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September 4, 2025 32 mins

The John Kobylt Show Hour 1 (09/04) - Former Vice Pres. Kamala Harris has been getting 24/7 security from LAPD. Update on the ICE raid on a marijuana farm in Ventura County. Prisoners want air conditioning. An urgent care staff in Santa Barbara was fired after posting a TikTok video making jokes about people's bodily fluids in examination rooms. 

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Can if I am six forty, you're listening to the
John Cobelt podcast on the iHeartRadio app. Welcome John Cobelt's show,
and we are here every day from one until four o'clock,
and every day you should listen to the whole thing.
But if you can't, then after four o'clock there's a
makeup John Cobelt Show on demand. It's the podcast version

(00:21):
same as the radio show posted after four on the
iHeart app, and you.

Speaker 2 (00:25):
Could listen to what you missed.

Speaker 1 (00:27):
I as a Los Angeles City taxpayer, I am an Angelino.
Thank you, I am an Angelino, and I am one
offended Angelino. Some of my tax money on some of
your tax money. Debra is going to pay for Kamala
Harris's private security on her book tour and in fact,

(00:52):
just in general, she's getting private security paid for by us.
And I am gonna play you five eleven story in
just a moment that gives a good overview of this.
But I looked up how much Kamala Harris and Doug
m Hoff her his Well, that's her.

Speaker 3 (01:13):
That's a former first Jeff friend.

Speaker 1 (01:15):
Yes, and girlfriend's slapping husband. He's an entertainment attorney. And
he and Kamala are worth, according to Forbes magazine last year,
eight million dollars.

Speaker 2 (01:28):
All right, so they got a lot of loot.

Speaker 1 (01:29):
Eight million bucks, certainly enough to afford private security. Secondly,
Simon and Schuster is the publisher of Kamala Harris's new
book and the last revenue year reported online that I
could find they took in one point one billion dollars

(01:50):
in twenty twenty two in revenue.

Speaker 2 (01:53):
So Kamala and.

Speaker 1 (01:56):
Doug can afford to pay for private security, and so
can Simon and Schuster. See, Kamala lost her lost her
a Secret Service protection. She got the normal amount. Six
months is what you get when you're vice president. After
you're out of office, she got the six months. Biden

(02:17):
had extended it by another year. Trump came in and
said no, so her I think it was July twentieth.
She was done with Secret Service protection.

Speaker 2 (02:27):
And now since she can't get.

Speaker 1 (02:32):
It from Trump, Gavin Newsom has stepped in and made
it sound like the state is going to pay for this,
except it's LAPD that's going to provide the security. Listen
to the whole thing, Fox eleven, Christina Gonzalez, we.

Speaker 4 (02:46):
Can tell you that there is an unmarked LAPD vehicle
at her home. Two officers inside has been there twenty
four to seven. Now you may remember Governor Newsom was
talking about agreeing to give hersp security, especially with the
upcoming book tour. But at this point, unless it is
private security or something from the book publisher, this is

(03:10):
all a taxpayer's expense, and some people are happy, some
or not. Take a look to.

Speaker 3 (03:14):
Yeah, I do agree, No, no, absolutely on this agreement.

Speaker 4 (03:18):
In Brentwood, over LAPD officers parked outside the home of
former Vice President Kamala Harris, which sources tell Fox eleven
is happening around the clock. It seems local officials have
decided to provide Harris with dignitary protection after President Trump
ended former President Biden's agreement to extend her Secret Service coverage.

(03:41):
In a statement to Fox eleven, Mayor Karen Bess writing
that quote, this is another act of revenge following a
long list of political retaliation in the form of firings,
the revoking of security clearances, and more. This puts the
former vice president in danger, and I look forward to
working with the governor to make sure Vice President Harris

(04:03):
is safe. In Los Angeles, says.

Speaker 2 (04:05):
A public person. As a former vice president, she's entitled
to that.

