Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Can't. I am six forty.
Speaker 2 (00:02):
You're listening to the John Cobelt Podcast on the iHeartRadio app.
We are out every day from one until four and
then after four o'clock. If you missed anything on the show,
you can hear it on the iHeart app The John
and Ken The John Cobelt Show on demand podcast. And
let's see we got two rounds of the moist Line
today in the three o'clock hour. We're gonna have Royal
(00:24):
Oaks on later from ABC. Today. At the Trump trial,
one of his top aides, Hope Hicks, testified because she
was aware of all the dealings. And next hour, I'm
really looking forward to this. Paul Morrow, former NYPD inspector,
former head of the NYPD Legal Bureau, and he is
(00:47):
also their leading intelligence, Operations and Analysis bureau person and
an attorney. He's on Fox News a lot. He has
a website on some stack ops desk. He knows a
lot about the origination of these protest groups that have
infiltrated the universities and attracted the students and designed these protests.
(01:16):
And I say that literally these protests are designed by
outside leftist groups. And I'm going to give you an
excellent analysis of this coming up in just a moment. Anyway,
we've got Paul Morrow coming on at two o'clock and
at three o'clock it's gonna be Whyal Oak step here
(01:36):
we go. This was in the Wall Street Journal yesterday
and it was written by the editorial board. They did
an analysis of a website. I looked up this website
and it's exactly what they say it is. The website
is called crimethink dot com, but it's spelled crime thh
(02:01):
I n C dot com, So crimethink dot com. You
might want to read it. It is an extensive manual
on how outside agitators can help conduct protests at universities.
(02:23):
It has real time analysis of ongoing university trumble. You
you just spend a little you can spend a lot
of time with this site. You can spend a little
time with it, and it's pretty clear to see what
is going on, and it is not just naive, idealistic
students exercising their First Amendment rights as they exposed themselves.
Speaker 1 (02:47):
To the tragedies of the world or some such rot Now.
Speaker 2 (02:53):
That's why I'm looking forward to Paul Morrow at two
o'clock because I heard Paul Paul talking yesterday on Fox
and he was explaining that this really is an industry.
He says, there's one thousand, five oh one three c
nonprofit entities in New York City alone that their business
(03:17):
is activism.
Speaker 1 (03:19):
They get big.
Speaker 2 (03:20):
Donations, some of them from huge foundations, tech billionaires, the
George Soros types, so well financed. You can come out
of an experience in college where you engaged in a
lot of activism and protest and get a job with
one of these nonprofits. It's funny how well paid people,
(03:44):
How well paid people who work for godprofits are?
Speaker 1 (03:48):
You know, just.
Speaker 2 (03:50):
The agency doesn't have to pay any taxes since their nonprofit,
but wow, are the employees getting paid well.
Speaker 1 (03:58):
It's like the homeless industry always tell you about.
Speaker 2 (04:01):
So I mean, it's a racket, it's a scam, but
it's now a real career. He said this that you
can have a career in protesting. And what you do
is you help organize protests, You hold classes to teach
students on how to do it properly. You can attract
more people to your nonprofit organization and train them as employees,
(04:22):
and they in turn will attract the students and I'm
just going to read you a little piece of it,
and then after Deborah's news update, I'll get to the rest.
But the Wall Street Journal rights that behind the students
is an organized movement of leftists who want to spread
disorder and whose candid strategy is to defy school administrators
(04:45):
and police to achieve their radical goals. And one thing
you have to understand with all the protests over the
last thirteen years or so is that the subject of
the protest is not of primary importance. What is primary,
what is the primary, very importance, is creating disruption and disorder.
That's the point you will see. This Gaza Israel thing
(05:07):
is going to die down. You may not even hear
about it again at a college campus for the rest
of your life. Something else will pop up in the fall,
probably something around the election. There'll be some ginned up
issue for the election, and then all these people will
get back to work, because again they make money. In
(05:29):
order to get the donations, they have to show that
they're performing. They have to show that they've got an
ongoing show somewhere. And you can't run on the same
issue over and over again. I mean, how many times
are you going to protest. You know, climate change, which
nobody really cares about.
Speaker 1 (05:48):
But the purpose is the disruption. That's the thing.
