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Jack Armstrong
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Jack Armstrong
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Jack Armstrong
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Joe Getty
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Jack Armstrong
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Katie
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Jack Armstrong
Broadcasting live from the Abraham Lincoln radio.
Katie
Studio at the George Washington Broadcast Center, Jack Armstrong and Joe Getty.
Jack Armstrong
Armstrong and Getty. And now here's Armstrong and Getty.
Joe Getty
How you feeling about Friday, huh? Excited. Gonna party. I'm gonna party.
Jack Armstrong
I don't believe you're gonna party.
Joe Getty
Probably not party. Probably take care of my kids, figure out some meals, do some laundry, get to bed on time. I usually get to bed early on Friday night. Yes, every night of the week. For some reason at this point in.
Jack Armstrong
My life, I cannot say the same. So I started my day with a early morning jabbing. Had to have the standard blood work done before my visit with my doctor and got an appointment and all what you need to do these days. And my wife, who's like a week off on the cycle of going to see the doctor, had her blood work done at the same place. And she said, oh, I hope you get. What's her name?
Joe Getty
She's the little gal.
Jack Armstrong
She's so bubbly and so cheery and so wonderful. So I got there today, and there she is. Not only is she cute and bubbly and cheery, she loves Jesus. And she let us know we were discussing the nice weather, et cetera, blah, blah, blah. And I thought, okay, great. Yeah, that's the gal Judy was talking about. And then out comes from the bowels of the building a darker presence this big. There's no reason to go into description. A large. A woman of large.
Joe Getty
You know what's interesting here is I have no idea where this direction is this story is going. I don't know if we were about to get off on how Christian she was or. No, I don't. Now we're going.
Jack Armstrong
You gotta hang out for the ride. That's. That's the brilliant. That's the brilliance of my artistry.
Joe Getty
I'm hanging on this. I'm hanging on for the ride. I don't know what's about.
Jack Armstrong
Big old gal radiating hatred for humanity from every pore. She was glowing with hatred of humankind just visible on her face.
Joe Getty
And they're both phlebotomists.
Jack Armstrong
Yes, Joe, we.
Katie
We refer to those as Large Marge in charge.
Jack Armstrong
Yes, well, Large Marge was in Charge. And so I'm thinking, oh, give me the sweet little girl. Give me the sweet little girl. But no, no, I got the mountain of malevolence.
Joe Getty
You don't request. I request. Remember I used to have my guy Pong, my man Pong, and I liked Pong. And I would. I would. I would show up and say, I want Pong. So I'll wait however long it takes until Pong comes up.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah, the place I go, you know, I only go, like once every six months, once a year. And they're not consistent. There are a bunch of different gals, and I think one dude once who worked there. But anyway, can I have the one.
Joe Getty
That doesn't look like they've been in prison?
Jack Armstrong
You could say that. Can I. Can I get the one who is gonna jab me with the needle whether I need it or not? Can I not have her? Yeah, she actually was pretty good. It was fine. But, you know, I found myself, like, trying to manage the relationship with being really pleasant and upbeat without being gushing, you know, because if you're in a foul mood, and she was clearly in a foul mood, if you're in a foul mood, the super chipper person who's trying to bring you out of it, that's not helping. So I thought, all right, you just gotta play your cards right. That job, it's like, you know, you're being robbed and you're just trying to. Look, you can have my wallet and all. Let's just send it here.
Joe Getty
Look at the. Lay back and think of England.
Jack Armstrong
Well, exactly. I was getting jabbed one way or the other, and I wanted it to be, you know, a good. It turned out to be fine. That professionalism intact.
Joe Getty
More than any other job, though. I mean, because we are. We're all human beings and we have good days and bad days and days when we're in good moods and bad moods. And that job, it's got to be particularly difficult. You know, you have your. I don't know, an argument with your husband or your teenager says something you hate when you drop them off at school or whatever, and then you gotta go in and be delicate with. Or you can take it out on your kid. Everything I do for that kid, like, God, no, I've been raising that kid and I feed him and everything, and they have no.
Jack Armstrong
Plus, you're dealing with the public for your entire shift. And anybody who's dealt with the public knows that that alone will put your teeth on edge. But anyway, it worked out all right. I'm just so glad it's over anyway, so I've been wanting to get to this and I don't know why exactly, but I find the dynamics of this so interesting. Speaking of managing a one on one relationship, and that is the history of American presidents getting played by Vladimir Putin. And this is written by Tom Rogan. I don't know Tom. I know Joe Rogan. I know what's everybody from the Washington Post. Josh. Josh Rogan. Right. Well, this is a. Yet another Rogan.
Joe Getty
But anyway, if you read the. The David Sanger version of Putin and Bush and how they hung out together like friends back in the day. Yeah, yeah, that was rough to read in. In retrospect.