Speaker 4 (04:09):
Former Vice presidents usually get six months Secret Service protection
after leaving office, but Harris's had been extended to July
of twenty twenty six by President Biden until Trump canceled
it last week. Governor Newsom is in discussions to extend
her CHP protection. Harris, who was the first African American

(04:31):
woman to serve as VP, did have an elevated thread
level while in office and after her failed presidential campaign.
The AP reported that recent threat assessments by the Secret
Service found no credible threats. As she begins a book
tour that will take her around the world, what point

(04:51):
though from this Brentwood resident.

Speaker 5 (04:53):
Obviously you could say that I disagree with her policies,
but she took four years out of her life to
serve the country. Then becomes a broader community thing too.
So if you went into a bookstore, Kamala Harris is there,
who would you want to protect you? LAPD or private
security who's got your security in mind as well?

Speaker 4 (05:10):
Now it's not just LAPD either. We're talking about metro officers,
is what we're being told, and that is an elite
unit at a higher cost. Now, we did ask about that,
not only to the mayor but to LAPD because it
does speak to concerns about the financial crisis the city
finds itself, and at this point no answer from the
mayor about that. From LPD. We reached out to the

(05:33):
publisher se if they're providing security to HP. Nothing from
them either.

Speaker 2 (05:40):
Who is that Brentwood wiener who came out in them?

Speaker 3 (05:42):
Know that your neighbor.

Speaker 2 (05:43):
Did you hear that guy?

Speaker 3 (05:44):
You neighbor?

Speaker 2 (05:45):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (05:45):
That sounds like half the Brentwood guys. They all sound
like they went through some neutering operation. Can you isolate
that guy again?

Speaker 2 (05:53):
Eric?

Speaker 5 (05:55):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (05:55):
And so many of them.

Speaker 1 (05:57):
Yeah, I mean there, I don't know they there must
be some uh neutering factory on the West Side that
I'm not aware of, And I hope I don't stumble
into it because they all come out and they've got
the same kind of voice and the same kind of cadence. Look,
she doesn't deserve it, period and neither would neither would

(06:17):
any other Former Vice president Mike Pence jd Vance. I
don't care who it is. You get six months, according
to the loss, six months is up. You're on your own.
You have to pay for your own private security. And
she and Doug m Hoff are worth eight million dollars
and she's going on a book tour that's her choice.

(06:38):
And Simon and Schuster makes a billion dollars a year,
So why am I paying for it? Play that Wiener again.

Speaker 5 (06:45):
Obviously you could say that I disagree with her policies,
but she took four years out of her life to
serve the country.

Speaker 2 (06:51):
Then becomes a broader community thing too, so if you.

Speaker 5 (06:53):
Into a bookstore, but still would you want to protect them?

Speaker 2 (06:58):
In this same solids who's gone as well?

Speaker 1 (07:03):
Oh my god, alleged men are now talking in that
sing song voice.

Speaker 3 (07:07):
That's the worst.

Speaker 1 (07:08):
Men?

Speaker 2 (07:09):
What's that? I said, that's the worst.

Speaker 6 (07:11):
I hate that sing song voice. And I also had
the valley girl valley guy voice.

Speaker 1 (07:16):
It's bad enough when it infected women, the valley girl
sing song. Now it's infected men, grown middle aged men.
That guy's probably fifty five years old. The hell is,
what's gone on here?

Speaker 6 (07:29):
Come on, John, let's hear your best sing song valley
guy voice.

Speaker 2 (07:32):
He's probably got a.

Speaker 1 (07:40):
There is no argument for this, because Newson could carry
on about her being a public servant and she's entitled. No,
she's not entitled. You choose to be a public servant.
Never mind that she didn't do anything as vice president
at all. You're a public servant. Now she's in private citizen.

(08:02):
We don't know her anything. I think she's going to
get a pension letter. Yeah, of course she's going to
get a pension. She's been in politics for twenty five years.
She could use her pension money.

Speaker 2 (08:14):
Doug M. Hoff I looked up his background.

Speaker 1 (08:18):
Some years he was making a million dollars a year,
twenty four hour private security in front.

Speaker 2 (08:25):
Of her house and an elite LAPD unit.

