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December 12, 2024 35 mins

ABC News reporter Brad Garrett joins John on the show to talk about Luigi Mangione and what could have led him to the assassination. Defense lawyer Thomas Dickey holds an impromptu press conference to challenge the charges against his client Luigi Mangione. California State representative Carl DeMaio joins the show to talk to John about new policies protecting Immigrant rapist and convicts.

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Can't.

Speaker 2 (00:01):
I am six forty.

Speaker 1 (00:02):
You're listening to the John Cobel podcast on the iHeartRadio
app Live.

Speaker 2 (00:06):
Everywhere on the iHeartRadio app. Welcome.

Speaker 1 (00:10):
We'ren every day from one until four o'clock and anything
you missed you can hear on the new, improved, revised
iHeartRadio app. It's rolling out today and maybe when you
update your iHeart app it'll give you the new version.
Maybe it won't, but it'll happen over the next few days,
So keep trying because we'll be explaining this over the

(00:33):
next few days what you can do with your app.
We're gonna have Assemblyman Carl Demaion, newly elected Republican out
of San Diego, and he's going to come on and
talk about a new San Diego County law that well,
a new policy that will prohibit San Diego County law

(00:54):
enforcement from contacting ice without a warrant even when they
have a legal aliens in the county accused of serious crimes.
That new policy is now in effect. We're going to
talk with Carl Demayo coming up. All right, let's get
Brad Garrett on ABC News Crime and Terrorism analyst and

(01:15):
about Luigi Mangione and one fascinating angle of this is
how did he get to be this crazy and violent?
There was nothing in his background for nearly his entire
life that would suggest any of this was possible. Brad,
how are you?

Speaker 3 (01:34):
I'm good, John. Thanks.

Speaker 2 (01:37):
It looks like he was radicalized.

Speaker 1 (01:40):
And the first comparison I thought of was, occasionally we
get these American kids who get radicalized and suddenly they're
flying to Syria and they want to join ISIS, and
they get this through online indoctrination videos.

Speaker 2 (01:59):
What do they think the process here was?

Speaker 3 (02:02):
It has to be without knowing obviously, John, it has
to be some version of that. I mean, you take
a kid that's without repeating, you know, you know, he's
had a great life of influential family, the best schools,
has a master's degree in engineer in the computer science.

Speaker 4 (02:21):
He's really smart.

Speaker 3 (02:22):
He's goes looking, he was well liked, and then six
months ago he just disappears. I mean, he cuts everybody off.
I mean to the point where his mother got concerned
that two weeks before the shooting, she took out a
missing person report on him in San Francisco, because I

(02:42):
assume that's the last location she had for him. And
so what happened in those six months. But I would
contend maybe even beyond that as far as sort of
dabbling in the whole idea of wrongs that occur and
the only way that you can correct those wrongs is

(03:03):
through violence. So quickly it's basically for stages of radicalization.
The first one is someone becomes intrigued with this sort
of extremest way of thinking. Do you just describe isis
it's the perfect example. They pull kids in or other
people in, and you know, they pay attention to them,
they give them a purpose, They make life very black

(03:25):
and white, and once you get somebody interested in that,
Stage two is where they believe what you're talking about
and what you're pushing. And then stage three is you
believe that violence is the only way to go at
whatever the injustice is. In Stage four is committing a

(03:48):
violent act, which obviously occurred last week. So he had
some of that has happened to him, because you can't
take a kid that was like, you know, three or
four years ago was what I just described. You know
now you know is taking credit and actually it's sort
of arrogant almost you know, some of his language and

(04:08):
there's written notes about you know, whacking the CEO. I
mean it's it's worded in such a way he clearly
feels he's on the right side here for committing this act.

Speaker 2 (04:20):
And he just discovered this.

Speaker 1 (04:22):
I mean, people have been complaining about health insurance and
the medical system for decades and decades. You know, it's
like a single and solvable problem of the last you know,
fifty years, and now he just discovered that. Because he's
a worldly kid. You know, he isn't from he wasn't

(04:43):
neglected and isolated. I mean it must have been, you know,
part of his education process.

