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Joe Getty
Foreign broadcasting live from the Abraham Lincoln radio Studio at the George Washington Broadcast.
Jack Armstrong
Center, Jack Armstrong and Joe Getty.
Joe Getty
Armstrong and Getty. And now here. Armstrong, get ready from Studio C, senor.
Jack Armstrong
A dimly lit room where deep within the bowels of the Armstrong and Getty Communications compound. And today we're under the tutelage of our general manager, Elon Musk.
Joe Getty
Four star general.
Jack Armstrong
What does that mean?
Joe Getty
There's this story going around, it's a headline on a lot of your big publications that Elon Musk is going to get a top secret briefing on our attack plans when we go to war with China. But the Pentagon is saying what? No, he's not. But it's still the. Who knows how much truth there is to it or how little.
Jack Armstrong
So those of you watching the TV feed at home are probably wondering why Joe and I are smeared with blood today. And the reason is spring equinox. Joe and I are both druids. That's actually how we met 30 years ago. We were at. We were standing around a fire. We just slaughtered a lamb.
Joe Getty
Yes. I was wearing goat pants. He was wearing goat pants.
Jack Armstrong
Thank you, Gladys. Yes, 30 years ago. We're around a fire at midnight on the spring equinox, sort of in 30 some years ago today. And then we're druids and then we get into the rituals and all that sort of stuff. The. The sun is directly overhead on the equator at the spring equinox. I didn't realize that. And it's the only time of the year that there is sun on both the South Pole and the North Pole at the same time, which is very handy if you're traveling between those two locations, I guess.
Joe Getty
Wow. This is all fairly interesting. How have I gotten to this advanced stage in life and not known this?
Jack Armstrong
Well, did you know? I didn't know this. Oh, it makes sense though. So June 21st is the longest day of the year. Longest sunlight of the year. The day doesn't change. It's still 24 hours.
Joe Getty
But yeah, we're tracking. Yes.
Jack Armstrong
And then you know, December 21st is the shortest day of the year.
Joe Getty
But you're.
Jack Armstrong
Spring and fall equinoxes, the nighttime and daytime are exactly the same length, which obviously that's delightful.
Joe Getty
Fascinating. Yes.
Jack Armstrong
But more importantly, it's. It's a number of other things depending on where you live. Kone takani is the way it is celebrated or many places in the world. Meticulous spring cleaning to purge a home's negative energy.
Joe Getty
Boy, I can stand to do that.
Jack Armstrong
And then also jumping over Fire to symbolically cleanse the prior year's bad experiences, of which I've had many. So maybe I'll make a fire for the weekend, jump over it and cleanse the past year's bad experiences.
Joe Getty
If that's what it takes, fine. It's got to be a fairly small fire. In my case. My hops are not quite what they used to be, but I'd hate to singe my netherworld, as it were.
Jack Armstrong
Fellow druids, I still and my son. Yesterday we were talking about the. Because we had great weather where we are. So sometimes, you know, spring arrives and it feels like spring and sometimes it doesn't. Man did it yesterday. I mean, it was just gorgeous. Here it's like 80 degrees and sunny.
Joe Getty
And it's far, far more primal and powerful than, oh, the weather is better, therefore I can do more fun things outside. No, it's. It's like deep in reptile brain that you delight in the spring coming.
Jack Armstrong
That's exactly what I was talking to my son about. Of course, because he's a teenager, he'd say, I don't feel anything, but. But it's. It is, it's just. It's like you said, it is not just, well, it's a nice day so I can go for a bike ride. It's just, oh, my God, just. You feel like the, the possibilities are endless with your life and you want to, you know, mate and have offspring and start a new career.
Joe Getty
Usually, yes, but more than usual ways, but Good point. Yeah.
Jack Armstrong
It's amazing.
Joe Getty
Right? Right, yeah, it's. It's powerful. That's. And not to get overly philosophical about this, but one of my firm beliefs about the modern world is that we have abandoned our sense of rhythm for all sorts of things. Everything is available all the time, 12 months a year, 24 hours a day. Whether it's your beloved childhood Christmas, TV specials, or, you know, communication or entertainment or whatever. Night is not very different from the day, other than the lack of light out of doors.
Jack Armstrong
Right. And if you're, if you're an endorsement, an avid endorsement, as so many younger people are nowadays. So there is really no difference because you're not. You're inside no matter what anyway. So, yeah, no, there's no difference between night or day. You're right. All the rhythms of, of humanity for hundreds of thousands of years have kind of done away with in the modern society.
