Just Two Good Old Boys

006 Just Two Good Old Boys

Subscriber Episode Gene Naftulyev Season 2022 Episode 6

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Ben

Hey Gene. How's it going?

Gene

Good, how are you?

Ben

Uh, doing well. Been traveling for Thanksgiving and everything else. Still, uh, still a little sleepy from all the Turkey and food.

Gene

Little trip to fan overdo.

Ben

Oh, man, it, we, it, it was so good. And anytime my family gets together like this, so we went to my family's Thanksgiving, uh, for Thursday, and then we're going to my wife's, uh, today, uh, later. And, um, man, it's, uh, everybody's pretty good cook, so there's really nothing bad on the table, you know? And my dad, the way he does his Turkey is low, low, low and slow overnight, so it's not all dried out and oh my God, it's good. Yeah. So, you know, he never gets it above 200 degrees, so that way it just doesn't get.

Gene

By the way, this is great cuz the about 50% of, uh, unrelenting. My other podcast was all food related and cooking related. So we're starting on the right foot here as well.

Ben

Yeah. There, there was a little bit of air fryer talk.

Gene

Yeah, I a little bit. Um, does your dad have a sovi?

Ben

No, he does not.

Gene

Does he have, uh, any other interesting kitchen gadgets?

Ben

No, no, no. My parents are old school. They, I mean, they were sitting there making a, a shoe pig salad, which has a lot of stuff chopped up pretty fine in it. And, um, I was like, y'all have a, uh, I mean, they're making a big batch, so they're both sitting there cho and cho and chopping. I'm like, y'all have a, uh, food processor, right?

Gene

Mm-hmm.

Ben

Why aren't you using it? I don't know. Didn't think about it.

Gene

Mm-hmm.

Ben

they're old school, but.

Gene

Have they ever done, or have you ever done FLA matter? A fried, deep fried Turkey.

Ben

Oh, yeah. Yeah. We, we've done that several years. Um, they're good. And it's, uh, not a bad way to do it, you know, the whole thing is that it crisps and heats through pretty quickly. Um, but, you know, my, my dad just likes doing it this way more, uh, with deep fried Turkey. The injectables are definitely the way to go.

Gene

injectables. What do you mean?

Ben

So, have you not used injectables,

Gene

Uh, no, I haven't.

Ben

injectable seasoning? So, like, Tony sat makes some, there's a bunch of different ones. People make their own, uh, basically you take a butter, um, or whatever liquid you're gonna do, maybe a, you know, citrus or

Gene

Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm.

Ben

put seasoning and then you put it in a syringe and you inject it into the meat.

Gene

Oh, I've done that. I just didn't, yeah. I didn't call it injectable, I guess.

Ben

Yeah.

Gene

Yeah. But as far as butter, I usually just chuck a stick of butter on the insides along with the.

Ben

Oh yeah. Well, yeah. So what we usually do on our Turkey is we'll put butter and, you know, herbs and stuff all up under the skin, and then my dad will take a big thing of rosemary, some onions, stuff like that, and stuff it in the cavity. So, yeah.

Gene

Yeah. Yeah. I, I don't like when it's right under the skin, uh, because that separates the skin from the meat. And I actually like the skin to be right on the meat. So I usually just make some small incisions with, uh, like a pairing knife and then put garlic and other, other things, uh, maybe a half inch underneath the skin, like in the meat. Make little pockets.

Ben

Yeah. Well, there's a bunch of different ways of doing it, but it sure is good. Um, you know, turkey's one of those things that you don't eat often enough, so it's, you know, if it's done right,

Gene

people, some

Ben

Yeah. I mean, some people eat ground Turkey and all that all

Gene

I had ground Turkey all the time. I prefer ground Turkey to chicken and, uh, I prefer bison to beef. Um, I don't know, I think ground, ground Turkey, it has, I don't even, I'm not sure exactly, but I, I do like ground Turkey more. You can, uh, you can make it tastes less like poultry, I think, with the right spices.

Ben

Well, and there's also a big difference between, you know, is it a heritage bird or is it just whatever farm raised, right. Same thing with chicken. Anything else?

Gene

for sure.

Ben

You know, beef and, um,

Gene

A wild turkey's awesome. I've only had that a couple times, but it's really good.

Ben

Oh yeah. We used to, I used to hunt turkeys in Idaho. I haven't, haven't been Turkey hunting since I've moved back to Texas, but,

Gene

I remember one time when my, uh, ex-wife, uh, decided to catch a Turkey. Uh, that was walking by us and then I don't think she realized how fast they run.

Ben

Well, and if she got ahold of it, how strong they are.

Gene

No, she never, she never got ahold of it, but she, she was thinking she could just grab its neck and that'll be the end of that. I'm get a free Turkey. I'm, I was standing by the car laughing. I'm like, yeah, that ain't gonna happen.

Ben

No, no. That's hilarious.

Gene

I've grabbed geese by the neck. That's not hard to do, cuz they don't, they go towards you, not away from you.

Ben

Well, they're aggressive as hell. They'll pack the crap outta you.

Gene

Yeah. It doesn't hurt.

Ben

Depends on if you're a little kid or not,

Gene

Yeah. Well, yes, of course as a little kid you wanna stay away from that shit. But no, as an adult, you know, if you got a goose walk into, I, I've always fed birds. I don't, I'm one of those people that, uh, enjoys the interaction with the, uh, the last of the dinosaurs.

Ben

Yeah, that's what I was about to say. The only reason why you like birds is cuz they evolved from rough tiles.

Gene

Uh, the last, uh, living descendants.

Ben

So while we are recording this, Tim Poole is on and ranting and raving.

Gene

Yeah. He's doing like a weekend stream, which is unusual.

Ben

Yeah. And what he started talking about was, uh, the meme going around of his address and house and it being the wrong house and address, which is pretty damn dangerous these days.

Gene

Yeah. Yeah. Well, he also talked about how all his neighbors would just love to shoot an Antifa person, so be careful.

Ben

Yeah. He a bunch of right wing nut jobs is what I think he said. So yeah,

Gene

in a loving way. Uhhuh, he said. Well, he said he's the liberal guy in the neighborhood, which I think is true.

Ben

Well, yeah, I mean, him and, you know, him and Shapiro

Gene

Yeah. Yeah.

Ben

Um, you know, I think it's interesting that since we've talked last, you know, the, there's been this shooting in, uh, in Colorado that really, it's interesting to hear the, the mainstream narrative. It's not all about the

Gene

did it. Did it start strong and then whimper out?

Ben

Oh, yeah. Yeah. And I, I think it's gonna be interesting to, since he is alive and isn't just shot dead and we don't get to hear his side, we're going to get to hear his side. Now they're saying, yeah, unless he gets suicide ed. Um, now they're saying the, the prosecutor's saying that he may not go to trial for two years, which is just like, what?

Gene

Uhhuh.

Ben

Um, but I think the purpose is to let the narrative cool off, quite frankly, because apparently this is a non-binary individual according to his own lawyers. And maybe it was a lover

Gene

It was a gay

Ben

got into it with somebody, you know?

Gene

Yep.

Ben

Yeah,

Gene

that's exactly what it was.

Ben

no. Well, I,

Gene

very likely that this was not any kind of a, uh, generic guns spree. I think this was a, somebody whose emotions went up to 11, uh, because of some specific person.

Ben

Yeah. So when it first came out, you know, it was noted that the club was going to be hosting a child drag queen show, you know, all ages drag queen show, uh, in the next few days.

Gene

Yeah. Well let, I mean, let, let just be specific. It was a drag drag queen show for all ages, which is different than a bunch of kids dressing up as drag queens, which would be a child drag queen show.

Ben

Um, I think, uh, you, you know, for a fact that there were not going to be kids involved in the show itself.

Gene

Uh, well, I watched the video. There was no kids that were dressed up that I could see. There was kids in the audience.

Ben

Okay. Well, I mean, if that's the case, that's a different understanding than I have. But regardless, people were linking this to, uh, the show, uh, early on, and the wood chipper memes flying around were

Gene

Mm-hmm.

Ben

Uh, it's interesting to see the Twitter and

Gene

the hells that come from? Why a wood chipper? I mean, you want to make a, uh, some kind of a political incorrect statement about killing somebody because you don't like them being a pedophile, but where's the wood chipper coming from? Is that some movie thing I missed or something?

Ben

Maybe, uh, just a way to get rid of a body. I don't know. You know,

Gene

You're not aware that it's connected to some existing meme or something, or,

Ben

not that I know

Gene

okay. All right.

Ben

but the point was,

Gene

a wood chipper is a particularly good way to get rid of a body.

Ben

well, the idea is it's just gonna shatter everything and make little teeny pieces

Gene

It does, it basically spreads DNA across a very wide area in the fine spray. It's a stupid way to get rid of a body if you want to do it. You get acid?

Ben

Yeah. Or, you know, just go to East Texas and let the hogs take care of it.

Gene

Uh, yeah. Yeah. And there's, well, they're not just in East Texas. There's hogs everywhere.

Ben

Well, there's a couple places that I know of that are particularly dense,

Gene

Mm-hmm.

Ben

yeah. You know, it was just over there. So, you know, you've got alligators, you got hogs, you got lots of, lots of animals.

Gene

s

Ben

Yes, plenty of that, but, uh, not big enough ones to take care of what we were talking about. But regardless, it's

Gene

You don't, you don't feed it to'em whole. You, you cut their arms.

