Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Can't. I am six forty. You're listening to the John
Cobel podcast on the iHeartRadio app. You get the show
every day from one until four, and then if you
miss it after four o'clock, go to the iHeart app
and it's there, John Cobelt Show on demand and you
demand and you get it. It's the podcast version. It's
the same as the radio show. Coming up in an hour,
(00:23):
We're going to have a columnist, Susan Shelley on. She
writes often for the Southern California News Group, which the
Orange County Register, LA Daily News and other suburban papers.
Whatever pieces was published in the New York Post and
people back east got to read this headline, why LA's
ice riots revealed decades of California's political decay. You're telling
(00:48):
me and the whole world knows. That's why Gavin Newsom's
US approval rating is a twenty nine percent. They found
a Karen Bass approval rating too. Harvard Harris did the
poll seventeen percent, so she could have been the vice president.
You know why Karen Bass did not get selected as
(01:11):
vice president and Kamala Harris beat her out because Joe
Biden had promised it was going to be a black woman,
and Karen Bass was on the shortest of lists. It
turned out the uncovered her involvement in a radical group
that spent a lot of time visiting Cuba because they
were so enamored with Castro, and all the progressives in
(01:35):
the media didn't report on that very much. And I've
been reading a lot about it lady lately, and it
kind of makes sense of her politics here in La
if you understand what a young radical she was back
in the seventies, and how enamored she was, how in
love she was with Fidelic Castro. So in fact, I
(01:55):
think she sent out a tweet mourning Castro's death a
few years ago, and once that tweet was publicized, that
was it as far as her being vice president. So
we'll talk about that another day anyway. Susan Shelley coming
on in an hour. This is so outrageous. The LA
(02:17):
school district is such a disaster. I could not send
my kids to LA schools and I had to spend
an enormous amount of money on private school. So I
am going to be bitter and angry about that forever,
because I think at a big city with the kind
of taxes that people pay minimum is you have a
(02:37):
competent school district. It would just be impossible for me
to believe a civilization allegedly as sophisticated as California would
have such disastrous public schools. But we do. And in
LA about three quarters of the kids graduate, and they
cannot read and they cannot do math. They just can't.
(03:00):
They're far short of proficiency. And then I read this
week that the LA School Board is going to be
borrowing a half a billion dollars to settle claims of
sexual abuse by teachers and administrators. Half a billion dollars
(03:23):
they're going to borrow for sexual misconduct. They go back
to the nineteen seventies, fifty years of bending little kids over.
And I'm thinking, well, you know, it's like the old saying,
why do why do bank robbers go to banks? Because
(03:46):
that's where the money is. And why do teachers? Why
do teachers? Why do people apply to become teachers? Well,
that's where the children are. And if you're so sexually inclined,
you'll just have a big smortgan sport, huh. And that's
why they show up as priests, and they show up
(04:06):
as coaches and Scout leaders and teachers, and they're everywhere.
They're in the private schools, believe me, they're in the
public schools. They're certainly, you know, in the religious schools.
And there seems to be no way. I mean, if
I was running a school system, you know what I'd do,
especially now with AI, I would show to every teaching
(04:29):
applicant the guys. Start with the guys, I would show
them AI child porn and if they get an arousal, but.
Speaker 2 (04:38):
How would you, you'd be AI.
Speaker 1 (04:40):
So no actual kids would be victimized.
Speaker 3 (04:42):
Okay, I understand that, But how do you know that
there's an arousal?
Speaker 1 (04:48):
Oh well, you'd put little electrode clips on them. Oh
and then you would you'd have a machine, and yeah,
you do this in public. Oh it'll keep them from
even applying. All right. Now, maybe they think they can
tough it out right, Yes, play some kind of mind trick.
But this is what you would do, because I think
(05:08):
when you're talking about a half a billion dollars, there's
been It's not just a bad apple here, we got
a bad orchard. I mean, you can't tell me that
there isn't a way to pick out child molesters in advance,
and I think now with AI because you can do
it definitively. LA Unified has about three hundred and seventy
(05:36):
sex abuse claims. They have borrowed money for years. In fact,
there's three hundred million dollars in bonds that they're going
to pay off with the five hundred million that they're
going to borrow now, if you could follow that, we
have so we have done so much borrowing in the
past to pay off settlements that that more than half
(06:00):
of the five hundred million dollars are borrowing now is
to pay off the loans that we borrowed before this
got exacerbated in twenty nineteen. Oh this must have been
a byproduct of the Me too movement. This is where
I thought all this went too far. They opened a
(06:22):
three year window twenty twenty to twenty twenty two that
allowed adults to file lawsuits over child sex abuse going
as far back as the nineteen forties, and the law
extended the deadline in the future that you could sue
up to the age of forty and so have They
(06:47):
got hundreds of claims coming in seventy six of them
went back to between the nineteen forties and nineteen seventies.
