any Democrats really showing up there either, and they tried to kill him at one of those. However, you know, the one thing that that the anti-assassination plot people had going for them was that they had their rise up in gout going as a counter to UFC on the White House lawn for Democrats, which I think like 45 people watched on YouTube. And no, it's actually not Rise Up in Gout, it's Rise Up Sing Out, but Rising Up in Gout is what it when you look at it, it's like somebody didn't do a very good job of labeling that or coming up with that name. It was just, it was pathetic.

SPEAKER_13

Well, and you have to look like no matter what side, if you're for what have if you're for the USA 250 or UFC 250, if you're for the rise up sing out, like both sides make plenty of mistakes. Both sides of this, because we're because we have this two-party system we're kind of stuck in, are very, very laughable at many times, right?

SPEAKER_09

Eli go ahead and grab it, and I'm gonna throw something out there while you do. Because here's the thing I don't think it's laughable. Laughable isn't the point. Here's what I think is the point. You had as of, and I actually looked and kind of added up, you had roughly 130,000 people watching at about 925 Central Standard Time during the UFC 250 that were watching the rising up in gout. Right? You had 80,000 people show up in person to watch from the mall. And some of the estimates are Super Bowl-esque numbers for the number of people watching this UFC fight.

SPEAKER_13

The disparity in numbers is ridiculous.

SPEAKER_09

That's what they couldn't have. They cannot have, and I say they, leftists, cannot have the real numbers show up and have people see it. Because forever, forever, it has been Democrats of the majority, Republicans, you're in the minority. I think that's OBS. Now we're starting to see the truth.

SPEAKER_14

Eli. Well, yeah, no, and I was gonna say, going along with what Caleb says, yeah, that there is uh both sides, you know, do things that are laughable in the north, but evil is gonna show its face, and the narrative is the same every time. So although both sides have some things that are that are laughable, ring the bell. The the evil side is gonna is gonna show more prevalently, and I think that's what people are starting to see.

SPEAKER_09

And Eli, I think where you're going with this is when you say it shows up the same every time. The messaging has not changed. There is no new message from the evil side, and the evil side is always calling people names, telling them they're bad people, telling them that they're trying to hurt people when they're not, they're putting out lies about who the other people are. It's all they've got.

SPEAKER_13

Well, and I think that's their problem, is they try to just be loud. They think that if they can beat their chest and make enough noise, we'll shut up. But when you have someone crying and screaming saying you're a bad person, like look, I'm I try to be really nice and really kind, and I do a lot for people, but man, sometimes I just want to kick somebody in the face. Well, like I'm not gonna lie to you about it.

SPEAKER_09

Caleb, I think here's why, because a generation or multiple generations lost what I think probably everybody that is even close to this show, and everybody that listens to this show got his children, which is our fathers telling us, Oh, you want to cry? I'll show you something to cry about. I will give you something to cry about. In other words, we learned early, oh, I think this is bad, I think this is terrible. No, you want me to show you bad and terrible, I will show you truly bad and terrible. This is restraint. You don't like it, and just because you don't like it doesn't mean it's bad. You really want bad, I'll show you bad. They haven't seen truly bad and terrible. These are people who've never actually experienced I don't want to say hard times, but they've never actually experienced true consequences for bad behavior.

SPEAKER_13

Well, I I think that it it shows as well their tears have no value. That's a grown and when I say their tears have no value, like Well, they cry for everything. Yeah, it's okay, it's okay for a grown man to cry. I'm gonna tell you that right now. I've cried, I've wept uh in in prayer, in everything. Um and my tears carry weight. Like whenever I shed a tear, it it it's a lot of weight. And it's a ton for a grown man to sit here and say, I've cried because of a loss, I've cried because of heartache, of heartbreak, uh, of sorrow, whatever else. Like the weight that is on your shoulders can come out in tears and it weighs a lot. And to understand that the value of your tears, you shouldn't cry for everything. Okay. And and these people that cry because they can't get the right color blue dye for their hair, or they cry because the the commercial that came on said that uh whatever it is and it upset them, that tear holds no value. So if your even your tears don't have value, what does that say about the person you are? How little value do you bring to the table? What little value do you add to your family name? What little honage, what little honor, courage, or purpose do you give the mankind?

SPEAKER_09

Look at the guy that Justin Gacy went full on Bobby Brown on in the fight. That dude, the dude easily had a broken orbital. We uh we're pretty sure about that one. I guarantee you he had broken ribs at the end of the fight. Did that dude cry? That dude wanted to get up and go back into the fight. I'll keep going. That's the difference. I remember watching this and thinking, man, you know, when you get hit in the face, there's a big question. It tells you a lot about who you are. Do you get up and go towards, or do you get up and cry and go home? And I'd love to say I've never been on both sides of that. At the end of the day, when it's really needed, the person you want next to you is the one who gets up and goes forward in spite of it all. Much like we are going to bring you hour two, which is always more fun of implicit bias radio, right after this break. Don't go away. Nobody likes to drive around in a grimy ride. Clean that car the Cajun way. Zydeco Ride and Shine Car Wash at 320 Willow and Cajun Car Wash at 510 Lafayette Street in Young'sville are there for you. Our facilities provide you with the best automatic car wash in the Acadiana area. Regulars get a bonus. Buy three washes at a location, get the fourth one free. Zydeco Ride and Shine and Cajun Car Wash, keeping Acadiana's rides clean since 2014. Dewpre Carrier Godshaw provides insurance locally as well as nationwide. A full service agency, DewpreCarrier Godshaw, can take care of all of your needs, from personal auto, home, or business, group health, life, or investment products. DewpreCarrier Godshaw is a growing business and is currently hiring. Email resumes to Charles L at DCGAgency.com. For all of your insurance needs, call DewpreCarrier Godshaw at 337-948-8186 or visit DCGAgency.com.

