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These Young 'Uns

February 24, 2024 JB and Sierra
These Young 'Uns
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Gives 0
These Young 'Uns
Feb 24, 2024
JB and Sierra

Remember that time Sierra finally joined the ranks of adulthood and celebrated with a set of shiny new wheels? Well, she's here on Give Zero, and we're toasting to the milestones and the madness that comes with growing up in a digital whirlwind. From the nostalgia of library card catalogs to the latest tech shaping our learning, we're unraveling the threads of generational culture and how it's stitching together the fabric of our society. Sierra and I don't just skim the surface; we get gritty with the realities of aging, wisdom, and the respect for a spectrum of opinions, all with a healthy dose of our signature unfiltered banter.

Ever wondered how the digital age has twisted our grasp on history or questioned the impact of role models in the era of smartphones? Buckle up, because we're not holding back. We dissect the digital influence on historical knowledge, examining figures like Margaret Sanger and weighing the integrity of information we consume. Technology's tidal wave hasn't just reshaped our past; it's redefining our present, from education to self-awareness, challenging the very nature of intelligence. Sierra and I share stories that'll make you laugh, think, and possibly question your smartphone's place in your pocket.

As we wrap up this raw and revealing ride, Sierra's voice is a beacon of freshness, calling out to a world sometimes overwhelmed by the influential and the infamous. We pay homage to the stars who lit up the screen before us and give kudos to the courage of those carving their paths today. A heartfelt shoutout goes to our listeners for sticking with us, and remember, it's not just about staying tuned—it's about keeping it real with experiences and opinions as diverse as the generations that share them. Join Sierra and me for a podcast episode that's as much about learning from each other as it is about learning about ourselves.

Support the Show.

Thanks for being a part of America's #1 (3rd Rate) Podcast!!

We thank ALL of you who support us spiritually and financially. THANK YOU SO VERY MUCH!

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Show Notes Transcript Chapter Markers

Remember that time Sierra finally joined the ranks of adulthood and celebrated with a set of shiny new wheels? Well, she's here on Give Zero, and we're toasting to the milestones and the madness that comes with growing up in a digital whirlwind. From the nostalgia of library card catalogs to the latest tech shaping our learning, we're unraveling the threads of generational culture and how it's stitching together the fabric of our society. Sierra and I don't just skim the surface; we get gritty with the realities of aging, wisdom, and the respect for a spectrum of opinions, all with a healthy dose of our signature unfiltered banter.

Ever wondered how the digital age has twisted our grasp on history or questioned the impact of role models in the era of smartphones? Buckle up, because we're not holding back. We dissect the digital influence on historical knowledge, examining figures like Margaret Sanger and weighing the integrity of information we consume. Technology's tidal wave hasn't just reshaped our past; it's redefining our present, from education to self-awareness, challenging the very nature of intelligence. Sierra and I share stories that'll make you laugh, think, and possibly question your smartphone's place in your pocket.

As we wrap up this raw and revealing ride, Sierra's voice is a beacon of freshness, calling out to a world sometimes overwhelmed by the influential and the infamous. We pay homage to the stars who lit up the screen before us and give kudos to the courage of those carving their paths today. A heartfelt shoutout goes to our listeners for sticking with us, and remember, it's not just about staying tuned—it's about keeping it real with experiences and opinions as diverse as the generations that share them. Join Sierra and me for a podcast episode that's as much about learning from each other as it is about learning about ourselves.

Support the Show.

Thanks for being a part of America's #1 (3rd Rate) Podcast!!

We thank ALL of you who support us spiritually and financially. THANK YOU SO VERY MUCH!

TWITTER (X)
@Gives0Show


TRUTH Social
@JoeyBrunoIV


Don't forget our home page!!
GIVES0.com

Also, we endorse (and are compensated by) My Patriot Supply and NORD VPN. We work with them because they are trusted names by we Patriots and we use their products and services ourselves. Use the links below for them, we get a little love when you do.

My Patriot Supply

NORD VPN

Speaker 1:

Are you ready?

Speaker 2:

to do this yeah, here we go. You're listening to give zero when everything matters, but your feelings. You're listening to give zero when everything matters, but your feelings.

Speaker 1:

I so dick that up. I still have C in the mix. This is like what's gonna be cool and this is already cool that I could have planned. Huh, You're listening to give zero. Let's do this. Here we go.

Speaker 2:

Now your host. Who gets up?

Speaker 1:

All I would like to say is that I am continuing a very long and and bountiful Tradition of this poor thing. Third-rate is it's your buddy JB here with you on America's number one story podcast. This is give zero. Yeah, I'm just. I just train wreck the whole intro.

Speaker 2:

But you know what?

Speaker 1:

there ain't gonna be no editing, cuz why would I do that? So welcome aboard. It's good to have y'all. We have a special guest for you guys today, chick. That I know. I'm just gonna go and bring her in, just throw her right in y'all's lap. But before I bring her out, a lot to say this she is of the younger generation persuasion, she's very pretty girl, she's smarter than she lets own, even though I she don't let on much. I don't know what that means and I would like to introduce all of you to my five friend, miss C C, how you doing.

Speaker 2:

I'm good. How are you? You really did train wreck that.

Speaker 1:

You know when I'm tired, I did the stutter and so the Vanna intro. It's a guy guys, welcome to all behind stage. You're about to see what happens behind stage, behind the curtain. So when I hit, you're listening to give. Okay, it's on a trigger. It's a little like a DJ button, okay. And so if I play the outro, for instance and you're all familiar with the the these days song, okay, so the outro is just the song and it's the regular song that you normally hear on the intro. Well, when I hit the button again, it pauses it. Wherever I stop it it starts and pauses where I let off. The intro doesn't do that. It's always on a single, single trigger. So every time I touch it, your list.

Speaker 2:

Your You're listening to give zero so yeah, dick that what happened, so anyway yeah.

Speaker 1:

Yeah and rather than, and rather than do something professional Like, just hit the big red green button, that's your go and stop button. When it's recording it's bright red, like you know, on the air. I Could have just tapped it, reset everything and said, see, I'm sorry, let's just start again, but no, no we're not gonna do probably ever make the mistake of doing that, so anyway.

