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This episode honors Alex Pretti and Renee Nicole Good, two lives lost while standing for humanity. We remember them and confront what their deaths mean for democracy.
Make room for wonder.
All my understand.
Whoa!
Hold on.
Yeah.
I'm so pissed right now.
We're celebrating the spirit of resistance.
I'm Jim Drastik.
I'm Tiffany Drastik.
I'm Nick Knutzen.
And today on the dangerous ones,
we're honoring all of the fallen heroes of the movement,
including 37-year-old ICU nurse Alex Jeffrey Peretti
and 37-year-old writer, poet, mother,
Renee Nicole Good.
We honor them and celebrate all who fight on behalf
of democracy and decency.
Plus, we'll be taking some of your calls.
Let's get dangerous.
Wow, here we are.
Well, it's been a hell of a weekend.
Welcome, everybody.
Welcome to the show.
Welcome to all the members of the Danger Corps.
Welcome to the family.
It's so great to have you here.
Hey guys, please hit like, subscribe,
and the little bell so you get notified each time
we launch a new video or go live.
If you'd like to call us,
you can do so by dialing 503-212-4600.
You can leave up to a five-minute message
and you can remain anonymous.
Dude, there was like over 100 calls.
I don't even have to do that.
The voicemail only goes 99 plus
and you don't know until you start counting down.
You have to keep, I keep have to keep looking
to see like 100 and what?
100 and what?
So much to happen over the weekend.
People are fired up and yeah, they are.
They are.
Understandably so.
You can also email us at shout at thedangerouswons.com.
Folks, wow, what a crazy, crazy weekend.
It's good.
Yeah, it was a heavy weekend.
We got so much to talk about, but today we,
instead of like playing like a lot of people
are playing all these really scary clips today,
we wanted to really celebrate the resistance
and I mean, these, these people,
not just, uh, Renee Nicole Good and, uh, Peretti,
but they're fallen heroes and there's other people too.
We're going to list all the names,
at least the ones that we have currently,
uh, and we have a bunch of stuff to show you.
Um, we're going to celebrate instead of, uh,
being scared today, you know,
it's, you know, we're all traumatized after this weekend.
So it's important to remember our humanity.
Remember the humanity of the people who have passed
on the front lines fighting for what we're doing out here
because this is what's happening.
And it's important that we remember
and keep our humanity so that we remind them
when the tribunals come of what that means.
That's right.
And, uh, Nick, you did a show earlier today, uh,
on the dangerous news break more about how to fight back
and, uh, talk, talk a little bit about that.
Yeah. So, uh, inspired by what Minnesota has done
over the last, uh, on both today and last Friday,
where they had basically a general strike
and an economic blackout, right?
Um, so we just kind of like expanded on that idea
in the news break today.
And yeah, we got to do this at a national level.
Yeah, we're going to talk a little bit more about that
and check out today's dangerous news break with Nick.
It's fantastic.
Great job.
Uh, today's comment question of the day.
I really like this one.
Who taught you how to stand up when it mattered most?
Who was that person in your life that taught you to,
to stand up when it mattered most?
Tiff probably my seventh and eighth grade teacher,
Mr. Cummings, Mr. Cummings, Mr. Cummings,
this wife actually married us.
Yeah, but he was fantastic.
He was. He was just really no bullshit.
And he was really like, he just told,
if you were old enough to ask him,
whatever it was, he was just going to tell you.
Yeah. And that's kind of how I raised my kids too.
Absolutely Nick.
Well, I've, I've worked in the nonprofit sector
for my entire adult career.
Yeah. And, uh, there's been a couple of people
who have been supervisors, bosses that I've had
who are just super passionate about the work, uh,
Jenny Steele, uh, from when I worked in New York
and, uh, Andrew Mason from here in Portland.
Uh, just really inspiring leaders who,
who were doing the work for the right reasons
and standing up for people who needed help.
Yeah. For me, it was my mom and dad.
Uh, they got me inspired real early.
