Puff and Drinks
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Puff and Drinks
Reparations Reimagined: Credit, Care, and Generational Wealth
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Listen to our full podcastEver wonder what real repair would look like if we stopped arguing slogans and started drafting policy? We pour the drinks, pass the mic, and build a blueprint from the ground up—equal parts history lesson, street-smart economics, and unfiltered barbershop honesty. The question isn’t whether pain can be priced; it’s which levers actually move families from surviving to compounding wealth.
We trace the gap back through slavery, Jim Crow, and redlining, then test competing ideas: direct cash, forty acres, or both. From Tulsa’s Black Wall Street to today’s credit deserts, we unpack why location, ownership, and cheap capital matter more than a one-time check. The conversation sharpens into a practical package with outsized impact: wipe medical and predatory debts, guarantee free healthcare, and reset credit scores to prime. It’s not flashy, but it’s potent—lower borrowing costs, higher approval rates, and healthier households that can finally invest in homes, education, and small businesses. We talk guardrails too: fair lending enforcement, algorithm audits, and procurement pipelines that turn new ventures into booked calendars.
Politics and power aren’t an afterthought. We break down why votes beat vibes, how student loan relief revealed the battlefield, and what cities and states can do now—municipal debt forgiveness, hospital charity expansions, small business guarantees—while federal debates grind on. Along the way, there’s humor, real talk, and a lot of heart, because the point isn’t waiting for a perfect bill; it’s stacking wins that compound like interest. Pull up a chair for a conversation that respects history, honors agency, and reaches for solutions big enough to matter and specific enough to pass.
If this hits home, tap follow, share it with a friend who loves policy and plain talk, and leave a review with your one-line reparations plan—cash, land, or systems change? We’ll read the best ones on air.
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Jimmie: 0:00
Cue to music. I know how to song my phone. I should. You should. I should. You should, sir. And this is Puffin' Drinks Yet Again on another Fun Feel Friday. Yes, yes, yes. You know what, gang? We have an interesting topic. But before we begin, guess what? My name is Rodney. Love throwing it over to Byron B.
Byron: 0:27
And I have a pairing later on. It's a check this out. A Tatiana Groovy Blue with a Cooper Craft bourbon.
Jimmie: 0:42
Oh, we're gonna have to talk about that. We're gonna have to talk about that.
Byron: 0:45
We just got drunk over this other weekend. Yeah, okay. So there we go. All right, there we go.
Jimmie: 0:48
All right, all right. Again, I'm Jimmy Jefferson and everything else. I'm looking forward to hearing all about the next pairing. Again, we are puffing drinks. And my partner on the other side, Dennis.
Dennis: 0:58
Dennis, Lamar Cotton, aka alias, whatever, DLC. There we go.
Jimmie: 1:03
DLC. DLC in the house, y'all. We have to toast it gang. Bring it in. Bring it in.
Rodney: 1:09
We gotta toast it game.
Jimmie: 1:10
There we go. There we go.
Rodney: 1:12
Yeah.
Byron: 1:13
I love Fridays.
Dennis: 1:16
You know what? I do too, man.
Jimmie: 1:20
It's the end of the week, y'all. We can do it all.
Dennis: 1:23
I never thought about that until just now.
Byron: 1:26
Fridays, man. You know, you work hard all week. Oh, you do. Yep. And by the time you hit Friday, man, your body's beat down. Yep. But then when your mind too. Yeah, your mind too. But then when we come here, it's just like everything releases, man. There you go. And then when the show is over, like, I gotta go.
Jimmie: 1:44
Well, you know, as long as you got your sorghum and cornbread. As long as you got your sorghum and cornbread, you can ask, you know, when we get home, you just dip your cornbread in your sorghum. There you go. No, no, it's like they'll all be sleep when I get in.
Dennis: 2:03
Oh my god. I like that one.
Byron: 2:08
What you got, Dennis? What you got, sir?
Dennis: 2:10
All right. We we've talked about this before, but for some reason it's on my mind. Okay. Reparations. Reparations, reparations. For those of you who may not have a clue of what that means, so let me give you a short story. All right. Now, if you may remember, our peoples were in slavery at one time. Yeah, yeah. The hell you say it's true. We weren't there, but it's true. Our forefathers and our foremothers and grandmothers were slaves. And you know, we got set free, blah blah blah. And then somewhere around the way, some good old white boy. Uh I don't remember if it was George Washington or whatever, or Abraham Lincoln. Yeah, you know, they said, Well, you know what? I think we should pay them, we should we should compensate them for the pain and misery of 400 years of slavery. Okay. Well, that ain't never happened. That never happened. I'm sorry, that was poor English. That did not ever happen. We knew what you meant. We knew what you meant. Don't know what you mean.