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SPEAKER_09

Hour two of implicit bias is brought to you by William S. Nacall Jewers, 3802 Johnson Street in Lafayette, Louisiana. Go find Grant Galatis. Tell him you want bigger, better diamonds for less, whatever you need, whatever you're looking for. They'll customize something just for you to make sure that your special someone gets that something oh so special. William S. Nacall Jewers, 3802 Johnson Street, Lafayette. Hour two of implicit bias radio is always more fun. Why? Because there's more weekly whiskey. The crew is ready to solve more problems of the world than you. Well, hopefully you've been sipping right along with us and you've got some things to say. Okay, just a quick reminder for Father's Day, on Father's Day, which is for those listening on terrestrial radio, tomorrow we will announce the winners of our big Father's Day prize packs. Go to our Facebook page, find the video pinned at the top, and go ahead and give your favorite theory that dad had that he was 100% convinced was true. Which, for example, mine actually fits in really well with this week's theme, which is believe none of what they say, believe only what they do. Because true evil will say one thing and do something else. And we should let that happen because that's going to expose who true evil is. Like Walker.

SPEAKER_13

Caleb, something you were gonna say. No, I can't say it on the radio because it was something my dad told me that it just came to mind. It's not a week. I'll tell you about it later. It's a really good one. Walker, what you get in your dad for Father's Day?

SPEAKER_08

I'm not sure yet. Probably something fishing related.

SPEAKER_09

It's a it's it's it's a week away. Maybe a week. Well, it's less than a week when we recorded. When this airs, it's gonna be like less than 24 hours.

SPEAKER_13

Why don't you just like get him a spinnerbait and put his name on it? Something fishing related. Yeah, like that's last year I got him a Would you make him a macaroni moon?

SPEAKER_07

Last year I got him two topwater baits.

SPEAKER_13

Macaroni or didn't your kids make macaroni art when they were little bitty? Yeah, but a macaroni name was a moon. His name's Moon. So a macaroni moon because it's a combination of Walker's still a child and his dad's name.

SPEAKER_09

Needless to say, this is why no one follows Caleb's line of thinking. Anyway.

SPEAKER_13

Yeah, I'm all over the place. Yeah.

SPEAKER_09

No, it's it's it's all right. It's all right. So anyway, who cares? All right, so let's go to the bar. What was that, Eli?

SPEAKER_14

I knew exactly what Caleb was saying.

SPEAKER_09

Oh, jeez. Okay, so we are going to get into some of the theories in the comments. I'm gonna have the crew pull up the comments. We're gonna spend some time on that this hour. But right now, retrieve it. Right now, I think we need to ring the bell. Because it's that time. We haven't done it in a few weeks. The conspiracy theorists were right. Again. This makes the conspiracy theorists what? Batting a thousand? Um, maybe, you know, 999 to one that they've been right versus wrong. I mean, really, when you go neck deep into this, you're like, how? How do they know? I'll tell you how they know once I tell you what the story is. Tulsi Gabbard is getting ready to leave her position in Washington, D.C. And Tulsi, in the week preceding this recording, released some files that basically outlined, they didn't basically, they did outline, how the United States was funding biolabs in Ukraine. Let me say that again. The United States was funding and paying for biolabs in Ukraine. Let me say it one more time. You want to see my surprise? The United States was funding biolabs in Ukraine. Anyone remember a particular radio show that was saying, hey, hey, hey! We know what's going on in Ukraine, and what did we get called? We got called the crazy uncle.

SPEAKER_13

I want to be the crazy uncle in my own.

SPEAKER_09

Well, the crazy uncle's been right a heck of a lot more than he's been wrong lately. But we now know that it's true. It's it's like in the the the bad Star Wars sequels. It's true. It's all true. The biolabs, the money laundering, the force, it's all true. It all happened. Say yeah, it all happened.

SPEAKER_14

Yeah, but come on, these biolabs that the US is funding, it's to Study biological, not weapons. It's supposed to be to study and to prevent biological outbreaks of any disease.

SPEAKER_09

Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait. So you mean like the I what do they call that? Um not game of thrones, but not G-O-T, G-O-F, not Game of Thrones, gain of function research. Is that what it is? Yeah. Oh, and so define for me gain of function research. Do you know what? But what is that?

SPEAKER_14

I mean, might be that it's it's a way to say that we're funding researching bioweapons, figuring out how to use how to create functionality out of those things.

SPEAKER_09

Absolutely. Yeah. Hence gain of function.

SPEAKER_14

So let's see. But it depends on how you look at it. Because if you're looking at it, that we're building bioweapons, then uh you're looking too deep into it. We're just seeing how it works to prevent outbreaks of from naturally occurring so we can identify those outbreaks.

SPEAKER_09

Yeah. I'm gonna change your nickname. You're not gonna be Dobash anymore. You're gonna be Dr. Fauci. We're gonna start calling you Fauci. Dr. Fauci over there at the bar trying to tell us. It look, it's the same argument with these people who were saying, oh, the Southern Poverty Law Center was paying for information. They were paying for informants. No, they weren't. The Southern Poverty Law Center was paying for functionality. They were paying for transportation. They were paying for hoods and drapes and crosses. That's what they were paying for. In other words, they were creating that. Much like the US, as much as I hate to say this, seems like we were creating biological hazards in Ukraine.

SPEAKER_14

Well, like I said earlier, evil will show its ugly face. And so there are a certain portion of the population that is going to believe whatever they want to believe and believe that things are done for for the greater good. When I think we know why you are funding a biolab and it's not to prevent the outbreak of we outlined this on this show.

SPEAKER_09

So if something happens, it doesn't happen in the US. Or the real reason might be we did it in Ukraine because it's illegal to do it on US soil, and too many people might find out.

SPEAKER_14

Now I was just gonna add to that. We may want to turn our eyes uh towards Taiwan because apparently there's lots of labs in that area of the country that are not destroyed by the Russians uh that could possibly be active.

