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May 10, 2024 34 mins

Metro must be safer. A bunch of Ivy League schools received donations from organizations connected to Palestine. Younger people don't want to answer the phone. Moist Line Rounds 1 & 2. 

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Can if I Am six forty. You're listening to the
John Cobel Podcast on the iHeartRadio app. We're from.

Speaker 2 (00:08):
I don't know where it came from, but I'm guessing
Bellio got it. And then Ray also got me another
cake too, So wow, chocolate and vanilla.

Speaker 1 (00:14):
With that one. Yeah, this was the Oreo cake. Yeah,
the Orio one is bomb now joking you took too
big of a BikeE before. Yeah, I know, I didn't
realize we were coming back. Oh, let's pause for a
few men. I didn't even finish the cake yet. All right,
So John Cobelt Show, Uh can if I Am six

(00:35):
forty live everywhere on the iHeartRadio app. We're on until
four o'clock every day one to four. After four o'clock,
you can listen to the show as a podcast. John
Cobel's Show on demand also on the iHeart app, and
you could pick up on whatever you missed. Now, we
probably every day could do part of the show just

(01:00):
on stupid columns written by La Times writers, and often
we do. And you know, there's a lot of days
where I see another stupid column. It's like, man, I
don't know, we already did we already did? Three this week.
I can't shake the crumbs in my throat. Hold on
a second. I don't know what to do here. Excuse me,

(01:28):
you need some water or something. Yeah, I'm drinking something here.
You know. Sometimes the cake crumbs are dry and they
get in the pack of your throat. Never eat cake
when you're supposed to do a radio show. Do you
have some music you can play? The body plays something
for just like a few seconds, so I get these

(01:50):
crumbs out of my system. Anything.

Speaker 3 (01:55):
Well, the girl is naked, she's walking around naked.

Speaker 4 (01:58):
I think I'm watching some charlish show or something.

Speaker 1 (02:01):
Okay, good naked, Thank you. We you know we used
to have We used to have skating music we'd play
when i'd have a coughing fit. Oh really yeah, yeah,
like ice skating music. The kind of organ Oh okay,
next time.

Speaker 4 (02:17):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (02:17):
I think Clay made that years ago. Do you remember
I was telling you about the Asian one hundred day
cough I got, yes, yes, Well I was on the
air and uh when I came back, and that went
on for weeks and I had so many coughing fits.
He had to play the uh, the the ice skating theme,
the organ theme for a while. While I hacked up
another one because I came back and then Ken was

(02:40):
off on vacation. Wow, that was by myself. Okay, anyway,
I was going back the La time. Steve Lopez, who
occasionally has good columns but often doesn't uh, and he
declined a few years ago. He declared himself old. I
don't know how old he is exactly, maybe seventy, but
he decided a few years he was old, and he

(03:01):
was only going to write about people he thought were old. Now,
I guess you know, some people are old very young
and they kind of shut down their life and they
don't do much. And other people still have a lot
of energy and ambition and they don't play as old.

Speaker 4 (03:19):
Right.

Speaker 1 (03:21):
Well, he's got a story here about the old people
who've given up driving and they want to get around
using the Metro train. But they're all terrified of the
Metro train, which I find really amusing here because it's
pretty clear that there's nobody at Metro who actually cares
whether old people live or die if they take the train.

(03:44):
I mean, they issue statements saying safety is our highest priority,
but when you look at what they do, it's clear
it's not that they're worried about stigmatizing the homeless. They
don't want to incarcerate the crazy criminals that run around
and the homeless, the vagrants, the mental patients, the drug addicts,

(04:06):
the criminals, the thieves, the attackers, they're all higher up
on the social pyramid as far as the Metro board
members are concerned, because they don't. Every every year things
get worse, the crimes get more lurid and outlandish. We've
just had we've had a whole rash of stabbings where

(04:27):
people got killed at that poor woman who got stabbed
viciously in the neck just a couple of weeks ago.
And and they never changed anything. They they they've they've
handcuffed the police, they cut the police, and and they
hired a lot of ambassadors who I guess wear colorful shirts.