Ben

yeah, the, the thing that, uh, I was getting at though is it's really interesting to see how brazen people have become on all of social media, whereas I think for a long time people were very, you know, hushed about their opinions and maybe they felt that way, but wouldn't post something like that because, you know, they knew that they would be banned and there would be a problem. And now that, uh, Musk is coming out and offering up amnesty and really looking at things in a different way, I think people have definitely gone, uh, a little far. You know, I, I think there is a decorum issue at this point, but you

Gene

I think it's just a continuum. As we're getting closer to full all out war,

Ben

Well, we're, we are definitely at the very

Gene

that calls to violence, that this idea that calls to violence are a. A, a bad thing that can be punishable I think was gonna flip in the next year or two. I think by the time the next election rolls around, uh, you're gonna hear not just Antifa calling for people's heads, but you're gonna hear a lot more of the Wood Shepherd type stuff from the right as well. The right is just getting finally tired of just putting up with getting fucked up the ass with no loop.

Ben

uh, to an extent. Yes. And you know, what people need to understand is the threat of violence exists in all human relationships.

Gene

Mm-hmm.

Ben

That, that is part of what

Gene

well, male ones

Ben

us civil. I'm sorry.

Gene

Male ones for sure.

Ben

Yeah. Uh, I mean, you know, obviously. Inter sex, uh, violence has come down a lot since, you know, it was legal to beat your wife, for example.

Gene

It's, it's not what I was referring to though. Uh, what I mean is women have. Different ways of escalating than men.

Ben

True. They're more on the reputation

Gene

for Yeah, exactly. Exactly. For men, ultimate escalation comes to physical violence. For women, it comes to complete annihilation of reputation.

Ben

Yes. And, uh, you know, that that's the main pathology. But, you know, I would say that men can also engage in reputation destruction and

Gene

Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. For sure.

Ben

Yeah. But you know, when we're talking about nations or politics, um, I think it follows the male model more than the female model.

Gene

Mm-hmm.

Ben

You know, and we can, we can say, look at Ukraine or anywhere else. Ultimately a country or someone is doing something you don't like and they push you far enough. You're going to go to war, you're going to engage in violence, you're going to make that stop.

Gene

You are, but I would say that the US is using more of the female model. Their, their primary focus is on reputation damage. It's all about pr. It's not so much about the actual violence.

Ben

Um, well that's because we're willing to fight to the last Ukrainian, um, you know, it's not actually our war. We're treating it as a proxy war. So, you know, there, there's the difference there. Uh, if it were, you know, American soldiers over there fighting and dying, I think you'd see it handled in a very different way.

Gene

Yeah. Well, yeah. It's easier for us just to, uh, pay, um, uh, Al-Qaeda to go over there.

Ben

Well, and it what a money laundering boondoggle. That's been,

Gene

Yep.

Ben

you know, more and more coming out on ftx.

Gene

Yeah. Yeah. And I guess some people are surprised by that. That seems like, um, uh, I, I would hope this wakes a few folks up who are gonna realize what I said, day one, which is how do you go from not believing the bullshit you're being told about covid to fully believing the bullshit you're being told about Ukraine. It's the same people telling you both, but the same people that I knew that were all up in arms against vaccine and covid and the fauci and the lies and you know, information coming out that proves them wrong, all of a sudden got fully on board and rah ra with the Ukraine disinformation.

Ben

Well, I, I'd see from my experience, uh, the people at work who, uh, are triple vaed and boosted and still wearing masks and everything are the ones on the Ukrainian bandwagon. And

Gene

Right. The, oh, they, they are, but they weren't the only ones. That's, that's where my surprise came from, is that there were plenty of people that I was lock step with on the, uh, covid stuff that all of a sudden when it came to Ukraine, it was like, yeah, those, those evil, uh, uh, you know, Russian troops invading that poor country for no reason. Like what?

Ben

well in

Gene

kidding me.

Ben

In a lot of people's minds, they still think of, you know, the ussr, um,

Gene

And incidentally, uh, I posted a link to a video. Uh, last night, which is one of the best, I mean, I guess partly cuz he agrees with me. But, uh, one of the best videos that I've seen that Emil did discussing the, um, Ukrainian Halor,

Ben

mm-hmm.

Gene

uh, which I've covered in one of the Surine speaks in the past, and talked about how the, it, it's very much taken by clips and bits and pieces, the way it's portrayed in the media, that there was somehow directed against Ukraine. First of all, it wasn't, Ukraine was a territory within the ussr. This was not a, a separate country. And it sure as hell did not target Ukraine because tons of Russians died and tons of Georgians died at exactly the same time. And what this was, was very simply a decision made by Stalin. That the country is going to be better off by selling grain for hard currencies from the west that it could then utilize then by taking that same grain and then feeding its people.

Ben

Mm-hmm.

Gene

So it was a financial decision that traded, uh, essentially starvation for, uh, more hard currency coming into the ussr. And it was not at all directed at anybody, but Ukraine is mostly farmland. And so what you had, there was a lot of farmers which are uh, you know, traditionally have been the least to have issues with getting food and grain and other things because when you're a farmer, there's a lot of opportunities for self-sufficiency from the food department, whereas people in cities have to rely a lot more. On the communist state to provide the availability of food. But in this instance, the farmers were left high and dry because everything that they were growing was going for export. And so there was absolutely a lot of death, but, but I would not call it a, uh, genocide because there was not the other characteristic of genocide with, which is a directed towards some particular group, if you wanna call it genocide. It's the genocide of the ssr because it was directed at everybody in the s r.

Ben

you, you had a lot of Ukrainians that died. Yes. Georgians, Russians and so on also went through a similar privation, but I, I think the Ukrainians took a bigger brunt of it than their population necessarily. Sh proportionally should have all that said, it doesn't matter. It was a failure of communism. Right. This is what you get when you get central planning.

Gene

central planning. But, but saying more Ukraines died is kinda like saying, well, more people died in Louisiana when, uh, uh, hurricane whatchamacallit came in. Yeah. They happened to be at a place that resulted in more death. It doesn't mean that hurricane targeted people that had a Cajun background.

Ben

I, I completely, I, I agree with you because

Gene

that's my point there.

Ben

Yeah, I, I think that communism is bad and communism is, uh, any central planning or any authoritarian system is the problem, right? That it's not, you are going to have issues like that if you go down the route of central planning because humans are fallible and we all individually make mistakes. But when you're making a mistake for you and your family or whatever, it affects a smaller group of people than when you're Stalin

Gene

I don't, I don't know that they saw it as a mistake though. That's the thing is that

Ben

They probably were evil enough not to. Yeah.

Gene

I mean, given that during the same timeframe of Stalin's rule, uh, 10 million Soviet people, a lot of whom were Russian, died in the prison camps for failure to adhere to communism. I don't think this was a big deal for them to have a few. Also die as a result of lack of food.

Ben

Well, and that's something that people just gloss over repeatedly when we talk about the history of the 20th century. We talk about the death camps in Germany and you know, the Holocaust and everything else, which, you know, we, we can do a deep dive sometime on, uh, some of the history of that. But Russia, you know, Stalin and ma killed far more people, people than Hitler did. Um, you know, through whether it was negligence or shitty decisions or, you know, outright putting people in the go logs and working'em to death, you know, it communism, centralization, authoritarianism. Nazis are socialists or communists? Uh, not a good thing.

Gene

Yep. Yeah, it's there. There's, uh, by some estimates, uh, more people died, uh, as a result of Stalin in the Soviet Union. Then as a result of World War ii, which also took a very large toll in the Soviet Union, a lot more than any other country.

Ben

Yeah, Russia definitely lost a few people, especially with some of the sages and everything else. Um, of the stories about the, uh, the people guarding the seed banks and their starvation and, you know, everything else is just crazy that they, uh, you know, they had food that they could have eaten, but it would mean that, you know, some of those plants would've been lost, so they did not.

Gene

Well, or just the distribution of the food, you know, over time. So if you're recovering from World War ii, all resources are limited. You're not gonna just, you know, open things up and for people to use everything up in the first few months.

Ben

Well, if you do, then you're gonna have a lot more people dead.

Gene

yeah. Yeah. Um, but the, the, I guess one of the things that for sure was the case was the brutality, uh, was scaled to 11 during that timeframe. The, the value of human life was very small. It's, it's just the idea that it, it. There's not much difference whether somebody dies or not, like that isn't gonna affect the decision making.

Ben

So what do you think that some, uh, some societies. Have a pretty standard view and vision of human life that stays fairly consistent over time. Where others, depending on what's going on now, I know it's always subject to, you know, all cultures are subject to certain privations causing the change in human life. But largely the uk uh, France, you know, uh, Western Europe,

Gene

Mm-hmm.

Ben

even after War II in the rebuilding, maintained a decorum on the cost of human life. Whereas China, Russia, Cambodia, great. You know, Cambodia especially did not, so what do you think that is? Is that something cultural or is it just they either hit harder?

Gene

I think that it has to do with the progression, uh, towards, uh, more intellectual and enlightenment of the general populace, not of individuals within that group. Um, so France went through this, uh, you know, several hundred years earlier, uh, as did most of Europe. The United States already, for the most part, was, um, by the time it became a country, uh, saw, uh, great value on individual human life. Because if you don't value life, you're sure as hell. Not gonna value liberty. you know, they're kind of tied, tied at the hip. Uh, but Russia was a peasant country up until 19 s. And, uh, and so the mentality, the willingness to accept the low cost value in life, um, which is always the case with, uh, slavery, with, uh, peasant populations, with surfs because, uh, you, you don't really actually own your life your, your lord does. Um, you have certain freedoms as a surf that you don't as a slave, but generally you don't really have ownership of the decision make, uh, decisions that are made around things that could result in your death. Um, and so I think that it's the same thing in China as well, and is that populations that were closer to serve them and peasantry, uh, accepted the low value of life. Much more readily than populations for whom the value of individual human life was, uh, already at a higher value before World War ii, like most Europe.

Ben

So looking at today in China with their zero covid policy and locking people in their houses and letting them starve to death and everything else, the brutality of what G is doing over there is to a western eye. Astonishing.

