Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
So the mountain lion was Yes, the constant updates. Right
behind our property, we face a street and then behind
us there's a row of homes that face a street
behind us. Yes, like we're back to back with these
homes and on that street mounta lion was roaming around earlier. Today,
(00:24):
time to let your cat and dog out. Uh, see
what happens. But it's nature, Deborah Mark or a circle
of life. No. Hey, I'd rather have a mountain lion
than one of those crazy vagrants. I can take the
mount Yeah, I take a chance of the mountain lion. Yeah,
Son of Kent, show a chance for money. It's coming
(00:46):
up another keyword around four twenty. Be listening for the
keyword and the instructions as to how you could win
the inflation bonus cash money. We have been doing the
yes and the no sides and the ballot measures whenever
we can find find anybody, as we're running out of
the time before the election, and this is going to
be Proposition thirty one. In twenty twenty, the legislature and
(01:09):
the governor approved the law that would ban the sale
of candy and fruit flavored tobacco products. But the tobacco companies.
We all, they opened their wallets and they got to
signatures for a referendum, which has put the measure on
hold until we resolved at the ballot on November eighth.
So a yes vote affirms what the legislature and the
(01:30):
governor did. It does ban the sale of candy and
fruit flavored tobacco products. A no vote repeals what they did. Right,
we are a no vote on the voter. Guy, So
if you want to end the sale of flavored tobacco products,
you vote yes. If you want to tell the government
newsom to get their beak out of private decisions, you
(01:51):
vote no. Beak Well, I mean, it's just not their business.
We're going to talk now to Stephen green Hunt, who's
a columnist. You see his columns the Southern California Newsgroup
papers like the Arch County Regis through the LA Daily News. Steven,
how are you? Oh good? Yeah? And on this issue,
I'm also I'm with the Art Street Institutem. We've done
(02:11):
a lot of work on this topic and it does
not advance public health to ban m you know, to
ban flighters. And it's not just foody flavors that bands
all flavors cinnamon mint, and it basically bans all vaping
because almost all vate products have flightwer in them, and
it it bans the safest products, right, So smokeless tobaccos,
(02:33):
you know, snooze and some of those things that are
much lower risk. Those things get banned. But you can
still pick up a pack of marlboros or camels. So
I don't know how that makes any sense. So they're banning.
The state decided through seven ninety three to ban the
safest products and to leave on the market the most
(02:54):
dangerous products in the UK. I thought this, Yeah, yeah,
I thought it's only dealt with tobacco products. Now you
mentioning vaping products. Yeah, it's it's a band on vaping
because they've defined tobacco as anything. Vaping is tobacco even
though it doesn't actually have tobacco. It's nicotine. You know,
I have never understood there is zero tobacco and in
(03:16):
a vaping product zero But yeah, it doesn't matter. That's
what they That's that's how the definition is. So it's
essentially a band on vaping on vaping is the target.
Why do you think these fanatics are worked up about
vaping when I haven't seen any evidence that there's health
issues if you vape. They don't. They don't like the
(03:38):
product and these things like that Snooze like in Sweden
has has the lowest um They have lowest cancer rating Europe,
and that's because people tend not to smoke there. They
use these little pouches, spitless pouches mostly which are flavored
called snooze s n us. You see this stuff like
zin which is just a pharmaceutical, great nicotine, these things.
(04:02):
According to the British Public Health Agency, vaping is safer
than smoking combustible cigarettes, and these products I believe are
safer even than vaping, so there's no inhalation at all.
And yet the legislature that's what they want to target
and the weird things, well they're doing it in the
name of protecting teens. It's already illegal to sell nicotine
(04:24):
products to people under age twenty one, So why don't
we ban alcohol just so kids can't get beer? Well,
you know what, I wouldn't be surprised if that's going
to be a push sometime, because we're in a banning
culture right now. Uh So, so this is an overall
band for not only kids, but adults, nobody in the
(04:44):
state can can buy any kind of flavored tobacco. Well,
it's not it's not a tobacco products. It's it's it's vavoring.