Speaker 1 (08:30):
There's like fourteen different officers supplying this over the course
of the over.

Speaker 2 (08:35):
The course of the week. This is ridiculous. No politician
deserves this, No out of work politician does.

Speaker 1 (08:43):
Basically, she is fired by the public. She wanted a
promotion and the public said get out, go home. So
now she should go home, and she doesn't get to
bring her security with her, paid for by all of us.

Speaker 2 (08:55):
That's outrageous.

Speaker 1 (08:57):
Yes, out get Karen Bass carrying on about Trump and
political retaliation. I care what it is. She doesn't deserve it.
She's not entitled. The words they use retaliation. She's off
the books, former employee in the past. Now she's an author.

(09:19):
She wants to sell it freaking book as a public figure.
Any risks she takes, that's her risk, that's her choice.
She should pay for the security. Oh, who's that winder?
Who would you want? Would you want LAPD or private security?

Speaker 2 (09:32):
It doesn't matter. You don't get LAPD just.

Speaker 1 (09:35):
Because you want it because you think it's better than
private security. That's our money, that's our police department. They
took some of these guys off active cases. That's crazy,
absolutely crazy, and it would be crazy for any public official,
Republican or Democrat. We should not have to pay for
these silly fools. All right, We got more coming up.

Speaker 7 (10:00):
Listening to John Cobelt on demand from KFI Am six forty.

Speaker 1 (10:06):
We are on from one to four Moistline eight seven
seven moist eighty six. Tomorrow is Moistline Friday twice in
the three o'clock hour eight seven seven Moist eighty six,
or the talkback feature on the iHeartRadio app Eric Howrad
The vacancy's doing.

Speaker 2 (10:20):
We got plenty of room. It's been a short week holiday,
you know how it goes, Oh my god. All right,
so let's get it fired up here. All right, this
is your chance.

Speaker 1 (10:29):
You have a higher than average chance of actually getting
on the air. If this is your dream, I would
I'd pull a trigger right now. Two yes, Aline, Wow,
that's right.

Speaker 2 (10:44):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (10:44):
I mean, this could be the peak of your existence,
and you will be listened to, and you may be
influencing other KFI listeners. You never know, So a lot
of wisdom in those moistline costs.

Speaker 2 (11:00):
All right.

Speaker 1 (11:01):
Oh, by the way, I just finished talking about Kamala
Harris and how LA taxpayers are now paying for LAPD
to give her security when she and her husband are multimillionaires.
We're going to talk with Katie Grimes from californiaglobe dot
com after three o'clock about this matter. Now, let's take

(11:23):
you back to August. Do you remember when the ICE
agents did a raid at a marijuana farm in Camarillo,
It's called Glasshouse Farms, and they arrested three hundred people

(11:44):
and they found fourteen child workers during the investigation.

Speaker 2 (11:51):
Migrant children. These were slaves.

Speaker 1 (11:56):
They were smuggled into this country to do slave work
at a marijua on a farm glass House is the
name of the company, Glasshouse Farms. Three hundred and sixty
one illegal aliens arrested, including criminals with convictions for rape, cerial, burglary, hit.

Speaker 2 (12:19):
And run, and DUIs.

Speaker 1 (12:22):
This is one of the biggest operations that they had
here in southern California.

Speaker 2 (12:27):
The ICE agents.

Speaker 1 (12:33):
Were charged by a professor, a cal State Channel Islands
professor named Jonathan Caravello. Jonathan Caravello, I remember talking about
this guy and I looked him up today. He has
wild long hair and crazy bug eyes. It looks like

(12:55):
a mental patient. Mudshot. He looks like a guy who'd
been captured screaming naked in the street, and they took
his mugshot. An absolutely terrifying looking man. But he's a
cal State Channel Islands professor, and he threw a tear

(13:16):
gas canister at federal agents. Apparently one of the ICE agents.
I guess a tear gas canister got loose in the
ruckus and he.

Speaker 2 (13:26):
Picked it up and threw it in the direction of
the agents. So he got arrested.

