Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Can't.
Speaker 2 (00:01):
I am six forty.
Speaker 3 (00:02):
You're listening to the John Cobel podcast on the iHeartRadio app.
We've got two rounds of the Moistline coming up three
twenty and three fifty roughly, we have the last thousand
dollars that we're going to give away on this show,
and then Conway will give away a couple of rounds
and then that's it his last day of this run
(00:22):
of the contest. So you got three more chances this hour,
four twenty five twenty. That's it the Moistline. Like I
said twice in this hour, And if you want to
be on the next week, you call eight seven seven
Moist Steady six, eight seven seven mois Steady six, or
use the talkback feature on the iHeartRadio app. Trump is
(00:44):
signing an executive order to make it easier for cities
and states to remove homeless people from the streets and
get them treatment. Let me try to explain this. I
don't understand it entirely, and you know sometimes his executive
orders have a lot of puffery in them. But he's
asking the Attorney General, Pam Bondi, to reverse judicial precedents
(01:08):
and any consent decrees that limit state and local government's
ability to commit individuals on the streets if the individuals
are a risk to themselves or others. Sometimes there are lawsuits,
and the federal government in past administrations has made what
they call these consent decrees and agreement where a city
(01:32):
will say, okay, okay, you know we've screwed this up.
We agree to do the following, and he says, basically says,
anything that's getting in the way of getting them off
the street, this is important. The next line, it's committing
federal funding to move people off the streets who are
causing public disorder and suffering from serious mental illness or addiction.
(01:55):
That is nearly everybody living on the street. And what
was so infuriating today when they had this public meeting,
the LOSSA Commission voted to get a new incompetent director.
They had to the old one resigned. Is that Belisa
Adams Kellum, the old incompetent director, and Karen Bass, the
(02:18):
current incompetent mayor, kept talking as if everything was wonderful
and they've all been wild successes, and they haven't. Homelessness
is up dramatically in the last six years, even more
dramatically in the last fifteen years. If they come up
(02:39):
with some fake numbers that say, well it's trickling downward,
it doesn't matter.
Speaker 2 (02:45):
It's way too high.
Speaker 3 (02:46):
This is the kind of news reporting, and this is
the kind of chest bumping that makes me nuts. You
see this with crime statistics. You see this with homeless statistics.
Well it looks like it's down one point eight percent. Yeah,
if I go back ten fifteen years and it's up
like fifty seven percent. The cherry picking of statistics to
(03:11):
get a cheap headline out the All Times is notorious
for that because they always do cheerleading stories on behalf
of the administration that's in power. So I'll give you
a quote. This is what makes me crazy.
Speaker 2 (03:33):
Okay.
Speaker 3 (03:34):
Trump says, people on the streets they're suffering from mental
illness or addiction. We've got to get them into treatment centers,
outpatient treatment, or other facilities period mental health or drug treatment.
But then there's something called the National Homelessness Law Center.
I don't know what these people do, Nothing good, nothing effective.
(03:58):
The spokeshole is somebody named Yes the Rebidoits. Listen to
what Rebidoits says. Forced treatment is unethical, ineffective, and illegal.
It's the only way to get the treatment otherwise they
die in the streets. How is letting them die in
(04:18):
the streets ethical? That's not ineffective. That should be illegal, right,
You're letting people die in the streets when it's clear
they've got addictions or mental problems. And this rebiduits character
then says people need stable housing and access to healthcare.
(04:41):
They The Homeless Center says the order does nothing to
lower the cost of housing or help people make ends meet.
There's no way to lower the cost of housing. That's impossible.
Houses cost what they cost, the material and labor costs,
or whatever the market bears the of the real estate.
Speaker 2 (05:01):
It's whatever the market.
Speaker 3 (05:02):
You can't lower housing costs, that's impossible the rental market.
You can build more housing that's costly, but you can't
put mental patience and drug addicts into the housing because
they just destroy it. But these people are are still
(05:28):
I don't know if they're stupid or it's just part
of the scam, the racket. The problem is not a
lack of housing. You could always move to a cheaper
city somewhere. People who are priced out of a neighborhood
or a city or a state move.