I mean, they told me about protests when I was young
and they talked about flipping, he goes,
my dad was like, I was down there flipping out some birds
myself. Yeah.
I went, uh, what?
Really?
God inspired early, man.
Uh, so who inspired you early?
Who taught you how to stand up when it mattered most?
Put it in the comments right now.
I can't wait to see, um, and then, uh,
Hey, we had a fantastic live on Friday before we get
to everything else.
And after the live, we got on discord.
Yeah.
Wow.
That was fun.
It was so great to say hi to everybody.
Hi everybody.
It was fast.
It was fast.
Yeah, go quick.
Um, so every time we go live,
afterwards, we're going to go on to discord for a half
an hour.
That's the best time to catch us.
Don't wait for us going to start conversation.
Uh, and if you would like to join our discord,
you can do so by going to the link in the description.
Uh, also fantastic danger core member Scott Denny.
Yeah.
He was at a protest, uh, late last week.
And he sent in this video.
Check it out.
Hey, danger core.
Well, we're wrapping up here.
It's about 5 30.
And I have to say that was one of the more fun times I've had.
I got to see actually lady.
I named Janice out here had her little setup.
And I got to sing.
We got that we didn't start the fire with her.
Which was quite fun.
Nice.
So yeah, um, it was exhilarating.
And it really helps shut down anxiety.
So yeah, all right.
I'm going to see if you guys are on air yet.
But yeah, it was fun to promote your show too.
I must admit.
Good trouble.
Fun trouble.
Thank you, Scott.
Scott's the best.
Oh, I love you.
Thanks for all your calls and writing in.
It's just great.
Plus he's a big gifter of memberships.
Yeah.
He wants other people to experience the danger core,
which is really, really like it's so generous.
My God, you know, fantastic.
And thank you for sending in that video.
If you guys go to protests like that and want to make a little
selfie video, send them along.
We'd love to love to play him.
Yeah.
And we'd love to promote him on socials and do whatever we can
because we are building this from the ground up everybody.
Yeah.
And and super huge.
And then we'll get to everything.
We're super huge shout out to all of our Canadian viewers.
Now we got a bunch of new Canadian subscribers over the weekend.
What's up guys?
Sylvia's show.
Yeah.
Sylvia's episode was talking about the carny speech and how
inspirational it was and how it was funny watching Canada
smack down Trump.
Yeah.
And we got a bunch of new followers from subscribers from Canada
and hello, we love Canada.
How are you doing out there?
Big shout out.
It just feels good when you see people fighting back like
because when you're in it, like in America, you're and
you're us sometimes like, is anybody hearing this?
Is anyone is the signal getting out?
So when we seek Canada and all these other places supporting
us, it's just really, oh, thank you.
It totally is.
Listen, it was a scary weekend.
Lots of crazy stuff.
We all saw the footage.
We all know what's going on.
I won't be labored that although we will talk.
We really want to honor these people today.
It's important.
It is because there's a lot of going like, yeah, you go like,
oh, yeah, I mean, we're going to we're going to be posting.
We've got this.
We put their photographs onto a piece of paper and we're going
to put it on the wall for the rest of the rest of the year to
honor them.
And you know, really quick before we go in any further,
people don't realize this that go to a shot of Tiffany
really quick.
Mark, that poster behind you is not just a static poster.
You actually continually ride on it and don't tell the folks
why every single time I get a story of police ending the
lives of our black and brown sisters and brothers.
I put their name in red up on the poster every single time.
And we get emails sometimes people call the hotline.
Sometimes I'm just randomly going through a story on the
internet.
And when I haven't done it for a while, like it's been a
couple weeks or it's been a couple months and I have to get
that fucking red pen and walk over here.
It's not lost on me, you know?
Yeah, yeah.
And we'll take a closer photo of it so folks can see what
we're talking about.
You've been doing that for five years.
Yeah.
Yeah, it was made in Portland.
Some friends gave it to us and it had been in our home office
for the longest time.
And then when we moved in here, it felt appropriate to bring
it with us.