Jack Armstrong
Well, this Rogan leads with Donald Trump says he wants peace in Ukraine. The problem is that Mr. Trump sees Vladimir Putin for who he wishes Putin to be. See if you agree with this, friends, he wishes him to be a hardened but practical, you know, negotiator rather than who he is, a former KGB lieutenant colonel who revels in the dark art of ruthless manipulation. Mr. Trump was shaped by the Wheeler Dealer New York City real estate scene. Mr. Putin was shaped by the brutal maximalism of the KGB's Red Banner Institute. But Mr. Trump is not the first US president to take an unrealistic view of his Russian counterpart. Consider his predecessor's experiences. And I was reminded of the patheticness of this, going through this. The first American president to deal with Putin was Bill Clinton. And he chose to remain largely silent on human rights concerns in Russia, including the incredible civilian casualties during the second Chechen war. Mr. Clinton instead focused on wooing Mr. Putin to join the post Cold War democratic international order. Mr. Putin did nothing of the sort. He intimidated the Russian media, cultivated an inner circle of oligarchs, and took Russia down the road of totalitarianism. All while Mr. Clinton stood idly by, hoping. But I don't know what Clinton was supposed to do, honestly. But next came George W. Bush meeting Putin in June 01. Bush said he, quote, looked the man in the eye and found him to be very straightforward and trustworthy, adding that he gained a sense of his soul. I, as a human being, I have soft feelings for George W. Bush. That is one of the most ludicrous things I've ever heard. Certainly in retrospect, that was wishful thinking of titanic scale. Yeah. Mr. Bush had been duped by Mr. Putin's KGB mind games. Mr. Putin appealed to Mr. Bush, a born again Christian, with a story about his mother's Orthodox cross being rescued from a fire in her dacha. Mr. Putin adopted a similar tactic with Mr. Trump's chief foreign affairs negotiator, Steve Witkoff, telling Mr. Witkoff that he had prayed for Mr. Trump when he learned of the assassination attempt against him in July. Putin has never prayed for anything in his life.
Joe Getty
No. The fact that some people, including many of our listeners, believe Putin's some sort of protector of Christianity. Good Lord.
Jack Armstrong
One more example. And then, you know, the main point which, which Jack is certainly hinting at. Then there was Barack Obama. Soon after taking office in 09, Obama essentially excused Russia's invasion of Georgia five months prior, publicly seeking a reset in relationship. That July, Obama traveled to Moscow to meet with Putin. Obama adviser Michael McFaul, who served as ambassador to Russia for a number of years, recounts in his 2018 book How Putin quickly asserted dominance over the American president. Putin, quote, putin spoke uninterrupted for nearly the entire time scheduled for the meeting, documenting the injustices of the Bush administration. This was a guy, this is the Bush administration that could see into his soul. This was a guy with a chip on his shoulder. Obama listened patiently, maybe too patiently. It was my assignment to read out this meeting to our press corps late that day. I couldn't tell them that Obama had merely listened the entire time. Then they go into the history of the appeasement of Obama. I think what maybe our presidents underestimate one after the other after the other, maybe for reasons of their own egos, is that they're up against a master, a master manipulator. Not just a hard ass negotiator and a cutthroat, but a guy who's gifted in not coming off as a cutthroat, in anticipating what you want to hear and giving it to you.
Joe Getty
Maybe the first time, the first president, that's fine, you can get away with that. But since then, I don't see how you get manipulated by the guy. It seems pretty obvious what he is. He's a ruthless. He will. He would murder your child if it benefited him. He's that guy.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah, yeah. Or even, even if he thought there was one in four chance it would benefit him. Yeah, your child would be dead. Trump clearly is prone to being swayed by flattery. I mean, that's just beyond denial at this point. And it was. I've been watching Special Report with Brett Baer, especially this week, in which he's talked to various leaders in the, the countries that Trump's visited in the Middle east in which he's done some really, really interesting diplomacy that might be like crazy beneficial for the next 50 years. There's some stuff that's bothered me, but I think a lot of it is really, really impressive what Trump's been doing. But it's been unbelievable how every figure Bret Baier interviews goes way over, above and beyond the call of duty in praising Trump. Like, it's almost like they've got a timer going off every fourth sentence to make sure they throw in some lavish praise for Trump. And so, yeah.
Joe Getty
On that front, I'm concerned. Trump said earlier today, he said, it's time. It's time Putin and I meet. We got to make that happen. And I'm really concerned about how that meeting goes. That Trump might just lavish praise on Putin to his face. And bad. They both sit there and badmouth Zelensky, and I don't know what we do with that.
Jack Armstrong
That would be tough to take. Yeah.
Joe Getty
In fact, I almost predict that's what's going to happen.
Jack Armstrong
But Putin will, like, have a $10 million documentary of Joe Biden's deceit and dementia produced and show it to Trump. He will build a shrine to Melania's beauty. He'll cut off his own thumb, maybe, to convince Trump they're on the same page and they're the kind of guys who. Who get it. Other people don't get it like we do, but we sure do.
