Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
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Speaker 2 (00:38):
This is the Jody Jones Show on Fourtom ninety six
seven and day. I'm fourteen hundred.
Speaker 3 (00:45):
Hi everybody, thanks for joining me on The Jody Jones
Show and in studio like always, Frank Van Lanningham.
Speaker 4 (00:51):
Hey, guys, what's up?
Speaker 3 (00:53):
AB one three three three? Another bill to destroy California
in that amazing Frank.
Speaker 4 (01:00):
Yeah, they are basically sanctioning home invasions and base. Isn't
it called you need to be a victim?
Speaker 3 (01:07):
Yeah, it pretty much is. But you know right now,
you're not gonna want to miss h Next week, we're
going to have a special guest on and we're going
to be breaking that bill down and we're going to
explain to you what it will actually do, so you
won't want to miss next week, that's for sure. But
right now I want to kind of roast somebody, and
(01:28):
we're not going to give her too much time just
because it's uh. I don't want to give her too
much time on on on this show. And that's representative
elan Omar.
Speaker 4 (01:36):
Oh my god, it's ladies and gentlemen, imagine if you
will for a moment that incest and terrorism had a
bastard love child, I would name it Ilhin and Omar.
Speaker 3 (01:45):
Yeah, I mean, you know, this is a lady that
came from some all you that married her brother and
just she's absolutely disgusting and sickening to listen to.
Speaker 4 (01:56):
Now, who's terents pay for the wedding when that happens, Jody.
Speaker 3 (01:59):
I don't know. It's just it's amazing that she's a
you know, she's it's amazing, she's a congressman. She's it's
amazing she's a representative for the United States. Of America
because she definitely does not have United States of America's
best interest in mind. Everything she does, everything she talks about,
is about hating America. Now she's calling everybody stupid. That's
you know, basically that you know, you're stupid if you
(02:22):
vote for you know, lowering taxes, defending the United States,
you know, all the above.
Speaker 4 (02:30):
Right, But she's she represents Minneapolis inner city, you know,
Saint Paul, Twin Cities is basically what she represents, which
is a big blue says pool. I was on the
phone the other day with a guy out of Minnesota,
don't you know, and we're talking about tractor buckets for
my machine, and he made it abundantly clear that much
(02:52):
like California, not everybody in Minnesota lines up with her.
They have a lot of good people, but in their
major metropolitan areas, and like we talked about last week, California, right,
And that's simply because the people in the big blue
cesspool are like zoo animals. They are captive, they need
(03:14):
these services, they are dependent, and these people pray upon that.
So she doesn't represent all of Minnesota. To be sure,
I want to be fair to those good people because
I'll catch a lot of crap from being from California
and people think, oh California, Berkeley. Yeah, Nancy Peluci's like no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
you don't get it.
Speaker 3 (03:31):
But you know, you always see these headlines with these crazy,
crazy left wing politicians, you know, coming out and writing
these bills like AB one three three three that all
they do is protect the criminals. You know, I would
probably have a heart attack if I seen one of
(03:52):
them actually write a bill that that's trying to protect
the law abiding citizens here in California. I would really
literally just fall over.
Speaker 4 (04:01):
Well, you don't need a bill to protect the law
abiding people. You see, there is natural law and that
supersedes all other laws. The first law of anything is
self preservation, number one law of nature, and any law
that goes against that is going to fail. So honestly,
you never needed a law saying you're allowed to have
(04:23):
a gun. You don't need a law that says stand
your ground. You don't need any of these laws. Those
laws already are in place, and what they want to
do is enshrine brutality. They want to make sure that
you now have some duty to be a victim. But
I can't wait for next week to talk about that. Jody,
our guest is amazing. That's the teaser. Folks. You're gonna
(04:43):
love this show.
Speaker 5 (04:44):
But you know what.
Speaker 3 (04:46):
It's it's refreshing having these new politicians in California, like
a similarman David Tange, Paul some similar woman Alexandra Mosito
and so on, you know, Senator Shannon Grove. They all
(05:08):
fight for, you know, the conservative value. And what I
love about them is they stand up and they do fight,
and they don't just you know, cower in the corner.