Yeah, I absolutely love it and the fact that it's now a
continual sad but memorial to the folks that keep getting
killed by police.
Yes.
It's just important to remember what we're out here fighting
because it's not each other.
Yeah, it's certainly not each other, right?
So lots of crazy stuff going on this weekend.
And obviously we saw the murder of Alex Jeffrey Peretti.
We're going to get into that.
We won't show any of that video today.
You've all seen the video.
We don't need to see that.
We do have a call to get us kicked off from debt.
Who is it?
It's Debbie in Kentucky and she is fired up.
Hi, this is Debbie from Kentucky.
I hope you all are doing well in your fairing well against
this weather.
I just wanted to say to you that I'm just so fucking sick
and tired of hearing these damn Republicans talk about gun
control, all of a sudden he brought a gun to a protest
that poor man who was a sweet loving guy, this kind person.
And they killed him.
Well, whatever happened to the slogan guns don't kill people.
People kill people.
Republicans were famous for saying that.
And that mother fucking Scott Benson's and Kash Patel.
And then of course the president and all the little sick
of fans around him are all now saying, well, he brought a
gun to a protest.
They didn't even know he had a gun until he was lying on
the ground with seven agents on top of him.
They pulled his gun out of his back where he kept it.
That just pisses me off so bad and I can't take it anymore.
I'm from Kentucky.
We know about carrying guns and we know about how to use them.
This boy did not do any of that.
He was murdered and the motherfuckers just keep saying it was his
fault and I'm so sick of them blaming everybody else and
taking absolutely no responsibility.
And I hope they get hung by their little testicles and
their pussy hairs and I don't care if you broadcast this or not.
When they find out the truth of all of this and they cannot
avoid it any longer, I don't care.
I'm so sick of them.
I can't stand it.
And I thank you for listening or not listening.
And I'm really sorry that you have to listen to all of this.
But I love you guys so much because you give us a place to voice
our frustrations, our fears and our concerns.
Take good care.
Love you bunch.
Keep on kicking their ass.
Oh, that's all we need today.
I know.
Don't be sorry for making us listen to the we love that shit.
Yeah.
More of that.
More of that.
Playing them by their testicles and their pussy hairs.
Right on them.
Fantastic.
And I just want to say I wrote a couple of notes because I wanted
to make sure that we all remember.
He was legally carrying the firearm.
He did not pull out the gun and he was only in that situation
because he was helping a woman who had been pushed down.
And he didn't do anything wrong.
And she's exactly right about the whole, you know, like the right now
wants it both ways with firearms, right?
They're fucking around and vining out.
That's right.
But we want to honor Peretti.
We've written a little bit about him.
So you get to know him a little bit better.
And then we have some video of him that you may or may or may not have seen.
Okay.
Go ahead.
So Alex Jeffrey Peretti was a 37-year-old intensive care unit nurse
at the Minneapolis VA Medical Center where he cared for critically ill veterans
and was deeply respected by colleagues for his kindness, professionalism,
and dedication to patient care.
He grew up in Illinois and Green Bay, Wisconsin, graduating from Preble High School
in 2006 before attending the University of Minnesota where he earned a degree
in Biology, Society, and the Environment, and later worked as a research assistant
in clinical research at the VA early in his career.
Peretti was a licensed registered nurse since 2021, a lawful gun owner,
and a member of the American Federation of Government Employees Union.
Ironic.
Yeah.
Friends and co-workers remember him as compassionate, socially engaged,
lover of the outdoors, especially mountain biking, and someone who often brought humor
and empathy into his interactions with patients and neighbors alike.
Alex, this one's for you.
Right there, brother.
You know, we, you may or may not have seen this video over the weekend of Alex
because he worked at a VA.
You worked at a VA for a while.
And, you know, there's this video going around and it's just so you're watching this
and you just go, I can't believe they killed this guy.
I can't believe they killed anybody, but I can't believe they killed this guy.
What an amazing human being.
Mark, roll the clip.
This is Alex because he works at a VA.