Joe Getty
Maybe he can get some of those hair swinging dancers that they had in Abu Dhabi yesterday. Trump seemed to like those. The girls that swung their hair.
Jack Armstrong
I gotta get the hair swinging dancer video. I missed that somehow. Yeah, but we'll have to see. I don't get it either, how one president after another after another makes the same set of mistakes. Well, even without realize they're dealing with an alligator, they're dealing with a reptile.
Joe Getty
You don't need to meet with the CIA and have them. You read their profile that they've dug up and put together for you. How about the fact that he burned all those people in that apartment building so he could blame the Chechens and start a war?
Jack Armstrong
Yeah, I mean, that's.
Joe Getty
Who does that.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah.
Joe Getty
That's the kind of guy you're dealing with. He would burn a whole bunch of families of the Russians so he could blame it on the Chechens and start a war because he wanted to.
Jack Armstrong
Sure. Yeah. That's straight out of his philosophy. And. And Hitler's and others. No, dang, Michael, this is not a gratuitous Hitler mention. This is a specific sighting of.
Joe Getty
Very different.
Jack Armstrong
Exactly. But the great man view of history is if you are not willing to sacrifice tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands, maybe millions of lives. You will not be one of the great men of history if you blanch at sacrificing all those lives. You don't deserve the gig. You're in the wrong job, chum. That's what Vladimir Putin would say. You gotta know that going in.
Katie
Jack Armstrong and Joe Getty the Armstrong.
Jack Armstrong
And Getty Show.
Katie
Jack Armstrong and Joe Getty the Armstrong and Getty Show I.
Joe Getty
Got a weird FOMO fear of missing out thing about when when I, when I find out this popular meme and then I read about it and I think, hi, I missed that. And part of it is this job. Like I don't want to miss out on popular trends that people are talking about without bringing them to you. Part of it's just fomo, I guess. But somehow I missed out on this viral video from a while back about this guy and his early morning routine that apparently has Caught on the 4am Wake up is not just for Superman CEOs anymore, says the Wall Street Journal. In a quest to be ever more productive, the morning routines of American men hit new extremes and it's about how it's become a big deal. Whether you're Disney CEO Bob Iger, who starts super early in the morning, or CEO Tim Cook of Apple. Getting up at 4am I guess is the new thing. And I didn't know about this Ashton hall, who posted a video his morning routine that involved mouth tape. Do you know what that is, Katie? What's mouth tape?
Katie
You put it over your mouth when you sleep.
Jack Armstrong
It's supposed to force you to breathe.
Joe Getty
Through your nose, which is better for you. I think my kids would discover my lifeless body if I did that. But all right.
Jack Armstrong
And I think Almighty God probably came up with a decent plan for how you ought to breathe while you're asleep. But thanks anyway.
Joe Getty
This guy, he got his mouth tape, an ice bath filled with bottled Saratoga water. Because the kind of water, cold water in your bath obviously makes a huge difference. A banana. A banana peel rubbed across his face. And most importantly, it all started it's what?
Jack Armstrong
Essential oils or something.
Joe Getty
And most importantly, it all begins at 3:55am I kind of like this sin lives late at night. According to this post that got so much attention. If you're dealing with a weak mind, bad decisions, or lack of productivity, go to sleep early. You do tend to make bad decisions at night eating relationship wise.
Jack Armstrong
It was shortly after he took the tape off of his mouth that Benjamin Franklin said early to bed, early to rise makes man, healthy, wealthy and wise.
Joe Getty
And the days that followed that video going viral, seemingly half of the Internet, from Ed Sheeran to somebody I've never heard of posted clips parodying the Hall's routine about getting up at 4 o' clock in the morning. Anyway.
Jack Armstrong
That sounds entertaining.
Joe Getty
I feel like last week we were talking about how I feel like I don't feel like I know this is true. Extroverts get to like run the world and act like that's the only way to do things. Because they're extroverts. They're. They're loud and proud and are willing to get in your face and say it. Whereas we introverts are kind of. Yeah, I don't, I don't really like, go ahead. So whatever. And so you get all the attention. I feel like people who are built to get up early kind of dominate that conversation. It works for you because that's the way you're built.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah.
Joe Getty
It doesn't work for everyone. And the sort of person who is more productive, maybe as productive as you, but does it? Getting up later and staying up later. So.
Jack Armstrong
Right. Exactly. But that there's no look what a hard guy I am. Aspect to that.
Joe Getty
Right. For some reason that is kind of interesting. I don't know why it is I get up at 10am But I don't go to sleep until 4 in the morning and I'm productive. The whole day gets no attention. But yeah, you're seen as a sloth. A sloth or something like that. Yes.
Katie
Well, there's nothing more manly than rubbing a banana peel on your face or.
Joe Getty
Making sure you have Saratoga water to jump into as opposed to tap water. Good Lord. Ugh.
