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Narrator
Something unexpected happened after Jeremy Scott confessed to killing Michelle Schofield in Bone Valley season one.
Gilbert King
Every time I hear about my dad is, oh, he's a killer. He's just straight evil.
Narrator
I was becoming the bridge between Jeremy Scott and the son he'd never known.
Gilbert King
At the end of the day, I'm literally a son of a killer.
Narrator
Listen to new episodes of bone Valley Season 2, starting April 9 on the iHeartRadio app. App Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Jack Armstrong
Broadcasting live from the Abraham Lincoln radio studio at the George Washington Broadcast Center, Jack Armstrong and Joe Getty. Armstrong and Getty. And now here's Armstrong and Getty.
Joe Getty
This overturns a lower court order which had barred those removals from taking place.
Jack Armstrong
Here's Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noemi.
Joe Getty
Today is a bad day to be a terrorist in the United States of America.
Jack Armstrong
Today, the Supreme Court came out with.
Joe Getty
A decision that reaffirmed President Trump was correct in using his authority on using the Alien Enemies act to deport terrorists.
Jack Armstrong
Out of this country.
Joe Getty
Attorney General Pam Bondi saying tonight's decision is a landmark victory for the rule of law. An activist judge in Washington, D.C. does not have the jurisdiction to seize control of President Trump's authority to conduct foreign policy and keep the American people safe. So the big headline that landed yesterday was from. This is from the New York Times. The Supreme Court is allowing the Trump administration to use a wartime power law to deport Venezuelans.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah. The reporting on Supreme Court decisions, especially fairly technical preliminary decisions like this, is absolutely as bad as the economic reporting you were always griping about.
Joe Getty
The dire and.
Jack Armstrong
Or reporting on dire wolves on NBC, for instance. Or NBC. Yeah. Yeah, it is. You might as well not hear the report. Okay.
Joe Getty
Awesome. I'm glad you're gonna fill us in because I didn't pay attention to this story.
Jack Armstrong
I find myself in a place of profound discouragement, Jack.
Joe Getty
I was doing all my research through. I was doing all my research on ancient wolves, so I didn't have time to look into the Supreme Court.
Jack Armstrong
Somebody go get me my scotch. I need to, you know, screw my courage to the sticking place. I just.
Joe Getty
Did you see the report on the Third story on 60 Minutes Sunday night about o barrels and whiskey?
Jack Armstrong
I did not.
Joe Getty
You should watch it. It'd be up your alley. It's all about the importance of oak barrels and how they continue to be as big a deal as they ever were. And it looked. It made me want. It made me want to drink whiskey.
Jack Armstrong
Wow. Which I never did, necessarily. Great. But, yeah. Boy, I do enjoy my scotch in the evening. Anyway, so it was a 54 Supreme Court ruling on Monday that lifted the lower court's order. You've heard about this judge, what's his name? Boberg or. Or something like that? Boseberg. That's right. Who' Washington, D.C. judge and a lefty. Anyway, he had said, you got to stop sending Venezuelan gang members to that Salvadoran maximum security prison. Alien Enemies Act.
Joe Getty
I'm looking at the videos of that. Why do they march everybody around pushing their head down? Are they all that bad? Must be a crowd of bad guys.
Jack Armstrong
And nobody can, like, mount a resistance in that posture. I know it looks incredibly uncomfortable, especially as an older fella, but, uh, so anyway. But the 54 Supreme Court ruling yesterday lifted the judge's order blocking the deportations. But in a note that I find very encouraging for reasons. I'll explain, the court also said that detainees were entitled to notice that they were being removed under the wartime measure and an opportunity to challenge their deportations before a federal judge in Texas, because that's where they are in the immigration lockup where they're being held. They cannot go before District Judge James Boasberg in Washington, D.C. and get a favorable ruling anymore. So it absolutely is a affirmation of the Trump administration, what it had been doing. But it also said, and I think this is absolutely appropriate, hey, slow down and give these people due process. Because we give everybody due process, whatever that happens to be in this specific incident.
Joe Getty
So Scarborough. Scarborough was saying this morning on Morning Joe on MSNBC said a smackdown by the Supreme Court for Trump. And I thought, okay, this is interesting. This is the opposite of the way I saw the headlines yesterday.
Jack Armstrong
He said those headlines that we heard to start the segment.
Joe Getty
Yeah, he said, with all nine justices saying he needs to go through due process for these people. So that.
Jack Armstrong
That's correct.
Joe Getty
That's accurate.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah. You know, that's. I mean, that's a one sided interpretation of what was done. On the one hand, it was. Yeah, you have this power under the wartime act, as far as we can tell, but everybody has to go through due process. So it was, you know, a little peanut butter, a little jelly, if you will.
Joe Getty
I don't know, a little league coach here and there, and ship them off to one of the worst prisons in the world. You know, omelet eggs.