Gene

Yeah. Yeah.

Ben

Do you see any hope in that brutality going a step too far for the Chinese people? Are they still in that mentality that

Gene

it,

Ben

this is

Gene

changes over time. It's the same thing in Russia too, is here's, here's the example. The, the mind experiment I can offer is, If we had an all out war, either with China and the US or Russia and the us, uh, 50,000 troops a day losses, 50,000 Russians killed versus 50,000 Americans killed versus 50,000 Chinese killed in both China and Russia. Those are acceptable losses. That's, it's not going to make people want to push back against the government,

Ben

But I

Gene

but in the

Ben

population to sustain

Gene

know, but they absolutely. But it has the mentality, the US does not have the mentality. Can you imagine if 50,000 American troops died in one week, what would be the end result for the government here? And we're not talking a theoretical, uh, you know, March on Washington. We're talking about the burning of the.

Ben

potentially. It depends on the motivations

Gene

guarantee you both. The woke left and Antifa, who's gonna say it's mostly black people getting killed and, and the conservatives, everybody would up in be up in arms. America is not prepared for heavy losses. It's never had heavy losses in the history of the country.

Ben

Uh, world War II and The, Civil War were pretty

Gene

Just Civil War. World War II compared to other countries for the US was not at all heavy losses. The Civil War was, I think the bloodiest period of the American history.

Ben

Absolutely. It was our deadliest war,

Gene

Yeah.

Ben

over 500,000 killed on both sides.

Gene

Yeah. Yeah. That's a tiny number.

Ben

It, it's really not, but I mean, that, that's a lot of people.

Gene

Imagine that in two weeks.

Ben

Well, yeah. I,

Gene

What would happen here,

Ben

yeah.

Gene

because I can tell you, 50,000 Russians get killed. It's not gonna change the thing. 50,000 Chinese get killed. The Chinese might actually be, you know, happy about it

Ben

Why do you think it would not change move Russia? Because I, China I can see one because of their population

Gene

the mentality of the, of the people, the mentality of the people are not far enough along in the, in the evolutionary progression to value individual human lives.

Ben

and you know, that's

Gene

That happens over time.

Ben

Yeah. So one of the big issues I think we have geopolitically is that because technology is being redistributed from society to society, you have societies that were not at a point where they could have come up with the technology or built a technology on their own. Um, but now they're given this technology and as a result, their culture hasn't caught up to where they need to be in the

Gene

we've been breaking the Prime Director for a long time.

Ben

Indeed, indeed. Which, you know,

Gene

I just had to throw in the Star Trek

Ben

well, I mean, it's interesting that we have done this and you know, Nixon's excuse was that China opening up China would, uh, you know, uh, be like essentially the same philosophy as taking down the bur wall

Gene

they couldn't imagine the idea that China would not change drastically if it was just simply allowed to see what's happening in the us.

Ben

They figured that not only would they change, but that, uh, you know, they would probably be forced to overthrow communism just from an economic standpoint.

Gene

Mm-hmm.

Ben

Yet, sadly, history did not work out that way.

Gene

No. No. And I, I think that this, I don't know that there is a shortcut here because that sort of common mentality of a particular populous is very, it, it, it's slow to change. It's slower to change than individual mentality. If you just picked a random person on the street and in Russia and you said, uh, you know, how, how would you feel about, uh, having 50,000 Russian deaths in, in, uh, in war? Um, they would of course feel horrible and that, you know, it'd be important to try and end this and minimize the possibility. But you take that same person, you put'em in a group of a hundred people, and you ask that group collect. The answer is probably going to be they're doing their patriotic duty, safeguarding the country.

Ben

Well, and that, that's an interesting point because most people, and this goes to just human psychology, right? Very few people are willing to stand outside the group and stand by the principles and say, no, this is wrong. It, you know, even if, quite frankly, a majority of the people in the group think it's necessarily wrong, but the I perceived ethos is the other direction, they'll, most of them will go along with it. It's very rare for people to stand up against a crowd in any

Gene

that's, yeah. What you bring up is general human nature, but also take into account that you combine that with an existential, um, crisis, which the US has never experienced in. Its. The attack on Pearl Harbor was not an existential crisis. The US was much greater than Japan at the time. And in fact, as you well know, the reason that Japan attacked was because of the pressure that the United States was putting on Japan. So, uh, other than the Civil War, I don't know that there was ever an existential crisis for the United States.

Ben

Uh, I

Gene

the, the

Ben

war of 1812 was pretty close.

Gene

The, the threat. Okay. All right. Um,

Ben

House was burned down. You

Gene

well, I mean, look in the first. Sure. In the first 50 years of the US as a country, there were existential threats. I'll give you that. Uh, but since the Civil War, I don't think there have been even really since the Monroe Doctrine, I don't think there have been existential.

Ben

Well, uh, yeah, our geographic isolation and lack of any real rival on The

Gene

to fear losing territory as much as we, well, some of us were alive to enjoy the movies from the eighties, like Red Dawn,

Ben

Mm-hmm. good movie. Unrealistic, but good movie.

Gene

movie, but funny, you know, I, I, I thought it was good when I, when I saw it, when I came out. Um, but realistically, that has never been the case here. Now most European countries have for many, many years been involved in the wars, uh, that were a existential crisis. Yeah. So they, they do have a good understanding of what that means, and I think this is why, um, It's easier to push European countries into what's happening right now, which is effectively de-industrialization and going back to the, uh, the days of candlelight and no, uh, heating of the homes because, um, you just have to settle these things to them as a requirement for us to keep existing. Because if we don't do this, then we may lose territory to Russia.

Ben

Yeah, so something is wrong with the reporting out of Ukraine on the damage to their grid because there is no way in hell that they have taken as much damage to the grid as quite frankly, they claim and still have the capacity to have electric lights in, give the

Gene

Oh, you're just underestimating Soviet engineering that created a grid that was able to function in time of war. Come on, man.

Ben

Yeah. Soviet engineering.

Gene

Uhhuh,

Ben

Uh, yeah, Uhhuh.

Gene

I have no idea this, this is not a topic that I have any expertise in.

Ben

well, I, I, I'm just saying the amount of power plants that have supposedly been disabled or destroyed the, uh, transmission facilities that have been taken out. I mean, this is not something you repair in a few weeks if they're really damaged at

Gene

you just drive out and stick a new transformer in place, don't you?

Ben

Yeah. You know, transformer that takes six months to get from, uh, a country if you can get it. So, and countries typically don't have just a whole bunch of spare transformers laying around, you know,

Gene

Hmm.

Ben

having worked for a rather large power company here in the us

Gene

makes them is, are they Chinese made these days or

Ben

Uh, some, some are, um, which we can talk about the transformer that, uh, the government sees that is now a national lab because it was a Chinese transformer, but no, uh, actually Europe, uh, makes quite a few abb, the Swiss, um, make a bunch there. There's a whole bunch of different brand. Um, you know, Siemens, the, pretty much any big manufacturing, uh, company is gonna be involved in transformer building.

Gene

how diff, I have no idea here. Um, so I'm showing my ignorance, but how different is the power regulation and transmission given that Europe is on two 20 versus us here? Uh, is the industrial side of it all running the same way or is it completely different there as well? I know there are 50 hertz instead of.

Ben

Yeah, the, the, they've just chosen a different voltage in a different frequency. Um, the three face power is three face power. Uh, the only country that operates really kind of a strange one is

Gene

is it three, three phase 600 volt then or what?

Ben

Well, so three face power means that you have, you know, power operates in a sign wave, AC operates in a sign wave. So you have, with big, you are asking about big industrial power. Uh, that's different than what comes to your home,

Gene

sure.

Ben

right? But big industrial stuff, three phase. And the reason why you do that is for motor control, things like that. Basically you have a peak constantly, right? So,

Gene

What's more efficient

Ben

90 degrees offset,

Gene

I remember right as well, for three phase.

Ben

uh, yes. I mean, that's why you see everything in threes on the big transmission lines and everything else, right? Um, Australia's a little odd because they have a single phase long range transmission.

Gene

Oh, really? I didn't know that.

Ben

Uh, yeah. It was done for cost savings to some of the rural areas, and it's, it's a little weird. Yeah.

Gene

There's some, uh, New Zealand guy I think, and no gender, social that always likes

Ben

he, he's a greeny. He, he, uh,

Gene

he always uses Greenland, which has the population of like Connecticut as the example of what everybody in the world should be doing, which is running on waterfalls, geo power, solar and wind, where New Zealand is literally a craggy outcropping sticking outta the ocean that allows you to do all those things where no other country can.

Ben

Yeah, well, or it would be very difficult, you know, uh, for example, tole a bend here in Texas, which is an 80 mile long lake, it's a big body of water. Tole a bend has two generators on it, and it produces a whopping 80 megawatts.

Gene

Mm-hmm.

Ben

You know, uh, we just don't have the head pressure here. We don't have the geography for hydro to be successful, so,

Gene

Now do, are there any, uh, other types of power generating equipment that I guess has evolutionary been designed to deal with? Small head pressure, like, um, you know, something that's more of a, uh, more like the, the old, uh, water mills where the, the movement of the water is just spinning a

Ben

Well, I mean that, that's essentially what's hap It's still a turbine that's being spun in a hydro generation facility and yeah, you have low

Gene

but you, but you have high. Oh you do? Okay. Cuz you have, you know, the whole point of having the dam in place is to create that head pressure so you can have the turbine spinning under greater pressure and generating more electricity per turbine. I get that, but can we not just cover the whole stream with slow moving, low head pressure turbines.