Jimmie: 3:17
That ain't never happened. That ain't never happened.
Byron: 3:19
I never received my 40 over a mule.
Jimmie: 3:23
Yeah, I I I you know it all depends on how the mule looks. I mean, you know, it just depends. Not nether, not netter. You know, I've drove, I've driven some mules. I bet you driven some.
Dennis: 3:32
It wasn't yours.
Jimmie: 3:34
There you go.
Dennis: 3:36
There you go. All right. So so let me set the stage. There we go. Let me see if I can put this in perspective. Okay. The Japanese got reparations, they were compensated.
unknown: 3:47
Two.
Jimmie: 3:48
Yeah, they did.
Dennis: 3:49
The the the Native American Indians, with all due respect and love. I I don't know if it was, I don't know if I could call it reparations where they got casinos.
Jimmie: 3:59
No. No, no.
Dennis: 4:03
That's not good all of us at the same time. All right, all right, hey, all right, all right, okay. So the bottom line is this every now and then, at least once a year for the last 20 years, people get together and they start saying, Well, reparations, reparations, reparations. Now, my question is this in in 2025, in 2025, I'm gonna put this in two questions. Question number one Are you waiting for reparations? Okay, question number two at this point, do we deserve reparations? Let's go with the first one. Are we, and I ain't saying us, but you know, I know, I know, we know what you mean, bro. Yeah, all right. Are we waiting around for reparations? Because in my opinion, it ain't gonna happen, and I'm not waiting around. Now, you know, if I get a check in the mail from the United States government for a couple of thousand dollars, we so sorry we put your your your your descendants, you know, in slavery. I'll take it and say thank you. Even if it came from Donald Trump, I don't care.
Jimmie: 5:10
But the question is not gonna happen, right? The government shut down, of course.
Dennis: 5:14
Yeah, yeah. I agree on that. The government is shut down. So even if he said, Yeah, I'm thinking about it, the government is shut down. Right. But the bottom line is, are we waiting for it? Should we wait for it?
Byron: 5:26
Uh okay, because oh I'm gonna say that. I'm not waiting for it. No, I'm gonna go get it. I'm trying to go out and get what I deserve. And if I'm gonna wait for it, it's never gonna happen. It's never gonna happen. And and I want people to be aware of that. It's never gonna happen. Never gonna happen. The time that this was put out there, okay, it was near near. I'm gonna say that. It was near as many black folks as it is now as it is now. So now, if you gave reparations right now to every black folk right now, we'll take over the country.
Jimmie: 6:10
That was the look, I I I would just like to say that you know, there wouldn't be a KFC open. You know, I'll pay for that. I'm gonna pay for that. You're gonna pay for that one. I know I'm paying for that one. You are, you know, yeah. I I I I Dennis, I you know, just to answer your questionnaire things, it's never gonna happen. No, not not in this life, probably not even in the next, you know. Well, now I have I have a filibuster.
Dennis: 6:37
A filibuster?
Jimmie: 6:38
Oh my god. Whoa. You do understand we are not able to spell that shit, okay? But go on, go on, like I said, go on with your stury, yeah.
Dennis: 6:48
Go ahead and filibuster. I love this show because we are the pinnacle of intelligence.
