Episode 263 – Joe Soloski Takes Over Muddied Waters


The Keystone Party candidate for Governor, Joe Soloski, joins Matt and Spike to discuss his plans for Pennsylvania including cutting spending, cutting taxes, and more.

Tune in to hear how Joe is planning to be the key to Pennsylvania’s success!

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Episode Transcript

DISCLOSURE
This episode transcript is auto-generated and a provided as a service to the hearing impaired. We apologize for any errors or inaccuracies.
FULL TRANSCRIPT TEXT

0:00
this episode is brought to you by travis
0:02
bull johnson who is running to represent
0:04
minnesota’s uh seventh congressional
0:07
district if you go to bull johnson for
0:09
congress dot u s you can find out more
0:15
[Music]
0:18
[Applause]
0:32
and now matt wright and
0:35
spike cohen
0:38
good morning good afternoon or good
0:40
evening and welcome to the vanguard for
0:43
spike how does he prepare coffee
0:46
he brews it cohen
0:49
i am matt wright and together we are
0:51
traversing the muddy waters of
0:53
freedom
0:55
no matter where you are no matter where
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you are watching this listening to this
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waters today kids
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love it kids love it
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now we have a very special episode
1:53
tonight uh we have a guest we we do this
1:57
every once in a while uh mainly it’s
1:58
when
1:59
we don’t feel like doing notes but uh we
2:02
have a great guest on
2:04
we have a great guest on tonight uh he’s
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been on multiple times before he is the
2:10
voice
2:11
of muddied waters of freedom he
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introduces us at the beginning of every
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episode
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ladies and gentlemen
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please welcome with spike with myself
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the one the only
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joe soloski
2:28
jose thanks so much for joining us uh
2:30
here on muddy waters uh how are things
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been going
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well fantastic thank you both spike and
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matt for having me they’ve been going
2:38
just great
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uh have been enjoying the campaign
2:41
things are certainly
2:43
starting to heat up now we’re only 90
2:45
days out
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60 days out really
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that’s crazy because you have been if i
2:50
recall you’ve been running for
2:51
pennsylvania governor since i believe
2:53
1974 it feels like this at this point
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when you pretty close uh just december
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5th uh 2020.
3:01
oh is it really it was only since then
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man i’ll tell you it has time has been
3:05
creeping as we’ve had fun uh but uh yeah
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it’s it’s so you’ve been at this for uh
3:10
two years now and uh so it’s coming up
3:13
we’re less than three months out and uh
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you know tell us what what have you uh
3:18
what are your main things that you’re
3:20
running on i know you said that probably
3:21
the biggest single thing is that uh the
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budget for
3:25
pennsylvania has doubled is that correct
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yeah 2002
3:30
pennsylvania budget and i’m speaking of
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the operating portion that they always
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talk about
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you know our legislature and our
3:38
governor i mean they they are supposed
3:40
to have the new upcoming budget nailed
3:43
down by july 1st every year this year
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they missed it
3:47
they finally put something together but
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they missed it for a while
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uh but that operating portion
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in 2002 20 billion dollars
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now it’s 42 billion and
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that’s an astronomical increase in just
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20 years
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the money just keeps rolling in they
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keep finding new revenue streams and uh
4:07
the uh the economic infrastructure here
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is vibrant enough that it’s been able to
4:11
keep up but uh dang
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they’ve got a real spending problem here
4:16
they never think of cutting spending and
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that’s going to be first on my list and
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i’ll leave from the top
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uh i’m going to start with my salary
4:25
pennsylvania’s current governor governor
4:27
wolf gets a salary of over two hundred
4:29
and five thousand dollars a year only
4:32
new york and california beat us
4:35
uh 205 brand is a lot of money
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so uh i’m going to be cutting my pay and
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i understand
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the first day i go into office i’ll be
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operating under
