 Welcome to the Knuckleheads of Liberty. Apparently, Sotomayor is sort of ultra-concerned about masking up in the court. And so she had had some concerns, and I guess she says that she might have expressed these to the Chief Justice. And so for some reason or other, that message didn't work its way to all the other justices, I guess. And so one of the justices who thinks this is apparently a bit of nonsense is Gorsuch, apparently. And he lived on a desk. Yeah, and so Gorsuch was not masking up, but he also hadn't been alerted about the issue either that one of his other justices wanted him to mask up. So it was sort of an issue. So the way NPR, though, reported it is that, and I don't have the story that's kind of sat in our bin for a while, so I can't quite remember the exact quote. But the issue was that they were saying that this was an issue of Gorsuch trying to disrespect Sotomayor. And he had never actually been told about it. And so one of the crazy things was that after all of the justices had come out, essentially, that were involved and openly said that this was just a miscommunication issue and that this hadn't been relayed and that Sotomayor wasn't bitter about Gorsuch at all, NPR refused to back off the story. So even though the justices were telling them, you got the story wrong, they refused to back off of it. And that's kind of more of the bigger scandal, you know, that the media is going to sit there and tell their viewers what the truth is, despite what the actual critical sources are. I mean, these are the sources, the main sources, right? Some of you works for Sotomayor. Sotomayor herself is saying it, you know, Gorsuch himself is saying it and Chief Justice Roberts is literally saying it. Those are the sources, right? It's kind of crazy. What do you guys think about this one? Well, I think it's a nationalist grace that NPR is funded by my tax dollars, okay? That's what I think. But on this particular story, you see, this is what NPR does all the time. Just because this story makes a conservative quote on quote looks bad, or Republican quote on quote looks bad, or someone was appointed by Republican Donald Trump in this particular case, it make all of them look bad, they have to stick with the story, okay? But this is what our tax dollars are doing and this is why we should stop funding NPR. Now, why do we need to be funding NPR in the first case? Why do taxpayers have to be funding them? We have so many, we spoke about this in the last show, we have so many sources of information right now. We don't need NPR, they're government funded propaganda to be filling our brains with nonsense, okay? And that's what this story was at a garbage. That's what it really was. It was a simple miscommunication and look at how they blow it up. And that's what our tax dollars are doing. We should stop funding these people. Wow, I can't add to that. I mean, that's awesome. Yeah, I agree. What can I say? Yeah, then, you know, again, another source that I can't get reliable information from. Oh, I'm shocked, but, you know, but again, Leon's point about, you know, okay, I'm not really shocked, but I don't want to pay for them either. I don't want to pay for them to give me disinformation. Exactly. I mean, it's already, you know, if I want to pay for disinformation, I'll just subscribe to CNN, you know? But that's all my own reconnaissance. That's my own decision. That's not something where NPR gets to suck that money right out of my pocket before I even get it. You know, through taxes. CNN better than satire. That's what their pitch line is. Thank you for listening to the Knuckleheads of Liberty podcast.