SPEAKER_09

So ring a bell because you brought up you brought up some people there that really factor into this discussion. You know, it's amazing what happens when we start turning Iran into glass with stories from other parts of the world. Because I can't tell you the last time I heard a news story about the war in Ukraine in the last three months. And that doesn't mean it's not happening. But my point is the attention is certainly gone from it. But see, here's where having a memory somewhat like an elephant helps. Does anybody remember why Russia said they were going into Ukraine? Wasn't it originally because they wanted to restore their lands that were taken from them? That's part of it.

SPEAKER_13

Yeah.

SPEAKER_09

But that's not the real reason that if you lay out the geopolitical aspect of this, that Putin said he went in. Grant, do you remember?

SPEAKER_21

No clue. I remember reading something about Putin. Uh it was something from his childhood, where I don't know if if Germany was actually used mostly that area in Ukraine as a gateway to to enter Russia. So you you've you've got some of that He's probably on a whole nother rabbit hole, but yeah. That's all I remember from from why that would be.

SPEAKER_09

You've got some of that realistic risk map happening in the world. Wasn't part of it because of the biolabs? He Putin sat down and said the US has funded and their intelligence agencies have put up biolabs on our doorstep, and our media called him a liar. Do you remember that? And look, I'm not taking up for Vladimir Putin here. But what I'm saying is you have to recognize who the evil is. The evil's our media.

SPEAKER_13

Yeah, they wanted to spin it and they wanted to prove him to be a liar because if he was a liar, they could discredit it and then they could hide the fact that we were still there. It's not that were there biolabs that were American funded, it's how many and what were they actually studying.

SPEAKER_09

So let me ask this. If we thought that Mexico had put a bunch of fentanyl manufacturing facilities that were flooding into the U.S., what might we do? Oh.

SPEAKER_13

Or if there was a book called The 1% Doctrine, where Cheney and Bush wrote it about a 1% chance that a country had a nuclear dirty bomb, what would we do?

SPEAKER_09

I'm thinking about the fact that we absolutely did exactly what Russia did in Ukraine to Mexico. We just didn't send mass troops in. Hey, Goose, don't look at this gander. My point being, there is not a person on this planet with more than three and a half brain cells between their ears. So that excludes almost all leftists. But there is not a person with more than three brain cells that would not say, gee, another country is putting biolabs on our doorstep to be able to do God knows what with them. I mean, who knows? You know, there might be like a viral outbreak right before an election that creates a totally different dynamic with how people can vote in order for fraudulent votes to get injected into the system and try and overthrow and create a color revolution inside of our country because of those. Anyway, they might say that and say we got to put an end to this. Anybody with more than two brain cells would say this. And our media calls them liars. Our media called you, if you actually listen to the congressional testimony that we told you about, where we admitted, yeah, we funded some biolabs in Ukraine. They called you a liar, they called you a conspiracy theorist, they called you crazy. And at the end of the day, what do we now know? Evil, evil projects. Evil does exactly what they say other people are doing. And that I think is the big catch here. And now you have you have reports, we are doing everything we can to substantiate them. Literally, this was tied directly to the Obama administration. Which is really interesting considering where pallets of cash were tied to that went to another country where we're currently entangled with right now. Anyone remember the pallets of cash?

SPEAKER_13

Oh yeah. All the time. There's so many pallets of cash, planes of cash, everything else, gold bullion that just go missing.

SPEAKER_09

Yeah, but there was like 420 million in cash that Kaiser Sozade.

SPEAKER_13

Some former president just sent that somewhere else. Not my address, I tell you that.

SPEAKER_14

Well, I don't know if you saw, but oh Obama just came out and said that the the deal that Trump is doing with with uh with Iraq right now is I mean Iran right now is the same that he did, except that we obliterated Iran and their whole all their navy and bombed out of their nuclear facilities.

SPEAKER_09

So I I love the false equivalence of the same. And and look, if you were watching TV this week, you probably heard and saw the talking points. That's the narrative that everybody got at 4 a.m. this morning. When you go on your media tours, this is what you talk about. It's the same deal, it's no different than what Obama did, right? They do their best to create an equivalency there. And that equivalency is so false it's not even funny. So let's start with the first part. This is what we know at recording time. What we know at recording time is that yes, some funds will be freed up to the Iranian government if they comply with everything else. Big difference between, hey, Iran, here's what we're gonna do. We're gonna land four C 130s with pallets of cash on your landing strips, and 420 million of that's gonna just disappear if that's okay, and we're not gonna know where it went.

SPEAKER_13

Well, I don't think the American people really understand what that means, right? So $420 million, it vanishes, it goes away. What do we do? What does our government do? Print another $420 million. Yep. So now it not only adds to inflation, it also continually devalues your dollar that much more. So it's not that we gave them $420 million, it's $840 million now that's gone that the taxpayers are on the on the hook for because that money had to get printed by someone else. And then we borrowed it from the Fed, which isn't the Fed. There's nothing federal about them, it's just a group of bankers that loan us money at interest rate anyway.

SPEAKER_09

That legally under the constitution they shouldn't be able to do, that's a whole nother story.

SPEAKER_13

Damn all that.

SPEAKER_09

Here's here's to me where where the whole Iran thing, and this is why I think you're hearing the talking points, this is why I think it was such a big deal. This is why you had all the tough talk from the same people who today said we never should have, we never should have been involved in a conflict in Iran, because every Democrat since Hillary Clinton, well, since Bill Clinton, because Hillary was never elected to president, she was the first lady who thought she was the president somehow and then swore when she ran that she was coming for Iran. Remember, she said this, she talked tough, never was gonna do it. This is my opinion, why the uranium in Iran. Please don't believe us on this. Please don't. Please go look up the uranium one scandal. The uranium one scandal, you have to know history, you have to understand it. When Hillary Clinton was Secretary of State, and this is very public, and we have multiple verification sources on this. Hillary Clinton sold a nice chunk of American weapons grade uranium, which is not easy to find, it's in limited supply, but she sold it to foreign interests. We know it happened. Everyone knows it did, and this is this is my theory. I'm not gonna call it a prediction. This is my theory. It's why getting the uranium dust and getting the uranium from Iran is so important. Here's the interesting thing about uranium. So, Grant, I know you watch the curse of we ain't found right on Oak Island. We I mean it's one of the most watched television shows on cable. What's really interesting is on that show, they can tell you, hey, you found silver on Oak Island. That silver was mined between these dates in this mine, somewhere in Germany or somewhere in Italy, they can tell you the unique metallurgic signature of that ore. They can do the same with uranium. And if in fact it comes back that the uranium in Iran is in fact American uranium.

