Cognitive Dissonance - Episode 667: Neighbor of the Beast
Episode Date: February 2, 2023...
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Every episode we blast anyone who gets in our way. We bring critical thinking, skepticism, and irreverence
to any topic that makes the news, makes it big, or makes us mad.
It's skeptical.
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And there is no welcome at this episode 667.
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667, neighbor of the beast.
Neighbor of the beast.
I like that. Neighbor of the beast. Neighbor of the beast. I like that.
Neighbor of the beast.
Neighbor of the beast.
So we got, we got a brand.
So here's the thing.
When we did the pandemic,
when we were doing the pandemic stuff,
everything was COVID, right?
Every story was COVID.
And so you and I just decided
we've got to do something else.
So we did man bites dog stories
for about a year.
And funny enough,
there was a ton of people who became
like really came really into the show for a while. There's a group of people out there that,
you know, like, like they just want to have a funny, they just want to listen to a funny thing.
Yeah. And I'll be honest, I had so much fun doing the show that I'm doing the show. We had,
we just laughed about goofy shit for
a half an hour to an hour yep and that was and it was so much fun so this is a return this is a
return a return a couple times a month we're going to try to do this yep yeah so this story let's
launch right in this story comes from yahoo news man stuck in snow breaks into school spends two
days cooking shooting hoops new york cops say. That is fucking baller, dude.
Literally.
But seriously,
this guy is stuck in
the blizzard,
walks over, he's like, well, I guess I'll go into the
school or whatever. He breaks into the school
and then he's just like, well,
I'm hungry. And then he raids their
pantry. Yeah, he's in the cafeteria.
He's eating canned peaches or whatever.
Self over to the,
one of the whole Mac classrooms.
He's like doing a cooking demonstration in there.
And he's got his own,
he put his little hair net on.
He's got his own season liberally going on there.
Then he's like,
I got to work on some of these calories in the gym.
Let me go shoot some three pointers for a while.
It's so good.
And then I think he left.
He left for a little while to go get his car.
His car goes missing because they probably just cleaned it up off the road.
And then he's like, well, fuck it.
He goes back to the school.
He goes back to the school, guys.
Like, I have returned to what you know.
Whatever.
Just go back and hang out.
He was living his best life.
I remember when I was in school, like a young kid, I was in school. Like, return to what you know. Whatever. Just go back and hang out. He was living his best life. He really was.
I remember when I was in school,
like a young kid,
I was in school.
I remember being like,
when I'm rich,
I'm going to buy a school
and turn it into my house.
And this room will be my bedroom
and I'll have a gym.
And like, he did it.
He really did.
He did it.
He lived my fucking sixth grade life, man.
If you look down
in like really rural parts of the country,
you can sometimes find schools.
For sale?
Old schools for sale.
When Sarah and I
were looking for a house,
we were moving from Chicago
during the pandemic.
There was one
essentially straight south
from Chicago
past Kankakee, right?
There's a past Kankakee?
Kankakee is pretty far south.
Yeah, it is.
Kankakee is, if you're from the Chicagoland area, Kankakee is right? There's a past Kankakee? Kankakee is pretty far south. Yeah, it is. Kankakee is,
if you're from the Chicagoland area,
Kankakee is over an hour from Chicago,
straight south on a road called I-57.
This place was farther south than that.
So it's like Mattoon or something like that, right?
It's like a city that you know no one lives in.
Right.
But it was genuinely a whole school.
A whole school that you could just be like,
and then we also saw a bunch of-
Did it have a playground?
We saw a bunch of churches too.
Yeah, there's a tennis courts and a whole thing.
Yeah.
I kind of would have bought it.
Dude, no.
There are churches?
There's churches too.
There's churches too where there's like a whole church.
And then it's like, you know what churches are like
because they don't only,
most churches don't only, they,
most churches don't only just have the like,
the pews and shit.
Yeah, yeah.
They also have like a whole,
like school sometimes attached.
Right, yeah.
So this one had the praying area.
So it had a big,
like one big room.
Right.
A couple of small rooms where people lived.
And then in the basement,
they had the whole like,
where you would have like the church basement. Oh, like the Cub Scout meetings
and shit? Cub Scout meeting, yeah. Oh,
I would buy the church and have pancake breakfast
all the time. I would buy the church
Just invite people over for pancake breakfast.
That'd be awesome. I'd just like start
opening the door on Sunday and see who shows
up. Not have service, but
just kind of like see who swings by. I would 100%
turn my sex-having
place into the altar.
Oh, 100%. There's no way you do it anymore.
You've got to do it.
Where else do you do it?
Are you kidding me?
I mean, you do like water play in the baptismal funds.
Are you kidding me?
When you come, you have to say-
Water sports or whatever it is.
Pew, pew.
Pew, pew.
You got to shoot it in the side of the cross.
There is so much language though.
That's like Jesus,
like sexual language that you can throw into sex.
I mean,
come on.
Literally.
Come on.
Come on.
All right.
Time to get on our knees and pray.
And so the Lord came into them.
Come on now.
This guy,
by the way,
I want to finish
this story out
because, you know,
you can't just leave it
as the guy's there.
He decides he's going to leave
and then he steals
the snow plow
and then goes,
steals from other places.
He was a bad dude.
He went on a spree afterwards.
He not only like
ate all the canned peaches,
like he drove
to an electronics store in a stolen pl afterwards. He not only like ate all the canned peaches, like he drove to an electronics store
in a stolen plow.
He had an absolute fucking banger of a weekend.
This guy, yeah.
This guy basically like,
there was a blizzard
and he thought he was in like
an end of the world twilight zone.
He really did.
He was just like,
they're all gone.
The people are all gone.