He was giving kind of a last honor to a veteran that had passed away
at the hospital.
Check this out.
Terence Lee Randolph, March 30th, 1947, December 10th, 2024.
Today, we remember that freedom is not free.
We have to work at it, nurture it, protect it, and even sacrifice for it.
I mean, we never forget and always remember our brothers and sisters who have served
so that we may enjoy the gift of freedom.
So, in this moment, we remember and give thanks for their dedication and selfless service
to our nation in the cause of our freedom.
In this solemn hour, we render our honor and our gratitude.
Wow.
I mean, I'm going to give it one of those.
It's so powerful.
Yeah.
Freedom is not free, he says.
Freedom is not free.
You know, and he died defending a woman like he said, a woman who had fallen.
And he wasn't there by happenstance.
Yeah.
He was there defending his community against what he perceived as a governmental aggression.
And yeah, I mean, he spent his life helping people.
Yeah.
Yeah, he needs to be remembered.
I couldn't agree more.
The other thing I really want to really pissed about is they're asking you not to believe
your eyes and your ears.
We all saw the video.
We saw every angle.
And you're telling me a man who works at the VA, a nurse, first of all,
do they even know what that's fucking like?
No, they don't because they've never lifted a finger to help anybody else on the planet
but themselves.
So they have no idea what patient care, human care, caregiving about anything is.
And they're going to label that guy a domestic terrorist.
And you're going to say that he, those agents, seven grown-ass men were in fear of their lives
from one man who's trying to protect another woman like you can't have it both ways.
You can't.
And he was dangerous because he was armed.
He didn't pull his gut.
You know what I mean?
It's ridiculous.
And that's his second amendment right.
Yeah.
So do I have a second amendment right right now or don't I?
Yeah.
Because what do you mean?
It's a crisis for the first and second amendment right now out there on what happened.
Right.
So remember what they're telling you.
Remember what you're seeing.
These people who are dying, who they're killing are domestic terrorists.
They're telling you they are the enemy that we are the enemy.
It's just, yeah.
Right.
No.
And we're not going to fight each other.
They, this is, they are, they are laying this shit on all of us.
Yeah.
And in the truth is they are our brothers and sisters in arms and they are also our neighbors
and they are, they are also our fellow Americans.
And it's just wrong that it's murder.
And every veteran who goes up to the VA today for your appointments and you have to look your nurse
in the eye, I want you to remember him.
I want you to remember him today.
That's exactly right.
And I also want to, I want you to remember that murder has no statute of limitations.
That in two years and 11 months, we're going to be looking for you.
So there you go.
We're going to play one more video.
And this is Alex being honored at a memorial for him.
I believe where he was murdered.
Hey.
Oh.
What the God?
Oh, shame.
Wow.
Fantastic.
You know, and it's, look at it.
I don't even know what the degrees is, but it's freezing cold out there.
It's like a negative 20 or something.
Yeah.
It's so ridiculous.
Yeah.
So proud of everybody who went out there in the freezing cold way to go.
Way to show up, you know.
You remember him.
And all weekend.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Don't pick on Minnesota.
Don't pick on.
Don't fuck with Minnesota.
I'm going to do that if I were you.
Hey, this isn't just about, we're going to get into Renee in just a moment.
But this isn't just about those two.
We wanted to read all the names that we know of that have currently been killed by ice
recently.
Yep.
So go ahead, Nick.
Yeah.
So there's, there's a couple more people that are, that are confirmed.
Right.
No problem.
Yeah.
No, no.
But of course there is.
Yeah.
So there have been multiple deaths in custody.
A Mexican national whose name has not been publicly released, died in the detention facility
in Georgia.
No.
Four more detainees have died at an ice custody in early January, 2026, but full names
were not, have not been released yet to the public.
It, at Camp East Montana in Texas, their, Victor Manuel Diaz, died in ice custody, ice
reported as a suicide.
And then, heraldo, lunus, combos, died in ice custody at the same facility ruled
a homicide by the medical examiner.
Man.
We, uh, we honor all of you as well.