So we've had perverts in the school system our entire
lifetimes and beyond. And they borrow all this money now
because they're going to try to pay it back in
(07:09):
installments so that I won't completely destroy the annual budget.
But there's so much interest that the five hundred million
is actually we're gonna end up paying seven hundred and
sixty five million, and we're going to be paying off
in LA these loans until the year twenty fifty one.
(07:34):
My god, that is a lot of perversion in the
LA Unified School district. That is a lot of guys
who ended up because you know, there are certain grades.
In no way i'd have a guy teach, you know.
And I hate to I don't hate it, but I mean, really,
(07:54):
I've got kind of some blanket rules in my life.
Speaker 2 (07:58):
What about guy babysitters?
Speaker 1 (08:00):
No, no, I mean, you know, unless you no I
baby shot. Okay, there's my going. I mean you did
it for who was just a neighbor down the street.
Neighbor down the street.
Speaker 2 (08:19):
Yeah, I had a neighbor down the street babysit me
one time.
Speaker 1 (08:23):
And oh yeah, yeah, no kidding, Yeah, all right, Eric
then it's no, all right, Well it.
Speaker 2 (08:30):
Didn't go well, was it? Eric, No, Oh, a lot
older than he is babysitting him.
Speaker 1 (08:38):
Sometimes I forget that, no kidding. How old was the guy?
Speaker 2 (08:43):
I don't remember. It's very it's very fuzzy.
Speaker 3 (08:46):
But I was a little girl, and I remember him
pulling his pants down and asking me to touch it.
Speaker 2 (08:54):
I don't think I did. And I remember telling my
parents and then they went over.
Speaker 1 (08:57):
You probably kicked him, you know.
Speaker 2 (09:00):
It was.
Speaker 3 (09:01):
I had a lot of traumatic things happen in my
childhood and that was one of it, one of them,
And so I don't I don't really recall the details,
but I do know that I told my parents and
they did go over there to his.
Speaker 1 (09:13):
Parents and a kid down the block. Yeah. And how
old is he?
Speaker 2 (09:17):
I don't I don't.
Speaker 1 (09:18):
Probably a late late teen. Yeah, yeah, oh my god,
I knew.
Speaker 2 (09:21):
We're just a little I was just a little thing.
Speaker 1 (09:23):
Ah. That's horrible, I know, that's really awful. Yeah, I see,
it's you don't like guys, all right, and it's it's.
Speaker 3 (09:33):
But there are there are some weird women too, though
they are teachers.
Speaker 1 (09:39):
You know.
Speaker 2 (09:39):
We've reported on those women over the years.
Speaker 1 (09:42):
Yes, middle school and high school. Yeah, a lot of those. Yes,
I'm familiar with a couple. Oh you are not. Not.
It didn't happen to me, but it happened to other
people that I'm aware of.
Speaker 2 (09:52):
That's all I shared. You know you can share too.
Speaker 1 (09:55):
No, no, I have. I've not been attacked by anyone,
and nobody my age either. It was kind of no.
I remember, I'm pretty sure, and I've told this story
a long time ago. I'm one of my closest friends
in elementary school. I'm pretty sure got molested by a
(10:18):
priest and the priest disappeared shortly thereafter.
Speaker 3 (10:22):
Well did I tell you that real quick? I was
getting my wisdom teeth pulled out. Yeah, and the anesthesiologist.
So I was in a room recovering, and I was
probably sixteen. The anesthesiologist came in and was trying was
touching me my clothes, run was touching me, I.
Speaker 2 (10:40):
Swear to God.
Speaker 3 (10:41):
And I was in a fog right because I'm under anesthesia,
But I remember, and so I remember the time I
had to go back for a follow up, and my
grandmother took me there, and so I was trying to
find the guy and I saw him and so I
was pointing at him and he hid, so.
Speaker 2 (11:00):
I knew I wasn't crazy.
Speaker 3 (11:02):
I mean, when I tell you I've had some creepy
things happen to me.
Speaker 2 (11:06):
Yeah, I have. So it happens. I can tell you firsthand.
Speaker 1 (11:12):
Yeah it does. Anything happened to that.