Joe Getty
Even more fundamentally, I think, than some of the things I mentioned is the question of inputs and quiet interaction and solitude, entertainment and quote, unquote boredom, which I think is incredibly important psychologically. The more they know, the more they realize that.
Jack Armstrong
I think I'll put an earbud in my ear today and listen to a podcast about the importance of solitude.
Joe Getty
That's a great idea.
Jack Armstrong
But the. What's from the old Bambi movie that the. The rabbit is. He's pounding his foot on the ground and something about the twittering or the. The thumping or whatever of the animals come springtime mating season. I mean, you know, mating season. Why would it be something for animals? We're animals and not something for us. So that's part of it is where we don't do that as human beings. We don't tend to, I don't think like more often have babies, get together and have babies in the springtime. But. But we're designed to like ah. I know I've got my plumage out. I don't know about the rest of you.
Joe Getty
Oh, it's. And it's beautiful too. I was gonna say something. I find myself wondering though, given our roughly nine month just gestation period as Homo sapiens, whether we shouldn't like feel the urge in what, October. So the kid is born in nice weather or something like that.
Jack Armstrong
That's funny you just mentioning October and I get this feeling of just hunkering down, no optimism, all the covers up, just. Just kind of. Right. Just trying to ride out the rest of the year, maybe find some fentanyl, just. You're just coasting at that point. Whereas right. Like this time of year, yesterday, it's just like ah, come on, let's. Life is great, let's do something. I don't know, I just find that interesting.
Joe Getty
So just, you know, it's not exactly a data set but I've got two September kids, the ninth month. That's easy enough to do the math. And a December kid. So evidently in the Getty household, winter time as well. It's time for reindeer games. But anyway, teach their own.
Jack Armstrong
I need to work on my. What was that phrase? Haktua. I think it was the phrase of no cleaning out.
Joe Getty
No, different phrase. No, that's not the phrase. Bad phrase. I think that's.
Jack Armstrong
It's interesting that baseball, the opening day so much coincides with the beginning of spring and then that the whole hope springs eternal.
Joe Getty
Baseball, start of the year.
Jack Armstrong
I mean, you know, the fact that they start at the same time that it's that feeling we've all got already for springtime and then we've got a sport that starts then too.
Joe Getty
And you are Just a font of philosophy today. All right, it occurs to me then, the rhythm of baseball is, you know, you just spring into action in the spring and get ready. And then in the fall, the late fall, it is crunch time. It's time to win the championship. Everything's serious and decisions and, you know, activities are done, made, and done that will determine whether you're successful or not. Much like preparing for the wintertime. Well, baseball is so close to so many people's holes.
Jack Armstrong
I don't know, similar to the mating thing. You get out your bat and balls here in the springtime.
Joe Getty
Oh, yeah. All right. You know what, Michael? Your segment went on 30 seconds too long. It sure did.
Jack Armstrong
You put the bat and balls away in the fall. Time is over. Let's wait till next year.
Joe Getty
You're an idiot.
Jack Armstrong
Let's start the show officially. I'm Jack Armstrong. He's Joe Getty on this. It is Friday, March 21, the year 2025, where Armstrong and getting. We approve of this program.
Joe Getty
And again, I was the star of winter ball. Clearly. All right, let's begin officially. Now, according to FCC rules and regulations, here we go at. Mark, how are you doing the job.
Jack Armstrong
Differently than Kamala did it?
J.D. Vance
Well, I don't have four shots of vodka before every meeting. That's one way, I think that Kamala really tried to bring herself into the role is these word salads. And I think that I would need the help of a lot of alcohol to answer a question the way that Kamala Harris answered questions.
Joe Getty
Wow, that's just. If you just heard the first part, that's J.D. vance declaring, Kamala Harris is a raving drunk. He really kind of softened it in the second half.
Jack Armstrong
He realized he'd gone too far and changed it a bit.
Joe Getty
Yes.
Jack Armstrong
There at the end. Yeah, I. While I laugh at that, I continue to say, it's not good that we keep going down this road. There's really no need to claim that the other party's nominee for president was a drunk at this point.
Joe Getty
They said that about Grant, who was one of the great heroes of the American history.
Jack Armstrong
Well, he just defeated half the country in a war.
Joe Getty
They.
Jack Armstrong
They didn't like him much.
Joe Getty
Right. But if she is a drunk, we're doing her a favor by not enabling her anymore. Jack. Wow. I care about Kamala Harris, the person.
Jack Armstrong
So we do need to get into the headline. And this is. It's the. See, on my Wall Street Journal, one of my newspapers, it was the top headline.
Joe Getty
Yeah.
Jack Armstrong
The top headline in the Wall Street Journal app. Musk set to receive top secret briefings on war plans with China.