Ben

So the, there are some, uh, so Ty typically you have to have, the turbine design is per pressure. So whether it's steam or in water or whatever your, your turbine design is gonna be based off of the amount of pressure you're gonna be dealing with. There are some startup companies right now that are trying to harness the power of rivers, which essentially means no head pressure, just water

Gene

Right. That's what I

Ben

small individual turbines to take that. Some of that.

Gene

just think of a whole bunch of old school mills sitting on the banks of the river,

Ben

Yeah, they're doing it a little different. The, the problem is, you, you're, you're not going to, each one is going to generate very little power. It's only in the aggregate that it matters. Right. So that, that's, that's the problem, is you are going to have to have a shit ton of something versus a single thing, uh, that brings in maintenance issues, that brings in, you know, lots of different things. Ju just like a solar power plant or a windmill for that matter. We have a lot of wind power in Texas. But, you know, the maintenance on each windmill is pretty egregious. And, you know, you have to have a lot of them to produce any amount of

Gene

Wind is ridiculous. That that should just be banned al.

Ben

You know, here's the thing. As soon as that tax subsidy for windmill ends, it's abandon. I mean, so in 30, 40 years when all these subsidies expire, we're gonna have all these windmills that then there's gonna have to be a government program to go take'em down and clean'em up.

Gene

Yeah. Well, they'll fall down eventually.

Ben

Yeah,

Gene

Made that well, but I, I don't like all the birds getting killed. I'm not a fan of windmills whatsoever.

Ben

well there, there's that environmental impact for sure. Um, and you know, what you have to realize is the deicing of these windmills during the winter, during Yuri was a great example, you know, and yes, windmills can operate in winter conditions if they are designed for it. You know, so before anyone says, well, but they've got windmills up

Gene

of those. Yeah.

Ben

Yeah, well, you know, those blades typically have small electrical heaters actually built into the blades to. Keep ice from forming it in general, in Texas, we don't have that problem generally, so guess what? That feature isn't included. So anyway,

Gene

Yeah. No, that's as,

Ben

the whole thing we need to do on the answer for, to make the environmentalists happy, if they would accept it and make, you know, not our, uh, our standard of living, uh, you know, retract is, you know, build some nukes, but man,

Gene

nukes are definitely the best way to go for sure. There's no two ways about it,

Ben

yeah, the problem

Gene

are afraid of nukes. That's the problem, is it's an irrational fear of nukes, and much like there's an irrational fear of c.

Ben

Agreed. And you know, here, here, here's the thing. Um, if Vog three and four don't get finished,

Gene

Mm-hmm.

Ben

I, I, you're just not gonna see a company go out on a limb to build a nuke for a long time until the NRC gets really, uh, really changed

Gene

Mm-hmm. Yeah. And then I think we're too early in the process for me to make any kinda accurate prediction on this, but I do think that the chances are fairly high that 50 to a hundred years from now, so middle of this century onwards, uh, given what is happening in Africa, where they are building a bunch of nukes, where the cost of energy is gonna be significantly lower, where they skipped the entire cycle of having to wire their cities and countries and went directly to wire less. Uh, I think African countries are gonna emerge in, uh, leadership positions starting with about 50 years from now and then moving forward.

Ben

So I am unaware of the, this, uh, that you're saying about power in Africa and nuclear power in Africa. I guess it's South Africa or what.

Gene

Oh, no. There's a lot of ethical countries that are putting nukes in, um, because they're, they don't have all the ridiculous regulations on it.

Ben

Yeah, but I, I would think that that would be a problem of, uh, the, some of the non proliferation treaties who's building them.

Gene

Oh, they're, these are all, uh, these are all small. Uh, what we would refer to as, uh, what do they call'em? Pocket nuclear, um, generators.

Ben

sort of thing. Couple hundred megawatts

Gene

Yeah. And, and again, the only reason I know is cuz my ex-wife's uncle, uh, was one of the, uh, executives in the company that did that.

Ben

Yeah. I don't know how I feel about a lot of these

Gene

when they sold a new nuke, they, you know, we'd hear about it.

Ben

yeah. I just don't know how I feel about, uh, fizzle material being handed around to unstable governments.

Gene

Gens outta the bottle.

Ben

Oh yeah, that, that 100%. But I mean, given the right materials, you know, making a dirty bomb is absolutely any idiot can do it.

Gene

Mm-hmm.

Ben

you know, anyone who's taken high school physics can create a fishing bomb at this point.

Gene

Yeah.

Ben

the delivery system's a little different, but still,

Gene

yeah. No, that's true.

Ben

yeah, the delivery

Gene

it's gonna,

Ben

thing that's

Gene

it's gonna happen. I mean, most of these nuclear plants are either Chinese or. Um, there's, uh, I don't believe Westinghouse reading of the US companies are working on any of this stuff.

Ben

Well, Westinghouse is out of the, out of the game because of Vocal three and four.

Gene

Mm-hmm.

Ben

I mean, they, they literal, they filed bankruptcy over Vocal three and four and Southern Company is choosing to proceed with the building of their reactors on their own. Literally, they're doing it in house at this point.

Gene

Wow.

Ben

Yeah. Vocal three and four is several years late and multiple billions over budget.

Gene

Yeah. That's not a surprise.

Ben

yeah, if Southern Company wasn't the massive behemoth in the power industry that it is, any other company, uh, that I can think of would have folded the project by now.

Gene

Hmm.

Ben

But, uh, Southern Companies pretty unique. They do go on, uh, Boondoggles with projects pretty often. Um, you know, they, they, the Kemper County project, I mean it took them years and years and billions over including, uh, government money. And as long as the Department of Energy was willing to continue to fund it, they were willing to put in some of their own money as well for Kemper County. But they finally gave up. So Kemper County was an interesting one cuz it was a utility scale coal gasification unit for a, uh, combined cycle. So literally being able to take locally mind li night, create a sin gas, and then run it through a, uh, normal combined cycle.

Gene

Interesting.

Ben

Yeah. But the gasifier, they could never get

Gene

have there been any, uh, any. Research reactors built, or, or just nothing at all's been built in the US known for years.

Ben

not anything real recent. There are some theoretical designs and some, you know, very, very small scale lab testing, but nothing at even like the one or two megawatt scale. Uh, I mean, the last reactors to be built in the us you know, uh, that weren't just typical lightwater reactors was in the nineties. Uh, is all that I'm aware of. Um,

Gene

when is the one that's over in your city built?

Ben

uh, a and M's reactor I think was in the seventies or the eighties. Yeah,

Gene

Yeah. Yeah. It's, uh, that's too bad. I, I think us could literally just end up falling behind in a lot of this te.

Ben

yeah. It was 1972.

Gene

72. Okay. Wow.

Ben

Yep, yep. Yep.

Gene

Yeah.

Ben

A and m has, you know, several different reactors over the years. The one that's out by the airport, which most people know about, is a two mega wa little pulse reactor for, you know, essentially experimentation training

Gene

Makes sense.

Ben

reactor.

Gene

Yeah, and it, I don't know, I, I just, uh, I watched some of these old documentary footages of the nuclear program in the US back in the sixties and seventies, and the complete lack. Of any fear or, uh, protective equipment that was involved. And then it, it really feels like we are completely 180 degrees from that right now where people are afraid to say the word nuclear.

Ben

Well, I mean, you had same thing with marijuana though, right? So, um, what was the movie? Something Fever?

Gene

Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. Um, what was it called? It was, um, uh, what did they refer to it as? Yeah, I know the one you're talking about, like Yeah.

Ben

yeah.

Gene

It was the one that Hearst promoted.

Ben

Yeah. But anyway, uh, damn it, I can't believe neither one of us could, you know, it's one of those things. But anyway, um, the whole thing is there was some propaganda around marijuana that caused, you know, the laws to be changed and sentiments to change for many, many years. We're finally starting to see that sway back, but

Gene

Reefer Madness.

Ben

reefer Madness. There you go. Um, You had, uh, the China syndrome and then, you know, things happened at Three Mile Island and, uh, you know, then obviously Cherno, uh, that people were fearmongering on, quite frankly, and scared the shit out of'em. Um, but, you know, people still live in the exclusion zone today in, in Noble, Fukushima, you know, everywhere through Mile Island. Never really had an exclusion zone. Uh, so yeah,

Gene

Yep.

Ben

people are afraid of things that they don't understand. Uh, you know, they, they, they don't understand. Well, you know, time, distance and shielding is what matters with radiation exposure. And oh, by the way, you know, what do you think a sunburn is? And you know, how much radiation do you think you get if you fly regularly and so on.

Gene

Yeah. And, and what is 5g?

Ben

Exactly. And there's ambient, you know, which, you know, could be causing lots of problems, but it, it's also about the frequency. Uh, you know, frequency matters, you know, but here's the interesting thing with radiation, higher frequency, more DNA damaging and so on. Easier at a block,

Gene

Mm-hmm.

Ben

you know, w when people start talking about, you know, really it's radioactive material, getting into your thyroid and everything else, that could be the big problem. But, you know, it's not actual just pure radiation. But if you're talking about a radioactive source that's high energy, high frequency, yeah, it can damage you, but a piece of paper can stop it, you know, depending on what it is. So time, distance, and shielding, and then making sure that you don't have things going into your body and ingesting, you know, breathing, that sort of thing.

Gene

Well, and, and there's a big difference between, uh, you know, beta radiation and neutrons.

Ben

Hmm,

Gene

And like you said, the, the shielding is vastly different between those as well.

Ben

exactly.

Gene

So yeah, it's, um,

Ben

Well, and

Gene

again, most people are

Ben

from the China syndrome of a core meltdown, right? Meltdown is not, it's, it's a term from that movie. Uh, you know, and the idea in the movie, one of the things they talk about is it'll melt all the way through the core of the earth to China, right? It just utterly nonsensical bullshit

Gene

Uh, and I remember even years ago, probably 20 years ago, of watching, uh, a, uh, a film about, um, the new safe, uh, liquid salt reactors

Ben

Oh yeah,

Gene

and how there they literally solidify as they cool, uh, preventing, you know, leakage.