(04:48):
So anyway, Steve Wolpez does a column and it's entitled
for Fearful Riders, Old and Young LA's trains and buses
must be safer. I was like that. I was like
the lecturing of columnists and tatorial writers, it must be safer.
Except these same people don't want to throw all the
criminals in prison, and they don't want to force the

(05:10):
vagrants and the mental patients and the drug addicts off
the streets and put them away in jail or in treatment.
They won't do it, but it must be said. Well,
you can't let all these people board the trains. You
have to throw them off and you have to arrest
them when you see them. So they write one column
saying it must be safer, and the other column we

(05:30):
must not criminalize the homeless. Well, that's incompatible. So you
got to choose one or the other. So he opens
with Lopez opens with a retired teacher named Will Fernandez
of Monrovia. He has a vehicle, but he prefers to
get around on his e bike, buses and trains for

(05:51):
his wallet and the environment. That's really the way to
do it. Well, I hate to break this to you.
First of all, he's only sixty three and he's already
like it up driving because he wants to save the environment. Will,
there's nothing you're going to First of all, the environment
is not in danger. We are not in crisis. Nothing
is happening, and you're not going to save it. Wipez

(06:13):
ran into Will Fernandez and many other older writers get this.
They actually Metro spent money on the Older Adult Transportation
Expo in Pasadena. Wow, is that not a retiree activity?
The Older Adult Transportation Expo an annual event aimed at
promoting writership and educating people how to get the most

(06:35):
out of Metro except Oh, anybody was talking about is
how dangerous Metro is and you might get shot or stabbed.
Why do you have to be educated on Metro? You
just look on the map and if there's a train
going to your destination, you get on the train. How
do you need to how do you mean get the
most out of it? Anyway? Will Fernandez says, I'm frightened

(06:59):
because of all the terrible violence that's going on. I've
lived in La all my life, and I've never seen
the level of violence that I'm seeing now. It's like
an insane asylum. I've seen people defecate on the train.
Can I stop there? I know we came out here
thirty years ago or so, and for the first twenty years,

(07:21):
I don't think we ever uttered the word defecate. We
never talked about poop, feces. It just didn't come up.
And then after the Occupy Wall Street movement, it seemed
everything was about feces. The last ten years. That's when
they allowed all the all the mental patients and drug
addicts to live on the streets. And what happened is

(07:42):
you had you had piles of feces everywhere, right, and
that became a constant theme because of the homeless. In fact,
just at the UCLA protests the other day, one of
the reporters was talking about all the defication that was
going on campus. And it seems when progressives took over this,
that's when there were constantly stories involving people dumping their

(08:08):
feces out in public. Never heard of it for the
first twenty years I was here, but the last ten
it's almost every day. So Will Fernandez says, it's an
insane asylum. I've seen people defecate on the train. I've
seen people pull knives on the train. It's definitely up
to by level of awareness. And this is something I
noticed in the story that talking to the old people

(08:29):
who take the train or you have to be aware.
You have to be aware of. What if you have
a crazy person at five in the morning suddenly come
fly out of nowhere and start stabbing you in the neck.
What are you supposed to be aware of? They just
jump you, and they have a violent fit and they

(08:52):
kill you. That's what happened to that lady a couple
of weeks ago. She was coming back from her overnight job.
She was a security guard at a Hamburger dand and
she comes off the train and and some some lunatics
stabs her to death in the neck. Wil Fernandez says,

(09:12):
there's too many fair jumpers. He tries to look part
of a tough guy while commuting, hoping to discourage attacks.
Wh wants to do that? Why not just take a car?
You're not saving the environment? Why do you? Why are you?
Why are you going on the train looking like a
tough guy so that nobody stabs you in the neck.
This is my bike lock, just in case grabbing the

(09:34):
steel cable. I'm ready to take care of business as
a defense mechanism, because gotten to the point where you
have to take responsibility for your own safety. You gotta
walk around with a bike lock. That's not where the
train ride. In the keynote address at the expo event,
the Metro chief executive Stephanie Wiggins, and boy is she