Speaker 2 (05:51):
When we come back, I'll tell you more. The headline
is Rules for Campus Radicals twenty twenty four.
Speaker 1 (05:58):
That is next.
Speaker 3 (06:00):
You're listening to John Cobelt on demand from KFI A
M six forty.
Speaker 1 (06:06):
All right.
Speaker 2 (06:07):
Continuing, Wall Street Journal has a piece today on crimethink
dot com. That's crime th chi NC dot com and
this website it describes as a hub for anarchists, antifa activists,
and radical leftists. These are the people who produce the
instruction manual on how to conduct a protest that turns
(06:33):
into a riot, and there are steps to take, and
there are instructions on how to deal with administrators, how
to deal with police, how to negotiate. And these fake
nonprofits that are involved in activism use this in order
to educate students on how to conduct their protest and
(06:57):
do it effectively.
Speaker 1 (07:00):
So you've got this online.
Speaker 2 (07:02):
Resource site filled well, it's designed and written and edited
by these radicals. You have the nonprofits that are activists.
They get donations from wealthy people who want to fund
this sort of thing, and then they go and recruit
and get college students known as the Useful Idiots, to
(07:24):
whip themselves up into a frenzy over whatever the issue is.
If you notice, whenever any of the students were interviewed,
and certainly Blake Truley found this, they weren't able to
articulate themselves very well. I didn't hear any of them
do the kind of thoughtful, intelligent analysis that you might
see on a television news show when analysts break down
(07:49):
what the Hamas and Israeli stances are, their goals are,
how we got to this point, what the results have been,
what the next steps by any of that. It didn't
seem that some of them understood at all what was
going on. Remember the two NYU girls, Well, you know,
we really have to get educated about this. They were
to making demands on NYU without knowing what NYU's policy
(08:13):
was regarding investments in Israel, that sort of thing, all.
Speaker 1 (08:18):
Right, So they write, they write A window on this movement.
Speaker 2 (08:20):
Is Crime Think, a hub for anarchists, antief activist and
radical leftists. In recent weeks, it has published anonymous reports
from around the country, drawing lessons from various campus protests.
They reveal the method behind the mayhem, the plan to
use violence and break the law. Again, this is on
this is on purpose, and it's not for noble causes.
(08:42):
They have a dispatch from the University of Texas at
Austin encouraging protesters how to surround and force out the police.
These protest guides reveal that universities are attracting professional demonstrators.
Speaker 1 (08:56):
The journal Rights.
Speaker 2 (08:57):
One experienced participant at the Columbia protests describes looking fondly
at the young students with that manic, electric, slightly dazed
look that I associate with participating for the first time
in some sort of revolutionary upheaval.
Speaker 1 (09:15):
You follow that the old.
Speaker 2 (09:17):
Protesters looking at these kids and they're all wide eyed
and manic and ready to go, and he's thinking, ah, yes,
it's your first time.
Speaker 1 (09:25):
He looks. He looks back at it nostalgically.
Speaker 2 (09:28):
And of course, because they're in this heightenedmanic state, you
can tell them anything and they're going to follow. They're
going to do what you want him to do. Here's
an analysis of events at cal Poly Humboldt. That is,
that is, the rural university up in north the western
California near the Oregon border. And they had a big
ruckus there, especially for the size of that school. And
(09:51):
the analysis said, it's clear that in order for this
crisis to develop further, student occupations should take buildings whatever possible. Okay,
so this website is instructing students and the leaders.
Speaker 1 (10:04):
You got to take the buildings.
Speaker 2 (10:06):
We can wield the most power by occupying the spaces
where classes are held and administrators have offices. So this
is going to happen. When you see the early days
of a protest, the stupid administrators are standing, mind, well,
we just want the students to spake their peace.
Speaker 1 (10:21):
You've dumb asses.
Speaker 2 (10:23):
The students are being instructed after a couple of days
to storm your office and take control of it. It's
right there on the on the on the website. Did
the administrators know this thing exists? It's apparently been around
for years. An analysis of protests at the University of
Illinois or Bona Champaigne notes that encampment is escalation. Putting
(10:47):
tents up on campus is against almost every campus policy.
Refusing to take them down means refusing to listen to
a lawful command. In other words, journal rights breaking school
policy see and law is not an accident. It's the
point of the exercise. First you put up the tents,
then you refuse to take them down. Now the school
(11:11):
has been challenged, what is it going to do?