Speaker 3 (11:14):
No, because again, now this is this is my bad.
And I don't think I told my parents, and I
think I told my grandmother, but I figured, I assumed,
and I'm sure a lot of victims feel this way.
I was under anesthesia, so I knew that if I
would go and tell.
Speaker 2 (11:30):
The doctor that performed the surgery that his.
Speaker 3 (11:32):
Right, they would say I'm crazy because I was under anesthesia.
But that's why I kind of did this little trick
where I was pointing at him and he saw me
and he kind of went and hid. So I knew
I wasn't crazy. Wow, all right, I know it's a lot.
That was just five minutes ago.
Speaker 1 (11:53):
Okay, we'll return to the confessional booth coming up just
a moment.
Speaker 4 (11:58):
You're listening to John Kobe Else on demand from KFI
AM six forty.
Speaker 1 (12:04):
We're on from one to till four o'clock and after
four o'clock John Cobelt Show on demand on the iHeart app.
Do you have any more confessions or is that it
for now?
Speaker 2 (12:11):
I think that's enough, you know, I think people need
to process what.
Speaker 1 (12:14):
I alway, I need to process all that. I'm not
making light of it startled me, which happens often, I know. Well, man,
that's it. Thank you for sharing all that though. That
was well.
Speaker 3 (12:25):
When my daughter thinks that I'm so paranoid to my kids,
I mean, look, I told you another story off the
year that I told on the Year many years ago.
Speaker 2 (12:33):
I mean, there are some crazy people out there.
Speaker 1 (12:35):
Oh, there are a lot.
Speaker 2 (12:36):
Now.
Speaker 1 (12:37):
Guys are naturally predators, yes they are, Yes, And most
guys have all kinds of crazy thoughts running through their
brain all day. Yeah, but you have to control yourself, yes,
you did. Cannot act on every impulse that you have
other rights. You wouldn't believe the chaos that there would be.
I mean, there would just be. It would be gone
(12:58):
on all day, be going on in the hallway here
in the offices. Yeah, no, be terrible. So you know,
it's it's it's part of its biology and you just
have to learn how to suppress it, control it. And
there's a lot of people who are just raised badly
by their parents and just you also need to have
your brain develop properly if you don't have a good
(13:20):
what is the name of prefrontal cortex. A prefrontal cortex
doesn't fully develop until a guy is twenty seven, which
is why guys, that's why, that's why insurance companies will
not rent cars stick anybody twenty five and under. And
the accident rates are so high because you give a
guy a car that he doesn't own, he'll be out
(13:41):
of control. That's you know, Guys drink too much, they
grab women too easily, they drive fast, they get violent,
and part of it is the way you raise part
of it's your brain development. And twenty seven is in fact,
gascon used that excuse not to prosecute young people, young
(14:04):
men twenty five and under, or not prosecute them fully
or let them out early, even if they committed a murder.
That was the excuse he used. And to me, it
is a biological fact. But you still should go to
prison for the rest of your life if you kill somebody.
But it's very hard for a lot of guys to
control themselves. I mean, you know who goes off to
(14:25):
war right, most mostly guys under the age of twenty
five who joins gangs. Same thing, guys under twenty five,
you know what makes up crazy fraternities and all their
sexual escapades. Guys under twenty five. And once you once
you get you know, towards your thirties, your testosterone drops,
your prefrontal cortex develops and get you get more civilized.
(14:49):
And of course women have very little of this. You know,
there may be a few lonely, twisted souls in high
school who go after young guys, but for the most part,
women aren't in gangs, women aren't in prisons for violent crimes,
and women don't sexually attack many people. So it's it's
very rare.
Speaker 2 (15:09):
We are the better species.
Speaker 1 (15:12):
Well you are, you are the most more civilized. And
and that's one of guys. You know, guys do better
once they get married or make some kind of you know,
deep commitment, because guys left alone, especially this is somebody
athletes get in a lot of trouble. A guy with
a lot of money and a lot of free time.
It is over only terrible things are going to happen.
(15:34):
Men cannot be left without a purpose and without like
a Guardian.
Speaker 2 (15:40):
What about self control, John.
Speaker 1 (15:43):
Well, I'm saying there's it's it's under twenty seven. Self
control is difficult for a lot of guts, I know.
Speaker 3 (15:49):
But it's a decision, right, You can make a decision
to act upon something.
Speaker 1 (15:53):
It is a decision. But there is something too if
you don't have the brain structure to temper your impulses.
I mean, I know I did things when I was
seventeen that I did not do at twenty seven.