Joe Getty
Likewise, the New York Times, wow, top story.
Jack Armstrong
And then you've got the other big story, that Germany has decided to invest trillion plus dollars in their defense. And as we've been saying all week long, depending on your point of view, Trump finally got Europe to wake up to the fact that they need to be able to defend themselves. Or look how desperate Europe is. We've abandoned them. They can't count on the United States as an ally and out of desperation they're coming up with their own defense.
Joe Getty
I tend caused Germany to rearm and build itself into a military powerhouse. And that can't possibly go wrong.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah, well, we all look back on this and say, oh, that's why we didn't want Germany to be able to rearm.
Joe Getty
All right. We thought they were nice now they seemed nice.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah. We ought to play that Norm MacDonald bit that he did on Letterman about, see, the country that worries me is Germany. I don't know if you're a history buff or not, but. So we got Katie's headlines on the way. We got Mailbag and those two big stories, among other things to update you on. And a lot on the way.
Joe Getty
So Clips of the week, too. Come on.
Jack Armstrong
Clips of the week coming up. Text line 415295 KFTC. Armstrong and Getty Cow coming up next segment. And before we get to Katie's headlines, we've already mentioned that. And this is unusual. The Wall Street Journal and New York Times both have the same big headline, pentagon to brief Elon Musk on war Plans with China. Why do those two papers with different political viewpoints have the same who got that story into the Wall Street Journal and the New York Times? Why are they both kind of, it feels to me like suggesting something nefarious is going on here.
Joe Getty
Well, and it's according to two officials, two U.S. officials who are obviously leaking like a, you know, punctured tire.
Jack Armstrong
Well, we'll talk more about that later. But I find that interesting. That's not an accident. Somebody wanted those that headline in those two publications.
Joe Getty
Yeah. Yep. I think their motivations are fairly clear. But we will discuss it in the coming moments. Stay tuned if you can. Clips of the week again, next segment. Segment. Right now let's figure out who's reported what. It's the lead story with Katie Green.
Katie Green
Katie, thank you, guys. Starting with abc, quote, woefully insufficient Federal judge accuses Justice Department of evading obligations to comply with deportation flight request.
Jack Armstrong
Is this a potential huge deal.
Joe Getty
Yeah, I don't think it's going to be one, but it could be.
Jack Armstrong
I mean, if they nail down the details and it looks like the Trump administration absolutely ignored a court order, that's a. I don't know where you go from there.
Joe Getty
Yeah, it's. Well, the good news is Trump and his main lieutenants have said we absolutely would not do that. Yeah. Yeah. Which. Which is good. Even if they did a little bit, we'll just have to see the facts really matter in this one.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah.
Joe Getty
And you are right.
Jack Armstrong
There's a big difference between if the, if they did accidentally on purpose, pushed it too far, the time got too close together, something like that. And they're saying, but we wouldn't do that versus if he's out and proud, saying, courts can't stop me. I can do anything I want.
Joe Getty
Right. And the difference between a judge in a hearing saying, you guys really need to blankety blank and then putting out the written court order because the Trump administration is resting on that distinction a little bit.
Jack Armstrong
Wow. Okay.
Joe Getty
And I don't know nearly enough to rule on that.
Katie Green
From Fox News, Husband of former squad rep Cori Bush charged with wire fraud linked to Covid relief funds.
Jack Armstrong
No way.
Joe Getty
Please place. That's the family business. Making loud claims about their great moral duty and then profiting mightily from it. Please. Bunch of crooks. Enjoy your cage, sir. I hope they get her, too.
Jack Armstrong
Wow.
Katie Green
From the New York Post. Transgender runner blows out competition. Sets season record in girls races at Oregon high school track meet.
Jack Armstrong
I saw that in. In a couple of different races. In the 400, he beat all the girls by seven seconds or something like that.
Joe Getty
Which in the hundred, sir. Well done.
Jack Armstrong
Which in the 400 would be like a quarter of the lap. I mean, that's a lot.
Joe Getty
Oh, yeah, yeah. If that were not a man, that person would be hailed as our greatest Olympic hope. Since, you know, whomever. Flo Jo. What a joke. And the people who can't see that that's a joke, they frighten me. You are mindless.
Katie Green
From USA Today, Venus could make a brief appearance this weekend as it passes between the Earth and the sun.
Jack Armstrong
Have I mentioned this on the air? Or maybe we've talked about it before. So you can get. There are various apps you can get on your phone where you just hold your phone up and it tells you what everything is.
Joe Getty
So I've got one. I love it.