(09:58):
out to lunch? She hit the highlights of service expansion
and increased ridership and repeated the grand division of Metro
as both a commuter service and an affordable way to explore, discover,
and connect with our communities. People. People went there to
Pasadena to listen to this. But Wiggins said, safety is

(10:21):
the most important thing we've been working on, and then
she called for a moment of silence for the woman
I'm talking about, Myrna Souza Ruse, the security guard at
Tommy's Restaurant sixty seven, stabbed to death on a Bee
Line train between North Hollywood and the Universal stations five
am and April twenty second. So she she has to

(10:49):
pause in her speech for a moment of silence because
one of her customers got stabbed to death. Because Stephanie
Wiggins and everybody else on the Metro board doesn't want
the police there. It's not that they don't even want
to pay for the police. They don't want to pay
for the police. It's that they don't want the police
because they hate the police. They hate the police, and
they think the police are the bad guys. That's baked

(11:12):
into their brains that police are bad people, So you
don't want to around protecting good people. Okay, Wiggins give
a speech where she indicated that Metro cannot clean up

(11:32):
all the societal failures. She started talking about a homelessness,
untreated mental illness, and a drug epidemic. We didn't create
any of these problems, but we need to manage them. No,
you just ban them from the train, is what you do.
You ban them from the bus. You don't let homeless
people on into the train stations and onto the buses

(11:53):
and trains. And most of the people on the Metro
board are local politicians. They should ban them from the streets.
Everybody should be forced into mental health treatment or drug
treatment or put in jail. They should be forced to
the laws are on the books. You should pass new
laws and put them away because you can't. Metro can't

(12:17):
stop people from stabbing you in the neck if they're
allowed to be on the street. But again, the Metro
board and all the local politicians, it's exactly the same people.
Then she talked to that while she was speaking. One
more thing. While she was speaking, a security guard got

(12:38):
into an altercation on Tuesday morning with a guy with
a knife and the guard was stabbed by the attacker.
The guard then shot the attacker and killed him. You
heard that story a few days ago. This is why
Stephanie Wiggins is given a speech on safety being the

(13:01):
highest priority. While she's talking, some guy pulls out a knife,
goes after a security knife, goes after a security guard.
Security guard shoots him to death. It's a zoo out there,
it's an outdoor insane asylum, and the people that could
stop it immediately refuse to do it. You must understand

(13:26):
they refuse to do it. They hate the police and
they don't think that we deserve to walk around safely.
That it's more important that the vagrants, the mental patience
and the drug addicts and all the violent criminals that
they are allowed to walk the streets unmolested. They've made
that choice. That's their value system, and we have to

(13:47):
live with it until we toss them at of office.
But we don't do that. All right, we got another
round of the Moistline coming up next.

Speaker 5 (13:55):
You're listening to John Cobelt on demand from kfiming.

Speaker 1 (14:02):
And it's time now for the first round of the Moistline.
Every Friday at three twenty and three fifty. We take
your calls all week at eight seven seven Moist eighty
six and you can vent your anger on anything you wish.
Let's roll. Hey, John, thanks for calling the moistline. I'm
so excited to hear from you to BAP time.

Speaker 4 (14:17):
You get what you deserve. You vote for Democrats and
you get cried, get homelessness, The legals get everything for free.
Americans getting screwed. That's what you deserve. Keep voting Democrats
California and you cry about it later. So funny? What
are jokes?

Speaker 6 (14:32):
I literally just had a John Coblt moment yelling at
the radio at John and Steve Gregory with the breaking
news about rent a cop coming from the governor's office.
What the actual why don't they just bring in the
National Guard? Our cops are underpaid, they're overworked, sis ridiculous.
I hate this god forsaken state and I cannot wait

(14:54):
until I leave.

Speaker 7 (14:56):
I am wondering why Trump is being charged for a insurrection,
but all these college students did an insurrection himself on
a college campus, so why aren't they being charged and
brought up the same way?