Speaker 3 (04:52):
I just think that whatever happened to him, I mean,
if you look at without knowing a whole lot about him, Yeah,
he graduates from the University of Pennsylvania with a master's degree,
but he never takes on a job that sort of
applies his education. He floats around the world. There's some

(05:12):
reporting that he may have gone to Japan some other places. Obviously,
I think money is not an issue based on what
I see in the family.

Speaker 1 (05:20):
Yeah, you know, I thought it was kind of odd
that he ended up here in Santa Monica working for
a used car online company.

Speaker 3 (05:28):
Yeah, under you know, underperforming probably not challenging job based
on his education, based on his experience, et cetera. So
he floats through all this stuff and then he gets
injured at some point, I think, and of why to
his back gets injured. He has maybe one surgery or
one procedure that doesn't work. He has a second surgery

(05:48):
apparently that did work. And you know, did that sort
of bend his ear toward the whole healthcare thing and
he jumped into it then saw what a message is
and maybe from his perspective, how corrupt it may be,
and or you know, not covering people that are really sick,
or covering only half of their illness issues, whatever it

(06:11):
might be, there's something that are and maybe John is
bigger than that. Maybe it's the whole corporate CEO, the
control of sort of big business, if you will, of
the rest of us. We'll see if there's writings that
go to that. We don't know enough other than people
like me surmising based on experience and his behavior as

(06:35):
to clearly radicalization in some former fashion clearly happened with
him because he wouldn't have written what he's written. And
you know that that outrage that he went into when
the officers, you're trying to get him into the courthouse,
you know where he starts screaming that. You know, he's
clearly believes that he's done the right thing here, and

(06:57):
the rest of us should understand that and believe that
you can't resolve these issues unless you step the violence.

Speaker 1 (07:07):
I wonder if he still feels that way now sitting
in jail. He may end up with a life sentence.
I always wondered, when does it dawn on these these radicals,
these warriors that whow that that got a little overheated,
because now I'm screwed forever.

Speaker 3 (07:25):
Yeah, and you know that eight x ten with no
window gets old after a couple of hours. So uh so, yeah,
I don't know, but yeah, he's in the evidence against him.
We don't even have to go through it. I mean,
that just goes on and on.

Speaker 2 (07:37):
It's it's it's obvious, that's that's the thing.

Speaker 1 (07:40):
And he has he really has no way out with
an insanity plead because this was too well well uh
planned and executed. He clearly is in complete command of
his faculties.

Speaker 3 (07:52):
I totally agree. So, yeah, he has no avenues here.
You know, could lawyers then go after if you can't
go after the case because it's so good, then you
go after the procedures or the process in the case.
You know, like, well, the shell cases weren't corrected restored properly,
or the DNA was not tested quickly enough, or whatever
it might be. I don't think that'll get him anywhere,

(08:13):
but that's tends to be where defense attorneys go when
the case is so solid.

Speaker 1 (08:19):
I just wonder about just I don't know, I don't
even know how to describe it. The personality type. Because
he comes from such a privileged background and was such
a high achiever, there had to have been something in
him that everybody missed. Or is this like an onset
of a mental illness of some sort. You know how

(08:40):
schizophrenia hits a young man often in their late teens
early mid twenties. I just wonder if this is a
cousin of it somehow, because how could you be on
the straight and narrow by everybody's estimation and then suddenly
veer off like you know, like you said, he graduates
college and basically goes nowhere, just drifts around for several years.

Speaker 3 (09:00):
Yeah, I think you can't underestimate how once these people
sort of fall into the rabbit hole they see on
the into the ideology rabbit hole. Yeah, that they basically
wipe out. It becomes the most important thing in their life.
So everything up to that point in their life has
no meaning until they get to this. And now his

(09:22):
life has meaning. Now I realized that is a huge jump.
But what else? How else could you describe it based
on how he planned it, how he did it when
he says, you know in notebooks, it'll be really interesting
to look at more of his writings. And then once
and I'm super law enforcements already into is his social

(09:42):
media internet traffic? You know, who was he talking to?
Who was you know, part of at least this philosophy.

Speaker 4 (09:50):
My guess is he.

Speaker 3 (09:51):
Did this alone. He planned it alone, but you know
other people were there to cheer him on at some point.

Speaker 1 (09:57):
I got another minute. But there's one quote mentioned this
yesterday and that jumped out of me. Did you see
his quote about Pythagoras and the Pythagorean theorem.