Speaker 2 (16:06):
No, I get that, I totally understand that.
Speaker 3 (16:09):
But certain things, I think you just know some things
are right or wrong, and you can have those thoughts
in your head. Of course, you don't have to act
upon these times.
Speaker 1 (16:17):
You realize it's wrong about a minute after you've done it, though.
See that's the thing. Yeah, well you had the impulse
that your brain flashes. But I'm not making any confessions here.
Oh today was your confessional.
Speaker 2 (16:31):
I've confessed enough.
Speaker 1 (16:33):
Now I want to hear the bad things you do.
Speaker 2 (16:35):
I'm not perfect. I'm not perfect. I never said I'm perfect.
Speaker 1 (16:40):
But yeah, yeah, all right, Well we've got more coming up.
Speaker 4 (16:46):
You're listening to John Cobels on demand from KFI AM.
Speaker 1 (16:50):
Six forty moistline is eight seven seven moist eighty six
twice on Friday at three o'clock eight seven seven moist
eighty six. If you have trouble with the let is
it's eight seven seven sixty six' four seven eight eight.
Six so he usually talkback feature on the iHeartRadio. App
there's been a case THAT i was fascinated by when it,
happened And i've wondered for several, years like who did
(17:15):
this and how they did? It you remember The brinx
truck that got that had one hundred million dollars worth of, Jewelry, yes.
Speaker 2 (17:24):
And the guy that was sleeping in the car and
the other guy that went to.
Speaker 1 (17:28):
Go get food at a rest stop in the grapevine
in the town Of? Lebec is that how you say? IT? L.
E B E. C lebec twenty twenty Two and, uh,
yeah what you. Said the two guys are driving The
brins truck and they stop middle of the. Night one
guy gets out to get some food and the other
guy falls. Asleep when he wakes up and his partner comes,
(17:51):
back one hundred million dollars gold, Diamonds, Rubies, emeralds luxury,
watches no sign of, handbags, no.
Speaker 2 (18:01):
There were a lot of ROLEXES i.
Speaker 1 (18:03):
Saw, Yeah, well they finally caught seven, suspects and these
guys have been pulling off these kinds of crimes for,
years which makes me. Wonder once you bag one hundred
million dollars and they're seven of, them all seven of,
you you're set for, life you, know sell you your
(18:23):
rubies and diamonds and go off. Somewhere why would you
keep playing the game because people are? Greedy, Yeah so
here's the. Guys Carlos circado Of, pasadena aged thirty, One
Jazio Padilla, resto he's thirty, Six Boyle, Heights Pablo, Rawu
(18:44):
Lugo laroic also known As Walter. LOZA a lot of
these guys have have. Aliases in, Fact Jazil resto is
also known As Ricardo, Moya Ricardo, Barbosa Alberto xavier At,
tomorrow so you could steal under a different name each.
Time then as a sixty year old guy, Involved Victor Hugo,
(19:06):
valencia Sol Arizazzo solazano From Rampart, Village Orge Enrique Alban
South La Jesson, Nelson Priscilla flores Of, upland And edwardo
Messiahs abara Of, westlake and most of these guys are are.
Not now we were talking about impulse, control you know
(19:27):
under the age of twenty. Seven, well these ages thirty,
one thirty, six forty, one sixty thirty, three forty two thirty,
six these aren't. Impulses this is a way of. Life
this is what they did for a. Living they they
a few of, them scouted The brinks truck leaving an
international jewelry show In San. Mateo The brinx truck left
(19:53):
with seventy three bags with one hundred million in. Jewelry
the suspects followed the truck for three hundred miles to Le,
beck and while the truck was, stopped they stole twenty
four bags from the. Truck they also stole about a
quarter million dollars Of samsung electronics from a cargo shipment In,
(20:13):
ontario and a couple of all those guys robbed a
box truck driver fifty seven thousand dollars worth Of apple air.
Tags that was a third. Crime here's a fourth. Crime
they tried to steal from a truck at A fontana
rest stop using a, crowbar BUT i guess they were.
Unsuccessful they also stole fourteen thousand dollars of electronics from
(20:37):
another shipment In, fontana and they can get twenty years
in federal prison for each robbery, charge and then's a
whole bunch of lesser. Charges so these guys had a
ring going and they never were. SATISFIED i, mean this
is this, LIKE i wonder what the legal status of
(20:58):
these guys. Are i'm just. CURIOUS i wonder if their
records are run through the, system we're going to find
out they were all legal citizens or. Not wouldn't you
feel invincible, though if you had the capabilities to rob
one hundred million dollars off Of. BRINGSTRUCK i had no.