Speaker 4 (11:14):
Well?
Speaker 1 (11:14):
As we found out at UCLA, nothing.
Speaker 2 (11:18):
And so the next step is to storm and try
to take over administrative buildings like Columbia for example, because
at Columbia the administration did nothing, not knowing it is
part of standard operating procedure for these groups to put
the tents down, To put the tents up, refuse to
take them down, and then go go storm classrooms and
(11:40):
offices because that's where you wield maximum power.
Speaker 1 (11:44):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (11:45):
This memo also says the basic premise of the encampment
is already an escalation that cops will meet with force.
Organizers should not concern themselves with de escalation or remaining peaceful.
Be prepared to escalate your action in order to continue
making it more expensive, whether material, materially, financially, or socially.
(12:10):
Make it more expensive for the administrators to remain complicit
rather than divest. In other words, if they won't agree
to divest and pull their investments out of Israel or
companies that do business with Israel, then make it cost them.
You start destroying the offices, you start destroying the building,
you start costing them more money for more security or socially.
(12:33):
Right now, you've got parents angry with you, You've got
the media covering your reputation is getting destroyed. Make them
pay a price for not doing what the protesters are demanding.
University of Now the journal Rights is This suggests the
futility of negotiating with most protesters. Of course, at the
(12:54):
University of Illinois, administrators had a memo about how police
officers made decision to de escalate and step back to
reduce the risk of injury to themselves.
Speaker 1 (13:06):
Well, the occupiers.
Speaker 2 (13:08):
Took this sign, took this as a sign of weakness
of retreat. They bring more supplies plywood, insulation board, lumber, scrapwood, metal, sheeting, garbage, gans,
They reinforce it. If the police are going to back off,
they're going to bring in more materials to reinforce their
encampment and make it that much more difficult for the
(13:29):
police when the administration finally gives up. Also on this
analysis at crimethink dot com that a lesson from the
George Floyd uprising in Capital letters, you see that was
another one of their productions. It's best to come to
all demonstrations with goggles, gas masks, laser pointers and shields.
(13:53):
You never know what a casual sleepover might become. New
York City police say nearly half of the protesters arrested
at Columbia and City College campuses. We're not students, were
not students. So you have these administrators like gene Blocked,
(14:14):
the chancellor at UCLA.
Speaker 1 (14:18):
Refusing to remove.
Speaker 2 (14:22):
A lot of people who weren't students, weren't faculty. They
were just crazy people off the street getting paid to
disrupt people's lives. And who lost out The students who
wanted to go to class and study for exams or
take their exams. That's you've lost out because gene Block.
(14:43):
It's too stupid to understand what's going on. There is
a very very strong, connected leftist movement in this country
and they're having a heyday. And the thing is they're
picking on the institutions and people who's who share their ideology.
(15:03):
These are leftists, embarrassing leftists. The UCLA administration and faculty
are a bunch of leftists, but this radical group turns
on them because there's one small area of disagreement. Your
your endowment is investing in companies that do business with Israel.
Speaker 1 (15:26):
Got more coming up.
Speaker 3 (15:29):
You're listening to John Cobels on demand from KFI AM
six forty.
Speaker 2 (15:35):
Coming up in the next segment, the story of how
did four hundred and fifty pounds of pig wast get
dumped in Gardena? And now my big pig wast? Are
we talking about?
Speaker 5 (15:52):
Whop?
Speaker 2 (15:54):
You know I read a story which made it sound
like it was it was pig parts.
Speaker 5 (15:58):
Oh no, I'd rather hear about poop.
Speaker 1 (16:00):
That I picked this story out for you.
Speaker 5 (16:03):
Yeah, I know you did. I don't want to hear
about pig parts.
Speaker 2 (16:06):
Well, this place in guard this area in Guardena is
like really really disgusting. There's a lot of garbage being
dumped all over the place. There are a lot of
those homeless RVs. It's La County. Apparently there's no government there.