Speaker 3 (10:07):
I did not see that with all the stuff on
the owner armor.

Speaker 1 (10:09):
But yeah, sometimes when sometime when he was in school,
they taught him the Pythagorean theorem and he said, It
bummed me out because I realized most of the great
math discoveries have already happened. There's not much more to do.
And I wish I was born during Pythagoras's time, and
then I could have been an historic figure. I would

(10:32):
have been known forever.

Speaker 3 (10:35):
What that certainly goes to meaningful life, right, Yeah, that
he didn't feel like and that is distorted to this
sounds that he's now found a meaningful life. Yeah, at
least short term in what he's pulled off.

Speaker 1 (10:49):
Yeah, but I mean there was some desire that he
wanted to end up larger than life. And nobody's going
to forget my name.

Speaker 3 (10:56):
Well that'll be true now, at least for a while.

Speaker 2 (10:58):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (10:59):
All right, Brad, good talk talking with you as always,
Thank you for coming on.

Speaker 3 (11:02):
You're welcome to take care of John's rat.

Speaker 1 (11:04):
Garrett ABC News Crime and Terrorism analyst And oh, you
know what I wanted to play. I wanted to play
some of the I didn't play the attorney yet, did
I Some I Okay, sometimes I lose track of what
I've done, and then sometimes I talk about something and
I can't remember if I talked about it on the
air or off the air.

Speaker 2 (11:22):
It's okay, John, yep, just like like this.

Speaker 1 (11:25):
Doing this is like a three hours of unreality and
then I don't remember did I have this discussion in
real life or in radio life.

Speaker 2 (11:32):
That's what happens when we get old. I'm just saying,
I am uh. It's just one long downhill slide from here,
is it?

Speaker 4 (11:43):
It really is?

Speaker 2 (11:44):
Every day is another little half step down the hill.

Speaker 5 (11:47):
You're listening to John Cobelt on demand from KFI A
six forty.

Speaker 2 (11:53):
Coming up at three point thirty. Karl Demayo's coming on.

Speaker 1 (11:56):
He's one of the new assemblymen uh in the San
Diego area, And there is a new policy in San
Diego County that's going to prohibit law enforcement from contacting
ICE without a warrant when they have illegal aliens accused
of serious crimes. I'm sure nobody in San Diego really
wants this to happen, right, Do you want criminal illegal

(12:19):
aliens suspected of committing crimes not turned over to ICE?

Speaker 2 (12:24):
Not?

Speaker 1 (12:26):
I mean that your local law enforcement can't call ICE. Really,
that's what the public wants. No, We'll talk to Carl
DeMaio about it. Coming up. We were talking with Brad
Garrett for maybe she knews on Luigi Mangione and Mengeone
has this attorney. He's kind of comes across like a

(12:48):
small town attorney. His name is Thomas Dicky and he's
one of these characters. He's like Thomas Dickie. He is
playing a role, and he knows he's playing a role,
and his role is to bs the reporters, and the

(13:09):
reporters will write down all his nonsense, like the other
day when he said that he hadn't seen any evidence
that connects his client Luigi Mangione to the crime, the
shooting in New York City, and everybody dutifully writes that down.
And he's so full of crap. It's what I was
talking about right at the start of the show. Everybody

(13:29):
in public life just lies, and the media amplifies the lie.
And whether it's whether it's healthcare executives saying that the
health of their clients are their top priority, whether it's
it's these attorneys, and it obviously politicians, people in the media,

(13:53):
everybody's just full of it. Well, listen to this guy,
Thomas Dickey got a clip to play.

Speaker 6 (14:00):
Haven't seen any evidence that says that he's a shooter.
So that's you know, like I like I said earlier,
and I wasn't kidding around a couple of things. If
you're going to report something, report accurately, and remember, and
this is not just a small thing. The fundamental concept
of American justice as a resumption of innocent and until
you're proven guilt to be on the reason doubt. And
I've seen zero evidence at this point. What are his

(14:22):
feelings right now?

Speaker 4 (14:23):
He seems not spoken.

Speaker 6 (14:24):
Well all I can well, you know, he's all you know.

Speaker 2 (14:28):
Stop stop at a second.