What what is it. It's like, it's it's liquid that
you put in a vappen, right, Yeah, and you're you're
you know, so that's right, and you could still order
it online, but you won't be able to buy a
retail So there's been a couple of studies that show
(05:07):
that if people can't and this just makes common sense,
if you can't buy these things that you use that
are safer vaping products and all at the store, you'll
just go and you'll buy the dangerous stuff. This makes
me crazy because I'm looking at this news story. It's
from a TV station in Sacramento. It says ban the
(05:28):
sale of fruit flavored tobacco products. Even the news media
refers to them as tobacco products when there's no tobacco
in them. I mean, it's just an outright why well,
and it's not just the fruit flavor. I mean they've
they've fixated on the on those flavors that are youth oriented,
kind of kid oriented type flavors. But most people, you know,
(05:49):
use cinnamon coffee, those sorts of things, and studies show,
you know, we've done that. That that's what people prefer.
Adult smokers don't want they want to break the smoking habits.
They don't want to taste of the tobacco, so they
prefer these fruit sometimes fruit flavors, but usually mint flavors. Whatever.
So the legislature and the governor says, no, no, you
(06:12):
can only have these products if they taste like tobacco.
So it seems as if they're trying to keep people
addicted to a dangerous substance rather than giving them an opportunity. Well,
now they know this, what's wrong with them? They know
that these vaping products have helped people get off smoking tobacco.
That's been proven. So why are they getting in the
(06:34):
way here? What's their fanaticism about? You know, they just
takee big tobacco. I mean, that's what it is. It's
just like and it's moral posturing, right. And the funny thing,
well not funny. The weird thing is the legislature and
the governor have been and some of the big supporters
like Scott Wiener of San Francisco, Yeah, of this measure
(06:56):
are being into harm reduction. And the whole harm reduction
idea is that the government, it doesn't try to engage
in prohibition, but they allow people to do things that
reduce the harm that they do them, right, Because when
it comes to the hard drugs in the streets, right,
they're all about enabling the drug addicts by giving them
a milder form of the addictive drug. Well they yeah,
(07:21):
and they have a certain point on some of these
other things, is that prohibition doesn't work. You guys know
that it never works. You could get you could get
any drug you want in a state prison, right, So
how are we going to keep it out of society
at large? So harm reduction in general, even on drugs
isn't a bad idea. You're just trying to help people
do something that they probably ought not to be doing,
(07:43):
but do it in a safer manner. Because when it
comes to yeah, the vaping products are basically a nicotine
delivery system, so people can get their nicotine hit without
smoking the burning tobacco which causes the cancer. And so
these these vaping products are manufactured market by tobacco companies.
So it's irrational hatred of the tobacco companies it's no
(08:05):
connection to what the product is made of. Oh, that's right,
that's right. And then I still can't get over the
fact that we're banning products for adults to protect teams.