Cause like he was later found.
He shoots hoops and he breaks his glasses.
He's like, no!
His only ball deflates.
His only ball.
No!
He's trying to blow it.
He's like, I don't have a fucking one of those needle things.
Why do they even make those?
It's so stupid.
You ever had a ball deflate when you were a kid
and you're just like,
I don't have one of those needle things.
No.
And you have to like figure out how to go.
You got to borrow it from a friend and then you can't fill it up at the service station because you need an actual pump.
Because you need the thing.
That was me like every, like every summer because like the ball would be in the garage.
Yeah, then it just deflates.
And then it just gets all deflated and shitty over the winter.
And then you're like, oh, cool.
Like it's good weather.
Like grab the ball.
And you're like, and you like throw it on the guys like,
and it makes the saddest,
a fucking half deflated basketball. It's the worst.
Makes the saddest sound.
Like the death rattle of your only child
is not as sad
as the fucking sound of deflated basketball
hitting the ground.
Chicago had for years,
there was a college team called the Blue Demons
and they had a very specific ball.
Do you remember? It was red and blue and then it had a demon on it. That was my prized possession
when I was a kid. I had a basketball that was red and blue. And I remember for, I want to say it was
like two summers in a row in high school. All I would do in the morning in high school, like when
I was like, I would just get up in the morning and I would go to the playground and I would shoot
hoops all day long and then go home and then do it again. And then, you know, eventually you meet
people and you start playing games. And so now you're playing, you know, 21, a half court 21 for,
you know, seven hours a day. And then you just go home. And then you normally, I would go back and play
for another two or three hours afterwards
and just like play for hours and hours
and hours and hours at a time.
Basketball was like the game.
Everybody knew somebody that had a hoop.
Yeah.
Everybody had like a friend
that had like a hoop on their garage or whatever.
And like my buddy Dave had a hoop on his garage
and he always wanted to play basketball
and I would always go out
and play,
but I never,
I was always bad
and he was like
a half a head taller
than I am.
Like I'm,
he's like,
get that shit out of here.
He was like 6'2".
Like I got nothing.
Yeah.
I got like,
when you're short
and not particularly coordinated
and the other guy's tall
and particular,
you're just,
you're just like,
yeah,
let's go play basketball.
Why don't I just punch myself in the shit?
The best was my friend who made his own basketball backboard
out of plywood.
And then we bought one of those things.
And then he lowered it enough so we could dunk.
And so we just would have the best time.
It's like a nine-foot rim.
So you just run as fast as you can and jump.
Like, ah!
He made me dunk.
It was the best.
A nine-foot rim for me may as well be on the moon. It was the best. That was shit. A nine-foot rim for me
may as well be on the moon.
It was the best.
A nine-foot rim.
I know there's normally
like 10 feet, right?
Yeah.
No.
Nine foot is the same as 10.
It's the same as 38 feet.
It was...
My vertical leap is like
maybe a thimble and a half.
It being much lower
is pretty nice, actually.
It's pretty great.
Yeah, I bet.
Yeah.
Yeah, I still couldn't hit it.
Six foot five. Maybe I did.
Maybe.
This is so fucked.
This is so fucked.
This is so fucked.
CBS News. Holy shit.
UK medical practice mistakenly
texts patients that they have
aggressive lung cancer
instead of Merry
Christmas.
Holy fucking... lung cancer instead of Merry Christmas. I can't even imagine how that happens.
Like what do you say?
Like you slipped and you broke the lung.
Jesus fucking Christ, man.
Have you ever made a mistake that made you just panic?
Were your asshole closest?
Were you just like your whole body?
You're just like, oh, years ago.
So I just started working in this position.
And I had just learned how to edit websites.
Like I just learned.
And I got a message from someone that says,
hey, can you take the one of the sort of,
there was, this is back when they used to have stuff
that like used to roll scrolling across the screens.
You know, like this is old, old, old website stuff.
And the guy's like, hey, can you take the,
you know, change the sort of rolling text at the top
to something else?
We're changing this around this thing.
And I was like, sure, no problem.
And I go on there
and I wound up deleting the homepage.
And so my boss comes in my office.
Did you quit?
And he's like, no, no.
I would have just quit.
No, no.
So like it was,
I had it on a backup off the computer.
Oh, okay. All right.
And so I just went over and got the thing and then I had to on a backup off the computer. Oh, okay. All right. And so I just went over and got the thing,
and then I had to just fix everything that was fixed since then.
So I didn't have a recent backup.
I had an older backup.
But when I deleted it,
it just so happened that my boss was going to the website
at the exact same time.
So he comes to my office.
He's like, are you messing with the website right now?
I was like, it'll be up in 15 minutes.
But the whole time my asshole was just,
I was just like,
like the whole time you're just frozen in fear.
I was working at a title company
and I lost a deed.
So now it's not as big a deal now,
but back when this was like,
you can't do anything with a copy. I had copies.
But you had to have
an ink original deed.
And I fucking lost it.
For about six hours, I lost it.
I eventually found it. I just got put
in the wrong file. But for about six
hours, I could not stop
sweating.
I was in that, like, straight panic
where you're like... Did you just look for six straight hours?
I looked everywhere. You looked for six,
eight hours? Yeah, pulled
apart every file I touched for a week
and I finally found it. It had just gotten misfiled
in a different file. So like there was
nothing I could do. I just, but as soon as I
realized it was gone, it's like
I was like, I'm gonna get fired.