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an existing budget
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right but but i’ll have to have the
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upcoming july budget now and i will be
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cutting my pay by that time by
4:54
65
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down to just under 70 000
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that’ll make pennsylvania just under the
5:01
state of maine we will all of a sudden
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be the lowest
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paid governorship in the country so if i
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can do that
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lead by example and i can’t imagine
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anybody who’s going to fight me i’m
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cutting my own salary now i can go to
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our legislature
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they are the highest paid legislature in
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the nation
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uh you come through the door you’re
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making almost a hundred grand first term
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and i think uh with their yeah they have
5:26
they implemented of all things it used
5:28
to be years ago they wanted to have a
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pay increase you know it had to be
5:33
approved they had to pass a bill it had
5:35
to be approved they were accountable to
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their constituents then not all that
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many years ago they they put through a
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law that basically says hey we just get
5:42
an increase every year automatic january
5:45
thanks
5:46
and right now incoming freshman
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legislators starting this january will
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make a hundred grand a year
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as a pennsylvania legislature and we’ve
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got 203 of them
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that is insane okay so uh it’s a 235 100
6:03
000
6:04
so they’re getting am i correct that
6:06
they’re getting uh 20
6:09
wow
6:10
yeah so 20 is that 20 million a year and
6:13
now you’re talking about let’s add on
6:15
our 50 state senators
6:17
you know they’re the same neck in the
6:19
woods a little more uh
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we need to be i need to be able to go to
6:23
them and say look guys it’s your turn
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this is what i need you to do i need to
6:25
cut your pay
6:26
cut your pay
6:28
this is ridiculous not only are you
6:29
going to cut your pay uh we need to do
6:32
two more things you know i want to see
6:33
ranked choice voting implemented so i
6:35
need that bill on my desk
6:37
i need a bill on my desk it’s probably
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going to take a constitutional amendment
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but the residence pennsylvania won’t
6:42
fight this one let’s make our full time
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one of only 10 in the nation full-time
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state legislature part-time
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and then after you do that guys i need
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you to cut your page
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and all of a sudden we will be in line
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with the rest of the nation do i think
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any of that’s going to go over
7:00
oh hell no uh i don’t think they’ll even
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pay me the time of day but i’ll then
7:06
after cutting my own pay
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i’ll be able to
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use a megaphone every day that i’m in
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office and put a spotlight on what these
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guys are doing
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and how they’re constantly sticking it
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to their pennsylvania constituents
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i’ll be in the driver’s seat and then um
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the other thing i’m going to be doing
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when it comes to
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cut not just cutting my own pay but i
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want to see our state budget cut by at
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least five percent per year that’s
7:35
extremely doable when it’s doubled in
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just 20.
7:38
uh there’s a lot of waste i i saw a uh
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i saw a news story come across today i
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don’t know if it was the department of
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labor in this industry or what
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pennsylvania department was
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but they have uh they’ve got over 700
7:53
million dollars allocated to update
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their website
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update their website you’re talking
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three quarters of a million dollars
