AND HERE’S MODI

Arthur Luxenberg: Part 2

January 24, 2024 Modi Season 5 Episode 99
AND HERE’S MODI
Arthur Luxenberg: Part 2
AND HERE’S MODI
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Episode 99.5: Modi and Periel are joined by Arthur Luxenberg (of Weitz & Luxenberg). Tune in to this bonus episode while we await the live taping of our 100th episode on February 1st!

Modi's 'Know Your Audience' Tour is on sale now!
For information about upcoming shows visit www.modilive.com.
Follow Modi on Instagram at @modi_live.

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Speaker 1:

Welcome to Andy's Modi. Part two Arthur Luxembourg. We finished taping and then we are in the studio catching up on everything like there was. We should have just been taping till now. The after party, the after party. This is literally the after party of the first video.

Speaker 2:

This is the VIP room no.

Speaker 1:

No.

Speaker 2:

Andy Cohn.

Speaker 3:

Andy Cohn has like watch what happens live, and then they have like go on the internet and you, yeah, that's what this is. This is our big channel.

Speaker 1:

Okay, so we have another 40 minutes of the studio. Part two Arthur Luxembourg. First question that's coming into my head now was you said that you were the guy that did all the legal research, for when you were starting your company there was no internet. Did you sit there with the books? Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 3:

Those ridiculous books that they had in the law offices. It's unbelievable that. I don't know if you know like what a concordance is Like. A concordance is like an index and you go to the index and you look up words and concepts, do a decimal system, and then it directs you. It directs you to the books, all those books on the wall. Go to this book or that book. That's what legal research was back then. It was by hand and you know what it was. It was doing it the hard way.

Speaker 1:

But they just use that on Google search and you're in there.

Speaker 3:

And shortly after you know Westlaw, it was Westlaw was the biggest company you know that really entered that space, that you were able to do legal research and, by the way, I never did legal research on Westlaw, never. I did it the old fashioned way. I, you know, looked it up, you know.

Speaker 2:

Right, this is like Leo and I had to write something for an upcoming event that we're doing, and so I'm writing the whole thing and I'm on the phone with Leo and he goes. Don't kill me, but I just put this into chat GBT.

Speaker 3:

By the way, by the way, insane, insane.

Speaker 1:

Insane we were. We were in the car we're driving Leo's next to me and he had to give this one woman some kind of a bio or some kind of I don't know what it was. He and no, somebody called him for a letter of recommendation but she, like, didn't give him enough time. He would have written it with his whole heart. He puts she's good at this, this, that, that she was here, there, there and there. Boom Puts it into that chat GGGPT, whatever it's called writes it for you, boom. Yeah, and it was amazing. It's pretty insane. It's insane, yeah, it's insane. And he told us how his connection with Brunello Cuccinelli is, and we got that, but we can't share. And then we, and now we're asking real law questions here. First of all, this whole thing with Trump. What's what's happening? Bring our viewers up to. Is he going to be able to run or no?

Speaker 3:

Oh yeah, I mean, that's his whole thing. I mean, look, I'm not, you know, political at this point.

Speaker 1:

No, no, no no legal, legal.

Speaker 3:

Oh look, I'm not a, you know I'm not a legal commentator, but yeah, I mean he thrives on this.

Speaker 2:

Your power. Legal commentator.

Speaker 1:

Your power legal? Oh, yes, like when they have on CNN. Yes. Senior legal editorial by by Arthur Luxembourg.

Speaker 3:

Can I, can I, by the way, that's amazing.

Speaker 2:

It's a great idea.

Speaker 3:

Right, I'm the legal commentator for the, and here's Modi podcast, modi podcast.

Speaker 2:

We're in good company because our other legal commentator the only other lawyer we had on the show is Alan.

Speaker 1:

Dershowitz.

Speaker 2:

Oh yeah.

Speaker 1:

And we spoke only about Cantorial singing. Really, yeah, he no one's to hear, nobody wants to hear. He's done a lot of good, yeah, and he's going crazy now with that, with all of Israel. He's really pro pro.

Speaker 2:

Okay, first of all Crapping on a. First of all, he's my best friend. That's right For God. You and him are. We just had him back on the seller podcast.

Speaker 1:

He's going to be jealous. He's going to be jealous.