Speaker 2 (05:46):
To other states.
Speaker 3 (05:49):
That story is in the paper every week that X
number of people left California. Number one reason high cost
of housing. Where did they move Texas and Florida.
Speaker 2 (05:59):
Why?
Speaker 3 (05:59):
Because because the housing costs less. That's what you do.
You move somewhere else. Ever since I was a little kid,
I knew there were wealthy neighborhoods, poor neighborhoods, middle class neighborhoods.
Some states were wealthy or some states were poor. You
move to a state where you can get a job
and afford it. But if you're mentally ill or you
have a drug addiction, your brain doesn't work properly, so
(06:20):
you can't do that. I mean, how many songs have
been written? How many movies have been made about people
who came to Los Angeles to become a star, right,
to become an actor in the movies, to become a comedian,
to become a musician, and.
Speaker 2 (06:37):
They didn't make it.
Speaker 3 (06:39):
And what's the cliched story. They pack up in the
car and they go home because they can't afford to
live here. They can't get work, they can't make the rent,
they can't own a house. They pack up the car
and they go home. To a cheaper place that's more
affordable because they couldn't make it an expensive competitive Los
(06:59):
angel Same thing in New York City. You go to
New York City, rents are very high, Buying condos.
Speaker 2 (07:07):
Are very expensive.
Speaker 3 (07:10):
You got to be able to make it in one
of the industries that pays a lot of money, Like
you have finance.
Speaker 2 (07:17):
You can't make it.
Speaker 3 (07:18):
You gotta go. You go to West Virginia, Go to Mississippi,
go to Texas. Go to a state where things are cheaper.
We're not required to build housing for every lost soul
that stumbles into California.
Speaker 2 (07:32):
Get half. These people are from out of state.
Speaker 3 (07:35):
They got thrown out of their families homes because they
were drug addicts, mentally ill, probably stealing money, stealing mom's jewelry,
until dad tossed them out and they got on a
bus and they came here because they heard there's no
rules in California. We don't have to build homes for them.
They don't deserve homes from us. Yeah, I'm working to
(07:56):
buy a home for somebody else.
Speaker 2 (08:00):
Now I'm working. Maybe if my kids need.
Speaker 3 (08:02):
Some help buying a home, I'll spend it on that.
I'm not helping somebody else's kid. I'm not helping somebody
else's drug addicted, mental patient kid who maybe was abused
and beaten up by their dad. So that don't understand.
You raise your kids the best you can. You try
not to damage them too much, don't beat them up.
(08:25):
Hope they don't get addicted to drugs or mentally ill.
If it turns out okay and they need a little
money for the down payment, maybe you help them out there.
You don't do it for some guy crawling in the
street from Arkansas.
Speaker 2 (08:37):
Why would you do that? Not going to do that.
I'm sick of.
Speaker 3 (08:41):
These lectures, these good and good lectures. Oh, we have
to we have to build more housing. Yeah, who's paying
for it? Not these foundations. These foundations are taking money,
they're taking tax money. They are takers. They are parasites,
these nonprofits, these foundations, it's a racket scam. I'm right.
(09:02):
I'm telling the truth here. You know I'm right here.
So we got to get these bodies off the street
once and for all. This has been a great ten
year experiment. It's not fun. It's not being fun for anybody.
It's not done any good for the homeless people. So
they have to be forced off. And if you have
to send the police, send the police. And if they.
Speaker 2 (09:22):
Resist, got to cuff them.
Speaker 3 (09:25):
Okay, if they start fighting back, got to pull the
weapon out and say, hey, I don't I would I wouldn't.
I wouldn't, I wouldn't resist me. That's what you do,
like they're doing with the illegal immigrants. Anybody doesn't want
to follow the law and obey the law, we got
handcuffs for you.
Speaker 2 (09:42):
We got a place to stas here.
Speaker 3 (09:45):
Build more jails, more prisons, more mental health facilities, more
drug treatment facilities, or at least just get them out
of the freaking state. Let their home states deal with them.
Enough is enough, is enough. Not going to fall for
the emotional manipulation anymore from these sick o nonprofits who
(10:05):
are stealing your tax money. And if you don't think
they're stealing it, then you are the most naive SAP
in the world. So take that, all right, Debra, Mark,
We got the moistline coming up.