Speaker 1:

So, since we have you here Before, whatever you have with ice in it melts, let's do rituals. So you don't have to yeah, you don't have to train wreck rituals with me. I'm quite capable of train wrecking rituals on my own. I noticed that you welcome, so. So what we're gonna do is is I will, I will. But now when we get down to the one, two, three, I'm all good stuff. You know, you got to do that part because that's a rule. Yeah, everybody says mmm, all good stuff together. I listen to the straw. Do you even listen to this program?

Speaker 1:

Yes, I do well, often then, you're supposed to be caught up.

Speaker 2:

I am caught up. All right, the rituals.

Speaker 1:

All right, so thank you. Yes, ma'am, if you have your beer, your wine, your coffee, your gin, your vodka, your mead I don't know, not scotch, because, yes, Scott, scott sucks or Tequila, which we never talk about enough on this program, grab it up. Or or no questions, even white claw, what a reply you like? It tastes like television static anyway. Or if you got a little something, something special, you want to go on the back deck and roll up little monkey up, fire it up and partake along with us on a deep drag. Puff the magic dragon, you do. You? Why say it's here, why?

Speaker 2:

America.

Speaker 1:

America, all right. So here we go on the count of three, and when we get down we go Mmm, all good stuff all together ready. One, two, three go, mmm, ah, good stuff. There you go. See you're in the club, welcome to give. This gives a real family.

Speaker 1:

I Can't believe you're welcome, we're glad to have you on board. So, see you're, and I know each other. I'm just going to call you see here. I was gonna say see, cuz that's kind of a little monkey nickname for you. I'm just gonna do that. I won't give you your last name for anonymity, and plus, you want to be able to show your face to your friends in the future. Um so, sierra and I know, each other.

Speaker 1:

That's not always too late. We're that that train has left the station. Um, so Sierra is my sidekick part. I'm all to be a great, great granddad, so, but sometimes I'm, but sometimes I'm big brother. Sometimes I won't say daddy, because that sounds like creepy, but you know, maybe maybe a father figure at times I just like to think of us as buds, and it works out great that way so, but however, she has done herself a grand piece of adulting today. Would you like to share with the world what happened to you today? I?

Speaker 2:

bought a car.

Speaker 1:

No, ladies and gentlemen, let me fix this for you. She purchased a sexy car, would you like to? Purchase the what a sexy car that thing is. Some some kind of cool is what that thing is.

Speaker 2:

So yeah, it's beautiful.

Speaker 1:

She don't drive a station wagon like I do. You know she's got to have something cool, so it's an infinity. That's an infinity right.

Speaker 2:

Yes, it is.

Speaker 1:

Okay, and we'll say no more, except that it's gorgeous and I'm not sure if this thing fits you or not. Of course I haven't seen it in person yet because I haven't seen you, so I won't see that till next week, but I'm not really sure. If so, can I ask why was this thing your vibe car? Why did it just stick out in your mind? It's like it's kind of cool. I think I'll buy this.

Speaker 2:

I'm gonna be completely honest with you. I have no idea, because it's actually everything that I said I didn't want in a car, but then I saw it and I was like, wait you need to see you need to fix this in your life, and here's why that I've gotten two wives doing that.

Speaker 1:

Don't do that. Unwise, unwise. One has a house and the other one has 27 cats. No, find something that you really like about it. Of course there's just don't have kids with it and pay a bunch of child support. So that's the main thing. Don't do that.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, no, I'm good on that one.

Speaker 1:

All right, so what I'm gonna do is I'm gonna use this and congratulations to you, by the way. That's, that's really bond that you did, that she's big girl, she's a delting. There's nothing wrong with adulting, so but that being said, are you sure?

Speaker 1:

Yes. So, that being said, what I'm, what I'm going here, what are we gonna do? We gotta do this. I've got 50 60 different topics we can do here socially, but not sports, because sports sucks to. Sports themselves don't suck, the leagues are what suck, and we can have that show another day, all this political rambling and poopola. But here's an excellent chance for us not to be In the same room together, not side by side, not having our goofball conversations that we have occasion. This is a perfect chance For you to be a little test subject, and I love this. So brace, a brace for impact. Anything could happen. Anything could happen right now.

Speaker 2:

Do you realize who I'm talking to?

Speaker 1:

yes, that's right, so prepare yourself for that. You can tell everybody how great it is to know me in person.

Speaker 2:

No, it's fantastic, there you go, actually my favorite.

Speaker 1:

Okay, checks in the mail, okay. So, as we as we were, as we were, what I want to show here is I Want to find out if cultural as in, I'm trying to say, generational differences matter, because, okay, my parents, you know, and my great-grandma, my grandparents, like those music sucks, okay, and I think that's just a rite of passage for everybody. Whenever your music sucks, you know, you're kind of making it. That makes sense.

Speaker 1:

That's true, yeah so right, so you go. Hey, we rock star. Okay. So, that being said, here we are. So, as we were, mike checking, before we started, before I wrecked the show, I said this. So here, a plea, pleases, just just say this the rain in Spain falls mainly in the plains, and you, in your cornbread accent, said this Okay, so let me, let me clue a sister cause, because you know, there's love here. This is, this is nothing that comes from a place of love. Okay, well, of course.

Speaker 2:

Now that being said.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, no, no, no, just no, you'll, you'll love this. As a matter of fact, this actually kind of falls right in your, in your world when I say this Because that is the a line that they tried to teach in the movie. My fair lady, I'm not gonna even list the, the care, the actors names, because it's a cavalcade. It is a classic piece of written work as well as it is, it is in the a list of movies, probably from the 40s and 50s. It's color, it's color movie. It is a heartwarming rags to riches story and you would sit there and probably cry on a Sunday Watching from the from, like the good part of your heart, like oh, my god, I love this so much, crying Okay.

Speaker 1:

Not like oh my god, lassie died. Nothing like that, okay, oh.

Speaker 1:

Oh yeah, see, okay, right, so that being said, the question I have to myself, to our audience and to you is since you know not this reference, because when I said the rating spot, spain falls mainly in the planes 60% of my audience goes oh yeah, my fair lady, and the rest y'all going what the fuck is that? I have no idea what. What my fair? What? Okay, taylor Swift was in a movie, hey, okay. So the million dollar question is this Does that stop you from being clearly bought a car today, a Functional adult, in this year, modern world?

Speaker 2:

I.