Jimmie: 6:53
You assume way too goddamn much on that one now. When we look at reparations innocence, it's to repair, all right. Right. I like that, yeah. Okay, so now there's no way we could repair from the anguish, from you know, everything that we've endured, but we can endure somewhat financially. Now, one thing I'd like to point out what are the two major wealth builders on this planet? It is inheritance or you're married into it. Okay, we were stripped of both of those because through child slavery, we were meant, our children were meant, our grandchildren were meant to be enslaved regardless. Speak the truth, brother. Okay, 400 plus years, too. Yeah, yeah, yeah. So now what I am looking at because again, we've started out 400 years at our existence of being behind economically, because that's the only thing that we could get economically, right? And then even after slavery, we've endured Jim Crow, we've endured redlining, we've endured every ism leading up to the 20th century up until now. Yep. Because I mean even still, but now, but now I would have to say, and I agree 100% that it may not happen because the only reason it may not happen is because we don't understand how we need to make it happen, and we can't agree upon what we want for it to happen. You're gonna have everybody with four different idioms. Right. I will check. You hit I want this, I want that during the late 60s and then early 70s and everything else. That was good, bro. That did come up again and everything else. And then also it was it was right after you know the civil rights, right? You know, and one of the big things that they actually brought up about that and everything else was that you know, you had you know multiple ideologies on how if reparations ever did take place, how would that look? Okay, because now our race has been watered down, you know, and and y'all know what I'm talking about, you know. And and and and again, it's just one of those situations where even if we even got to the point where you know they were offering, you know, I don't know, a bucket of chicken and and two watermelons. You know, you know, I can't even eat watermelon. I'm allergic to watermelon. All right, so in that case, then you won't get your reparations. I won't get my reparations, you know. So, yeah, but you get your bucket of chicken. So there you go. You get your bucket of chicken, and it might be spicy. It might well, no, that did not come. It's a whole mile. So again, again, how this actually goes about is too many ideologies because you have uh, you know, multiple factions of our race or of our culture, period, okay, that that that just like Rightney said, that are you know, they're they're they're really have you know saying, I want us to get, you know, a an annulment, not an annulment, but you know, an annual payment for the next 30 years.
Rodney: 10:20
Okay.
Jimmie: 10:20
You know, then you got the other group that's saying, Oh no, I want my shit right now. You know, then you got the other group saying that, okay, can you give it to me in food? You know, and then you got another group that's saying, okay, let me get my own parcel of land, and then you know, then you just wipe the slate. There's no right or wrong way. There's no wrong, there's no easy way to do this, period. No matter how we do it.
Byron: 10:44
Because we're not all gonna agree on how we want our reputation.
Jimmie: 10:48
And then then we don't have our leaders like we used to anymore. We don't have the we don't have the king, we don't have the Malcolm X, we don't have the maker Evers, you know, we don't have all these guys who at one point in time that would would have actually done our they were our mouthpiece.
Byron: 11:03
Yeah, the legworked behind it.
Jimmie: 11:06
Well, well, well, well, but I've got I have a caveat to that. We're four educated grown men. Well, grown men, I don't okay, but go on. Go on with your story. Go on with your story.
Dennis: 11:18
I think he's trying to give us a complex. Okay, I'm sorry, yeah. I'm sorry, I'm sorry about that.
Jimmie: 11:22
We're worldly, we're worldly, yeah. Let's just say Kamala was president, and she said, Fellas, I'm giving you boys 10 days to come up with a reparation plan that would benefit everybody. We would not get it, we wouldn't get it. Um, and we're both nope, and we would say, Hey, nope, she's like, if you can do this, I have a Congress that will let it go. All you boys need to do is come to the table with something. What you got?
Dennis: 11:52
But you know what? Let's let's take two minutes to try. Just for the function.
Jimmie: 11:57
Let's try just for the fun of it.
Dennis: 11:58
Okay, go with it, go with it. All right, what would you want? Me myself, I would be willing to sacrifice my thought just to go with the consensus to make it happen. But if I were to answer that question, money.
Jimmie: 12:17
Okay, money. Okay. Okay, I'm I'm gonna go a little further with this. Because the brother brother said he wants money.
Dennis: 12:23
How much? 10 grand.
Jimmie: 12:25
10 grand. That would settle you for 400 years of or of the atrocities that that was inflicted upon our people.
Dennis: 12:33
Better than a little something than a whole lot of nothing.
Byron: 12:36
Okay. Okay, okay, okay. Being hunted on 40 acres, okay, 40 acres is not a lot. No, no, absolutely not. But with the amount of people we have right now, it would be feasible for us to take 40 acres. And with those 40 acres, you could do a lot. Yes, you can.
Jimmie: 13:02
If you actually were able to actually take and say, you know, I want 40 acres, we'll say hypothetically in Bloomfield Hills, you know, you know, you can choose your spot. You know, you can choose your spot. 40 acres, uh, your your 40 acres is going to be in Bloomfield Hills. Then you got another that says, uh, you know, I want my 40 acres in Grand Blanc. You know, now that might actually work to your advantage because you can see that grow.
