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March 28, 2025 33 mins

The John Kobylt Show Hour 2 (03/28) - California gubernatorial candidate Chad Bianco comes on the show to talk about why he wants to abolish the state income tax if he is elected in next year's election. Dr. Patrick Soon-Shiong is concerned about the link between COVID and cancer. Roger Behle comes on the show to talk about the lawsuit against LADWP that claims LADWP equipment increased the severity of the Palisades Fire. Tim Walz's son made a quip at Walz about losing to Trump in the election and RFK Jr. was fat shaming the West Virginia governor to the governor's face!

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Can't. I am six forty.

Speaker 2 (00:02):
You're listening to the John Cobel Podcast on the iHeartRadio app.
We're on all the time Monday through Friday from one
until four o'clock and if you miss anything, that's what
the podcast is for. Posted after for John Cobelt's show
on demand, Big Day. Today, we're going to have Chad
Bianco on now Riverside County Sheriff. He is running for

(00:25):
governor here in California as the Republican nominee for twenty
twenty six, and he announced today that if he's elected governor,
he's going to work to abolish the income tax for
all of us here in this oppressive, dreadful, wretched state.
Imagine that, abolish the income tax, which they don't have

(00:50):
an income tax in Florida, they don't have one in Texas.
I think there's seven states without income taxes and Florida
and Texas. People are still streaming to those two states.

Speaker 3 (00:59):
And.

Speaker 2 (01:02):
People are still fleeing California in record numbers like the
state has never seen before. Let's talk to Chad Bionco again,
running for governor as a Republican in two thousand and six.

Speaker 1 (01:16):
Chad, how are you.

Speaker 3 (01:18):
I'm doing great. Thanks for having me on again.

Speaker 2 (01:19):
Well, you caught my head snap back when I saw
that this morning. Good and the first thing I said
is we got to have him on today. I got
to hear more about this. So go through this idea.
What made you think of it?

Speaker 3 (01:32):
Well, I mean you have to think about it because
you have to ask why is everybody leaving and where
are they going? And they're all going to states that
don't have taxes. There's actually ten of them. There was
nine until today, and now Mississippi just took away their
tax so they're going to phase thirs out within the
next two years or three years maybe. But all of
the people that are leaving California, they're leaving because of

(01:53):
regulation and because of high taxes. So California, we have
the highest income tax in the entire country. And everyone
knows that we don't have a revenue problem, we have
a spending problem. So my firm belief is if these
other states can do it, why can't we. We are
better than them. We have better people here and we

(02:14):
can do the exact same thing, and we'll even make
it better. And you have to ask yourself why. So
California has a spending problem, and they have a greed problem,
and they get the majority of their money from our
income taxes. But the problem is is one percent of
our tax earners that they take money from provide more

(02:36):
than half of the revenue generated from income tax So
think about that. If less than a million people beside
all at once, the workers that hey, we're leaving, we're
out of here, the business owners, the state's going to fail.
All of our revenue is gone. So it's a toxic
way to try and get revenue for the state. And

(02:58):
other states have proven that we can do without, and
we're going to do the same thing.

Speaker 1 (03:02):
What would you do to rebalance the income stream?

Speaker 3 (03:07):
Yeah, so number one, we all have to. Number One,
I'm going to go to Sacramento and be absolutely truthful
and say we have been wasting your taxpayer money for
decades and we are going to stop the waste. We're
going to stop the abuse. We're going to stop the funneling.
And some people refer to it as the laundering of
taxpayer money to all of these things that we have

(03:27):
no record of where it went, the gross ridiculous thing
they call a bullet train. That all of that has
to stop. We have to stop with that money, and
then there could be the possibility that we could eliminate
the tax right then by just saving the waste. And
if not, then we'll come up with a I guess

(03:51):
like a sliding scale to get rid of it over
a couple of years, so we can work out the
difference of how much can we say, what do we
really need to run the state? What don't we need
to be spending our money on. And there's the chance
that we could do it within the first year. Chances
are though, we'll have to We'll have to work with
everybody else to come up with the best way. We
have ten different examples of how to do it, and

(04:13):
we're going to find the best way of all of
them and make ours better.