Ben

well, there, there are lots of different designs. Um, China tested recently, one of the first intrinsically safed reactor designs where they literally took the unit up to full load and, uh, cut all cooling. Well, you could not do that with a typical lightwater reactor design at all. Any western design reactor today, that is not a thing. Um, what this allowed them to do, uh, they cut the cooling and it went up, hit its peak, and then shut down on its own. Um, The technology is still pretty classified, so we don't have a lot of details on exactly how they're doing that or how it's working. Uh, but hey, you know, that's pretty cool. And that's just a typical light water reactor design. It's not, uh, nothing like molten salt or anything else, or a breeder reactor. You know, it's funny because, uh, the very first nuclear power plant in the US was a breeder reactor. Uh, and you know, Rick over, uh, chose the lightwater reactor design because it could be, uh, utilized more quickly. Yeah. Yeah.

Gene

Mm-hmm. Yeah, that, that decision to focus on dual purpose reactors, I think was definitely motivated by military reasoning.

Ben

Well, yeah, and putting a, you know, a, a breeder reactor that's using milant salt instead of water is a little heavier, you know, so that, that takes more displacement from the ship and so on. So the, the light water reactor one out for many reasons, um, not just, you know, it's dual use nature, but the just practicality of putting on a ship. Now obviously designs have, uh, gone further and, you know, we've done better, but, uh, yeah, he, he made a decision that has definitely impacted the world, so,

Gene

Yeah, for sure. And it even sounds like Japan is, uh, easing up their fear of nuclear again.

Ben

Yeah. Uh, Japan is definitely going to be, uh, going back down the road. Uh, I mean, they have to, they have really no other choice. They, they can't afford, you know, they don't, they're not exactly a major oil producing nation. And, you know, I think they're realizing that renewables, especially given their geography is, you know, outside of some hydro here and there, not a thing. So

Gene

could go to, um, purely a whale Blu economy.

Ben

yeah. Let's, let's go back to fishing. The whales to extinction.

Gene

Uhhuh. Yep. Um, now why haven't we been just building nuclear power plants under the sea? You got infinite cooling possibilities, and they're far away from human, you know, civilization centers.

Ben

Yeah, but I mean, you, you don't really wanna damage the oceans as well. And you know, the oceans are, are a harsh environment. Salt water is very corrosive. Um, you know, water itself is a universal solvent. Um, so, you know, you have all these things that kind of work against it. Um, yeah, so ease of maintenance, lots of lots of things,

Gene

Mm-hmm.

Ben

you know, but I mean, Microsoft years ago put the,

Gene

I mean, we

Ben

the data

Gene

them, they're, they're in submarines.

Ben

Yeah, yeah, yeah. But they, they're in a

Gene

We could just park a bunch of submarines alongside the shore and then string up lines away from them for power.

Ben

You could, I think it'd be an expensive way of building it. I mean, I

Gene

it goes back to cost in

Ben

Yeah. But why do that? Why not just educate the population and put'em on land?

Gene

You think that's easier to educate the population?

Ben

Yes,

Gene

I don't, I don't, I think that's more difficult. It's easier to take money from the population to do things in a, so you don't have to educate'em.

Ben

Yeah. I, I think as soon as the green movement and everybody goes, oh, nuclear power power's. Okay. I, I think then we'll be done. It's, you know, it's interesting the move to hydrogen, uh, a hydrogen economy, and the only way I see you getting there is with a ubiquitous

Gene

Free energy,

Ben

Well, no, no, no. So if, if we basically built pretty much nothing but nukes, so if you were gonna run the US grid, or even the Texas grid

Gene

Mm-hmm.

Ben

on nothing but nukes, You would actually have to have a shit ton more power plants than we have today. And the reason why is because when a new gets up to full stable load, it just sits there. It doesn't fluctuate, it doesn't move, it sits there, it can't ramp, it can't do any of that because it just, that's not the design, it's not

Gene

So what happens if you have excess power on the grid that's not being utilized?

Ben

It's wasted. Um. Right.

Gene

no negative side effects though.

Ben

correct. So what could you do with, since we have to have way so with. Power plants that can ramp meaning change their load more easily, um, which basically means natural gas. So coal can ramp some, but realistically what a coal plant wants to do. Same thing as a new get up at high stable load and stay there or go down to low stable load and stay there. It can move some in between, but not a whole lot, not easily. And it's at a very slow ramp rate. Combustion turbines can come online and you know, get up to full load or move around. They don't care. Right? It's like a jet engine. You have a throttle control essentially like that. And then you can put in the steamers and everything else on the combin cycles. So, A lot of places, uh, you know, you'll see like there's a plant in, uh, New York that, uh, my company owned that literally set between two nukes and was designated medium impact, uh, by the local ISO because of being there for voltage control and being able to ramp when the nukes can't. So if you're gonna go to get rid of all fossil fuels, meaning okay, we can't have these natural gas plants to ramp and so on, essentially you're gonna have to have a shit ton more generation than you really need.

Gene

Can you burn hydrogen in the gas?

Ben

You can so

Gene

use the nukes to create hydrogen

Ben

well, what I think you do instead.

Gene

and then, burn the, uh,

Ben

Yeah, but what I think you, what I think you do is instead is go the other way of voltage control. Meaning you have the nukes producing a shit ton more power than they need, and these hydrogen electrolysis plants being

Gene

or the access.

Ben

for the excess and they load shed as needed for voltage control

Gene

There you go. That makes

Ben

and then all of that hydrogen could go into your other manufacturing and cars and so on.

Gene

Yeah. Cause I, I think the, the big issue with hydrogen,

Ben

that's a hundred plus year endeavor, probably.

Gene

yeah. So the Japanese and Chinese are perfectly happy to take that on. Americans are like, what? We'll be dead by then. Fuck that. Let's do something that'll be done tomorrow,

Ben

Exactly. Which,

Gene

which is why this country is doomed.

Ben

we'll see.

Gene

There's no long term pervasive thinking here. Everything's short term gain.

Ben

Uh, yeah, but you have that unseen hand and I think that that is a generational thing that flip flops and I, I think we're in that fourth turning where it's gonna change back. We're gonna have some hard times and then we're gonna go back through that entire chain of events.

Gene

Mm-hmm. and then looking back at history, every Empire Falls. So the question is just simply when, not if.

Ben

Well, yeah, I mean, history is, history rhymes. It doesn't necessarily mirror everything. And I think there is, You know, changes that happen. Um, the fall of the British Empire, for example, was not the same as the fall of the Roman Empire. Um, the fall of the Ottomans was not the same as the Roman Empire. So I, I think you have some, I think our societal collapses are evolving, is what I'm saying.

Gene

I mean, you can say that, but there were plenty of commonalities between their falls in terms of the populous of that country.

Ben

Absolutely. But you know, my point is the fall of the Roman Empire sent us into the dark ages. Uh, that's not what happened when, you know, the British Empire fell and it was much larger than the Roman Empire,

Gene

Well, yes, but I'm gonna say something that's not popular here. I don't think the fall of the Roman Empire send us into dark ages. I think it was the conversion of Rome to Christianity that sent us into the dark ages. It was the denial of all the, the cultural and the science that preceded that event. And it wasn't so much that all of a sudden the fall of the government somehow lost all that knowledge. It was a superstition ruled

Ben

Okay.

Gene

gene@seine.com.

Ben

I just, I I hear you and I get it, but I, uh,

Gene

shaking your head. I know.

Ben

yeah,

Gene

Uh, and then, and the British Empire was not based around, uh, you know, a particular religion that ended up getting, uh, stamped out. It was

Ben

I would say that the only reason why Human Knowledge survived the Dark Ages was Christianity.

Gene

Well, that's just a false statement.

Ben

No. The monks preserved a lot of shit.

Gene

The majority of that knowledge was actually preserved outside of Christian areas and areas that were, it wasn't heresy to have that knowledge. Um, if you want, I thank Islam for something. A lot of it is the preservation of science that preceded Christianity.

Ben

Yeah. And the number zero.

Gene

Sure, sure. Well, all numbers that we use currently, the, the, all the numerals that we use, instead of Roman numerals, you can think the, uh, Arabs for as well.

Ben

Yes.

Gene

So empires fall, new empires rise. So the real question here is who's rising and who's falling? And I made a prediction earlier in this episode, uh, which I don't think is very popular. I don't think many people are making this predict. Is that within 50 years, I think we're gonna see the rise of African Nations

Ben

maybe, um, know, it, it, it, so there's a book, um, written by Henline that I would point to forums, freehold, where.

Gene

now. Book Recommendation

Ben

Yeah. And a lot of people will say it's racist or whatever, but it's an interesting book. And just take it as a treatise on, uh, humans. And it wouldn't matter if it were the subject for the African countries or Asian or Europe, it's, the point is during the Cuban missile crisis, it goes the wrong way. And Russia and the US annihilate the northern hemisphere, and the only continent that was basically untouched is the Russian, or is the African continent, African continent. And they, you know, uh, several hundred years in the future have taken over civilization. And, you know, they're not great people. You know, they, they, they're very, it's a very racially charged book in a lot of ways, but

Gene

Are you a Black Panther denier?

Ben

Huh?

Gene

Are you a Black Panther denier?

Ben

No, actually the book talks about an advance of further technologically advanced culture than we are today. So, you know, there's that, um, it's, it's just the slave holding nature that's some people find objectionable, but

Gene

Fair enough. But

Ben

realistic nature of humans.

Gene

be a mistake of the Western world is the, uh, abandonment of slavery.