Speaker 1 (14:31):
It's presumption of his innocence in a court of law,
which means they cannot permanently take away Luigi Manjjonne's freedom
because he hasn't been officially convicted yet. It doesn't mean
he's innocent. They always act like, well, we don't know
if it happened, Well, yes it happened. Well you can't

(14:52):
say it. Well, yes I can say that. I can
say Luigia Mangione killed Brian Thompson as I saw it
with my own eyes on the video, So yes, I
can say it, and it happens to be true. He's
innocent until proven guilty only within the confines of the
courtroom and the trial, which I wish somebody in a

(15:16):
news report for once would say, play some more.

Speaker 6 (15:21):
Well, oh I can't. Well, you know, he's allus. You
know I said earlier, use your common sense. If you
for yourself and you or a loved one in that position,
it's you know, a natural I think, to go through
many emotional stays. As far as him not talking, as
long as I'm going to be the lawyer, I'm going
to do all the talking.

Speaker 4 (15:40):
You you really feel that your clients should be out
in the public. You do not feel that he's a
pressed y.

Speaker 6 (15:45):
Yeah. Now, you got to understand when you set bail.
The judge could set a million dollar bail, it could
be five million dollar bail, but you know, damn it,
you get bail. That's what you do. And like I said,
anytime you look at the criminal justice system, pretend you're
that one in that spotlight. You're going to want to
be out.

Speaker 1 (16:01):
Stop stop stopping this. Imagine you are in the criminal
justice system.

Speaker 2 (16:04):
I'm not. I didn't kill anybody.

Speaker 1 (16:06):
I haven't killed anyone, So I'm not imagining that if
I killed somebody, they shouldn't let me out on bail.

Speaker 2 (16:16):
The hell's wrong with him. They let him out on bail.

Speaker 1 (16:19):
He's gonna kill a healthcare official in Pennsylvania. You don't
think the guy. The guy made a gun out of
his printer. For God's sakes, he made a three D
gun out of a machine.

Speaker 2 (16:30):
He ordered parts in the mail.

Speaker 1 (16:33):
You let him out on bail. He can get one
of those machines. He'll have a mailing address. He'll want
to take out another guy before he goes to prison.
I hate that argue.

Speaker 2 (16:46):
I guess it's.

Speaker 1 (16:46):
Small town lawyer argument. Well, you know if it happened
to you, well, it's not happening to me. I'm not
a murderous psycho. Secondly, I should be put away.

Speaker 2 (16:56):
I've had enough when we come back. Carl Demyo.

Speaker 1 (17:01):
Apparently people in San Diego County don't even know this,
but San Diego Board of Supervisors approved a resolution.

Speaker 2 (17:13):
Giving this is hard to believe. I'm going to read
this out loud.

Speaker 1 (17:15):
This is from News Nation giving immigrants accused or convicted
of rape and kidnapping more protection than they have under
California's existing sanctuary laws. I don't know how this happens,
but I guess it passed and State Assembly. When Carl Demyo,

(17:37):
just got elected last month, is going to explain this.

Speaker 5 (17:40):
You heard me, you're listening to John Cobel's on demand
from KFI A six forty.

Speaker 1 (17:48):
Carl Demayo's coming on with us easy Assimilarly from San
Diego County, recently elected last month, he has been one
of the leading advocates for UH taxpayers and the people
who've been oppressed by the California government for all these years.

(18:10):
This is unbelievable in San Diego County. I had to
read this three times. This is from News Nation. The
San Diego County Board of Supervisors voted this week on
a resolution that gives illegal immigrants accused or convicted of
things like rape or kidnapping more protection than they have

(18:31):
under California's existing sanctuary laws.

Speaker 2 (18:35):
Rape and kidnappers get.

Speaker 1 (18:38):
More protection than the rape and kidnappers in the rest
of the state.

Speaker 2 (18:43):
In San Diego County. This is how that What the
hell is this?

Speaker 1 (18:48):
Well, We're going to get Carl demon to talk about this.
This is unimaginable, inexplicable. I'm out of words here. Can
you possibly tell us what's going on here?

