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November 12, 2025 30 mins

The John Kobylt Show Hour 2 (11/12) - California gubernatorial candidate Steve Hilton comes on the show to call out Gov. Newsom for all of this climate change nonsense. More on the national media greasing Gov. Newsom. A woman was found chained in the backyard of a home in Austin, Texas and had been held captive for 5 months. 

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Can't.

Speaker 2 (00:00):
I am six forty. You're listening to the John Cobelt
Podcast on the iHeartRadio app. We are on every day
from one until four o'clock. After four o'clock John Cobelt
Show on demand the podcast, it's the same as the
radio show. I want to get right to Steve Hilton here.
Steve Hilton is running for governor. We've talked with him
a couple of times already. He's leading candidate in some

(00:23):
polls to be governor, leading Republican and it's it's a
pretty weak field on the Democratic side. And Steve has
been a Fox News television host for six years. Before that,
he was He's been an entrepreneur for many companies, and

(00:43):
he also worked for the Prime Minister David Cameron in
as a as a top advisor in Great Britain. Steve
Hilton running for governor and doing well. And we're going
to talk today about Gavin Newsom pripping and prancing in
Brazil at the Climate conference pretending he's a president. Steve,

(01:05):
how are you.

Speaker 1 (01:07):
I'm very well.

Speaker 3 (01:08):
I'm just, you know, so infuriated when you see him,
when we see everything that's going on in our state,
and you got this guy exactly that printing and preening
for the global climate elite in the rainforest in the Amazon,
right when because of his own policies, we are crushing

(01:30):
our own oil and gas industry in California, leading to
working class Californians paying the highest gas prices in America,
higher than Hawaii in the middle of the Pacific Ocean,
even though we have abundant oil reserves and all because
we're shutting down our own production and instead we're shipping
it in from across the world. And guess where half

(01:52):
of it's going. Half of the oil that is drilled
in the Amazon rainforest is now by California.

Speaker 2 (02:01):
Is that right?

Speaker 1 (02:02):
You can't.

Speaker 3 (02:02):
Yes, we just did the numbers and I've just put
something out on it, and like, what is he even
doing there? He's just it's a joke, and he's he's
kind of virtue signaling to the global climately on the
backs of working class Californians, small businesses in California paying
the highest gas prices, all to make himself look good. Meanwhile,
we're buying the oil that's being drilled in the rainforest,

(02:25):
and he's pretending he's sunk at a climate warrior the
whole thing is unbelievable.

Speaker 2 (02:29):
That that is unbelievable. I hadn't heard that. I didn't
know that we were drilling and importing half the oil
you could find in the Amazon rainforest.

Speaker 3 (02:38):
Yeah, from Ecuador, it's incredible. From Brazil, I believe that's disgusting.

Speaker 2 (02:45):
That's terrible, because we got a ton of it under
the desert here in California exactly.

Speaker 3 (02:51):
And then and it used to be that the majority
of the oil and gas were used in California came
from right here, from in.

Speaker 1 (02:57):
State A, you know, a large majority.

Speaker 3 (03:00):
Now it's down to about I mean, it's nearly eighty
percent is imported. It's totally avoidable, and.

Speaker 1 (03:06):
So it's making it more expensive.

Speaker 3 (03:08):
By the way, even on there is spewing out carbon
emissions because they're bringing this stuff in on these giant
supertankers that run on what's known as bunker fuel. It's
the dirtiest form of oil. So they're massively increasing carbon emissions.

Speaker 1 (03:23):
What in the name of climate?

Speaker 3 (03:24):
I mean, you just it's so infuriatingly stupid, hypocritical and ridiculous.
And the people who lose out, as always from these
Democrat policies, are working class Californians who are just being
squeezed from every side.

Speaker 2 (03:39):
Why doesn't the progressive media who's been pushing this climate
change for decades go after him for taking oil out
of the Amazon rainforest.

Speaker 3 (03:48):
Well, exactly, and they never do on anything. It's exactly
that's what He's literally taking oil out of the Amazon rainforest,
which totally avoidably.

Speaker 1 (03:57):
I mean.

Speaker 3 (03:57):
The other point is that the other I think the
give supplyer now for us in California by volume is Iraq. Iraq, right,
that has terrible environmental standards. They're flaring a lot of
the gas, you know, releasing CO two emissions, terrible human
rights record.

Speaker 1 (04:13):
It's a joke.