Um, let's, uh, do we want to take another call, do we have another call that we'd like
to play?
Yes.
Cause I'm getting mad.
So call is perfect.
Yeah.
Okay.
This is South Carolina blue and, um, he was listening to Bobby Gentry's, oh, DeBilly Joe.
Do you remember that song?
Yeah.
Of course.
Yeah.
Okay.
Um, and kind of got him motivated to write something of his own.
So he shares it with us.
Hey, dangerous ones.
This is South Carolina blue.
And I was listening to a music show and they played Billy Joe McAllister, Jim's off the
Cal Hatchee Bridge.
And it started tearing up.
And I also just saw a report on the latest murder and Minneapolis.
And I felt compelled to write a little bit.
But here it is.
Tears flavored with sadness and rage are streaming down my face.
American citizens are being murdered by massed, unqualified, poorly trained people.
Many who have serious impulse control issues, much like the 34-time convicted felon directing
them.
The fascist handbooks pages are afraid and dog-eared and ice training centers, I suppose.
This is fucked up.
I'd love to ask a advance what our times number of trials will be called.
And in deliver state, local and federal officials stand and deliver with every U.S. citizen
and every freedom-loving person on earth.
Little Donnie and his crew will not succeed.
Thank you.
Oh, fantastic.
Love that.
Love that.
I love that.
I know.
I love that.
Thank you, Blue.
That's what I mean.
Like take that grief and that, you know, tears flavored with sadness and rage are streaming
down my face.
That was literally me five minutes ago.
Yeah.
I love that.
Yeah.
And stand and deliver for us, the people that we voted for, you know, you're, we're standing
out here defenseless against these motherfuckers and you're like, look, give them more money.
Are you high?
Yeah.
Speaking on that term, we're going to have a lot to talk about the funding bill that's,
and forget the DHS funding bill.
And we have a lot to talk about that tomorrow, so stick around for that.
So we haven't forgotten about that, trust me.
On that note of poetry, that brings us to Renee Nicole Good.
She was a 37 year old writer and poet, a U.S. citizen and a mother of three who lived
in Minneapolis.
She graduated from Old Dominion University with a degree in English and was recognized
there for her poetry.
Over the years, she worked at different times as a dental assistant and later helped run
a small home renovation business with her partner.
Who I believe is actually her wife.
In the period before her death, she was primarily focused on her community.
Friends and family described her as deeply caring and creative, someone who paid close
attention to the people around her and believed in showing up when others needed help.
Now, Renee won the 2020 Academy of American Poets Prize for a poem she wrote while studying
creative writing at Old Dominion University.
The poem is entitled on learning to dissect fetal pigs.
And don't let the name freak you out, it's actually an amazing poem and tips going to
give it a go.
I want back my rocking chairs, so lips is sunsets, and coastal jungle sounds that are
tursets from cicadas and pentameter from the hairy legs of cockroaches.
I've donated bibles to thrift stores, mashed them in plastic trash bags with an acidic
Himalayan salt lamp, the post baptismal biopibles, the ones plucked from street corners from the
meaty hands of zealots, the dumb down, easy to read, parasitic kind.
Remember more of the slick rubber smell of high gloss biology textbook pictures?
They burned the hairs inside my nostrils, and salt and ink that rubbed off on my palms.
For clippings of the moon at 2.45 a.m., I study and repeat.
Ribosome, endoplasmic, lactic acid, stamen.
At the eye hop on the corner of powers and stets and hills, I repeated and scribbled until
it picked its way and stagnated somewhere I can't point to anymore, maybe my gut.
Maybe there in between my pancreas and large intestine is the pitily brook of my soul.
It's the ruler by which I reduce all things now.
It edged and splintering from knowledge that used to sit, a cloth against fevered forehead.
Can I let them both be?
This fickle faith and this college science that heckles from the back of the classroom?
Now I can't believe that the Bible and Quran and Bhagavad Gita are sliding long hairs
behind my ear like mom used to and exhaling from their mouths, hey, groom, for wonder.