Speaker 1 (13:35):
And the next day the idiots at the California Faculty Association,
I guess this is a collection of professors. They put
a reel on Instagram claiming that Caravallo, Oh excuse me,
Professor Caravallo was kidnapped by the agents. Okay, they claimed

(14:00):
four masked agents again with the masks. This crowd was
happy with masks a few years ago. I don't understand
now they're offended by masks. They made masks mandatory. For
God's sakes, you couldn't go to bed unless you were
wearing a mask. Four masked agents, they say, dragged Jonathan

(14:21):
Away into an unmarked car. They're so dramatic. Yes, Ice
agents drive unmarked cars because if they don't, all these
savages start destroying the car. They dragged Jonathan Way into
an unmarked car without identifying themselves, without giving the reason

(14:41):
for arrest, and without disclosing where they're taking him. See
a lot of faculty members at students were protesting the
raids because apparently they don't want hundreds of illegal aliens,
many of them criminals, to be arrested. They don't want

(15:01):
they don't want convicted rapists, burglars, hit and run ars.
They don't want those guys put away, and they want
those children to continue to be enforced slave labor.

Speaker 2 (15:14):
I don't understand them.

Speaker 1 (15:16):
I'm you know, you know, I'm sure at Gallas State
Channel Islands, whatever the hell that is, I'm sure they've
had many classes attacking slavery and racism and all the
other ills. Suddenly they're in favor of children of color
being put into slave camps to grow marijuana.

Speaker 2 (15:40):
Of all things. I don't really understand.

Speaker 1 (15:45):
The night before he was arrested, this nutcase Caravello spoke
at a cameraal council meeting and said he was patrolling
the streets himself. All right, this is the nut patrolling
the streets following armed, masked thugs trying to kidnap my
undocumented neighbors. Well, Caravello has now been indicted by a

(16:10):
federal grand jury for throwing that tear gas canister, a
violation that charges him with assaulting, resisting, or impeding officers
or employees federal officers. So now he's facing up to
twenty years in prison, which I find very funny. The

(16:32):
US Attorney Bill A. Sale put out this this on
social media. A little while back. Caravallo was not kidnapped
by federal agents. He was arrested for throwing a tear
gas canister at law enforce. When he's charged with a
violation under eighteen US Code one to eleven. It was

(16:52):
knocked down to a misdemeanor, and then they presented the
case to a grand jury and the grand jury.

Speaker 2 (16:57):
Said, no, that's a felony.

Speaker 1 (17:00):
All I can hope for is that Caravello and his
hair and his bug eyes are put away until what
would that be the year at twenty forty five. Yeah,
that'd be fine, that'd be great. And they should take
all the hysterical professors and hysterical students with them. Who
needs this crowd. They're they're they're favorite of all kinds

(17:20):
of criminals. They're in favor of child slave labor. The
guy's throwing a tear gas canister. There's more insanity than
I've ever seen in my life, inexplicable insanity. More coming up,
and we got Deborah Mark.

Speaker 3 (17:39):
Speaking of And I knew you were going to say that.

Speaker 6 (17:41):
In fact, I was going to say that too, but
I just decided to let you do it.

Speaker 2 (17:46):
Because I'm so nice. All Right, crazy one do the news.

Speaker 7 (17:52):
You're listening to John Cobel's on demand from KFI AM
six forty.

Speaker 1 (17:58):
We're on every day from one until four clock and
then the podcast after four o'clock John Cobalt show on
demand so we could hear whatever you missed. They just
never know what you're gonna find every day. There is
now a report cal Matters did this story. Uh, prisoners
want air conditioning. Yes, your local rapists and murderers are

(18:24):
overheated and they want air conditioning. And there are activists
demanding air conditioning in prisons.

Speaker 2 (18:33):
I never thought about that, they did.

Speaker 1 (18:36):
You never, No, you never thought about it.

Speaker 2 (18:41):
And they should never have air conditioning.

Speaker 3 (18:44):
Well I shouldn't say they shouldn't.

Speaker 2 (18:46):
But I do you want to spend six billion?