And you know, recent data shows that team vaping has
been falling since peak levels, and a couple studies have
showed that, you know, if vape sales are restricted, or
in places where they restrict vape sales, e sigarette users
(08:29):
are likely to switch back to cigarettes. So that's crazy, right,
We're encouraging people to engage in the riskiest behavior because
we're insisting on this puritanical thing that they don't smoke
at all. And then you talk to these folks and
they say, well, they should use FDA approved cessation devices,
as if the FDA is the be all and end
(08:50):
all of everything, right, because they did all did such
a good job during COVID, Right, And even the FDA's
tobacco chief recently admitted that these cigarettes are much safer
than than combustible sor so we think. Could this drive
make for an increase in smoking among teenagers? Yes, yes,
(09:12):
that's what That's what I could definitely do. And but
more important, more, well, nothing's more important. It's just that
also it's going to increase uh, smoking for everyone, right,
for adults, because teenagers shouldn't be smoking anyway, they're not
allowed to be smoking adults. Uh, it's gonna close off
this this ability of them to receive other, you know,
(09:35):
these lower risk products, and will encourage them to go
back to smoking the really dangerous products. So I don't
know how that helps anybody. You know, we're run by
crazy people. Thank you for coming on, Stephen, Yeah, thanks
for having me. Appreciate it. All right, Stephen green Hut
talking to us about the Proposition thirty one. This is
(09:55):
the one that would affirm if you vote yes, the
legislature and the governor's ban on the sale of certain
flavored tobacco products. And I'm reading the actual Big Voter
Guide and it says including a not limited too cigarettes,
et cigarettes, chewing tobacco, and other tobacco flavor enhancers. So
they would be going after the vaping. It's weird because
(10:16):
it's not tobacco. But yeah, I think the reason, John
is they think is a gateway. Kids are attracted by
the fruity flavors. They'll start vaping and then they'll move tobacco,
they'll die. I had to trunk gate it. It's gonna
be the other way around. So I am. My sources
are telling me about the Mountain Lion. Mountain Lion is
now sleepy and they're waiting for him to drop so
(10:39):
they can take them away. You have a source that's
like right next to the Mountain Lion, or well, it's
my neighborhood. It's in my neighborhood. Oh is this your
what we'll call it your neighborhood watch app? Or uh no,
I just I'm in communication with the locals. One more thing, guy,
This mounta line was at my grocery store I always
(11:00):
go to this morning. Didn't they buy a bagel too?
I think it likes your scent. I think it's waiting
for you. That's why it's not falling asleep. It's waiting
for you to come home. Every single place they've seen
the Mountain Lion are places that I was at this morning.
There you go, all right, chance for money? The keyword
is next. John and ken KF I am six forty
live everywhere on the iHeartRadio app. I should be dead John,
(11:22):
all right, the Mountain Lion has been captured. Oh yes,
they snagged him. Yes, he was very sleepy, as you said,
so threat averted you can go home. You don't have
to worry, all right. I's got to fight him off
with my bare hands if I had to. We were
just talking about ballot proposition thirty one, that's to try
(11:45):
to ban flavored tobacco products. That's a no. We're gonna
tell you a minute to look at proposition thirty because
something stunning happened. Proposition thirty is also known as the
Lift Measure l y FT, the company that you know
use the app to get a ride. They spent a
lot of money to get it on the ballot because
they're hoping that if it passes, the money which is
(12:07):
grabbed from wealthy people's income taxes will be used to
give their drivers electric cars. Lift and the others are
under a mandate I think by the year twenty thirty
that they have to have a significant number of their
cars on the road be electric. So they put this
ballot measure out there to help with that, and raising
(12:28):
the income taxes on people who make single individuals two
million dollars or more per year and annual income, and
it raises the effective tax rate to a stunning fifteen
point zero five percent of the California's new top income
tax rate. Here's the stunning news. When surveyed a couple
(12:48):
of months ago, fifty five percent were in favor of
the measure. That has plummeted. Now fifty two percent are opposed.
So it looks like Prop thirty is a loser, which
is good. And that's our recommendation. On the voter guide.
What happened, I don't see a lot of ads yes
or no on it, So I don't know what happened
with people. But maybe they got the voter guides and
(13:10):
they started to just read what it was and said,
a lot of summertime polls are worthless because hardly anybody
is paying attention. Well this was September. Yeah, that's that's
that's basically early a month ago. Well it's October man, Yeah,
I know, but people don't pay attention until the final weeks.
They just don't. I mean, you know where where where?
(13:32):
You and I are way out of touch with the
way most people consume the world. True this, you know
this stuff, just but I thought in general, people are like,
I don't care. You can text the rich doesn't affect
me and oh, look, it's for wildfires and it's getting
more charging stations, and full are very easily swayed by
simplistic arguments. However, the bias for propositions is that people
(13:54):
want to vote no because they've been scammed so many times.