Speaker 3 (04:14):
Meanwhile, the oil that we produce in California, we have
the highest environmental standards anywhere in the world. If you're
going to use oil, let's use ours, not import it
from the rainforest and from Iran.

Speaker 2 (04:27):
That shows you, and that is so crazy. You've really
stunned me. I had no idea. I know, I've never
seen this in a news story anywhere.

Speaker 1 (04:38):
Well, we're just putting it out.

Speaker 3 (04:40):
I mean, it's just a stunning, stunning thing. But you
know the truth is that when you look at all
the crazy things they're doing in California. I've said this
for a long time, and I've been working on all
these issues for a number of years now. I set
up a policy organization a while back, Golden Together, and
I've been digging into all the different issues water and
energy and the business climate, crime schools, and I've said

(05:01):
the homelessness of course, and what I've said for many
years now, when you look at all the insane policies
that they're doing that cause such pain and misery for
regular work in California's by far the most insane is
the energy policy, because it doesn't even make sense on
their own terms of what they're trying to get out
of it.

Speaker 1 (05:21):
It's just so crazy.

Speaker 2 (05:23):
Yeah, we're using just as much oil and gas as
we ever have. We're not using any less. We're just
paying a hell of a lot more for it because
we're importing it from all these really dangerous countries.

Speaker 1 (05:36):
Example. Yeah, I'll give you another example, a real example.

Speaker 3 (05:39):
So we have the highest so on gas, we're the
highest in the country, including Hawaii. On electric, we're the
highest in the country except for Hawaii, Okay.

Speaker 1 (05:49):
On electric bills.

Speaker 3 (05:50):
Our electric bills are more than double the national average.
Why because of their climate insanity, their obsession with windmills
and solar power which is more if unreliable.

Speaker 1 (06:01):
And all the rest of it.

Speaker 3 (06:02):
What we have in California is a whole fleet, as
they call it, of natural gas fired power stations to
generate electricity. But because they're of their war on fossil fuels,
they're not using those power stations at full capacity. In fact,
they're running at about ten to fifteen percent of their
capacity just to use as backup for wind and solar

(06:25):
when the wind's not blowing and.

Speaker 1 (06:26):
The sun isn't shining. We could just we could.

Speaker 3 (06:29):
Turn up the bile on our gas fired power stations
using natural gas from here in California. And by the way,
natural gas is even worse than oil. We are now
importing ninety percent of the natural gas that we use,
even though we have the in state right, we could
be using our own natural gas to fire the existing

(06:49):
gas fired POWERstation. You don't even to build any new
that would provide all of our energy electricity needs affordably
and reliably, but they won't do it because of their
relous climate you know, religion, zenatry. I mean, it's just
so electric bills.

Speaker 2 (07:07):
It's a religion that doesn't even make sense on their
own terms. Whatever their preaching ought to be done, they
don't do it. They actually are doing more damage to
the climate if you buy into.

Speaker 3 (07:18):
That, exactly because of all the shipping, and you just think,
what is wrong with these people and they don't care.
This is the I mean, sometimes I call it the
climate religion. Other times I call it climate elitism, because
that's also what it is, because it's the poor and
the working class who are paying the price for this
so that they can go to conferences and pat themselves

(07:39):
on the back and get the warm glow of these
climate elites. It's just disgusting, honestly.

Speaker 2 (07:44):
Well, you've put some of this into a letter to
the leaders of the Climate Conference, the president and executive
director of this conference it's called COP thirty, and the
Executive Secretary of the UN Climate Change and others, and
you want to stop at Newsom from getting a speaking
slot at.

Speaker 3 (08:04):
This Well, how exactly like I've just because they don't
I don't even suppose they realized they're going to, you know,
you know, celebrate as a hero and give a massive
speaking slot. And that's sort of treating him as if
he's the president.

Speaker 1 (08:16):
To this guy.

Speaker 3 (08:17):
Who's buying half the oil from their.

Speaker 1 (08:20):
Amazon rainforest, what are you talking about?

Speaker 3 (08:23):
That's why I wrote a letter like, don't give him
a platform. He's a fake climate crusader.

Speaker 2 (08:29):
Well that that that's its, doesn't it. Almost every crusader
jump sign is fake.

Speaker 3 (08:35):
Yes, everything is fake, exactly know, but I mean it's
really true everything he said, he says. They basically are
doing the opposite I got.

Speaker 2 (08:42):
I got a comment here on one of our social
media pages. Somebody in Texas who listens paying two dollars
and twenty five cents for a gallon of gas and
we're paying five bucks two twenty five in Texas. The
average price is about three bucks here in this country.