Speaker 1:

Don't think it does.

Speaker 2:

But there's definitely some differences. Sure, there are, but from the, from the 40,000 foot lens of my generation.

Speaker 1:

We're like how do you not know this? This is a clean and it's not like you don't know it, like from the 70s, like having a pet rock that was a thing, by the way. But I find it interesting that, because I do, I have, I literally Come and clean, I have that bias. You. You see me in people, in public, with people. I would like to think that you would attest that I'm Not racist nor homophobic or anything else. I you know, I know I know all my jokes, like everybody else does, because everybody's got them to my black buddies till the best Italian jokes you've heard in your life. But this really did. They're awesomely hilarious. But the case in point is, is that you know I think I tend to fess up when I mess up?

Speaker 1:

Yeah, and that being said, I Try to be a decent person. I have that bias, yeah. So the question is hey boomer, what are y'all's biases? Tic-toc, you're on the clock, your show, take it go.

Speaker 2:

My goodness, oh no, things aren't as simple as the older generations Think they are anymore. I guess is probably the biggest one that I have, because I Hear all the time about things I should be doing at my age and I'm like, yeah, that Was fine then, but like now it's not that easy.

Speaker 1:

You mean activities or stages in your life. You should have already built a house by your age Stuff like that or what.

Speaker 2:

Kind of both activities, but then like at the same time I have the comments like when I was your age, I was married with children and I'm I'm like, okay, that's cool, but I'm not.

Speaker 1:

I'm a, I'm a little secret, so I have to deal with this on a personal level, this subject with another person that you know on a personal level. And they themselves are surrounded by younger people as well. Sweet guy, love him, but there's that. So here's what I Oftentimes throw out. And so and I know that happens to you guys, I know it happens to you guys and it's unfair, and by that I mean the same point could be argued that a hundred years ago You'd better be married at 14 or 15 because you're gonna live to be about 40, okay, and so odds are you'll live past a hundred.

Speaker 1:

Odds are, you know you guys what you know, unless you just totally destroy your bodies or something or do something uber stupid, Um cuz you know Darwin's gonna do what Darwin does, right?

Speaker 2:

Well, you know me, I mean uber.

Speaker 1:

stupid is an Area that I wouldn't go exactly there, but yeah, so buckle up when you drive that thing. I've seen you at stop lights and stop signs and I've heard about it from the police, that being said hey, yeah, no time. There better be a reason. I got a reason. Want to see my book of tickets.

Speaker 2:

Hey, it's not a book. Yeah, that's one stop.

Speaker 1:

They email, they text them to you these days.

Speaker 2:

So, yeah, yeah, so so you know there.

Speaker 1:

Now the thing is, though, I think, that whenever Getting letting go of all the biases, people my age and I'm 58 be 59 in June, the you know, you, and you realize that you're not 20 anymore, you're probably not dead yet, but you know you're, you're moving, you're you're, you're Transitioning from fall to winter.

Speaker 2:

There's no doubt, okay and yeah, you're getting up there.

Speaker 1:

Look at the time I have said so much fun speaking with you today. You have a great life, and good luck to you, everybody. All right, so Lacey, bye, so, but the case in point is is, I think it's a head scratcher, because I think I catch myself, and this is where I have to preach to my friend. It's like look, you know. The short answer is is when you're, you know when you're running the race. At our end of it, we look back at them and they're full of energy, and you know Everything defies gravity, and it's just not fair, and blah, blah.

Speaker 1:

You know, youth is wasted on the young, as they say, and the short answer Is, though, is that if I knew that I had not only that time back, plus the extra time you guys will probably get because of lifespan and stuff. You know With what we because we had, we had it built into us earlier hey, go, rock and roll, rock and roll, and, and so the rock and roll pace is different with y'all, but with us, you know, because what people don't realize is that, god, we'd have had ten extra years of new coke and we'd have been fried, and what have happened to about 90% of us. It's truth bad as I hate to say it. And so, that being said, you know, I, I it's really a real thing that I Don't know this jealousy, but I think we look back at it with, you know, a lot of mileage because, you know, hopefully, if you've made it as far as I have, there's some wisdom in there.

Speaker 1:

Nobody's that lucky to have lived that long right. And so I mean seriously, you know, because Stupid pays a price. I just, you can do it for so long, but after a while, yeah, it's time to pay it up. And so I think I think that we look back at a 20, 25 year old or something like that would go, man, you know, if I was there right now in this world with that knowledge, what could I do? You know, just, oh my god. But then again, I don't think that people 50 years ago didn't think the same thing.

Speaker 2:

Exactly, cuz I mean I feel like now, yeah, you look back at it and you're like it, if I could be that age but and have that knowledge, but at the same time, when you were that age, you did not have that knowledge. So I'm kind of in a generation where we don't have that knowledge. We're making it there, but we're not old enough to have the knowledge that y'all have yet, as much as y'all would love for us to at 22, 23, 24 no, but when we think about the fingertip, now, not that Google's accurate, depending on what you ask it.

Speaker 1:

If you ask it, you know the molecular weight of something. It's probably spot on or to multiply something for you. But if it's an opinion thing, I wouldn't trust Google for shit. But that being said, you know to know that I've got a device in my hand that basically has answers versus our day. We had to go back and hope that the library had a relatively current set of encyclopedias.

Speaker 2:

Oh, absolutely.

Speaker 1:

I mean it's just a trace.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I mean they've definitely made things easier, but at the same time things have changed a lot as well, like over time. So While things have gotten easier, they haven't Got an easier all the way around.

Speaker 1:

I guess one of the biggest things that I find that I find intriguing, and we have touched on it. If you listen to any episodes and it's not out there, I say it verbatim, because I rarely do anything verbatim. I'm having more serious talk with you than I probably have in the last 10 episodes because I'm just, you know, a baby in a can. But I like that just, you know, just spilling my brain out there and let it just do its thing. Because you know one thing about gives zero, I'll give it credit, for it's just a common meeting place for all of us that have.