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that’s quite a website
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oh my god
8:07
and when they’re done it probably won’t
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work well
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so this is the kind of place
8:13
a lot of waste
8:15
um and what i’m gonna do every year
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every year the legislature is gonna
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finally have to put a bill on my desk
8:22
for the upcoming year’s budget and i
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have
8:24
constantly said that the veto pet
8:27
is extremely powerful
8:29
if i don’t get the cuts i’m looking for
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i will shut down pennsylvania government
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annually and i
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won’t think twice about it but
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there are mechanisms in place to make
8:41
sure people that desperately need
8:43
benefits unemployment benefits and the
8:45
like will continue to get their checks
8:47
unfortunately i think that same
8:49
mechanism keeps the legislature pay
8:51
which is a crime truly a crime but i
8:54
will veto that and shut down government
8:57
in the state and hopefully save us a lot
8:59
of money just doing that alone until
9:02
they finally put a decent reasonable
9:04
sane budget on my desk every year
9:07
that’s crazy
9:09
go ahead i just did a quick uh i just
9:11
did a quick search and um
9:13
so here in florida
9:16
the legislature has a base salary of
9:19
just under 30 000 a year twenty nine
9:22
thousand six hundred ninety seven
9:24
south carolina
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has a salary
9:29
what would you think it is if you just
9:30
had to gas off the top of your head
9:33
south carolina sucks man i’m guessing
9:34
like 50 60k
9:37
10 000 for 100
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oh one month the other way
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yeah it went the other way i i thought i
9:44
thought it was going to be higher but 10
9:46
000 and then all of them kind of have
9:47
per diems and then mileage is and stuff
9:50
like that yeah yeah yeah but yeah ten
9:52
ten thousand four hundred according i
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don’t know how accurate this website is
9:56
i just went and in pennsylvania it
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starts it’s gonna start at a hundred
10:00
thousand dollars plus the per diems and
10:02
all that yes they get their daily per
10:04
diem and
10:06
plenty of great benefits i mean
10:07
obviously above and beyond the per diem
10:10
you’ve got pension you’ve got travel um
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and here’s another one that is horrific
10:14
in pennsylvania there is no ban on
10:18
gifts that legislatures can legislators
10:21
can receive not only is there no ban
10:24
there’s no requirement for them to
10:26
account for that
10:28
uh great example
10:30
a gentleman and he’s the state senator
10:33
in my district uh a gentleman named uh
10:36
jay corman he is also the head of the
10:38
senate right now uh he
10:41
um
10:43
he has never come out for a gift ban and
10:44
he was also running for governor for the
10:46
republican nomination this year he
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didn’t even come close
10:50
but the reason he never came out for a
10:52
gift ban uh even during 2020 during the
10:54
coveted lockdown one of the lobbyists uh
10:58
flew he and his whole family to either
11:01
bermuda or the bahamas for like a
11:03
week-long tropical conference
11:07
this is the kind of crap
11:09
these guys get on top of their
11:11
exorbitant salaries
11:13
wow and i want to see that put in place
11:15
now they’re talking about a gift ban
11:17
right now as we speak it may actually go
11:19
through sometime soon
11:21
and uh i’ve never been a fan at all of
11:24
our current governor wolf
11:26
but i like to give people credit what
11:27
credits do
11:29
and one thing that he has done well as
11:32
soon as he took office eight years ago
11:34
uh the first thing he did for his
11:36
executive branch he said
11:38
uh gift ban across the board guys
11:41
we here in the executive branch no
11:43
elected official or an elected official
11:46
will be permitted to receive a gift of
11:48
any kind uh i applaud that and he has
11:52
been asking the legislature to do the
11:53
same
11:54
they’ve just shut their ears and ignored
11:56
them every step of the way
11:58
so uh hopefully that’ll happen now but
12:00
uh okay i won’t be surprised if it
12:02
doesn’t
12:03
so obviously to ought to uh welcome all
12:07
these new spending cuts and fiscal uh
12:09
responsibility that means you’ll also be
12:11
able to have massive tax cuts right well
12:14
absolutely
12:15
i point out that states like florida
12:17
texas tennessee you know states that
12:19
don’t have income taxes
12:22
those are the states that are
12:23
business-friendly you know
12:25
and pennsylvania needs to be one we need
12:27
to be a taxi
12:28
if we can start cutting taxes then i do
12:30
mean all the income taxes left and right
12:33
uh we’re going to be able to attract
12:34
more businesses here but pennsylvania
12:37
has the second
12:38
highest
12:39
fuel taxes of gas and diesel in the
12:42
country
12:43
those needs slashed and we easily could
12:45
because
12:47
a lot of the highway
12:49
fuel taxes
12:50
don’t go to highways here uh uh billions
12:53
of dollars of it go to from the state
12:55
police i’m sorry the state police should
12:57
be coming out of our general budget not
12:59
out of the highway budget um and then we
13:02
have uh we have so many other things
13:04
here where we could cut uh we have a
13:06
inheritance tax here i think that’s
13:08
particularly particularly regressive you
13:11
know here we all are we’re working right
13:13
every day of our lives we’re working
13:15
pennsylvania has a 3.07
13:17
income tax okay it’s flat
13:20
but it’s that’s 50 higher than 1981.