Speaker 4 (10:18):
You're listening to John Cobelt on demand from KFI AM
six forty.
Speaker 3 (10:24):
Let do a moistline in a minute. But since I
talked about this so much the other day, I don't
know if you heard the follow up. Remember the Whole
Foods that I'm forced to go to. Yes, and there
was a murder outside nine o'clock at night.
Speaker 5 (10:39):
Yeah, and the guy got away.
Speaker 3 (10:41):
The guy got away. They got the guy, They got
him into custody outside a restaurant next door. He showed
up again on Thursday. Tuesday, he stabbed a guy to
death in front of the Whole Foods. Thursday day, he's
in front of this restaurant called Katsuya. It's a nice
(11:04):
Japanese restaurant. For of those special event restaurants we used
to go to, you know, one of our kids would
graduate something and they get to choose, and they would
choose God see you and God soe.
Speaker 2 (11:16):
He serves good beef.
Speaker 5 (11:18):
And they make delicious vegetable veggie rolls and yeah.
Speaker 2 (11:21):
I wouldn't have a cat of rice cake. Yeah I
wouldn't have that either.
Speaker 3 (11:24):
But anyway, they arrested him and uh in connection with
as salt with a deadly weapon investigation. I don't know
what that was about. And then they realized, hey, he's
the guy who killed a man just a couple of
stores away. Because because the police came back, you know,
(11:50):
and they shut down the street and the helicopters and.
Speaker 5 (11:56):
Do you feel better now?
Speaker 3 (11:58):
Well, I didn't think he'd be in there, you know.
My wife said, well, he could be in the neighborhood
and I said, no, he's probably miles away, right he
ran away. Who hangs around the scene of the murder? Well,
another crazy homeless guy hangs around the scene of the murder.
He only had traveled a few feet. And then you've
probably heard this story all day long. A guy named
Calise Crowder was arrested in Burbank at a Walmart sniffing.
(12:26):
He was sniffing women's butts, sniffing the rear ends in public.
He's been arrested multiple times.
Speaker 5 (12:34):
My favorite story of the day.
Speaker 3 (12:36):
Well, yeah, Shannon raised a good point. We were talking
off the air. Is that actually crime? You're just sniffing
the air around the rear end, is.
Speaker 2 (12:47):
What she said.
Speaker 5 (12:49):
Yeah, that's a good point. It's disgusting no matter what.
Speaker 3 (12:53):
Oh, it is disgusting and creepy. But maybe this is
why they've never been able to put him away. He's
been arrested multiple times. But in the end, how long
is can you lock a guy up?
Speaker 5 (13:02):
And who's but smells good? Not that I've smelled any
But I well, since.
Speaker 2 (13:07):
You raise the issue, you tell.
Speaker 5 (13:09):
Me, I would imagine nobody's.
Speaker 3 (13:12):
I would think. I think the real crime is what
people what people admit.
Speaker 2 (13:17):
But like, if.
Speaker 5 (13:21):
He was, somebody should have farted when he did that.
Speaker 3 (13:24):
That's how you deal. Well, maybe maybe that's what he's into.
Maybe he's waiting for. That was in a Nordstrom rack.
Suspicious man loitering in the women's department.
Speaker 2 (13:34):
All men who are in the women's.
Speaker 5 (13:35):
Department, unless they're with the wives and they're helping jees,
the help, you know, find something.
Speaker 3 (13:41):
Unless they're on that sad little bench. And I've been
on that sad bench. You sit on the sad husband
bench waiting for your wife to finish putting on dresses
or trying on shoes.
Speaker 5 (13:53):
That's a good husband.
Speaker 3 (13:54):
By what are you doing? I'm a sad husband. Let's
do moistline here.
Speaker 1 (14:02):
Hey, Sean, thanks.
Speaker 2 (14:03):
For calling the moistline.
Speaker 3 (14:05):
I'm so excited to hear from you to bath time.
Speaker 6 (14:08):
Karen bass Crow.