Jack Armstrong
It's amazing. But I was doing that the other night and you could see that night. You could see Mars, Venus, Saturn. There's Another one in there.
Joe Getty
Uranus lined up. Katie. You know it all, people.
Jack Armstrong
I've been working on my flexibility. I'm almost there.
Joe Getty
Oh, shut up. Oh my God. Even funnier, Michael. I come in every. No. Oh, now you've. Now you've abandoned me. I want to come in and talk constitutional norms and the proper workings of the government. I'm getting jokes about people's body parts.
Jack Armstrong
I can already touch my toes. That's the next bunch of children from.
Katie Green
Breitbart.com Texas janitor gets 6 years for spreading STDs by peeing in office water bottles.
Jack Armstrong
Oh my God.
Joe Getty
No. No. Oh my God. Yeah. Hey, can we have one story that's not like in the toilet, please?
Jack Armstrong
No.
Katie Green
Babylon Bee Trump administration orders removal of DEI black pieces from all chess sets.
Jack Armstrong
That is good.
Joe Getty
I like that. Come on.
Jack Armstrong
So we got clips of the week and then we got to figure out some of the news of the day. Am I supposed to be afraid? Very afraid that Elon Musk is getting the Chinese war plans and they've got.
Joe Getty
The pictures of him.
Jack Armstrong
Sunglasses and all the pictures. So scary. And Gettysburg have boiled down two key elements of the whole Trump defying judges whole order story as it's being portrayed in the mainstream media that we have talked about. But I. I'm not sure everybody has heard. So we, we ought to get into that. Cuz this, this could turn into a big story if the, if the Democrats controlled the House, there'd be impeachment talk right now. Guarantee.
Joe Getty
Yes. Wow, interesting. Plus, the richest man in the world has taken over our military. The terrifying details coming up or reasons to not be worried about it at all. Stay with us. But first, let's take a fond look back at the week that was. It's the Friday tradition. Cow clips of the week.
Jack Armstrong
Hello, stranger.
Joe Getty
It's really come as quite a shock to me. Isn't that amazing?
Jack Armstrong
Venezuelan gang members arriving to his country overnight, marching into prison.
Joe Getty
I don't care what the judges think. I don't care what the left thinks.
Michael
We're coming.
Unnamed Speaker
I think at a certain point you have to start looking at what do you do when you have a rogue judge.
Joe Getty
So do you then think we are.
Jack Armstrong
Actually at war with Venezuela, the nation state of Venezuela? You're not hearing me and you're not understanding me.
Unnamed Speaker
Well, this is a time of war.
Jack Armstrong
Just say no and then you'll know that I'm right. This is a step and you'll know that I'm right.
Joe Getty
The FBI is investigating what it calls a targeted attack Shots fired at this Tesla dealership in Oregon. Tesla's spray painted in Massachusetts. Tesla is a peaceful company. We've never done anything harmful. Please don't vandalize. Don't ever vandalize Tesla vehicles. And so what's the plan if Putin doesn't agree to a ceasefire?
Unnamed Speaker
Bad news for this world.
Joe Getty
Vladimir Putin did not agree to the unconditional US backed 30 day ceasefire plan. It looks like more than 350 people were killed. This according to the Palestinian health officials in Hamas.
Jack Armstrong
We cannot have a world with the Ayatollahs with their finger on the nuclear button.
Joe Getty
Not just the U.S. we're doing the world a favor.
J.D. Vance
It's a little afternoon on a Friday and don't you all have jobs? Who are the people?
Joe Getty
First it was Elon Musk with the chainsaw. Now President Trump taking a sledgehammer to.
Jack Armstrong
The Department of Education.
Unnamed Speaker
As a former real estate person, I will tell you, I ride through the streets of Washington and it says, Department of Education, Department of Education.
Jack Armstrong
SpaceX Crew 10 climbing through the skies above a Falcon 9 rocket and splashdown Crew 9 back on Earth.
Unnamed Speaker
You know, we could have done this sooner, but Biden didn't want to because he was embarrassed by what happened.
Jack Armstrong
I am a firm believer that President Trump will run and win again in 2028, as we'll see what the definition of term limit is.
Michael
I'm a leader. I made my money all by myself. How dare your government take my money. Me? I don't want to pay taxes.
Joe Getty
I think I could kick most of their ass.
Jack Armstrong
I do. Hi, I'm Melanie. I'm studying the Unseen Body and Creative Spaces.
Joe Getty
Erasure and exposure of the queer.
Jack Armstrong
Y.
Katie Green
Do we have jobs for that?
Joe Getty
Yeah, it's called Starbucks.
Jack Armstrong
Oh.