Speaker 1 (09:03):
Yes, exactly, that's what.

Speaker 3 (09:04):
So my pledge as governor is actually the first pledge
I made in my campaign was to roll back these ridiculous,
crazy climate regulations and so that we could end up
with three dollar gas and three dollars now finally enough,
I say that. Sometimes I go on national, you know,
media shows. I remember the first time I was on
with Sean Hannity and.

Speaker 1 (09:24):
I Fox, I said three dollars gas, and.

Speaker 3 (09:26):
I could see he was looking at me, like, what's
so good about that?

Speaker 2 (09:30):
For most of the country, that's like, Hi, yes, I
actually I tracked this every day on the Triple A
Gas site and there's actually twenty nine states below three dollars.

Speaker 3 (09:43):
I know, and most of them don't have oil reserves
like we do.

Speaker 2 (09:47):
Yeah, I know, crazy, It's really nuts. Can you hang
in line for another segment?

Speaker 1 (09:52):
Absolutely?

Speaker 2 (09:53):
Thank you, you got the time? Okay? Good. Steve Hilton. Steve
Hilton running for governor as a Republican. He's trying to
get Gavin Newsom off the speaking list at the Climate
change conference in Brazil, because I did know this. Apparently
out of oil oil that gets drilled at the Amazon Rainforest,
California gets half of it. More coming up.

Speaker 4 (10:13):
You're listening to John Cobelt on demand from KFI AM
six forty.

Speaker 2 (10:19):
Let's continue with Steve Hilton running for governor as a Republican.
And Steve is at the top of the charts in
some of the polls, even ahead of the other all
the other Democrats, and there's many of them, and they're
all they're all bad, and he is trying to get
the United Nations to strip Gaven newsom of a speaking

(10:40):
role at the United Nations Climate Conference down in Brazil,
because California actually imports half of all the crude oil
that is drilled and extracted from the Amazon Rainforest. So
what the hell is he running around preaching about climate
change when he's taken and half the oil out of

(11:01):
the Amazon rainforest? Really really is crazy, Steevie, You there.

Speaker 3 (11:08):
Got me absolutely insane. But you know, we used to
air in California.

Speaker 2 (11:13):
Yeah, well, you know, actually I think long term, I
don't think he's going to fly in most other states
outside of California. But let's talk about you running for
governor in California, because that's our immediate disaster here. The
other day, I just off the top of my head
came up with nineteen issues that we're in trouble with,
right and we talked about the gas prices and the
electricity prices, and the highest inflation rate, and we have

(11:36):
the highest unemployment rate. And you were giving all the
legal aliens healthcare from birth to death. You get in,
you get in as governor. You're dealing with a two
thirds majority Democratic Senate and Assembly most likely would what
are you going to be able to do? What's going
to be your secret power here to fix some of

(11:59):
the start.

Speaker 3 (12:01):
It's a great, great v question, and I thought about
it a lot, and I'm doing a lot of work
to get ready to be prepared, because if you think
about the difference between the comparison with the on the
federal level of President Trump the first time around and
the second time around, and it is a direct comparison
because you've got obviously the presidents, you've got the executive branch,

(12:23):
You've got Congress.

Speaker 1 (12:24):
Same deal.

Speaker 3 (12:24):
Here in California, you've got the executive branch. The governor
runs the executive branch. That is all these agencies and bureaucracies.
And actually, when I'm on the road the whole time today,
I've been in the Central Valley, our farmers, and you
talk to business owners up and down the state everywhere,
as I do the whole time. As you mentioned at
the top of the hour, I was a business owner.
Are small business owner started companies, and so I know

(12:47):
the pain they're going through. Most of that pain is
actually coming from these agencies carb the Air Resources Board,
the Coastal Commission, the Pest Side Board, the.

Speaker 1 (12:57):
State Water Resources Control Board, oh and on.

Speaker 3 (12:59):
There are hundreds of these agencies, and you, as the governor,
appoint thousands of people.

Speaker 1 (13:05):
To these agencies.

Speaker 3 (13:06):
A really good example is actually what we've just been
talking about, oil and gas, so that is regulated by
a group called COLGEM Geological Energy Management. They are the
ones shutting down California's oil industry on the direct instructions
of the governor. There's no law that was passed saying
shut down the industry is gavin you from doing it
through the people he appoints to CALGEM, telling them not

(13:28):
to issue permits for maintaining existing wells, for expanding them,
for drilling new wells and existing fields. I've seen all
of that firsthand. I've been to the oil.