The La County Supervisor Holly Mitchell, who is like one
of the most incompetent politicians on the planet. That's our district,
(16:28):
and apparently she's incapable of getting the RVs removed, stopping
the garbage from being dumped, and even four hundred and
fifty pounds of pig waste. So anyway, we got a
we got a clip we're gonna play from Channel four
is Channel four notes Channel eleven, and we're gonna we're
gonna talk about that coming up, because you know, it
seems like we should be in modern times now. You know,
(16:49):
we're in a big city, modern times. We've paid billions
of dollars in taxes. There shouldn't be four hundred and
fifty pounds a pig wist laying in the hot sun. Now,
just to follow up, we were telling you about the
Wall Street Journal article on the website called crime Think,
which is an extensive how to manual to put on
(17:12):
these protests. And it looks like at least half of
the protesters in Columbia and City College in New York,
we're not students, they're these professionals. And you're going to
hear Paul Morrow come up on the show at two
o'clock and he's going to have a lot of details
on this. He is a former NYPD inspector, headed the
NYPD Legal Bureau, has led their Intelligence, Operations and Analysis Bureau,
(17:37):
and he's on TV all the time talking about this stuff.
And I heard him yesterday, and it's like, this guy
knows exactly what's going on here, and this is what
the truth is.
Speaker 1 (17:47):
Now.
Speaker 2 (17:49):
I saw this story about the UCLA protest, and I
don't know. I guess we're supposed to be sad. After
you have your big jimbree camp and you stamp your
feet and you bang your drum and you have your
little grievance circle and you stay up all night and
it's really cool and you pretend that you're going to
(18:09):
fight off the police. And then the police come in
and they destroy your camp, put you in ziptize and
send you home to mommy and daddy. What's it look
like the next day, Well, they cleaned up U see
La real fast. I don't know who did it. I
(18:31):
don't know if it was the UCLA crew or not.
But if they cleaned it up so fast, I don't
know why they didn't do this a couple of weeks ago.
But the La Times had a story about with the
help of bulldozers, tents, chairs, yoga.
Speaker 5 (18:50):
Mats, we got to get your exercise.
Speaker 2 (18:54):
You know what it's funny is, in addition to all
the like the hateful death to Jews chant, there's kind
of an.
Speaker 1 (19:01):
Overlay of this new age healthy were the sage too.
Speaker 2 (19:09):
It's like it's like the the grievance circle that they
were having and they picked up the yoga mats and
guess what, it all got thrown into a large gray dumpster.
That's that's what happens the day after your your big,
your big party, everything goes into the garbage. Now, what
(19:29):
did you do with your life over the last two
weeks except commit crimes and maybe get expelled from school,
because ultimately Israel is still bombing Gaza and they're not
going to stop, and we're still sending money and weapons
and that's not going to stop. And u c l
A's en downment is still invested, perhaps in companies that.
Speaker 1 (19:51):
Supply the weaponry to Israel.
Speaker 2 (19:54):
And even if they sold their stock, so what somebody
else bought it. So what did you do? I don't
get it. Really call in explain what did you accomplish?
Did you raise awareness?
Speaker 1 (20:07):
Perhaps?
Speaker 2 (20:10):
They write in the story packages of unopened plastic water
bottles lay on the grass.
Speaker 1 (20:15):
Well, that is not environmentally sensitive.
Speaker 2 (20:18):
I tell you these protesters, they engage in so much
environmental degradation. They do plastic water bottles dare they nearby?
Two white trucks held pieces of wood that had been
used by protesters to barricade the camp. Would would so
they exploited trees. They not only threw plastic water bottles
(20:45):
on the ground, they killed trees. A group of four
graduate students from UCLA walked over to Dixon Court where
the encampment once stood, and then they learned the camp
had been taken down. Jimbree class is closed. Grant students
(21:06):
came bearing donations. They bought water chips, masks, and protective
eyewear so that when the police start firing rubber bullets,
they wouldn't get one in the eye. And now with
the UCLI camp destroyed, some protesters think the momentum might
(21:27):
have stalled.
Speaker 1 (21:28):
Oh you think.
Speaker 6 (21:30):
They can't interrupt people's you know, studying for finals, trying
to get a good grade, trying to graduate.
Speaker 2 (21:37):
Yeah, the narcissism is astounding, though, the self delusion is astounding.
I'll be there's not one day in my life where
I thought I could stop a war. You know, I've
been I've been reading this week about the Vietnam War.