Joe Getty
Wow. Tulan Times, Jack. Speaking of which.
Jack Armstrong
So you pointed this out yesterday, but I don't think this gets mentioned enough. I hadn't heard it until you said it and it doesn't, it doesn't get pointed out in this story much. So if you don't know, this judge says the other day, hey, you can't send those migrants you rounded up back to Venezuela just yet. We gotta figure something out first. So don't do it. And the planes went anyway. Now the timing of that is all important. You know, did the judge make that announcement before the planes left? And all these sorts of things need to be figured out, but the implication is, and the mainstream media is certainly willing to go with the assumption that the Trump administration, the Trump White House, just absolutely ignored a federal judge and did whatever they wanted to do. Which would be a legit constitutional crisis, Correct? Yeah, because then who fixes that? Um, but anyway, as you pointed out yesterday, and it, it, it, it, it should get mentioned every single time.
Joe Getty
More.
Jack Armstrong
Judges have stepped in and stopped Trump's doings than eight years of Obama, eight years of Bush and four years of Biden combined. So, I mean, it's an outlier of, an outlier of how often this sort of thing happens where a judge sets, steps in and tells the president, no, you can't do that.
Joe Getty
Right.
Jack Armstrong
So you got one side saying, well, so obviously the judges are out of control. They all just hate Trump. The other side saying, well, Trump does all kinds of crazy s. That's why judges are having to step in more often. Other, these other presidents didn't do crazy, unconstitutional s all the time.
Joe Getty
Right.
Jack Armstrong
Trying to nail down where that is. But, but to me, the constitutional crisis, either way, it is a crisis. We've got that, that either presidents are going further and further down the road. This is absolutely true. But presidents are going further down the road of seeing what they can get away with around the Constitution and, or.
Joe Getty
Intentionally baiting judges into stopping them so they can get credit for trying from their base and blame the judiciary for being out of control. Both sides have done it. Yeah, absolutely.
Jack Armstrong
And sometimes judges who are, who do really hate one side or the other do step in again, it would seem. I don't know how often that happens. I mean, you do have the situation with that ninth Circuit Court in, you know, out on the west coast that gets overturned, like, what is it, 80% of the time, clearly their politics are wacky or whatever that is. So, I mean, if you're an outlier like that, then you got. So, but that, this is a bit of a crisis.
Joe Getty
It is. Just to flesh that out a little bit, here's the headline. Federal Judge Temporarily blocks Trump Administration from reclaiming Billion Dollar Climate GR Horrific Utterly criminal graft. Just stealing and handing out to your cronies taxpayer money grants from the Biden administration. The EPA is trying to get the money back. And good old Judge Tanya chutkin of the U.S. district Court in the District of Columbia, her name should be familiar to you from one of the Trump Big Trump cases said, no, no, no, it's too vague. Vague references to program, programmatic waste, fraud and abuse, conflic interest, but not enough specific information about the investigations. This is insufficient. You can't claw the money back. Not yet anyway. It was kind of a wait, let's wait and sort this out. Ruling. It wasn't a complete quashing of it, but. So that's another setback from a judge. But the numbers are amazing. In Bush, there were six. George W. Six total injunctions by federal judges against something they were trying to do. Half of them were issued by a judge appointed by the president of the opposing party. Okay, so it was 50% under Obama, it was a total of 12. And 58% were by the other party appointed judges. Okay. Trump's first term, we went from 12 to 64. And 59 of those were issued by a judge of the opposing party. That's over 92% of the injunctions. Then when Biden was in office, and I think there's a pretty good explanation for this, There were just 14 total injunctions, all 14 of them by Republican appointed judges. And then Trump's. What are we up to with Trump? I thought I had that number, but it's, it's following in a similar trend. In fact, it's even hotter and heavier. 12 nationwide. No, that's Obama. Anyway, the trend is continuing in the Trump administration. Many, many, many injunctions, and the vast, vast majority of them by judges appointed by Democrats. It's just, it's a really bad look.
Jack Armstrong
Now on this. Sorry, on this most recent one, the one that's getting all the attention with the, you know, supposed gang members on the plane being flown back home, that judge was appointed by Roberts. Am I correct about that? That including Roberts had put this guy on the FISA court, which you would have to assume that Chief Justice Roberts wouldn't choose some whack job for the FISA court. Man, once, maybe we're already, we might already be there, but once we're to the point where we, we perceive judges to be no different than House members or senators, you just vote your party. We're in a bad spot.