Speaker 1:

I don't think that I'm any smarter than anybody in the Audience God knows I'm not but I think that the big thing is it's like well, you know, here's an actual voice that's in. Not that I'm big media by any measure. You know we've got our 10, 12, 14,000 listeners out there. We're not. You know, of course we're about to pass CNN, that's for damn sure, but MSNBC and the like. But having said that, you know we're all pretty sympathetic to each other. I think it's just nice to push a button and, you know, because it's it's not died. This is rare. I do have dialogue. It's usually monologue, me just talking yeah and and just and me just spewing the same thing that everybody in the audience feels, but I think because it helps me when I get emails and tech you know stuff from people, so I don't feel quite as solo doing this and it's cool that there are like-minded people out there that go.

Speaker 2:

Yes.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, jb, say it. Say that thing right there, say it, tell them what, tell them what it's like. Well, you know you're, you're able to say it too, but it's just nice to hear it. Now, that being all said, I said I like to say this. So, when I come back and I say points like you just made, there's this common thing from a social side, there's a tech, there's a believe it or not, there's only two sides to this, and they usually, I said there's more than two sides, but there's literally only a social side and a tech side to this as the generational gap goes.

Speaker 1:

So I've embraced you know, I mean I was. I grew up with the home PC, so it was a little. I mean I was in my, my 20s, so close to your age, so I wasn't born with it in my hand, but I was with that generation that that came from. Click, click, click, click, click, click, click and we have like a box Moving across the screen and we go man, that's bad asset, that's. That's 14 hours well spent, you know, and so it's. It's tough when we look back and we realized that there are people your age that cannot write cursive, need a pacifier, and their whole world is a safe space and yeah, no, don't get me wrong.

Speaker 2:

My generation, I believe, is just as stupid as probably anybody, but that's a whole different story.

Speaker 1:

Why would you say there is stupid as anybody else. What things are they stupid about?

Speaker 2:

I just we're. So I don't know. I guess I don't necessarily want to say it's all my generation, because it's probably all of them, but my generation specifically, they're babies. You can't have an opinion that's different than theirs without somebody wanting about it. And I just I don't get that. Like, at what point did we lose the ability to have an opinion without it being almost considered a hate crime?

Speaker 1:

Welcome to give zero. That is fascinating to hear you say that, and the reason being is and I don't, and that's like saying that all black people are criminals.

Speaker 2:

And that's unfair.

Speaker 1:

And that's unfair? Sure, absolutely is, but statistically the ratio is much higher, while they are a lower percentage of the populace. That being said, what I mean by that is this so the majority of people my age and older assume that every one of y'all has a pacifier stuck up your backside and literally what you just said. They're so fragile you can't dare have an opinion or say anything different than what they air quote believe, or the train comes off the tracks.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, why?

Speaker 1:

Now, that being said, if you can differentiate yourself from the this is to be honest from the other part of your universe, the other part of your generation, that must be a reality to some level, and if that be the case, why is that a thing?

Speaker 2:

I wish I had an answer for you. I'm not one. I really do. I don't understand it. I don't.

Speaker 1:

Do you?

Speaker 2:

I don't understand why we lost the ability to communicate. Well, actually, I do know why we lost the ability to communicate, because we're always attached to a screen, but I don't know when we decided suddenly that our opinion was greater than everybody else's.

Speaker 1:

So let me ask you this Is that a self-darning? In other words, were you ever in that class? Is that a self-darning epiphany that you've had A light bulb, Come on. Or is that you repeating something like an old man like me has said and it's like oh, I'm going to give zero? I'll just say that.

Speaker 2:

No, that's just honestly how I feel about my generation. I just, you know, I don't you know me personally and I don't really care too much about politics or even social issues, because I just, I just don't, I don't concern myself with it because I don't care about other people's opinions, there's not much I can do about it and there's just no reason, honestly.

Speaker 1:

Oh, I'll fix that in two seconds. I can fix that in two seconds and tell you that you're wrong. Let's find out if you have a pacifier inserted somewhere. You want to try it? Let's go. Okay, do you like killing babies? No, you got an opinion about that. The poppies are opinions. Says you're wrong.

Speaker 2:

Oh, I know.

Speaker 1:

Oh, but you don't care.

Speaker 2:

But you don't care, do you?

Speaker 1:

You don't care.

Speaker 2:

No, no, you said it. I have my opinions on it, though, and like okay, with anybody else having their opinions on it. Do I think it's right to kill a baby? No, but am I also? Do I also think it's right to tell a woman that she doesn't have the right to choose? Also no, the only way that, the best way I can put my thoughts on that, is I personally, but I'm pro choice for you, because do your thing, but I got an idea, because I don't think anybody should be able to tell you that you have to do that.

Speaker 1:

I'll give you, I'll tell you what to do. How about we send you out in public with a clipboard and a pencil and I'll let you take a poll and I'll let you ask all the unborn children what their thought is on that.

Speaker 2:

Oh, I know, Like I said, I'm I don't know, I'm not saying I agree with it, but I'm also saying that I don't agree with just saying that you have to, I guess.

Speaker 1:

That's me whistling past the graveyard. I know this is intriguing. I'm intrigued as I sip coffee.

Speaker 2:

Well, you took your coffee because I'm going to sit my crown.

Speaker 1:

You're supposed to have adult beverages. That's fine, Sip your crown. So, that being said, I find this intriguing. So, but you do have opinions. Now the question is is this this is the final, this is the final piece of adulting. Now it can be said that you're putting your nose where it doesn't belong. I can, I can see where that might be the case, but that's also a defensive mechanism, because the short answer is this it's exactly what I just said. So if I clipboard and I went out and did that and pulled the unborn, but I think the answer will be different than what has been socially taught to be the correct answer oh, absolutely.

Speaker 1:

Now, that being said, so whom do you speak for? Do you speak for yourself? Who really is having a neutral opinion? Do you sit there and tell me about every woman that has some kind of decision to make about her body? It's? It's really weird, because if abortion was about her body, it would kill her and not the baby. Or is the important thing to focus on the unborn and figure out if they have rights or not? And they have a right, until they can speak for themselves, to decide what they want to do?

Speaker 2:

I mean, like I said, for me personally, I couldn't do it. I could not live with myself had or knowing that I took. I took somebody's life away, but I couldn't do it.

Speaker 1:

But you're fine living with yourself by just not putting your nose in it.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, kind of because kind of going back to I don't really remember when we lost or I don't know how we lost the right to have an opinion, it kind of that kind of goes hand in hand with minding your own business and that's kind of how I choose to live. I just stay in my lane. What you do, that's on you. If you can live with yourself for that, okay. I just personally couldn't.