Because everybody likes to look at as they're their north stone.
(22:00):
It's like, oh yeah, it's just like in the sixties
the Villa. Now, how long the Vietnam War went out
after nineteen sixty eight, remember I don't if you've ever
seen any old video, but they basically destroyed the Democratic
National Convention, and there was all kinds of protests in
college campuses and that went on through umber. In nineteen
seventy was Kent State when the National Guard killed for students,
(22:22):
and that was a huge controversy, and it went.
Speaker 1 (22:25):
On and on.
Speaker 2 (22:26):
But from the start of the protests, which I think
go back all the way like nineteen sixty seven, sixty six, the.
Speaker 1 (22:35):
War went on to nineteen seventy three, but the US
in it.
Speaker 2 (22:39):
In fact, the war wasn't over till nineteen seventy five
when the North Vietnamese won.
Speaker 1 (22:45):
And bowled over into South Vietnam.
Speaker 2 (22:49):
All those protests didn't do it any Now, I understand
why they're protesting. I mean I would have too, because
I certainly would not want to be drafted and get
killed from a stupid war. So I always thought that
those protests made sense because literally your life is on
the line. I mean I would I would want to
go to to that war. I would have gone to
(23:12):
Canada too, But under no circumstances did those protests stop
the war? And under those circumstances will these protests stop
a war in another country that we're not directly involved in?
Speaker 1 (23:27):
And I don't know what.
Speaker 2 (23:28):
If you really believe in the cause, why don't you
go to Israel in protest? Seriously? And if you're if
you're you're raw, raw for the Palestinians, join Hamas, Please
go ahead, They'll take you. Did you see a run
is offering scholarships at one of their colleges? They are.
They've been running coverage of the protests at at UCLA
(23:53):
and everywhere else on Iranian TV and they have if
you get if you got felled from UCLA, University of
Teyront will take you tomorrow.
Speaker 1 (24:04):
All expense is paid. You got a deal there? All right?
We come back.
Speaker 2 (24:09):
The mystery of the big waste, uh Guardina, four hundred
and fifty pounds of pig waste?
Speaker 1 (24:17):
Exactly what it was it made of? Who dumped it,
where did it go?
Speaker 5 (24:20):
And why?
Speaker 1 (24:21):
And why? Because you can't even take looking at bacon no.
Speaker 6 (24:26):
And you know what, I had to fish out a
dead bird today and a little fountain that we have.
Speaker 5 (24:31):
That was very sad.
Speaker 1 (24:32):
Oh my whole day. Oh so you're pretty shook up
as it is.
Speaker 5 (24:35):
Yeah, now we got to talk about pig waste.
Speaker 1 (24:37):
I wish you should have told me. I wouldn't.
Speaker 5 (24:39):
I actually forgot about it.
Speaker 1 (24:41):
You know what kind of a bird?
Speaker 5 (24:43):
It was just a tiny little bird. I don't know.
Speaker 6 (24:44):
I should have taken a picture because you probably would
have known what kind I think it smashed into.
Speaker 5 (24:49):
I don't actually, I don't know how.
Speaker 2 (24:51):
It's like its first flight didn't go well. Yes, I
think that might be the side of the fountain, a
drowned See birds having a worse day than you are.
Speaker 5 (25:01):
That's true.
Speaker 3 (25:02):
You're listening to John Cobels on demand from KFI Am
six forty.
Speaker 2 (25:08):
We're gonna have Paul Morrill come on after at two
o'clock to explain what's behind these protests, the organizations. It's
quite a labyrinth of money and organized shock troops. It's
it's not innocent college students, not by a long shot.
Paul Morrow, former NYPD inspector, had a legal bureau there
(25:31):
leader their intelligence, Operations and Analysis bureau. He knows this stuff.
All right, we're gonna play this report. It's not too long.
It's from Fox eleven Hayley Winslow. Okay, what was the
four hundred and fifty pounds of pig waste? What was
it made of? And why was it dumped in Gardina?
Here's the whole story.
Speaker 7 (25:49):
Even though it's not part of their district. The Harbor
Gateway Chamber of Commerce organized public works to pick up
the rotting pork on Wednesday morning. It was right here
you can see somebody has already dumped more trash that's
attracting flies and is really stinky. It's a problem that
only seems to be getting worse.