Speaker 2 (04:17):
I'm doing this for memory, but I think at the
last year the Arnold Schwarzenegger administration, like twenty ten, twenty
eleven around there, the budget was about one hundred million
dollars the state budget, and last year Gavin Newsom the
budget was three hundred million. It tripled, It tripled in
less than fifteen years. And I'm knocking my head against

(04:40):
the wall looking around thinking what did we get?

Speaker 1 (04:44):
What did I get?

Speaker 2 (04:45):
What did all of us get after tripling, after adding
two hundred million dollars to our spending?

Speaker 1 (04:52):
What did it go for?

Speaker 3 (04:55):
Yeah, well that's that's the great question. And it just
goes to show that throwing money at thing is not
the answer. Raising regulation, raising taxes just to get more
money to spend on pet projects is not benefiting anyone
in this state. Every aspect of our state is broken.
It's broken because of regulation, it's broken because of taxes

(05:15):
and a complete government system that thrives off spending money
that isn't theirs.

Speaker 2 (05:23):
You were talking about the huge amounts of money we've
wasted in various categories. Just off the top of my head,
Newsom admitted twenty four billion dollars in homeless money gone
unaccounted for. We know that at least thirty billion dollars
disappeared for COVID unemployment that's gone maybe fifty billion, mostly
to foreign fraudsters. Then we've got seventeen billion for high

(05:47):
speed rail that's gone I.

Speaker 1 (05:50):
Mean, I mean right there.

Speaker 2 (05:52):
Just to add up those three categories, that is over
seventy billion dollars.

Speaker 3 (05:58):
And when when are we going to start holding these
people accountable? And the same people that put us in
this position that voted for these things and that agreed
to waste all of that money are now the same
ones that want to be governor. This is our time
to finally take the stake back, make a difference, and
say enough is enough.

Speaker 2 (06:19):
And then we got twelve billion dollars for legal alien healthcare,
which no other state is doing. So that's you said,
you eighty three billion dollars right there.

Speaker 3 (06:29):
Yeah, and he just asked for what do he asked
for three billion more for this stupid train?

Speaker 2 (06:34):
Yes, I mean, it's so blatant and outrageous. And life
just keeps getting worse and worse it does.

Speaker 3 (06:44):
And Californians are amazing resilient people that have thrived here
or done their best to thrive despite government doing all
of this to us. And it's time we let It's
time we let Californians spend their money how they want,
rather than having it taken from them to the state

(07:04):
and then wasted. And we don't even know what we're getting.
We're not getting anything for it.

Speaker 2 (07:08):
Can you imagine if we did a thorough investigation and
audit like they're doing in Washington, DC now, what they
would find. I think proportionally, they would find more waste
here in California than even in Washington on a proportional basis.

Speaker 3 (07:25):
Well, I think you're exactly right, and then I will
I'll go right now and just get into the political
aspect of it. A conservative Republican who is fiscally conservative
is not going to waste as much as a liberal
progressive Democrat who believes that they just spend everybody's money
however they want. So since we've been controlled, our government's

(07:48):
been completely controlled for thirty years, by more than thirty
by progressive Democrats, it's unimaginable the amount of waste that
we're going to find when we get in there.

Speaker 2 (08:00):
Have you had any immediate reaction? I just saw this
story late this morning. I imagine you got got blowed
back almost immediately from somebody.

Speaker 3 (08:10):
Yeah, it did. Surprisingly, I did that. I announced it
actually the end of last week, and really I have
had yeah, and I have had zero blowback. Everything has
been of course, you have the pessimists that say it
could never happen, But I mean, I don't even like
talking to those people because my entire life, my life
in my job that I have now, my whole staff

(08:32):
knows don't come to me and tell me why we
can't do something, tell me how we are going to No, No.

Speaker 1 (08:36):
It can be done.

Speaker 2 (08:37):
There's ten states doing it already, like you pointed out before.

Speaker 3 (08:41):
Absolutely absolutely, so I know this is going to happen.
California is going to want this to happen. So the workers,
business owners and workers that are like, yeah, sign me up.

Speaker 2 (08:50):
And big states Okay, we're not talking about Wyoming here
or New Hampshire. We're talking about Florida and Texas who
are gaining a resident so quickly. You know, we're going
to lose four or five electoral votes, four or five
congressional districts by the end of the decade.

Speaker 1 (09:07):
There's so many people fleeing the state.