SPEAKER_14

Whoa, whoa, whoa.

SPEAKER_13

Well, and that's uranium one was actually the country that were based out of Canada, and they were mining uranium from here in the US in North America. It's American uranium, is my point. Yep. And it had when they went through Russia, Russia, I don't remember their name of their company that bought into it, wanted to buy, they took over 51% of the company, right? In order to do that, a certain federal government had to approve it because some of those assets were on American soil. And take a guess who was the big push behind it. Who was the president of the time during that?

SPEAKER_09

The president at the time, oh, I think his initial smell like uh body odor. Uh oh no, there's an H in there. Barack Hussein Obama?

SPEAKER_13

Well, originally it was Clinton. Back when it goes all the way back to that to Clinton. And then whenever you whenever Clintons were pushing it, guess who made the largest donation of that year to the Clinton Foundation? Uranium One as a company.

SPEAKER_09

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SPEAKER_09

Hour two of implicit bias is brought to you by William S. Nakehol Jewers, 3802 Johnson Street in Lafayette, Louisiana. Go find Grant Galatis. Tell him you want bigger, better diamonds for less, whatever you need, whatever you're looking for. They'll customize something just for you to make sure that your special someone gets that something oh so special. William S. Nakehall Jewers, 3802 Johnson Street, Lafayette. Squirrel segment of this week's episode of Implicit Bias Radio. I'm your host, Gavon Bordelon. In the Mr. Lester's TSPO, located somewhere in Lafayette, Louisiana, where we record. We have a great crew, and that's crew with a K assembled. Eli Tate, otherwise known as Dobash, sitting at the bar. And Eli, what you looking at over there? You gotta have you gotta have the microphone. It's a radio show too, remember.

SPEAKER_14

So I just poured this uh Elijah Craig uh private uh barrel. Oh, yeah, good stuff. I just took a sip of it not thinking, and wow. It's only 128 on the roof. Wow. Big difference. Big boy, huh? Yeah, but maybe I missed this. But this would, in case anybody's wondering, this would be a blue times two.

SPEAKER_09

Eli, as you can see, is having fun. He's sitting next to KB Grant Galatis, who does Big A Beta Diamonds fillet at William S. Nacall Jewelers, which by the way, Grant, you notice that I I I wore it tonight?

SPEAKER_21

Absolutely.

SPEAKER_09

I had to wear it for the show because I have a hard time with it. So for those who who don't know, okay. Full transparency of the nepotism and inbreeding from Implicit Bias Radio. Grant's son is about to marry my daughter, and Grant's son does custom designs. Like he is really, really good. Dylan is fantastic at figuring out who you are and putting who you are into a piece of jewelry. This is a one-off St. Michael the Archangel ring. It's I the only hard, difficult thing I have about wearing it is I don't want to ever mess it up because it's so awesome. But if you don't wear it, it's like, you know what? You wear it every day and because that's what it's meant for. It's meant for people to see it. It's just character on jewelry. Yeah, it is. Yeah, it is. Speaking of someone with no character, Caleb Morse, the Russian grenade is here. You like that segue? That was good. That was well done. Well done. And we are having a fun time. Okay, so this is why this is a squirrel segment. Because this is something that Caleb and I actually discussed after we recorded our last show. Sometime around 10:30, 11 o'clock at night when Caleb called me and I was like, Caleb, you do realize what we have done here. And he's like, What do you mean? So for those who don't know, I'm gonna put this a show synopsis into this segment. The gentleman at the bar, I'm gonna ask y'all have either of you figured out that we have created a live action, real life version of old school? The movie old school? Yeah. We're going streaking. Everybody to the quad. I mean, stop and think about this for a minute. So what Walker, have you seen the movie Old School? Please tell me you have. I don't think so. Oh, dear. You're my boy, Blue. Yeah, that's that's not no, that's Renee. Uh we're just waiting for him to roll a seven in a inflatable pool filled with baby oil. Yeah, we're not doing the Diddy thing, don't worry. Um, but yeah, so in old school, it's a bunch of guys who are out of school. They are working professionally, and what do they do? They create their own fraternity. And it's all off campus. It has nothing to do with school. And it's some guys who were old enough to have just enough in life to be able to be like, hey, what can we do that's stupid and get away with it? What would we have loved to have done that is incredibly childish that we can do today because we can afford it? Cheers, gentlemen. This is what we've done with implicit bias radio.

SPEAKER_14

Yeah, and I totally get you. I was so in left field. I thought you were tying this back into what we were talking about last segment. I'm like, no, that's how is how is all this conspiracy theories coming to light have anything to do with old school? But yes, amen. Come on, this is definitely this is our old school.

SPEAKER_09

That's why I was like, it's a squirrel segment. We're just going complete, completely off tangent or completely on a tangent, not off tangent, but on a tangent to the topics of the rest of the show. But I was like, man, this is it's so true. It is so true. I mean, we've got summer supper coming up at Mr. Lester Steakhouse. And look, Mr. Lester's is such a wonderful partner, and we love everybody down there at Cypress by you. So if you get the opportunity to enter, go to our Facebook page. There's a chance to enter now. We're gonna give some tickets away before the end of Father's Day, which for those who are listening on terrestrial radio, is tomorrow.

SPEAKER_13

So rush out and get him something, not not sucks. Correct. Not underwear either. Your dad doesn't wear those. Trust me.

SPEAKER_09

Enter to win. No, we don't. Enter to win those two tickets to summer supper where dad, mom, and dad can come to Cypress Bayou Casino at Mr. Lester Steakhouse, the only five star restaurant between New Orleans and Houston. We're covering food, hotel, and drinks for the night.