Speaker 1 (14:10):
Hey, start killing those How TI him up for Hooters?
The progressive morons like Bess and Newsom have been given notice.
Guys man will surely come us. Tom Homlan has taken
his show on a nationwide tour. Check your social media
for an appearance at a sanctuary city near you.
Speaker 7 (14:27):
Karen Baths must have been a real weird kid to
play golf with when they were kids. Will everybody else
is playing with barbies and Star Wars figures. I'm sure
she probably had like a Shakhovara and the Deel Cathro
action figures.
Speaker 6 (14:40):
You know. Our Karen bass is modern day Nero. When
he was out of town, Rome burned down, he came
back and took a third of it for himself, built
this huge palace.
Speaker 3 (14:52):
Karen Basquis said she was in Comperce for twelve years.
Speaker 8 (14:55):
Now she's mayor of La and god knows whatever other
department and she's been in that she's.
Speaker 1 (15:01):
Done damage too.
Speaker 2 (15:02):
Does she get a pension for being in Congress?
Speaker 6 (15:04):
Does she get a pension for being mayor?
Speaker 1 (15:07):
Does she get a pension for.
Speaker 2 (15:08):
Every government job she's.
Speaker 9 (15:09):
Been in and out of?
Speaker 6 (15:11):
Is it's just a big scamp.
Speaker 10 (15:13):
You know.
Speaker 9 (15:13):
The moment one of those barb dolls swoops down as
the Debra Mars backyard and because of one of her
little dogs carries him away, She's going to be the
first one aliant to exterminate those things.
Speaker 11 (15:23):
I hope this Border patrol agent is able to sue Biden.
Speaker 6 (15:27):
Biden's policies put this back on the street, giving him
the opportunity to shoot.
Speaker 11 (15:33):
This border patrol agent in the face. So I hope
mister Border patrol agent can sue Biden directly.
Speaker 12 (15:40):
This is a message for the four people in the
Palace Stade Tower Alcadina who lost their home and they
only have a lot that's left. Why don't they put
up their own camper right now or their own tent
and see how long the city comes along and tells
them to take down that tenth that idiot mayor is
so worried about. There's two beet away from their family.
Speaker 13 (16:03):
I went in the army back in nineteen sixty four
and I was gone for thirty months.
Speaker 12 (16:09):
I never had contact for seeing my family.
Speaker 6 (16:13):
So she can.
Speaker 12 (16:13):
Stick that up prect.
Speaker 6 (16:15):
You know, I used to use stage all the time.
Speaker 8 (16:17):
It's a really nice smell, kind of cleans up the ear,
and that's a nice relax effects on you and your skirt.
Speaker 9 (16:23):
Here's the truth, Martha says to Karen, who should get deported.
Karen says blah blah blah blah blah. My developers who
knew something was going to give one hundred million dollars
to have to have construction workers who need low cost labor.
That's where the illegal aliens come in.
Speaker 1 (16:38):
I guess who's going to get.
Speaker 9 (16:39):
To live there. The illegal aliens, illegals are going to
be living in the Pacific Palisades.
Speaker 12 (16:45):
You watch. I heard that Deborah smudges, and I was
wondering if she uses white sage to smudge with.
Speaker 6 (16:54):
If not, what does she smudge with?
Speaker 8 (16:56):
Since twenty twenty, we've lost Carl's Junior Corporate, Tesla, Chevron Oracle,
Charles Schwab, Toyota Corporate, John Bajuice, and now in and
out you covering her new scum. I was in jail
once for like twenty four days, and the hot dogs
are like the best of you all I got in there.
Speaker 6 (17:17):
Let's grendate beast with resign now chance resign now signs
every time she is outdoors and in a public appearance.
Speaker 14 (17:27):
I feel horrible for all those people in Palisades and Alsadina,
But I think the amazing fusal to jump into action
and say get this done, hurry up, hurry up could
be the mission of her saying, hope, did I screw
up by leaving? So if you don't hurry up, you
didn't make a mistake.
Speaker 6 (17:47):
Just a thought.
Speaker 12 (17:49):
I've been in tears and I could barely sleep.