Speaker 8 (15:09):
Come on, Joss, stop being so demental about that husband
who was getting breast fed by the wife. I mean,
she's producing milk and daddy's thirsty.

Speaker 9 (15:17):
If no one else see what Gatstone does. He like
totally destroys everything about right and wrong and who should
be taken to trial and which people should be prosecuted.

Speaker 10 (15:30):
And then when it comes close to the election.

Speaker 9 (15:32):
He starts like letting people out of jail and doing
this at and whatever, guys, open.

Speaker 8 (15:37):
Your eyes, do not vote for guests.

Speaker 7 (15:39):
Go.

Speaker 11 (15:39):
I'll tell you most of the people that come out
of the California Apartment of Corrections claim some kind of
mental disability, and they collect sold security and they don't work.

Speaker 12 (15:48):
I can tell you this is.

Speaker 11 (15:49):
True because my brother, he is under forty five and
pulling a scam and collecting the solid security.

Speaker 8 (15:56):
Quit projecting.

Speaker 13 (15:57):
I work from home, and I work much hard, harder
at home than I ever did.

Speaker 10 (16:01):
In the office because I don't have anybody.

Speaker 14 (16:05):
Distracting me and all the social stuff.

Speaker 4 (16:07):
It's just me and work.

Speaker 15 (16:09):
I just heard Jackie Lacy endorse Nathan.

Speaker 1 (16:12):
Hoffman, and I have a question.

Speaker 3 (16:13):
How the did the LA voters vote for Herbert the
Frog over.

Speaker 8 (16:17):
Her Biden's Gods and refugee plan.

Speaker 12 (16:20):
Yeah, I think Biden ought to do.

Speaker 3 (16:23):
This to fill a pothole in LA. Probably involves a
surveyor an engineer, the third party asphalt contractor foreign overers,
the case of beer and a dog to guard the
bear with the price of dog food's no wonder it's
costing us so much money.

Speaker 11 (16:38):
I don't know why you guys are making fun of
as my white breastfeeding.

Speaker 4 (16:42):
I mean, you could make a bootload of money.

Speaker 11 (16:44):
You could charge dudes one hundred bucks. That's six hundred
dollars an hour. Jesus God.

Speaker 4 (16:50):
I want to talk to my wife when I get home.

Speaker 15 (16:52):
Hasn't anybody woke up yet that the war of terrorism
is against us by our own government.

Speaker 4 (16:57):
I guess Gavinism wants to bring employees in the office
so they can really screw things up. I guess they're
not screwing things up and up at home.

Speaker 12 (17:04):
If those protesters were protesting high rents, poor health insurance.

Speaker 10 (17:09):
High prices, I'd be right there with them.

Speaker 16 (17:12):
Joe Hayes interpreter might have been a jerk for doing
what he did, but you know what.

Speaker 10 (17:17):
He's a real stand up guy for taking responsibility and
pleading guilty.

Speaker 17 (17:21):
We've kind of solved our homeless problem in Riverside County.
What we do is get a van.

Speaker 4 (17:26):
Put the vagrant in the van and.

Speaker 17 (17:28):
Give him each twenty bucks and shipping the La Times
dose free housing there for you, buddy, Yes, take care
from La County.

Speaker 18 (17:35):
You're the first person I thought of last night when
this incident happened. I was having dinner outside in Largemont
with my friend when all of a sudden, I saw
a ghost stand right in front of me. Mayor Yoga
Pants was back in town. I don't know why he's here.

Speaker 9 (17:51):
That's the most ridiculous thing I've ever heard. Food smell
is now air pollution.

Speaker 1 (17:57):
My god, they do want to erase people. You better
wake up and wake up fast.

Speaker 4 (18:04):
They should do rationing with the electricity.

Speaker 11 (18:07):
For evs like they did back in nineteen eighty in.

Speaker 16 (18:10):
The energy crisis, where even days are charging your EV's.

Speaker 4 (18:15):
That would solve a lot of problems.

Speaker 12 (18:16):
I'm listening to John talk about worms coming out of
his nose and Robert Kennedy Junior things happening to him
the same kind of thing. Then I'm listening to the
rats in the restaurant. What the hell is going on?