And I wonder how that is slow changing voting patterns
where the default opinion people have is no, you're trying
to fool me. It looks like a lot of the
ballot measures are going to be a no, including those
gambling ones seven. Look where we suffered with Prop forty seven, right,
that was supposed to be the neighbor neighborhood in school's
(14:17):
safety Actors some such nonsense, and that turned out to
release all the people you see in the streets now
whacked out on drugs. In the past, those people who
have been forced to either go to jail or go
to drug treatment down none of them are forced to
go to either location, and they're just laying in the
streets and terrorizing you. And look at high speed rail.
(14:40):
That was a big sack of lies. And so I
think you should assume no at all propositions unless there's
some unusual situation. Just just vote. If you vote, know
nothing bad is going to happen when you vote yes
on this stuff, Often bad things happen. Cal Matters put
(15:01):
a chart in there that I wanted to call to
the attention of our listeners, because we bring this up
on the show quite a bit. Who pays the taxes?
In twenty nineteen, only point two percent of all individual
income tax returns in California reported an annual income of
two million or more. Did you get that? Not two percent?
(15:24):
Point two percent? Two tenths of one percent. Guess how
much of all the taxable income those people paid? Thirty percent?
They paid, So they have two tents of percent of
the filers paying thirty percent of all taxable income. Yes,
(15:46):
thirty percent. And then what's almost as amazing is the
next category, people make one hundred thousand to two million,
They paid thirty percent. So the bulk of the taxpayer
is sixty six percent make less than one hundred k,
and they're paying nine percent of all taxable income. Nine percent.
So that's how out of skew and how when the
(16:10):
market's dump, the investments dump, the capital gains dump, were
screwed And tell it to you right there when you
get one of these lying stink bag politicians going the
rich have to pay their fair share. Yeah, well they are. Yeah,
they're all getting screwed. The rich people are getting screwed.
Two tents of a percent are playing thirty percent of
all the taxes. So screw you in that that dope arguments.
(16:31):
And what is anybody getting out of this? Thirty five
thousand people in the state. We got forty million people.
Thirty five thousand apparently earned more than two million a year.
And we get more homeless, we get more crime, we
get bad bad roads. What's what's the upside here? There
isn't any bad school systems. As you said, vote no,
(16:54):
just vote no on everything and everybody. We got more
coming up. John and ken kf I am six F
he live everywhere on the iHeartRadio app. John and Kenna Nor.
We can all rest easy. You're safe for the mountain lion.
Thank God for that. Well, I could have been eaten.
I could have been eaten this morning. That's right. Anytime
along your paths around your neighborhood, you could have been.
It was really close. It was probably just a matter
(17:19):
of several hundred feet. Something's gonna do you in Why
not something dramatical like a mountain lion eating you. That
would be cool, Yeah, I mean I would. I would
get the leads quite the tribute on the air to you.
And oh, you guys would laugh your rear ends off
if I got consumed by a mountain lion. I mean you,
the whole audience would everybody? Would you brought up that
story the poor woman that got followed by the python
(17:39):
and Indonesia, so right, sure, anything could happen. That was
a line could have eaten me this morning because I
was traveling very near, very near him and I didn't
know it. The moist line is tomorrow, so we're giving
you warnings for the last round of calls. If you
want to leave a message that could be included for
this week, the iHeartRadio app is one way to do it.
The microphone icon the toll free number is another way.