Jack Armstrong
I appreciate your finely wrought sarcasm, sir. But I tell you what, looking into the case of the one Salvadoran fellow who was alleged to be a member of Ms. 13 different gang and got shipped off and now there are a couple of suits and cases going on and the judge ordered that he be brought back. Really interesting legal fight going on over that. I dug pretty deeply into it yesterday, including reading the transcripts of the actual case, and it was a serious mistake. I don't see any good evidence that the guy was an MS.13 member. In fact, as a boy, a young boy, he was brought to the United States because the gang thing was so ugly where he lived. And they were trying to compel him to join the gang for reasons that are a little complicated. His parents had a business, they're being extorted by the gangs, blah, blah, blah, horrible, horrible. And it was like, we need, we need young men in our gang. It'd be a shame if something happened to your business. So they said, you know, terrified and grief stricken, send the boy to live with his aunt and uncle in the US because this is too dangerous.
Joe Getty
That is so horrible.
Jack Armstrong
He's never been accused of anything. He's never been arrested for anything. They had one informant who said he associates with, quote, unquote, Ms. 13 guys. Now it could be that that's true. And if he's an active Ms. 13 guy, bring him back, go through due process, then ship his ass out. But here's, here's the thing, and if, if, if you do not share this principle with me, we can't be friends. We have got to every time, tell the government before you take away somebody's liberty or their property or their life, you prove to whatever level is appropriate. Because criminal law, civil law, immigration law, they all have different standards, which is fine, but you've got to, to that standard that what you're doing is justified. Because if we the people start, you know, going soft on, well, he was an illegal immigrant, therefore we can do anything we want with him. Even though he's been here for years and has an American wife and American children. It's very close to. I said they came for the Jews and I said nothing. They came for the Catholics and I said nothing, etc. We've just got to have that in place even when it's annoying and time consuming. Now, does that include somebody who sneezed across the border and the border patrol grabs them right there? No, turn around, put their ass out. That's fine.
Joe Getty
Man, that's a horrible story. That reminds me of the Clint Eastwood movie Gran Torino, where that poor kid was being, you know, they're trying to force him into the gang.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah.
Joe Getty
You know, your parents don't want their kids to be in the gangs. But man. Oh, what an awful situation.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah. So I, I actually think this is a pretty balanced ruling. I'm, I'm going to look into it more. It's interesting because there have been three very similar cases, each of which has been five to four. But Justice Roberts and Amy Coney Barrett's votes are very much in play and she dissented. Amy Coney Barrett did, at least in part, and joined the three liberals on the case. And I have a feeling it is one of the most sacred conservative principles and that is the big stupid bureaucracy of government doesn't get to f with the people without really good reasons. And just because it's. And I know I'm going against the grain here of a lot of talk radio, but just because it's a group that you don't have a lot of sympathy for, you give away that principle. And we don't have a country. We don't have our country anymore. Anyway, enough said.
Joe Getty
So you could portray it if you want to do like a drive by media. They've brought back the direwolf sort of headline. You could portray this as good news for the Trump administration or bad news for the Trump administration.
Jack Armstrong
Absolutely. Yeah, yeah, yeah. You can keep doing it, but you've got to be more careful. That's what the ruling said by all nine Justice.
Joe Getty
You got to follow due process.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah.
Joe Getty
Which I got. No problem with that.
Jack Armstrong
Greatest country on earth simply save home security wants to help you with the problems of progressive law enforcement policies that would be decriminalized in crime. Letting junkies set up camps in your neighborhood. The rest of it simply save home Security. Especially with their crazy cool active guard outdoor protection are there to prevent break ins before they happen.
Joe Getty
Oh yeah. With those AI powered cameras there, they're going to catch the dire wolves before they leap through the window and are at your throat. That's nice.
Jack Armstrong
And I got three of them in my house to protect me.
Joe Getty
It's a tough situation.
Jack Armstrong
There's a lot of poop. A lot of poop.
Joe Getty
As amazing as this system is, you'd expect it to be pretty expensive. But it's around a dollar a day. No long term contracts or cancellation fees because they're proud of what they've built.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah. If you get annoyed by the old style systems that were ineffective and incredibly expensive and wires everywhere, really seriously, look into Simplisafe again. Super reasonably priced and effective. Visit SimpliSafe.com, armstrong to claim 50% off a new system with a professional monitoring plan. Get your first month free Again, that's simplisafe.com Armstrong there's no safe like Simplisafe.
Joe Getty
Chicken Jockey. You either know what those two words mean or you really, really, really don't. But they are causing problems all across the country in movie theaters. It has grown exponentially since I brought it up yesterday. Wow, there's a problem for movie theaters. We've got an example of it coming up. Maybe warn your kids before they go to the Minecraft movie to keep them out of trouble. Chicken Jockey. Stay tuned.
Jack Armstrong
Armstrong and Getty.
Narrator
Something unexpected happened after Jeremy Scott confessed to killing Michelle Schofield in Bone Valley Season one.
Jack Armstrong
I just knew him as a kid.
Narrator
Long, silent voices from his past came.
Gilbert King
Forward and he was just staring at me.
Narrator
And they had secrets of their own to share.
Gilbert King
Gilbert King I'm the son of Jeremy Lynn Scott.
Narrator
I was no longer just telling the story. I was part of it.
Gilbert King
Every time I hear about my dad, it's, oh, he's a killer. He's just straight evil.
Narrator
I was becoming the bridge between a killer and the son he'd never known.
Gilbert King
Known if the cops and everything would have done their job properly, my dad would have been in jail. I would have never existed.
Narrator
I never expected to find myself in this place. Now I need to tell you how I got here.
Gilbert King
At the end of the day, I'm literally a son of a killer.
