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April 30, 2024 31 mins

Brian Claypool talks about the Noah Cuatro Child Abuse case. Biden Transcript Corrections. University of Minnesota DEI Manager gets fired. South Dakota Governor Kristi Noem shots 14 month old dog. Anti-Israel Protesters at Cal Poly Humboldt. 

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Can't I am six forty. You're listening to the John
Cobelt Podcast on the iHeartRadio app around from one until
four and after four o'clock John Cobelt Show on demand
on the iHeart app moistline eight seven seven Moist eighty six.
Let's get to it. You might have some thoughts about
all the terrorists, all the spoiled bratt terris that are
protesting and shutting down universities and terrorizing Jewish students, chanting

(00:25):
Alahu akbar at UCLA, and these useless administrators, including the
UCLA Chancellor Gene Block, not doing anything about it. Well,
you can call in at eight seven seven Moist eighty
six and we'll play the calls back on Friday, or
use the talkback feature on the iHeartRadio app. We're going
to talk to frequent guest on our show, Brian Claypool.

(00:49):
He's an attorney and he's been involved in a lot
of child abuse child murder cases, and a big one
came to an end today. In July twenty nineteen, Palmdale,
little four year old Noah Quatro was tortured and murdered
by his parents, Jose Quatro Junior and Ursula Juarez. Jose

(01:15):
got thirty two years to life, Ursula twenty two to life,
and on March twenty ninth, Jose Quatro pleaded no contest
the first degree murder and torture, and then Warez pleaded
no contest his second degree murder and torture. They part
of the plead deal. They are they're not going to

(01:37):
appeal their sentences. And we're going to talk about Brian
Claypool because he's represented the great grandmother of the boy
of Angelina Hernandez, who filed a wrongful death lawsuit in
La County. Let's get Brian Claypool on.

Speaker 2 (01:54):
Hey, John, great to be with you.

Speaker 1 (01:56):
Remind people. I know it's terrible details, but what what
these what these two actually did to Noah.

Speaker 2 (02:05):
There was a pattern of alleged abuse, not feeding Noah,
failing to take him for example, the medical visits he
was losing weight when he was with one of my clients,
Ava Hernandez. And then there was an allegation toward the
end of his life of alleged sexual abuse allegedly penetration

(02:29):
in his anus with something. But make no mistake about
it that this was a pattern which we're going to
prove in the civil case. This was a pattern that
was going on for you know, at least a couple
of years. This was not just some aberration at the
end where Noah, you know, died, And that's why John
there were these torture charges that John Tommy, the prosecutor,

(02:52):
did a great job of keeping in the case. And
just so your listeners know, those torture charges that they
played guilty to are really important because when it comes
to whether they get paroled after the thirty two years
and the twenty two years are both going to have
to serve at least out amount, but then they're going
to be up for parole, and having these torture allegations

(03:12):
pled guilty to that might help keep them in jail longer.

Speaker 1 (03:18):
Do you represent the great grandmother of Angelina Hernandez. She
filed the wrongful death lawsuit against La County for herself
and the boys, sister and two brothers, and you claim
that his death occurred after multiple reports of abuse were
made to Department of Children and Family Services and also

(03:38):
involved was Hathaway Sycamore's Child and Family Services in Pasadena.
What's explain the nature of the allegations you're making against
these not only the public child services agency with the
private one. What was their role iness that led to
Noah's death?

Speaker 2 (03:58):
Yeah, great question. And and just so your listeners, now
you know, I thought the most shocking case I ever
You and I talked about calling Anthony Avalos for years.
I was on your show many times where he was
tortured and murdered after multiple reports of abuse. Memory was
dropped on his head and you ended up with brain damage.

(04:18):
His body was bruised from head to toe. So I
thought that, But that's that had to be been a
lot of the worst case I've ever seen. But Noah
Quatro's case is equally disturbing, if not more disturbing, than Anthony's.
And here's why because at one point the DCFS, one
of the social workers, Susan Johnson, she actually did the
right thing. She applied to the Child Dependency Court to

(04:40):
get what's called a removal order john to have Noah
removed from the home because she suspected that he was
in danger of grave bodily harm. Right, So a commissioner
then Ibsen, approves the requests for the removal or then
he signs an order saying you need to go remove
Noah and you need to subject him to a forensic