Speaker 3 (09:09):
Yeah. And the sad part is is the current leadership
doesn't care. They just want more of our money, they
want more of our taxes. They just keep spending things
they don't have, and they're not addressing the fact that
they are creating this problem. And how are we going
to fix it? So the answer is, you created the problem.
You're going to have to let us fix it.

Speaker 4 (09:29):
Now.

Speaker 2 (09:29):
Well, you know what you've done, a really good thing
and a smart thing. You've gone on offense. You've differentiated yourself.
You've laid a big issue out on the table. Now
everybody else has got to react to it, and all
your opponents on both sides have to explain why we
shouldn't abolish the tax.

Speaker 1 (09:45):
And yeah, all.

Speaker 2 (09:47):
Right, very good, Well Chad will keep talking. Thank you
for coming on.

Speaker 3 (09:51):
Sounds good, Thank you, all right.

Speaker 2 (09:52):
Chad Bianco, Republican candidate for governor twenty twenty six here
in California. And he says, abolish the income text. That's
what he wants to do if he gets in charge.
And yes, it can be done because there's there's ten
states doing it. There's two big states Florida and Texas
that are thriving economically. They don't have income taxes, and

(10:12):
if we all have and by the way, he's right
what he said. You know, half of the income tax
money comes from the top one percent. They are already
leaving and they're going to continue to leave. Athletes Shaquille
O'Neal lives in Florida, Tiger Woods lives in Florida. Tech
guys like Elon Musk, he went to Texas. Of course

(10:34):
they leave. Why would you pay Gavin Newsom several million
dollars a year for what see smart guys. I know
some people get angry about smart guys or rich guys,
but there's a reason they're rich. They're rich because they're smart,
and smart people don't shovel money into some criminal money

(10:56):
laundering operation run by a bunch of hack politicians like
some in Karen Bass. We've got more coming up.

Speaker 5 (11:04):
You're listening to John Cobelt on demand from KFI AM
six forty.

Speaker 2 (11:10):
Coming up after two thirty. We're gonna, We're geting. We're
gonna him on two thirty, right. Roger Bailey, he's the
attorney for the H a lot of the Palisades residents,
and they filed a massive lawsuit against the DWP and uh,
according to our sources, Remember he was on the other

(11:32):
day and he had incorporated into the lawsuit that two
power poles had broken and collapsed in Pacific Palisades. It
was called H poles, I think because there were two
poles and they were connected by two vertical planks and
it looked like an H and they collapsed and fell

(11:53):
to the ground.

Speaker 1 (11:54):
The idiots.

Speaker 2 (11:56):
Jenice Keinoniez, who runs the DWP, did not turn off
the power. This is twelve hours into the fire, didn't
turn off the power, so these live electrical wires hit
the ground when the poles collapsed, started a brand new
big fire. And the power is definitely on because you
see San Diego has cameras out in the woods and

(12:16):
in the distance you could see the neighborhoods in the
Palisades had their lights on in the homes, traffic lights
were on. And this is in the Summit, that's the
neighborhood up in the highlands north of the village. And
so this was a second big fire that caused a
lot of damage. And according to people who know the alcohol, tobacco,

(12:43):
and firearms, federal agents they have field investigators and they're
investigating the area where the power poles fell. And media
is flying over a helicopter flying a helicopter over the
area now, so it looks like the Trump administration he's
gotten wind of this discovery and the ATF is now investigating.

(13:06):
We're going to talk to Roger Bailey, the attorney coming
up after two thirty. I want to play this before
because we had so much still to come on the show.
The owner of the Los Angeles Times, Patrick soon Shiong.
He made his money is a surgeon, and he made
his money he came up with a cancer drug. That's

(13:29):
why he's a billionaire. He actually invented and developed a
cancer drug. He went on Tucker Carlson and he thinks, now,
I don't know if you've noticed this in the papers,
and I didn't know if this was some kind of
media hoax or what.

Speaker 1 (13:44):
But if you've been.

Speaker 2 (13:46):
Keeping track of the media, apparently there's a record number
of young people with colon cancer, like really young people
twenties and thirties. And I didn't know if this was
a hyped up poax story, but it turns out it's true,
and Soon Chion thinks it's because of the COVID vaccine.