Narrator
Bone Valley Season 2 Jeremy.
Gilbert King
Jeremy, I want to tell you something.
Narrator
Listen to new episodes of bone Valley Season 2 starting April 9 on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts. And to hear the entire new season ad free with exclusive content starting April 9th. Subscribe to Lava for Good plus on Apple Podcasts.
Joe Getty
Chicken Jockey. So my kids have been saying this for weeks. I didn't pay any attention to it, but I know they and their friends were saying chicken Jockey for weeks. It's a. It's a meme that has come out of the Minecraft movie and like, they ran enough promos that all the kids were aware of it and it was already like the cool thing you had to say to each other to show your, I don't know, part of the tribe or however civilization works.
Jack Armstrong
Is this this year's Skibidi or this months or whatever?
Joe Getty
This is bigger than that and definitely more real than that. That was just so disappointing. I was disappointed in humankind for that one. Let me read from the Economic Times, which writes pretty in a funny way about this. Meet the Chicken Jockey. Tiny, rare and totally unhinged. Unless you're a die hard Minecraft fan. That's where it comes from. The movie. The term chicken jockey might sound like an odd combination of barnyard, animal and rodeo event, but in Minecraft lore, this rare and quirky creature is something of a digital unicorn. A baby zombie riding a chicken. Its in game appearance is staggeringly rare. Just a 0.25% chance if no chickens are nearby and a 0.5% chance if they are. When you are playing Minecraft, little better.
Jack Armstrong
With the presence of chickens, every once.
Joe Getty
In a while it will just show up and then it's very, very exciting. I guess. Then all of a sudden you got a chicken jockey in your little Minecraft scenario that you're dealing with while you're playing your video games. So I mentioned I played this yesterday. You can start it. My son was at the movie theater with all his friends opening night for Chicken Jockey and he gets his phone out here. Let's. So everybody says chicken jockey at the same time and claps. And the fact that my son had his phone out already is. I don't even know what that is.
Jack Armstrong
Knew what it was coming and everything.
Joe Getty
But it's grown and it's become a thing. Here's a latest version of it at a different theater. People going wild, throwing things, jumping around.
Jack Armstrong
Okay.
Joe Getty
Snitch police having to come, people police coming, people being escorted out of theaters.
Jack Armstrong
And then people chanting and singing at them as they're dragged out.
Joe Getty
Right. So I'm just, just letting you know because this is. I'm guessing that's enough of that, Michael. I'm guessing that this weekend it is going to reach its zenith would be my guess. And, and then it will go away forever. But it's going to be mayhem in the theaters. So just be prepared if you're sending your kid or going with your kids, like if you're going with a younger kid, we're prepared to have popcorn thrown on your head when the chicken jockey appears.
Jack Armstrong
I. I feel like I'm watching the strange mating rituals of the ostrich or something like that. Yeah, these are humans and this is something they do.
Joe Getty
This, this article in the Economic Times is really good. Divided fandom, hilarious hype or public nuisance? I'll have to do a deep dive on that. I don't know which it is actually.
Jack Armstrong
It doesn't feel like the Economic Times is way out of its lane, but whatever. Jack. Speaking of chickens, everyone wants to raise chickens, but egg layers can be bad neighbors. It's the cost of eggs, don't you.
Joe Getty
Know, as I'VE been saying for a couple of weeks, if you, I don't know how many eggs you eat. Again, that's always my bottom line. I mean, if you eat 50 eggs a day, I suppose maybe you need to do something. But you do not want to get into the I'm owning chickens business just because the price of eggs is high for a while.
Jack Armstrong
I would suggest that there is a failure to perform mathematics at work right end, a failure to properly anticipate who's going to take care of the damn things. If you want to go on vacation or whatever, hey, can you stop by three times a day and tend my chickens? No, not at any cost. A decade ago, Jack, backyard chickens, jockeyed or un, were more a niche for part time farmers and urban hipsters. But the COVID 19 pandemic and more recently the spike in egg prices has sent America's Americans flocking for their own poultry. It's plan words. Wow.
Joe Getty
They said flocking and we're talking about birds. That's really something.
Jack Armstrong
There were 11 million households with backyard chickens last year, up from about half that number in 2018, according to the American Pet Products Association. Even U.S. agric Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins recently jumped in. By the way, what percentage of Americans could name the ag secretary? Well, maybe in the heartland they could. Anyway, recently jumped in saying she wants to help Americans save money by making it easier to raise their own egg layers. You're going to save money by, first of all, making sure that you can do this wherever you live because there is noise and, and chicken guano is so stinky and the startup costs and all of the care they take, they require.
Joe Getty
It's the, it's the, the, your time. So if you like this as a hobby, cool.
Jack Armstrong
But yeah, being a gentleman farmer, gentlewoman farmer, if you like. I mean, if you can figure out how to make this work. You know, it's interesting, it's primal. It's agriculture, which is great.
Joe Getty
But I was thinking about this while I was dealing with my computer, which I still want to talk about, and the many hours I invested in trying to get my son's computer fixed. And this article I read a couple years ago. I wish I could find it. It was so good. I talked about it on the air a lot, about calculating what your time is worth and thinking about that on a regular basis. Oh yeah, bird flu.