Speaker 3 (18:52):
No? No, not really, only for the innocent people.

Speaker 2 (18:58):
There are no innocent people in well, there are you know.

Speaker 3 (19:00):
I've watched movies, John, I've seen TV shows. There are
some people.

Speaker 2 (19:08):
There are some.

Speaker 6 (19:08):
People that have been let out after years and years
and years after DNA testing has found them innocent.

Speaker 3 (19:13):
So those people, I think they should have air conditioner.

Speaker 6 (19:15):
But the real bad guys and women that really did
commit the crimes, they should not.

Speaker 2 (19:21):
They are all innocent on Netflix, aren't they.

Speaker 3 (19:23):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (19:27):
And I gotta give it to this Gene Kwang. She
actually tied this into to climate change. Climate change, Yeah,
but as a Twofer for this. But these, these these
are such left wing, progressive knutball journalists. As climate change
exacerbates the risks of extreme heat across California.

Speaker 2 (19:52):
Well they're gonna build.

Speaker 1 (19:54):
They're gonna spend thirty eight million dollars to build a
pilot program of air conditioning in some prisons. Now, this
is really small, and it's going to take a long time.
They claim they need six billion dollars to air condition
all the prisons. Thirty eight million is not going to

(20:14):
cover much, it says, warnings by advocates that the problem
only get worse as the planet warms. You know other
things I care about in life. That's not my top
one thousand. Yeah, whether prisoners are too.

Speaker 6 (20:29):
Hot, don't do a crime to get you into prisons.

Speaker 3 (20:33):
Then you won't have to worry about it. You are conditioning,
you know how you cool off?

Speaker 2 (20:38):
Never kill somebody to begin with.

Speaker 3 (20:41):
Yeah, there you go.

Speaker 2 (20:42):
How about that.

Speaker 3 (20:43):
That's a good idea that's.

Speaker 2 (20:45):
Never suggested in these How about you don't kill the guy.

Speaker 1 (20:50):
Can you go to prison and you'll have a lot
of air conditioning in your happy little apartment.

Speaker 6 (20:55):
Why don't we let them have fans? Can they do
to people with fans.

Speaker 1 (21:03):
There are fans. I'm glad you brought that up. They
can have a personal fan in their cells. Of course,
you know, when it's one hundred degrees, it's blown a
hundred degree.

Speaker 3 (21:14):
But it is better than nothing, and it's not costing
all that money.

Speaker 1 (21:19):
It's available for twenty seven dollars from the commissary. There
you go, but you have to work a minimum wage
prison job for four weeks to afford it.

Speaker 3 (21:27):
Okay, well, there's an incentive.

Speaker 1 (21:31):
Unless their family wants to pay for it. Now, if
your family doesn't want to spend twenty seven dollars on
a fan for you, you must be a real, real bad guy. Yeah,
twenty seven dollars does not even buy lunch in most
places anymore. So if the family can't give you that
little money, it means that you deserve to be in prison.

(21:58):
And they go through all the you know, because the
climate change. Like chow Chilla prison, every year they get
seven days where it's one hundred and five degrees And
they talk about a woman who died named Adrian Bouwaar,
and she's been in prison for ten years and it's

(22:20):
a long story, but.

Speaker 2 (22:23):
She died.

Speaker 1 (22:24):
There's fentoyl in her bloodstream, but these activists claim that
it you know, she died from the heat. Of course,
it takes a little to find out that she's serving
fifteen years to life for second degree murder.

Speaker 2 (22:40):
She beat a guy to death.

Speaker 1 (22:45):
She and another woman argued with this guy in an
abandoned car wash in North Sacramento. I've been feeling something
really bad was going on in that car to begin with. Anyway,
he pissed her off, she beat him to death, and
now she's got some poster child for overheated felons. If

(23:06):
she hadn't beaten him to death, then she wouldn't be
overheating in prison.

Speaker 6 (23:11):
And why is nobody buying her a fan for twenty
seven dollars?

Speaker 2 (23:15):
That's a good point. Or why doesn't she work for
a month and earn the fan?