Speaker 1 (18:35):
Thank you for leaving your message coming out of my notes.
We were talking about worms coming out of Robert Kennedy's head.
Very confused woman and there were rats in the restaurant
McDonald's up in Oakland. That's the news news you can use.
We come back. You may wonder why these universities were

(18:59):
so accommodated to the pro Amas protesters. Well, they may
have been getting paid to. They've been accepting a lot
of money from organizations connected to Palestine, so maybe they're
compromised here. Maybe they've been bought off and that's why
they've allowed so much nonsense. We'll tell you about it

(19:20):
coming up.

Speaker 5 (19:22):
You're listening to John Cobelts on demand from KFI Am
six forty 'ron.

Speaker 1 (19:28):
From one until four after four o'clock. If you missed
the show or I missed parts of it, John Cobelt
Show on demand on the iHeart app. We got the
second round of the Moistline coming up in minutes Conway
at four o'clock and at John Cobelt Radio. If you
want to keep track of us on social media, there
is I want to talk about the payoffs that universities

(19:50):
are getting from Palestinian interests, and that might explain what's
in part what's going on. But as I was trolling
around the internet, I came across the story about gen
Z having gen Z peep. I always hate these broad

(20:11):
generational characterizations, like you can't take one generation that spans,
you know, twenty years and come up with this generalization
that applies to most of them or all of them.
It's it's kind of stupid. But I want to mention
this one because somebody had the same experience recently. In

(20:34):
this story about the difficulties that eighteen to thirty four
year olds have in growing up and taking responsibility and
living on their own and handling their money. Apparently, according
to a survey, twenty five percent of eighteen to thirty
four year olds have never answered their phone. Twenty five
percent have never answered their phone. So how do they

(20:57):
talk to people just the text yeah or through social media?
They apparently it's too much pressure. And the thing is,
I just talked to a radio guy recently. I was
gonna say, who said the same thing that in dealing
with younger employees, if the phone rings, they freeze and

(21:17):
they don't want to call people and they don't want
to answer the phone. And I've heard this, I've heard
this from my sons. Now they're not like this, but
they say that there are a lot of people their
age who don't use the phone that's considered an old
person's way to communicate.

Speaker 2 (21:35):
Well, okay, so I'll give you an example. I'll call
my friend and he will miss the call or whatever
for whatever reason, but he won't call me back. He'll
text me back being like, hey, I saw you called.

Speaker 1 (21:47):
What's up? Yes? I get that increasingly now too. It's like,
well I called you. It means I want to have
a conversation because I hate conversing by text. Yeah, I
can't type too much gets lost in translation. No, no, yeah,
people misinterpret very easily when it in print. And you know,
conversations are free roaming, free ranging, and also sometimes there's
just a lot of details that you got to work out.

(22:08):
But I've heard this frequently that younger people they they
they get like they get scared by the phone, like
it's too intrusive. They don't know how to conduct the conversation.
I just wonder how pervasive it is. All right, onto

(22:30):
this story, which was in the New York Post. You know,
when you see something that doesn't make sense that you
haven't quite seen before, there's usually another story behind it.
You just don't know it. And it depends whether anybody investigates,
wants to report it and has the guts to report it.
And if you wondered why some of these universities had
these programs to teach students to hate Jewish people and

(22:53):
to hate students to hate the concept of Israel, you
may wonder, well, where did this come from? And you
may wonder where these students come from. How did all
these jew hating students end up at one elite university
and they're running around now waving Palestinian flags and dressing
up in Palestinian cultural uniforms. Where did this all come from? Well,

(23:17):
it turns out that some Ivy League schools, including Harvard
University and Brown and also Indiana University of Pennsylvania, which
is not an Ivy League school, but they accept funding
from donors in the State of Palestine. Now, the State
of Palestine is not a real thing according to the

(23:39):
United Nations. Some countries recognize the State of Palestine. The
US does not. The United Nations does not, although there
is a movement to do so. And these schools that
I mentioned took ten million dollars over the last six
years from entities in the State of Palestine. This is

