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March 11, 2025 32 mins

The John Kobylt Show Hour 3 (03/11) - CA State Assemblyman Carl DeMaio comes on the show to talk about a voter ID initiative that will be on the ballot in 2026. Katie Porter is running for Governor of California. The vote for an expensive security contract for the head of LADWP Janisse Quiñones has been postponed two weeks. Elon Musk said that most NGOs that get US taxpayer funding for support are scams. 

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Can't. I am six forty. You're listening to the John
Cobel podcast on the iHeartRadio app. I can't get that
Kamil Harris thing out of my head. It actually did
something to my circuitry. I she had one of her
classic words salads. We are going to talk now to
Carl Demyo. Carl, really, something happened to me after listening

(00:22):
to that. Carl Demyo is a Republican assemblyman out of
San Diego. He's on frequently with us, and he's got
a new plan. It's a coalition that's forming to collect
one million signatures. So a constitutional amendment will appear on
the statewide ballot in twenty twenty six. And this would

(00:44):
be a voter ID initiative. Everybody would have to show
an ID in order to vote, because you know, we
have ballot harvesting, We have all kinds of problems with
voting in California. Most people shouldn't trust it. I know
I don't. Let's get Carl Demayo on and talk. Well, Carl,

(01:07):
welcome and explain what's this constitutional amendment about specifically.

Speaker 2 (01:13):
Well, look, a lot of Californians don't trust our elections.
They've lost public trust and confidence in the way in
which illegal immigrants seemingly are being put on the voter roles,
the fact that we have a lot of outdated voter roles.
Where in Los Angeles County, for example, Judicial Watch had
to sue because there were more people registered to vote

(01:35):
three years ago than they were actual living people in
the county. We know that the signature reviews are not
done properly. There's a lot of ballot harvesting. So here's
the thing we need to solve the problem. And when
I talked to Democrat voters and Republicans and everyone in between,
they all say, look, I'll be happy once we get

(01:56):
voter ID. And so let's do that. Just settle the
debate here and now let's restore public trust and confidence.
Do what twenty eight other states already do, and that
is require photo ID for in person voting, or the
last four digits of your driver's license on an envelope
if you're doing it by mail. This is common sense.

(02:18):
It's not controversial. The polling that we just finished as
part of our campaign shows that sixty eight percent of
California support voter ID. But we're doing one more thing
with this John, We've got another reform that I think
is as important as voter ID and that is citizenship verification.

(02:39):
And that would happen if you want to register to
vote in California. When you initially register, we have to
verify your citizenship, and so we would that you provide
a document, one document from government demonstrating that you're a citizen,
and then your grandfather on the voter role for the
rest of your life. I'll tell you this right now,
most people are already in this category because they've already

(03:01):
provided various documents to the DMV for California real ID
and that allows you to fly on airplanes. Ninety eight
percent of Californians have a real ID, so we're talking
about only two percent that in the first election that
this is implemented, would have to add an additional document,
just one time to verify their citizenship. This cleans up

(03:23):
the voter roles and then establishes a verification process thereafter.
It is common sense, let's get it done.

Speaker 1 (03:28):
And Democratic politicians are against it because they want to
continue the scam. They want the ballot harvesting the illegal immigrants,
they want those votes. I think it had a lot
to do with them achieving a super majority in recent years.

Speaker 2 (03:43):
I do think that it has had a major impact
on discouraging people from voting because they feel like, well,
my vote doesn't count because it's already rigged. Look, we
can't have a healthy democracy when people don't participate because
they think, either real or perceived that the election is rigged.
So let's settle the debate. Let's go and verify that

(04:04):
we have accurate voter lists with only citizens on them
who are eligible, and then make sure that we have
identity verification every time someone returns a ballot. Again, twenty
eight states already do this. It's not rocket science, it's
not controversial. Our polling shows that a majority of Democrats
support this, and a super majority of Independents and Republicans. Obviously,

(04:27):
we also have a majority of African Americans, a super
majority of Latinos. About the only group that we found
that don't like voter ID Sacramento politicians. They do not
want to give us a voter ID law in Sacramento.
They've shot my law down, and so I've decided, well,
let's take it to the voters by by collecting finagers.

Speaker 1 (04:48):
Now now I know that they shoot it down because
they want to protect their super majorities. But what's the
public reason they give for opposing your law.