Speaker 2:

He is on fire. Yep, he's 85 years old. From October 7th until last week or whenever we had him on the show, he has written another book. Wow, he, I mean it's unbelievable he is. I mean I guess it's not unbelievable at all, but he is so insightful and so sharp and I mean everything he was talking about with Israel was just unbelievable.

Speaker 1:

But he had the whole thing with Obama Obama was yes.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, he was talking about that too.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, yeah, great lawyer, great lawyer, yeah, great lawyer. And it's insane, but now we have our own great, great lawyer.

Speaker 3:

We have our own. I might dress better than him.

Speaker 1:

You definitely dress better than him. He looks for hot. He looks like with the it looks.

Speaker 2:

I know he shows up in a suit.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, but from Burlington coat factory? Yeah, yeah, not like a which fits him.

Speaker 2:

It fits his, exactly it fits his thing, definitely not from Burlington coat factory.

Speaker 3:

It's not Not as just an example.

Speaker 1:

I'm just all right. I'm sorry I've been your boyfriend, yeah Right.

Speaker 3:

Right, he gets to dress as well as me.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, wait, but what were we asked, what we were talking about?

Speaker 2:

Nothing. I realized that.

Speaker 1:

Trump.

Speaker 2:

No.

Speaker 3:

I think he, I think he, I think he, I think he thrives on this, I think he runs.

Speaker 1:

But legally, the man's being indicted for things that he's going to be.

Speaker 3:

By the way, from my understanding, legally those kind of things are are halted Once you're the president, once you're the president. I mean that's why situations like with Clinton, you know that whole Monica Lewinsky thing that all went away for all the time that he was the president. So if Trump that is so corrupt, you know it does, you know you know it's like.

Speaker 2:

So all of the horrible things you potentially you're are alleged. We did just disappear.

Speaker 3:

No, no, no, no, they don't disappear, they get put on, they get, they get delayed. Okay, they can run and then become president, and then they bring back what happened, if you remember, if you remember Not crystal clear on it, but the concept that you, that you have to remember was that Trump wanted to resign Before he was finished. He wanted to resign or you and he wanted Pence to pardon him for things that he had done. Really, that whole thing never happened, but that's what the news was talking about.

Speaker 2:

Unbelievable unbelievable.

Speaker 1:

So he, he could really he's, he's in, he's like it's In. What into the president Perry L? We have been traveling through America. You haven't been. They are looking for him to be the next president, yeah.

Speaker 2:

We don't know he's going to win again. You're living in New.

Speaker 1:

York. You're in a bubble. You're at the comedy cellar.

Speaker 3:

You're at that we don't have another. We don't have another Republican. You know, we don't have another Republican.

Speaker 2:

I'm a Republican now.

Speaker 1:

Why.

Speaker 2:

I'm Because of. I don't like what's going on with Israel. I don't like being called a homophobe who supports genocide by all of my former friends.

Speaker 1:

If you're ever an author's office, there's pictures of him and Joe Biden.

Speaker 3:

Joe Biden was a very old friend of mine, I mean, who's also a stutterer?

Speaker 1:

No, absolutely A hundred percent, by the way it. But he's so far.

Speaker 2:

Call it.

Speaker 1:

He can't remember his tricks.

Speaker 2:

No, that's not true. I don't think that's an accurate depiction it is.

Speaker 3:

Joe Biden is a acknowledged stutterer.

Speaker 2:

No, no, no, I'm talking about that. He's not with it. That's what I was saying.

Speaker 3:

I think that he's doing what I'm saying to you is. What I'm saying to you is in the very beginning, when you would see Joe Biden a little bit lost, it was because he hadn't been so used to speaking publicly in that way, and that's why the teleprompter helped them a lot, because none of us stutter. With a teleprompter, you could look at words and just read them and not really. You don't stutter when you sing. You don't stutter when you're in a room alone.

Speaker 1:

You don't stutter when you know your bit and all the words that go in there.

Speaker 3:

But, modi, if you're in a room alone and somebody asks you to read something, or you're just talking and there's no camera on you, right, do you stutter?

Speaker 1:

Sometimes Really, don't forget. I'm also dyslexic, so when I read it's the get reading.