Capabilities i'd like to know what that feels. Like, YEAH
(21:22):
i would like to. KNOW i, mean you got to
end up with the big ego and a lot of.
CONFIDENCE i. COULDN'T i couldn't steal a cupcake from a.
Speaker 2 (21:29):
Bakery and you know, what these people that do this what.
JERKS i, mean there are so many jewelry.
Speaker 3 (21:36):
Stores that are being robbed right now in the middle
of the, night where these crooks are going into adjacent
buildings and they're they're they're making holes in the walls
to get in and then they're stealing.
Speaker 1 (21:47):
Everything that's A chillian gang that does that.
Speaker 2 (21:50):
Theirs this is WHAT i have to say to, you,
guys get a real.
Speaker 3 (21:53):
Job you, know people work really, really really, hard you,
know and you're stealing they're they're there, Jewelry you're you're
taking their.
Speaker 2 (22:03):
LIVELIHOOD i, mean, oh it gets me so.
Speaker 1 (22:06):
Mad did you see the poor owner whose jewelry store
store was ransacked by the looters after the ride? Downtown,
YEAH i felt so bad for that. Guy he and
his family have been running the jewelry store for.
Speaker 3 (22:18):
Decades and did he say they didn't have, insurance WHICH
i can't. Believe how do you have a jewelry store
not have, insurance you know.
Speaker 1 (22:23):
What i've heard that in other cases. TOO i don't
know if the insurance premiums are just so. HIGH i don't.
KNOW i don't know the jewelry business.
Speaker 2 (22:31):
Because i'd be terrified to be in the jewelry.
Speaker 3 (22:33):
Business but you, know back in the, day you put
stuff in a, safe whether it's in your house or
your your.
Speaker 2 (22:40):
Business and how they're blowing these.
Speaker 3 (22:41):
STATES i know they steal the safe, exactly BUT i
mean some of these says that these these jewelry.
Speaker 2 (22:47):
Stores they're.
Speaker 3 (22:48):
Humongous you can't you can't physically take them to blow them.
Speaker 4 (22:53):
Up.
Speaker 2 (22:53):
Yeah SOMETHING i don't. KNOW i don't know exactly.
Speaker 1 (22:56):
What they, do make something so they could get the. Door,
yeah so there might there might be something getting. DETONATED
i don't know.
Speaker 2 (23:04):
What, losers, Man.
Speaker 1 (23:07):
I'm.
Speaker 3 (23:07):
Sorry it just when when people steal, it really it
really gets gets, ME i.
Speaker 1 (23:14):
Know and and it's been basically legalized in this state for.
Years and look how emboldened these guys. Were they would
do it over and over and over, again apparently not
nervous that they were going to get, caught that anything
bad would happen to.
Speaker 2 (23:27):
Them, well we have a NEW, da.
Speaker 1 (23:30):
NEW da and a NEW Us. Attorney, yes and so
now people are getting, charged cases are being.
Speaker 4 (23:37):
Broken you're listening To John cobels on demand FROM kfi am.
Speaker 1 (23:43):
Sixty we're gonna Have Susan shelley come. On column is
here In Los angeles for The Southern California News, GROUP
La Daily, News Orange County, register and many other publications as,
well including The New York. Post her column was published.
Today uh and this is her explaining to the readers
of The New York post and a lot of people
on The East coast just how Absurd la And california is.
(24:07):
Politically and the headline is Why LA's ice riots revealed
decades Of california's political. Decay it's a great, column is absolutely,
right and we're going to talk about it coming up
in a few. MINUTES i just have a short time
Before debor's, news because debbah constantly has, news AND i
(24:28):
saw this story and it got to. Me it's one
thing that really irritates, me almost as much as the
zombies walking around staring at their, phones walking along the side,
walks walking in the, street utterly oblivious to what's going.
On air. Pods people have their AirPods stuck in their
(24:53):
ears all the, Time, yes AND i. Know and they
walk in the streets nobody, Know nobody looks when they
cross the.
Speaker 2 (25:01):
Street what about here outside of our parking.
Speaker 3 (25:03):
LOT i can't tell you how many people are either
on their phones or they have those air. Pods and
there's there's something mean inside me THAT i.
Speaker 1 (25:10):
Just you want to gut in the. Engine YEAH i did.
Speaker 3 (25:13):
TOO i wouldn't, ever BUT i WANTED i want to
scream out my, window.