SPEAKER_13

Hotel's important because just like an old school. If we're there and Frank the tank shows up. Oh, Frank will be there. No driving.

SPEAKER_14

No driving. You can tell me Renee is not. We don't need to Renee is blue. Renee is Renee is thinking. You're my boy, Blue. Ever since all I was saying was Frank the tank streaking down the road. Oh no.

SPEAKER_13

Ever since Renee went into AFib from drinking too much.

SPEAKER_09

Which did happen. Renee did text us one morning, like, hey, I'm at the hospital just so y'all know. We're like, wait, what? Yeah. He's like, yeah, I went into AFib last night. And we're like, well, gee, Renee, the three filet mignons, the two orders of potatoes a gratin, and the six cigars you smoked last night, probably, right? Yeah, no, that's yeah, which is again why he's also he's our boy blue, right? Then again, oh wait, is Sam blue? Because Sam rest in peace. He's not with us anymore. He's just dead to us. He's not really dead. Yeah. But I mean, we we've got that.

SPEAKER_13

Yeah. So does that mean Walker will be baby blue? Like the color of your eyes. Oh dear lord.

SPEAKER_09

That's funny. I didn't need the singing. We just didn't need the singing. Well, you have to sing it. It's one of those songs that you just have to. All I want to know is this who's paying for Snoop Dogg to show up and perform at our next big party?

SPEAKER_13

That we'd sell out. Oh, we absolutely sell. Not we'd be sellouts, but we'd sell all the tickets.

SPEAKER_09

No, we we would sell all tickets. We absolutely would. So yeah. Squirrel segment over. We'll we'll dive back into some of the topics because we were going down the uranium one path in the last segment. But I was sitting here as we were talking, and there was a comment made about oh, what Walker was gonna do to celebrate the fact that he's actually gonna get a grown-up job at some point. And when Caleb said, Oh, yeah, getting a baby pool and some baby oil, and I was like, oh, wait. Mm-hmm. Old school, here we go. Old school, here we go. I'm just waiting on the dude with the cinder block and the rope and the manhole. Yeah, I don't know who that's gonna be. We'll figure out who that's gonna be one day. Anyway, let's dive back to uranium one. So Caleb, you were outlining how the deal went with uranium one. Are you are you on the same line of thought as I am that uranium one is going to end up rearing its ugly head in this whole Iran deal?

SPEAKER_13

Oh, I believe 100% it will, because uranium, there's only so much of it and it can only come from so many places. The problem we're gonna have with this is if we can prove that, hey, it came from that old Uranium One deal where the U.S. signed off on Russia owning 51% of a company based out of Canada that made a large donation to the Clintons because they were president at the time, then the Clintons facilitated the trade and everything else. Like, what's gonna come of it? I mean, what does it matter anywhere? I think is what she said, right?

SPEAKER_09

So at this point, what difference does it make?

SPEAKER_13

Yeah.

SPEAKER_09

Yeah. By the way, did y'all see on social media on Twitter? Well, formerly Twitter, now X, that particular person decided to go off about events at the White House, and one of her former military staff members just started spilling the beans hand over fist over the room.

SPEAKER_13

About how much they hated her? Oh, about how rude she was. She would make people put their nose into the corner when she walked by because that's the kind of person she is.

SPEAKER_09

Wait, about how they went on a diplomatic trip into Europe and stole the silverware and China that they were served breakfast on.

SPEAKER_13

Look, you can you can take the person out of the trailer. We love your arcade. As somebody that grew up in a trailer, I'm gonna tell you right now.

SPEAKER_09

Yeah. I I I just look at this and I go, this is why evil needs to be allowed to do evil. Because if it's kept under wraps and somebody hides it, so look, and this is probably where I go with this guy who allegedly was one of their attache, one of their handlers for the US military. This guy allegedly carried the nuclear football for Bill Clinton. Why are we only hearing about this 30 years later?

SPEAKER_13

Because they can the the politicians in power control so much. And they manipulate people and and force them to do just despicable things. Like that's why that that lifestyle and people in the people in power, like it's absolute power corrupts absolutely. You know, and it it it disheartens you because people go places, they try to make a difference, and then the machine eats them alive. And what you're left with is a zombie shell of a person that's going through motions and then becomes part of the machine, and it it's just heartbreaking. It really is.

SPEAKER_09

And Grant, you don't think we'll ever see any accountability for any of this stuff. And look, I'm not just picking on Democrats here. There are Republicans who are probably just as bad.

SPEAKER_21

Oh, absolutely. But but that's that's the thing. The way I've always looked at it is it's just a really large blanket. Whenever you hear our government say it's a matter of national security, that can cover such a wide array of things. And and if they're looking to get rid of something, they're looking to hush something up, they're looking to stop someone, they throw it under the the blanket of uh national security. Uh but what it comes down to is when something uh happens to that level, to where it's gonna do like Caleb said, and they're gonna be hanging people from bridges and and and doing whatever. I don't think it'll ever get to that point because it just makes the country look bad. No matter what side it is, they when it gets to a certain level, there's always a way to to manipulate it, to make it come off a little bit softer to where it doesn't have that impact, just because it makes us look bad. And when you have that kind of power, you can do that. You can you can put anything under the rug. I I've always said, look, what they want to do with stuff like this is they want to lock it in a room and throw away the rum. Look not just the key, but they have that ability to do that. If it just makes our government, our elected officials, whatever side of the fence you're on, if it makes us look bad, they can they can make it go away.

SPEAKER_09

I hope that that is just not the case. And uh just like I hope that it's not the case that you're going away because we have to take a break and come back. Penultimate segment after this, Walker. Doesn't matter. Yep. This is implicit bias radio.