Ben

I don't see that as a mistake, but

Gene

Well, we'll find out.

Ben

okay.

Gene

I mean, you know, if I, I, like I said, in, in the foundation, I kind of really think that, Uh, that what most people consider to be the good guys are not really the good guys.

Ben

in a lot of times. And, you know, I would say that the only approach I would say on this is that I believe that. If you're a free individual, you should have the right to sell yourself. Uh, if you own your body, then you should be able to give,

Gene

Yeah. I, I think, I think that everyone should be born free,

Ben

Yes, absolutely.

Gene

after that, uh, should not be limited by, um, you know, government edict.

Ben

Yeah.

Gene

You wanna sell yourself, that's fine. Somebody you sold yourself to wants to sell yourself to somebody else. That's fine.

Ben

Well, I mean, a lot of, uh, a lot of people who came to America came as indentured servants, you know, um, they, they came

Gene

the, the silent majority in.

Ben

yes, absolutely came over owing to a colony or to an individual, their passage and the cost of their passage. Uh, and they had to work.

Gene

Now you're, you're talking about the Mexicans and the Coyotes right now? I, I assume

Ben

No, I'm talking about the white settlers that came, you

Gene

know, I know, but it's the exact same deal. It's like literally like your passage is gonna cost you 5,000 US dollars, which you don't have. So now you gotta work that off after they sneak you into the US to pay them off before, you know, if you don't, then they'll take you up.

Ben

Yeah, well, regardless, the, the, the point is, you know, that was an economic tool that a lot of settlers used, and this country would not be here if that economic tool had not exist.

Gene

And, and Incidently, the Governors of the Colonies Pre American Revolution also used that to that advantage by getting, uh, labor that they could literally purchase for the price of the ticket.

Ben

Well, and here here's, but it was a win-win because a, you had this new continent that needed to be conquered, if you will, or tamed and turned into farmland. And you had people whose economic situation in the uk, in France, in, you know, uh, various parts of the world was such that they had no opportunity. They were a burden on society. And by them willingly going into that and getting freedom and land and creating a life for themselves, you know, it, there was no downside to this. Now were some people abused and taken advantage of? I'm absolutely sure, given human

Gene

Yeah, human nature. Exactly. Which, you know, is, is still a stark contrast to Australia, which was just simply a penal colony

Ben

Well,

Gene

about 20 years ago.

Ben

there were, there was a colony as well, but Yes.

Gene

Well, yeah, you sure You needed the guards for the penal colony. So there were some free men in Australia, but

Ben

Mm-hmm.

Gene

in general, it's safe to say that Australia is basically, uh, you know, what happens when you, when you have large prison?

Ben

Yeah. But you know, why did they have guards? Why not just take the boat, dump'em off, leave,

Gene

Well, and uh, it's fair enough, but I, I think that, uh, given that Australia was owned by the Crown, they, they didn't want to just simply give up the island. They wanted to utilize the, the penal colony labor. To try and make that a better island for the crown.

Ben

It's a continent gene.

Gene

It's still an island.

Ben

So is North America on island

Gene

It's an our, our capel actually.

Ben

Okay.

Gene

Well, it is. I mean, it stretches from the very north, uh, in the arctic all the way down to the south.

Ben

yeah, this, this is like, uh, this is like the, uh, debate over when does a pond become a lake. You know, there's no clear definition.

Gene

Yeah, it's a good point because, uh, is a privately owned lake, a lake or a pond, regardless of size,

Ben

So, you know, it depends. And I don't

Gene

if it's, and if it's a pond made of cement is a cement pond or swimming,

Ben

indeed, I don't know.

Gene

So we,

Ben

Fuzzy definitions.

Gene

the, the hard questions here.

Ben

Yes.

Gene

Oh man. So what else going on, man? It's, uh, seems like we've covered a few topics here. What, what else is interesting?

Ben

Uh, well, have you been tracking the Oregon gun law?

Gene

Uh, not really. I've heard about it and it seems insane, but that's what people voted for, so they're gonna get it.

Ben

Well, I don't know. There's some pretty good challenges going up against it right now, um, that we only just need to watch and hope and pray for, because if we can get a stop

Gene

their gun regulations.

Ben

Well, they've been losing court battles that

Gene

Yeah,

Ben

the, the enforcement of the, uh, gun regulations in California is still very much up in the air. Um, Anyway, just something to be watching. Uh, not a lot of full details on, you know, the court cases. Everybody can go read about the, the, uh, Oregon law, but essentially magazine capacity bans, um, uh, you know, stock traits. Very, very California esque on

Gene

a little worried about the fact that that congress passed a, an update of the assault weapons ban with the current Democrat led Congress. And there's actually a fairly decent chance that the, uh, Senate is going to pass their own version of that once it can be convenes because they think they have enough Republicans that are gonna go, uh, for gun regulations given all the, all the incidents happening with guns, these.

Ben

and maybe, um, I, I hope that is not the case. And the question is whether right now the real question is whether they can get it through the process before, uh, before January, because quite frankly, the there, my understanding is there are enough differences between the House and Senate bills as it stands right now, that it is, um, unlikely to make it through reconciliation before

Gene

So you, you think the updated house can kill it in re reconciliation? That would be good.

Ben

Well, I mean, if the bill doesn't get passed before the Congress, it would have to be reintroduced anyway before the rollover, the new Congress. And given the tax implications of the current legislation, um, that has to originate in the house and the new Republican majority isn't gonna originate that bill.

Gene

yeah. Yeah, well, hopefully, hopefully that'll be the case cuz uh, it, it's just, it's knee jerk trigger, absolutely insanity. That they keep taking isolated incidents of people that are mentally unstable to use them as some kind of a prop to demonstrate that, uh, a whole class of tools needs to be taken off the market.

Ben

Well, and you know, have we not figured out that, um, you can't legislate morality, so, and you can't prevent crime. That's the thing I I is trying to prevent crime. A crime prevention bill is moronic. What you do is you enforce and you punish when a crime occurs. And a crime by definition is harm to one's property, one's life, and one's liberty. Anything else is not a crime.

Gene

Well, and I, and I think there generally the perpetrators of these types of mass shootings are also dead. There's no, nobody to sentence after the fact. This thing in Colorado is somewhat unusual. Um, but the idea of taking something which happens a fraction of a percentage of 1% of the time, and then changing gravely, changing the regulations for the entirety of the population, uh, it, it's, you know, I, I don't know, uh, any other word other than tyrannical to call.

Ben

in removing people's right to defend themselves, you know, just like the capacity, uh, issue on the magazines. You know, the, and this is something that I really like, uh, some of the challenges to, uh, the terminology in the bill. So one of the things that they're challenging it on is, you know, banning of high capacity mags. Um, you mean. Standard capacity max. So yeah.

Gene

Well, and I don't, I don't know if you listened to Ellen thing, but Darren was saying they just passed regulations in Illinois, obviously stemming from Chicago, that effectively disallow the police to arrest people in cases of, uh, burglary. So somebody breaks into your house and you call the cops. The cops can show up and take down information, but they will not arrest that person even though they're still standing there.

Ben

burglary, or trespassing,

Gene

Uh, I think it was, I think he said burglary.

Ben

huh?

Gene

Like somebody literally break it, like breaking in and stealing shit from you. If the cops show up and they're still there, the cops will not do anything other than collect information. That's the way he described it.

Ben

I mean, You're just gonna have people dying then.

Gene

I, I mean, I would hope so. I, I think more people need to start treating any kind of intrusion, even if it's not armed as an assault on your person and responding accordingly.

Ben

I,

Gene

Somebody breaks in, I don't care if they have a weapon or not, they're not leaving on their,

Ben

I very much fully agree. Yeah. I mean, here's the thing. If you can't rely on your society to, okay, if you want a disarmed populace, then you have to have a very strong societal agreement that you are going to punish

Gene

right?

Ben

any, um, any threat to someone's life, liberty, or property.

Gene

Yeah. Like, uh, Stalinist Russia or, you know, China during Mao

Ben

Uh,

Gene

good examples of unarmed societies.

Ben

yeah. And then you have the government to worry about,

Gene

Mm-hmm. But like when the government is responsible for millions of deaths of it's own citizens, um, having an unarmed society.

Ben

becomes a problem in of

Gene

You know, it, it kinda, it, it makes sense of that point.

Ben

and I don't want to make it sound like I'm for an unarmed society because I'm not, but I'm just saying we're bri, the, the libs who are sitting there wanting to take the guns are also then saying, we're not going to enforce xyz uh, crimes. You know, Austin, if something is stolen, you know, it's, if it's under, I think it's$2,000 at this point, they're not even going to investigate it. That's insanity. So you're breaking the social contract on both ends. Um, that's my only point, which.

Gene

Well, and I, I, I really pray to a non-existent God that, uh, they're going to sorry, I have to get that in there, that they will end up taking Austin's incorporation away. That would be so awesome.

Ben

Dude, it looks like that may

Gene

Cool. Would that be? Man, our city is so shitty, full of Californians that we're gonna make it not a city

Ben

Yeah. The, I I think that there is a damn good chance that that passes,

Gene

that would be so awesome. I would love to see that

Ben

the district of Austin.

Gene

it's, it almost turns into like a penal colony, just put'em. Put a big old fencer on Austin

Ben

Yeah.

Gene

and if you wanna leave you, you need to get permission to enter Texas.

Ben

Can you imagine, uh, Adler's reaction to that?

Gene

Oh, it'd be hilarious. The last mayor of Austin ever.

Ben

I, I guarantee you he'd use it to run for governor or try. He's

Gene

Oh

Ben

looking for that excuse for a while.

Gene

Uhhuh Given what he is done to this city. Yeah, I wish he would run for governor. That would ensure there's no chance in hell that he.