(05:02):
child sexual abuse exam within seventy two hours. That was
non negotiable, dude, non negotiable. That said, within seventy two hours,
this little boy needs to go in for a forensic
sexual abuse exam. What did DCFS do? I took the
depositions of all the supervisors. They decided to nuke the
removal order. So they got what they asked for. They
were supposed to go out and rescue Noah and save

(05:24):
his life, which they could have done. And what do
they do. They get a bunch of people, John, you're
gonna shot. You're gonna be shocking to hear us who
never even read the application filed by Susan. Didn't even
read it to see the litany of abuse this little
boy went through number one. And then they never even
read the removal order issued by Commissioner Ibsen. And yet

(05:44):
they had this little pow wow and unilaterally decide we're
not going to go execute this removal order. And this
little boy ends up murdered after that. So they've got
blood on their hands. And half the way this halfaway
Sycamore company, John, guess what we did? They got out
of this case two years ago. Right, a judge in
the trial court says, oh, there's no duty owed by

(06:06):
them to art to Noah's family and Noah, Well, guess
what we fought our butts off. We won. On appeal,
the public Court reversed that ruling, and if public were
issued a long opinion. You know what they said, Here's
what they did wrong. They were supposed to give Noah therapy. Right,
they were supposed to give therapy to Noah. They were
supposed to do therapy, I believe with one of the parents.

(06:29):
The parents were supposed to undergo parental classes. But let's
focus on Noah. They were supposed to give him therapy.
They then tell here's what they did. They didn't do anything.
They didn't have therapy, but no. But where they are
going to be held accountable is they owe a duty
John to inform the child dependency Court that none of
this therapy happened. Right. Instead, you know what they said.

(06:51):
They filed a report and said, oh, Noah's good to go,
things are fine, and he ends up debt. So that's
why we're holding them accountable too. They breached their duty
owed to the court. Otherwise the court could have made
A three sixty and pivoted in said, wait a minute,
you haven't done this. Wait a minute, No, one's not
gotten help. We're not going to send him back to

(07:11):
these two lunatic parents. So that's where we're at with
this cake. And by the way, we've got a trial
day coming up. Finally, we've been fighting, fighting, and this
has been a blood bath. We've had to file eight
different complaints. John, eight, you want to know why, because
these lawyers that the county hires, we brought in the
other kids too. By the way, I want to update

(07:32):
your listeners. We're suing now. We're trying to sue on
behalf of three other siblings who we believe were also abused,
who we believe we're starved, stuck in a room, locked
in a room all day. We found that out when
I took one of the social workers depositions, so we
amended our complaint. We're trying to get these kids in
the county's fighting. But the good news is it looks
like we're going to keep Avi's playing in as well

(07:53):
as the great grandmother, because the county owed her a
duty to tell her, right John, they didn't even tell
her about this removal here. So we are battling furiously.
We've got a trial coming in February, and we go
to trial. We're not interested in negotiating and settling with
the county. We're sick of doing that. We want to
get the truth out of the public. Let's let a
jury decide the price the county should pay.

Speaker 1 (08:14):
I can talk to you all day about this case,
but I'm ahead of time, Brian. Great work. And February
you said this is the trial next year.

Speaker 2 (08:23):
Yeah, February.

Speaker 1 (08:24):
Thanks, all right, thanks, we'll be on top of it.
Thanks Brian Claypole. In the case of Noah Quatro, the
four year old Palmdale boy who was tortured and killed
by his parents, and they were both sentenced today Jose
Quatro thirty two years to life, Ursula Juarez twenty two
years to life, and he pleaded no contest to first

(08:46):
degree murder. Jose Quatro and Warez pleaded no contest a
second degree murder. You heard the story, and also the
villains who work in the Department of Children and Family Services,
they have no value for the kids' lives that they're
they're somehow they've gotten so twisted and hateful that these

(09:06):
kids are brought in and DCFS is supposed to sell
save their lives, and instead they allow them to die. Motivation.
I don't know human evil. I guess you're listening to
John Cobelt on demand from KFI A M.

Speaker 2 (09:23):
Six forty.