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Drink Kacheri's Coffee, the official coffee of Implicit Bias. Available at LaCrapery on Collie's Saloon, at the Rustic Renegade, Automotive Gear on Judson Walsh and Opalousis, and The Chill House, the dessert destination in Maurice. Kucheri's Coffee, the official coffee of Implicit Bias. Hour two of Implicit Bias is brought to you by William S. Nay Call Jewelers, 3802 Johnson Street in Lafayette, Louisiana. Go find Grant Galatus. Tell him you want bigger, better diamonds for less, whatever you need, whatever you're looking for. They'll customize something just for you to make sure that your special someone gets that something oh so special. William S. Nay Call Jewelers, 3802 Johnson Street, Lafayette. We are jacks of all trades and masters of none on this week's episode of Implicit Bias Radio. I'm your host, Kavan Bordelon. Welcome back into the Mr. Lester's top secret podcast layer with your co-host Caleb Morse. He is the Rustic Renegade at the bar. He is Big A Beta Diamonds Philes. KB's Grant Galatis. Man, he's got like six nicknames all right in there. Strooge McDuck. What's funny? What's funny about that?

SPEAKER_21

Absolutely nothing. I was agreeing. It was a little snicker of a little snicker of agreement.

SPEAKER_09

Am I funny to you? Is that what you're saying? I'm funny to you. Funny, haha. Grant still would throw it off because we're recording this on a Monday.

SPEAKER_14

Grant just could it's thrown his whole week into it.

SPEAKER_09

Am I like a clown to you? Is that what you're saying? I'm here to make you laugh. I'm here to amuse you. And of course, that is the voice of Dobash. He is Eli Tate of Gambino's Bakery. Walker Griffon is still manning the audio for now. And I'm your host, Kavan Bordelon. All right, so like I said, Jack of all trades, master of none, which means we like to talk all things guy, stupid, fun, funny, make fun of, figure out what stupid, childish, sophomoric, 13-year-old, pre-teen-year-old stuff we can do and get away with on this show. And one of the things I think we kind of all want is this Mercedes AMG four-door coupe with this new axial electric motor.

SPEAKER_13

Yes. And so, like last week we talked about uh Ferrari's electric motor and how it like Well, they just completely screwed the pooch. Yeah, they they it took a massive dive on their stocks. Uh but what got me into this when I started looking at it, well, we've been trying to push battery technology and do all this other, and we're using cobalt, lithium, everything else, and trying to make it work better, make it work faster, make it work have more horsepower, more efficient, blah blah blah blah blah blah. Here we have Mercedes said, What if we change the engine? What if we change the motor?

SPEAKER_09

Okay, so before you get any farther into this, a lot of guys who listen to this show were working guys, work with our hands, or work people who do work with their hands. You may remember when there was this revolutionary technology that came out in power tools, specifically cordless power tools called brushless motors. They didn't change the batteries, but the motor was so much more efficient, gave so much more power, more torque, it's just a better motor. And essentially, that's what Mercedes has done here. Not change the battery. Let's see if we can make a better motor, correct?

SPEAKER_13

Yes and no. So Mercedes didn't originally do it. It's another company that I can't pronounce it. It's like Y USA or something like that. Uh Mercedes bought them for this technology. So think of a traditional V8. You have pistons going up back and forth, right? And uh electric motor will be an electromagnet around that, causing everything to spin and rotate.

SPEAKER_09

And it spins on a horizontal plane. So it's a horizontal drive shaft that comes out of the motor. It spins, right? So that is basically like the drive shaft on an internal combustion engine car that hits a gearbox in the back of the vehicle or the transmission that then converts it to the wheel spinning in a direction, as opposed to this is like a record player.

SPEAKER_13

Flat, like a series of pancakes, a triple stack, if you must, from IHOP, together. And they all have opposing forces magni uh force magnetics. They have a nine millimeter thick electric motor that makes 60 horsepower.

SPEAKER_09

So this AMG has three of these axial motors in it and is 1,300 plus horsepower, and it does 0 to 60 in less than three seconds. For those who've never driven a car that does 0 to 60 in four. Grant, I mean, you and you and I, Eli, we were all kids when the you know, rolling in my 5.0 was a thing. That big 5.3 liter V8 engine in the Mustang in the early 90s, late 80s, it would move. I mean, it would pull you to the back of the seat, and you were talking what, 350, 375, 400 horsepower at most? Can you imagine what this thing's like at a thousand?

SPEAKER_21

Without the sound, I would imagine. No. I mean, this is gonna it's gonna be just like a slingshot. It's just gonna be extremely quiet and and growing up around all of that stuff, man. That was that was kind of the the the thrill of that, you know, hearing that, hearing that muscle, hearing that that guttural well then the lobe of the cam. But but yeah, that's that's over 1300 horsepower. That's just that's frightening for a mass production vehicle.

SPEAKER_09

And look, for for our buddy Alan Rawls at KMLB and Monroe, who every time we do something on cars, because he has a a Mustang 50 GT, not a 90s or 80s one, but a newer one. One that doesn't look stupid. No, it it's awesome. It's tricked out. Stupid fox body. It's no, those were those were fantastic. They were nuts.

SPEAKER_13

Yes, they were. It looks like a high heel shoe from the side. Or a door wedge. You need glasses, don't you? It's like a door wedge. That's what it looks like from the side. That in the 80s Corvette, too.

SPEAKER_09

I agree that there is nothing like the sound of an old school internal combustion muscle cart. There just isn't. And I don't hope that we will ever outgrow that car or that engine or that feeling or that experience. But there's a place for electric. And really the reason I dropped this one in, because we don't normally don't do like two electric car stories in back-to-back weeks, but it's to show how you can do this right. How Ferrari completely this up. Yet how Mercedes is going, oh no, we're gonna do this and we're gonna do it right, and it's gonna be special.

SPEAKER_14

Yeah, and so and the technology is not that new. They actually that motor, that axial motor was used in uh in like the Sony Walkman's, but they just couldn't scale it. It's very difficult to make because it has to be so precise. So Mercedes figured out, or actually, the company they bought. Yeah, I was wrong, it's Y A S. Figured out how to like make this. And so So wait, you're telling me Tony Stark built this thing?

unknown

Yeah.