Did you just shit immediately
once you found it? Yeah, I think I did. just shit immediately once you found it you're just like
I think I did
all your bodily functions
just relax
and you're just like
poof
I was like
my first thought was like
I should just quit
and leave now
I should just leave
you light it on fire
like Homer Simpson
when he's leaving work
you know when you're like a kid
and like one of your friends
gets hurt
and everybody just runs away
you remember that
you remember when you were a kid
everybody just runs I don't know if I remember
that, no. Like little kids, it's the
funniest thing to watch. I think this might be something
very specific. No, I've seen other people do it.
I think it might be very specific to you, Tom.
Like they realize they're in trouble. I'm terrified
of getting hurt around you.
Just run away. Tom's over
the house. I fall down the stairs and Tom
just runs out.
I didn't do it! I didn't do it.
I didn't do it.
So, okay.
So you're telling me
about a phenomenon.
You have this phenomenon
that you imagine
that happens to other people.
It only applies to me, I guess.
It only applies to everyone else
in the world
that Tom is ubiquitously saying
every other human in the being
runs away.
The universal experience
that you all remember.
Go ahead.
You don't know.
Like I felt that way.
Like we just feel like you should just like run, run away from the problem.
I'm just Tom just winds up in Kangaroo.
His family is looking for me.
I lost the deed.
I'm never coming back.
I like have a shirt with a smiley face
and I'm just running.
Just, I like to run.
You're down building fucking, uh, building
boats with that fucking guy from Shawshank
Redemption. You're just like... Tell me more
about the shrimp we can catch. I'm gonna
crawl through this puddle of... I'm gonna
crawl through this pipe and come out the other side.
Amazing. Alright. So anyway, so back to the story where they sent, you have aggressive lung
cancer instead of Merry Christmas. We're making fun of it, but could you imagine getting this
fucking message? How fucking pants shittingly awful this would be to be like, I got the worst fucking news today.
I went in for a rectal exam.
I didn't even know they could find that from here.
They somehow looked and saw my lung was aggressively cancerous.
I got to read this because it's actually a little bit off more.
A medical practice in England intended to text its patients wishes for a very Merry Christmas. Instead, the mass text told patients they had aggressive lung cancer
that had spread and asked them
to fill out a form for terminal patients.
God damn, could you imagine
how fucking terrifying that would be?
Also, what fucking paperwork
are you giving to terminal patients?
Is it a will?
Do I have to will over my money to you?
I don't know what's happening.
Like, of all the times in my life, I'm not going to get around to the paperwork. I know, right? Hey, you're going to die. Can you fill out a will? Do I have to will over my money to you? I don't know what's happening. Like of all the times in my life,
I'm not going to get around to the paperwork.
I know, right?
Hey, you're going to die.
Can you fill out a form?
That's not how I'm spending my time.
Absolutely not.
Actually, no.
A hundred percent no.
Fuck you.
You know what you could do?
You could just piece it together
like a fucking ransom note
from other things I've signed.
I'm never touching another pen
as long as I live.
What if I don't sign it?
Do I not get to die?
I know, right?
Like, fuck you. All you need to know how to beat death never touching another pen as long as I live. What if I don't sign it? Do I not get to die? I know, right?
Fuck you!
All you need to know how to beat death is this one simple trick, right?
The mass text from
Askern Medical Practice in
Doncaster sent out December 23rd.
In it, the practice
says the doctor has asked the recipients to
fill out a form DS-1500,
which according to another hospital system, is
meant for people who have a terminal illness to apply
for their benefits. The text also
tells recipients they have been diagnosed with
aggressive lung cancer
with metastases. How does
that get a mistaken for Merry Christmas?
It's not a Merry Christmas!
In a second text,
patients were asked to accept the center's
sincere apologies.
This has been sent in error.
It states,
our message to you should have read,
we wish you a very Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year.
That is the greatest punked moment.
It is so,
God,
I would drive down there and punch somebody in the face.
Oh my God.
I could not imagine how furious I would be if somebody did that.
You know,
somebody got screened for lung cancer.
Yeah.
Right?
And then they're going to go like, somebody went and told their wife, oh my God, honey,
I have lung cancer.
It's the end times now for me.
And then it's like, no, wait, actually, Merry Christmas.
And they're like, what?
Oh, I guess I'm fine.
Sorry.
Hold on a second.
Holy shit.
Yeah, man.
And you know what the worst part is,
is that somebody got that message.
Then they got the Merry Christmas.
And then they got the message again that says,
no, you weren't.
Oh, Joe.
No, sorry.
This one's for you specifically.
Joe, you're not included in this text.
You know, it makes me wonder, like,
did somebody who was supposed to get the,
also real quick, this just occurred to me, I'm me wonder like, did somebody who was supposed to get the, also real quick,
this just occurred to me.
I'm gonna interrupt myself.
If you're given the news that somebody has aggressive lung cancer,
maybe that's not a text message.
It feels like a face to face conversation.
You know?
Yeah.
It feels like,
I feel like that's one of those things where you've been dating long enough
where you break up in person,
you know,
you're going to fucking die.
And I get a text message?
Don't fucking leave me on read if I have metastases, okay?
Does it have like a fucking shruggy emoji
after like...
What the fuck?
Like the shruggy and the skull is just like...
There's just a lung and a fire next to it.
What the fuck?
Sends out a text message.
You gonna die.
Love your doctor.
Oh man.
I can't wait.
I cannot wait until we get serious texts from serious people that are all emojis.
I can't wait.
I can't wait.
Cause then I'm crawling into one of those suicide pods.
The Swiss have.
They've got it right.
I'm just fucking peacing out of the world.
Do you think that there was somebody out there who didn't get the aggressive
lung cancer text message,
but they got a
Merry Christmas text message
and they had it in reverse
with like,
oh, that's nice.
I got a Christmas text.
And then it's like,
we are very sorry.
We meant to send you.
You have anal cancer or whatever.