Ben

Yeah. I dunno. He keeps winning in Austin, but I, I, he would, I think, get

Gene

is not Texas, dude, please.

Ben

but I think he'd be beaten worse than Beto. So

Gene

Oh, totally. I mean, I, I'm shocked at how, how many votes Beto got, frankly,

Ben

yeah. Yeah, indeed.

Gene

this just tells you the number of stupid people here. Have you been watching that series of the Bees, the Babylon Bees, uh, Californians moving to Texas.

Ben

I've seen a couple of.

Gene

Uh, I think they've got five episodes now. That is the best series I've ever seen them do. It's, uh, every episode is hilarious. They're all full of truisms. The actors they have playing these parts are doing a great job. And I mean, they're, they're just professional actors. It's not like they're, you know, people that work for the Bee. Uh, they, they did a casting call and hired people to play these parts, but they're doing a phenomenal job. And the irony in this, That those actors that are playing, these folks do live in California,

Ben

Geez, Yeah.

Gene

so they're genuinely Californians coming to Texas and, and uh, one of the last episodes they had was they end up at a Bucky's

Ben

yeah.

Gene

and they're blown away by holy shit. This is a thing, which is a reaction that most people that have come here that I've taken to Buckys have as well, is like, this is a gas station. This is not a gas station.

Ben

Buckys is awesome

Gene

Other states don't have Buckys.

Ben

They're starting to Yeah,

Gene

yeah, but I mean, as a concept, like people can't imagine a gas station that was 72 pumps and a Walmart size area for buying stuff. They're like, what

Ben

Yeah. It's uh, it's pretty cool, but, uh, you know,

Gene

I love Buckys. It's.

Ben

well, and, but people, well, why would you want That is a question that some of the people who haven't seen it, you know, often pose. Well, because when you stop to get gas, you can amazing selection of jerky, food, everything else, you know, they've got a deli there.

Gene

and their food is good. I actually have Bucky's barbecue sauce in my fridge.

Ben

Yeah, they've got some pretty good food and you know, they've got unique snacks and everything else. Anything you could, could want. It's not like stopping at a little convenient store or even a truck stop, you

Gene

it's like a giant Canadian store.

Ben

Yes.

Gene

Uh, and they have, um, they add blue in pumps. So as somebody drives a diesel,

Ben

Mm-hmm.

Gene

I can fill up both my diesel and my ad blue, uh, at Bucky's from a pump.

Ben

Yeah. Your diesel exhaust fluid.

Gene

Mm-hmm.

Ben

Your pig piss.

Gene

yeah. Pick piece, which comes from China, which is hilarious. Of all the places in Texas where you have more fricking hogs than we know what to do with, and we're importing the hog piss from China.

Ben

well, you know, uh, it. I mean, urea injection actually as a cataly, uh, as a catalytic was power in power plants before it was ever in diesels. Um, it does reduce NOx emissions and things like that. Um, you know,

Gene

And what in UIA is doing that? Like what chemically speaking, do you know?

Ben

the ammonia, uh,

Gene

It just doesn't, it doesn't have to come from piss. It just has to be

Ben

no. And in fact, power plants, like a modern coal powered plant would use anhydro ammonia

Gene

Okay. That makes more sense.

Ben

Um, but anhd ammonia in of itself is a

Gene

More volatile.

Ben

thing. Well, it, it's dangerous, uh, you know, farmers use it and things like that,

Gene

I don't know, man. I grew up around that stuff. That's every.

Ben

w okay, so quantity

Gene

Farmland. Yeah.

Ben

So in the scale that A modern power

Gene

gallons,

Ben

no, no, no, no, no. Lot more than that. So one of the power plants that. My former company owned, uh, had enough Anh hydros ammonia on site that if a catastrophic leak were to occur was enough for potential seven mile kill radius.

Gene

Wow. That's pretty impressive. Now, was it, was it ammonia that blew up what blew up in West Texas a few years back?

Ben

Well, the, that in, in literally in a town called West that was a fertilizer plant,

Gene

And, and, but so what part of that fertilizer blew up is, I guess, where I'm getting at? What, what was the, it was nitrates, right?

Ben

right? It was either nitrates or armonia, which most fertilizer is a mix

Gene

Do you remember what it was?

Ben

No, I don't. Uh, but, uh,

Gene

don't either.

Ben

anyone who's seen

Gene

I remember. I remember that explosion because I, I drove by there, uh, a few days after that event and you could literally see it from the highway.

Ben

Oh yeah. From 35. Yep. It, it was devastating to that town. I mean, it, it, that, you know, other than the loss of life and everything else, I mean

Gene

Like how many pastries were harmed in in that event?

Ben

Well, that's the thing is other than, you

Gene

I'm making an inside joke. People don't know this, but West is famous for their Czech of Slovakian pastries.

Ben

Yes. The check stop is in West and anyone who's driven down 35,

Gene

pastry things there as well.

Ben

yes,

Gene

It's not just Czech stuff.

Ben

I, I understand. But, um, that's the famous one. But the problem for West, which is just north of, uh, Waco, uh, on 35, the, that was their main industry, and that is gone. So that, that has really hurt that town a lot.

Gene

They had a couple of barbecue places closed right after that too, which is unfortunate.

Ben

Mm-hmm. Yep.

Gene

It is kind of a pass through town though. Every, basically between Dallas and Austin or, uh, Dallas or, uh, well any of the cities south of there I guess. But on the way back and forth from Dallas, you always drive through West.

Ben

Yep. As long as you're not going to Fort Worth, you

Gene

yeah, yeah, yeah. Fort Worth would be a different route. Yeah, that's true. Uh, is there a midway food point on the drive from Fort Worth, or, sorry, from, uh, Austin to Houston? I'm less familiar with that route. I've gone there a few times, but not very many

Ben

Uh, you going down two 90 or what?

Gene

probably.

Ben

Uh, I don't know. It's been a long time since I've made that drive that direction. So, I mean, you could always, uh, um, yeah, I mean, not

Gene

West is kind of a natural little, Hey, let's stop filled up the gas and get some snacks kind of place,

Ben

Yeah,

Gene

so than Waco.

Ben

absolutely. Well, and you know, Waco, Waco's turning around though. So Waco's one of those cities that is actually, uh, getting some decent food now and a little bit of a revival in downtown and, but Waco is one of

Gene

stadium help?

Ben

Yes. Uh, and you know, Baylor is definitely a thing, but um, you know, if you go to downtown, uh, Waco, it's architecturally the 1950s and that's it. Um, you know, Oklahoma, uh, in, I'll be in Tulsa in a few days, so that's part of why I'm thinking about this. Oklahoma City and Tulsa, very much the same vibe, except they have modern skyscrapers and things like that as well, but Waco, For whatever reason, never took off the way Houston, Dallas. And, you know, it, it was a fairly large city, even in the fifties. And, but it's just never built up any industry like the rest

Gene

Yeah. What is the industry other than Baylor?

Ben

cattle.

Gene

Okay. Hmm.

Ben

Yep. Speaking of,

Gene

Cattle or Waco.

Ben

cattle. I think, uh, I think that little side business I was talking about might be, uh, coming to fruition. So we'll

Gene

Good.

Ben

Gotta figure out some of the tax stuff

Gene

Okay.

Ben

a way to move some money around without paying too much of a penalty. But,

Gene

Hmm.

Ben

So

Gene

come out and help.

Ben

okay. Well, yeah, so, uh, yeah.

Gene

No. If you get some, if you get hogs or anything, I'll totally come out.

Ben

Well, we're looking at starting with a few cows right now and we'll go from there, but

Gene

are you gonna get like a yearlings or what are you gonna get?

Ben

Yeah. So we're gonna, you know, probably start, uh, with nothing too fancy, probably just, uh, regular Angus and, you know, uh, go from there, get around, get'em around

Gene

do dairy as well, or just purely the, uh, okay.

Ben

beef, beef only. But, uh, the, the original thought and where we want to get to, I think is, you know, doing longhorns grass fed and finished and direct to consumer sort of thing. Um, uh,

Gene

I, I feel like somehow this is a bad thing, but I have to say that I, I actually prefer corn finished.

Ben

well a lot of people

Gene

think they taste better.

Ben

Yeah, it's a milder flavor and it's a more marbling fattier meat.

Gene

Yeah. I like grass fed, but corn finished.

Ben

Yeah. And you know, we may do a variety, uh, but I really think from a health standpoint and where I've gotten to is grass fed and finished. Um,

Gene

But it's better for the cow for sure.

Ben

yeah, I mean, if, if you feed the cow nothing but grain, it will eat itself to death. So

Gene

Yeah, for sure.

Ben

anyway, but uh, looking at the numbers and looking at the, the price per cow that places like K and C are getting is, uh, you know, pretty astonishing. So I think there's a business workable business model there.

Gene

Well, and, uh, on the last episode of Under Hunting, I hate to keep going back to my other podcast, but we literally were comparing beef prices in our cities. Uh, and it's insanely cheap in Chicago, but. I guess Chicago has historically had a large beef,

Ben

It's where a lot of stuff because of the railroads. Yeah. Back in the day.

Gene

And I think that might be partly responsible for their even current cheaper pricing than what we have here. Which ironically, this is where we grow beef, but it's cheaper in Chicago.

Ben

Yeah. I mean, you know, k and c cattle for a whole cow, which, you know, they, they estimate, uh, you know, between four 50 and 500, uh, pounds of

Gene

Yep.

Ben

is$3,100.