SPEAKER_14

Because essentially that's what he did, right? So it's and what I keep going back to, and I know it just takes the whole like muscle car, but I keep going back to these small motors and how much horsepower they put out. Yeah, and they're big. Do you remember that if you ever looked at watched, like, and maybe this shows how country I am, but like the big monster truck put like the truck? Yeah, tractor pulls, not truck and the tractor pools. Tractor pools have like five big V8 engines on them. Could you see one of the like a tractor that has like 12 of these axial motors with all the weight of the battery? Like they would pull from here to China.

SPEAKER_09

Oh, you would be able to stop. Oh, yeah. Well, here's it. Well, you say you'd be able to pull from here to China, if you could maintain the charge on the battery, which is the problem with electric today and why if if you live in a city and you drive a grand total of 30 miles a day on average, probably not a bad idea to have an electric car. If you live in rural Louisiana and it takes you 35 miles to get to Walmart, probably not gonna be a good idea for you to have an electric vehicle. We're traveling 300 miles to go anywhere is gonna be standard.

SPEAKER_14

So, and here's an interesting fact that is probably a topic for a uh different show, but I have a brother-in-law that works for one of the bigger electric vehicle companies. Okay. And the he said that the technology is there, but the reason that they go 300 miles is because that's the standard that vehicles go on a tank of gas. Man, I go 700 miles. So it's limited by marketing and what the technology is there that we could drive vehicles from more.

SPEAKER_09

Here's the huge fallacy with that, though. I might drive 300 miles to get to the deer camp in a day. I might work the day and have to drive around while I'm there and then want to come home. I don't want to spend six hours charging my damn battery and have to spend the night. No, that's what I'm saying. That's my point, though.

SPEAKER_13

It's capable, and then the axiomotor is actually much more efficient on lighters. So instead of making the battery lighter and smaller, they're keeping the same kind of charge duration or the same kind of uh wattage hours, and they have a motor that weighs a third, and that's producing two, like producing two times the horsepower. So if your range is limited to 300 powers and we can uh 300 uh miles and we can reduce weight and increase output by an additional third, well, now let's call it 400 miles.

SPEAKER_14

And like Eli's saying, though, the Yahoo's saying, how we can be able to say it's only gonna do 300 miles. And we're still only gonna do 300 miles.

SPEAKER_09

Much like Walker's gonna give us the finger from the side and tell us we got to take a break and come back with our final segment for Implicit Bias Radio for this week, which Jurassic Park might not be as far-fetched as you think. And what do we do? We make fashion accessories on this week's episode of Implicit Bias Radio. How sweet it is! Gambino's Bakery of Lafayette can satisfy all of your bakery needs. Cakes, cookies, pastries, melt-in-your-mouth pedophores, wedding cakes, and of course, the original New Orleans Doberge cake. Family-owned and operated, let Gambino's bakery take care of all your dessert needs for your family gathering, tailgate, holiday, or any special occasion. Visit with the baking professionals in Lafayette. Find what fits your taste, enjoy the sweet life with Gambino's Bakery of Lafayette, 3802 Johnson Street. Call them at 337-406-9066 or online at Gambinos.com.

SPEAKER_06

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SPEAKER_17

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SPEAKER_17

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SPEAKER_09

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SPEAKER_13

Come create with Bayou Crafting. Today's economy grows increasingly unstable. It's become more important to invest in precious metals and buy local. Buy your gold, silver, and collectible coins in person at Coin Treasure in Lafayette. Owner Louis Pizzolato is over 50 years in business, offering an in-person experience instead of dealing with invisible online dealers. Lewis and his staff can help you take physical possession of your gold and silver at the time of purchase. Coin and Treasure 2472 West Congress and Lafayette. Or call them at 337-232 2573. Coin and Treasure, your local precious metal experts.

SPEAKER_09

Outfit your backyard Oasis at Brosso's Hardware in Maurice and Abbeville, the most interesting hardware stores in Louisiana. Grab top-notch outdoor cooking gear from grills to smokers. Plus, discover our exclusive liquors and premium bourbons. Elevate your gatherings today. Visit Brosso's where hardware meets hospitality. Hour two of implicit bias is brought to you by William S. Nacall Jewers, 3802 Johnson Street in Lafayette, Louisiana. Go find Grant Galatus. Tell him you want bigger, better diamonds for less, whatever you need, whatever you're looking for. They'll customize something just for you to make sure that your special someone gets that something oh so special. William S. Nacall Jewelers, 3802 Johnson Street, Lafayette. And yes, we are teabagging it, T-Rex style, on this week's episode. I'm your host, Gavon Bordelon. We've got a great crew here on the Mr. Lester's Top Secret Podcast layer for you. One last reminder before we get into the story, and I'll explain what I meant by what I just said. Please go find our Facebook page. If you are looking for dad to win something on Father's Day, enter to win everything from a bar donated by Box Drop of Lafayette with an old fashioned kit donated by Ciro de Saison, a suppressor from the Rustic Renegade, to a move to Sono Speaker, to oh dear goodness, a box of Kohiba cigars with a lighter. And it's a sampler pack. It's not a full box of cigars, but it's a sampler pack from Pipers Haven, a bottle of implicit barrel from Mr. Lester Steakhouse at Cypress Bayou Casino, $17.92 single barrel, even two tickets to summer supper at Mr. Lester Steakhouse. You can enter to win on our Facebook page. Winners will be notified and announced on our Facebook page on Father's Day. Okay. So what did I mean by we're doing something with T-Rex? We are bagging it with T-Rex. Well, for those who remember the theory behind Jurassic Park, anybody here actually read the Michael Crichton original book before they made the movie? Grant, you did, I did. The book was fantastic, wasn't it? It was absolutely a riveting book. And the technology described there, do you remember how they revived dinosaurs?

SPEAKER_13

It was through the DNA that was stuck inside amber, wasn't it, from the mosquitoes or something? Well, that was from the movie. Eugenics? I don't remember. Well, it was that was in the book, too.