Speaker 1 (13:38):
Fields, and here's what we're going to do.

Speaker 3 (13:40):
We're going to kick out the climate zelos.

Speaker 1 (13:42):
From that agency.

Speaker 3 (13:43):
We're going to put in their sensible pro California energy people,
and I'm going to tell them to issue licenses as
fast as the requests come in. And I've talked to
the industry about all of this, and we believe that
with that kind of full steam ahead approach, we can
double californ your oil production every two years.

Speaker 1 (14:02):
And I don't need the legislature for any of that.

Speaker 3 (14:04):
Now you take that example and you apply it to
every single one of these issues. I can't do everything.

Speaker 1 (14:10):
As governor, but actually there's a lot you can do.

Speaker 3 (14:13):
Through that if you really understand how government works. That's
why I think my experience working in the government in
the UK senior advisor to the Prime Minister. You mentioned
that earlier. Really I was leading along with the team
there the implementation of our domestic reform program, and I
saw firsthand how the bureaucracy works. Now, back then, I
didn't win all the battles, not by long way, because

(14:35):
often I didn't have the political backing. This time, I'm
going to be the boss, and I really know their tricks.
I really know how to take them on, and so
that's how we're going to get it done. The other
thing I just mentioned briefly is that at least I
can stop it getting worse as well, because the other
power you have as governor is to veto the legislation. Now,
all this nonsense is coming, you know, on top of

(14:56):
the regulations, you've got all this legislation. Every year, they're.

Speaker 1 (14:59):
Passing all these bills.

Speaker 3 (15:00):
Just this year in the session that ended a month
or so, ago. They've passed one one hundred and seventeen.

Speaker 1 (15:06):
Bills just this year.

Speaker 3 (15:08):
Right, I did an event in Sacramento. We printed them out,
I piled them up with double my height. Right, as governor,
you can veto all of this and slow it down.
And in these smart people will say, well, with a
two thirds majority, they can overturn a vita. That is true,
but it takes time. There's a process, so you can
slow it down, you can stop it getting worse. On

(15:29):
top of that, your point, judges, look how powerful that's
been for President Trump at the federal level. You know,
so then you've got emergency powers. This there's actually a
lot you can do with this office if you really
know what you're doing and you understand how government works.

Speaker 2 (15:41):
Steve Hilton, please come back again soon. I want to
keep talking abolutely, all right, Steve have it? Republican Governor
candidate Steve Hilton.

Speaker 4 (15:52):
You're listening to John Cobels on demand from KFI AM
six forty.

Speaker 2 (15:58):
The John Cobelt Show. You can follow us at John
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(16:21):
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We are now on TikTok too, We're we're on we're everywhere.
You could spend the whole day consuming the show and
then regurgitating it and consuming it again. What Cal's do.

(16:42):
It's very nutritious. All right now, I I've been mentioning.
We just had Steve Hilton on for half an hour.
If you're just tuning in, you've got to listen to
that on the podcast. Right. He's one of the leading
candidate for governor here in California, Republican, and he was
telling truth about Newsom that nobody else wants to. Newsom's

(17:05):
actually our state receives half of the oil drilled out
of the Amazon rainforest. Wonder how that plays with all
the climate fanatics here in California. I mean, the whole
that is on rainforest is the holy Grail. I've been
hearing about that since I's like kiad the Amazon rainforest
and California gets half the oil drilled there. You realize

(17:27):
what a think this guy is ahem. So Politico dot
com has a story the Climate President in waiting. Oh
this writer Camille van Kinell, she loves Newsom. This. This
is a tongue bath. I'm gonna read some of this
for Beatim. You tell me when you start gagging. Okay,

(17:51):
you might want to pull your office garbage can over.
Gavin Newsom can't get out of a meeting or talk
at an international climate talk here without being swarmed by
reporters and diplomats eager for a quote, a handshake, or
a photo. On tour of a cultural center, the leader

(18:13):
of the Brazilian state governor, Helder Barballo, which is hosting
the talks. While he's talking to Barbollo, a passerby recognizes
them both. There's the governor, he exclaimed, and there's the
California governor. And as Newsom rode up an escalator later
in the day, packed with reporters and international officials on