Fuck.
Do I still get the Merry Christmas?
Yeah, this one.
Tom, you got to read some of this article.
I'm going to put it up on the big screen.
This is a fucking delight.
I'm going to put it up on the big screen so people can see what we're talking about.
This story comes from the CBC.
This story comes from the CBC.
Pigeon wearing crystal meth like a backpack caught inside British Columbia prison yard.
This is kind of a curveball, says corrections officers union.
That's so amazing.
Nearly a century ago, a pigeon breeder approached federal customs officers with a bit of an odd problem. A pigeon he'd recently sold to a buyer in Mexico had flown back to his home in Texas with two aluminum capsules
full of cocaine tied to its legs. After a brief investigation, officials announced their
conclusion. Carrier pigeons smuggle drugs, blared an all-caps newspaper headline on February the
2nd, 1930. Wasn't coke legal in 1930? Do you remember it was legal? It was legal.
I know like when Freud was
bopping about. That's in the 1800s though.
Yeah, so I don't know when they made it. Maybe around
the turn of the century they decided
no more cocaine for people or something.
But wait, is it illegal for pigeons?
I just said no more cocaine
for people, but
what about avian cocaine? Cocaine just keeps
pouring it on his little paw
or whatever, his little talon.
He's doing bumps off his talon.
It's like, it's hard for him to snort it
with that beak. You know, he's got to like turn
his head kind of upside down to like get his little
nostrils around the top and
He's just flying around. His eyes are like
Get out there, man.
He's flying around,
just clenching his beak real hard all the time.
He breaks a beak.
He has to go to the doctor.
He's flying around.
Hey, guys,
I got some fucking really cool new ideas
I want to talk to you guys about.
All right.
Drug smuggling pigeons have persisted
over the decades since,
busted from North America to Europe and Asia.
The birds are caught with pills or powder,
stuffed into mini backpacks, tiny baggies.
That's adorable.
This is the cutest way to send drugs.
I mean, let's be honest, man.
A tiny little animal backpack.
Get the fuck out of here.
Here's the thing.
I really think the DEA should consider a rule
that if the smuggling is cute enough, it's legal again.
You know?
It's small.
S-M-O-L.
It's a small little pigeon.
Like, if it's fucking totes adorbs, you just got to let that one go.
It's amazing.
You've got to.
Every single baby goat just walks right past customs.
It doesn't matter.
Let him through.
Let him.
It's fine.
It's fine.
I know you're going to slice him in half later to get it.
I don't even care.
It's a killer.
Look at them.
Last week, for the first time in recent memory,
one was captured in BC.
This is kind of a curveball, said John Randall,
a Pacific Regional President of the Union
for Canadian Correctional Officers.
Then I love this because the mental picture of this
is everything.
It's so good.
It's so good.
It's everything.
Officers had to corner it.
Randall said it was a routine.
It's a bird.
Can't it just fly away?
Like, what are you talking about?
You've got to picture this bird with a backpack
and then all these Keystone Cop motherfuckers
chasing it around while that silly music plays.
Yeah, it's trying to fly.
And the best part is, is it hasn't flown.
Right.
It's just running. So you've got to imagine, so it's not like flying from place to place to it hasn't flown. Right. It's just running.
So you've got to imagine, so it's not like flying from place to place to get away from you.
Right.
It's literally just running and dodging around these guys.
It's juking them like, whoa, whoa, whoa.
That's the only way to envision this.
You can't envision it another way.
Officers were standing in one of the fenced inmate unit yards,
which prisoners use regularly for hanging out, playing games, or getting some fresh air.
Then the officers noted something strange.
A gray bird with a small package on its back.
From my understanding,
it was tied to in a similar fashion as,
like, a little backpack.
It was fucking adorable.
The officers moved in.
Well, if it was like a regular school kid's backpack,
it would be bulletproof, right?
Is that what we're doing now?
The birdshot just bounces right off.
Tom
as a kid is trying to shoot it like
an asshole with a BB gun. It's like, whatever.
You're not wrong. Whatever.
I love this. They had to corner it, Randall
said. You can imagine how that would look, trying
to catch a pigeon after a lengthy
period of time.
The officers apprehended the bird. A lengthy period of time. The officers apprehended the bird.
That's in quotes.
A lengthy period of time is in quotes.
You've got to think too, Cecil.
Like, here's all these, like, inmates at the prison.
And then they're watching you run around,
crouched over, doing the fucking shuffle walk.
It's a snipe hunt.
Yeah.
You lose all respect for your CO.
You know what I mean?
Like, your CO's like, oh, no.
Hey, John the bull over there
is going to crack some heads.
You see him like chasing this pigeon.
You're like,
ah,
fuck that guy.
His pants are kind of
hanging off his ass a little
as he's trying to get it.
Randall said the package contained
about 30 grams of crystal meth,
which he described as a
fairly substantial.
Depends on what the substance is.
30 grams can be pretty substantial.
Yeah, I have no idea.
Like, I don't know.
How much is a meth thing?
I will tell you,
like, a teaspoon of yeast
is like five grams.
Okay.
All right.
That's yeast, though.
I don't know how dense
that is in comparison
to crystal meth,
but three teaspoons worth of drugs
feels like a lot.
Well, like,
I wonder how much is in a dose.
Like, how much do you take of crystal meth?
It looks small.
When I see them do it on TV, it looks small.
Yeah, when I watch fucking Intervention,
they don't have, like, giant chunks, right?
Yeah, they're not smoking Himalayan salt rock.
You know what I mean?
Like a salt lamp.
They got a whole salt lamp full of fucking crystal meth.
Oh, it's on now.
It's not one of those.
Here we go.
I'll sleep again
in September, motherfuckers.