SPEAKER_09

So essentially, what they that they found was they found prehistoric amber that had mosquitoes inside of it. And they were able to extract dinosaur DNA from the mosquitoes. This was the theory in the book, and then recreate from that DNA, put into an amphibious embryo, dinosaurs. And that technology created Jurassic Park. Well, now apparently someone has figured out a way to did they replicate replicated proteins. The proteins from a Tyrannosaurus Rex.

SPEAKER_13

Yep. Because DNA breaks down, so they weren't able to use that, but they got the proteins. And made leather. Yes. Made T-Rex leather.

SPEAKER_14

Yeah, and the interesting thing is that because there were some gaps in the protein chain, and they put it into AI, and they figured out that it was pretty close to the same proteins as chicken. So it's very close to the protection. Is that why chicken tastes like chicken skin? Okay, so hold on. It's what I got to hope.

SPEAKER_09

Wait, so this is a Kraklin bag? I mean, you know what? If so they could not, they wanted $500,000 for a T-Rex leather bag.

SPEAKER_14

It's not real T-Rex leather. It's chicken skin. Yeah.

SPEAKER_09

They couldn't get it. They nobody paid it. It got to $150,000, so they didn't sell it. But I guarantee if you made T-Rex cracklin and you charged $100,000 a pound, there'd have been Cajuns lined up from I-10 to the Gulf of Mexico to buy it. That there is no doubt about that. If Billy's had done that, Billy's would make more money than they could ever imagine.

SPEAKER_13

Look, their cracklins are already good. T-Rex crackling. That's my point. If it was Velociraptor crackling, I'd probably What do you call it? Like tracklins?

SPEAKER_09

Ring the belly. I like that. I like that.

SPEAKER_13

Well, I think I think what most people got with this is like it's not real T-Rex leather. So a half a million dollars for a purse or a bag that's bio-engineered faux leather, like how can you justify that? I get that they were saying, look what we can do, look at this. But yeah, look, if it's you don't, you can't say it's real T-Rex. It doesn't matter. It's all about the rarity. Um like I would much prefer to see coins, like um the the Ford Raptor with like Raptor seats. That would have more skin.

SPEAKER_14

Grant real quick, because I think this would go right in hand in hand with with like uh the uh diamonds, like the lab grown diamonds. Oh, that's what do you see with it? That seems like it's pretty similar.

SPEAKER_21

Yeah, but from the article, it said that they just synthesized something similar to the skin.

SPEAKER_09

So here's here here's here's where I have a problem with what was done and the claim. The problem that I have is this. Folks, AI is not the all-encompassing intelligence that we believe it to be. So I love how Eli said they used AI to fill. Where did AI get that information from? AI doesn't know. AI, you know where they went, you know where AI went and got it from? MSDNC, CBS, NBC, ABC. That's where it pulls all its information from. I actually have, and I will I will share this with the crew. I don't know that I'll share this with the public. I have a string where I argued with Grok. And I know you're like, wait, you argued with AI on X? Yes. And Grok actually admitted, yes, the answer I gave you was biased. I understand why you say the answer I gave you was biased, because the references I used have been proven to be bad references in the past. But the initial reference, if you take it at face value, was complete and total bail bovine excrement, as Renee would say.

SPEAKER_13

At least you said it. Like mine's like, no, this is the answer. And I'm like, no, it sucks.

SPEAKER_09

But you have to understand AI that now, AI that we have access to. AI that the general public has access to, it's not intelligent. It's a general research tool that pieces together the large steaming piles of excrement information that's out there, and then claims, oh, according to these this research and these sources, this isn't true. Well, wait a minute. What if those sources are wrong? That's the question that AI cannot ask itself, and that's the big difference. Because when AI uses Snopes as a reference, and Snopes has been proven to be partisan, to be paid, all these things, you're like, well, wait a minute. AI, I guess it's not so smart after all. So that's what worries me about, oh, it filled in the gaps. How does it know what to fill in? AI wasn't around when dinosaurs are around. AI doesn't know what Dr. Jane Goodall has done in the jungles of Africa. AI AI is not there for those things. It has no idea. Not that the jungles of Africa have anything to do with Tyrannosaurus Rex skin. I don't know, but neither does AI, and it might reference that if she says something about T-Rexes.

SPEAKER_13

No argument? Are you kidding me? No, I mean it has to draw its information from somewhere, so it only knows from the collective knowledge base that it has, right? And that collective knowledge base, it has no clue if it's true, not true, if it's biased, unbiased. It just knows this is the information I was given. So that's where it gets it. Like if you only have one pond and you're trying to drink a glass of water, you're probably drinking someone's pee. Go back to the biolab story.

SPEAKER_09

If you ask AI if the US was funding biolabs in Ukraine, probably the majority of information is going to say no, the US wasn't. When we now know through government documents that we were, why is it gonna say we weren't? Because the media was creating an echo chamber that now AI is the amplifier for the subwoofer in that 1989 Toyota with two inches of ground clearance, neon lights underneath it. Oh, that's two that just says toy on the back.

SPEAKER_13

Yeah. Yeah, that's pre-Walker's.

SPEAKER_09

That's gonna do it for this week's episode of Implicit Bias Radio. As Walker now tells me, we've got one minute left, which Walker, you can take that and stick it. You've got one minute, short timer. We'll be back next week. We will have our winners announced for our contest on Father's Day. We will discuss some of the great, great lessons we learned from dad on next week's episode, and we hope that you will have a fantastic week as you do what's right, not what's easy, on Implicit Bias Radio. We'll see you in the second. Drink Kucherry's Coffee, the official coffee of Implicit Bias, available at La Crapery on Collie's Saloon, at the Rustic Renegade, Automotive Gear on Judson Walsh and Opalousis, and The Chill House, the dessert destination in Maurice. Kacherry's Coffee, the official coffee of Implicit Bias.

SPEAKER_05

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SPEAKER_18

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SPEAKER_19

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SPEAKER_01

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