They're very vocal about conservative values and that's what we
need in Sacramento because it's that's few and far between
right now. Super majority, I think, and I hope and
(05:31):
I pray that we get a little closer, you know,
in a couple of years and when we go back
to the polls that people understand and look at this.
But you know, to what you were speaking on earlier,
right now, Frank about the big cities. You know, the
(05:52):
big cities are controlling everything in California right now, and
and that's absolutely because they've made them dependent instead of
independent by giving them everything that they possibly can give them,
and nobody wants to vote that out. You know, they
know who they're voting for. They know that if they
vote for somebody else, that some of these things are
going to go away. And you know what is what
(06:13):
is socialism. Socialism is spending other people's money. That's exactly
what it is. And when that runs out, which it will,
it always does, every socialist country in history has broken down.
And this is what bankrupt.
Speaker 4 (06:30):
Well because it defies the natural order of things. It
is not God's plan, it's not Darwin's plan, it's not
life's plan to sustain like that. And again, the minute
the industrial revolution started, and this goes back into the
eighteen hundreds, when we discovered how to use machines and
do things more efficiently and more effectively and more uniformly
(06:52):
and more economically, the entire paradigm shifted. We no longer
need to stay down on the farm. We could go
to those big, shiny cities. At that time, the cities
were new, they had services, they had water coming out
of the pipes. Your sewage went away and food got
brought in. There was anything you wanted to eat. It
(07:13):
was a cavalcade of prizes. And I understand the allure
and I mean, work on the farm was hard, it
was brutal, but you survived and going forward you come
into the cities, it's wonderful. Well that worked until we
started offshoring and outsourcing a lot of our jobs because
we basically created this unnatural situation, packed people into a
(07:38):
concrete jungle, and then we disassembled the mechanism that sustains them.
What do you think will happen? And so we set
these people up for failure. So the first thing I
would say, Jodi is whenever you devise a system, whether
it's a business system and economic system, anything, make sure
that it, to the greatest extent possible, goes along with
(08:00):
the natural order of things. If you do that, your
tenure on this earth will be a little longer and
a little more comfortable. Ultimately everything fails, but at a
bare minimum, you won't suffer as badly. Right now, we
are paying a price for many things that we've done.
Speaker 3 (08:16):
Yeah, and you know it's people talk about the breaking
down of America and conservative values, and not just even
conservative values, it's America. It's it's the American families. Yeah,
and you hear about it all the time. How you know,
there's it's a it's a you know, one parent family.
You know, one the the families of the past that
(08:41):
was a one family home, your mom, dad, kids, you know,
dad working. That's a thing of the past because it
takes both parents to work. And unfortunately, when you have
them divorced and you have them a lot of times,
you have the kids living part time with mom, part
time with dad.
Speaker 4 (08:58):
You know.
Speaker 3 (08:59):
And I'm not saying and that's always bad, because there
is there is parents out there that do work together.
But overall, I think that's really hurt America. And and
a lot of it is economically driven because it's just
so expensive now to live and and when when I
say that, I even break it down a little more
saying that it's policy driven because that's what breaks down
(09:22):
our economy. Just like in California, they're they're they're passing
so many policies and that are affecting you know, the
the workforce, uh, small businesses and and everything that you
can possibly think of, from you know, construction work to
(09:43):
owning your own little business like a restaurant or something
like that. There's there's so many things that you have
to get insurance, you know, everything that you're doing when
it when it comes especially here in California. It they
they really make it hard to live and especially if
(10:03):
you're a business owner. You're a small business owner, Frank,
you know, won't you speak to that a little bit?
Speaker 4 (10:09):
Well? As a small business owner, the first thing you
learned to do is solve problems and find solutions because
all day long you're going to be hit right, left
and center with this broke, that broke, this guy didn't
show up, this guy didn't perform.
Speaker 3 (10:25):
Let me ask you this though, because you've been in
business for a long time, and what's the biggest thing
you've seen in the last say eight years? Okay, when
it comes to financial you know, financial problems and just
keeping your business financially because of all the policies and
(10:48):
everything that they're that the you know, California has passed
to make it harder for the small business to stay
in you know, to stay up and and and make money.
Speaker 4 (11:00):
You know, it's a good question, and I will tell you.