Jack Armstrong
Oh, bird flu.
Joe Getty
Coincidentally thinking about what your time is worth. And, and, and most people, including me, don't do that. And you, you do a lot of things you probably shouldn't do. You should either hire somebody to do or something because you would never take that job for the amount of money that you're getting paid, which is nothing. But you would never take that job for even a decent amount of money because, no, I'm not going to spend my Saturday X, you know, driving to Best Buys to try to get my computer fixed. I mean, if somebody approach you, hey, I'll give you 50 bucks to spend your entire Saturday afternoon dealing with this computer thing. You'd think, no way, right? But you do.
Jack Armstrong
That's what you saved by driving or whatever.
Joe Getty
Yeah, right. And it just. It doesn't quite make sense. And the same thing with the chicken thing. How much is your time worth now? If you. If you're enjoying this, fine, but are you. Do you want to spend an hour a day or two hours a day or whatever ends up being to get cheaper eggs?
Jack Armstrong
I did not even get to my favorite chicken statistics.
Joe Getty
Does it involve jockeys at all?
Jack Armstrong
No, these are un jockeyed chickens.
Joe Getty
That's the hot thing right now. You got to get a jockey involved.
Jack Armstrong
Armstrong and Getty.
Narrator
Something unexpected happened after Jeremy Scott confessed to killing Michelle Schofield in Bone Valley season one.
Jack Armstrong
I just knew him as a kid.
Narrator
Long, silent voices from his past came.
Gilbert King
Forward, and he was just staring at me.
Narrator
And they had secrets of their own to share.
Gilbert King
Gilbert King. I'm the son of Jeremy Lynn Scott.
Narrator
I was no longer just telling the story. I was part of it.
Gilbert King
Every time I hear about my dad, it's, oh, he's a killer. He's just straight evil.
Narrator
I was becoming the bridge between a killer and the son he'd never known.
Gilbert King
If the cops and everything would have done their job properly, my dad would have been in jail. I would have never existed.
Narrator
I never expected to find myself in this place. Now I need to tell you how I got here.
Gilbert King
At the end of the day, I'm literally a son of a killer.
Narrator
Bone Valley Season 2 Jeremy.
Jack Armstrong
Jeremy, I want to tell you something.
Narrator
Listen to new episodes of bone Valley Season 2 starting April 9 on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts. And to hear the entire new season ad free with exclusive content starting April 9th, subscribe to Lava for Good plus on Apple Podcasts.
Donald Trump
The reason we're not talking about tariffs with Russia is because we're not doing business essentially with Russia because they're in a war. And I'm not happy about what's going on with the bombing because they're bombing like crazy right now. They're Bombing. I don't know what's happening there. That's not a good situation. So we're meeting with Russia, we're meeting with Ukraine, and we're getting sort of close, but I'm not happy with all the bombing that's going on the last week or so.
Joe Getty
So Trump once again in the Oval Office yesterday with Benjamin Netanyahu took some questions, and that one about the peace process between Russia and Ukraine. I don't know if a peace process exists in any way. Actually, they're trying to get one started. The. Unless he starts saying even stronger things about Russia, there is no leverage against Russia. Why would they quit there?
Jack Armstrong
No.
Joe Getty
Yeah, so. So that's that one. And then the other hot spot in the world is Iran, and he was asked about that.
Donald Trump
We're having direct talks with Iran and they've started. It'll go on Saturday. We have a very big meeting and we'll see what can happen. And I think everybody agrees that doing a deal would be preferable to doing the obvious. And the obvious is not something that I want to be involved with or frankly, that Israel wants to be involved with if they can avoid it. So we're going to see if we can avoid it.
Joe Getty
The obvious is what he talked about last week, which is a bombing the likes of which they have never seen or the world has never seen or some language like that. Right?
Jack Armstrong
Yeah. Yeah. Well, that's, that's well put. It's, it's well stated. I think he's 100% right. It's going to be a hell of a tough nut to crack. The Iranians are among the best at appearing to cooperate and sign a deal, meanwhile continuing their efforts. But Trump knows that.
Joe Getty
Well, there are various claims that Iran is just days from being able to put together a nuclear weapon, and then that changes everything in the Middle East. So the difference between this and the Russia thing is obviously the leverage of he has stated out loud, we're going to bomb the crap out of you if you don't. We will take out your nuclear program if you don't agree to, you know, pare it down to something that's only about energy. So they don't have that leverage with Russia.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah.
Joe Getty
And why don't we have that leverage with Russia? Because they have nuclear weapons. That's why you don't want Iran to get nuclear weapons.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah, they have the most nuclear weapons. Yeah, I would, I would say that's exactly the right bargaining posture with Iran. Anything else is just fantasy land.
Joe Getty
Well, that'll be exciting.
Jack Armstrong
You think he comes to a deal with them or do you think the bombs fly?
Joe Getty
I think we bomb. Yeah. I think we end up bombing US in Israel.
Jack Armstrong
How certain are you?
Joe Getty
I don't know, over 50%. But I also can't come up with why Iran wouldn't realize at some point. Jesus, what is what? What advantage do we get out of getting bombed back to having nothing.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah. The only thing that we won't let.
Joe Getty
This is what I'm certain of. We will not let Iran. Trump will not let Iran get a nuclear weapon. Biden said that, but would have let them get a nuclear weapon rather than bomb.