Speaker 1:

I'm not just in this, so would you consider that apathetic? You can look that up.

Speaker 2:

I don't know AP.

Speaker 1:

I don't know how you knew AP.

Speaker 2:

AP. You don't have to spell it, I'm good at spelling.

Speaker 1:

Apathetic. Look at that word. I don't know why you use Google, google, okay, google it.

Speaker 2:

Okay, lucky for me.

Speaker 1:

I know how to use a dictionary, and I did when I was in the third grade.

Speaker 2:

I know how to use a dictionary, I just don't own one, sorry. Showing or feeling no interest, enthusiasm or concern. Hey, yeah, I would say that that kind of describes my personality.

Speaker 1:

But does it describe your soul, is the question. And by that out, and does it describe your soul? Your soul is not your personality. For instance, my personality is that of an A-hole. However, my soul was a shining star of goodness.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, my personal is that of an asshole to go. To be completely honest with you, I'm an impact, so yes, has everybody, that's not so. That being said, that says everybody that's not Okay. Well, I guess that's everybody.

Speaker 1:

Everybody, everybody, everybody on Facebook and everybody on YouTube is a fucking empath. Yes, I'm.

Speaker 2:

I'm just saying I literally can't watch other people cry without cry, that's all I know, that's because you're a wuss, wow.

Speaker 1:

Okay, yeah, I went there, I straight did.

Speaker 2:

I straight did. Okay, that's fine, I'm fine with it.

Speaker 1:

And by that I'm going to say this you think I don't have to be tough when somebody gets waterworks around me because I'm trying to hold it together for everybody, yeah, and that's okay. But what that is is that's not being apathetic that allows me. It's like I don't care how I feel I've got to. I've got to say do whatever. The function is that gets us over this hump.

Speaker 2:

Right.

Speaker 1:

And I'll deal with it later. Some of that's guy, I don't care what people say, it's certain, things are built into the sexes and then you can. You can do this, dr Phil McGraw. Dr Phil McGrawing, all you want to, but you know the boys is that way because boys is raised to be whatever, whatever, it's just, I'm sorry, give a. Give a little girl, or an or a little boy, a stick of dynamite and a match. I'm telling you the boy will figure out by birthright and that's how you use it. Something's getting blown up in the house. I don't care. Okay, you are, it's just built in. We just break crap, that's just. It's in us. So and we are. And, weirdly enough, men are more nurturing than women are. Women are more motherly, but I think that men and I think and going to the I don't want to live in the abortion land subject, but you know, I think I know more guys pissed off about abortion than women are.

Speaker 1:

Cause they just like unless you got a womb, you ain't got no room. I'll ride to say what happened to a woman or her body. Okay, making man's laws to tell a woman what she's supposed to be doing.

Speaker 2:

Okay, I will say this I don't think they should make it as easy to do.

Speaker 1:

What to conceive to conceive or to abort a child?

Speaker 2:

To abort a child. I don't think they should. I don't think it should be as easy to do as it is.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, if you ask the, if you ask the libtards, you can. You can abort a child after it. One of these places has an after 30 days.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, See that's wrong.

Speaker 1:

We did this on that. I don't there's no way around it Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa. What's the difference between popping one in the head at 28 days after they're born versus three months after conception?

Speaker 2:

in results, See I think, even three months, I think even three months after conception is too long. Probably but the story is, I think, what's the difference? It should be a lot more difficult to do so. I mean the libtards, I know you can't necessarily say like based on certain circumstances, because circumstances are different all over the place, but at the same time I feel like there there should be a lot more reasoning, I guess, than is than what we have. That's just my thing, though.

Speaker 1:

My mother told me this story one time rest her soul that her mother put her on the peel when she was like 17. Right, and this was in 19, late 50s, and I'm thinking to myself. I don't know what the peel was made. Then I said they were poor and I'm like Mom, where'd you get the pills from? She goes medicine cabinet. I said okay, she goes. She took an aspirin and told me to hold it between my knees. She says that'll keep it from happening.

Speaker 2:

I mean, yeah, that's, that's no ineffective way.

Speaker 1:

I just have this. I I pause it. This theory POSIT you can look that up too. I pause it. This theory on the show quite oftenly it's the, it's the elephant in the rooms that dictate things. And this is a warning that I share with you and those of your ilk, of your age that this technology can really be the downfall of you if you aren't careful. And the reason is we really didn't have to. Now, abortions probably abortions been a thing. The Egyptians have recorded how they did abortions. There's nothing new under the sun. Okay.

Speaker 2:

Right.

Speaker 1:

But it didn't become rampant until you know. Do you know who Margaret Sanger is?

Speaker 2:

No, okay.

Speaker 1:

I'm going to have you look that up at some point. Okay, it did not become a thing thing until there was technology to stop conception. That abortion became a big thing. And if you'll, if you're a caring person, and you'll look up who Margaret Sanger S-A-N-G-A-R. Is that right, I'll look it up. And now you got me curious. You, everybody in your generation, needs to know who Margaret Sanger is.

Speaker 2:

It's just. It's just a thing M-A-R-G-A-R-E-T-S-A-N-G-A-R.

Speaker 1:

Yes, s-a. Oh, I spelled Margaret wrong M-A-R-G-A-R-E-T and Sanger is S-A-N-G-A-R. She was the president of the International Planned Parenthood Federation from 1952 to 1959. And so it's important to look up how she played a part in that, and it's getting harder to find because of Google. I'm not sure you can even find it on Google. All right, so this is a quote. This is from Reuters. Where is it?

Speaker 1:

She stated that the she started the Negro project in 1939 with the aim of expanding birth control services for black communities in the South, and actually her original quotes and the work that she did back then. What she wanted to do is she was out to basically sterilize and exterminate the black population in the United States. That's where Planned Parenthood came from. That was her jam. You need to see if you can find that in real stuff and see. Now, this is the difference.