Gene

Yeah. And I, I looked at doing that, uh, about two years ago, a, a friend of mine bought half a cow and he was like, yeah, next time, do you wanna split one? And I'm like, yeah, it might be a good way to go. And then I thought, yeah, that, you know, I can get a freezer for cheap enough. I should be doable. But then when I started looking at the cost, I'm like, holy. This is a big commitment. I mean, I'm sure I'll eat all that meat eventually, but that's kinda like committing to a very, especially, you know, keep in mind I'm a single dude, right. I'm not feeding a family with a bunch of kids. It's like, that's a lot of beef, even a half a cow.

Ben

Yeah. And you know, one, one of the things they're doing though is you, you have, yes, it's a big commitment. They're getting a better than they would get at auction price for the beef. And they're, you know, doing it in different packs. They're selling individual steaks. You know, very few people are actually just going and getting a half a cow or a

Gene

Well, and the cost of butchering is significant.

Ben

It is, it's not insignificant.

Gene

Yeah. So I guess if I, I'd almost be tempted to go take a, a, uh, course in butchering myself and spend the money on that. And then buy the meats as a, uh, you know, a half cow or a full cow split, and then do the butchering myself

Ben

Okay.

Gene

versus paying somebody that much money just to do the butchering.

Ben

It's pretty hard to do though.

Gene

I don't know. I've watched a lot of videos, dude. It doesn't

Ben

I, I understand, but I'm just saying weight and moving and you have to have a

Gene

a significant, yeah, yeah, yeah. Well, you would presumably rent that, but yeah, for for sure.

Ben

Well when I was growing

Gene

are not light

Ben

yeah. When I was growing up, the cows that we were raising and then some of'em selling, some of'em slaughtering for our own food, there was a mobile butcher that would come out

Gene

There you go.

Ben

you know, had a trailer and boom, there you go. Um, And, you know, part of it was, uh, the, it was interesting because the cost changed on what you wanted to keep. So if they got to take the bones that obviously weren't part of a cut, and the organs and the hide and all that, it was a substantially reduced cost. And the reason why is they would take that and sell it.

Gene

Yeah.

Ben

So, yeah.

Gene

Yeah, exactly. I've never, like, when I was young, I was always only around dairy farms. I was never around, uh, beef farms. Um, so I played with plenty of cows as a little kid and stuff, and, but I never, uh, never had to be around them getting slaughtered.

Ben

Yeah. Well, you know, it's, it's a thing that exists, so

Gene

Well, I remember the first time I saw a pig getting slaughtered. That was pretty, uh, pretty strong reaction.

Ben

really

Gene

They squeal

Ben

yeah. Yeah, yeah. But I

Gene

lot.

Ben

I don't know. I grew up hunting, so you

Gene

Well, yeah. But there's a difference when you take a live animal and you start cutting it.

Ben

Well, you don't do that.

Gene

Well you do back in the old country.

Ben

Well, that's a dumb way to do it.

Gene

Mm.

Ben

You kill the animal, then you do it

Gene

Okay. So you hit it with a hammer first, then you cut it.

Ben

Sure. But anyway, I mean, you make sure the animal is you, you do it as humanely as possible. This is one of the reasons, like when I'm hunting, you know,

Gene

get all the blood out, you have to make sure the cart's still beating when they start draining the blood,

Ben

yeah. So this is one of the arguments that I make for when I'm, when hunting, you know, not taking a torso shot, taking a headshot on a deer, because you're either gonna miss it or you're gonna kill it. You're not gonna, you're not gonna do one of the two.

Gene

okay. The danger is that you hit it but it's not fatal and you, you cut it, like you shoot it and you blow off its teeth. Now the thing's gonna starve to death, cuz it, it can still run. It's not gonna bleed out, but it can't

Ben

when I say a head or neck shot, I'm talking about back of the head neck. So you're either gonna miss high or low, or

Gene

that may be where you're aiming. Doesn't mean that's where you're gonna hit there is wind, you know?

Ben

Okay. It depends. In Texas, you're not taking a long shot, dude.

Gene

fair enough. I thought you were talking about back in Idaho

Ben

Well, I mean, if you're taking a three, 400 yard shot plus, then sure we can, we can talk

Gene

Center of Body.

Ben

But then again, you blow out along or whatever, you still have the trouble tracking it down. But in Idaho, losing animals is, a lot less prevalent because you know it's easier to track. It's not scrub, scrub brush that you're going through.

Gene

But I think also this is a good argument for a high powered rifle and not the minimum necessary for the kill, because you wanna have something that even if you're not exactly right on target, will still bleed it out.

Ben

Yeah, you, you want a big enough wo channel and all that. I agree. And that, I mean, that's why I hunt with 30

Gene

you've never, uh, hunted with a, uh, shotgun with slugs, have you?

Ben

uh Yeah, yeah. As a kid.

Gene

Oh, you have? Okay. Okay, got it. Yep. Cause that's always something I thought would be, uh, a good way of doing it. I've never done it. I've always just used a 3 0 8, uh, every time a gun, deer hunting. But, uh, but a theoretically speaking like that would force you to be a little closer to the animal and more likely that you would have a faster kill.

Ben

Yeah. Well, you know, there, there are lots of different options. I personally, you know, you know me, I like my high powered rifles,

Gene

Mm-hmm.

Ben

Got to do a little bit of shooting this weekend and a little bit of

Gene

Oh, nice.

Ben

it, it was nice. Yeah. Yeah. I took out the, uh, the m uh, SOCOM 16, so M one A and my beara and, uh, my pistol and yeah, we, we had some fun.

Gene

How's the begar treating you?

Ben

Oh, I love it. It's a, it's a great gun.

Gene

I still need to buy the optic for my, um, for my handgun that I bought recently.

Ben

Yeah. The, in that optic man, I, I was letting one of my cousins and her husband, uh, shoot it. And you know everybody who's shot that, who has any pistol experience, everybody thinks the optic is a game changer, especially for a defense weapon.

Gene

Yeah. Yeah. Makes sense. I, um, I remember back in the old days, meaning the, uh, 1990s, um, there was occasionally people that had scopes on their handguns. And the attachment typically back then was, uh, screws to the frame over the slide. then a, um,

Ben

Yeah, but it was a literal scope and

Gene

It was a scope, it was literally, it was not usually a red dot, it was like a small scope. Um, but shooting those guns, of course you tend to be way more accurate than iron sites

Ben

Yeah,

Gene

at, at the gun range.

Ben

Well, I in Iron site, so it's a very big difference there because iron sites, uh, you know, are not optimal. A scope is pretty much optimal as far as accuracy is concerned. And I'm not saying the red dot, it makes you more accurate. In fact, it makes me less accurate because it's a sim six MOA dot meaning.

Gene

that was your choice.

Ben

It, it is my choice, but I think it's the right choice for the purpose for the gun because easy acquisition of the target and hitting, uh, hitting a human torso is the purpose of that gun. Right? that's why I wanted that bigger, brighter dot. And even a three MOA dot, you know, is a vast difference from your iron sites. So, yeah.

Gene

Oh three on my age. Yeah, I guess it is. I mean, it should be pretty close the size of the, of the middle dot, uh, hiring sites,

Ben

Well, yeah.

Gene

I don't know, but I do still need to pick one up. And I, I think I'm once again leaning towards getting Thet Trican.

Ben

Yeah. The battery life though.

Gene

Well, and that's part of the reason why is um, because the tricon you can get with the fiber optic as well,

Ben

Well then you're talking real expensive

Gene

Oh yeah. Yeah. It's

Ben

you've got the Okay,

Gene

Yeah, but you know the old saying, you should never have a sign on a gun that's cheaper than the gun.

Ben

ah, I, I disagree with that.

Gene

Well, it's an old saying though.

Ben

I understand. But technology has progressed, so

Gene

Yeah. So, I don't know, I still haven't pulled a trigger on it, but I'm definitely leaning towards, uh, the tricon unless somebody else makes one that has fiber optics as well, having dual illumination. I wish they still made the old one they used to have, which had tridium and fiber optics for the pistol. And I know it was bigger, it was less, you know, like the new ones are all super lightweight, but I just like the idea of no batteries.

Ben

Well, I like that idea as well. But then the tridium, you still have to replace every few years and everything else, so there's no,

Gene

still haven't sent, I still haven't sent my scopes in. I mean, my, my tridium updates are gonna be over 800 bucks right now, for scopes that I already own.

Ben

Yeah,

Gene

Uh, so it is

Ben

that's the cost of a scope

Gene

Uh, yeah, it's a cost of aScope, not the scopes that I got, but it is absolutely, and it's a, you're gonna do it for the rest of your life. Because that Tridium lasts about seven to 10 years and then you gotta get it swept out again. I wish that was just cheaper. I mean, it would be great if we had cheap Tridium, but we're no longer buying it from Russia.

Ben

Well, and, you know, Tridium has handling issues and everything else. The, the watchmakers in the twenties or thirties cost us that one.

Gene

Yeah.

Ben

Tridium

Gene

that was, that was radium. Yeah,

Ben

Was it radium? I thought it

Gene

that That was radium. Yeah. Yep.

Ben

Yeah.

Gene

Um, alright, well I dunno. It's good enough. We've covered a few topics. You got anything else or should we wrap things up?

Ben

Well, we need to wrap because I've gotta run to, uh, yet another holiday experience.

Gene

Oh, fun

Ben

yeah, that's the way we gotta cut it a little short this week,

Gene

I think we're about close to on time. Either way. Good enough. Um, and, uh, yeah, so we'll, we'll get back on it. And then I gotta, I know I, I mentioned it last time, but I've been looking at what's available and, uh, a few of these websites that lets you, uh, essentially licensed music. Um, also talked to a guy that does some independent music creation stuff, like Musician, I guess would be what those people are called.

Ben

That would be what those people are called, gene

Gene

so I got some options, uh, that I want to, to kinda take a look at. But once again, this episode, no, no music, but we'll get there eventually.

Ben

All right, gene. We'll catch you later.

Gene

Take care.

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