Speaker 3 (23:19):
She does want to do that, well, didn't she gets
no fan?

Speaker 1 (23:23):
Well, and then she's no longer with us. There's no listen.

Speaker 2 (23:30):
Listen. I mean.

Speaker 1 (23:33):
One prisoner in Norco because it was so hot, he
wouldn't take his antipsychotic medication because he didn't want to
lose his maintenance job over heat concerns. I guess he
takes his medication and that makes it more sensitive to eat.

Speaker 2 (23:48):
I didn't really understand what that means.

Speaker 1 (23:53):
That all you can do is take showers or you
can scoop ice when the officers decide to provide it.
And so they just spend thirty eight million dollars with these,
with these you know, too detailed to explain. But they're

(24:14):
going to try to cool some areas of a few
prisons off, but they're not going to evaluate it until
twenty twenty nine. This is like the California bureaucracy. A
judge said, hey, you got to come up with a
way to cool off the prison. So they said, I'll
do this pilot program. And they're going to waste almost

(24:35):
forty million dollars and it's going to take them four
years and it's a bunch of half assed measures and
then we'll do a report. The meantime, all the prisoners
are going to continue suffering, which is.

Speaker 2 (24:50):
A good thing.

Speaker 1 (24:51):
You see, they ought to be publicizing what it's actually
like in prison. And if you realize it's going to
be one hundred and ten every day in your cell,
I think that changes behavior.

Speaker 6 (25:00):
Yeah, I think maybe you won't want to commit a crime, right.
Can you imagine all those sweaty prisoners though, Can you
imagine what that smells like in there?

Speaker 3 (25:10):
Not good?

Speaker 2 (25:11):
You know, the smell would bother me more than the heat.

Speaker 1 (25:14):
Yeah, prisoners are stewing in their own juices.

Speaker 3 (25:18):
They get to do they do? They have to buy
deodorant in the commissary.

Speaker 2 (25:23):
I bet you they have to buy deodorant.

Speaker 3 (25:25):
Yeah, maybe they don't. They care how they smell, and.

Speaker 1 (25:28):
Then you'd probably have to work an extra week for
the deodorant. So I'm guessing they don't.

Speaker 2 (25:37):
You know.

Speaker 1 (25:38):
This makes me feel good when I read this, though,
does it because they Yeah?

Speaker 2 (25:43):
It does.

Speaker 1 (25:43):
I want to I want to hear all these bad
guys suffering. I love that they're they're uncomfortable. Word coming up.

Speaker 7 (25:54):
You're listening to John Cobbels on demand from kf I
AM six forty.

Speaker 1 (26:00):
We're on every day from one until four o'clock. We
got a lot of room on the moistline. Look, we're
working here. You got to do your part. Eight seven
seven moist eighty six. Eight seven seven moist eighty six.
That's the number that you dial or use the talkback
feature in the iHeartRadio app and give us your angry

(26:20):
denunciations of what is going on in the news. Short week,
holiday week, last weekend of the summer official, you know,
unofficial weekend of the summer, and people are a little
slow witted, a little lazy. We'll get to it because
we're gonna put something on tomorrow. I don't know what
the quality is going to be like. Unless you step up,

(26:41):
you're gonna have to listen to that.

Speaker 6 (26:42):
I could call it John. I could disguise my voice
and say some things.

Speaker 2 (26:47):
If you want, why don't you see if you get
by Eric, Okay, I could say That'd be pretty'd be
pretty funny. Actually, I missed a guy who was a
keylaw that would.

Speaker 3 (26:59):
Call yeah the keenewalk hail dude.

Speaker 2 (27:02):
Yeah, yeah. I used to imitate your dogs, Yeah dogs.

Speaker 3 (27:08):
I missed that guy. What ever happened to him? I
hope he's not in jail.

Speaker 2 (27:13):
There's a good chance, all right.

Speaker 1 (27:19):
You might remember every once in a while there's stories,
maybe it's a security video or there were recording an operation,
and you hear all the crazy things doctors say while
a patient is under anesthesia. Yes, and doctors uh, and
it's it's understandable. It's a high pressure job. There's a

(27:41):
lot of dark humor to relieve the tension.