Jack Armstrong
Oh, my skin. My poor skin. Hand me another banana peel quickly. It's all dried or something.
Katie
The Armstrong and Getty Show.
Jack Armstrong
Get more Jack, more Joe podcasts and.
Joe Getty
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Jack Armstrong
And so appropriate to talk about fathers and sons and daughters because Father's Day is coming up. I know my dad absolutely loves the Omaha Steaks packages we send every year because he doesn't need stuff. He needs deliciousness.
Joe Getty
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Jack Armstrong
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Jack Armstrong
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Jack Armstrong
Hey everybody. So when you get asked, what is Odoo? What comes to mind? Well, I'll tell you. Odoo is a bit of everything. Odoo is a suite of business management software that some people say is like fertilizer because of the way it promotes growth. But you know, some people also say that Odoo is like a magic beanstalk because it grows with your company and is also magically affordable.
Joe Getty
Oh, but then again, you could look at Odoo in terms of how its individual software programs are a lot like building blocks. Whatever your business needs, manufacturing, accounting, HR programs, you can build a custom software suite that's perfect for your company. So what is Odoo? Well, Odoo is a bit of everything. Odoo is a fertilizer. Magic beanstalk building blocks for business. Yeah, that's it.
Jack Armstrong
Which means that Odoo is exactly what every business needs. Learn more and sign up now@odoo.com that's O-O-O.com.
Katie
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Jack Armstrong
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Joe Getty
I don't know those books.
Jack Armstrong
They are enormously popular now among especially conservative America. Conservative to moderate America. They are absolutely entertaining, funny, well written books that represent traditional values. I will read from their website and.
Joe Getty
Help you understand gender fluidity.
Jack Armstrong
Oh no, they don't really get into that. An innovative series of colorful, engaging books that use storytelling to share important economic, civic and real history principles with your child. Plus workbooks, audiobooks and parent guides to empower parents and enhance learning. And they have many, many titles and great to help you.
Joe Getty
To help you. And gender fluidity.
Jack Armstrong
No, no, again, I think you're. You're misunderstanding this. No, you know what it is? It's. It's books that educate. And I almost Hate to use that word, but haven't we all learned a ton from various stories and books we've read about life and love and humanity and science in some cases and that sort of thing. Written from a point of view that is not about gender fluidity. It's good stories that would have been written a generation ago. And the response has been absolutely enormous to these books. Well, this county library banned these books. Why? They were asked. Listen to this, would you? Some of the content promotes a specific political and economic perspective that clashes with the library's policy to include all points of view. The implication being these books have a point of view but do not reflect all points of view, which is a bizarre requirement. So what's.
Joe Getty
Of course, what's the points of view that they do reflect? Does it have like. So it has like traditional. Morales.
Jack Armstrong
Okay, I'd have to read in America. Yeah.
Joe Getty
So if you do well, it kind of my joke turns out it's too real. So if you don't include gender fluidity, you're not including all points of view. So it's kind of the book's got to be banned.
Jack Armstrong
Or if you proudly advocate for traditional civic virtues and morality and family values, you cannot be in that library. Because I quote, some of the content promotes a specific political and economic perspective, free markets. That clashes with the library's policy to include all points of view. And then this author shows the email that was leaked to them, yet they're banning our books, writes Conor Boyak, who's the author, which teach kids and their parents about free markets, property rights, personal responsibility, entrepreneurship, and more. This shows that you can't assume anything about anything in your area simply because we're mostly conservative or whatever. The left has captured most of society's institutions. They dominate the schools and the libraries, even in otherwise conservative communities. And Connor, I would say to you, sir, we have been saying for a very long time around here, you can live in the reddest area in the world. You have a blue blotch right in the middle of your town or county. It's your local school and or library. But then Connor Boyak writes, I think my favorite thing here is that they're removing the Tuttle Twins books because they alleged our books contain, quote, a political and economic perspective that clashes with their policy to include all points of view. So because our books aren't inclusive of all points of view, they're excluding them. The irony is thick. This sounds like something the Babylon Bee would write. Meanwhile, what kids books are included in this library.
Joe Getty
There you go.
Jack Armstrong
Let's take a look at screenshots which Jack I happen to have in front of me. A is for Activist. It's an ABC board book written and illustrated for the next generation of progressives. Families want their kids to grow up in a space that is unapologetic about activism. Environmental justice, justice, civil rights, LBGTQ rights, oh my God, etc. Etc.
Joe Getty
Oh my God. That is unbelievable and believable at the same time.
Jack Armstrong
Here's another book that's included Phenomenal AOC the Roots and Rise of Alexandria Ocasio Cortez.
Joe Getty
Wow. Wow.
Jack Armstrong
Continuing on Radical My Year with a Socialist Senator by Sophia Warren. Moving along Trans Bodies, Trans Selves, A resource resource by and for transgender communities in this library. Connor goes on, wait, there's more. Why not? We're having fun. Kamala raised her hand. A tribute to Vice President Kamala Harris, recounting every time she raised her hand to stand up for what she believes.