Speaker 4 (19:02):
It's pure and unadulterated insanity. That's what it is. Basically,
The San Diego County Board of Supervisors yesterday voted to
make San Diego County what I'm calling a super sanctuary city.
It goes way beyond the California sanctuary state law SB
fifty four that was passed in twenty seventeen. What it

(19:24):
basically does is says that no government official, no law enforcement,
court officer, facilities manager, may cooperate in any way with
the federal government when there's anything having to do with
an illegal immigrant. Now, let me be very clear that

(19:46):
that means that if someone's in this country illegally under
this policy and they're actively committing a crime, maybe they're
a member of a terrorist organization, provided that they're not
here legally. This policy technically says, we can't work with
the FDI, we can't work with the DOJ, We can't
work with Homeland Security or anyone for that matter, in

(20:09):
any respect whatsoever. It's not just confined deportation and border enforcement.
In addition, the policy demands that the Chief Administrative Officer
of the San Diego County government opened an investigation for
the last two years of cooperation that sheriff's deputies and

(20:29):
court officials may have participated in to basically go after
sheriff's deputies and government officials for what they've done in
the last two years to cooperate with immigration and border patrol.
This is dangerous and it shows they don't care about
our safety because they would rather protect criminals and put
them back out on the street than to actually cooperate

(20:52):
with the incoming Trump administration to get criminals off of
our streets.

Speaker 1 (20:57):
Going through this news story, it would protect rape and
kidnapping convict.

Speaker 2 (21:06):
Also gang activity weapons.

Speaker 1 (21:10):
Yes, I mean all the seriously, who in San Diego
County wants.

Speaker 4 (21:17):
To no exceptions, no exceptions to the policy, No exceptions
exceptions to the policy. The good news is that the sheriff,
who technically is a Democrat, she was elected as a Democrat.
The San Diego County Sheriff put out an immediate statement
saying that she feels what the San Diego County Board

(21:38):
of Supervisors just did was unlawful, it's unenforceable, she does
not plan to comply with it. She's duly elected. She
is going to do her job, and I have to
applaud her for standing up and speaking clearly. But my
concern is this sheriffs come and go. And what it
also does is it sends a message to rank and
file law enforcement sheriff's deputies, quarterficial that they may very

(22:01):
well be prosecuted themselves for simply doing their job. Every
one of these individuals is swears an oath to uphold
the Constitution and to enforce the law, and yet they're
now being told that they will be investigated and potentially punished,
including possible imprisonment, including termination from their position, if they

(22:25):
engage in any of these activities.

Speaker 1 (22:28):
When did these progressives, and you know this is part
of their sick religion, when did they make the jump
from protecting illegal aliens to protecting violent criminal illegal aliens,
violent terrorists, illegal aliens.

Speaker 4 (22:45):
What's probably around the same probably around the same time
that they decided that boys should be able to go
into girls sports and that we should tap taxpayer funding
of transgender surgeries. This is all insanity. All of these
policies are absolutely insane. It does not fit with where
Democrat voters, Republican voters, and everyone in between sits. This

(23:06):
is true extremism, and yet they are doing it because
they are only listening to the farthest extreme left voices
in their party. They're certainly not listening to the people
because everyone I've heard from Democrat voters included, are not
happy with this policy. They are actually offended with it.

Speaker 1 (23:25):
Now I understand just telling me the county sheriff said
they're not going to go along with this policy. But
I mean is like you said, the next sheriff could
could have a different opinion. Could they go after the
sheriff because she will they implemented. Could she be up
on charges in some way?

Speaker 4 (23:45):
Yes, they could.

Speaker 2 (23:46):
They could go.

Speaker 4 (23:47):
After her budget because they have to approve her budget.
But what I will tell you is that there is
a chilling effect. When a sheriff's deputy hears that there's
now a county administrator who's been asked with investigating anything
they do in the next two years in the prior
two years, then they're going to worry that, well, maybe

(24:08):
the policy changes that the sheriff has and then I'm
in trouble, even though I was doing what the sheriff
told me to do. Again, there's no place for this
law there. It actually puts us at risk. It makes
our safety less and we should be working with ice
and the federal government and border patrol to secure our homeland.