Speaker 3:

Forget reading. Ok, so somebody asks you, somebody said go into the room, you're alone, there's nobody there, it's not being recorded. Do you stutter? You won't, I won't. I did that, you won't. But the moment that I tell you you're being filmed, even though no one's in there and there's no camera guy, just the camera is there you'll stutter. Why? It's because part of the science, the medical science, the physical science of stuttering is that you know how you do something. I mean, you're so used to speaking publicly and being out there, but even if you are, you have like a little bit of anxiety. You have remember the term you have butterflies in your stomach. Yeah, ok, we all do A stutterer with butterflies in their stomach. That manifests itself in a stutter. That nervousness, that anxiety, that uncertainty that we're feeling when we speak publicly and we're out in a room manifests in a stutterer. That has not great control in stuttering.

Speaker 2:

How come you don't stutter when you sing?

Speaker 3:

It's because it's an unbelievable thing, guys. It's a different part of your brain. Yeah, singing and talking are different parts of your brain.

Speaker 1:

Really, there's a very famous Israeli singer what's his name? From a Greek background. Can't speak a word. I look, no, no. And when he speaks he can't get words out when he sings. It's unbelievable. I just forgot his name. Wow, yeah.

Speaker 3:

But it's very well known. You know that it's singing.

Speaker 1:

So politically I know not politically legally you think Trump is going to be able to run.

Speaker 2:

Yes, Ari San, ari San.

Speaker 1:

No, no, ari San is a Greek singer. You the poliker, you the poliker.

Speaker 2:

OK.

Speaker 1:

He stutters heavily, he's heavily stutters, and when he sings it's magical. Yeah, what else were we talking about before? But when we literally we just decided to start filming again, because when we stopped filming last time we were, but you kept asking is the mic off? Is the mic off Because you were talking about?

Speaker 3:

Well, we were having some sensitive conversations, very sensitive conversations, under the cone of silence between Modi, periel and Arthur. Exactly, I didn't give away any, really no.

Speaker 2:

Well, now that you are a WeGo consultant, it's probably covered by some authority.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, attorney client, attorney podcast privileges.

Speaker 1:

I love that.

Speaker 2:

So what? We had big news. We have big news.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, we're doing the 92nd Street Y for the 100th episode of this podcast.

Speaker 3:

You've got to explain to them like but we have what that is.

Speaker 2:

I know you're very excited about that. I'm excited about it too.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, well, you're interviewing me. It's called conversation with. We called up to see if the theater was available and they said no. But we do these things called conversation with, and I felt so like, I'm so happy that they wanted to do this with me because it's like it's like it's Woody Allen's been on these things. It's iconic, iconic.

Speaker 2:

It's very New York. It's 92nd Street Y.

Speaker 1:

You didn't know last night what I told you about this. I didn't.

Speaker 2:

You don't know the 92nd Street Y.

Speaker 3:

Of course, oh, ok, I know 92nd Street Y is that place that has an impossible school to get into, that people keep calling me to see if I know anybody there. That's what I know about the 92nd Street Y, but they have these interviews series. I don't know about it, but I'm excited for you. Thank you.

Speaker 2:

Wait and the history of the 92nd Street Y, because I'm going to tell you is so interesting. I was just reading about it how it started. Do you know how it started?

Speaker 1:

No.

Speaker 2:

Neither do I.

Speaker 1:

But I remember going to see people that I absolutely adored being interviewed there. I saw Alan King being interviewed there. I saw so many amazing and I can't believe I'm doing it.

Speaker 2:

I'm so excited I know it's very exciting. On March 22, 1874, it started from a German Jewish professional and businessman met to explore ways in which they could serve the social and spiritual needs of the American Jewish community.

Speaker 1:

Bam, that's how it started. That is us.

Speaker 2:

It started in 1874 as the Young Men's Hebrew Association. Very, very cool In 1864? 1874. Oh wow, but that is extremely exciting, but that was not the first thing I was going to say, that we were like officially married now, me and you.

Speaker 1:

Why.

Speaker 2:

We signed our contract.

Speaker 1:

For the book. Oh, working on a book, wow, all the crazy stories I tell you when we go to dinner or putting them in a book.

Speaker 3:

I love that.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, yeah. Crazy stories from the road, crazy stories of growing up at a time. Yeah.