(24:02):
according to analysis by an organization called Open the Books,
which is a nonprofit that is dedicated to revealing government spending.
We have had Open the Books, We've talked about it
numerous times because they will put together analysis so we
find out how much money is being made by government

(24:22):
employees for example. So give you an example. Brown University
in February of twenty twenty got six hundred and forty
three thousand dollars from a foundation in the state of Palestine,
and the money created a professorship in Palestinian studies in
Brown's Middle East Studies program. Now what do you think

(24:44):
they were teaching in Palestinian studies? You think they were
teaching how wonderful the Israelis are. In fact, nine donors,
including some Brown alumni, and the foundation, a foundation called
the Munib and Angela Masri Foundation came together to fund

(25:08):
the Mohammad no the Mahmud Darwish professorship in Palestinian Studies. Okay,
so let me clear this up. You had a group
of donors create a professorship in Palestinian studies, and then
these schools took money to give Palestinian students scholarships and

(25:30):
presumably they would take courses in Palestinian studies and then
develop all their hatred of Jews in Israel. And then
when Hamas committed its disgusting atrocities, they were willing to
take to the streets and defend Hamas because they had

(25:51):
been thoroughly schooled and trained by these professors and buy
these academic programs. But the professor and the academic programs
and the students exist because it was paid for by
these Palestinian foundations and Palestinian alumni. Harvard got money from

(26:15):
Palestinian donors in twenty seventeen, twenty eighteen, and twenty nineteen,
and they won't reveal the donor names. They were reported
as payment of tuition and fees for students from Palestine
funds to to pay educational related expenses for these students

(26:36):
through their enrollment in the program. Indiana University of Pennsylvania
got over two million dollars from the Arab American University
to cover tuition for Palestinian students. US universities have ongoing
relationships with the universities in the West Bank. In fact,
the first professor of Palestinian studies at Brown, Bishar Dumani,

(26:57):
was also the president of BUSERYNY in the West Bank
now Bisra University, the day after the October seventh attack,
stated that twenty twenty three will be recorded historically as
the year that Palestinians stood boldly in the face of
colonial fascism and screamed in defense of their homes, humanity

(27:18):
and lives. See you follow this. You've got a professor
president of a university in Palestine, also a professor of
Palestinian studies at Brown. His organization in the West Bank
was cheering on Hamas after the bloody massacre of the rape,

(27:41):
the killing of the babies, and this guy's teaching it
Brown and the students. I wonder if they're on student visas.
They're getting money from these donors, and they are the
shock troops to take to the quad or take to
the streets and starts screaming kill the Jews, and from

(28:03):
the river to the sea and all the other stuff.
So this is all funded, and the universities are happy
to take the money, happy to take the tuition, the
donations and all, and happy to teach this nonsense and
willing to pay the price of having their reputation destroyed
by protesters supporting one of the most vicious terrorist operations

(28:26):
on the planet. Fascinating that they were willing to sell
their reputations to organizations like this. So that's where this
all came from, because I mean, that's what I was
wondering every day, ten times a day. Where do these
people come from? Well, they came from Palestine. The money's
from Palestine, the programming is from Palestine, and it was

(28:50):
accepted by these university presidents and the boards because they
agree with it. They agree with the Hamas invasion, they
agree with all the bloody murder. They're looking around going,
what what's everyone upset about? So there was a masker?
What was that a big deal? Then they allow the

(29:10):
chanting of kill the Jews, f the Jews and all
the rest. It's there because the people who run these
universities agree with it and support it. They were cheering comas.

Speaker 19 (29:26):
Hard.

Speaker 1 (29:27):
It's hard to accept, but that that is the truth.
Otherwise they would have shut it down in five minutes,
and eventually, when the blowback became too great, they did.
They shut it down real fast. All right, we got
another round of the moistline coming up.

Speaker 5 (29:40):
You're listening to John Cobels on demand from KFI AM
six forty.