(18:35):
his way to deliver a speech, a bystander shouted, the
escalator is not broken for you, because you know the
un intentionally broke Trump's escalator. Newsom grinned wide, Oh, I
like that. The adulation was gold for a governor with
presidential aspirations as he steps into a power vacuum. The

(18:58):
Trump administration is trying to dismantle climate policies both at
home and abroad, and other likely Democratic presidential contenders are
absent from the United Nations climate talks. Seeing a chance
to plant his green flag on an international stage, Newsom
is embracing the role of climate champion as his own

(19:20):
party backs away at home. Let me get let me
see here Trump and the Republicans want nothing to do
with climate change, and the Democrats want nothing to do
with climate change. So why is Newsom traveling to Brazil
for a week to pontificate about climate change? Nobody here

(19:44):
is interested. That's what I don't get.

Speaker 1 (19:47):
What.

Speaker 2 (19:50):
We're at peak influence now, Now somebody has to decode
this Newsom line. We're at peak influence because of the
flatness of the surrounding terrain with the Trump administration and
all the anxiety. But I'll say this slower, please seriously,

(20:13):
if anybody can figure what this is that this would
be like a game show. We're at peak influence because
of the flatness of the surrounding terrain with the Trump
administration and all the anxiety. I think I got it.
You do what. I'm slower than you are.

Speaker 5 (20:30):
He's trying to say that California is at the top
of climate change initiatives and all of that, and the
flat terrain that he's talking about. Is Trump not giving
ans about climate change? Oh, it's pretty good. I gotta
write that down, all right. Oh you're gonna be our
official Newsom decoder. Then it's probably all the hours you've
been listening to his speeches.

Speaker 2 (20:50):
Overably, Yes, Newsom's profile has never been higher. Just days
before traveling to Brazil, he celebrated a decisive win in
his redistricting camp Pain. The governor couldn't walk down the
hallway at the conference without getting swarmed, undeniably the star
of the talks. On their second formal day, at one point,
security officials had to physically shove one man, repeatedly one

(21:13):
man security official. The conference attendees yelled out, keep up
the social media, Well there's a there's a rallying cry
and go Gavin, and an occasional who is that? The
first question by the Brazilian press are you running for president?

(21:35):
And the business people would ask are you coming back now?
In paragraph nine, you could see Camille here. She's twitching.
Would you agree with me? She's twitching? She is Camille
von Kanel, She writes. The rest of the world may
wish America was more like California, but the country itself,

(21:57):
even Democrats who will decide the twenty twenty eight primary,
are far more skeptical. What looks like courage abroad can
read as out of touch back home in a country
where voters, including Democrats listen to this, routinely rank any
number of issues, including the economy, healthcare, and cost of living,
as more pressing than global warming. Now, I have looked

(22:19):
at a lot of poles, and I do always believe poles.
But when you get a consistent result, and consistently, global
warming is the bottom of the list of things people
care about. If you write down fifteen issues and poll
people on them, what's most important? Climate change is number fifteen.
If you come up with eighteen issues, climate change is

(22:40):
number eighteen. If you come up with twenty five issues,
climate is number twenty five. There is literally almost nobody
who actually cares about it, and if they do care
about it, they don't think it's that important. There's five
other things that are more important. She writes, other Blue
states we're already backing away from Newsom's gas powered vi

(23:00):
called phase out, and then Congress and Trump ended it.
Another Democratic contender for president, Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro, may
pull his state out of an emissions trading market. Even
in California, trade is more important than climate change as

(23:21):
the voter's top priority for international talks. Even here in California,
the interest in climate change has faded. Jerry Brown, who
started all this nonsense, acknowledge that climate is not a
big issue in South Carolina or Maine or Iowa. It's

(23:42):
not like immigration, homelessness, taxes, inflation, the price of a house.
So he's obsessed with something that hardly anyone cares about
except the people who make money and gain stature. Always
express my relationship to my truth. All these private diplomats,

(24:07):
they get paid to go to these conferences and it's fun.
You got to Brazil. Brazil is some party country. Lots
of young women there, lots of dancers, lots of prostitutes,
lots of food and drink. And you know you got
a big expense account from the home country.

Speaker 4 (24:23):
You're listening to John cobelts on demand from KFI AM six.