Speaker 3:

I'd like to write one of the forwards, one of the 100%. You should have a lot of people contributing.

Speaker 2:

It's actually interesting to have. That's an interesting idea.

Speaker 3:

You want forwards.

Speaker 2:

No, not even necessarily forwards, but like Inclusions inclusions. Or questions. I could ask you a couple of things about Modi and that, because Leo's giving me jewel tones, we're calling it.

Speaker 1:

What the hell's that?

Speaker 2:

It's like getting a story out of you, that's what you vape. No, getting a story out of Modi is sometimes a little bit like pulling teeth.

Speaker 1:

I don't know. No, she came to Florida. We were in Florida to work on this book, so I dropped an Adderall so I could sit there and focus. And if I hit the Adderall I can get the stories out. And then she's like hi, can we stop for lunch? It's been six hours. We haven't moved from the table Were you taping them?

Speaker 3:

Yeah, of course, yeah, you have to.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, and then we were getting the stories down.

Speaker 2:

No, but then it's like and then he'll like I basically moved in with him and Leo for like four days and taped him down to a chair and was like extrapolating these stories and information. And then, like casual at dinner two nights later, he'll tell me like the most unbelievable, insane story and I'm like how is that not in the book?

Speaker 3:

So did you transcribe them? Yes, oh, you did already. Yeah, so you probably have a lot of great material. Well.

Speaker 2:

I have a lot of great material that needs to be then turned into.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, but editors do that. No, no, no, she's the.

Speaker 2:

No, no, no no, no, it needs to be really turned into like a narrative and essays. Yeah, of course, but then I have to talk to Leo to get, like you know, the more detailed information and stuff. He's like why do you want to know that it's not interesting? Then it turns out to be the most interesting stories.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, the book is great. Yeah, it's fun. It's fun, it's going to be great. Great little stories, really funny stories. I didn't realize how funny they were from the road. You know I'm not a regular comic. I'm performing these events, that these situations that are insane.

Speaker 3:

I think it's like interview people like that guy we met last night, arnold, yeah, yeah, he knows you when you were, you know you're Modi it could be an interesting idea to get like little stories.

Speaker 1:

No we don't need that. It's not like, I just think the funny, I just what's funny? Just need funny stuff out. Make sure the story's funny, make sure it's it's good, it's it's. That's all we really need. It's, it's just great. It's going to be a lot of fun. I can't, I can't wait. Arthur, by the way, if you ever go to his office, he has like carts of books.

Speaker 2:

I want to come just for the snacks.

Speaker 3:

Anytime, anytime.

Speaker 1:

Very good, he's got his own mini, tolbarones Mini mini's and he's got stacks of books, Any book he likes. He buys a billion and gives it to everybody else.

Speaker 2:

I love that.

Speaker 1:

I got some good books.

Speaker 3:

What's your, what's your number one book to give people the five people you meet in heaven. Who are they? The five people you meet in heaven are is a. They say they. I'm lost for words for a second.

Speaker 3:

The five people you meet in heaven is a story about the five people you meet in heaven after you pass that explain your life, everything that is unexplained to us, that we can't understand how that could be, that we say how could this possibly have happened? How in the world did God ever let this happen? Get explained to us, and in the most incredibly creative way. It's explained and that's what the book is about. And the book is about a hundred pages. You read it in about two hours and it makes you, it makes you a believer that there really is somebody that's that's pulling the strings up there. There is somebody really in control.

Speaker 3:

And when you say, how could this be? How could this have happened? How could we be in this circumstance? From the beginning, from the little insight that you get in the book, you say, wow, that's unbelievable. And it's this twisted way that it all makes sense. After you read a little book like this, you say, wow, I could, I can understand now how some of the things in my life that are mysteries happened. And the same author wrote a whole bunch of books and they're great. But look there there are. There's a lot of other books that I've read, little books that were advertised, that I read, that I hand out. Books on anger are great. Books on emotional intelligence, where we're able to. You may not be able to control a circumstance, but we can control how we react to it.

Speaker 2:

My husband should read that book.

Speaker 3:

But we all could benefit from it. You know all these books are read because we realized that we could benefit from a book. It's nothing. The first step to helping yourself is realizing you could do better at something. So you find something that resonates with you, you buy a bunch of them, you give it out.