(18:01):
One eight seven seven moist eighty six one eight seven
seven six six four seven eight eight six. We'll be
joined by the La County Sheriff alex Via Nueva after
the news at five o'clock. He is claiming that the
Attorney General Rob Banta wants his office to destroy all
(18:22):
evidence concerning the Sheila Kuel investigation. The La County Supervisor
destroy the evidence is what he's claiming that they've been
told to do by the AG's office. We'll see how
he has come to this knowledge and what it is
after the news at five o'clock. It's a strange twist
in the story that begins some time to go at
(18:44):
that raid on Sila Kuel's home because allegedly the La
County supervisor was used in her power position to get
a friend to her as a contract with Metro to
run a sex harassment or a sex assault hotline which
got no halls and looked like a scam because it
looked like a waste of money, all right, So we'll
(19:05):
talk about that with the sheriff after five o'clock. Probably
a tough job to have these days would be in
the real estate business. The average rate on a popular
thirty year fixed rate mortgage has surpassed seven percent for
the first time in twenty years. I think I can
(19:28):
use this for John. That's going to have a chilling
effect on real estate sales. A chilling ect chilling effect
that that kills real estate sales because that is a
huge increase in your monthly payment. It's not mentioned months,
but when people say, how come out, everybody's buying a
house the last so many years. Well, you know, interest
rates were so damn low. That's a big enticement. You
could get a mortgage in the twos for a while.
(19:52):
I think I did. I refinanced. I was in the twos.
Of the threes, everybody refinanced. Everybody did. That was the
other part that happened just buying new homes. Everybody jumped
into refinance their old mortgage. People who bought in the
early eighties had mortgages that were like right, and you know,
(20:14):
we're headed. We're headed to double digits soon because they
haven't finished raising the interest rates at the Federal Reserve.
You know, and only it says here, only in the
early eighties, a time of high inflation, did rates rise
quicker than they have in recent months. Yeah, rates are
still below the historical average of seven point seven to
six percent, but it is really affecting the markets. And yes,
(20:37):
it's possible that the Fed will continue to raise interest rates.
You know what's funny, it's people squawk all the time,
especially out here, as about the high cost of housing, right,
the high cost of buying a home. Of course, well,
the only thing that will lower it a little bit
are these ridiculous interest rates. Like you get scurty either way,
(21:00):
either you're paying a big overall price you know, to
buy the home, or you'll get a lesser price, but
you got to pay the seven percent mortgage. Yeah. Well,
Southern California home prices they rose forty percent in the
last two years, so something had to tank this. Yeah,
and I'm sure it's going to be interest rates. Prices
(21:22):
are already six percent off their peak from May, and
one of the big real estate firms, Zillo, announced today
they're laying off three hundred employees, five percent of their workforce.
They're not the only ones. I heard. Other big real
estate firms are doing the same thing because there's going
to be a lot less people shopping for homes. Mortgage
(21:45):
applications dropped two percent this week. You got to ride
this out. You got to wait for the recession to
hit and then after their session passes, or maybe while
we're in recession, then they'll start lowering the federal reserve rates. Yeah,
that short of happened. That report came out today, and
I guess if Biden was dancing around that there was
(22:05):
economic growth in the last quarter, or at least better
than the previous quarter. But when you have interest rates
at seven percent and still rising, it's eventually going to
affect the overall amount, if not tip us into a
recession because it's more complicated. At first of all, everybody's
reacting to the inflation rate. The inflation rate has far
outpaced the increase in wages, and that that's the whole
(22:26):
ball game is every month, how much am I making?
How much I spending? Well, if everything is eight or
ten percent more, especially grocery store prices and gas prices
are well into the double digits when it comes to
an increase, that's that's that's what's going to affect the
vote more than anything else. I read that part of
(22:47):
the reason for the two and a half percent GDP
increase was exports. Companies exported more goods than normal. There
was a backlog of orders that they finally got out
a damic or something or yeah, yeah, yeah, chain problems. Yeah,
the supply chain is loosening up, so companies are able
to sell more overseas than they have been. Right, So
(23:10):
that that drove it, which which is a good thing
for American companies, but it's not something the average person
is going to see in their life. And then the
other thing was that there are certain industries like car sales,
there's more cars available to sell down there was a
huge backlog on that because of the supply chain issues, right,
(23:32):
but it doesn't help the average person who's running out
of money at the end of the week or the
end of the month now and and and so you know,
Biden could do all the BS dancing he wants until
the inflation rate comes down and the gas prices come
down and the food prices come down. You know, he's
just going to keep getting his rear end kicked. Oh yeah,
(23:55):
this is the reality. I mean, I saw another one
of those massive polls today, and that's what's on top
of people those minds is the economy and inflation. Now,
all these other issues they're trying to throw out there
are just not resonating with people. Well, it pisses you
off every day. You know, I'd double whammy yesterday, Right,
I go buy gas. I'm still staring at five seventy
nine a gallon. Then I go to the grocery store
(24:16):
and all those atrocities, right, So you know, twice in
a day you get pissed off over something that we
had such stable pricing for a while, you didn't really
notice anymore. Right, you didn't really notice the gas prices
for a long time. You didn't notice, you know, the
price of everything, because it was stable, or it would
go up slowly, so you got used to the prices.