(14:07):
So we're going to play a clip of a Soon
Chiang the time Zonner speaking with Tucker Carlson and his
theory the link between the COVID vaccine and cancer cut
number two.

Speaker 6 (14:18):
We're of the first people to notice that there's been an
increase in scary cancers in populations that didn't used to
get them, very obvious just from living here, and a
lot of people are pointed to both COVID the virus
and the mr NA, COVID vaccines as potential causes.

Speaker 7 (14:33):
Do you think that they're related. The best way for
me to answer that is to look at history. What
we know about virty induced cancers is well established. We
know that you should get hypatitis, you get liver cancer.
Hypatitis is a virus infection. We know if you get
human papilloma virus HPV, you get civical cancer.

Speaker 8 (14:51):
Yes, so certain kinds of throat cancer are caused by
viruses as well. Right, if you get HIV, you gelt kaposisocoma. Yes,
so we call that oncogenic viruses in medical terms, meaning
viruses that are induced carcinogenic. And the fundamental basis for
that are threefold. The hallmarks of an ecogenic virus is one,
it must persist and why because it continues to create inflammation.

(15:15):
And why with inflammation you get suppression because your body
is trying to suppress it. It must inhibit the sink
called P. Fifty three that's in your body to try
and protect your body from not having cancer. And if
it persists and causes inflammation and here inhibits P. Fifty three,
it begins to have the hallmarks of an oncogenic virus.

(15:35):
So then the question is does COVID whether it come
from the vaccine, which is the spike protein vaccine, or
from the infection which is a spike driven that gets
into every cell of our body because it goes through
the cell of the body.

Speaker 7 (15:49):
It goes wherever you have the sink called the ACE
two receptor, which is in the blood vessels. So where
we have a blood vessel in your body, it's where
it's going to go. And it has an a receptor
on that blood vessel, that's where it can go because
that's the purpose of the spike protein to penetrate, to
hijack that A two reciplent get into their cells. So
that's why it gets in the bank and that's why
you have brain fog goes it disrupts the blood vessels

(16:10):
of the brain and cause the mitochondrial dysfunction. That's why
in the colon which is a high and the GI
track is a high as to receptor, that's why pancraticized
is to receptor where that's why people have in the
heart you have dysfunction. You've seen young people have sudden
heart attacks all of a sudden. You see young people
with bank redit can. So, all of a sudden, you

(16:31):
see young people's colon cans all of a sudden. So
is it by coincidence that post covid infection, post covid vaccine,
we're seeing all these events where we know the spike
protein goes there. I don't think so. I think it's
anot a coincidence. So the question is, can we prove
is what I call long covid flowers persisting? And the

(16:54):
group at University California, sent Francisco has now definitively proven
that and published in papers like Nature. Can we also
prove that once you have that persistence of that virus,
does that covid virus suppress the natural killer cell? Does
a natural killer cell actually not only go to sleep,
becomes what we call energic that's now been published the
natural killer cell has gone to sleep.

Speaker 6 (17:16):
So by your definition, we just solve the mystery right there.

Speaker 9 (17:21):
I think. So, I think this is the conversation I
had with the Well, wait, I mean billions of people
literally billions of people had the covid virus, over a
billion got the spike protein vaccine.

Speaker 6 (17:35):
So that's like we're talking like a huge percentage of
the Earth's population unless.

Speaker 7 (17:40):
I'm missing something. Now you understand what keeps me awake
at night, And it's kept me awake at night for
two years, two and a half years. And that's why
I sort of abandoned everything just to focus on how
do we clear the virus, because the answer is to
clear the virus from the body. From the body, the
answer is to stop the inflammation because it's chronic inflammation.

Speaker 1 (18:01):
Uh, that's one of the scariest things they ever heard.

Speaker 10 (18:08):
I don't even know what to say.

Speaker 2 (18:09):
Yeah, and let's remember our government helped finance the COVID research.
They sent money to Wuhan to create this gain of
function research monstrosity that ended up being the virus. This
is an Anthony Fauci production. And now you got doctor
Patrick Soon Chean cheang saying that these burst of cancers

(18:33):
and young people might be the COVID virus and or
the COVID vaccine.

Speaker 10 (18:39):
Remember how badly we wanted that vaccine.