I'm ready to go.
I'm going to drive a truck.
No, but it's normally
a small amount.
So like, yeah,
like a teaspoon of yeast,
a teaspoon of salt
is probably maybe,
it probably weighs more.
I would say maybe that's
10 or 12 grams.
Okay, so like three
or four teaspoons of salt?
Of salt, yeah. Probably a similar density of salt, I would imagine. that's 10 or 12 grams. Okay, so like 3 or 4 teaspoons of salt? Of salt, yeah. Probably
a similar density of salt, I would imagine.
Probably something like that, yeah.
Oh, shit. Alright. So, I mean, it goodly
some. It's not small amounts.
Also, I like this. Drones are typically
the problem. Drones? They just fly drones
in and just drop fucking
drugs over. Well, okay, so keep going because there's a better
part of this. Okay. One expert said
there are two plausible ways to use a pigeon
to deliver drugs. What are those
two ways, Tom? One,
someone could throw the freighted pigeon
over the fence and into the prison.
I just see a pigeon
with like a little, like a kilo
of cocaine on it, and they
throw it over, and it's just laying on its back
like a turtle, and its little legs
are stuck in here. Dude, if you're going to throw it, and it's just laying on its back like a turtle and its little legs are stuck in here.
Dude,
if you're going to throw it,
what do you need the pigeon for?
What does the pigeon add
to this equation?
It just sticks its arm out
so it has a slower landing.
What the fuck
is the pigeon for?
I imagine,
I imagine,
Tom,
it could be any,
it could be any weighted thing.
So a pigeon works,
but so would a weighted thing.
I love the idea that there's throwing random animals.
Oh, it's so good.
Hey, throw in a guano full of methamphetamine over the wall.
Is there anything that you could like, does it have to be an animal?
They throw like a fawn with a key of coke on it.
You guys find it in like random animals.
Here's a macaw with some fucking blue cocaine on it. You guys fighting like random animals? Here's a macaw with some
fucking blue cocaine
on it.
Why would you throw a pigeon?
I love the idea. I love the idea of somebody
just taking their hand and there's a fucking
live pigeon in their hand and then
they throw it with a thing on its back.
Are you serious?
What is happening? I think I solved this problem.
Yeah, alright genius.
My other part too, it's like at the bottom here it says like Shawshank Redemption Are you serious? What is happening? I think I solved this problem. Yeah, all right, genius. Yeah, you got it.
My other part too,
it's like at the bottom here,
it says like Shawshank Redemption,
where they had a crow from a baby,
you could do that with a pigeon.
So basically they're saying
you could teach the pigeon to come back.
Says the director of the Vancouver Poultry
and Fancy Pigeon Association.
Now this here is a fancy pigeon.
All the ones in Chicago that are just like the fucking flying rats.
Those are the trash.
Those are the trash.
Those are like the,
they have like a,
like a Dixie flag tramp stamp or whatever.
They are not fancy.
They are not fancy.
They are not fancy pigeons.
You know what?
They eat with their fucking elbows on the table.
All right.
They eat.
I don't know why that's bad,
but they do it.
That's not a fancy pigeon. I also want to, I also want to read bad, but they do it. That's not a fancy pigeon.
I also want to,
I also want to read this part
because I love it.
It's the other method.
So there's two methods
that inmate can use
to use a pigeon.
Yeah, we mentioned one already.
One, you can hurl
the superfluous pigeon
over the wall.
Like a discus.
You just do three spins
and then you throw it.
And then get it over there.
Yeah, yeah, sure.
The other one is
an inmate could spend months
training the bird
from the inside
to recognize the prison at its home.
Then I love this sentence.
Someone would get the bird to the outside, fasten its cargo and release it to the return home to the prison.
How the fuck do you prison smuggle a pigeon out of your ass?
Do you?
I can understand having the pigeon in the prison.
But now somebody has to smuggle the pigeon out of the prison.
You're going to stick that in your fucking prison pocket.
That is one hell of a thing is going to pack your prison pocket.
It's a conjugal visit.
This is a good hand.
Yeah.
This is a fuck around and find out one.
This story comes from Yahoo.
Arsonists set themselves on fire while trying to burn down California immigration centers.
There's an image of them too here,
of the arsonists with this,
you know, of course they have their masks on.
Yeah, right.
Got your mask on.
Got your mask.
And they threw gasoline on this immigration center
and then they lit themselves on fire
and had to run away.
Now they haven't caught them yet,
but they said they look like they had extensive injuries just from the image.
So these people probably fucked
themselves up pretty good, but then they couldn't check themselves
into a hospital to properly... Yeah, because
they're going to give themselves away. Give yourself away.
It's like when somebody gets shot or somebody ODs,
they immediately have to call the police or whatever.
It's, you know,
this is one of those things I've watched. I don't know how many videos
I've watched where people underestimate
or don't understand how gasoline vapor works.
You've seen these videos where people take these huge fucking gas cans and they're just fucking pouring gas and spraying gas in the air, you know.
And then they light it on fire.
They're right next to it.
And they're right next to it.
Right next to it.
And they've created this huge fucking vapor cloud of explosive flammable gas.
And then they're like,
Some of that stuff is amazing.
What the fuck is wrong with you?
To see some of that stuff just explode
and how much they do.
The womb, man.
And the thing is,
again,
these are people you just,
I mean,
you should just be paying attention
to what you do
and you wouldn't get lit on fire.
These are bad arsonists.
These are bad foreign arsonists.
I would go so far as to say
I will take immigrant arsonists over these ones.
Yeah, right.
I feel like they'd be better off.
We'd be better off as a country
if we would allow better arsonists.
You don't want the immigrant arsonists
taking our arson jobs, Cecil.