(24:29):
I mean President Trump has said what he wants to
do is focus on people with criminal records who shouldn't
be here, who are committing crimes. What that means is
if you can get someone deported who has a criminal
record and has been engaging in a pattern of crime,
what it means is we have less crime victims in
the United States, less crime in our neighborhoods. And who
would be against that? For goodness sakes? Apparently the border supervisors,

(24:52):
a majority of them in San Diego County. And my
concern is that this bad policy it's going to spread.
That's what we saw in twenty fifteen, six exteen, and
seventeen with sanctuary cities, and then we became a sanctuary state.
I believe we're going to have proposals up and down
the state of California calling for super sanctuary cities and counties,
and eventually they're going to go to Sacramento and want
to do a super sanctuary state. And I'm dedicated to

(25:16):
fighting that with every fiber of my being.

Speaker 1 (25:19):
Well, anytime you want to discuss this further, because you're right,
this is probably going to spread because all their other
insane ideas have spread, there seems to be no way.

Speaker 2 (25:30):
I'm how much farther can they go?

Speaker 4 (25:33):
I would have can only imagined, One can only imagine.

Speaker 1 (25:37):
All right, very good, Carl, thank you again for coming on.
Carl Demayah, thanks so much. The assemblymen, and again the
San Diego County Board of Supervisors approved the policy that
illegal aliens accused or convicted of all kinds of violent
crimes like rape and kidnapping, gang activity, weapons offenses, they

(26:01):
have super sanctuary status. Nobody, no official in San Diego
County can help them, can can assist in reporting them
to ICE and getting them deported. San Diego, because of
its proximity to the border, has among the highest rates

(26:23):
of human trafficking and fentical trafficking in the United States.
I mean, this is an epicenter of drug and human trafficking.
And the idiots on the La County Supervisor Board, the
chairwoman is Nora Vargas. What a whack job, Nora Vargas.

(26:47):
And it's so crazy that the sheriff said, I'm not
going to follow this policy tomorrow, gonna have Jim Desbonon
in the Orange. The San Diego County supervisor who voted
against this. These people are sick, twisted out of control

(27:08):
and their day is over. Elsewhere in the country, progressivism
is dying or dead. I mean Eric Adams, the mayor
of New York City, said today he's thrown his lot
in with Tom Homan the borders are and Donald Trump
he's going to help them deport the criminals in the
terrorists in.

Speaker 2 (27:26):
New York City.

Speaker 1 (27:28):
San Diego County is providing extra protection to the criminals
and the terrorists, even if they've been convicted. Why are
we trapped in this state. It's like everybody else is
having a freedom party, and we've got another layer of
oppression added to our lives.

Speaker 5 (27:47):
Every day you're listening to John Cobels on demand from
KFI A six forty.

Speaker 1 (27:55):
And we got Conway coming up in minutes. This is
really crazy. We are run by such weirdos. The Attorney
General Rob Banta here in California, and this is out
of the California globe. Rob Bant is like a Newsome
mini me. He's another one of these pajama boy weasels.

(28:20):
A few years ago, they passed a bill requiring department
stores to have a gender neutral children's section with gender
neutral toys. Seriously, this past was assembly built ten eighty

(28:40):
four so that retailers could not engage in gender priced,
gender based pricing discrimination and reduces the imposition of gender
stereotypes on children. The kind of nonsense is this? The
hell does this even mean? Gender neutral toys? So you

(29:04):
have to put aside a section of toys that I
guess appeals neither to boys nor girls. Imagine you running
around a business and the government is telling you what
kind of toys, Uh, there's too many girls toys, too
many boys toys. What kind of message are you sending
me to the kids there? What are girls supposed to think?

(29:27):
I guess they want us all neutered. We're just going
to be just mutilate all our genitals, so we're all
a sexless unigender.

Speaker 2 (29:42):
But here's the twist now, just.

Speaker 1 (29:47):
In the last few weeks, Rob Bonta sent out a
message urging Californians to police the stores to make sure
they have gender neutral sections.

Speaker 2 (30:02):
In other words, you the shopper. Bonta wants you to
be a spy.

Speaker 1 (30:09):
Go into the department stores and check to see if
the toys are gender neutral or there's a gender neutral
section of toys, and he says, if you do not
see an adequate gender neutral products section in a large
retail department store and that you believe is covered by
this law, you may take pictures, document and file a

(30:30):
complaint with our office at OAG dot CA a dot
gov slash report. So you're gonna have these these these
Who the hell's gonna do that?

Speaker 2 (30:42):
Just weirdo activists.