Speaker 2 (18:42):
Oh yeah, I mean I took I don't know how
many four or five is this? Yeah, well we're doing now.
The government bullied everybody into it, terrified everybody into it,
and some.

Speaker 10 (18:59):
Well I didn't feel bullied into it. I really wanted
it because I was scared.

Speaker 2 (19:03):
Yeah, but they terrified you. They bullied others by saying like,
you know, cops and firefighters, you can't work, you lose
your job.

Speaker 1 (19:11):
Wow.

Speaker 2 (19:12):
Well, happy Friday. Thanks, I have a lot to drink tonight.
We're all doing you know what.

Speaker 10 (19:18):
I think that's a good idea.

Speaker 1 (19:20):
When we come back.

Speaker 2 (19:21):
Roger Bailey, he's the attorney for those Palisades residents who
are suing the DWP for all the malfeasance that led
to the Palisades burning down. And now apparently ATF agents
are investigating. Helicopters are flying over that region. They're on
the on the ground. We'll have more.

Speaker 5 (19:39):
You're listening to John Cobels on demand from KFI A six.

Speaker 2 (19:45):
Earlier this week, we had attorney Roger Bailey on he's
representing many Pacific Palisade residents in their lawsuit against the
city's DWP for all the things we've talked about so
many tis the reservoirs being empty and as one example,
and he was he has photos in this new version

(20:09):
of the lawsuit where he says power poles collapsed north
of the Palisades village near the Highlands, the Summit neighborhood
up there, and it was a pair of poles and
they were connected with these vertical.

Speaker 1 (20:26):
Planks.

Speaker 2 (20:26):
I guess the whole thing collapsed, brought down electrified wires.
The DWP had never turned off the electricity and crashed
to the ground, and the electrified wires started another fire,
a big fire because of all the heavy vegetation down below.
And we've got some more information giving it. Roger Bailey

(20:48):
on here, Roger, Yes, what do you know? What are
you hearing?

Speaker 3 (20:54):
Well?

Speaker 11 (20:55):
We after we spoke a couple of days ago, we
got word this morning from a couple of our clients
that live in that area that ATF had a group
of investigators up in the precise location that we identified
in our most recent version of a lawsuit conducting additional

(21:19):
investigation of that area, the power lines, et cetera. So
that all took place this morning. And you know, previously
the city had said ATF had never identified any power
equipment or anything in that area as being associated with
any fire, and yet today, perhaps as a result of

(21:43):
our recent filing, they're up doing their own investigation. We
also made a request for some raw video footage from
the cameras that are mounted to that water tank we
talked about a couple of days ago, and we're told
in response to those cameras and the footage they contain
is now the subject of an active ATF investigation. So

(22:05):
it's developing day by day here, and I guess we'll
we'll find out what they what they determine after they're done.

Speaker 2 (22:14):
And we should point out again, as you did in
the lawsuit, that the DWP had claimed that those lines
were not energized, that they had been dormant for five
years up until earlier this week, and then an attorney
finally admitted in a footnote that yeah, they were energized

(22:36):
last year, and they were energized the night of the fire,
and clearly you could see the results of that when
when the power lines hit the hit the heavy underbrush.

Speaker 3 (22:47):
Yeah.

Speaker 11 (22:47):
The story keeps changing though. So it began back in
January that these lines were abandoned and had been abandoned
for five years, which didn't square with the evidence we had.
And then this week we got a response from the
lawyer you mentioned it said, well, in fact, those lines
were energized at the time of the fire. Then they've

(23:08):
qualified it again. And said, well, at the time of
the fire, by that we meant the morning only, but
we actually manually shut them off at two fifteen in
the afternoon, which again doesn't square with the video evidence
that we have.

Speaker 2 (23:21):
No, you have snapshots for people who haven't seen the lawsuit,
you have screenshots. You see San Diego has cameras there
in the in the wild Land area, and you could
clearly see that that neighborhood, the lights are on in
people's homes, the street lights are on, and the fire
has already started.

Speaker 11 (23:43):
Yeah, and those those cameras were operating with some power source,
so you know, it doesn't square. And again we're just
watching the target move that they go from abandoned lines
to well they're energized, but they're only energizing in the morning.
We actually turned them off. So we're just wondering what
the next pivot is going to be.