Speaker 2 (04:58):
Oh, they say it's racists. They say it's going to
suppress voter turnout. None of that is true. There's not
a single bit of data that suggests that people somehow
feel like, you know, showing their license will impact their voting.

Speaker 1 (05:13):
We had a great test case in Georgia just a
few years ago, the voter ID and it turns out
that that nearly all black voters agreed with the voter
ID law. Remember Major League Baseball moved the All Star
Game out of at landed a protest. Sure, Joe Biden
called it Jim Crow two point zero. There was this

(05:33):
huge ruckus. The voter ID law passes. Nearly all blacks
supported it as well as all the other demographics, and
they got a higher turnout among blacks and everyone else.
Going to your point, where people trusted that the election
was real and not tainted in.

Speaker 2 (05:50):
Some way, that's correct and and and that's why the voters,
if they get a chance to vote on this, are
going to overwhelm thely pass it. But our here's our challenge.
We need a million matures in one hundred and eighty
days to get this on the ballot. So I'm asking everybody,
if you want to take back this state, if you
want public trust and confidence again in our elections with

(06:11):
voter ID, go to the website voter ID petition dot
org and sign up voter ID petition dot org. We
can't do this unless people are willing to fight, and
I can't do this alone. I can organize the campaign,
but it's really up to grassroots supporters who want to
make this happen to step forward, and that means go

(06:33):
to the website voter ID petition dot org.

Speaker 1 (06:37):
All right, Carl Demayah, excellent work as always, Thank you
so much, Thank you for coming on. When we come back.
Missus potato Head is running for governor as long as
Kamala's empty head doesn't get in the race. That's next.
Can we have somebody normal? Is there anybody normal out there?

Speaker 3 (06:58):
You're listening to on co Belt on demand from KFI
AM six forty.

Speaker 1 (07:05):
Follow us to John Cobelt Radio and social media at
John Cobelt Radio. Missus potato Head. Katie Porter, the former
Orange County congresswoman, is running for governor and she's another
one who's considered a top contender unless uh Kamala Harris
enters the race. And we just played you her Dorito's

(07:27):
words salad a half an hour ago, and and Eric
saved that one because that that's a Hall of Fame entry,
no problem. She sounded drunk and stoned while babbling on
for two and a half minutes about Dorito's and Ai
and I don't know, I couldn't, I couldn't understand anything else.
But Katie Porter, I call him missus potato head because
one time, and this is in legal records, she got

(07:50):
so mad at her then husband they eventually divorced, she
dumped steaming massed potatoes on his head during dinner. I
think in front of the kids. I don't know how
much hair the guy has, but he doesn't have much
hair that's really gonna hurt. Mashed potatoes right from the

(08:13):
pot on his head. And she kind of looks like
a sack of potatoes too. I just I just think
it fits. She's a loud mouth, and she starts her
campaign by saying that she's gonna be running against Trump.
I first ran for office to hold Trump accountable. I'll

(08:37):
never back down when Trump hurts Californians, whether he's holding
up disaster relief, attacking our rights, or our communities, are
screwing overwhelming working families to benefit himself and his cronies.
Interesting because there's a story about Gavin Newsom and his
wife today and Gavin Newsom and you know, we have

(08:57):
the highest electricity rates in the nation, the highest gas rates,
gasoline prices in the nation. And when PG and E
started the camp fire back in what was it now,
almost ten years ago, right, that's the one that burned

(09:19):
Paradise and killed eighty five people up in northern California
twenty eighteen, burned Paradise, killed eighty five people, and they
were convicted of eighty four counts of manslaughter and they
were going to go bankrupt, and Gavin Newsom bailed them

(09:41):
out with an insurance package which was paid for by us.
In return, PG and E gave his various campaign accounts
seven hundred thousand dollars over the years. It was like
a long running seven hundred thousand dollars payback and paid

(10:06):
money to finance at least two Jennifer Newsom gender equity films,
gender justice films seriously, and I'm thinking she we've got.
Katie Porter thinks that that Trump is screwing over working families.

(10:28):
Gas in California is often two bucks more a gallon
than other states. That really screws working families. Electricity rates
here are double than many other states, partly because the
state has these stupid demands on developing wind and solar,

(10:54):
and so a place like PG and E uses all
its available capital capital for wind and solar, and they
don't do basic maintenance to keep their electrical wires fastened
to the electrical poles and towers. Their maintenance is terrible.