Jack Armstrong
And Obama was so in love with his own diplomatic skills, he was not a realist.
Joe Getty
Trump will not let them get a nuclear weapon.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah, yeah, yeah. I think I agree with you about the most probable result. It'll be interesting to see unfold. Oh, what I started to say was the only wild card that Westerners must, must always remind ourselves of, which is why I harp on this so much. Islamism is willing to sacrifice virtually anything to bring on the ultimate victory of Islam. And there's a particular sub sect that's well represented by the mullahs that believes the only way to bring on the. I don't want to get too theological, but the coming of the great and glorious day is through cataclysm, through utter chaos, the battle for the universe and the hearts of mankind. So there, I guarantee you there's a faction, Iran, that says, oh, bring on the horrifying attack from the infidels. That's exactly what we need to galvanize the Islamic world.
Joe Getty
And anytime you unleash the dogs of war, you don't know what's going to happen. That's always been the case throughout history.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah, yeah, very true. So speaking of Islamism, a couple of headlines. Leadership crisis is compounding the decline of the Palestinian cause. Hamas is devastated. And Fatah, if you're not into this, they're the like more political, more reasonable leadership that's mostly on the west bank for the Palestinians, but they're utterly corrupt and completely ineffective. So, you know, your beleaguered Palestinian folk, they get to choose between the lunatics of Hamas and the fat thieving bureaucrats of Fatah. And no third alternative is. Has arisen. And after, you know, the failings of Yasser Arafat and just everybody who's claimed to be their leader, who was, who was the jackass, who was the latest to hold negotiations, then back out at the last second when they had a.
Joe Getty
Great deal Makmuda boss.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah, right, exactly. Yeah, yeah, they're, they're in miserable, miserable shape. And I think this is a pretty good description. The Gaza Strip is in ruins. Many residents might leave or be pushed out following the war sparked by October 7 attacks. Palestinian territory in the west bank is divided by ever expanding Israeli settlements. Middle east countries have been building ties with Israel and allies such as Iran and the Lebanese militia Hezbollah were battered by Israeli attacks last year. Palestinians, meanwhile, are fighting with each other, caught between violent groups such as Hamas and the nationalist Fatah, blah, blah, blah, which we were just describing. You know, if you were, if this was some sort of simulation in a political science class and putting aside the names and you know, and, and, and you were asked as a student, when you're looking at this trend line, what do you think is the most likely, you know, set of developments looking, say, five years down the road? I think any student worth a damn. I mean, Jack, you can jump in here if you want. If you want to answer that question, my answer would be no. Those, those people are headed for a complete defeat and either assimilation with the new ruling party or they will be pushed aside and go find somewhere else to live.
Joe Getty
And decimating people is not what we do in the modern world. So it'll be interesting to see if that happens like the old timey days where you actually just completely defeat your enemy to the point that they can't mount offensive against you anymore. We don't do that anymore.
Jack Armstrong
Well, and as I pointed out a couple of weeks ago, read a great Think piece and shared it on the air. There is no case in, in history, last several hundred years, where one neighbor has launched an unprovoked attack on its neighbor and lost that it did not lose its land, of course, sovereignty, of course.
Joe Getty
It seems like the obvious end to that sentence.
Jack Armstrong
So it's this bizarro conceit of the polite pink in the air modern world that, oh well, they launched a deadly and horrifying attack, including the murder of babies and rapes and the rest of it out of nowhere. And we've defeated them. But we must now go at live side by side and seek a two state solution, though that's never happened in human history.
Joe Getty
So I learned something interesting the other day. Journalist Douglas Murray, if you know his act, he's on Lex Friedman's podcast and he's done a lot, spent a lot of time in Israel and Gaza over the last, you know, since October 7th and before. But he explained it in a way I hadn't heard before about how Netanyahu and the Israeli government was asleep at the switch that allowed October 7th to happen. Now, a lot of the Netanyahu or Netanyahu haters have portrayed it as like some sort of evil deal he had made with Hamas or something like that. Something untoward. Douglas Murray's take on it was just that they had become convinced Netanyahu and most of the Israeli government had become convinced that Hamas no longer meant what they said, that they had become decadent. They had, Israel had allowed them to accumulate so much wealth and comfort that they were not the kind of threat anymore that they used to be. The super high level rich guys were living in those apartments in Dubai or whatever and they were stealing all the money and they got yachts and homes around the world. And Netanyahu and those around him just thought, they're not going to blow that up. That's not human nature.
Jack Armstrong
So the fiery rhetoric was just to, you know, keep the people loyal and the rest of it. Right.
Joe Getty
And he actually believed that. And yeah, I can see where you'd come to believe that. Like what, they're gonna blow up the cushiest gig ever. They're all billionaires and living, you know, lives everyone wants to live. They're gonna blow that up to actually go to war with Israel?
Gilbert King
No.
Joe Getty
No flipping way. And they did.
Jack Armstrong
Well. And especially under the Obama and Biden years, the greatest superpower on earth was ordering them stop acting like there's an attack imminent, war is imminent, you gotta live side by side, two state solution, blah, blah, blah. And then Europe, you know, one of your other big, important, influential, you know, groups was saying exactly the same thing. And they'd look over there and think, you know, they are living pretty good lives. And they say they're just gonna govern now and not be a militant organization. There'd be a hell of a temptation to believe it.