Speaker 1 (09:26):
This is funny the White House. The Daily Caller has
looked at the White House official transcripts because every time
Biden speaks in public, the White House UH takes down
every word and puts it out on the website so
reporters can access it to get their quotes accurately. And
it's it's a matter of history, what did the presidents

(09:48):
say on this particular day. And because Biden makes so
many blunders when he speaks for the official record, the
White House tries to correct what he says. And what
they do is they'll print the statement and then they'll
cross a line through whatever was wrong and then insert

(10:13):
what should have been said, or what he meant to say,
or what he forgot to say. And so far since
the first of the year, the White House Communication staff
has had to correct Biden's public remarks one hundred and
forty eight times, one hundred and forty eight times in

(10:34):
one hundred and eighteen statements, speeches, and chats with the reporters.
Sometimes it's the correct names, dates, titles of organizations. Sometimes
they have to change verbs, or sometimes they have to
change the meaning of the president's statement entirely because he
says the opposite of what he should have said. Words

(10:57):
that Biden did not say but should have add also
are added to the transcripts. So this is the official
revision of the record. And he stumbles a lot. It's
almost hard to follow and hard to read.

Speaker 2 (11:12):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (11:13):
He said something like it was then through no through
my American Rescue plan, which every American voted against, and
they crossed out the word American and inserted Republican. It's
that kind of stuff, you know, when he speaks off
the top of his head. We must be honest. The
threat to the must the threat to democracy must be defended.

(11:36):
You follow that the threat to democracy must be defended.
They had to cross out defended and put in defeated.
What was funny last week when he he read the
word pause office teleprompter, he stopped because there was an
applause line, and the teleprompter told him to write in

(11:58):
the word pause. Well, they replaced and then he said pause,
and it was very embarrassing. So they replaced the word
pause and put inaudible, and then they corrected the correction,
putting back the word pause as well as inaudible. He oh,
he had said four more years, and that was supposed

(12:22):
to be a cue for the audience to chant four
more years, but he said four more years pause, and
then everybody paused and stared at him. So there's a
there's a staff at the White House that has to
decode whatever he said. I wish we had all one

(12:44):
hundred and forty eight when they'd be fun to play
them all, and we had a lot of them. We're
coming up. We're going to talk with Oh, We're going
to talk about the DEI official. No greater hypocrisy than
d officials. And you know, they're the ones who try
to prosecute people for improper behavior regarding everything. And this

(13:11):
DII official was fired for posing in front of an
for posing in front of an Israeli flag with swastikas,
and she is suing the University of Minnesota. That's right,
she's posing with swastikas and suing Minnesota. We'll talk about
it when we come back.

Speaker 3 (13:30):
You're listening to John Cobels on demand from KFI AM
six forty.

Speaker 1 (13:36):
I assumed, Ebor, you heard about the South Dakota governor
Christin Noms.

Speaker 4 (13:41):
Was this the killing the dog killing?

Speaker 1 (13:43):
Yes?

Speaker 4 (13:44):
Story?

Speaker 1 (13:44):
Yes I did.

Speaker 4 (13:46):
Yeah, yeah, I know that was very upsetting.

Speaker 1 (13:49):
This woman has been the governor of South Dakota for
a number of years and apparently she's high on the
Trump list to be vice president. And uh, she's another
one of these hottie types like Sarah Palin.

Speaker 4 (14:05):
Oh I didn't see what she looked like.

Speaker 1 (14:06):
Oh, no, she's she's got it. Well you don't think
Trump would have an ugly woman as vice president?

Speaker 4 (14:13):
Probably?

Speaker 2 (14:13):
No, that was.

Speaker 1 (14:16):
But kind of like Sarah Palin, you know, she's the
from a rural area where they where they have different,
different views, different.

Speaker 4 (14:26):
Yet and different ways of life than I like.

Speaker 1 (14:29):
That's so she writes a memoir that where she admits
that twenty years ago she killed her dog on purpose.

Speaker 4 (14:41):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (14:42):
It's the story of Cricket, one of the working dogs
at her ranch, and they use him for they were
trying to teach him to be a hunter. Fourteen months.
It's a female dog. Yeah, and apparently Cricket was untrainable.
They'd take cricket on pheasant hunts and she'd ruin them.

(15:04):
She'd go out of her mind with excitement and chase
all the birds.

Speaker 4 (15:07):
Oh what a bad dog.

Speaker 1 (15:10):
But she got the death penalty because one day she
she took her she took the dog and it got
loose and the dog started killing chickens.

Speaker 4 (15:27):
Yeah, but she was training the dog to be a hunter, right,
So what's the problem here?

Speaker 1 (15:34):
Uh? The dog, I guess, couldn't figure out what he was,
what she was supposed to kill, and what she wasn't
supposed to kill. So yeah, so the uh so what
Noam did? Nom showed this dog took her to a
gravel pit near her farm and shot her to death,
saying that the dog was less than worthless, untrainable because

(15:57):
it killed and had killed and eating several chickens.