Well my understand, whoa, hold on, yeah, I'm so pissed right now.
It's hard.
You know, especially with art, art like poem and stuff like it's, I mean, there's a reason
why it hits you.
It's art.
You know, and it's such a fantastic poem.
There's nothing wrong with breaking down in the middle of it.
All my understanding dribbles down the chin onto the chest and is summarized as life
is merely to ovum and life is merely to ovum and sperm and where those two meet and
how often and how well and what dies there.
Fantastic, wow, fantastic, wow, I'm literally like, wow, I'm a sucker for good poetry and
good art and that just, I hope that, I hope beautiful.
Isn't that beautiful?
Yeah.
Is that visceral fight between soul and mind, you know, yeah, I brought this down at
its core, on learning to dissect fetal pigs is about the collision between faith, science
and the loss of innocence and what happens when a person is forced to hold all three at
once, you know, fantastic, she's a domestic terrorist, right?
Yeah.
Yeah, right.
So we honor you as well, Renee Nicole Good, what a force for the resistance and just
another neighbor gone beautiful human.
So this is a photo of Alex and Renee and it's our small little gesture to put them on
our wall and it's going to remain there for the rest of this year and because they're
sacrificed to the resistance is unmatched and I just, and everybody and I just, I just
don't want to, I don't want us to forget, you know, I don't want anybody to forget.
And like I was saying, I'm sure if you asked them, they didn't want to die, you know,
but, you know, here we are, so, let me right here, there we go, we honor you.
All they were doing is exercising their constitutional protected rights, think about that.
Yeah.
See up, any time I'm just going to go ask them with it, you know what I mean?
Yeah.
Okay, well, boy, tough stuff, but let's keep going.
We've got, what does that do from St. Louis?
Let's go to Drew from St. Louis.
Perfect.
Now we're going to pivot about what to do with all of this rage we're feeling, right?
Okay.
So Drew from St. Louis called and he says we got to hit him where it hurts, which is the
corporate wallet.
Hey guys, it's Drew from St. Louis.
I'm calling on Saturday night data Alex pretty was shot, but I've seen somebody say
something.
Remember that feeling you got when the second plane hit the second tower and you just
fucking knew you got that just that that queuesy feeling something was being out of your control.
You know, that was, you know, there was something big against you and everybody else that you
couldn't control.
Something was happening.
As exactly what happened when I saw that, I think this is obviously the turning point
just right here.
And I still believe that we need to do some financial stuff because people stopped using
credit cards.
As transaction fees would dry up for all the major companies and stuff and that would get
big competition.
Now, I expect people to do it for like $300 or the groceries that they get, but, you
know, I'm going to start walking in to pay my gas instead of paying at the pump here
and there and everything that I always use the card for.
I'm going to start using cash instead.
I'm going to do what I can do.
We're going to hit them where it hurts to every one of us that really isn't involved
right now.
We got to think of do something.
Anything that we possibly can hurt was a fix of the most of the money.
So God bless.
And everybody keep your head up.
Thank you Drew.
Thank you Drew.
Fantastic call.
Yeah.
Those little waves, you know?
Yeah.
So I agree with him.
Protesting is extremely important, but we got to go even farther because Donald Trump
does not care about the protest.
Right.
Doesn't care at all.
And a very smart man I saw recently on a show said, you know, the U.S. economy is $27 trillion.
Okay.
That is $74 billion a day.
Okay.
Now, our economy is 70% consumer driven.
All right.
Okay.
So if that's a lot of power, that's a lot of power, 70% you say 70% so if 10% of the upper
class are the rich people, basically, if they reduce their spending by 10% and if the
medium and lower class income households reduce their spending by only 5%, all you got
to do is just buy less 5%, the GDP, GDP would go negative almost overnight.
You've got that.
That will get their attention.
That's a plan.
That's a plan.
That's some power.
So I do believe, I believe that some, but we have to do it together and we have to do it
for one day.
We got to do it for a week and a month.
Yeah.
It's going to be the only thing that's going to change anything.