Joe Getty
I would agree. The constitutional issue at stake, which we talked about at fair length yesterday, I think, I think it was yesterday, is that you have a federal district court judge who has a very narrow jurisdiction. It's a very small area of land that they deal with federal law in that area. And you can have that judge, who you know is the Eastern District of Maryland or whatever, halt the presidential administration, the executive branch from doing something nationwide. And it's not constrained in the way judges jurisdiction usually is with who's got standing in the rest of it. They're just issuing these injunctions willy nilly. And Ben Weingarten, who is an editor for the Federalist, says there's a credible case to be made that any one of the around 700 district court judges possesses more power than any one Supreme Court justice, given their unilateral power to. To issue a universal injunction. I'm sorry, I'm stumbling over my words like a. Like a drunk. Like Kamala Harris. Anyway, we'll have to keep an eye on this. This topic will not go away.
Jack Armstrong
Well, God, I'd say not. It could explode into one of the biggest political topics ever, depending on what facts get laid out.
Joe Getty
So I thought we were going to dive into the Elon Musk thing, but we're out of time. We will hit that at the top of hour two. But the. The headline story and Wall Street Journal and the New York Times, which is notable, is that Elon Musk, the unelected Elon, he's the richest man in the world. Jack is going to receive a top secret briefing on the US War plans for China. According to two US Officials. The Pentagon says. Wait, what? No, he's not. We'll try to bring you something close to the truth. Or who's saying what. What's. Is it a constitutional Christ? No. No, it's not. No.
Jack Armstrong
What is the implication?
Joe Getty
That he's become a quasi king, dictator, rich guy advisor thing? No, no. They always leave that vague and unspoken. Be afraid. Be very afraid. Of what exactly? He's unelected. Like 99% of the executive branch is unelected. He's the richest man in the world. Okay, well, he's done well. Yes.
Jack Armstrong
Congratulate him. If I was advising Elon. And when you're the world's richest man, you don't have anybody advise you. You do whatever the hell you want. Don't wear a fool.
Joe Getty
In that case, you gotta have good advisors.
Jack Armstrong
Don't wear the dark MAGA hat and the aviator sunglasses. I mean, I like the look. I think it's very cool, but it just leans into the left's perception of you. Some sort of scary oligarch.
Joe Getty
And to be fair, because fairness is my hallmark, Michael, isn't it? Yes, it is. Yeah, I guess.
Jack Armstrong
So.
Joe Getty
Is. Is that if indeed this story is true, and it's not clear that it is, Elon does have some substantial conflicts of interest when it comes to China.
Jack Armstrong
Oh, so you wanted Kamala Harris to be president. Okay. Oh, Lord. See where you are. Joe's mailbag. Next. There, Armstrong and Getty. Utah University upset Texas State, so my brackets ruined. Thought I was gonna win this year. So sorry.
Joe Getty
I am bracketless. Here's your freedom loving quote of the day. Continuing our series from Theodore Roosevelt. I'm beginning to understand as we go through these quotes how Rooseveltian my thinking is in a lot of ways, you've been hearing this from us for years and years. If we've been listening for years and years, order without liberty and liberty without order are equally destructive. We've been saying as we watched the blue states of America crumble, California and Oregon, Washington state most notably, that order without compassion is brutality, but compassion without order is chaos. Seems anyway, and in a similar vein, obedience of the law is demanded, not asked, as a favor. Keep that in mind. Gavin, you putz. Mailbag, drop us a note. Mailbagarmstrongetti.com Speaking of beautiful Washington state, Chuck from Vancouver writes, guys, we need your help on getting the word out on the planned attacks on homeschoolers states, Illinois and Washington, to name a few. We actually talked about Illinois yesterday. I think it might have been hour four. But Washington state, too notably are passing laws to go after homeschoolers. With public schools agendas geared more for critical race theory and wokeness, and students drastically failing, many parents are opting for homeschooling. Now Democrats are attacking these homeschoolers with jail time and fines if they don't meet their standards, which are convoluted and take hours and hours and hours of compliance and more.
Jack Armstrong
I'm doing a version of homeschooling and I'm paying a guy a lot of money for a couple of hours of just paperwork per week to meet the requirements.
Joe Getty
That's exactly what they're trying to do.
Jack Armstrong
I would never be able to get it done on my own.
Joe Getty
The teachers unions are trying to make it so painful and cumbersome to homeschool in any setting, in any format that you can't do it anymore. It is a brutal and shameless attack on liberty. Moving along, Dirk's the German with a comment on Chuck Schumer's statement the other day. Michael, do we have that handy?
Michael
I made my money all by myself. How dare your government take my money from me. I don't want to pay taxes.