Byron: 13:30
You know, but again, if you take 40 acres in Bloomfield Hills, you almost taking Bloomfield Hills.
Jimmie: 13:36
Yeah, true. That it ain't much there. Yeah, it ain't much there. It ain't much there.
Byron: 13:41
You know, so but 40 acres you can build.
Jimmie: 13:45
Yes, a lot on 40 acres. Absolutely. To back Mr. Byron up, Black Wall Street was on 40 acres. Yep, it was on Tulsa. Just Tulsa. Just 40 acres? 40 acres. 40 acres. Wow.
Dennis: 13:56
Okay, I didn't know that. Yeah.
Jimmie: 13:58
Yep. They had everything from an airfield to an insurance agent. Yep. Okay. And and and they also had, you know, they were also buying stocks.
Dennis: 14:09
Okay.
Jimmie: 14:10
You know, even though they call it Black Wall Street, but they the the they were actually developing this whole area where it would actually take in, provide generational wealth.
Dennis: 14:22
Okay.
Jimmie: 14:22
You know, and they they, you know, they're the men and women that had actually, and and and I have to say it, it was women too. That black women that actually, you know, provided this whole knowledge process of how how to generate general wealth, generational wealth. And then when you know the opposite found out of everything else, that's when hell broke loose.
Byron: 14:44
Right, right. All right. So he wants the money. I want the 40 acres. What do you want?
Jimmie: 14:49
What I would want is both.
unknown: 14:51
Okay.
Jimmie: 14:52
Don't get don't give me and and and I'm gonna be perfectly honest with you and everything else. I don't want a little of anything, I want it all. No, no, okay. I want I want what you owe me. You know, there's a spot in Boondocks, you know. Yeah, and for those who've seen Boondocks and everything else, you know, Riley takes and tells his brother and everything else. I Santa, I want what you owe me, bitch.
Byron: 15:17
Now, you you say you want both.
Jimmie: 15:20
I want both.
Byron: 15:20
You want the four dicks, and you want how much money?
Jimmie: 15:24
Be honest with you, I'm perfectly honest with you. If I'm actually gonna be, you know, honest with it, I want nothing less than probably 30 million dollars. Nothing less.
Dennis: 15:32
Okay, now see that's the problem. Right. Now I said that.
Byron: 15:36
Is it really? Yeah, is that realistic though?
Jimmie: 15:40
None of it is. None of it is. If we if we if we if we're gonna actually take it and be honest about it and everything else done, it is because you know, I could easily say 50 million dollars. Because truth be told, you know, if you think about what was actually taken and stolen, you know, when it comes down to our our culture, yeah, our lives, yeah, yeah. You know, the whole nine yards, 30, 50, 60 million dollars, shit, nothing.
Dennis: 16:06
I I totally agree with that. But when slave when slavery ended in 1865, there were four million African Americans or black folks. Now it's what 23, 24 million.
Byron: 16:16
All right, so I'll give it take a two. So are our reparations based on that the what you said? The population, yeah. The population, the initial population.
Dennis: 16:26
It would have to be. It would be impossible to do a a genealogical research or whatever. Right. Oh, yes, absolutely. 400 years later. It's impossible to trace it's impossible for somebody to say that my great-great mother, great-great-grandmother, and my great-great-grandfather were slaves. Okay, it's impossible. Right, you can't go back that far. So, I guess what I'm saying is our popular uh uh African Americans, we make up 13, 14, 15 of the United States population. Absolutely. That's easily 25, 30 million. So it seems to me, I would and here's the thing our government is still controlled by white people, okay? Yeah, we may have a black, a hypothetical black president, but the Congress and the Senate is still controlled mostly by white people. Yeah, so absolutely my thing is I'd rather get a whole I would rather get a little something than a whole lot of nothing. I I would hey, if you want to give me a check for 30, 40, 50 million dollars. Oh, thank you, sir. Thank you. I love you.