(11:14):
Everything's old, and the wires fall to the ground or
the towers fall to the ground when you have windstorms
and it starts these massive fires and then it kills
eighty five people and then puts out an enormous amount
of carbon and toxic materials into the air. In fact,
one of those big fires undoes about twenty years worth

(11:34):
of climate savings that Newsom has instituted. Whatever they're saving
with all their idiotic regulations and taxes, it's all overwhelmed
by the amount of carbon dioxide, another toxic filth that
goes into the air. So the idea that Katie Porter

(11:56):
is running against Trump so he doesn't screw over our
working class people. Believe me, Katie Porter's buddies and Sacramento
like Gavin Newsom, are doing plenty to screw us, all
of us. But I mentioned I mentioned Jennifer Newsom's movies,

(12:18):
and these are gender justice movies, documentaries. I always wondered
what they sounded like cut eleven. We're going to play
a condensed trailer for her twenty eleven documentary called Miss Representation.

Speaker 4 (12:31):
The media is the message and the messenger, and increasingly
a powerful one.

Speaker 5 (12:37):
In a world of a million channels, people try to
do more shocking and shocking things to break through the clutter.
They resort to violent images, or sexually offensive images or
demeaning images.

Speaker 6 (12:47):
When is it going to be enough?

Speaker 7 (12:49):
There is no appreciation for women intellectual. It's all about
the body, not about the breed.

Speaker 4 (12:55):
You all saw the photo from the weekend of Hillary
looking so haggard and what looking like ninety.

Speaker 1 (13:01):
Two years old breast implants?

Speaker 7 (13:03):
Did you have them or not?

Speaker 8 (13:04):
If you waterboarded Nancy Pelosi, she wouldn't admit the plastic surgery.

Speaker 4 (13:08):
The fact that media are so derogatory to the most
powerful women in the country. Then what does it say
about media's ability to take any woman in Marca?

Speaker 7 (13:18):
Seriously?

Speaker 1 (13:22):
All right, this stop stop this. Jennifer Newsom was an
actress and she butted up with Harvey Weinstein. Remember she
was trying to get Harvey Weinstein to do something for her,
and then she claimed he started molesting her or something,
except the jury didn't believe it. She was the only

(13:44):
woman the jury didn't believe in that particular case. And
then even after he supposedly assaulted her, he was calling
her up for advice for Gavin Newsom, and I forget
there was some kind of public issue that Newsom was
dealing with. Jennifer calls Weinstein for advice on what to do.

(14:09):
So she's a total phony that she's worried about what
the what the media does? I mean, I'm sure she
did everything to beautify herself to look the part, to
be a success in the movies. If they told her
to cut off her nose, she would have cut off
her nose, all right. Play Cut twelve. This is a

(14:32):
trailer for her twenty twenty two documentary fair Play, and
Katie Porter makes an appearance in this.

Speaker 9 (14:38):
I had the breast pump in the diaper bag and
the pastor seat of my car. I was racing to
get Zach at his Todyler transition program. Had a client
contract in my lap. The pen would stab me in
the vagina. Set aside to send me a text, I'm
surprised you didn't get blueberries. I remember thinking to myself,
I'm the default for literally every single household and domestic
task for my family.

Speaker 2 (15:00):
When I became a mom, I felt like my identity
completely changed. I really didn't understand the amount that she
had to endure.

Speaker 4 (15:12):
It goes back to the twisted notion of we you
just got to ask for their help.

Speaker 7 (15:16):
I don't want to ask what time? Yeah, I have
two foot from work, hardy.

Speaker 9 (15:20):
I became obsessed with a quest to figure out what
was happening.

Speaker 2 (15:23):
To us when it comes to care, we're so far behind.

Speaker 5 (15:29):
We're saying we value work more than we value our families.

Speaker 2 (15:33):
There's this hidden message there which is just too expensive
to support women.

Speaker 1 (15:41):
Work family conflict.

Speaker 4 (15:43):
It's not even about women, it's about men and gender
pressures on men.

Speaker 7 (15:47):
Oh Jesus, for men, what feminism is for women? For God?

Speaker 9 (15:53):
For women to step into their full power in the world,
it requires men to step into their full power in
the home.