Joe Getty
Yeah, yeah, the government deserves all of your money. They may let you keep a little. In Chuck Schumer's world, it's tough not to say naughty words on the air in response to that. But when Chuck Schumer alluded to that money is the government's, not taxpayers, it made me think. It's not just that the government takes our money, but what they do or don't do with it. We pay more per student to educate, quote Unquote our students than any nation but score at the bottom of math and reading. In California, we pay the highest gas taxes, Dirk writes, but our roads are like Albania's. We paid loads of local taxes, feeds, fees, fines and levies. Yet there are hobos living on the sidewalk outside my office. At least in Europe, the government fleeces the taxpayers but gives them something of value in return. Amen for that. To that, Dirk.
Jack Armstrong
That Chuck Schumer clip is so freaking maddening.
Joe Getty
Oh yeah. Oh, and his contempt. Yeah, for anybody who suggests, you know, I earned that money, I'm willing to contribute. But why are you taking half of my money? Especially people who are in sales or something like that that are going to have one or two good years, maybe home run years, then going back to just making an okay living. Nope. Those two great years where they excelled. No, the government's going to take half of that or damn near it.
Michael
I made my money all by myself. How dare your government take my money from me. I don't want to pay taxes from.
Joe Getty
A guy who made his living through graft his entire life.
Jack Armstrong
And if you don't agree with me, I'm going to act like you talk like a cartoon bear.
Joe Getty
JK Fair, Fair Fair point JK in Granite Bay, California writes, read the district court judges. We must be wary of asking that they be stifled completely while their district court judges stop issues they object to, like immigration, doge other mag issues our district court judges stop issues we object to, like the curtailment of second Amendment rights. In other words, the dcjs may be a pain in the ass, but the knife cuts both ways. There needs to be a better defin definition of their jurisdiction and ability to block issues nationwide from their narrow perch. That's exactly correct. Y JK Friend of Armstrong and Getty since the beginning. Keep it real, gents. Ms. Green, a fantastic addition to the team. Agreed. Do we have time for this? Frequent correspondent J.T. in Livermore. During Tuesday's show, you brought up the attempt to classify Trump Derangement Syndrome as a recognized mental disorder. I don't know if it's a mental disorder or not, but it seems to have jumped the shark over previous opposition efforts by the Dems. Unlike their crazy stunts of the past, Dems suffer from tbtds have gone so far that they're more of danger to themselves than they are to the GOP or Trump. Consider that they've rallied around the wrong end of several 8020 issues. They're suddenly fudding like hell to prevent the lawful deportation of illegals that have been convicted of murder, rape and child molestation. They're fighting to keep graphic gay sex books in school libraries, demanding that liberals be allowed to secretly help trans children without notifying parents. They're against the notion of cutting a single dollar from the federal budget even as tens of billions of dollars in waste, fraud and abuse have been uncovered. They're ready to die on the Hill of men and women's sports. Agreed.
Jack Armstrong
We got all those stories Joe mentioned to get to an hour, too. And hours of we're gonna do six hours today. I think that's planned. If you missed a segment, get the podcast Armstrong and Getty on Demand. Armstrong and Gettysburg.
Armstrong & Getty On Demand: Episode Summary - "I Was Wearing Goat Pants"
Release Date: March 21, 2025
Host: iHeartPodcasts
Podcast: Armstrong & Getty On Demand
In the episode titled "I Was Wearing Goat Pants," hosts Jack Armstrong and Joe Getty delve into a myriad of topics ranging from geopolitical tensions to societal shifts and constitutional debates. The conversation is both engaging and thought-provoking, blending humor with serious discourse.
The episode kicks off with a controversial topic surrounding Elon Musk. Both hosts discuss headlines from major publications such as The Wall Street Journal and The New York Times, which reported that Musk is set to receive top-secret briefings on U.S. war plans with China.
Joe Getty [10:22]: “The top headline in the Wall Street Journal app...and the New York Times...it's still the who knows how much truth there is to it or how little.”
Jack Armstrong [12:28]: “Somebody wanted that headline in those two publications. That’s not an accident.”
Despite Pentagon officials denying these reports, the hosts ponder the implications of Musk’s potential involvement, highlighting concerns about his influence and the constitutional ramifications of an unelected individual accessing sensitive military information.
Shifting gears, Armstrong and Getty share personal anecdotes about their shared history as druids, celebrating the spring equinox. They humorously reveal that both were "wearing goat pants" during their inaugural ritual 30 years ago.
Joe Getty [01:25]: “Yes. I was wearing goat pants.”
Jack Armstrong [02:02]: “June 21st is the longest day of the year...the day doesn’t change. It’s still 24 hours.”