Speaker 1:

No, I always give out the book Power of Intention by Dr Wayne Dyer. It's my, that's my go-to when I speak to somebody. I ordered it on Amazon.

Speaker 2:

What's your average? I started reading that. I have to finish reading it.

Speaker 1:

It's so good. How could you put it down? Once you start that book, I cannot. When I reread that book, I start, I can't put it down.

Speaker 2:

Well, I'm really reading it because I feel like I have to read it before I write our book, like, I feel like to really understand you, you have to read that book.

Speaker 1:

Absolutely.

Speaker 2:

Like that book is.

Speaker 1:

Absolutely.

Speaker 2:

Integral to your.

Speaker 1:

Integral to my life. Yeah, when everything just changed, just seeing everything in a positive light. Everything is happening. You can make it your thoughts. All of that stuff is in there. All the self-help books are basically the same. It's a different way to present it. It's a different way to show it to somebody. That might be a better way to help them. Five people you meet in heaven it might be just hey, we're down here, this is what's happening, lean into it and make it good.

Speaker 3:

No, I mean you know we're, you know I mean the $99,000 question we're all searching for is like you know what happened at that festival where young people died, and what happened in Gaza, where babies were slaughtered and you know women were raped, like what happened there, like how could that have happened? You know people forget or they don't forget. Many people don't forget. You know what happened in the Holocaust. You know what happened in the Holocaust, but nobody's really asking those questions anymore. You know what happened. Where was God then? But like something that so new. October 7th, what happened?

Speaker 3:

And you know, you think like sometimes, like we deserve an explanation. Sometimes Somebody's gotta give us some kind of a sign that everything's okay. And you know, I think about that a lot Like looking for a sign, like maybe my father, who's up there, is gonna, like you know, come to me in a dream and just tell me it's all right. Someone's gotta just let everybody know I got it, don't worry. Okay, it'll make sense one day. Right now it seems like the furthest thing from reality, but I got this and I think that that's a little bit. There are people with enormous emunah. They're gonna believe everything and anything, no matter what. And then there are people on the other extreme, you know, that don't believe that God is controlling any of this. And then there are people in the middle that you know see these situations and they question it and they ask themselves how could this be? And that's where emunah really steps in and separates the people that completely believe from the people that are gonna question things once in a while.

Speaker 1:

I don't know, I don't have any of the answers, I just thinking in. You know. So this happened on October 7th by October 6th was the holiday, you know and the state of Israel was a mess, the government was a hot mess, the government was just, the government was at each other's throats. Horrible, horrible situation with the government, and I don't wanna take sides or whatever, but it was just embarrassing and horrible. And all of a sudden, in 24 hours, the country's united. Yeah, no one should have been raped and no one should have been killed and no one should have been murdered or taken hostage, but something happened that brought that to the country together. Now, you know, I have no idea, the civilians have been brought.

Speaker 2:

The civilians have been united.

Speaker 1:

Yep.

Speaker 2:

But the government itself is still a mess and the civilians are irate, by the way, but it's still.

Speaker 1:

There's a unity.

Speaker 2:

Something happened to break that, and also there is probably a lot of things that we don't know.

Speaker 1:

And I always say I live in America, I did not serve in the army. I don't ever give the conclusions of what you should do or what they should do, cause I don't live there. I don't live there. I just wish them a sheikh energy always, and that you can't. But that's what they should do, unless you're writing a $20 million check to the government. Then you can say what to do. But I'm not so. I never and I don't live there, so I can't be like. This is what they should be doing and this is why they should do it. I can't have that opinion. I can't.

Speaker 2:

I have a question for both of you. Maybe, Arthur, first, are you surprised at the rabid anti-Semitism that we have seen come to the forefront of this country all over the world since October 7th?

Speaker 3:

I'm not surprised by it, I'm blown away by it, and it's just something that we're just beginning to deal with. I mean, you have educated people professors at universities and students at the best universities that are just not realizing the atrocities that occurred and they're just and don't understand the issues. Meaning, if you're, some of the best interviews on Instagram are interviews of people speaking to some of the other people that are signing. They're either signing petitions or other things and they ask them by the way, do you know this or do you know that? Or do you know where Gaza is or do you no idea? They're just following a crowd and you know, my partner sent me something really interesting to listen to.