Speaker 13 (17:51):
Eric Menendez is in the hospital and he's not feeling
well or something. Oh my god, you might be going
through pain, but I doubt aside pain at his mama
dad went through having their heads blowing off. Right, Good lord,
have mercy.
Speaker 15 (18:05):
You know, the only thing super than Gavin Nuisance is
the people who voted for him. And he's not that
good looking, the kind of guy.
Speaker 16 (18:12):
Who goes in and butchers for human beings without provocation
due This guy does not get chipped about any statements
that are made to him.
Speaker 17 (18:23):
Thank you for leaving your message. Please hang up, goodbye?
Speaker 2 (18:28):
What kind of stage?
Speaker 5 (18:30):
It's white?
Speaker 2 (18:31):
Is white? Safe?
Speaker 5 (18:34):
And I'm going to be burning some tonight because Michael
Monks told me that it's a what did he say,
not a full moon? A new okay, So he told
me it's a good time to do it, So why not?
Speaker 2 (18:46):
All right?
Speaker 3 (18:47):
Good you and Michael Monks burning sage. We got a
lot of weirdos at this station.
Speaker 5 (18:54):
You don't have to be a weirdo. You heard that
one guy like the.
Speaker 2 (18:57):
Smell, you know, like this smell.
Speaker 5 (19:00):
Yeah, he said that I don't love the smell, to
be perfectly honest, but it's a foul order. I wouldn't
say it's foul, but I don't do it for the smell.
Speaker 4 (19:10):
John, you're listening to John Cobels on demand from KFI
AM six forty.
Speaker 3 (19:17):
Gee, did Gavin Newsom find a buyer for the refinery
up at Benetia. This is going to be one of
the most fascinating things to watch over the next few
weeks because he has screwed the state and now he
knows it, and he screwed himself. John Fleischman had a
(19:39):
good rundown of what's happened over the years with all
the really punishing regulations and taxes against the oil industry,
and everybody with a brain told Newsom, you're going to
ruin the oil industry. You're going to drive up gas
prices to double digits, and the gonna there's gonna be
(20:01):
they're gonna flee the state, and I don't know what what.
He's got a tremendous amount of arrogance in him, and
Fleischman writes, Newsom has spent his tenure declaring war on
the oil industry. Year after year, he rolled out harsh regulations,
crushing fines. Made no secret he wanted to eliminate fossil
(20:25):
fuels from California. Imagine, imagine the arrogance of a man
who thought he could eliminate fossil fuels from the state
of California. And then yesterday he wrote a letter to
the vice chairman of the California Energy Commission admitting that
we're gonna be using gas and oil for many years
to come. Well, of course, what's astonishing. This was the stupidest,
(20:49):
most extreme, most destructive act he could he could he
could commit. Nothing is worse than destroying the oil industry,
because there is most products need oil for manufacturing, for transportation.
You cannot run anything without gas and oil. It's impossible
(21:13):
to have a modern society. You would have to go
back to the seventeen hundreds. You'd have to go back
to the pre industrial age. There is zero percent of
the public. I mean, there are some climate change fanatics,
but truthfully, none of them want to live in the
seventeen hundreds. And that's what you'd have to do. Even
(21:37):
creating electricity requires gas and oil. So Newsom is now
see the thing is closing the refinery. They've always been
forcing refineries out of business. It's no joke that we
used to have forty three of them. We still had
twenty of them as late as the year two thousand.
(22:00):
Now when these two closed, the one in Benetia, and
then there's another one in the one down in why
do I keep forgetting that one Wilmington here in the
LA area. When those two close, Phillips sixty six is
closing the one in Wilmington. Valera's closing Benetia. We're down
to seven. They were in the forties, then the twenties,
(22:22):
now at seven. And what Fleischman wrote is you might
expect Newsom to celebrate, right, this is what he's been
driving for. This is the logical outcome to all the
excessive regulation in taxes.
Speaker 2 (22:35):
But there's no celebration.
Speaker 3 (22:37):
Instead, there's furious phone calls to OVERSEAE energy companies, Please
bail us out buy this refinery in Benetia.
Speaker 2 (22:46):
Please.