Jimmie: 17:28
Well, I have something that is realistic, okay, that's here, sir, and more than capable. Okay, I would like free health care for every black person and everybody's debt to be white plane. Ooh, let us rebuild everything ourselves. If you don't want us over here, leave us the freak alone and let us build our own congregation here. Oh, wait a minute. Wait, when you say debt clear, complete debt clear. See, I can forego my 30 to 40, 50, 60 million dollars. I can forego that having debt clear because you can do more shit than you think. You can do more, yes, absolutely, and then have all. I mean, what's what created the mega amount of debt medical? That's true. That is true. That's one of the major things that's held us back, especially as we get older. Wipe all our medical debt clear, give us free medical, leave us the fuck alone, and you get that, and then your your your 465 credit rating. It goes up to 850. So now you just shot up the you know, now you got a whole race of people with an 850 credit rating. You shit, that might be a dangerous thing. You might you might have done better giving us all ten thousand dollars apiece and just been done with, yeah. But I mean, you think about it that makes sense if you wipe all the debt, because that I mean, from educated to non-educated. Oh, oh, if everything had a been structured where, in fact, you ain't got no coat hangers. No, oh Lord, you want to start a barber shop, you want to start a barbecue place, everybody has a chance to create their industry, okay, and you have all of the medical taken care of. I need insulin, I need hypertension med. You can even start medical prevention. So we're we're we're getting healthy and we're building generational wealth, and plus, we our credit rating is now clear. Yep, we don't need we don't need anybody else.
Dennis: 19:40
Sign me up, don't need anybody else.
Jimmie: 19:42
But see, now you got a situation where Shakula she she done went out and bought she done got every goddamn MX card imaginable. Because a ninja gonna be a ninja all day long, all day long, all day long. If you don't know, you never know. You know, you know what I'm saying? You never know, but but yet still Shaquilla gotta have something to buy, yeah, yeah. True that yeah, but she ain't working though, you know. She's you know, she was over at the car wash, you know, trying off the cars, you know.
Dennis: 20:09
So yeah, but but you know what? We we just came as close, we had we just came as close, us four, we just came as close as maybe anybody to coming up with a unified idea for how to get what we owe. Okay, so it can be done, but maybe not in our lifetime.
Jimmie: 20:27
But I mean, but think about it, that's realistic. It is very realistic. Every brother ain't getting a billion dollars. No, no, but yet still, when Joe Biden look at all of the shit that happened when he tried to wipe that student loan, they lost their fucking life. Yeah, yeah, it's like, how dare you stop the shit that's aware of everybody down? Wait a minute. You you mean tell me that you're gonna clear my student loan? Yeah, you know the mine has been wiped. See, there you go.
Dennis: 20:57
Well, you know what? I pay one dollar a month, but I don't even want to hear that shit.
Byron: 21:04
I I go in and check just to make sure this is good. It goes in there every month. It says zero for this man. And I I also check to see if it's interest keep adding on to my the total.
Jimmie: 21:18
No interest. Well, you can't you can't add interest on to zero. So yeah, you know, but again, this is one of those situations. Again, I don't think that you know, it's like you said, Dennis, and everything else, it'll never happen, right?
Rodney: 21:29
Yeah, I mean about it. You know what I mean?
Jimmie: 21:31
I mean, if we've had multiple, you know, generational conversations about this, you know. Committee, you know, we you know, there's committees been formed the whole nine years, it's never gonna happen in anything else. But who's been on the committee and how many have been engaged in the conversation? Well, again, there's this belief that you know, African American culture is that you know, in our culture and everything else, that someone else will fix our problems. Well, well, you know, still that was created by our own. That's true. Well, you've already said it. We need a king, we need it. All we need is four motherfuckers that fly out. Right, right. Yeah, we're gonna slide this over. We want you to call Equifax, Trans Union, you know, pick up the phone, call them, and then let them know clear our shit clean, you know. Man, I'm telling you right now, if you wipe my mortgage out, my ass will be happy. I know that's right. I'll be back swimming in your lake like shit. I'm gonna do it the poor people. And again, and again, 465, you know, your your credit rated of 465, it goes away. Yeah, right. That shit goes away. So I agree, I agree. I mean, you know, can it be done? It would be nice. Do we deserve it? Absolutely. Absolutely, but at 400 years now, it we're actually coming to closer life things. It's 410, 420.
Speaker 01: 22:56
You know, I say this though. We I can kind of we kind of talked about this a little earlier, and uh I don't know why we're talking about this at work, but we have just been the longest in slavery, right?
Byron: 23:10
Every mentally and physically no, everybody's been enslaved. That's true, that's true. That's very true. Them Europeans tried enslaving themselves, but they couldn't take the heat.