Speaker 2 (24:05):
I don't know if you heard today, but the La
Times is suing the city because Karen Bass's administration is
hiding the emails. And again the story kept changing, and
first they said, ah, it was on auto delete, we
don't have any. Then all of a sudden, they have
one hundred and twenty five emails that they were covered
through you know, extraordinary technological means or some such nonsense,

(24:28):
and The Times is saying, no, there's a lot more
emails that you haven't released yet, and it just looks like,
to my eyes, a massive cover up is.

Speaker 1 (24:36):
Going on here.

Speaker 11 (24:38):
Well, I'll do you one better. We sent an evidence
preservation letter to the la B to BP City of
Los Angeles on January the seventeenth, twenty twenty five, which
is well before the thirty day auto delete period that
they're referencing for those emails. Everything was set to auto delete.
But our letter the first a letter to my knowledge

(25:01):
from any law firm demanding that they preserve evidence, including
it specifically specifies preserve all communications, text messages, emails, et cetera,
that went out on the seventeenth of January, well before
the thirty day auto delete period.

Speaker 3 (25:15):
So you know, yeah, no it didn't.

Speaker 2 (25:20):
The Time's original requests were very early as well. They
were within a few days of the of the fire
breaking out. So well, we all know what's going on here,
don't we. I don't When all the truth comes out,
I don't think anybody is going to be surprised. Roger
Bailey thank you for coming on with us.

Speaker 11 (25:37):
You bet, John, We'll keep you posting.

Speaker 1 (25:39):
Yeah, please do.

Speaker 2 (25:40):
And he's the attorney who's representing a lot of the
Palisades residents who got burned out in the fire. Boy,
there are a bunch of snakes. Huh, They are a
bunch of snakes in the mass administration. I mean that
all all all of City Hall, City Council a bunch
of snakes. Yesterday, they're called to a hearing by a

(26:02):
federal judge to try to explain where two and a
half billion dollars went of homeless funding. And Karen Bass
didn't even show up, and Judge David Carter got upset,
and somebody fetched Karen Bass. The city council president, Marquis
Harris Dawson didn't show up. The U, the chief supervisor

(26:26):
of the county, Lindsay Horvath didn't show up. The head
of Los Angeles Homeless Authority, what's her name, Valicia Adams
Kellum didn't show up. Federal judge asked them to come.
He's doing a hearing. He's trying to figure out wherewo
and a half billion dollars went. Nobody wants to show up.

(26:46):
They don't release emails they claim, oh wow, we deleted them,
and then oh oh they weren't deleted, and all the
stuff Roger Bailey just discussed in his investigation. Well, the
ATF is now instigating. They're on the ground, and you know,
there really ought to be federal investigations, state investigations into

(27:09):
all all this corruption, all this all this theft that's
going on, all this incompetence. There should be state and
federal investigations into the City of La, County of La,
because this is all rotted to the bonk.

Speaker 5 (27:23):
You're listening to John Cobels on demand from KFI Am sixty.

Speaker 1 (27:29):
All right, I understand that where you can't.

Speaker 2 (27:33):
Tim Walls, the losing Democratic vice presidential candidate with Kamala Harris,
apparently was giving a didn't appearance today with that loser
betto or Rourke.

Speaker 1 (27:47):
Was kind of kind of some kind of losers conference.

Speaker 2 (27:49):
It was some town hall in Texas. I guess town hall. Yeah,
I'd be dying to ask Tim Walls and better work questions.
That's great.

Speaker 1 (27:56):
But Walls told the story about a little talkie he
had with his son.

Speaker 2 (28:00):
So I got an eighteen year old gus and I'm
with that Gus out there and I'm.

Speaker 1 (28:04):
Having one of those dad talks with him. I was
giving Gus my wisdom.

Speaker 7 (28:08):
On what he had done.

Speaker 2 (28:09):
You know, I was being because I know these things, right,
I'm the dead and in the middle of it, he
gives me the old says the guy who got his
kicked by Donald Trump. And I'm like, okay, okay, okay.
You know when you send things you're a bozo. I
think it's time to sit down Robert Kennedy. Two stories

(28:30):
on Robert Kennedy. First is you know, he's running Health
and Human Services and they're going after the state of
California because the state of California teaches weird sex education
to students and youngest ten years old. Here's something, it's
for real. These are in the California teaching materials and

(28:53):
Kennedy's department has sent a letter to the state. They
want to see all the materials used for sex educationation.