You know?
Then what would good old American arsonists do?
American arsonists do.
We don't want immigrants coming in here and, you know,
doing their crimes like arson, for example, as one of them.
Here's an interesting one.
Yeah, this is from KFI, which is, I don't know.
It's an AM radio station.
Wow.
National Guard.
Do you think we can be on AM
if we tried hard enough?
We couldn't be on FM
if we tried hard enough.
I know that.
Can we make it to AM radio?
I don't know if we could ever.
If we swing hard right.
Oh, yeah.
You got to swing hard right.
Then we could do it.
You're right.
National Guard General
fired for ordering troops
to take his mom shopping.
I can't believe that that is not an acceptable use of his military authority.
I hope that they had to take her in a tank.
Oh,
like,
you know,
like they fly her in a Huey.
Oh,
one of those big double fucking.
And they just like have to fucking land on top of the fucking wall.
Like that,
like that movie with the zombies or whatever.
Yeah.
That's what I hope happens.
That's it.
If you're going to abuse your power, abuse all of it.
Do it right.
Don't hold back.
Yeah.
Don't hold back.
A general, a general with the California National Guard
has been relieved of duty after reportedly ordered troops
to take his mom shopping.
Brigadier General Jeffrey Magrum.
You don't get to general.
Yeah.
This is like a career military guy.
Right. This is a guy who spent,
you've got to spend decades of your life
in the military, devoted
to it, dedicated to it. And at one
point he was like, someone's
got to take mom out. I can't believe somebody
would do that.
Dude, take your own mom out.
Well, no, his response too is, had I ever heard of any ethics issue like this from subordinates, peers, or commanders, or perceptions of such, I would have corrected and addressed it on the spot, he said in a statement to the inspector general.
Yeah.
So he's like, I would have changed my mind, but I just figured they wanted to like drive
my mom to her eye appointment.
Yeah, right.
Well, here's what they had him do.
Brigadier General has also been accused of forcing subordinates to perform other tasks,
such as making an on-duty National Guard member drive him 120 miles to a dentist appointment.
Why is your dentist 120 miles from you?
Where is your dentist, Doug? What is happening? Do you not have dentist 120 miles from you? Where is your dentist,
Doug?
What is happening?
Do you not have a dentist
anywhere near you?
Jesus,
what is that?
And coercing an underling
to take his place
in a mandatory training session.
See,
now,
I'll be perfectly frank.
That's one I can forgive.
I get that one.
I can forgive that one.
I understand.
Have you ever been on a work call
where you're just like,
God,
why am I on this call?
I cannot believe that I have to sit through this.
You do those like corporate compliance training type stuff
and you're just like, stay awake, stay awake.
Every year, my work sends out a compliance training
to everybody and you have to complete it.
And it takes about an hour and 10 minutes every year to do.
And it's a thing you have to read.
And then you have to take a quiz.
Yeah.
And you have to do it every year.
And it's the worst.
Seriously, it's like,
Jane's brother works for a window company.
Can we hire Jane's brother to come in and redo all our windows?
You know, Jane was your coworker or whatever.
And you're just like, no, you can't. That's fucking conflict of interest's fucking conflict interest you know let's do that no but it's like so it's like
can i skip to the test it's so easy it's just like everything is so it's the same one every year yeah
it's the same one every year i know every year and it's like like bill grabs jane's ass at the
break room cooler is this okay you're like no no, it's not okay. Who says no?
Who says yes?
You should,
that should be a test
for you to just be fired.
Yeah, it should log you
out of the system.
As soon as you select
the wrong answer
for some of these,
you should just be like,
no, man, you're actually fired.
We don't need you.
As soon as you select
the wrong answer,
it should,
the computer should snapshot
on its own
and push you
into the suicide pod. That's what it should do. It should be on its own and push you into the suicide that's what
it should do it's like no you're canceled your life is canceled if one of those was at work
and it was and there and i started getting into work conversations there's a chance i might just
do it at work i don't know i think it's a dangerous thing to leave you can't you can't
have those laying around it's a dangerous thing thing. You cannot, you cannot have, I have never really had any modicum of power in my life. And I'm kind of
glad. Cause I might be this guy where I would just be like, yeah, man, I don't really want to go.
And you just, I'm like the guy in charge. So just go do it. Like, I feel, I feel like I,
I'm glad that no one's ever trusted me this much. Yeah. I a hundred percent would abuse my authority.
no one's ever trusted me this much.
Yeah, I 100% would abuse my authority.
I would too.
I got 100%. I would too.
Like I think about it,
I'm just like,
damn man.
I just thought about it for a second.
I was like,
there's a 0% chance
I would abuse my authority.
There's no way
I'm not driving everywhere in a tank.
Like there's no way
I'm not every,
like even if I just have to go
to my car to go home.
My car would be a tank.
I would get in my tank, drive it to my
car, and then get out of the tank, and then
make someone drive the tank back
so I could get it one in the morning when I come back.
A thousand percent. I would be
the worst. I would fire someone out of a cannon.
I would be the worst.
Are you kidding me?
This is a job you do not want me to have.
No, I am
trying to imagine myself as a brigadier general,
and the world does not need that.
I did not have the mental capacity to be a soldier.
I knew that I did not have that.
Actually, I was warned against it by my dad.
Were you really?
Yeah, so I was going to go into the military.
A bunch of my friends from high school,
two or three of them,
joined the military right out of school. And when
you're a poor kid, it really is appealing because you see a chance to maybe go to college. Right.