Speaker 1:

My generation grew up knowing this. My generation could look this up in an encyclopedia. My generation could find this stuff out and the tech that you guys have it may be difficult to do. Have you seen the thing let's talk about? Some give zero stuff. Have you seen Google's AI system? I forget which one it was. They had to shut it down this past week. Yeah, welcome to board. So whenever you would ask Google's AI to make me a depiction of George Washington chopping down the cherry tree because you know AI will draw pictures and shit for you yeah well, all the historical figures are black, including the black figures. Obviously you know George Washington carver and stuff like that.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yeah, yeah. But the all of them.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, and so the reason being is is that it has been taught off of an incorrect historical model that won't draw a white guy, unless you tell it. Show me something radical in today's society.

Speaker 2:

Well, to be completely honest, I do have a lot of things about like the education that I don't necessarily agree with either and like that kind of plays into that.

Speaker 1:

That's fine. That's fine that you have an opinion on education and how it's done and what it is, but the short answer is just like the kids in the womb. That doesn't stop those teachers from still teaching that tribe or, or, or, a bunch of or a bunch of basement dwellers telling AI because it only knows what it socially is told and taught by a select group that teach it things and teach it those things.

Speaker 2:

Well, that's how we all are.

Speaker 1:

We're taught what we're taught and which proves that if it's an accurate spitting it out, it is not intelligent, because intelligence requires access to equal and inaccurate information. So if you and your not saying you particularly but if you and your aren't giving pause to thought, to think and I understand you answered this question a while ago but if they're not pause to think and consider, what's the difference between three or four weeks out of the birth, after birth, versus five minutes in the womb? I mean, if you can kill a child after birth, hey it's, it's on, it's on it. Two months, six months, three weeks, a day of two years old, three years old, four years old, five years old. At what point does a parent, a woman, get to choose that she no longer wants this child? And as much as I love you, if you teach generation to allow them to have no opinion, are you able to make a rational decision?

Speaker 2:

I mean, that's true, and there's no way.

Speaker 1:

There's really not an answer there and, fairness to you, there's not. I realize that I want us to have fun on here. I'm not here to grill you, but I'm curious about all this Because we will. You and I will continue to have conversations like this on here because it rocks my world to be able to do this. But what I'm getting at is there's a point with these devices where everything is outside of you and are you guys developing the time without a phone in your hand while you're driving to drive two hours, where you're forced to self-reflect and internalize and spend some time with yourself? That's my question, Because I got a 16-year-old granddaughter and buddy. She knows nothing about herself. She can tell you about every influencer in the world and they're not called influencers for lack of a better term.

Speaker 2:

Right.

Speaker 1:

And if that's what and I've watched a few of them with her and if this is what's shaping the societal mind out there.

Speaker 2:

We're fucked. Yeah, we went past that.

Speaker 1:

We're having, we're cuddling and smoking. Right now we're past that.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, honestly, I feel like it's hard for me to answer that question because I don't necessarily feel like I'm like a lot of my generation, a lot of my generation and you're right Like your granddaughter Like not everybody is willing to just put their phone down. Some people just have it in their hand all the time wondering what everybody is doing, like keeping up with the Kardashians. I don't even know what any of them are famous for, yet I still watch them all the time because I think they're funny. But do I actually know anything about them? No, no, not at all.

Speaker 1:

Do you know what they're famous for?

Speaker 2:

All I know is their dad was a very famous lawyer.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, because you know, every lawyer's family has their own television show.

Speaker 2:

Exactly.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

That's what I'm saying.

Speaker 1:

I don't. I have no idea why they're actually famous.

Speaker 2:

I have no idea why they're actually famous, in fact their show. Honestly, the only reason I watch their show is because I think it's funny to me how out of touch with reality. I guess they really are the things that they think are like.

Speaker 1:

Wait, wait, wait. It says the audience that watches them.

Speaker 2:

Okay, yeah, that makes sense. Yeah, because I think it's funny.

Speaker 1:

Okay, that makes some kind of sense. That being said, they're famous for being famous, yeah basically, they're famous for being famous. Now, how it initially got famous is one of the daughters. It was Kim, I believe.

Speaker 2:

The sex tape.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, the sex tape, and only because it came out at the same time or within a year of Paris Hilton's sex tape. You have no idea.

Speaker 2:

Well, they were best friends.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, whatever. The only reason why they got big? Because Paris has a car zillion dollars. To begin with, because she's heir to the Hilton Empire Empire is the right word. And, by the way, their hotels actually suck. I've been in an FOM my traveling days. God, I hate living in a hotel room. I hate it. The only reason why Kim's got more traction is bigger ass.

Speaker 2:

Bigger ass and a bigger name? No, there was not.

Speaker 1:

No, yeah. Yeah, the Victor was a bigger name, that's for sure, but in either case it took traction and they've made more money than the air quote name as a group. Yeah, so pick your poison, okay. So what I'm saying is you know, that's social entertainment.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, but I go back to what I said before the Kardashians. Like I am one for a road trip, I'm one to just put all my music in the car and just drive.

Speaker 1:

Let me ask you this Could you do it without your phone for a week?

Speaker 2:

Oh, probably not.

Speaker 1:

I could drop mine in a garbage disposal and never look back.

Speaker 2:

I probably couldn't. But that's not necessarily because I just am always on social media or because I'm always talking to people, because I am not I don't really I'm not a very people-y person, but one. I get lost a lot. No, I gotta have a GPS.

Speaker 1:

You would learn to read a map. I can't read a map or people could give accurate directions, which is a lost art.

Speaker 2:

Well, let's see, I was about to say that's a problem because I was in Mississippi over the summer and my phone had died and I had no service, had no idea where I was going and I just needed to know how to get to a hotel and ask the lady at the local gas station how to get there. She had no idea and she had lived there her whole life.

Speaker 1:

You know what's funny and I'm like, wow, you know what's hilarious, what? You don't have a support system out there that can do it, because in the old days we could stop by a store or a gas station and ask somebody and I'm talking about a place that's a hundred miles away. A gas station could tell you how to get there.

Speaker 2:

And see, that's what I was thinking. It's a gas station and it's a local gas station, you would think they would know how to get to the hotel.

Speaker 1:

Nope, they have no clue, because the the nose ring blue hair girl behind the register that cannot make change, can't get back and forth to work without her.

Speaker 2:

It's absolutely amazing to me how many people can't make change.

Speaker 1:

Can you make change?

Speaker 2:

I can make change. I've worked in grocery stores, that's right.

Speaker 1:

Well, out there in Huckleberry, huckleberry Hound Hall, or where you was raised, that's y'all were like the only grocery store within 500 miles, weren't you? Yes, yes, okay.