Speaker 5 (16:00):
First of all, lady, you should have taken into a
shelter if you didn't want it, But to sit there
and murder it in a gravel pit, you're training it
to be a hunter. Obviously the training you did was
messed up.

Speaker 1 (16:14):
You know, there's some secrets you just take to your grave.

Speaker 4 (16:17):
And why would you admit that? Because I don't like
her now not that. I mean, I don't anything really
about her until this popped up.

Speaker 1 (16:25):
I think this is the only thing she's ever going
to be remembered for. Yes, she blew up her entire
political career because she just had to tell the world
how she executed a dog and a gravel pit for eating.

Speaker 5 (16:40):
Chicken, right, a dog that she was training to be
a hunter dog.

Speaker 1 (16:44):
And when she got all the criticism, she went online
and said, we love animals, but tough decisions like this
happened all the time on a farm. Sadly, we had
to put down three horses a few weeks ago. So
she said, well, wait a second, we don't just kill
dog dogs still horses. We kill lots of animals on

(17:08):
our farm. That's the way life is. And then she
used it as an example of how she's able to
make the tough decisions in life and why she's the
type of leader you want.

Speaker 4 (17:18):
Oh yeah, that's the type of leader i'd want.

Speaker 1 (17:22):
I mean, how many tens of millions of people own
dogs and love dogs and they don't know who she is.
I mean, she's known in political circles, obviously, but it's
very similar to Sarah Palin looks like a good idea
on paper until she opens her mouth.

Speaker 4 (17:38):
But this is just ridiculous.

Speaker 5 (17:41):
I mean, first of all, to murder the dog like that,
just you know what, Obviously you didn't train the dog
very well. So you know what, go take the dog
to somebody else, just shoot it to death.

Speaker 4 (17:52):
Oh my god, that's so upsetting.

Speaker 1 (17:54):
I didn't understand this, because, all right, you're training a
dog to kill. It's only fourteen months old exactly, so
it doesn't know what it's supposed to kill or not kill.

Speaker 4 (18:04):
Right, so you're gonna kill it.

Speaker 1 (18:05):
I'll show you. I don't know what the protocol. She wrote.
What I learned from my years of public service, especially
leading South Dakota through covid as. People are looking for
leaders who are authentic, willing to learn from the past,
and don't shy away from tough challenges. My hope is
anyone reading this book well and understanding that I always

(18:27):
work to make the best decisions I can for the
people in my life.

Speaker 4 (18:30):
Well, that was a crappy decision.

Speaker 1 (18:32):
Even if it's hard and painful. I followed the law
and was being a responsible parent, dog owner, and neighbor. What,
as I explained in the book, it wasn't easy, But
often the easy way isn't the right way.

Speaker 4 (18:44):
Oh wait a second, that makes no sense. Of course,
it was easy. You go and you take the dog
to a shelter.

Speaker 5 (18:50):
You don't want the dog, even though the dog's only
fourteen months old and you're training it to be a
hunting dog.

Speaker 4 (18:56):
So it killed some chickens. You were pissed off at that?
What's wrong with you?

Speaker 1 (19:01):
Anyway? There's no going to be no vice president Christy Nome,
not even not even Trump's going to touch that. Then
the DEI manager that I mentioned, and you know, I
don't know what DEI managers do, probably just cause trouble
for people. Every time somebody makes a straight comment or
there's some email that's mildly offensive, they try to enforce

(19:25):
the rules, or maybe they do the bean counting to
make sure that every department is properly balanced racially and
ethnically and sexually. But they have one at the University
of Minnesota. While they had one, her name is Marshall
Machelle sir Zad. Now she has a job description two

(19:47):
jobs that could only exist in twenty twenty four. Sometimes
I imagine going back in time about forty years and saying,
what would you think. Let's talk to people like in
nineteen eighty four, people back then, what would they think
if they heard that there was the woman who worked
at a university who is a DEI manager diversity equity

(20:08):
and inclusion and an Instagram model. She's both of those
and she's another hotty.

Speaker 4 (20:17):
And well that's why she's an Instagram model.

Speaker 1 (20:20):
She got fired from her job. Now normally she posts
really hot, sexy fashion photos. In fact, there's a photo
of her in a bikini, tanned body, long legs.

Speaker 4 (20:36):
Okay, calm down, John.