Speaker 1 (25:21):
Look Up i've made left turns and suddenly somebody out
of nowhere ends up walking in front of me as a.
Pedestrian and it's because they have earphones or you, know
they're on their phone, scrolling reading text or. Something AND
i give them the biggest honk imaginable AND i make them,
SHAKE i make them like throw their arms up in
(25:42):
the air and, freeze and THEN i no on yell
at him sometimes get off your, phone just really really.
Sha it makes me crazy BECAUSE i can't stand, zombies addicted,
zombies whether whether it's you, know the drug addicts that
litter the place or these these iPhones airpad. Zombies apparently
(26:03):
people are showing, up, well they have them on at
work all, day, right and they're showing up at a doctor's.
Appointments there's a Doctor Dan. Weazel this is In Saint
Louis Wall Street journal. Story he's noticed more patients keep
their earbuds in even after he walks into the exam.
Room and his initial reaction is that's. Rude they don't
(26:26):
even want to give him. Attention he's trying to diagnose their,
disease AND i walk right.
Speaker 2 (26:30):
OUT i, say, okay you don't want to know what's going?
Speaker 1 (26:33):
On, okay, yeah just die from, it, right and he
says he tries to BE i love this. Try maybe
there's a good reason for you, know maybe it's a hearing.
Aid that's not a hearing. Aid maybe they're autistic and
the earbuds control sensory. Overload, no, no, no your first impulse was.
Correct they're not autistic and they don't have a hearing.
Problem they're they're they're they're, idiots and they're either listening
(26:58):
to music or listening to a pod. Cast of course
you were listening to the part.
Speaker 3 (27:01):
POST i was going to, say if you're listening to
The John Coe Belt, show that's.
Speaker 2 (27:04):
Okay we'll make an.
Speaker 1 (27:05):
Exception and you, know one guy, says, well you, know
my AirPods are, off but if someone, CALLS i can
answer right. Away it's, like oh, cares you can answer right.
Away you know most of the time my phone. RINGS
i look And i'm not answering.
Speaker 2 (27:20):
That, well it depends on who it.
Speaker 1 (27:22):
Is, well exactly a lot of PEOPLE i don't want
to hear. From. Ever one. Guy one guy went through
the drive through line at a fast food joint and
he looked into his bag of food and somebody these
air pods were in. There they've fallen, Him they've fallen
(27:42):
out of their dirty. Years the Earwat, yeah into the
bag of Foods, now listen to this and, this this
kind of this kind of annoyed me. Too walmart has
a dress code and and it you're dealing with, customers
you're not supposed to wear. Earbuds but according to one
(28:06):
human resource, person they give it up trying to enforce
rules like. That there's a growing number of people who
treat their air pods as permanent facial. Features it's like
another sensory. Organ they got their, ears their, nose their,
mouth and the.
Speaker 3 (28:23):
AirPod WHEN i first saw, THOSE i thought it was
some kind of WEIRD i don't even know what UNTIL
i realized what they.
Speaker 1 (28:31):
Were. Yeah And i'm still startled by people who have
a talk on ear pods on a phone call Because
i'm so attuned to crazy homeless. People i'm so terrified
by them that WHEN i see an adult coming AND
i see his mouth moving AND i could hear his,
Voice i'm, thinking, oh, holmless, Whacko he's going to slip
my THROAT i DO i. Jump i'm starting to go,
(28:53):
CRAZY i. Know according to this human resources. Person she, Said,
honestly we stopped trying to make rules for people way
back in twenty twenty. One we're just grateful the guy wears.
Speaker 2 (29:07):
Pants, well that THAT'S i get.
Speaker 1 (29:11):
It that's that's what it's come down. To you were in,
pants you're. Hired we are de evolving if that's the
kind we, are we really are de evolving when we come.
Back Susan, shelley Why LA's ice riots revealed decades Of
california's political. Decay, yeah no. Kidding Deborah, mark is your?
(29:35):
YAW i you know it's That i've been on the
air since little conversation just ended like eight seconds.
Speaker 2 (29:40):
Ago i'm very.
Speaker 3 (29:41):
TIRED i held it, in, well, yes BUT i held
the on. In, YES i held it in until you
were done.
Speaker 1 (29:49):
Talking at LEAST i thought you were Geez Tebra mark
live in THE cafi twenty for our. Newsroom, hey you've
been listening To The John Cobalt show. Podcast you can
always hear the show live ON KFI am six four
for from one to four pm Every monday Through, friday
and of course anytime on demand on The iHeartRadio. App