Speaker 2:

You got to drive 45 minutes and then any direction to get to another one.

Speaker 1:

That's why you had to figure. You do because you were. You were basically raised on water and straw.

Speaker 2:

I don't like water.

Speaker 1:

Just just just so you guys will know uh, c is probably five, seven or eight and she's, she's built like a, like a, it's, uh, it's, it's, she's not a fat girl or anything, but she's, she's just like the little, like a college cheerleader. She's just this thing Um, she's springy. Is that a word? Yeah, so I can use that, Is that is that? Does it embarrass you? Does it Okay?

Speaker 2:

No, okay.

Speaker 1:

Uh, you make a great swimmer. Yeah, I'll go that, because you have an athletic build and you're not like you know, but still straw and water. So that's right. You play volleyball, that's right. You told me that.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I played volleyball and I've always heard. I was built to play volleyball.

Speaker 1:

Do you still play?

Speaker 2:

Um, I, I would love to, but I don't know of anywhere I can play at this point, now that I'm not at the YMCA.

Speaker 1:

Canada, they got everything for a man to enjoy. You can hang out with all the boys. It's fun to be at the YMCA. That's what I heard growing up. That's what they said.

Speaker 2:

I was about to say that was definitely one of our favorites in the student section Of course I was in high school.

Speaker 1:

Listen to a 40 year old song at the time and go, this bad ass is like I move my arms. Um so what music doesn't suck. If I had, if I had, to listen to your playlist right now, that's a current song because I have zero in mind. Mine's all classic rock, country and death metal and stuff. So what is what's, what's what's the thing? And if I swear to God, if you say Taylor Swift, I'm cutting this off right now.

Speaker 2:

I'm not a Swiftie, you don't have to worry about that. I might make you endure some Hannah Montana sometimes, but I want to make you, so you're okay.

Speaker 1:

And it's been great talking to you and here we go, and it's been really. It's the end of that. So thanks, no, no, we do not do. No we don't know no.

Speaker 2:

We're in childhood, okay.

Speaker 1:

First of all, Hannah Montana was a Disney character.

Speaker 2:

I know, that's what I'm saying Childhood Okay.

Speaker 1:

We all know how well that worked out.

Speaker 2:

Yeah. Listen it did not listen. None of the Disney stars have worked out very well, except for maybe Selena. Here's all she's the only one that hasn't been on drugs or in a scandal.

Speaker 1:

So I looked at Miley Cyrus here six months ago on Google.

Speaker 2:

Okay.

Speaker 1:

Because we were looking for something to do with wrecking ball. I forgot what it was and I only seen clips of the video of nursing, the whole video. So where Google has images I hit images. Okay, I have seen more of air. Quote Hannah Montana. I have seen parts of her that only her gynecologist has seen.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

It's out there. Just go look her up.

Speaker 2:

Oh yeah she. She definitely went through that phase of she didn't give a shit about anything, she was just whatever.

Speaker 1:

I guess. Well, think about the girls that grew up watching Hannah Montana and they want to turn their kids on to Hannah Montana, and they happened to it was sad to see.

Speaker 2:

I mean, I know some people stuck with her the whole time, but it was honestly sad to see.

Speaker 1:

You know who Charles. You know who Charles and Heston is.

Speaker 2:

Who.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, exactly the Rainier and Span Charlton Heston, don't look it up, no.

Speaker 2:

No, I just I couldn't hear what you said.

Speaker 1:

Okay, it's okay, I'll let that there's no using Google unless I say use Google. It's against the rules. Don't cheat.

Speaker 2:

Okay.

Speaker 1:

Charlton Heston was an actor. He played Moses in the 10 Commandments. Okay, they're visual 10 Commandments, not some bogus version. The 10 Commandments back in the day.

Speaker 2:

Okay.

Speaker 1:

Charlton Heston was the ultimate badass. You can say it was Sean Connery. You can say see, there's all these great guys back in the day, all these great male stars. The women were all beautiful, okay, mm hmm. But the men of Hollywood were just and they were. They were real too. You can tell they weren't like these guys that play in the Avengers, that are all jacked up on something and Joe Rogan up, and they spend every five minutes. They've gotten the gym roiding themselves to death. They'll all die of prostate cancer when they're 45. Okay.

Speaker 2:

The gym or the plastic surgeon.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, whatever, but the short, yeah. The short answer is, though, is so who's? Who's hunky, who's hot, who's a guy that's like Uber hot these days? And I will lay him against Charlton Heston any freaking day. Go for it. Pick one of your generation, we're in high school, yeah. Well, you in high school and you go, oh my God, he just butters my biscuit. Who is that?

Speaker 2:

Well, it's literally. My celebrity crush has always been Josh Hutcherson, but like I wouldn't necessarily consider him the hottest one, oh my God. I guess, probably like maybe, uh, I don't even know.

Speaker 1:

This is so screwed up because this Josh guy I would have to Google him. That tells you where we're at right now. Well don't know, have you ever seen the?

Speaker 2:

movie Bridge to Therabithia or the Hunger Games.

Speaker 1:

I've seen the Hunger Games.

Speaker 2:

Okay, he's Peter in the.

Speaker 1:

Hunger Games. Okay, a, the Hunger Games sucked. I was watching it with my wife, so you can imagine what a hard experience that was, and so I tried to go. We watched it at home, so I tried to every every chance I get, to go to the kitchen and get something or go pee I'm not sure I remember. I'll look it up. All right, I'll tell you. What do you look up? Both of them Now? How, how, how well, would you say. He is now that actor. Okay, does that one look like his first scene in Hell? When I was a kid, I, without a закl beard.

Speaker 2:

Oh, honestly, I don't know. I feel like he's kind of fell off.

Speaker 1:

Um, all right, so Google him, google I'm. I'm because I'm going to do this in the blind. You have me at a disadvantage because I'm not looking any of this up. So look him up and top in 2023.

Speaker 2:

Okay.

Speaker 1:

And then look at the images and they show a picture from last year or something. Let's see what he looks like.

Speaker 2:

Okay.

Speaker 1:

Oh, she says do I need to text you a cigarette? You okay over there? Do we need to stop now? Are you okay If?

Speaker 2:

you need some if you like the cocaine model. Okay, all right.