I know.
You know, I know.
We have to be out protesting and fighting back and showing that we're not going to put
up with the ship.
But what's, but he doesn't care about that.
But it matters to us.
But to fight back, right?
I mean, what do you think, Nick?
100%.
I did a whole show on it this morning.
That's exactly right.
Yeah.
I mean, we, it's, it's untapped potential in terms of resistance and it's time to break
the glass.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And it's, it's like a, you know, multi-pronged approach.
Like, if you can be out in the streets, be out in the streets.
If you can't or that's not your vibe, stop spending money at certain places or do like what
Drew's doing.
Take these little extra steps of pay cash some place, walk in and pay, don't get cash
back at the ATM and pay the 50 cents or whatever.
You know what I mean?
We agree more.
We have to do this.
Yeah.
And when it happens, I promise you, we're going to do whatever it is, whatever the big one
is, we're doing it.
Wait, I don't care.
We won't spend any money.
This company won't spend any money.
We won't spend any money.
We were, but they're also saying, you don't need to not, you don't have to spend no money.
You have to reduce your spending by 5% rich households by 10%.
And that would bring the GDP down and that would freak out.
That would change things.
Well, that's good enough for me.
Yeah.
So the only thing that matters to this motherfucker in the White House is money and power and power.
But bad.
No problem.
Yeah.
Let's do it.
Mom's everywhere like, no, we're not doing it.
What are your guys' ideas of how to opt out of this giving them any more money?
What are you guys doing at home?
Call the hotline.
Call the hotline.
Call the hotline.
212, 4600.
That's right.
Or put it in the message or write in the comments right now.
Yeah.
Listen, I think we only have time for one more call.
Okay.
What do you think, too?
Let me pick a really good one.
Okay.
What are you guys doing out there?
Are you guys okay?
You guys okay?
The spit it off weekend.
Yeah.
Okay.
We love you guys.
We're going to give you Beth from California because she is never going to stop resisting.
Hey.
All right.
Hi.
I'm Beth from California.
I've been marching, resisting boycotting since 1970.
And I will continue until the mango monster and his minions are stopped and hopefully help
legally accountable.
The unwanted kidnappings and executions should make every decent person rise up in protest.
Thank you all for keeping it real.
Thank you, Beth.
Oh, thank you, Beth.
Yeah.
So don't give up, you guys.
It's rough out there.
But don't go up.
We're going to do it.
We're going to do it together.
Yeah.
You know, we got a lot of carms.
Like I always say that on the show.
We got a lot of carms.
We got to do it together.
And we can't.
You just heard them.
We got 70% of the buying power.
Yeah.
Holy shit.
Oh, and 70% of the dangerous ones were doing what that person said.
See that?
Okay.
And let me say something else.
If the news is, is, is scaring you or somebody you know, I'm going to do a little self-promotion
here.
I'm sorry.
But if it's, if the news is freaking out, somebody you know, send them to this show.
We're not going to be playing.
I mean, you know, once in a while you got to play the tough stuff.
But for the most part, we're not here.
We're here to move forward.
Yeah.
I mean, not to like, hey, what's the most freaky thing we can like put out like fuck that shit?
Like we're going through it with you.
What's that?
We're going through it with you.
Yeah.
Like it's traumatizing us too.
And it's not.
We don't want to freak each other out all the time.
Yeah.
Yeah.
We don't have to be scared all the time.
Yeah.
Finding ways forward and finding ways to resist and finding inspirational stories is the way
to do this.
Yeah.
Spoiler.
We actually created this show to help us get to this.
It was there, but by connecting with all of you in this great community.
Right.
Well, listen, do yourselves a favor and give the hotline a call.
Put on the hotline for five minutes.
A lot of fun.
It's completely free.
I don't think I say that enough.
It's free.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Until next time, be safe, get into good trouble, get into fine trouble.
And remember, we are all the dangerous ones.
Bye bye.
Bye.
Bye.
Bye.
Bye.
Bye.
The Dangerous Ones