Speaker 1 (29:02):
The materials.

Speaker 2 (29:05):
Demonstrate that instructors are told to teach students about sexual
aids commonly called sex toys by the youth. This is
as young as ten years old. California sex education instructions
have explanations on sex toys.

Speaker 1 (29:27):
I didn't know that.

Speaker 2 (29:29):
Do you know that I did not. That's really disgusting.
But you're ten year old hearing about sex storys.

Speaker 10 (29:35):
I would be very pissed off.

Speaker 2 (29:37):
Oh man, then you hear buzzing coming out of their
bedroom and it's just disgusting. They're also told they're talking
about role playing to reflect the spectrum of sexual decision
making circumstances at age ten. No, age ten, you're going

(29:58):
to do role playing? About all it's a different.

Speaker 3 (30:02):
What is it?

Speaker 2 (30:02):
Different positions or I don't know, I don't know, different
combinations of people with all the new categories. Apparently there's
extensive teaching on pronouns. Oh my god. If I hear
about pronouns, oh I no that that that's over. The
pro pronoun debates are from twenty twenty. That's that's done.

(30:24):
California gets six million dollars for this program. I don't
think they're going to be getting that much more. No
way that the Trump administration is going to pay millions
of dollars to California to teach, uh, give sex toy
education to the kids, sex to sex toys.

Speaker 1 (30:44):
Yes.

Speaker 2 (30:46):
Now, Robert Kennedy also in the news because he did
he did an appearance with the West Virginia Governor Patrick Morrissey.

Speaker 1 (30:54):
Have you ever seen Patrick Morrissey?

Speaker 2 (30:57):
No way over fed John Guy? Hey, No, hey, that's
polite compared to RFK Junior. Play this clip.

Speaker 3 (31:05):
No.

Speaker 4 (31:05):
I said to Dr morris Or Governor Morrisey the first
time I saw him, I said, you look like you
ate Governor Morrisey. And there was a lot of talk
about getting healthy again. And I'm very happy, and he's
invited me to be his personal trainer.

Speaker 1 (31:26):
I'm gonna put him he's doing this in front of
the governor.

Speaker 4 (31:33):
I'm gonna put him on a really rigorous regimen, and
we're gonna put him on a carnivore diet. We're gonna
make him do raise your aunt if you want Governor
Morrisey to do a public way in once a month
and then when he's lost thirty pounds, I'm going to

(31:55):
come back to the state and to his celebration and
a public way and with them.

Speaker 1 (32:02):
Wow. Do you hear what kind of diet he's gonna put?

Speaker 10 (32:06):
I heard, and I think switch it to vegan.

Speaker 1 (32:10):
Carnival carnivore. I like that he looks like he ate Governor.
And he said it to his face.

Speaker 2 (32:19):
That's right, Governor's standing right there.

Speaker 1 (32:26):
This is good stuff.

Speaker 2 (32:27):
This is a good air. All right, would we come back?
It was rude, it was We're in talk.

Speaker 1 (32:34):
Uh. We're going to talk.

Speaker 2 (32:36):
Next hour with someone involved with the Paradise Cove Beach
Cafe in Malibu, a business consultant, Glenn Besera, who's working
with the Paradise Cove Beach Cafe.

Speaker 1 (32:48):
You've probably been there. I love it, I love going there.

Speaker 2 (32:50):
Yeah, but uh, every all the businesses in Malibu are
hurting because you can't get to Malibu from the south.
They have a military checkpoint. You can come from the north.
It's difficult to get there through the canyon roads from.

Speaker 10 (33:07):
Were there from Mothers Day again?

Speaker 2 (33:08):
Oh yeah, yeah, we've gone there for Mother's Day. Paradise
Cove Beach Cafe. It's a great place. So they want
all this stuff relaxed. They want the restrictions lifted because
a lot of businesses are dying there. We'll talk to
Glenn Bissera, the business consultant to who's working with Paradise Cove.
The owner is Bob Morris. All that ahead. Deborah Mark
live in the Cafi twenty four Our newsroom. Hey, you've

(33:30):
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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