Speaker 1 (30:49):
The The guy who came up with this bill Evan Lowe,
who by the way, has no children. It was the
bill was to make all kids feel welcome. I don't
think girls and boys were feeling unwelcome because there were

(31:10):
girls and boys toy sections. It would allow for a
freer shopping experience for both children and guardians. You know,
just that word guardians. I guess parents is on the
taboo list, right, like mother. Like they don't use mother
in a lot of government documents anymore. You're a birthing person,

(31:31):
now you're no longer a parent. The guardians and the kids,
the children would be able to shop for the items
the children would like to purchase without societal pressures. The
societal pressures you're standing in a department store, toy department.
This is about kids not feeling bad about what they

(31:51):
choose to purchase because of the store section it was
purchased from. Why is this the business of idiot pajama
boys and government? What is is there anything they won't control?
We got to follow up on this one. Good lord,

(32:11):
all right, we have Tim Conway ding a dog. Well,
the rain never materialized much, or at least in the
San Fernando Valley it didn't. You know, I don't know
if we're going to get any out of this because
they don't know what they're doing.

Speaker 2 (32:24):
Yeah, that's right, that's right.

Speaker 7 (32:26):
I mean, you know, the in the old days, you
know forecasting Mark Mark Thompson was the weather forecast.

Speaker 2 (32:32):
What is it that's right? That's right?

Speaker 7 (32:36):
Well, uh look it's it's a it's a fairly easy
job to do around here, you know, seventy.

Speaker 2 (32:42):
Five partly cloud and they blew it right. Yeah, there's
like six days of rain a year. They can't get that.

Speaker 7 (32:47):
Right, and sometimes they've blowed in a huge way. Dean
Sharp's coming on with us. That's a cool deal. The
family of this Hannah Hannah Kobiacci is offering refunds to
go fund me daughters. There's a lot going on with
the family not going on. Yeah, I know, it's weird.
The whole world is voting on it. Yeah, but you know,
it's weird how we as a society get go in

(33:09):
and out of stories with families, you know, with this
woman from Hawaii that was two weeks ago, and then
we're into this Luigi, you know, and Jeoni will be
into him for a little while, then we'll move on
to somebody else. We it's weird how we all like,
you know, there's not enough going on in our family. Well,
we got to worry about somebody else's family.

Speaker 1 (33:28):
Yeah, Well, it's easier to enjoy other people's dysfunction, that's right.

Speaker 7 (33:32):
And you know, a friend of mine told me this
from the racetrack. He said, if you take all your
problems like John Colevelt and Europe and your lovely wife Debra,
if you take all the problems you have, you know,
with your kids, your finances, your family, your communication, whatever,
and you put them all on the curb for people
to see. And then you walk around your neighborhood and

(33:53):
look at everybody else's problems because they put theirs on
the curb. You'd run home you would run home, grab
your problems, grab your wife and slam the door.

Speaker 2 (34:03):
It could be a lot worse out there. It is,
it is. It's a lot worse out there. It's crazy
out there.

Speaker 7 (34:10):
And then the city of Stanton is urging cameras with
recorded audio messages to help I decrease the prostitution out there.
So for fellas out there like go to Stanton and
get the prostitutes, that's coming to an end.

Speaker 1 (34:23):
Stanton, Yeah, stant Yeah, how do you know that? It's
got odd town to pick.

Speaker 7 (34:32):
Look, that is if you get in good with the cops,
they warn you before this, before the action comes. I
couldn't tell you where Stanton is either, all right, Yeah,
I think it's an Orange County. Probably a nervine belly.

Speaker 2 (34:48):
He is a nervine. A lot of prostitute. No, they
wouldn't do that.

Speaker 7 (34:53):
I bet there are a Nope, I bet there are
very few. No, that's not true. I bet there are
high end gals. Yeah, escorts in in Irvine.

Speaker 2 (35:00):
Irvine has escorts. Yeah, right, they're Stanton as.

Speaker 7 (35:03):
Prost I don't think Irvine has a street walker.

Speaker 2 (35:08):
They do not, they do not. How did she know?
I don't know?

Speaker 7 (35:13):
Is that their slogan, Irvine, we don't have street walkers,
only sports. Okay, the Madam has spoken, all right, Conway's
next big dog.

Speaker 1 (35:28):
Michael Krazer has the news live 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
kf I 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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