Speaker 3 (22:50):
Nobody thinks any company would buy a California refinery unless
there was a drastic change in regulation in taxes, it's impossible,
So we're gonna lose. I mean, Benetia makes Benetia processes
one hundred and forty five thousand barrels of oil a
(23:14):
day and turns it into gasoline one hundred and forty
five thousand barrels a day. Think about that. What does
that look like? So seventeen percent of California's gasoline production
capacity is going to get wiped out in a year
because of these because of these refineries closing. Here's some
(23:38):
of the financial difficulties Valero's had to deal with, and
this is all new, some policies. They had to take
an eighty two million dollar penalty from the Air Quality
Management District and the California Air Resources Board over unreported
toxic emissions. Instead of jest having maybe like an oversight
(24:00):
panel check on their toxic emissions reporting, they took eighty
two million. In fact, Valerio had to take over a
one billion dollar impairment charge on their California operations, a
billion dollars they had to write off. And now, because
(24:24):
he's running for president, and only because he's running for president,
he wants to look like the great compromiser, the great visionary.
Now he's going to stand up against all the climate fanaticism,
which eventually everyone will realize was.
Speaker 2 (24:43):
A weird religion.
Speaker 3 (24:47):
It's it's we have these moral panics in our society now,
and they occur frequently. We had a racial moral panic
a few years ago after the George Floyd case. We
had this climate change moral panic, and they come and
they go, but this one is going to leave permanent
(25:09):
destruction behind. It is impossible to run a modern society here.
It's impossible to run a successful economy without gas and oil.
And you can't have the price be ten dollars a
gallon or eight dollars a gallon.
Speaker 2 (25:26):
It's just.
Speaker 3 (25:28):
I mean, it's three sixteen across the country. In fact,
the average price is less than that because the California
excess lifts the average price. And there isn't a day
in his governorship that he wasn't in fact, you know,
I did a let me see if I still have it.
(25:49):
I did like a Google search on Newsom and oil,
and it was just all these headlines about Newsom going
after the oil industry, like the uh uh it.
Speaker 2 (26:05):
Was price gouging bills earlier this year.
Speaker 3 (26:08):
Yeah, price gouging bills the other companies from price gouging,
and then Michael Machee released his study at USC and said, no,
it's you, it's your taxes and regulations.
Speaker 2 (26:20):
There's no price gouging.
Speaker 3 (26:22):
And the newsom got so mad he had his staff
smear mache but miche was telling the truth. Newsman is
a lin stinking dog. All right, we come back, second
final round of the Moist Line.
Speaker 4 (26:35):
You're listening to John Cobels on demand from KFI AM
six forty.
Speaker 3 (26:41):
Follow us at John Cobelt Radio. We reached thirty thousand
followers today the start of the show.
Speaker 2 (26:47):
We needed three more.
Speaker 3 (26:48):
We got the three, so keep joining, keep following, and
it is time for round two of the Moistline. Eight
seven seven Moist eighty six. You want to be on
next week, Man Sean, thanks.
Speaker 2 (26:59):
For calling the Moist. I'm so excited to hear from
you about time.
Speaker 11 (27:03):
Of course, Hunter Biden is angry and dropping f bombs.
Speaker 6 (27:07):
The party's over, the gravy train has stopped.
Speaker 15 (27:09):
He has no money for crack, no money for prostitutes.
Speaker 6 (27:13):
He can't go to China and.
Speaker 11 (27:14):
Get billions of dollars because no one's gonna give him
any money because he's got nothing.
Speaker 17 (27:18):
All he is is.
Speaker 9 (27:19):
No more crack, no more prostitutes, no more good times.
Speaker 6 (27:25):
It is over what a piece of.
Speaker 18 (27:28):
Two young kids stuff they don't need to be showing.
Speaker 6 (27:31):
And he confusing the heck out of them.
Speaker 18 (27:33):
It's the school system they're screwing up for kids and
making these mental.
Speaker 6 (27:37):
Health problems happen. Cuba's pretty much been ashle ever since
Castro took over, and he's he's stole quite a bit
of money. What a person to look up to? You go,
Karen Bass.