Speaker 1 (20:40):
And that's what she posts. But also there was a
photo shoot of her carrying a Palestinian flag during an
anti Israel protest, and then the university became aware of
photos that showed her protesting against the Israel Hamas warre
in Barcelona and she's standing in front of an Israeli
flag with swastikas painted on it.

Speaker 4 (21:03):
That doesn't sound very inclusive to me.

Speaker 1 (21:06):
No, it is diverse, though you can't get word diversed
than Swastiaka's an.

Speaker 4 (21:10):
Israelis not because you're excluding the Jews.

Speaker 1 (21:14):
During a news conference on Friday, she insisted that was
somebody else's flag. I cannot be responsible for somebody's intellectual property.
She also said the photos were on our private Instagram,
but they were automatically shared on her public Facebook page
without her knowledge. The School of Public Health dean told Shirzad,

(21:35):
your conduct directly undermines your credibility in this role. Your
continued employment would create a real risk of significant disruption, and,
especially given the climate around the Israeli Palestinian conflict, highly inflammatory.
She also posted something in November she referred to Israel's

(21:57):
bombardment of the Gaza Strip as genocide. So now she's
suing now and DEI managers usually create situations where students
or employees can sue because they've been wronged or offended
in some way. So now she's suing, demanding that her

(22:18):
job be reinstated. She wants seventy five thousand dollars in damages.
Her First Amendment right, she says, had been violated, and
she's been discriminated against because people don't appreciate the swastikas
on the flat.

Speaker 4 (22:30):
Well, they appreciate her bikini.

Speaker 1 (22:32):
I'm sure the bikini you can appreciate. All Right, we
got more coming up.

Speaker 3 (22:40):
You're listening to John Cobels on demand from KFI AM.

Speaker 1 (22:44):
Six forty since one o'clock. We did a lot of
coverage on the various protests. We had a great report
from a reporter with the News Nation. He told us
he was live at Columbia telling us what had happened
in the previous twenty four hours or so, and you
can hear that on our podcast, along with the clips

(23:05):
that we played of the UCLA student who was blocked
from entering the use of the library because he was Jewish,
and a parent whose son was also blocked from the
UCLA library because he was Jewish might have been the
same parent kid. I don't know, but you'll get the idea.
And there's a lot of bad stuff going on at UCLA,

(23:28):
a lot of bad stuff at usc with the graduation
being canceled, and even at a college you probably never
heard of in northern California, cal Poly Humboldt. Dawn this morning.
It's in Arcada, California, which is way up in northwest California,
not far from the Oregon border rural area and cal

(23:50):
Poly Humboldt. They had to get one hundred law enforcement
officers in riot gear marching into the quad. They were
holding their guns and batons, and they circled around a
small group of protesters who had been causing a lot
of a lot of trouble. They had occupied an academic

(24:10):
administrative building. They were painting the buildings with graffiti. Twice
they got so aggressive they forced the police to retreat.
Now this is in a rural area, a forested area,
red red red trees, about six thousand students, but the
protests there had been way outsized compared to the uh

(24:33):
to the size of the college. Well, when the police
showed up at the quad, they were met with some
guy dressed as a furry you know those weird, creepy
people who dress as furry animals. This character was dressed
in a lime green costume, and he's holding hands with

(24:56):
the other protesters and they're reciting Native cham Now imagine
they're in a redwood forest. They're far far away from
normal civilization here in California. One guy gets up in
the morning, puts on a lime green furry costume, meets

(25:17):
his friends, they hold hands, they recite Native Chance, and
then when that's over, they paint buildings with graffiti and
they challenge the police and they occupy the buildings, and
it's all because they want to stop a war that
must be what ten thousand miles away. The delusion of

(25:37):
this is bizarre. Well, we're expressing ourselves. Why what's the
purpose of expressing yourself? And the crowd started yelling resistance
is justified, and the officer said, you're under arrest and

(26:00):
started pulling them up one by one and zip tying
their hands. Now you expect this. We've had plenty of
this at USC in Berkeley, but this place apparently has
a long history of students acting like morons, and that's
in this story and other stories. It's like, why do

(26:20):
you do this? Well, the university has had a long
history of speaking out in protests and exercising our First
Amendment rights, you know, about whatever the issue of the
day is, which they've had no effect on. And ultimately,
what do they do. They interfere in everybody else's life,
that's what they do. And in this case, it's not