Speaker 1 (15:59):
That legacy that we all do. We get potatoes on
our head, hot potatoes. Right, we don't do enough at home?
Now you get you get the hot potato treatment. Did
you do enough at home? John, Well, I'll find out.
Maybe I'll get potatoes on my head. God, what a
bunch of wires and complainers, that kind of stuff. Parents

(16:22):
never did any complaining like that. My dad did what
he could do. My mom did what she could do.
I never heard them carry on once. Well didn't they
have to find though? No way there was, but there
was a lot of it wasn't that rigid. My mom
worked some and my dad, Like on Saturdays, my dad
would do cooking and cleaning. I saw my dad in

(16:44):
an apron really nothing else, just the apron. But uh,
and he used to He used to cook on Saturdays
until my brother and I begged him to stop that bad.
It was awful height may hamburgers and they were de
letely the whole thing was carbon black, and we we
we begged him to take us to McDonald's. Tried, he did.

Speaker 7 (17:07):
Try.

Speaker 3 (17:09):
You're listening to John Cobels on demand from KFI AM
six forty.

Speaker 1 (17:15):
John Cobelt Joe can't I Am six forty live everywhere
on the iHeartRadio app. Yeah, you know, I was talking
before John Ali. John Alley is a businessman and he
owns a lot of business properties in Santa Monica and
also in Westlake where MacArthur Park is and all that
criminal and behavior and drug addiction and filth. And he

(17:39):
was talking about Karen Bass, and he said, the frustrating
thing is, no matter what seems to happen, all these
people just keep moving on with their jobs. They're never
brought to any account by anybody, right, hardly any Oh,
I was talking Crystal Grab about this. Yeah, that's right.
Well I'm talking too both of them. Crystal Grab is
a journalist. And no matter what happens, because much of

(18:02):
the media is in support of all these progressive politicians
and most of the most of the government, well nearly
all the government is democratic. It's a one party rule
that Karen Bass can go off to Ghana while the
Palisades burns comes back, Stone Walls everyone. Now she's deleted

(18:24):
her emails, nothing ever happens, and Deanise Kenonez doesn't fill
up a one hundred and seventeen million gallon reservoir and
nothing happens. She didn't tell the fire chief, she didn't
tell the mayor, she didn't tell the people of the
Palisades that the fire department, what's left of it, is

(18:45):
going in unarmed. And then the galling thing. This week
we found out that she wanted a security protection, she
wanted armed protection, she wanted a driver to take her
to work. Now she's making seven hundred and fifty one
thousand dollars of your money, seven or fifty thousand dollars.
And what did we find out? There's thirteen hundred fire

(19:08):
hydroens busted in the city, many of them in the Palisades.
There was virtually no water supply that was useful for
a fire, and a lot of homes burned in the
fire department didn't even show up because there's not that
many firefighters and they don't have any water, even if
they did have a crew waiting, I mean, they sent

(19:28):
some crew members home because they didn't have fire trucks,
because one hundred of them are being being serviced. Except
we don't have mechanics. But you know what we do have,
or at least this was the plan. We had seven
hundred thousand dollars to pay for Genice Kinoniez security. Seriously,

(19:50):
that was the proposal, which is about five times the
amount that would have fixed the pool c Remember the
pool cover had a tear, would have taken a month
one hundred and thirty grand to fix it. Instead, they
left it empty for a year. And now they want

(20:12):
to spend seven hundred thousand dollars on security for Deanie
Kenoniez because she's getting a lot of threats because her
actions helped burn down thousands of homes. Well, there's been
so much blowback that Karen Bass has gotten involved. Here,
I'm going to play a clip from the president of

(20:34):
the LEDWP, Richard Katz. Now they've been having meeting public
meetings for weeks and they never discuss why the uh
why the reservoir wasn't filled up. This is fascinating, and
Canona sits there at the meetings. Well, he had to

(20:55):
comment about Genie Kenonie's security detail because they're postponed the vote.
Listen to this.

Speaker 6 (21:01):
Before we get into the agenda, I'd like to take
Item one.

Speaker 7 (21:07):
Security contract and.

Speaker 6 (21:10):
First step to the next meeting. And the recent mayor
called last night we had a discussion about this, and
the mayor made it very clear that she would like
to see this much less expensive contract than the one
that we have before us. We're going to work on
that between now and the next meeting and see if
we'll get either a couple more quotes on it or

(21:35):
pare down the quote that we have. But for that
reason and at the Mayor's request, we're going to put
this over for two weeks.