Speaker 17 (27:48):
I always thought John was being hyperbolic about MacArthur Park,
but I just left there of it and I saw
six people shooting up and then two people get there
kicked over a drug deal gone ron. The place is
absolutely never go there.
Speaker 7 (28:01):
I can't wait till twenty twenty eight when and JD.
Speaker 12 (28:05):
Van School added. I want to see them to destroy
that slimy, greasy snake, that piece of luscum.
Speaker 15 (28:13):
John jack Bath isn't going to see the banners in
the Palace days asking her to resign. She doesn't go there.
Somebody needs to put up some billboards all over the
city asking her to resign, and then asking.
Speaker 13 (28:27):
Where were you when the fires happened.
Speaker 15 (28:30):
And then where have you been since the fires?
Speaker 13 (28:33):
Well, if you take a look at the videos of Cuban,
now Los Angeles could be hited in the same direction.
Speaker 14 (28:38):
I sure hope we don't go that route.
Speaker 19 (28:40):
Even if we got rid of all of the gasoline
powered cars and went to electric cars, we still need
oil for diesel delivery trucks, semi trucks, ships, and the military.
Not to mention jetliners out of all the airports.
Speaker 6 (28:57):
We cannot do without oil.
Speaker 19 (28:59):
And the gasline Newsom's an idiot.
Speaker 15 (29:01):
I can picture it now.
Speaker 6 (29:03):
You can use the oil from his hair to refine
the gas.
Speaker 15 (29:06):
Oh wait a minute, you won't need to refine any gas.
Speaker 17 (29:09):
There's enough gas.
Speaker 18 (29:11):
Coming out of that bag to fuel half the cars
in California.
Speaker 3 (29:15):
Oh my god, we got to get.
Speaker 6 (29:17):
Rid of this guy.
Speaker 3 (29:18):
Hey John, this is marking the big Easy New Orleans
just happily paid two dollars.
Speaker 6 (29:25):
And forty three cents a gallon.
Speaker 3 (29:27):
I hope y'all can do something about all that high
gas y'all got.
Speaker 1 (29:31):
This is Lisa.
Speaker 10 (29:32):
I'll live in Brentwin, Tennessee, and it is so hot
here I had to put the icon in my car
to go get my mail at the end of the
drive line. There's cheap gas here, but there's nothing to do.
I'll have to be back in California, which I should
never have left. Pay more for gas, have things to
do and seventy degree temperature in Huntington Beach instead of
this hell on earth here. Gas is cheap when you
(29:55):
have nothing to do.
Speaker 6 (29:56):
You should really become like president or governor of this state. Man,
you'll cream fathers and garbage up.
Speaker 18 (30:03):
That is a great idea. Why don't we ship all
our criminals to a Salvador because over there nobody has rights. Here,
everybody has rights, even if you slaughtered a family and
tortured him. Makes sense sense and I'd rather pay them
than our California government.
Speaker 17 (30:21):
Thank you for leading your message.
Speaker 6 (30:23):
Please hang up, goodbye.
Speaker 3 (30:26):
Fewer rights for people in this country. Criminals being shipped
to US. I bet you we pay that President Bouquet
enough money. He'll build more supermax prisons just for all
our criminals.
Speaker 2 (30:40):
Send everybody there.
Speaker 3 (30:43):
US citizens, walk them up in El Salvador for the
rest of their lives.
Speaker 2 (30:48):
He's successful. He got every bad guy off the.
Speaker 3 (30:52):
Street, and the murder rate went down ninety seven percent,
and people in El Salvador are very happy.
Speaker 2 (30:58):
They're thrilled.
Speaker 3 (31:00):
I imagine losing ninety seven percent of the murderers.
Speaker 2 (31:04):
Why not? All right, I'm that happy. Note before the weekend.
Speaker 3 (31:12):
We've got Conway coming up next, and Michael Krozer is
the news live in the KFI twenty four hour Newsroom.
Speaker 2 (31:18):
Hey, you've been listening to the John Cobalt Show podcast.
Speaker 3 (31:21):
You can always hear the show live on KFI Am
six forty from one to four pm every Monday through Friday,
and of course, anytime on demand on the iHeartRadio app.