Joe Getty
So the other day I'll be vague about.
Jack Armstrong
Let me finish the list real quick. Greta Thune Bloomberg Climate activist, Beacon of hope, the life of Barack Obama and I'm an activist, An Introduction to Activism teaches people are changing the world, blah blah blah. And it's for kids. Go on.
Joe Getty
The other day my son was in a situation with another kid his age, 13 year old, who made some sort of comment that he didn't understand.
Jack Armstrong
And.
Joe Getty
He said, you know, what are you talking about? Or what does that mean? Or something like that. And the kid said, what are you against bisexuals? Are you homophobic? And I just thought, why does this.
Jack Armstrong
Come up all the time? All the time?
Joe Getty
And it's because of these books that they have at the schools and the stuff they teach at school, plus, you know, who knows what the parents are talking about all the time. But why is this topic so prevalent? Why is it impossible to get away from sexuality as a topic all the time? God, it never came up when I was young, certainly at that age and younger.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah, yeah, read James Lindsay and Helen Pluckrose's cynical theories about critical theory, queer theory, radical gender theory, and why they push that stuff. It has to do with neo Marxism and eroding the values of Western society so you can overthrow it. But I'm reminded, I mean, this library, obviously saying some of the content promotes a specific political and economic perspective that clashes with the library's policy to include all points of view, which is a ridiculous, laughable, cynical lie. And I'm reminded of one of my favorite quotes about these people. Marxists just lie. They lie so overtly and blatantly that people begin to question their own perceptions. It works because no one expects another person to lie so overtly. So these woke libraries, these woke schools, these woke universities, they will out and out deny that they're doing what they're doing. Be. Just be ready for it. Be aware that the nice local librarian will lie to your face about what they're doing and why they're doing it.
Joe Getty
Yeah, I find that very, very frustrating. And I have comments I'd like to make, but I don't want to hurt feelings or cause problems. But yeah, the whole library thing, it's.
Jack Armstrong
Something that's the other thing Marxists count on. And you're talking about your personal life, so I'm not telling you you should mess up your personal Life, but they 100% count on you being afraid to make the encounter hostile and unfriendly. They count on your niceness to win the day.
Joe Getty
Some of those book titles you gave us.
Jack Armstrong
Oh, my God. Trans Bodies, Trans Selves. There's no One Way to Be Transgender. Trans Bodies, Trans Selves is a revolutionary resource. A comprehensive, reader friendly guide for transgender people, with each chapter written by transgender and gender expansive authors.
Joe Getty
I like the Rise of aoc, a minor congressperson who's a socialist, but happens to be attractive. So she gets lots of attention. Yeah, good.
Jack Armstrong
That book is in the library. That's right.
Katie
Armstrong and Getty.
Jack Armstrong
Hey, everybody. So when you get asked, what is Odoo? What comes to mind? Well, I'll tell you. Odoo is a bit of everything. Odoo is a suite of business management software that some people say is like fertilizer because of the way it promotes growth. But, you know, some people also say that Odoo is like a magic beanstalk because it grows with your company and is also magically affordable.
Joe Getty
Oh. But then again, you could look at Odoo in terms of how its individual software programs are a lot like building blocks. Whatever your business needs. Manufacturing, accounting, HR programs, you can build a custom software suite that's perfect for your company. So what does Odoo? Well, Odoo is a bit of everything. Odoo is a fertilizer. Magic beanstalk. Building blocks for business. Yeah, that's it.
Jack Armstrong
Which means that Odoo is exactly what every business needs. Learn more and sign up now@odoo.com that's O-O-O.com.
Katie
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Katie
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Joe Getty
And Getty show and not only does it looked like one eight weeks post operatively, it's Acting like one.
Jack Armstrong
The level of kidney function is as good as we would expect from a human kidney transplant. Holy cow. Nice job, pig kidney.
Joe Getty
So kidneys is one of the big ones because why do your kidneys go south on you? It just happens sometimes.
Jack Armstrong
High blood pressure is one major cause.
Joe Getty
Because liver is often a drinking and drugs thing. Right. But kidneys can just fail on you.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah. Some drugs you process through your kidneys, but I don't know much about it anyway.
Joe Getty
So you got two of those, you got one liver, you got two kidneys. Am I right so far? And then if you need a new kidney, somebody who has a. Is a match for you, you can have taken one of their kidneys. Because a person can get by on one kidney.
Jack Armstrong
Right. But that's always been, you have no kidneys, that's a drag. Right.
Joe Getty
And then you got to find somebody with a kidney. And sometimes you're on the list and thinking, man, if I don't get a kidney soon, I'm going to be kidney less. Which you can't be. And then you'll die. Nobody wants that. Yes. Katie, do you know something about kidneys?
Katie
Well, yeah, I have a kidney disease. And the transplant list for kidneys is.