Speaker 2 (24:27):
Forty John Cobelt Show, moistline, Hey, we got a lot
of vacancy. Let's get to it here, moistline eight seven
seven Moist eighty six, eight seven seven moist eighty six.
Or maybe you're happy paying five dollars a gallon for
gas and you're happy paying double the electricity prices compared

(24:49):
to the rest of the country. Maybe maybe you're comfortable
with that eight seven seven moist and eighty six. You
use the talkback feature on the iHeartRadio app coming up
in minutes, Tom McClintock. Because have they voted yet on
the opening up the government with the House? I don't
see that they have yet, But today's the day they're
supposed to vote in the House. The Senate's already voted

(25:11):
to end the shutdown, and Trump will sign it as
soon as it passes deb Were you there where else
would I be? John? I'm at your service. I didn't
mean physically. I meant you know, I'm here. Do you
ever wonder what trashy people do in places like Texas?

Speaker 6 (25:30):
Well, I've seen sometimes what trashy people do.

Speaker 2 (25:32):
All right, you want to hear this story? Yes, a
half naked woman was allegedly tortured and chained up in
the backyard of a Texas home for months in the backyard,
so she's outdoors, and they arrested five people. They were
friends of hers, and they got mad at her, so

(25:54):
they brought her out to the backyard, chained her up,
starved her, and started shooting at her with bb guns.
And this the night before Halloween or the day before Halloween.
The Austin Police Department got a call about a woman
screaming for help and handcuffed to a metal exercise equipment

(26:18):
set up in the backyard. The first responders could not
get her disconnected from the exercise equipment. She was handcuffed
in such a strange way. As they tried to free
the woman, five adults inside the home saw what was
going on and they tried to flee, but the police

(26:43):
caught him detained him. They found two small kids living
at the home. They were sent to protective services. Now
these people Michelle Garcia is fifty one, Crystal Garcia twenty one,
Mache Carney thirty two, on Pablo cast our Age thirty
and Maynard lev Le Fevers twenty one. They had held

(27:04):
her captive for five months why. They were all friends,
but at some point the group decided they no longer
liked her, and they decided to hold her hostage. She
was living outside for weeks and beaten whenever she tried
to flee, and they gave her one plate of food

(27:26):
today and they shackled her to the exercise stand. And
apparently one of the women, one of the suspects, told
investigators that they limited the woman to one meal a
day because she thought the victim had gotten chunky. Apparently

(27:47):
she'd gotten too fat for the group, and they decided, well,
you're too fat, and we're going to chain you up
and not feed you anymore. I don't have any words,
the victim said. The night before, her pants had slipped
down and she got in trouble. I don't know what
that means. So they shot her with a BB gun.

(28:08):
Her friends, nice friends, cuffed her to the stand and
left her half naked overnight as punishment. Temperatures dropped to
the forties. She had extensive injuries, open wounds, swelling of
the rest, loss of tissue from her hands and feet,
widespreads scarring from the BB gun pellets. They were just

(28:30):
taking potshats at her right, I've never heard of this.
I haven't either. It was an electric rifle style BB
gun and one guy said the reason he shot at
her with the rifle is because he didn't want to
touch her.

Speaker 6 (28:49):
Wow, okay, that makes a lot of sense, he said.

Speaker 2 (28:55):
This guy cast her when he would get home from work.
He'd grabbed the BB gun from his closet and just
chase her around the yard. This is so cruel. One
of the four year olds just cast her. A son
and he ran it out dad. Oh good, what a
good boy, he said. His dad shot the woman and
whenever she was bad, that kid was in line. Didn't

(29:19):
cause any trouble. And that is mom Carney usually stood
by and watched. This is gross. What a lovely family.

Speaker 6 (29:29):
Okay, so you know what happens to those people. They
you know, an eye for an eye, right, you need
to go.

Speaker 2 (29:35):
And she got one of the bbi's in the eye too.
Oh god, it was lodged in there. I didn't mean her.
And then the perpetrators. Yeah, now she she had a
facial trauma and they found a bb lodged in her
right eye. So yeah, you're right. Eye for an eye,
Oh yeah. Just everybody gets gets one Bbie in the

(29:56):
right eye. Nice friends, Yeah, nice friend. Jeez, she's too fat. Wow,
we're going to start.

Speaker 6 (30:08):
That's the fun thing that we do out here.

Speaker 2 (30:12):
We come back. Tom McClintock, the Northern California congressman, old
friend of our program, and the shutdown vote is coming
sometime very soon. Deborah Mark is led in the KFI
twenty four hour newsroom. Hey, you've been listening to the
John Cobalt Show podcast. You can always hear the show
live on KFI Am six forty from one to four

(30:33):
pm every Monday through Friday, and of course, anytime on
demand on the iHeartRadio app.

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