13:24
um
13:26
so you have that now you get to keep
13:28
what’s left oh but wait everything you
13:31
buy not everything you know not
13:33
necessities like food and clothing
13:35
but any other goods you buy in
13:36
pennsylvania you’ve got a six percent
13:39
sales tax
13:40
on top of that and uh the counties of
13:42
allegheny where pittsburgh
13:44
is and philadelphia they have a seven
13:47
percent tax a little bit more
13:49
uh so now they’re getting you on
13:51
everything you buy
13:52
of course there’s capital gains in this
13:54
state uh there’s we have a regressive
13:56
very regressive property tax system that
13:59
needs to be totally thrown out and our
14:01
education system funding needs totally
14:03
reformed and it can be done
14:05
uh but then after paying all that all
14:08
your life
14:09
here in pennsylvania
14:10
when you die
14:12
oh the state says
14:14
let’s get him just one more time huh
14:16
and they nail you with an inheritance
14:18
tax also if it is a uh a lineal
14:21
descendant six percent playing sales tax
14:24
but if i leave all my stuff to one of
14:26
youtube you’re gonna pay 15.
14:28
uh and i just think it’s horrible
14:31
immoral
14:33
that dying in pennsylvania gives her
14:36
eyes to a taxable event
14:38
uh and as a cpa all my life i’ve had to
14:41
deal with these and see them i find them
14:44
just as obnoxious now as i have all
14:46
those other years so they need to be
14:48
changed and cut
14:49
so
14:50
when you say lineal descendant that
14:52
means do i have to be a blood relative
14:54
or what if it’s like a a spouse or
14:57
something like that um spouses count as
15:00
linny uh you know if you’re so like
15:04
what if it’s like an adopted child would
15:05
count that that would count oh that
15:07
would count
15:08
so it’s just anyone that’s not your
15:10
relative they more they almost triple
15:13
the tax
15:15
almost yes yeah yes like two exactly
15:18
they only have that one last chance
15:20
they only have that one last chance so
15:23
that’s it yeah
15:30
that’s something that you see everywhere
15:32
they’re they’re going to tax you when
15:35
you get paid they’re going to tax you
15:36
when you buy things you know not here in
15:37
florida they don’t tax you when you get
15:39
paid but other places
15:40
um they tax you when you get paid they
15:42
tax you when you buy something that’s
15:43
actually when you sell something
15:45
uh
15:46
they tax you basically every way out and
15:48
then so many other places
15:50
say that it’s immoral for you to be able
15:52
to just give people what you have saved
15:54
so they tax that as well
15:58
and the immoral thing is you’re you’re
16:00
taxing them every way along everything
16:02
and then at the
16:04
every step and then you’re taxing it at
16:06
the end
16:07
when they die yep yes that money has
16:09
been that money has been taxed
16:12
a hundred times over by that point
16:14
because they’re trying to get more
16:16
and then people will sometimes say to me
16:18
okay joe so what are you gonna replace
16:20
it with
16:22
and i’ll give them a solution i’ll say
16:24
look if i’m constantly cutting
16:26
spending as far as i can
16:29
i can keep cuts to a minimum or making
16:31
the cuts i want to make will be a hell
16:33
of a lot easier
16:35
next
16:36
if i’m cutting taxes again pennsylvania
16:39
becomes a tax hate
16:41
business friendly states have already
16:42
found this out
16:44
when businesses are flocking here what
16:46
happens
16:47
your tax base broadcast goes up yeah so
16:51
i may be dropping percentages or
16:53
eliminating taxes but if the pool’s
16:56
getting wider
16:57
we still have revenue inflow that’s more
17:00
than adequate
17:01
and then i point out look
17:04
between the two if we’re going to be
17:06
cutting taxes
17:07
cutting spending drawing more people in
17:11
we’ll have more than enough to go around
17:13
and it has been proven by states like
17:14
like florida like tennessee so it can
17:17
happen here we just have to have people
17:19
who are willing to say let’s try
17:22
something different
17:23
i guarantee you this um
17:25
if nothing changes if they keep just
17:29
electing the failed duopoly like they
17:32
have for decades i’m willing to bet in
17:35
just 10 years
17:37
that operating budget will hit 60
17:40
billion in in short order and i’m very
17:42
confident saying that now obviously i
17:44
can’t prove it yet but it’s one of those
17:47
moments where i can sit here on money
17:48
waters media and say
17:50
mark my words i’m willing to bet it’ll