Speaker 3:

It was an hour long podcast. I don't remember who the person was, but it was great and I'll circulate it and what was it. It was a person that explained and took the position that we've got this wrong. Okay, we've got this wrong and all the people in the United States and in the rest of the world have it wrong. This is their religion, this what they did. They were following Muhammad, if you, if you read. The reason we don't know is we haven't read the Quran. We don't know what happened in there. We don't know the stories Biblically. We know our own stories. This is how Muhammad operated. This is what he did. This is the atrocities that he committed in the Quran. This is what he spoke about. They're just following their leader. It has nothing to do with Gaza and any supposed oppression of Palestinians that were living there. It's a mistake. It's a perfect storm. That's what it is.

Speaker 1:

It's their religion. So the Quran doesn't, doesn't, doesn't teach peace and love? No, no, it doesn't.

Speaker 3:

It teaches it teaches exactly what occurred, and the podcast detailed it and and translated it and showed it in very clear ways how these people are acting and the fact that we're taking we're taking a position here, right this anti-Semitism is shocking.

Speaker 1:

But I I've seen Iman's on on Instagram that have been saying that the Quran basically says do not kill women, do not kill children, do not kill elderly and the, and they were saying that they, what they did was absolutely not, was not, was not of the Islamic religion, and I, I, I can't imagine any religions built on killing this this what this podcast explained very carefully and quoted from excerpts of the Quran detailed, detailed that this is the conduct that Mohammed acted, this is how he acted, and that their conduct was copying was copying his.

Speaker 3:

they were following their leader. Just like we observe the Sabbath and we we have, you know, we send flyers out in Gaza before we're going to invade that everybody should leave and we give notice, weeks, weeks worth of notice. They kill in that way, in that very violent way. They kill.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, what the anti-Semitism, the anti-Semitism is is insane and it are you surprised, though?

Speaker 2:

Are you like shocked?

Speaker 1:

I am not shocked, it's just, it was there, just. It wasn't just like the insurrection, january 6th, it was just there. Is this living in America? There is this people who are the white power and they, it's there.

Speaker 2:

But no, no, no, but this is now. It's a real are KKK white power. There are people on the campus.

Speaker 3:

No, I'm just saying, but this this now, now that Israel is is retaliating in Gaza, it opens up the floodgates for all the anti-Semitic things happening in the world, because I think that a lot of these people either weren't informed or or or weren't weren't informed or forgot what happened October 7th, right, you know Israel waited, you know, a good deal of time, you know, before they retaliated.

Speaker 1:

I will say Nikki Haley said right away on, like October 8th, 9th we are seeing the footage now of what happened in it, but remember in a few weeks when Israel is retaliating, and remember that this is what it was last. Yesterday, for some reason, I put NPR on it when we were in the car. The way they present the news is so insane and so against any normality of of of way to be a journalist. The way they presented this hospital attack, the. If you're seeing the videos and I really try to limit what I'm seeing, but you're seeing soldiers with the cameras here we are, this is the house of the head of Hamas, this is the hospital and here is the entrance of the tunnel that goes under the hospital and through that and dip and NPR is like Israel today.

Speaker 1:

You attacked the hospital and bombed it and civilians died and they forgot to mention that in the basement is the Hamas headquarters, that they tried to get everybody out as they could. They took the kids to another place, location before they bombed whatever they had bombed the opening of the tunnel. The way they presented is so insane and then it gets all of these insane kids who think that they who listen to NPR and like the woke and like. This is why we have to support Palestine. And then you have that whole. Leo turned his Instagram off because of queers for Palestine, these gay, gay, lesbian, trans people Not even realizing what would happen?

Speaker 3:

What are they Not? What would happen if they ever were in Gaza or Palestine? My friends sent me videos.

Speaker 1:

In Washington Square Park, queers for Palestine, and it's white 20 to 30 year old idiots standing there with their purple hair, screaming queers transfer Palestine. They would gas all of them in a minute, in a hot minute that the Hamasis and the regular Palestinians would gas them, not just like just the Hamas, the regular ones, would also kill them. And we had in the news lately when Israel came in there and soldiers who are gay pulled out of the rainbow flag. Here we are in Palestine with a flag and Habbad set up a table where here you can put on filling in Gaza, in Gaza, and they have the services. And there's one picture that's so amazing. Believe me, I really, really, really, really tried to limit what I watch.