We can look at symptoms and we can look at
underlying root causes, and as humans, we've become very good
at treating symptoms. The all big pharma everything's about treat
the symptoms don't talk about the problems, but the root
cause of all the problems we have are you know.
(11:22):
And I can blame politicians, but I have to look
at the humans that voted for these people and say,
you put those people in. And then I ask myself,
why did you put this person in? Will you put
this person in because you have a screwed up belief system?
Why do you have a screwed up belief system? And
we can keep going down that rabbit hole, and I
will tell you, I think a lot of this is
(11:45):
a byproduct. And I know I'm going to catch a
lot of flack here of the women's movement. And look,
said Frank said, I hate women. I hate women. No no, no, no, no, no,
you misheard me. A lot of good has come out
of the woman movement. I was raised by a single
mother full disclosure. She married a guy later on in
(12:05):
life who became my stepdad, a black guy, and they
dragged us into Englewood, and I learned about the inner city,
you know, vibe, and so all of that turned out
to be a very positive thing because it gave me
a little more perspective.
Speaker 3 (12:18):
That's what I like the best out of you, Frank,
is is. You know, you're always honest. You know, you
don't treat anybody like trash, whether it's a you know,
somebody with a whole bunch of money or somebody with
you know that's pushing a broom. You treat everybody the same.
And that's why I always say who I am. You know,
I don't care you know, your socioeconomic background, color, your skin,
(12:40):
your sexual preference. I don't care. If you're a good person,
You're going to be my friend. And that's what I
like about you, Frank. You know, we kind of went off,
you know, my thought process here about you know, businesses
and policy driven and stuff like that. But you know,
I like where you went with that, Frank, And since
we're there, you know, yeah, I do agree with you
(13:01):
a lot on that too. You know, it's there's a
lot of pieces to the puzzle. Why you know, America
is where we're at right now, and there's no short
fix at all. Zero.
Speaker 4 (13:14):
I'm not even sure there's a long fix. Honestly, I
think we have done so many things, and one might
say a lot of damage. I don't know that it's
necessarily damage, but the things that we have done have
set the stage for everything that's happening right now, and
I would say the root of all of this is
the breakdown of the American family, the breakdown of all families.
Speaker 3 (13:38):
Well, hey, let's talk about that after our break the
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Speaker 2 (15:44):
The Jody Jones Show on Power Talk ninety six seven
and AM fourteen hundred.
Speaker 3 (15:49):
It seems like these days when when couples have problems,
they don't want to work them out. They would rather
separate and do it on their own than work together.
And you know, think about think about this, guys. How
many people do you know that are still together after
so many years, like say high school, and you see
a couple you know, you have a friend or something, man,
(16:12):
you think they're still together. How cool is that?
Speaker 5 (16:15):
Right?
Speaker 4 (16:15):
Oh? Absolutely? The first first thing I want to say
is I've been married to the love of my life,
well since two thousand and three when I finally convinced
her to walk down the aisle with me. And I
have to say, Lydia, Marie van Lanningham, you are the
light of my life. I would marry you one hundred
times more if I could.
Speaker 3 (16:35):
And you know, Frank, that's great, That's that's great, bro.
What And I see you guys, you guys, you know,
you guys have problems. You guys work it out, you know.
But that's the thing, that's what I'm saying. You know,
people don't want to work things out anymore.
Speaker 2 (16:47):
You know.
Speaker 3 (16:48):
To me, that's what That's what builds character and relationships,
not the good times the bad times. And what we
see now is it's an immediate fix, like you know, hey,
what can you do for me right now? And if
it's if it's a bad thing, then people just want
to leave. But like I said, there's a lot of
(17:08):
ingredients into the breakdown of American families, and we don't
have enough time to talk about all that.
Speaker 4 (17:13):
This part of the feel good mentality, right and you
can you can look at us collectively and say we
want to I want to feel good right now. So
I want to take a pill for this. I want
to take a shot for this. I don't want to
do the hard work. I want to get a divorce.