Speaker 15 (29:48):
Hey, Sean, thanks for calling the moistline.

Speaker 17 (29:50):
I'm so excited to hear from you fromout time.

Speaker 20 (29:53):
The reason why we're not hearing about the tax measure
so we get veto increases.

Speaker 1 (29:59):
They don't want I want us to know they don't
want to give us power.

Speaker 17 (30:02):
That's typical of the public schools in Chicago.

Speaker 1 (30:05):
All the more reason they have school choice.

Speaker 4 (30:06):
But if you think this isn't going to come hit
to southern California, I got news for you.

Speaker 20 (30:10):
Every bad thing ends up in California.

Speaker 15 (30:13):
Are we going to have a new I sah back
at nineteen eighty, But oh well, that didn't happen either.
I guess the climate's been changing for like the last
two or three hundred thousand years, so we're not going
to live to see any noticeable change.

Speaker 1 (30:29):
What the hell?

Speaker 19 (30:30):
During COVID, I fell in love with Burger king two
for six on whoppers. Today I go through the drive through,
I say, give me two whoppers and oh yeah, throwing
a taco twenty one dollars? Are you kidding me? Newsome,
you suck.

Speaker 20 (30:49):
You know, if my kids were just coming out of
high school, I would definitely not recommend that they go
on to college because up here today in the colleges
around the country, they're getting these degrees and the doctor
and then of course they're minoring in how to be
a paid protester.

Speaker 1 (31:03):
For the rest of their life.

Speaker 13 (31:04):
The Happy Birthday Hunger Kick wants Princeton to divest from
companies that are building bombs that are being used to
defend Israel. Does this numb not realize that these are
the same companies that bill bombs that defend her idiotic
rights and all these things that she has and her freedoms,
or is she just so smart that it's beyond her comprehension.

Speaker 4 (31:28):
You know where the company name bullying comes from from.
The plants fly over ahead of the.

Speaker 10 (31:32):
Parts bounce of the state.

Speaker 1 (31:33):
They go boying Boeing, boying.

Speaker 10 (31:36):
The problem with the schools today is not only the
lack of police. The problem is that the school system
and the rules have completely changed. Teachers are not allowed
to discipline bad students. Bad students are not expelled, and
if a student attacks another person in the class, the
other person is deemed to have equal responsibility for the altercation.

Speaker 11 (32:02):
All the mikers come to Chicago, we know why, because
they are bringing in voters. They will legalize eight million
new people into Democrat conference.

Speaker 8 (32:13):
I keep hearing all these leftist whine about how Trump
was trying to steal an election or report our democratic process.
Yet the governor that they elected in the state of
California already told the voters they were stupid and take
away the death penalty, and now he wants to take
away our right, says ay, no more higher taxes. Who's
parting democracy?

Speaker 14 (32:34):
He can end this campus bs demonstrations right now if
the parents of the students whose educations have been affected
with secure an attorney and start suing these universities.

Speaker 16 (32:46):
Sermy Daniels is able to describe in all this lurid
detail about her trysts with President Trump, but at one
point she whacks out, let's all say this in unison.

Speaker 8 (33:00):
Anything we can believe anymore?

Speaker 3 (33:02):
Why doesn't Newsom get exposed for what a crinny governor
he is.

Speaker 4 (33:07):
I'm just so upset, he is so deceitful, and he's
never exposed.

Speaker 19 (33:12):
I'm just set up with it all.

Speaker 18 (33:13):
Thank you for leaving your message, Please hang up goodbye.

Speaker 1 (33:17):
It doesn't get exposed because most reporters in the media
are progressives and they don't want to harm political leaders
on their side. End of story. You have to accept
that that is the reality and it's not changing anytime soon.

(33:38):
So you're never going to read much too many terrible
things about newsom or hear them or watch them. It
just they won't do it. It's their guy, it's their buddy.
So we'll keep telling the truth here because that's that's
one of the powers of being independent and not giving
a crap about stupid politicians. All Right, more coming up

(33:59):
with Conway. Conway is next. Kurzer's Got the News Live
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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