17:52
happen prove me wrong
17:54
oh it’s likely it’ll happen even before
17:56
that it might double in 10 years
17:59
honestly especially with inflation
18:00
there’s a good chance it might double in
18:02
that 10 year time to
18:04
80 billion so uh one last thing that we
18:06
were talking about uh before we started
18:09
you want to uh also make a radical
18:11
change uh to the way that uh that drugs
18:14
are being treated by basically ending
18:16
the war on drugs in pennsylvania as well
18:17
tell us about the model you want to use
18:19
well i point out to people you know uh
18:22
when they all of a sudden here in
18:24
pennsylvania they’re starting to talk
18:25
about drug well marijuana
18:28
legalization
18:30
now
18:31
and governor wolf just tweeted today
18:33
it’s time to do this you know and i
18:35
pointed out to him in a response i said
18:37
hey governor
18:38
just four years ago when you ran for
18:40
office
18:41
you quoted
18:42
your comment was pennsylvania is not
18:45
ready
18:46
to legalize drugs
18:48
yes that’s changed a lot has changed in
18:50
four years apparently
18:52
yeah
18:52
exactly so i said so what’s changed
18:55
actually nothing has changed in the last
18:57
50 or more
18:58
and uh and i pointed out to them all
19:00
they want is a new revenue stream like
19:02
they did with gambling state they’re now
19:04
the second
19:05
uh largest casino gambling state in the
19:07
nation second only
19:10
yes uh you could go back 30 years people
19:13
were still saying oh you’ll never see
19:15
table games come to pennsylvania
19:18
we’re number two to nevada and uh and
19:21
that’s great you know i to me it’s like
19:23
a golf course it’s entertaining uh if
19:25
somebody wants to spend 100 bucks today
19:27
on gambling or 100 bucks golfing
19:30
go have fun whichever drugs
19:33
back to drugs for me
19:35
portugal the country of portugal in
19:37
again 2002 they decided to look at the
19:40
drug war differently rather than look at
19:43
it as a criminal problem they decided to
19:45
look at it as a medical problem and they
19:47
ended the war on drugs
19:49
they didn’t just legalize them they
19:51
decriminalized
19:54
all think of that all drugs and there’s
19:57
a little i’m not recommending people
19:59
take drugs
20:00
but what i’m saying is
20:02
we have created a class of
20:05
vic
20:06
non-victim criminals through this damn
20:08
drug war and yeah portugal in their
20:11
20-year uh real-time study their
20:14
addiction rates have gone down their
20:16
hiv-related infections have gone down
20:19
every significant marker
20:21
that we’ve been trying to improve upon
20:23
they’ve done for a fraction of the cost
20:27
because they their their medical
20:29
intervention efforts
20:31
are much more successful than anything
20:33
we do as a criminal interdiction
20:36
that’s what i want to do in pennsylvania
20:38
and if i have to do it in ways that may
20:41
even be
20:42
in the face of federal government
20:44
regulations i’m prepared to do that i
20:46
don’t know if the legislature will have
20:47
the spine for it but i do
20:49
and if we do that we’ll end up saving a
20:52
ton of money
20:53
we’ll end up you know stopping ruining
20:55
people’s lives uh
20:58
i point out to people imagine you are
21:02
you you pick up a flower pot and you’re
21:04
holding a geranium
21:07
you’re not doing anything wrong
21:09
it’s a geranium well if i pick up this
21:11
pot and it happens to be a marijuana
21:13
plant i’m sorry it’s the same thing i
21:15
should be able to grow this in my window
21:17
box
21:19
but here what we’ve done we’ve
21:21
incarcerated people
21:23
and ruined their lives
21:24
they come out of jail now we’ve totally
21:27
handicapped them in getting
21:29
housing
21:30
employment you know credit
21:33
uh we’ve probably destroyed marriages
21:35
and families it is so counterproductive
21:38
so if we look at it the other way as
21:40
portugal has we’re going to have the
21:42
same great results on a massively larger
21:45
scale
21:46
i would love to be that governor
21:49
that proves that point in a few short
21:52
four years uh it can be done here and i
21:55
i am confident we’ll make it out
21:58
so you want to make government much
22:00
smaller budget cuts tax cuts and you
22:03
want to get them out of a uh treating
22:06
what is a medical problem that’s what
22:07
addiction and overdose is it’s a medical
22:09
and a health problem that’s usually
22:11
masking a mental health problem that’s a
22:13
whole other subject uh you’re you’re
22:15