Joe Getty
The longest out of all of the organs. Do you still have both yours?
Jack Armstrong
I do.
Joe Getty
They both work?
Jack Armstrong
For the most part, yes.
Joe Getty
But if one family.
Jack Armstrong
There are cancers that affect the kidneys, there are all sorts of things that can hurt them. Yeah, yeah.
Joe Getty
How'd you ruin your kidneys? It's just a, like, genetic thing or.
Katie
It's a genetic thing.
Joe Getty
Gotcha. And then. But so we've been hearing about this our whole lives, and now if they could use pig kidneys, that would eliminate the whole problem, I assume.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah. Unless you're a pig. Then it causes a whole new set of problems. But the point remains, it's in advance. More of Dr. Sanjay Gupta's report.
Joe Getty
Now, there is one complication they're watching for very carefully. Something that is unique to xeno transplants and could affect not only Tim, maybe all. If there is some sort of weird or strange virus in the pig and it gets into the human population through one of these transplants, might not only affect the patient, but people around the patient as well.
Jack Armstrong
In all the studies that we're doing, we're not only monitoring the patient, but their close contacts.
Joe Getty
You're right. These stories are always presented from the human being point of view and not from the pig's point of view in which he would say, hey, I was using this.
Jack Armstrong
Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, you show me where. I said this was cool. It is not cool, by the way. The idea of some horrendous pig virus spreading to humans. Dr. Fauci says what, he's probably doing experiments in North Korea right now at some leaky lab financing that. Good thing Biden pardoned him. Never forget one more nugget from this story.
Joe Getty
This is really the progress of several Nobel prize winning discoveries. Everything from crispr, which is gene editing technology, actually taking genes out of the pig genome, adding other genes in from humans into the pig genome. They also use cloning, they use ivf, they use transplant immunology. These are just huge, huge developments in the world of medicine that have all sort of come together to make this work. But they basically make the pig genome compatible with humans. That's what they do. Two legs good, four legs bad. That's where you end up.
Jack Armstrong
Fall in love with her cute little snout. Her hooves. Let me stroke your hooves, my love.
Joe Getty
Yeah, that'd be cool. If this becomes a thing of the past, having to worry about kidneys, do.
Jack Armstrong
They get to vote? He's half human, half pig. Iverse. Well, not exactly half, but. Katie. Yes. Yeah, I. I do have to tell.
Katie
You, during that report, when they were giving the guy the ultrasound to show.
Jack Armstrong
Him the kidney, he.
Katie
He rubbed his stomach and went, you can feel the little piggy right there.
Joe Getty
A little cringy.
Jack Armstrong
That's very cringey.
Joe Getty
And do you, every time you eat, like bacon, do you kind of just like nod up to heaven a little bit? Kind of a salute?
Jack Armstrong
Like a little toast for the homies.
Joe Getty
For the homies.
Jack Armstrong
Or, or. Or do you, like, vomit it because you're, you know, you're rejected.
Joe Getty
Yeah, cannibalism, right?
Jack Armstrong
Yeah, it's right. Take a pickabalism.
Joe Getty
Anyway, so will the doctor that puts your pig kidney in you have been the most qualified person they could get at ucla, or did they just fit the racial quotas that they wanted? This is going on at ucl. UCLA Medical School, one of the most, you know, prestigious medical schools in the entire world. They're clearly, clearly continuing to use race and admissions. I mean, there's just no getting around it whatsoever. And there's a lawsuit going on right now. It's against the Asians because they just. There's too many Asian kids that are super smart and can qualify for the school, and not enough black kids, and they don't like that result. So what do you do? You discriminate by race. I mean, you. The lefties, you discriminate by race. To try to fix the problem, which is just nuts, right?
Jack Armstrong
Right. UCLA Medical is unforgivably woke. A new story emerges every week.
Joe Getty
Lawsuit brought on behalf of students denied admissions since 2020. According to the complaint, UCLA will routinely admit Black applicants with below average GPA and MCAT scores. In 2023, Asians were 41 of the total applicants and only 28% of the people that graduated. Black applicants made up 8% of the applicants, but 14% of the graduates.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah. So at much lower scores.
Joe Getty
Yeah, it's amazing, some of them. Racial preferences have been outlawed in California since 1996. Even in California, we voted that now making decisions based on race is racist. We ain't going to do that even in California. But of course, the enlightened universities find their way around it, right?
Jack Armstrong
And here's an idea. Black America, we just keep, you know, growing school choice and all the other things that will actually improve education and educational outcomes for black kids so that every damn black man or woman who graduates from a medical school, everybody will know they're 100% qualified. And there will never be any whispers about, you know, diversity hires or DEI doctors or wouldn't that be great? And yet the progressives are the ones who prevent that.
Joe Getty
Justice Roberts wrote in the Students for Fair admissions case that racial preferences cannot be reconciled with the Constitution's equal protection clause and that a student must be traded based on his or her experience as an individual, not on the basis of race. Obs would be my response as a non writer.