(26:43):
like they're screaming about the climate right and shouting at
the clouds. They're actually saying all kinds of vile things
about Jewish people, and in some cases they're physically assaulted
the Jewish students they're blocked from attending class or going
to the library. And one at the chairman of the

(27:04):
sociology department, Anthony Silvaggio, that's another thing, sociology department. What
is the point of those departments? What do you do
with these degrees? What are they teaching there? And this
genius says, well, why do they occupy Why don't they
do what everyone else does and sit outside in tents.
If it's because we're humboldt, we occupy space. We have
a rich history of taking over space and a long

(27:26):
genealogy of direct action tactics. So why what they were
doing is scrolling slogans that says land back, destroy all
colonial walls, pigs not allowed. I don't know if they
meant that about the Jews or about the cops. They're
writing blood on your hands, graffiti across the President's office.

Speaker 3 (27:50):
Conway, Thank you, buddy, appreciate that. You know, I'm not
a history buff. Some people think got here. But you know,
when when the Russians invaded Ukraine, we didn't go after
Russian students. No, I didn't even think of that, did we. No, No,
let them be on their way next time, next time,

(28:13):
all right? We have the metro crash today. I guess
there are fifty five people that have been treated. I
wonder how many people are really injured, and how many
people are looking for a check.

Speaker 1 (28:25):
Yeah, well, because I'd be looking for a check. They
think it's a lottery tickets, like the bush crash is excellent.
That's right, that's right. I'm hurt now.

Speaker 3 (28:33):
But see, i'd be one of those guys in line,
you know, give me some money, give me some money
that pain.

Speaker 1 (28:38):
I'll be in the give me some money crew.

Speaker 3 (28:40):
Then we also have new details emerging on the armored
car heights in Los Angeles. Remember thirty billion or trillion
dollars thirty trillion, Yeah, thirty trillion dollars is stolen. And
then we have the one point three billion dollar power ball.
Think it's thirty one, Well it's close, it's closed. It
might as well being you know, thirty trillion with them.
And then we also have more kids are getting kidney stones,

(29:04):
and I don't know what it's from.

Speaker 1 (29:06):
So I don't know, I'm mayor drinking too much. I
think it might be the shot.

Speaker 3 (29:10):
You know, everyone is always blaming the COVID shot, and
I you know, I was I.

Speaker 1 (29:16):
Saw this on.

Speaker 3 (29:17):
I think it was one of the who's dating Taylor
Swift Travis Kelsey. Yeah, one of the Kelsey brothers said
that fifteen to twenty percent of NFL players are flat earthers. Okay,
so I'm like, oh, that's crazy, that's crazy. And then

(29:37):
I do some research and there's some videos out there
that are pretty compelling, and my wife's like, Tim, you've
got Paul McCartney's not you know, got killed and we
didn't go to the moon landing. Those are your two
conspiracy theories. You're not getting a third one.

Speaker 1 (29:51):
Those are it. It was an NBA player Eric probably
would remember a couple of years ago. He was, he
was big on that.

Speaker 3 (29:58):
I think the flat earthers later, John looks crazy. I
don't want to get into it because I run munch
time here. I had a flat earth guy on the show.
Once they're onto something.

Speaker 2 (30:07):
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (30:08):
I think there might be something there.

Speaker 3 (30:09):
I don't know, but I think that's why you don't travel,
because you're afraid of fall. That's right, that's right. Or
it's easier if you drill down. You could just drill
a train hole all the way through the Earth. It's
only like five miles to get to, you know, wherever
the other side is. But I think you should have
only two conspiracy theories and then the third makes you nuts. Yeah,
all right for that, So my two or we didn't

(30:30):
land on the moon? Okay, that's a layup, right obviously, right?

Speaker 1 (30:33):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (30:34):
And then Paul McCartney was killed. The real Paul McCartney
was killed. This new Paul McCartney is a fake Paul McCartney. Still, Yeah,
fifty years but yeah, I mean they covered it up
when when he died. Look it up, you don't think so,
look it up. I had Fred in high school. He
comes back from college.

Speaker 1 (30:50):
We go to a bar, sit down and have dinner
or drinking, and he hits me with the Paul McCartney.

Speaker 3 (30:57):
And he's like ten years too late to it. Like
the whole rest of the evening, that's all we wore
talking about my kind of guys. What happened to you?
What's going on in college?

Speaker 2 (31:12):
All right?

Speaker 1 (31:12):
Contwait next dog? What 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 pm every Monday through Friday,
and of course anytime on demand on the iHeartRadio app.

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