Speaker 2 (27:43):
And uh, the doctors often during surgery say terrible things
about the patients who are They can't hear it anyways, But.

Speaker 3 (27:51):
You never know what goes into the subconscious.

Speaker 2 (27:54):
You don't know, and you know, you wake up and
you feel bad. Yeah, maybe you have a neue heart.
You have a new heart. You're gonna live much longer.
But they were making fun of you.

Speaker 1 (28:05):
Oh god, Well, here's what the staff in Santa Barbara.
At the sen Sum clinic in Santa Barbara, these employees
would make fun of the bodily fluids you left behind
on the paper coverings of the exam tables, and they

(28:27):
make they would they taped video making jokes about people's
bodily fluids left behind, and one of the employees put
together clips of all the comments made and video of
the stains and posted it on TikTok. I'm so sorry

(28:53):
that I don't have a TikTok account, because gee, I'd
love to see this. Send some clinic in Santa Barbara.
For example, there's some bodily fluid on the paper covering
of the exam table and the caption was guess the substance.

(29:16):
Another one the workers were on the video are patients
allowed to leave you guys?

Speaker 2 (29:20):
Gifts?

Speaker 1 (29:21):
It was the image of the smiling medical staff and
then the second image showed a small stain left behind
on the xam table with the caption yes they can
leave you, they can't leave you gifts. Yeah. Another one
reads all shapes and sizes another worker bending over a

(29:43):
large stain on a different exam table and the worker
is sticking her tongue out. Multiple employees in one image
clustered around an exam table with a stain. Make sure
you leave your healthcare workers sweet gifts.

Speaker 3 (29:58):
Like these so incredibly rude, And then they post.

Speaker 2 (30:03):
It idiot, let me see.

Speaker 1 (30:06):
Have they fired everybody? Yes, they've all been fired. The
parent company, Suitor Healthcare, called it dehumanizer.

Speaker 3 (30:16):
Yes it really is.

Speaker 1 (30:20):
Suitor Health is one of the largest nonprofit healthcare networks
in Northern California and their partners at the Sansum Clinic
in Santa Barbara. They are deeply concerned about the employee's actions.
A disrespectful social media post made on a personal account
by a former employee, and we are conducting a full review.

(30:43):
Now it looks like the former employee hadn't worked in
two months, so maybe this was some kind of parting protest.

Speaker 2 (30:50):
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (30:52):
That person is now put their account on private, but
the video itself is being copied on many other sites.

Speaker 3 (31:02):
I would be so upset if that happened to me,
if I was. Yes, how embarrassing.

Speaker 1 (31:12):
You know, I guess you got to pull the paper
out yourself and throw it out if you leave something behind,
because you know that comes out on a roll. Yeah,
I guess, so you just just roll it up and
throw it away.

Speaker 3 (31:28):
Geez, mean people in this world.

Speaker 1 (31:32):
You know that that's one reason I could never have
been been a doctor. Well, there's a lot of reasons
why I couldn't have been a doctor, But I can't
stand dealing with like bodily fluids. Yeah, I can't even
deal with my own little one. You're dealing with strangers
bodily fluids all day.

Speaker 2 (31:52):
It's just it's just not not good work.

Speaker 1 (31:55):
All right, when we come back, you know often we
talk about illegal im What is the most probably the
most important aspect to this story by far, and it
is almost entirely unreported.

Speaker 2 (32:11):
I'm going to tell you what it is. You've probably
not heard this before, and talk about the reason why
you never hear this.

Speaker 1 (32:21):
To me, this is the only thing that matters. I mean,
if you're going to be interested in this, if you
want something done in the end, this is all that matters.
This one statistic. And yet it's hardly ever published, hardly
ever discussed. And this is the whole ballgame here. I'll
explain when we come back and we have Deborah Mark
live in the KFI twenty four hour newsroom. Hey, you've

(32:42):
been listening to the John Cobalt Show podcast. 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.

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