I want to you know, all of that, and think
about when we empowered women and told them and this
(17:35):
comes back to Rosie the Riveter and even before then,
if you want to go to you know, the Suffrage
Act for women, you want to talk about nineteen sixty four,
a lot of good happened, some bad things happened. In
a nutshell, a mentality developed where I don't need no man,
I can do it on my own. And there's you
(17:56):
know that Tina Turner syndrome, right, And the option was
stay with ike and let them keep beating you, which
was also a crappy deal. And so by no means
am I saying women should be you know, suffer at
the hands of men. Not by a long shot. But
I will tell you that the minute we started putting
women in the workforce, a couple of things happened. Number One,
(18:17):
the economy pivoted, and now it requires two incomes to
run a household. Initially we got a sugar rush, we
got sixty five inch television sets. We've got consumerism, we
got materialism, we got boats, we got urvs, we got
new clothes for the kids, we got bigger houses, and
it went on and on and on and Economically, Jody,
our generation is the pinnacle of the socioeconomic strata. We
(18:42):
are the peak. Unfortunately, from here it only goes down.
And if you do not have two people working good
paying jobs right now, you're in trouble. You're in trouble.
Speaker 3 (18:54):
Yeah, you know, sure is funny. President Trump's pigs almost
all of them are gen X. If you don't know
gen X is you know what years that is. It's
pretty much between nineteen or yeah, nineteen sixty five through
like nineteen eighty. Yeah, you know, and before that's baby
boomers nineteen forty six to sixty four sixty four.
Speaker 4 (19:16):
I'm I'm the young one of the younger boomers, a
year old. Yeah. I get deals at Denny's full disclosure deals.
I do, I do, I do anybody want to meet
me there for the early bird special at four o'clock.
Speaker 3 (19:28):
I got a coupony, right, and then our kids are
basically gin y and millennials, which is what eighty one
through ninety four.
Speaker 4 (19:37):
Yeah, I think after that point, yeah, you just write
lame because you know, yeah, my biggest problem, Yeah, you
ask me a question in the last segment, Jody, and
I want to answer that because I never got a
chance to. Uh, The biggest problem of being a small
business person is the human element. We have very entitled people.
I have entitled people on the buying end of the
(19:59):
spectrum and on the working end of the spectrum. People
get lazier, they get stupider, they get lamer. Thank God
for AI, all I got to say, because the computer
doesn't know it has a bunch of rights. It doesn't
need the Family Leave Act and the Lily Ledbetter Act
and all this kind of wonderful stuff. And all of
these things are band aids to be thrown on a
(20:21):
very bad abscess. And much of this, once again, was
when people started doing what feels good, what makes them
feel happy in the moment, and we got away from
a mentality of service and assistance and helping and nobility
and strength and striving. And you look at all the
(20:42):
roads out there, Look at the water pipes that we
take for granted, the electric lines, the buildings, the freeways,
all of it this was given to us by people
who are now dead. And I'm talking. These people worked
when it was one hundred and ten degrees. If they
were lucky, they had some lukewarm water to help cool down.
They didn't have air conditioning, they didn't have three thousand
(21:03):
channels and smartphones and Starbucks and all these great things.
They weren't, you know, given a just a treasure trove
of right.
Speaker 3 (21:11):
It wasn't so confusing. We knew what a man and
we knew what a woman was. They figured it out,
you know what I mean. It wasn't like she them.
They that there was no time for that.
Speaker 4 (21:21):
That is a luxury for overprivileged, over entitled people. If
you know we have disrupted that, you want to talk
about that. At the time of survival, I needed a
wife to help me take care of my children so
that I could go to work, and she kept the
home together. Dad came home from work, took off his belt, disciplined,
(21:44):
the kids, went back to work the next day. She
took care of things. Was it perfect?
Speaker 1 (21:49):
No?
Speaker 4 (21:49):
Was it better than what we have? Your darn right?
It was?
Speaker 3 (21:52):
And now what we have is let's depend on who
you ask. I guess you know. Unfortunately, was it better?
That's the asked, the million dollar question. Was it better?
Speaker 4 (22:02):
Judge by the results, not by your field.
Speaker 3 (22:05):
It's where I'm going with this. Yes, yes, so we.
Speaker 4 (22:07):
Look at us. You know what I get up every
Saturday before the show comes on. I cut my lawn,
I wash my car, I do the things I need
to do. I love the sound of a lawnmower on
a Saturday morning.