Speaker 1 (21:42):
So moving along, moving along, all right, as Karen bas says,
go forward, We're going to go forward. We're going to
move along. We're going to pretend the fire didn't happen, unless,
of course, you had your home burn to the ground.
But everybody else just move along, go forward. They don't

(22:04):
discuss the reservoir, they don't discuss the lack of water pressure,
they don't discuss all the busted fire hydrants. Moving along,
Moving along, they claimed, as part of their lazy excuses,

(22:26):
it's like, well, it took a year, and by the way,
the reservoir the cover is still not installed and the
reservoir is still empty. They claim that, well, we had
a competitive bidding process. You know, there are certain rules.
They only had one bid, competitive bidding. They had one bid.
The thing is for Kenonia's security detail, there was no

(22:49):
bidding process. They just accepted a bid. Well, they don't
really care what it costs, and she was getting the
security detail. In fact, yesterday they were supposed to do
the final vote on it was supposed to be a
done deal, seven hundred thousand dollars for her security when
they wouldn't spend one hundred and thirty thousand dollars to

(23:10):
fix the pool cover. The pool cover, but that's what
it was, the reservoir cover, which they didn't even need.
The reservoir was built to put out fires. And the
thing is they don't want to hear from anyone. They
don't respond to anything. I wish there should be some mess,

(23:33):
some mechanism for a massive public investigation. I know they's
supposed to be a state investigation, but you know they'll
release it the night before Independence Day or Labor Day
months months down the road, you know, eight o'clock on
a Friday night on a long holiday weekend, and the
TV stations won't cover it because most of the people

(23:55):
won't even understand it. And there should be a public
investigation where we get an update every week, like like
they start publishing the results of the investigation. Well, this
week we interviewed the following people. Here's what they told us.
You know, create a storyline from week to week so

(24:16):
we understand, so we could catch early on who's lying,
who's full of it? But boy, did they move They
want to move fast for her security detail? How about
you move fast and fire her. Why isn't she fired?
Why don't you just tell her to stay home, don't

(24:36):
show up anymore. You've done enough damage. Does she have
to answer to anybody? How do they treat her at work?
How does this happen? Like? Does everybody show up in
hygien ees? How you doing? What's going on? Do they
all act like they're all competent there at the DWP,

(24:58):
like they know what they're doing? Do they have any guilt?
Do they feel bad all the people involved in not
filling up the reservoir? Do they think about it in
the middle of the night? Did they ever wonder how
those kids feel whose homes were burned out and all
their toys burned and their school burned and running away screaming?

(25:19):
And do they think about it because they wouldn't fill
the reservoir?

Speaker 7 (25:24):
Oh?

Speaker 1 (25:24):
I have these regulations for a betting. It was a year.
It still is a year. Nobody gets fired. How do
we end up in Asia? When nobody gets fired for anything?
Like the last twenty five years, Nobody ever got fired.
Nobody got fired during the Biden administration. Nobody got fired
during the Bush administration when everybody failed and let Assama
bring down those towers, and they knew about that a

(25:47):
month in advance. Everybody just forgets things. Nobody gets fired.
No accountability, no responsibility, doesn't really matter. And you wonder
why they don't care about how they perform. All Right,
we come back. Elon Musk is saying the same thing
about the federal government that I'm telling you about the

(26:10):
Los Angeles homeless racket. It's all about these nonprofits. They're
set up to steal money from taxpayers. It's a loophole
in the law. Elon Musk explained it yesterday on Fox Business.
That's next.

Speaker 3 (26:25):
You're listening to John Cobels on demand from KFI AM six.

Speaker 1 (26:30):
Forty Conway coming up in minutes. I've been telling you
that the whole homeless industry is a scam, is a
racket here in Los Angeles. There's more news today in
the last few days about the Los Angeles Homeless Authority
and the audit which found over two billion dollars basically

(26:53):
missing in action. And they give the money to these
they're called NGOs, not government or organizations, nonprofits, and then
the nonprofits enriched themselves, blow the money on all their
friends and relatives and it disappears. And that's the way
the world works in government here, it's the homeless racket.
In Washington, it's endless rackets. And that's what Elon Musk

(27:16):
is dismantling, which is why they're squealing so loud. Elon
Musk went on with Larry Kudlow from Fox Business and
explained how the racket in Washington works. But it's the
same racket that's going on here. Play the clip by this.

Speaker 7 (27:31):
How do you do it? Okay? How big is your team? Yeah?
Where'd you recruit most of them from?

Speaker 8 (27:37):
And what is it that makes you choose, you know,
the Treasury or Social Security or USAID?

Speaker 7 (27:43):
How does it work? Let the public know? Please? Right?