Speaker 1:

Type his name in and put put hot. I couldn't tell what was happening there. I didn't know if you need some alone time. I didn't know I'm. I'm so asking.

Speaker 2:

No.

Speaker 1:

This is fun.

Speaker 2:

He's like I said it, just he looks like the cocaine.

Speaker 1:

Well, find up, just type his name in and type in space hot and hit enter and see if it shows you a picture of him at his hottest.

Speaker 2:

Okay, I feel like hunger games there. It was probably his hot.

Speaker 1:

Okay, so let that image soak in your brain for a second.

Speaker 2:

Okay.

Speaker 1:

Okay, now up there, edit it out and put in Charlton, heston, c-h-a-r-l-e-s-t-o-n. No, that's not right. C-h, charlton, C-H-R-C-H-A-R-L-T-O-N. Heston is H-E-S-T-O-N. And then do a space and then put hot. Let's see what you get. Oh.

Speaker 2:

Lord.

Speaker 1:

Lord, you see a picture, or Lord? This is hard to type in.

Speaker 2:

Well, I didn't add hot to it. In the first picture I saw of him he looked kind of like a caveman.

Speaker 1:

Cause it may have been one of the roles he was playing.

Speaker 2:

It may have been Okay.

Speaker 1:

So which one's hotter he reminds me of like a.

Speaker 2:

You can say it.

Speaker 1:

He looks like me. I totally agree, he looks like me. I totally get that. We had that same. We had that same shockingly good. Look, I get that a lot. I get that a lot.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, we're going to. We're going to go with exactly what you just said. Okay, okay.

Speaker 1:

No cause. I've asked you to be honest and not lie on the program.

Speaker 2:

Well, um, no, I'm trying to think of who it is. He reminds me of Um, or at least in this particular photo he kind of reminds me. I think it's Chris Pratt. Is he the one that's in?

Speaker 1:

um, uh, I can kind of see that, cause Chris Pratt has that like super boy next door look.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

Cause he's not super hunky, but there's no doubt he's good looking and so it's kind of quizzical, it's like yeah, yeah, exactly, and he's quirky and it's like, yeah, how can you actually be that hot Cause?

Speaker 2:

you're not, but you are but you're not, but, you're not, but you are.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, good, yeah, he kind of he kind of.

Speaker 1:

Has that uh?

Speaker 2:

Chris.

Speaker 1:

Pratt kind of vibe. Yeah, yeah, I think the vibe.

Speaker 2:

The vibe is thicker than it sneaks up on you. 44.

Speaker 1:

Charlton Heston is not Charlton Heston is not 44.

Speaker 2:

No, Chris Pratt is 44. Yeah, I can believe it. Yeah.

Speaker 1:

He's one of them A-holes that gets better as he goes.

Speaker 2:

Oh, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1:

I'm kind of doing. I'm kind of doing that Chinese woman thing where I look great till I'm a 50 and then everything just flies apart. Yeah, that's what happened to me. So, all right, we're pushing an hour. If you can believe it and I would, we could keep this going forever. But I can't keep it going forever cause rules. So I'm going to ask you this um A, would you come back and visit with us more often? Absolutely Okay, and we will actually have a subject. I'll do this. What do you think of Joe Biden?

Speaker 2:

That's JB.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, okay, you can say fuck on the air. It's just up to how well you want to face your family, if they ever hear this.

Speaker 2:

Oh, my family wouldn't care. They all agree.

Speaker 1:

You think you think Trump's treatment in the, in the media and courtroom is fair?

Speaker 2:

No, I don't. Hmm, how, how are you going to have a trial that you've already decided is one, before it even starts?

Speaker 1:

Honey, have you ever been married?

Speaker 2:

No.

Speaker 1:

I haven't. Oh, that's what it's like being married.

Speaker 2:

Well, I mean.

Speaker 1:

Mrs JB has decided my guilt before I ever say the first damn thing.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, well, in fact, but I literally had to overturn things that were so old just for them to even bring him to trial.

Speaker 1:

See, that's what's wrong with you. You're a hater. I'm beginning to see this. Now You're probably not a hater, probably a Nazi too.

Speaker 2:

No, I'm not a hater. Huh, how am I a hater?

Speaker 1:

Just because you're not with it. You're one of those Trump people. You're one of those maga weirdos trying to overthrow the, trying to overthrow democracy. Or, as I say, you're trying to overthrow democracy. Shame on you.

Speaker 2:

I'm not trying to overthrow democracy mainly because I don't give a shit.

Speaker 1:

I'm a sick human being. Okay, open mic. Any shout out you'd like to do, let her rip.

Speaker 2:

Oh, I really don't know.

Speaker 1:

Huh.

Speaker 2:

I guess my daddy is a midget wrestling.

Speaker 1:

Is he in the midget wrestling?

Speaker 2:

He loves his midget wrestling.

Speaker 1:

Oh my God, I don't.

Speaker 2:

I don't know.

Speaker 1:

Does he have midget like midget wrestling posters? I'm going to be around a time I could do this. Oh, we have to talk about this. You're coming back. Would you like to? Would you like to sign off the show? Do you know what we say at the very, very end? Don't say it yet. I'll say my little bit and then I'll say say goodbye, See. And then you say goodbye and say the line Can you do that?

Speaker 2:

All right.

Speaker 1:

All right, so I'll get us out of here. Thank you guys for listening. Thanks for putting up with our Tom Frullery. This has actually been fascinating. I'd like to thank my lovely guest, miss Sierra, for coming on. There was congratulations on her new car Kind of cool, adelting. In the meantime, you've been listening to give zero, america's number one third rate podcast. I'm your humble host, jb, and I have really enjoyed having you here. Keep spreading the word about us, keep telling folks about us. Go to give zerocom, find us on all the popular platforms out there for shows like ours. And while you're there, don't forget to like, subscribe, auto download, etc. Etc. Watch your six, take care of your family. And with that I say goodbye to you and Miss C. You have the floor Go.

Speaker 2:

Well, thanks for having me, JB, and good luck America.

Generational Differences in Culture
Reflecting on Aging and Wisdom
Generational Gap and Opinion Integrity
Generational Differences in Historical Knowledge
Youth and Technology Influence on Society
Celebrity Comparisons and Political Opinions
Thanking Guests on Podcast