Jack Armstrong
Obs.
Joe Getty
It's amazing how hard it is to kill off this kind of racism.
Jack Armstrong
Well, they. They do it with the approval of their own consciences. They are utterly convinced that they are doing the right thing by pushing some people down to elevate others. It's. The hubris of. It has always amazed me you think so highly of yourself, your judgments, your morals, that you can wield the awful, awful tool of racial discrimination to get the outcome that you say is appropriate. Sickening. You people sicken me. And, and God dang it, this is. And I almost said a very nasty thing. I'm glad I didn't. Part of me wishes I had anyway.
Joe Getty
You're conflicted on this.
Jack Armstrong
I am. Thank you for summarizing. What really blanking pisses me off is that these same people are putting the band aid of, look, they're not really qualified and we really didn't educate them at government schools, but let's go ahead and shove them into these upper tier colleges and medical schools or whatever, and then pretend like they're qualified. You are making it impossible to actually reform schools for the little kids when they're young and idealistic and want to learn. I'm talking about your black kids and whatever kids of whatever race. You're talking about you with your. Let's just go ahead and kowtow to the teachers unions, then elevate them artificially when they hit college. You are making it impossible to do the real work to improve these people's lives, you hypocritical self. Regarding Bad. You bastards. I hate you. You want hate speech? There it is. I hate you.
Joe Getty
So these are. These are kidneys are actually taken just out of a regular pig. It's not one of those. They're growing a pig valve in a petri dish or something?
Jack Armstrong
I don't actually know that. I mean, the guy mentioned the many, many incredible technologies that grow in go into getting a very different. I mean, it's not a typical. You can't like go down to your local hog farm, steal a kidney and have it stuffed in you. These are incredibly advanced.
Joe Getty
Oh, so it's not just a run of the mill. Orville, the pig kidney.
Jack Armstrong
No. Were you listening?
Joe Getty
So they had to use the crispr and everything else to bring this kidney around.
Jack Armstrong
There you go. Yep. Among other things. Yeah.
Joe Getty
And what is it with the pig? Why the pig? Why not the monkey, for instance?
Jack Armstrong
Yeah, the monkey, which is genetically very similar. Certainly apes are certainly.
Joe Getty
To several people I know.
Jack Armstrong
Fair point.
Katie
Jack Armstrong and Joe Getty. The Armstrong and Getty Show. Millions of people have turned to Claude, the AI assistant from Anthropic because it just feels different. Where other AIs often sound a little robotic, Claude has been designed with special research that informs its character, meaning that Claude just gets it when it comes to empathy and emotional intelligence. That's why Claude has become the if you know, you know, choice for dating advice, career coaching, gathering your thoughts for those important life decisions, and more. Give Claude a try for free at Claude.com. that's C-L-A-U-E.com and let us know how you feel the difference.
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Armstrong & Getty On Demand: The A&G Replay Friday Hour Two – Detailed Summary
Release Date: May 23, 2025
Host: Jack Armstrong & Joe Getty
Platform: iHeartPodcasts
Timestamp: [03:08] – [07:27]
The episode kicks off with Jack Armstrong and Joe Getty exchanging light-hearted banter about their typical Friday routines. Jack shares a personal story about his and his wife's recent visits to the doctor for blood work, highlighting the contrast between their generally calm experiences and an unexpected encounter.
Jack Armstrong recounts his visit:
"I started my day with an early morning jabbing... my wife, who's so bubbly and so cheery... she loves Jesus."
[04:07]
However, their routine takes an unexpected turn when they encounter a particularly stern and unapproachable phlebotomist, leading to humorous yet relatable commentary on managing interactions with challenging professionals.
Joe Getty adds:
"More than any other job... dealing with the public for your entire shift can put your teeth on edge."
[07:27]
Timestamp: [07:27] – [16:19]
The conversation shifts to a critical analysis of the historical relationships between U.S. Presidents and Vladimir Putin. Drawing from Tom Rogan's writings, Jack critiques former Presidents Clinton, Bush, and Obama for their unrealistic perceptions and handling of Putin, suggesting a pattern of underestimating his ruthlessness and manipulative nature.
Jack Armstrong asserts:
"Mr. Trump sees Vladimir Putin for who he wishes Putin to be... a former KGB lieutenant colonel who revels in the dark art of ruthless manipulation."
[08:12]
Joe echoes this sentiment, emphasizing Putin's manipulative prowess:
"He’s a ruthless. He would murder your child if it benefited him. He's that guy."
[12:30]
The hosts express concern over President Trump's upcoming meeting with Putin, speculating it might result in mutual backbiting and ineffective diplomacy. They highlight the dangers of leaders being swayed by flattery and failing to recognize the true nature of their counterparts.
Joe Getty comments:
"It's pretty obvious what he is. He's a ruthless guy."