Your income was going up. Life was good. Now everything
(24:38):
pisses you off, all right, We got more coming up,
John and Ken kf I am six forty live everywhere
on the Iheartware. Sheriff being a wave on in fifteen
minutes right after Debora's news Yes to talk about how
he says, the Attorney General wants his office, the La
County Sheriff's Department, to destroy evidence from the Shila Kul raid.
(25:00):
We both did this. It's an interesting and strange development,
is it not. That's right, it's an intriguing claim. As
you know, the AG took over the investigation from the
Sheriff's department. Sheriff via Auava had recused himself from it.
He has a special office of Investigations that was conducting this.
So he says, the Attorney General is going to ask
a judge to order via Auayvea's Department to destroy remaining
(25:24):
copies of the evidence seized from Kuel. Well, if that's true,
it sounds like Banta's given up on I mean, if
you're going to destroy the evidence, you have a case anymore.
What is it about destroying the evidence? Why the necessity
to destroy them? I don't know why sensitive materials that
anybody to see. I don't know. What about returning them?
(25:44):
I don't How about using the evidence to convict her.
Here's the update on the Harvey Weinstein trial. But these
are some headlines. Oh good, some testicle talk. We are
going to get to that. The first Harvey Weinstein accuser
has finished for three days of disturbing cross examination. This
is Jane Doe number one, the Italian model. I like
(26:07):
this headline. Harvey Weinstein's chair was moved because he's accused
of staring down the jury in the case. So I
guess they moved him so he couldn't quite have a
direct site mind. Is he trying to intimidate him? That's
what the implication was, And exactly that's the judge agreed
to move the chair. That's what you really was. That's
(26:28):
a stupid strategy. I mean, he's one of the most
hideous looking men you'll ever see and giving them the stink. Guys,
you're supposed to be warm and endearing. Well, one of
the key things in the case for these women testifying
that Harvey Weinstein assaulted them is to establish that they
(26:49):
actually did have an encounter with Harvey Weinstein. There's no
rape kits, no physical evidence, not a lot besides the
words of these women against Weinstein. So one of the
things that's come up repeatedly is covered in a headline
from The New York Post back in twenty twenty, Harvey
Weinstein's deformed penis explained, I mean that I'll get your
(27:14):
attention on't it? You gotta click that? Aren't you gonna click? Oh?
I read this the first time. I remember. I think
we may have talked about it. Every time I see
the words Harvey Weinstein and deformed penis, I'm there automatic click. Well,
and that's an issue here because the jane Does that
are testifying are being asked details to make sure that
(27:37):
they indeed were sexually assaulted, that they are aware of
his rather unusual jedital you and here are the reasons
he had a life threatening bacterial infection known as Fournier
is Gang Green? Do you do you want Gang Green
named after you? If you're a researcher. Oh, mister Fournier. Yeah.
(28:00):
Was that doctor Fournier and had discovered this? Or was
it some poor guy named Fournier whose testicles fell off.
I can strike middle aged men and diabetics. Weinstein is both.