Speaker 10 (27:47):
Well, we just basically follow the money, you know, we
look at the presence executive orders, and we also just
follow the money.

Speaker 7 (27:54):
So we started looking close.

Speaker 10 (27:56):
At USCID because they were completely violating the presence executive
orders to suspend foreign foreign aid, you know's what's called
forign aid.

Speaker 7 (28:05):
But in our view is a lot of corruption.

Speaker 10 (28:09):
So what we saw there is just a trans amount
of money being sent to non governmental organizations. But actually
it's this, by the way, is I think one of
the biggest sources of fraud in the world is government
funded non governmental organizations.

Speaker 7 (28:25):
This is a.

Speaker 10 (28:25):
Gigantic fraud loophole where the government can give money to
an NGO and then that there are no controls over
that NGO, so.

Speaker 7 (28:35):
They've given billions dollars.

Speaker 10 (28:37):
In thatch, we estimate tens of billions of dollars to
NGOs that are essentially scams.

Speaker 7 (28:43):
And right way, I try to put us off to that.

Speaker 1 (28:46):
And that's exactly what's going on in la version. In
la is, the government gives billions of dollars to these
homeless nonprofits that squander the money and they're not required
to show where they spend it and if any of
it works. And it's the same model that all these
organizations use, whether it's the federal government or the states

(29:06):
or local and billions of dollars disappear and nothing illegal
about it Conway and Thompson.

Speaker 8 (29:14):
I was, I was just talking about that very thing
today actually, and the home and the homeless issue in
LA actually was there.

Speaker 5 (29:19):
And the sales tax is going up again, yeah April first,
April fools.

Speaker 1 (29:23):
Yeah, that's.

Speaker 8 (29:26):
It is wild though to hear Elon Mush talk about
here we go entities getting money from the government that
are not not audited or non governmental.

Speaker 1 (29:35):
At least he gives them a rocket, okay once in
a while. I mean they give it to Boeing and
that didn't do any good. That's true. That's another contractor.

Speaker 5 (29:46):
Alex Stone is coming on today, and so is John Decker.
He's our White House correspondent. He's very good, he's terrific man.
And then we'll ask, well, well, I've been doing a
three month study on is it cool to let your
teams at home? And I've come to the conclusion. I'll
tell you a five drinking news. I used to drink
in my friend's car.

Speaker 7 (30:07):
Oh, yeah, we.

Speaker 1 (30:07):
Should we used to. I started drinking at at I
think nine. Why would you do it in the house anyway?

Speaker 5 (30:13):
Well, my grandfather worked at am at nine eight nine
pu no, nine years old?

Speaker 1 (30:19):
Oh, at nine years old?

Speaker 5 (30:21):
Now it's nine am. It was just nine years old.
I don't drink during the day. The one policy I
have is I never did drink.

Speaker 1 (30:28):
Then I guess you're a prototype for what happens. Well, look, yeah,
I'm doing afternoon drive.

Speaker 7 (30:33):
Look I think I think the.

Speaker 1 (30:34):
Guy's doing pretty well.

Speaker 7 (30:35):
To be honest, you're doing something right.

Speaker 1 (30:38):
Well, I'm saying, recommend that's right.

Speaker 7 (30:42):
He's a shining light. Your kid.

Speaker 1 (30:44):
Get him drinking at nine. He'll become a radio star
telling stories about how he was doing exactly right. But
my grandfather used to work at a place called you guys.

Speaker 5 (30:54):
It was a natural gas company, and he'd come home
from work at five o'clock and whoever got him his
stros also brought a little dixie cup and he'd fill
it up, like, you know, a third of the way
with with beer and I'd have.

Speaker 1 (31:07):
A drink, my friend. That's good bonding, that.

Speaker 7 (31:12):
You guy. It was.

Speaker 5 (31:13):
Then it became a meragas. Their job was there's a
natural gas pipeline that came into Sugar and Falls, Ohio,
and they used to take a thousand gallon tanks and
fill them up for mobile home parks and they you know,
they do that all day long, him, Bill Butler, Dalton,
all the guys that worked, from five guys who worked
there forever, all of them while filling up these big, huge,

(31:37):
thousand gallon tanks with natural gas, smoked while they're working,
every one of them. If that planet blown, it would
have made you know, that little town in Ohio, what
was that Palestine? Yeah, it would have made that look
like you know, I washed.

Speaker 1 (31:54):
Out generation nothing. They were an annoying and nagging everybody.
All right, 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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