They discuss the significance of the equinox, its impact on human behavior, and the primal instincts associated with the change of seasons, such as increased optimism and the desire to embark on new endeavors.
The hosts express concern over how modern lifestyles have disrupted natural rhythms and cycles.
Joe Getty [04:11]: “We have abandoned our sense of rhythm for all sorts of things. Everything is available all the time, 12 months a year, 24 hours a day.”
Jack Armstrong [05:04]: “There's really no difference between night or day. You're inside no matter what anyway.”
They argue that the constant availability of information and entertainment has eroded essential rhythms, leading to psychological impacts and a loss of connection with the natural world.
Katie Green presents a series of news headlines from various outlets, each sparking discussions on pertinent issues.
a. Federal Judge Accuses Justice Department
Katie Green [13:02]: “ABC reports a federal judge accuses the Justice Department of evading obligations to comply with deportation flight requests.”
Joe Getty [13:19]: “If they nail down the details and it looks like the Trump administration absolutely ignored a court order, that's a...I don't know where you go from there.”
b. Cori Bush's Husband Charged with Wire Fraud
Katie Green [14:34]: “Fox News reports the husband of former squad rep Cori Bush is charged with wire fraud linked to Covid relief funds.”
Joe Getty [14:44]: “Please place...That’s the family business. Making loud claims about their great moral duty and then profiting mightily from it.”
c. Transgender Runner Sets Record
Katie Green [15:01]: “The New York Post covers a transgender runner blowing out competition and setting a season record in girls' races at an Oregon high school track meet.”
Joe Getty [15:24]: “If that were not a man, that person would be hailed as our greatest Olympic hope.”
d. Venus Passing Between Earth and Sun
Katie Green [15:46]: “USA Today mentions Venus making a brief appearance as it passes between the Earth and the sun.”
Jack Armstrong [15:54]: “There are various apps you can get on your phone where you just hold your phone up and it tells you what everything is.”
e. Texas Janitor Sentenced for Spreading STDs
f. Removal of DEI Chess Pieces
Katie Green [16:48]: “The Babylon Bee covers the Trump administration ordering the removal of DEI black pieces from all chess sets.”
Joe Getty [17:09]: “I like that.”
A significant portion of the episode is dedicated to the escalating tension between the executive branch and the judiciary, particularly focusing on the Trump administration's actions and judicial responses.
Joe Getty [22:05]: “Judges have stepped in and stopped Trump's doings more frequently than previous administrations combined. This is an outlier.”
Jack Armstrong [23:46]: “Presidents are going further and further down the road of seeing what they can get away with around the Constitution.”
They analyze the trend of increasing judicial interventions in presidential actions, highlighting the potential for a constitutional crisis. The discussion touches on specific cases, such as Judge Tanya Chutkan's rulings against the Trump administration's deportation plans and the broader implications for executive power and judicial authority.
In the Mailbag segment, listeners' letters address various concerns:
a. Attacks on Homeschoolers
Chuck from Vancouver [30:06]: Highlights planned attacks on homeschooling in states like Illinois and Washington, criticizing convoluted regulations that hinder parents from educating their children independently.
Jack Armstrong [31:42]: “I'm doing a version of homeschooling and I'm paying a guy a lot of money for a couple of hours of just paperwork per week to meet the requirements.”
b. Critique of Chuck Schumer's Tax Comments
Dirk from Germany [32:17]: Responds to Chuck Schumer's assertion that money is the government's, not taxpayers', lamenting high taxes with poor public services.
Joe Getty [33:35]: “We pay more per student to educate our students than any nation but score at the bottom of math and reading.”
c. Trump Derangement Syndrome
The episode wraps up with a reflective quote from Theodore Roosevelt, emphasizing the balance between liberty and order.
This sentiment encapsulates the episode's recurring theme of seeking balance in societal structures and governance.
Notable Quotes:
Geopolitical Concerns: The potential involvement of private billionaires like Elon Musk in national defense strategies raises questions about democratic oversight and constitutional boundaries.
Societal Shifts: Modern society's disconnection from natural rhythms impacts psychological well-being and societal cohesion.
Judicial vs. Executive Power: The increasing frequency of judicial interventions in presidential actions signifies a brewing constitutional crisis, highlighting the need for clear boundaries between branches of government.
Public Sentiment: Listener feedback underscores frustration with governmental overreach in education and taxation, reflecting broader discontent with current political dynamics.
Armstrong and Getty provide a comprehensive and critical look at pressing issues, blending personal anecdotes with incisive analysis. Their ability to interweave humor with serious discourse makes "I Was Wearing Goat Pants" a compelling listen for those seeking both entertainment and enlightenment on contemporary matters.