you’re dealing with it as the actual
22:17
health issue it is and stop treating
22:19
people like criminals uh who are just
22:21
trying to basically medicate themselves
22:24
um and so uh if someone wants to get
22:26
involved in your campaign they want to
22:28
help donate to it what is it that you
22:30
need obviously every campaign needs
22:32
money uh how can people reach out to you
22:34
but also how else can they get involved
22:36
besides giving you money if they live in
22:38
pennsylvania well i’ll tell you what
22:39
first of all uh let me let me answer
22:42
that by by putting on my muddy waters
22:44
media boards just for a minute yes you
22:46
could check me out at joe soloski that’s
22:48
right joe soloski.com and in doing so
22:52
there’s a donate button spike’s
22:54
absolutely right campaigns are extremely
22:56
expensive and we need every buck we can
22:59
get especially if we’re going to take
23:01
down the duopoly which is desperately
23:03
neat uh the sooner that we have
23:06
third parties and i even mean multiple
23:08
third parties you know weak keystone
23:10
parties green constitution third party
23:14
presence in all areas of government
23:16
that’s when we’ll finally start to see
23:18
some great changes and improvements
23:21
so
23:22
volunteer-wise also you know we’ve got
23:24
60 days till election day ballpark here
23:27
um
23:28
if you’re available to volunteer we
23:30
would love to hear from you we need you
23:31
helping us uh at the polls on election
23:34
day we need you before then knocking on
23:36
doors reaching out to voters
23:39
if that’s something that turns you on
23:41
we want to be able to utilize your great
23:43
talents to uh to help us with it
23:46
awesome well that’s great and if people
23:47
want to reach out to you they can do
23:49
that
23:49
joesalowski.com um and thank you joe now
23:52
you’re going to be sticking around uh
23:54
for the second part of our interview but
23:56
the rest of you
23:57
if you have not yet become subscribers
24:00
uh you will be missing out on this
24:02
second part and it’s a much better part
24:04
this was just the warm-up we’re going to
24:05
get in the really really juicy stuff uh
24:08
in the subscriber-only episode so if you
24:10
want to become a subscriber go to anchor
24:13
dot fm slash muddy water subscribe not
24:15
only will you get access to the second
24:17
part of this interview you’ll get access
24:19
to the exclusive money waters only
24:21
content every single week you will also
24:24
get discounts at the muddy waters media
24:26
store as well as discounts at
24:28
participating vendors all of that for
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the low low price of 10 u.s federal
24:32
reserve notes which are losing value in
24:34
your pocket rapidly right now as we
24:36
speak so every month it’s a discount
24:39
from the month before uh anchor dot fm
24:41
slash money water slash subscribe well
24:44
folks just like i said a moment ago we
24:46
are just getting started with this
24:48
episode the best part is yet to come and
24:51
again if you want to uh be able to see
24:54
uh this second part and all the other
24:56
muddy waters exclusive content and i
24:58
forgot to mention uh you also get an ad
25:01
free listening and viewing experience on
25:05
all available uh podcasting platforms
25:07
including anchor and spotify all you got
25:09
to do is go to anchor dot fm slash muddy
25:12
water subscribe you get that plus uh a
25:15
uh a discount at the muddy water store
25:17
as well as a discount at our
25:19
participating vendors all of that at
25:22
anchor dot fm slash money water slash
25:24
subscribe it’s only ten dollars a month
25:25
best ten dollars a month you’re ever
25:26
going to spend so we will join you right
25:29
back here on saturday for the final
25:32
conclusion the
25:34
de nomo
25:35
of the uh joe soloski interview oh boy
25:39
does it get better and better folks we
25:41
can’t wait
25:42
to have you if you are a subscriber if
25:45
you’re not
25:47
we still you’re all right you’re fine
25:49
we’re good we’re good we’re still good
25:51
we’ll see you next week but if you are a
25:53
subscriber oh
25:55
boy howdy are you gonna get a great
25:57
thing for only 10 bucks a month these
25:59
poor schlubs huh they’re going to miss
26:01
out on it but but you you’re going to
26:03
get the good thing so uh look forward to
26:05
that we’ll see you on saturday and where
26:07
we’re going we don’t need ropes
26:18
[Music]
26:34
you
45:45
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