Joe Getty
And the other thing Douglas Murray points out, which everybody points out, is Gaza is just rubble now. It's a whole bunch of people and rubble. So even if every member of Hamas is killed today, now what, who, who's gonna rebuild that and why? And who's gonna pay for it and why? Wow, what a mess.
Jack Armstrong
Trump made reference just yesterday again to owning Gaza. If the US Were to run it and own it, that would benefit many, many people.
Joe Getty
Gaza lago. Well, who else is going to step in and want to run it or, or build it back up? What's your investment get you?
Jack Armstrong
Well, unless there develops a giant market for rubble around the world. Yeah, where's that money going to come from.
Joe Getty
Yeah.
Jack Armstrong
Unless it's real estate speculation, because it's spectacular real estate.
Joe Getty
Sure. Yeah. That's. That story's got a lot yet to be written. No doubt.
Jack Armstrong
And you know what? Honestly, not to come off like some Old Testament prophet or something like that, but in the span of history, the unfortunate circumstance of the quote, unquote, Palestinian people between the 1940s and today, that's not even a blip in human history. So they get shoved aside and gotta live over there. History would not even yawn at it. It wouldn't even blink at it. It's not even worth remarking on. And yet in the modern world, modern media, video everywhere, and student activists and the rest of it, everybody's acting like it's like the end of the industrialization of mankind or like one of the. The greatest happenings in human history. And I realize I sound cold in saying this, but seriously, it's not.
Joe Getty
No, it's a small number of people that are gonna lose their chuck of land. Yeah.
Jack Armstrong
And go live elsewhere.
Joe Getty
And it wasn't working out anyway. Stock market's up. Why is that? Well, there are a couple of stories behind that we can bring to you. Maybe an hour, four. If you don't get that, get the podcast. Armstrong and Getty on demand.
Jack Armstrong
Armstrong and Getty.
Narrator
Something unexpected happened after Jeremy Scott confessed to killing Michelle Schofield in Bone Valley season one.
Jack Armstrong
I just knew him as a kid.
Narrator
Long, silent voices from his past came.
Gilbert King
Forward, and he was just staring at me.
Narrator
And they had secrets of their own to share.
Gilbert King
Gilbert King. I'm the son of Jeremy Lynn Scott.
Narrator
I was no longer just telling the story. I was part of it.
Gilbert King
Every time I hear about my dad is, oh, he's a killer. He's just straight evil.
Narrator
I was becoming the bridge between a killer and the son he'd never known.
Gilbert King
If the cops and everything would have done the job properly, my dad would have been in jail. I would have never existed.
Narrator
I never expected to find myself in this place. Now I need to tell you how I got here.
Gilbert King
At the end of the day, I'm literally a son of a killer.
Narrator
Bone Valley Season 2 Jeremy.
Jack Armstrong
Jeremy, I want to tell you something.
Narrator
Listen to new episodes of bone Valley Season 2 starting April 9 on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. And to hear the entire new season ad free with exclusive content starting April 9th. Subscribe to Lava for Good plus on Apple Podcasts.
Jack Armstrong
This is going viral. A New York City delivery worker was.
Joe Getty
Caught on video dropping a pizza on the street, then picking it up and putting it back in the box. Customers like as long as it doesn't.
Jack Armstrong
Have any pineapple, I'll try it.
Joe Getty
I like pineapple on my pizza.
Jack Armstrong
I do too.
Joe Getty
Our four Some tariff talk that I think is interesting, but if that made you groan, we do have a story about two identical twin dudes who married two identical twin women in a co ceremony and there's way more things that are the same. It's very interesting.
Jack Armstrong
And did that cause a wrinkle in the fabric of time or did they breed a super baby here?
Joe Getty
Does seem like it should be in the Loki show or something.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah. Yeah. Join us for hour four. If you don't get hour four, subscribe to the podcast Armstrong and Getty on Demand. I wish we had a little more time for this, but I just came across not long ago one of the most beautiful and touching things that I've seen in a very long time. And that is a farewell message from Mia Love. Do you recognize that name? She was the young black woman who was elected to Congress in Utah. She'd been a mayor and stuff like that. She was the first black woman Republican in the House of Representatives and really interesting person. She died recently of brain cancer and she wrote what she said, not a good was not a goodbye message, but a thank you message. And it is absolutely beautiful. And again, I wish I had time for more, but I'll give you a little bit of it. Dear friends, fellow Americans and Utahns, I'm taking up my pen not to say goodbye, but to say thank you and express my living wish for you in the America I know. And then she describes the end of the battle with brain cancer and why she and her family have decided that now it's time to just be with each other as opposed to more treatments. Anybody who's gone through that terrible experience knows what she's talking about. As mayor, member of Congress and media commentator, I've seen the worst of petty politics, divisive rhetoric and disappointing lapses of moral character by some. These same roles also provided me a front row seat and a backstage pass to be blessed and inspired by the courage, vision and hope of America's finest daughters, sons and citizens. Couching this column is a dying wish felt a little dramatic even for a drama person like me. We are not certain how long the season of my battle will be, and I do want to share and reshare some things with the world that I passionately believe. I write all of this as my living wish and hopefully Enduring wish for you. Let me tell you about the America I know. My parents immigrated to the United States with $10 in their pocket and a belief that the America they heard about really did exist as the land of opportunity. Through hard work and great sacrifice, they achieved success. So the America I came to know growing up was filled with all the excitement found in living the American dream. I was taught to love this country, warts and all. And I understand I had a role to play in our nation's future. I learned to passionately believe in the possibilities and promise of America. Then she talks a lot about watching her mom and dad work our odd jobs to provide for the kids and the education that they got.