And I had no idea how to go to college other than that. Right. And so I told my dad, I'm thinking
about going. And he said, do not do it. He's like, do not go to the military. He's like, you don't
have the mindset for it. He's like, you really have to have a very obedient
mindset. And he's like, you would not thrive there. And it was the best advice my dad ever
gave me. I think it was, might've been the only time he was sober too. So it was like
the best advice he ever gave me was that. I took the, it's called the ASVAB, the Armed
Services Vocational Aptitude Battery. I still remember it. And the only reason I took it in
high school is because if you agree to take it, you got to go to the auditorium and skip like
two or three of your classes. So you're like, I'll take a fucking test. I don't care. I'll hang
out with my buddy who also signed up as a joke, right? Cause neither one of us were going to join
the military. We signed up as a joke. And so we're going to go, we're going to sit in the auditorium.
We thought we'd fucking goof around and take this fucking goof off test.
And we'd be able to skip class for the day, right?
So we go to the auditorium and it's proctored by all these military guys.
And they want you to be quiet and sit like three people apart.
And I'm like, well, fuck, this isn't fun anymore.
Like, so now I'm just taking the test because I'm going to take a test.
But I like tests.
I was a good test taker.
So I take this vocational aptitude battery and I turn it in
and I go on with my life and I don't think anything of it
because I was never going to join the military for a second.
But what that did is it created a endless cavalcade of phone calls
from military recruiters calling the house and promising,
oh, you know, you did good on this test.
You know, you can join up.
You could be anything you want.
You can choose this job or that job.
We'd, you know, just promise you the fucking moon.
It's the army and the Navy and the Marines and the air force.
They're all calling and they all want to like, oh, well, you know, we'll suck your
dick every day you're in college.
And, you know, you could be a doctor, medic, general president, or, you know, like they
really promised the whole thing.
And I started to get like, maybe I should join it.
Cause I'm 17, you know, I'm like, well, maybe I should join the military.
And my dad was just like, no, he didn't entertain that shit.
He didn't talk to you about it.
He was just like, he's just, he was just straight up.
He's like, you're not joining the military.
Hang up the phone.
And I was like, wait, what would he say?
And he's like, hang up the phone. You're not joining the military. up the phone and i was like wait what what he's saying he's like hang up the phone you're not joining the military that's amazing and
i was like i gotta go because like i don't care how many stars are on your fucking shoulder you
ain't my dad i talk i'll hang up on you like that i talked to so many of those people yeah those
recruiters called me they're aggressive one of them called me from the air force and i remember
trying to get off the phone with them and i was was just like, yeah, I don't know.
And he's like, you should join.
And I was like, yeah, I wouldn't join the Air Force
unless I could be a pilot.
He's like, well, then you want to go to this.
And he's telling me all the stuff you have to do to be a pilot.
And I'm just like, I just said it just so you'd be quiet.
I'm too fat to get in one of those jets, man.
Are you kidding me?
They'd look at me, they'd be like, dude, no.
I can get in one.
I'm just never getting out again.
Right?
They'd put me like, have you seen?
They're all cramped up and be like, I can't breathe.
My fat's pressing on my lungs.
That's so amazing.
This story comes to the New York Times.
We're just reading chunks.
They traveled from South Korea.
They got stranded near Buffalo.
A South Korean tour group's van
became stuck in the snow outside a home in Williamsville, New York. They spent the weekend
with the residents who luckily had a well-stocked kitchen. And there's a great picture. That is a
great picture. There's a great picture of a beautiful home and like some guy who's taking
the picture, just smiling this great big smile. And there's got to be a dozen. Just there's got to be a dozen of these
Korean tourists who are just like
having a genuinely nice time.
Yeah, man. This is just great.
I read the story. And so
the broad strokes to this story are that
there's this bus tour
that's going through Buffalo. Buffalo just got
hit with a massive, deadly
storm. Deadly storm. It got like
70 inches of snow or something crazy.
It was a deadly storm.
Like people died.
And so they're outside and they come knocking on this door
and they say, hey, I just need to borrow a shovel.
We got to try to get our bus out.
Well, they couldn't get the bus out.
And he was just like, well, then come in.
Right.
And so they all came in.
And so this guy is just like, they're from Korea.
You know, some of them are here speaking.
They can speak English. They can communicate. This guy is just like, they're from Korea. You know, some of them, you know, are here speaking.
They can speak English.
They can communicate.
Just so happens that this couple really enjoys Korean food. So they have a ton of Korean condiments and foodstuffs to create Korean food.
How lucky is this?
And then they just like hang out with this group of people.
And then they just open their doors with hospitality to someone who is stuck in a storm, and they keep them there for two days.
Yeah.
How insanely generous.
I think that's amazing.
It's actually kind of a beautiful story.
I love it so much.
I love the serendipity of it.
Yeah.
You know?
I love just like the unlikelihood of them knocking on exactly the right guy's door.
The right guy's door, yeah.
You know?
Because there was other stories.
My wife was telling me another story.
I didn't find it.
I don't know anything about it.
But she said there was another story of like a guy knocking on doors and everyone turning him away.
And there was a bunch of people in cars that were just like stuck and stranded.
And no one would let him in.
And they had to break into a school to survive for the night.
Jesus Christ.
But people wouldn't let him in their house. And so that's what she said. I don't know where this— It's clearly in Buffalo, but I didn't for the night. Jesus Christ. But people wouldn't let them in their house.
And so that's what she said.
I don't know where this,
it's clearly in Buffalo,
but I didn't see the story.
I'm going off secondhand information.
So I don't know all the details,
but she said that they basically had to,
and she thought that's what I was talking about.
I'm like, no, no, this is like a feel good.
This is a nice story.
This is a sweet story.
You know, there really is nothing in our life
that really allows for this kind of thing anymore, right?
A guest to your house that's unannounced
is a very rare thing today.