He's now sixty nine and or he's seventy. I think
he is. When bacteria enters through a cut or scratch
(28:23):
in the gentitals and spreads through the bloodstream, some patients
require skin graphs, but in extreme cases, such as Weinstein,
there's an operation to remove the testicles. So his testicles
were rotting inside his scrotum, and that's why they had
to relocate them to his thigh. Apparently that's what happened, Yes,
(28:45):
and inside the thigh. John asked the other day if
they were attached, Well, all right, no hanging off? His thought.
That's what I thought. Honestly, I thought they were connected
to the skin surface of the thigh. I didn't realize
they were embedded in the sore. They because when they're
embedded in the thigh, are they still connected? So they
worked to produced because in the news story that neither
(29:09):
one of us could read out loud describing what one
of the women had to do with Weinstein. To me,
it made it seem like they were attached outside. I see, okay,
I had the exact different visual that. Of course they
put him inside. Then how do you get at them?
(29:31):
Why would you want to get at them? That was
the crime? Yes, you're right, because he was. He's supposedly
forcing them. And I think this is Jane Doe number one,
who claims that he asked her to Yes, s I mean,
I got pleasure them somehow. I well, yeah, they're hiding inside.
But that was the defense lawyer's point. If she originally
(29:52):
said that, and he said that can't have been the case.
He had this procedure done in nineteen ninety nine. Okay,
so they are inside, Yes, that's what he's saying. That
was That was Weinstein's alibi, That was his way of
ripping into her story. But apparently when she went before
a grand jury some years later, she did not include
that element of the case that he wanted her to
(30:14):
pleasure his sub Yeah. Yeah, so that's what he's trying
to catch her in like a live or a change
of story. I mean, I looked up the Cleveland clinic
who does Fournier's gang Green effect, and it has all
the all the all the risk factors. And you read
these risk factors and you'll quit everything. You'll you'll end
(30:35):
all your bad habits. Wouldn't you read I'll have a
gang green works. What are the consequences gang? Because it's diabetes.
So you just stop desserts now, alcohol abuse? I mean
up to about hamburgers. I knew you're going to ask
that hamburgers are not listed. Yeah, too much red meat,
too much bluze. Up to fifty percent of people with
(30:58):
Fournier's gang Green alcohol use disorder, or they have cirrhosis,
or they have kidney failure which comes from alcohol overuse.
You smoke your obese. But it says it enters through
a cut or scratch in the genitals. So how does
that have anything to do with drinking or and how
(31:19):
do you come in contact with this particular Just maybe
it's more any kind of bacteria which could Yeah, I
guess maybe it's your immune system is terribly compromised. This
deformity was first revealed in court when an actress named
Jessica Mann, one of the accusers, said she felt compassion
after seeing his deformed genitalia looking as if it had
(31:39):
burns in his nether region, So she kind of felt
sorry for him. One of the women that he was
involved with. No one of the accusers, Jessica Man was
an accuser. Remember they already had this trial, right right,
That's what I meant, So she felt bad towards him.
You know, I heard the same thing. I swear with
the Jeffrey Epstein that somebody said the same thing. They
(32:00):
thought he was deformed, and they kind of felt some
compassion at first. Yeah, these two are very similar. What
so I mean is that is that how these guys
tried to get women attracted to them. Look look how
look at look at my deformed genitals and and the
women go oh, Coming up, Dex will be talking again
(32:22):
to the La County Sheriff, Alex Vienneueva for an interesting
development in the story of Sheila Kiel, the Ela County supervisor,
and possible corruption. The sheriff is claiming that the Attorney
General's office wants his office to destroy the evidence that
they obtained from Sheila Kuell's home. Johnny Ken, you can
(32:43):
get that gang green from e coli. All, and that's
in Hamburgers. Yeah, more often in sal leafy, leafy vegetable.
Johnny Ken calf I AM six forty Live Everywhere on
the iHeartRadio app, Jebber Mark Lott in the twenty four
hour calf I Newsroom