Joe Getty
God, I hate to turn this negative, but that's what I do. It makes me nuts that there are so many children of privilege on college campuses. I mean, you grew up an upper class lifestyle. Now you're at a expensive university and you're down and sad and on anxiety medicine and angry because you believe the country's so awful and you can't make it right.
Jack Armstrong
Right. That just to me, you know, idle hands are the devil's playthings. That just shows the corrosive power of lack of purpose anyway. And this part I love too. Watching my mother and father work odd jobs in order to provide for us and maintain their independence taught me valuable lessons and personal responsibility. When tough times came, they didn't look to Washington, they looked within. Because the America they knew was centered in self reliance. The America I know is founded in the freedom self reliance always brings. What makes America great is the idea that when government is limited and decisions are made closest to the people they impact. People are free. Free to work, free to live, free to choose, free to fail and free to achieve. The America I know provides everyone an equal opportunity to be as unequal as they choose to be. We will have a link to this entire essay@armstrongegetty.com I suggest you very strongly you read it because there's a lot more to it.
Joe Getty
It. What's that saying of whether you think you can or you think you can't? You're right.
Jack Armstrong
You're right.
Joe Getty
It reminds me of that with the. The philosophy of you either believe this is a country where you can work hard and make it or you don't. You believe that that's a lie that people tell you. I've heard, I've heard Bruce Springsteen say that they, they push this lie that you work hard and you'll make it. F you Bruce.
Jack Armstrong
Oh my God. Yeah, like I need my sociology lessons from guitar players. Gritty determination. You're gonna win. Sniveling victimhood. You're gonna lose. That's just true. Armstrong and Getty.
Narrator
Something unexpected happened after Jeremy Scott confessed to killing Michelle Schofield in Bone Valley season.
Gilbert King
Every time I hear about my dad is, oh, he's a killer. He's just straight evil.
Narrator
I was becoming the bridge between Jeremy Scott and the son he'd never known.
Gilbert King
At the end of the day, I'm literally a son of a killer.
Narrator
Listen to new episodes of bone Valley Season 2, starting April 9 on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
Armstrong & Getty On Demand: "Somebody Go Get My Scotch!" – Detailed Summary
Release Date: April 8, 2025
In the episode titled "Somebody Go Get My Scotch!" from the Armstrong & Getty On Demand podcast, hosts Jack Armstrong and Joe Getty delve into a variety of pressing topics, ranging from judicial decisions affecting immigration policy to cultural phenomena disrupting movie theaters. The discussion is enriched with insightful commentary, sharp critiques of media reporting, and reflections on international relations. Below is a comprehensive breakdown of the episode's key segments.
The episode opens with a heated discussion on a significant Supreme Court decision that impacts the deportation of Venezuelan nationals under the Alien Enemies Act.
Supreme Court Decision: The Hosts examine how the Supreme Court overturned a lower court's order that previously blocked deportations. They highlight Attorney General Pam Bondi’s remarks praising the decision as a "landmark victory for the rule of law” (01:05).
Due Process Concerns: Jack Armstrong elaborates on the ruling, noting that while the Supreme Court upheld the Trump administration's authority to deport individuals deemed as terrorists, it also mandated that detainees receive proper notice and an opportunity to challenge their deportations in federal court (03:18). He emphasizes the importance of due process:
“We’ve just got to have that in place even when it's annoying and time-consuming.” (06:26)
Case Study – Salvadoran Individual: The hosts discuss a specific case involving a Salvadoran man wrongly accused of gang affiliation. Jack Armstrong criticizes the lack of substantial evidence against him, arguing that the true threat was the coercion he faced from gangs to join their ranks (06:26).
Media Critique: Both hosts express frustration with how the media has reported the decision. Joe Getty sarcastically remarks on the superficial coverage, likening it to "dire wolves" on NBC (01:58), while Jack Armstrong criticizes the oversimplification of legal matters in media reporting (01:42).
Notable Quote:
Joe Getty: "I was becoming the bridge between a killer and the son he'd never known." (00:32)
Shifting gears, Armstrong and Getty explore the viral meme "Chicken Jockey" that emerged from the Minecraft movie, causing unprecedented chaos in theaters.
Viral Meme: The term "Chicken Jockey" refers to a rare in-game character in Minecraft—a zombie riding a chicken. The hosts describe how this meme has led to disruptive behavior in cinemas, with audiences chanting and causing mayhem during screenings (12:29).
Impact on Movie Theaters: Examples include fans throwing popcorn and engaging in unruly behavior when "Chicken Jockey" appears in the movie, prompting police intervention (14:27).
Economic Angle – Backyard Chickens: The conversation transitions to a related trend where Americans are raising backyard chickens in response to rising egg prices. They discuss the practical challenges and personal time investment required for poultry keeping.