Speaker 3 (22:20):
Jody, Right, that's because women like alpha man. I don't
care what anybody says, right, what anybody talks about. They
want an alpha male. They want a man that knows
they're a man and knows how to take care of them,
because every woman wants that. Now, are a lot of
women independent, make their own money? Of course they are,
(22:42):
of course they are. But I'll tell you, I'm not
saying every woman on this planet, but a majority of
the women want an alpha man.
Speaker 4 (22:50):
And absolutely, it's just the way it is.
Speaker 3 (22:52):
I'm not saying, you know, somebody else, some woman's out
there is going I don't think that will Okay, Well
then good that's you.
Speaker 4 (22:58):
Yeah, you're the outlier there.
Speaker 3 (23:00):
I'm saying a majority of the women want an alpha man.
Speaker 4 (23:05):
Right. The other two percent wear comfortable shoes, say.
Speaker 3 (23:08):
They want somebody that, you know, if something breaks down,
they're gonna fix it. They're not calling, you know, Johnny
on the spot, Hey man, I need you come over
and fix this on this is broke, Harry Man. You know,
I mean, it's like, hey, that's broke, I'll fix it.
Let me fix it, baby boom, get it fun. You're
done every darn time.
Speaker 4 (23:22):
And you know what, on I am not going to
be a beta male to satisfy an unsatisfiable insatiable woman.
If I need to take a pair of pinking scissors
and clip myself to please her in the moment, she
won't want me anyway.
Speaker 3 (23:37):
And I'm not going to break down the male you know,
person about if they can't fix something, that's okay. I mean,
if you're out working and you're working every day and
you're supporting your family, man, that that's that's really it's.
Speaker 4 (23:49):
What a majority. That's just another way of doing it.
Speaker 3 (23:51):
Yes, exactly, you might be I don't want to be
miss construedor you do, yes.
Speaker 4 (23:55):
Do it like an alpha male, right, I don't care
whether you work HR apartment. Hey, but before women came
into the workplace, Jody, was there such thing as an
HR apartment?
Speaker 3 (24:06):
Uh, you know you didn't need I don't know. I wasn't.
Speaker 4 (24:09):
Oh no, when I when I was, when I was younger,
there was no such thing as an HR apartment. We
didn't get that until everybody discovered they were victims. Then
all of a sudden, now we need an HR apartment.
It's it's and and and all these postings all over
the wall. The worst part of a small business is
that you need five hundred square feet of wall space
to put all this crap up there that nobody can read.
Speaker 3 (24:30):
Yeah, you know, and and I kind of want to
get back to what we're talking about about policies and
and these are policy driven and and it's bad policy
here in California. It just there's there's no other way
to put it. It's bad policy. It's it's you know,
people come up like with this AB one three three,
it's protecting the criminals, it's it's it's all the above,
(24:53):
you know, And I know Californians are getting sick and
tired of it. We've been that that for a long time.
You know, last week we talked h with Madison from
you know, Turning Point, USA, and she's saying, you know,
and we kind of laughed about the millennials and gen
y and stuff like that. But you know what, there's
a lot of young people coming up and they're seeing
(25:16):
the light and they're seeing that that all the stuff
that the mainstream media has been saying and portraying is
really not true. And the movement is really to get
those kids and those young people to think conservatively, which
they're going to see. They're going to open their eyes
and go, wait a minute, what's really going on here?
(25:39):
They're gonna they're smart enough to think for themselves.
Speaker 4 (25:41):
Well, we have to ask ourselves, Jody, what kind of
country do we want to be? Right? Do we want
to be a country of strong, proud, brave warriors? If
you know, every couple more weeks we go back down
to Mexico again. And you know what, the thing they
respect the most down there is an alpha male. Right
(26:02):
you go to Afghanistan, Pakistan, any other country, a strong
proud mail is the gold standard.
Speaker 3 (26:09):
And I'll tell you what that is the standard for
America too. Having all that said, join us next week.
So until then, God bless you and God bless America.
Speaker 4 (26:19):
Thanks folks, good things, and God bless you.
Speaker 2 (26:22):
The Jody Jones Show on Power Time ninety six seven
and AM fourteen hundred.
Speaker 3 (26:27):
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