Speaker 4 (26:07):
When I turned the corner my window down, it smelled
like a dead body.
Speaker 7 (26:11):
Four hundred and fifty pounds of rotting pig and this
is the third time, about a month ago, same thing,
but a thousand pounds of rotten meat. Businesses say the
illegal dumping has been a constant problem in East Guardina
and the surrounding unincorporated La County for the past couple
of years. Is home to that massive homeless RV encampment.
(26:32):
We've taken you too many times.
Speaker 1 (26:34):
They do it all the time. On use to edge.
Speaker 7 (26:37):
Jeff Holler, who provides equipment to our local ports, plans
to move his company elsewhere.
Speaker 8 (26:42):
It's a third world country. There's been shootings, yes, it's
that's part of the take of it too. There's drug dealing,
there's murders, there's assaults, there's prostitution.
Speaker 1 (26:55):
You guys come by here after six, so it's really dangerous.
Speaker 7 (27:00):
Just you know, Miramante's manufactures hair and body cosmetics right
here on Bredondo Beach Boulevard and says the pig meat
is bringing in the wrong kind of business. Baby rats
like these and bucks.
Speaker 1 (27:11):
Boxes full of flies on top of the meat. They're
just like it really happened. So it was still fresh.
Speaker 7 (27:22):
Despite constant community cleanups like this one on Broadway and
one hundred and thirty third, it just keeps coming back
human ways from brat.
Speaker 5 (27:31):
No food that's been here for maybe months.
Speaker 1 (27:35):
We clean up today, tomorrow will be the Saints.
Speaker 7 (27:37):
And that's exactly how the Harbor Gateway Chamber of Commerce
volunteers caught the pig waste culprit pork ribs in boxes.
Speaker 4 (27:45):
So we went through the boxes, we found the serial number,
We called the company in Colorado.
Speaker 1 (27:50):
We were able to figure.
Speaker 4 (27:51):
Out who the distributor was, so we believe it's a
local restaurant that's dumping.
Speaker 2 (27:55):
Ah.
Speaker 7 (27:56):
It is absolutely foul out here. So LASD is going
to put a care. I'm right on the other side
of this fence. They already installed one just down the
street from here. Business owners are hoping more cameras like
this one nearby and proven successful will help save their
sanity and livelihoods. And he's Guardina. I'm Hailey Winslow Fox
(28:16):
eleven News.
Speaker 2 (28:17):
So it's a restaurant and that's their unsold meat. Yeah,
and the unsold meat, that's a lot of unsold meat.
That's probably a bad restaurant. Customers aren't buying the meat
for whatever reason.
Speaker 6 (28:30):
I had a vision in my head that it was
body parts, uncooked body parts.
Speaker 5 (28:37):
So this is big.
Speaker 6 (28:38):
Yeah, not this is disgusting, but not as disgusting as
where I went.
Speaker 2 (28:44):
But Holly Mitchell is the La County supervisor and she's
just dreadful. And you can see when you have someone
like Holly Mitchell as your major, your lead government official,
this is what you get. You get, you know, hundreds
and hundreds of pounds of rotting pork, You get flies,
get rats, you get all kinds of bugs and then
all the crimes that are taking place there, and then
(29:07):
you have the RVs, and of course the people in
those RVs they're flushing all their waste out in the
street as well.
Speaker 5 (29:14):
What was that quote, it's the third world country.
Speaker 2 (29:17):
Yeah, that's an insult to third world countries. I've been
to third world countries. I've never seen or heard of
anything like that. But good job, Holly, good job. You're
the best at what you do. And last election she
won easily. She doesn't have to go into a runoff
in November. People love her in that district, like you're
(29:37):
doing a great job, Holly, excellent. This has been going
on for two years, two years, and you can't stop
some idiot restaurant dumping their pig waste, their pig meat.
When we come back, this will be interesting. Paul More
with NYPD used to be an inspector head of the
(29:57):
Legal Bureau Intelligence operations. He's an attorney and he knows
exactly who is supplying the manpower, the logistics, the supplies
the strategy for these demonstrations turned riots at the colleges,
and he's going to talk about it we come back. Hey,
you've been listening to the John Cobalt Show podcast. You
(30:17):
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