Jack Armstrong: "It's primal. It's agriculture, which is great." (17:57)
Notable Quote:
Joe Getty: "Chicken Jockey. Stay tuned." (11:09)
The hosts delve into U.S. foreign policy under former President Donald Trump, focusing on interactions with Russia and Iran.
Russia Relations: Trump discusses the absence of tariffs with Russia, citing their involvement in ongoing conflicts and expressing dissatisfaction with Russia's bombing activities. The hosts debate the efficacy and implications of Trump's confrontational stance.
Joe Getty: "Unless he starts saying even stronger things about Russia, there is no leverage against Russia." (21:12)
Iran Negotiations: The episode covers Trump's direct talks with Iran, highlighting his vow to prevent Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons through potential military action.
Trump: "We're going to see if we can avoid it." (22:15)
Potential Conflicts: Armstrong and Getty speculate on the likelihood of military engagements, expressing a pessimistic view that bombing could escalate into broader conflicts.
Joe Getty: "I think we bomb." (24:03)
Notable Quote:
Jack Armstrong: "What advantage do we get out of getting bombed back to having nothing." (24:17)
The discussion extends to the deteriorating situation in the Middle East, particularly the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
Leadership Crisis: The hosts analyze the internal struggles within Palestinian leadership, citing corruption and inefficacy within both Hamas and Fatah. They predict the eventual defeat or assimilation of Palestinian factions due to ongoing conflicts and external pressures.
Jack Armstrong: "The Gaza Strip is in ruins. Many residents might leave or be pushed out following the war sparked by October 7 attacks." (26:57)
Douglas Murray’s Perspective: Referencing journalist Douglas Murray, Getty explains Netanyahu's miscalculations regarding Hamas, attributing the October 7 attacks to a false sense of security among Israeli leadership.
Joe Getty: "They had become convinced Netanyahu and most of the Israeli government had become convinced that Hamas no longer meant what they said." (29:00)
Future Outlook: Armstrong expresses skepticism about achieving a two-state solution, citing historical precedents where unprovoked attacks lead to territorial losses rather than peaceful coexistence.
Jack Armstrong: “It’s not even worth remarking on. It’s not.” (33:23)
In a heartfelt segment, the hosts commemorate Mia Love, the first black woman Republican elected to Congress, who recently passed away due to brain cancer.
Farewell Message: Mia Love’s farewell message is recounted, emphasizing her dedication to America, self-reliance, and the pursuit of the American dream.
Gilbert King: “I’m literally a son of a killer.” (12:03)
Legacy and Values: The message underscores the importance of personal responsibility, limited government, and equal opportunity, resonating with the podcast's recurring themes of individualism and skepticism of governmental overreach.
Mia Love: “What makes America great is the idea that when government is limited and decisions are made closest to the people they impact, people are free.” (38:24)
The episode concludes with lighter discussions, including amusing anecdotes about pizza delivery mishaps and identical twins in marriage ceremonies, adding a touch of humor to the otherwise serious discourse.
Pizza Delivery Incident: A viral video of a New York City delivery worker's clumsy pizza handling is briefly mentioned, highlighting public reactions and customer preferences.
Jack Armstrong: "Have any pineapple, I'll try it." (35:06)
Twins in Marriage: The hosts joke about the potential chaos and humorous outcomes when identical twins marry identical twin partners, likening it to scenarios from the Loki TV show.
Joe Getty: “Does seem like it should be in the Loki show or something.” (35:44)
Judicial Integrity vs. Executive Power: The Supreme Court's affirmation of the Trump administration’s deportation authority underscores the delicate balance between national security and individual rights, highlighting ongoing tensions in immigration policy.
Media's Role in Public Perception: Armstrong and Getty critique the media's superficial treatment of complex legal matters, advocating for more nuanced and informed reporting.
Cultural Impact of Viral Trends: The "Chicken Jockey" meme exemplifies how digital culture can spill over into real-world disruptions, reflecting the power of social media in shaping public behavior.
Economic Response to Market Fluctuations: The surge in backyard chicken farming as a response to rising egg prices illustrates grassroots economic adaptations and the trade-offs between cost savings and personal time investment.
Foreign Policy Realism vs. Idealism: The hosts emphasize a realist approach to international relations, questioning the efficacy of diplomatic negotiations without tangible leverage, particularly concerning Iran and Russia.
Humanitarian Perspective on Conflict: The analysis of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict reveals a pessimistic outlook on achieving lasting peace, suggesting a need for alternative solutions beyond traditional diplomatic efforts.
Legacy of Public Figures: Mia Love’s farewell serves as a poignant reminder of the values of self-reliance and limited government, reinforcing the podcast's advocacy for personal responsibility and skepticism of governmental intervention.
Jack Armstrong: “We’ve just got to have that in place even when it's annoying and time-consuming.” (06:26)
Joe Getty: “Chicken Jockey. Stay tuned.” (11:09)
Mia Love (via Gilbert King): “What makes America great is the idea that when government is limited and decisions are made closest to the people they impact, people are free.” (38:24)
This episode of Armstrong & Getty On Demand weaves together critical analysis of legal decisions, cultural phenomena, international relations, and personal tributes, offering listeners a comprehensive and thought-provoking experience.