[12:47]
Timestamp: [16:19] – [20:02]
Katie introduces a segment on the viral trend of extreme early morning routines, citing a Wall Street Journal article and a viral video featuring Ashton Hall's 4 AM wake-up regimen. The discussion delves into the societal pressures and the "Fear Of Missing Out" (FOMO) associated with adopting such routines, despite varying personal productivity needs.
Joe Getty shares his skepticism:
"I didn't know about this Ashton hall, who posted a video his morning routine... Do you know what that is, Katie? What's mouth tape?"
[17:34]
Katie explains:
"It's supposed to force you to breathe through your nose, which is better for you."
[17:36]
The hosts humorously critique the extremes of these routines, emphasizing that productivity does not have a one-size-fits-all approach.
Timestamp: [24:25] – [45:54]
A significant portion of the episode tackles the controversial banning of the "Tuttle Twins" books from the child and youth sections of Chemung County libraries in New York. The hosts discuss the broader implications of such actions, framing them as indicative of a left-leaning agenda infiltrating traditionally conservative areas.
Jack Armstrong outlines the issue:
"They have expelled all of the Tuttle Twins books... they represent traditional values... the left has captured most of society's institutions."
[25:31]
The conversation highlights the irony of libraries banning books that promote diverse political and economic perspectives under the guise of maintaining an unbiased collection. The hosts critique the underlying motives, suggesting a deliberate effort to marginalize traditional values.
Joe Getty remarks:
"They have been saying for a very long time... It sounds like something the Babylon Bee would write."
[27:19]
Jack further emphasizes the discrepancy by juxtaposing the banned Tuttle Twins with other heavily politicized books still available in the same libraries, such as titles focused on activism, climate change, and prominent political figures.
Jack Armstrong cites examples:
"A is for Activist... Phenomenal AOC... Radical My Year with a Socialist Senator... Trans Bodies, Trans Selves..."
[29:32]
The hosts express frustration over the enforcement of such bans, characterizing them as a form of political censorship that undermines parental authority and educational integrity.
Joe Getty shares a personal anecdote:
"The other day my son was in a situation with another kid... Are you homophobic?"
[31:10]
Jack connects this to broader societal shifts, attributing the prevalence of such topics in educational materials to a deliberate strategy to reshape societal norms and erode traditional values.
Jack Armstrong concludes:
"The nice local librarian will lie to your face about what they're doing and why they're doing it."
[32:43]
Timestamp: [37:35] – [46:54]
The discussion transitions to groundbreaking advancements in medical science, specifically the development of pig kidney transplants. The hosts analyze the implications, benefits, and ethical concerns surrounding xeno transplants.
Jack Armstrong summarizes the medical breakthrough:
"The level of kidney function is as good as we would expect from a human kidney transplant... Nice job, pig kidney."
[37:41]
Joe Getty delves into the technical aspects:
"These are incredibly advanced. They use CRISPR and other technologies to make the pig genome compatible with humans."
[40:15]
Katie shares a personal connection, mentioning her own kidney disease and the challenges associated with transplant lists.
Katie states:
"I have a kidney disease. And the transplant list for kidneys is the longest out of all of the organs."
[38:35]
The hosts humorously discuss the practicality and societal perceptions of pig transplants, while also addressing potential risks, such as the transmission of pig viruses to humans.
Joe Getty warns:
"If there is some sort of weird or strange virus in the pig and it gets into the human population... it might affect more than just the patient."
[39:35]
Jack criticizes the portrayal of these medical advancements, labeling certain narrative choices as "cringey" and expressing skepticism towards the integration of animal organs into human bodies.
Jack Armstrong quips:
"Whoa, whoa, whoa, you show me where I said this was cool. It is not cool, by the way."
[39:51]
Throughout "The A&G Replay Friday Hour Two," Armstrong and Getty provide a blend of personal anecdotes, critical political analysis, and commentary on societal trends. They tackle complex issues—from international diplomacy and educational censorship to medical innovations—through a lens that emphasizes traditional values and skepticism towards progressive agendas. Their engaging dialogue, punctuated with humor and pointed critiques, offers listeners a perspective that challenges prevailing narratives and encourages independent thought.
Notable Quotes:
Jack Armstrong on Putin's manipulation:
"Mr. Putin is a former KGB lieutenant colonel who revels in the dark art of ruthless manipulation."
[08:12]
Joe Getty on the challenges of dealing with the public:
"Anything who's dealt with the public knows that alone will put your teeth on edge."
[07:27]
Jack Armstrong on library censorship:
"The left has captured most of society's institutions. They dominate the schools and the libraries, even in otherwise conservative communities."
[25:31]
Joe Getty on Trump's potential meeting with Putin:
"I'm really concerned about how that meeting goes. That Trump might just lavish praise on Putin to his face."
[14:15]
This comprehensive summary encapsulates the key discussions and insights from "The A&G Replay Friday Hour Two," providing readers with a clear understanding of the episode's content and the hosts' viewpoints.