Speaker 1:

There's a picture of this like an officer and they're having a service. It was probably Rosh Hodesh. It was Rosh Hodesh, the new month was there and you read the Torah and he's reading it and for the pointer, he's using his battle knife. So he's like. You know, when you read the Torah, you point it's like it's very hard to read because there's no and you're not supposed to touch the actual thing with your hands. But usually there's a Yad, there's a little hand like a silver hand and it looks like this and it's. And you point that and you go amen begechamoshebuneru, amen bechazalala. And then, but he's using a knife, this battle knife, this insane battle knife.

Speaker 1:

They put a joke out of it like no one's ever gonna correct him if he makes a mistake, because usually in the services when someone reads the Torah and he makes a mistake, everybody right away starts to Like just the whole thing. It's like we tried to put our hand out. It didn't work. Now the knife is out. Beware, that was the I took from that picture before reading the thing. Anyway, so I'm glad we got an extra. What was the half hour we did with Arthur Nice? It was just.

Speaker 1:

A little serious, a little sobering. Yeah, a little sobering, yeah, but we did have a very funny conversation before, when we clipped off after the first podcast, which part I don't know, we can't mention what it was, but you were on fire, so we just figured we'd just keep recording. I'll be back, you're always welcome back.

Speaker 3:

I think I'm gonna pop in here.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, love that. Yeah, so this is short. How long was this one? We're at 35. We're at 35. We're good to yeah, we're what? I think we're good to go. No, that was a fun one, a short one. Thanks for listening. Did you guys announce the book?

Speaker 3:

Yeah, did you talk about the book?

Speaker 1:

We just talked about it.

Speaker 3:

We're working, it's okay yeah.

Speaker 1:

Again, a and H provisions. Thank you very much for being a part of our podcast Kosher Dogs.

Speaker 2:

KosherDogsnet. It's perfect for Thanksgiving to shop it up, put it in the turkey. Oh, look at you with the recipes.

Speaker 1:

And CodeModi for your first order, 30% off if you use the code MODI. And, of course, whites and Luxembourg. Thank you for being a part of our family literally. It's not a collaborates family Family and Arthur's here for the Good to be here. Yes, good to be here. Shows Atlanta, charlotte, north Carolina, atlanta the tour, the Know, your Audience tour, is live. Go to moriolivecom and get a show with the paramount that San Diego, moriolivecom, moriolivecom.

Speaker 2:

I know the other shows too.

Speaker 1:

Balboa Theater. Go to moriolivecom, find a show near you, find a show near your friends. Send them the link, be the friend who brings the friends to the comedy show. And that is Mashiach Energy, which is what we're about here. Anything you want to close with, and if you're not following Jack Snacks, you can go to.

Speaker 3:

Mashiach Energy. I'm not following Jack Snacks, oh.

Speaker 1:

Jack Snacks Making a mistake. Yes, well, don't follow Jack Snacks Order Order. I'm sorry.

Speaker 3:

If you're in the tri-state area, right, she's still yeah.

Speaker 1:

Although she's telling us that she's gonna blow up out of this.

Speaker 3:

She's still delivering. Right, she's still delivering. Yes, manhattan Jack Snacks.

Speaker 1:

Five pounds great neck. When you are invited to go for Shabbat somewhere and you need to like what, am I gonna buy them? Flowers or a dish or whatever? Just go to Jack Snacks and order this beautiful arrangement that comes there. It is literally it's Mashiach Energy in a box and yummy and tasty and there's oh, it's always abundant. You can tell this girl group in a house of abundance it's like Excess. I didn't wanna say excess. So order Jack Snacks for yourself. But also, when you have to go somewhere, bring it to a friend. Hollies are coming up. Shabbat is every week. Bring it to your friend, send him a little Mashiach Energy. Thank you, arthur, for staying on with us. Thank you, periel and all of you listeners, mordilivecom for shows near you. Thank you very, very much. We're out. We're out.

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