Jimmie: 23:21
Yeah, yeah, but not shadow slavery, yeah. Yep, shadow slavery, we were never meant to be out of slavery, yes. Our children's children's children, that's our DNA was supposed to be in slavery. It's actually written so long, right? It's actually written into the amendments of the country, uh it's actually part of the constitution, yeah. Yeah, yeah, yeah. That that even though we're no longer in slavery, technically, but there is, I think it's amendment 14, the 14th amendment, right? That's actually part of that. You can actually still lock our asses up and use us as a slave.
Byron: 23:56
Well, and then that's saying what every 25 years they have to sign a bill for us to vote. Uh-huh. Yeah. So, yeah, why isn't that going away? It won't for that part in the 14th Amendment gone away. It won't ever go away.
Jimmie: 24:10
Well, you know why it hasn't gone away? It's because we don't have the votes in Congress. And you don't have the votes to make it go away, which people do not understand. Every five years it keeps coming up. Yeah, yeah, it keeps coming up. Everybody's bitching, we all you have to do is put the right number of people in to make shit go away. Yeah, okay. It's all math. How's that working? How's that working? Exactly. But yet, and still, when you got people, oh, the political thing is two birds of the same wing, and blah blah blah.
Byron: 24:43
And and you know, I I look at I look at you know, and this is kind of like off topic a little bit, but it's kind of the same thing, it's a solution to a problem. And I'm gonna I'm I'm gonna put his name out there. Magic. Magic had AIDS, right? Okay, had age, had AIDS. He is the first person that I known of where they could not detect this book again.
Jimmie: 25:10
They could it was he was the first one that actually I recalled announcing that was no longer detected, yep.
Byron: 25:17
Okay, the same shit can happen with cancer, but the the the the the money isn't in the cure, the cure, right? No, it's in the treatment, yeah. Yeah, you know what I'm saying? It's not in the cure, it's in the treatment, so they're not gonna give us anything.
Jimmie: 25:37
You can call Terry right now, y'all know who Terry is. You know, you know, Terry, call Terry and Terry, Terry, Terry over there now, putting uh brakes on like El Camino, yeah, you know, and and again, Terry ain't trying to figure that shit out. He don't care, you know. But so again, at the same token, again, when everyone is bitching about the parties, it is never about having permanent enemies, permanent friends, it's all about permanent interest. Yes, when you vote, you look at the bill, you look at the party that says, Okay, this bill's for my interest, right? This bill is not for my interest. What do I need to get more of these bills to go in my interest?
Byron: 26:21
It's not even about parties, man.
Jimmie: 26:23
It's about rich, it's all about exactly they should be named rich poor, those are the party names. I mean, you think about it, man. Right now, there's no way in hell Trump should be present. No, no way. I mean, he killed a half a million people that we knew of.
Byron: 26:39
The last time he was in office, we're in a recession, yep, and the government shut down for 34 days.
Jimmie: 26:45
Ironically, ironically, since every time he he gets in office, this is actually the fourth time that the actual government has shut down. This is the fourth time. Anytime the GOP is in office, I we we were all in college during the first bush, couldn't find a job, yep. Yeah, the second bush, you couldn't hold on to your house. Yep, and it always took a democratic president until they didn't fix it fast enough. Everybody, oh god damn it, I am I'm switching parties. Now, now Joe got everything to a stable state, and everybody like ah, you know, I'm sorry, man. Motherfucker said, I'm paying your mortgage, do here. Yep, there we go. Take us out of here, bro.
Dennis: 27:33
All right, gang. Well, hey, we're I hold on. I just gotta say, you know what? We are some smart ass dudes. Yeah, we go. Oh my gosh. You read a book or two. Oh my gosh. Wow, Ryan. I'm impressed with you. I love you, brother.
Jimmie: 27:50
Good old economics classroom. Eastern Michigan. Yeah, Mac College's rule, man. There you go. There you go. There we go.
Speaker 01: 27:59
All right, all right, here we go.
Jimmie: 28:00
Well, gang. Hey, thanks again for another spirited discussion. Yes, gang. Like us, love us, please hang out with us. All right, we are going to hang in various places throughout the fall. We're gonna do our deer hunting segment. Stay tuned. Again, I am riding the queue, throwing it over. And I'm Byron B. I'm Jimmy Jefferson and throwing it over to Dennis. Dennis Cotton. There we go. DLC. Everybody, toast out. Remember. We appreciate y'all, man. Thank y'all smooth and sit with us. There you go.