When we were growing up,
it was a lot more common
to have someone just stop by your house.
Yeah, I was just going to say,
it would be weird if I showed up to your house.
It's very strange, right?
Most people nowadays,
this isn't a thing that just happens, right?
And then spontaneous hospitality
just doesn't happen as often
as it might've used to a long time ago.
So I go to this thing every year,
not every year, but on occasion I go
and I might go this year or whatever,
but there's this thing called Penzic War.
And what Penzic is, if you don't know,
I belong to this thing called the Society for Creative An And what Penzic is, if you don't know, I belong to this thing
called the Society
for Creative Anachronism.
And it's a,
it's a medieval
recreation society group
that does,
you know,
simulated combat
of a couple of different
styles and flavors.
And then it also does,
they do medieval recreation
where they try to create
as much as you can
of the Middle Ages
while still maintaining us, you know, the basics of everyday life.
So, you know, there's plenty of people who will have like, you know, that they will drive around in a, say like a mobility scooter or something.
Like there might be somebody on a mobility scooter.
No one would be like, you can't have that here because that's not, you know, that's not period or whatever.
You can't have that.
So there's a creativeness to what people can do because we still want to maintain like living, right?
We're not like.
And you don't want to be exclusionary.
Yeah, you're not like those English Civil War guys who like their buttons have to be perfect or whatever.
It's a very lax sort of organization.
But it's a really fun organization and I've belonged to it for 25 to 30 years.
I forget exactly how long I've been in it, but I've been been in for a very long time. And they do this thing every year. It's called Pensac War,
and it's a huge event that is a full week-long camping event that happens in Pennsylvania,
just on the right by Youngstown, just a little south and east of Youngstown. And it is Youngstown,
Ohio. And so it's this really nice campground and you go there
and there's 10 to 12,000 people there and everybody camps. And so you set up your camp with all your
friends and then a bunch of other people from all over the country show up and all over the world.
There's people from Australia that I know that show up every year, et cetera, et cetera.
But one of the best parts about that, it's a long setup to tell you one of the best parts is spontaneous hospitality. It's not something that happens
in your everyday life, but you can walk around Penzik with your friends, or I can walk around
by myself and I can just swing by your encampment and be like, hey, is Tom around? And they'll be
like, yeah, he's in the back. He's by the fire. And I walk back, hey, Tom, you're like, hey,
Cecil, sit down by the fire. Let me get you a drink.
Hey, I made up some sausages early.
Do you want to eat?
And there's this really wonderful feeling of being a host.
And it's instant.
It's like this instant host where you're like people come to.
It's not a feeling you get in everyday life.
No.
You rarely get it, right?
Nobody just stumbles into my house.
That happens every year
at this thing that happens in Pennsylvania. But this is such a cool thing to have happen to you.
And it's something that I've experienced many times in my life. So that's why I think this
story really touches me is because it's such a cool thing to experience. And it's not something
that modern society allows you to really experience. No, no, not at all. It's, it's, I'm, it's funny. Cause like I was thinking like I I've, I've been last summer, I was, uh,
doing these longer bike rides and I ride my bike now sometimes into right by your house.
It's a good distance from my house. And there was a couple of times I thought,
wouldn't it be funny to stop by and say hi? And I thought, no, I don't know.
He's probably working.
I don't want to bother him.
You know, like it's like impolite.
And like you're my best friend of 20 some years.
Yeah.
But like swinging by unannounced just isn't something that like feels right.
It's not something that modern society allows anymore.
Right.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's so funny.
I never really thought too much about it, but I was like,
nah, it just seems rude.
Yeah.
You know, and I'm just like,
oh, come on.
It's like calling someone
before you text them now.
Yeah, it's still acceptable.
That's not acceptable.
That's not acceptable, Tom.
When I'm outside of Penzic,
I want you to text me
before you call.
No, but it's funny though
because like this story
is such a sweet, sweet story
of these people who needed help.
And, you know, like what I think about this too, I also think about our immigration problem in this country and how we don't welcome people, how we are unwelcoming, how we see certain people as the other.
And this whole story turns that on its head.
It does.
It's like I welcomed someone else.
I welcomed them.
I didn't just like tolerate them or whatever's like, I welcome someone else. I welcome them. I didn't just, I didn't just like
tolerate them or whatever.
No,
I gave them hospitality.
And that's a whole different.
And there's a difference there.
There is.
Yeah.
It's not like you can sleep
in a garage.
Right.
Right.
These people slept
all over this guy's house
in his guest room
and on his floor,
on his couch.
He had,
he literally,
he put them up
for the two days
to make them as comfortable as they could be.
I mean, this is a-
It's a beautiful story.
It's a really beautiful story.
This one was the one I was smiling while reading this week.
This is what I love to do.
Once in a while, you'll come across a feel-good story
that we just can't cover on our show.
It doesn't have a home.
It just has a home now.
It has a home.
New format has a home.
Has a home here.
It has a home here. New format has a home.
It has a home here.
All right.
So show on Monday.
We'll be back Monday with a regular show.
And then next week, we're going to be doing a deep dive.
We'll let you know what that's going to be.
Maybe Monday.
We will let you know Monday.
This upcoming Monday, we'll let you know what's going to be up next Thursday for the deep dive.
And Tom's going to read it to you this month alone.
Everyone gets it.
So Tom's going to read it ahead of time.
So we're going to have Tom read it aloud.
We're going to talk about the article extensively afterwards.
So next Thursday, expect that in your feed,
but we'll be back next Monday.
And now we're going to leave you like we always do
with the Skeptic's Creed.
Credulity is not a virtue. It's fortune cookie cutter, mommy issue, hypno Babylon bullshit.
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