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December 3, 2025 31 mins

The John Kobylt Show Hour 3 (12/03) - Michael Monks comes on the show to talk about the LA County mask ban for federal law enforcement officials. More on how LA City Council delayed a decision to waive rebuilding fees for Palisades Fire victims. More on how much of a budget deficit California is facing because of Gov. Newsom.

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Speaker 1 (00:01):
I AM six forty. You're listening to the John Cobel
podcast on the iHeartRadio apps. We are on every day
from one until four after four o'clock John Cobelt Show
on demand the podcast and you could listen to what
you missed, same as the radio show. We want to
thank everybody for coming out to the pastathon yesterday. As
of this morning, it was the total of cash raise

(00:22):
nine hundred and fifty five thousand dollars over a million
by now, but I don't know where the counters are.
We never got an update and ninety two thousand plus
pounds of pasta and sauce. You can keep donating money
at the website CAFI AM six forty dot com Pastathon
all weekend right through Sunday night, and then you can
go to our sponsor partners. They're all listed on the

(00:44):
website as well, and you can engage with and donate
money there and take advantage of their promotions. And thank
you for enjoying the furry dance. I heard you were
a big I've had like everybody in the place today
mentioned that you really enjoyed the furry dance and that
deeply disturbs me.

Speaker 2 (01:04):
Oh well, you know. I didn't know that you had
it in you. Yeah, I suspected, but I didn't know.
It's quite a roar you've got. Well, thank you, King
of the Jungle. Indeed, Jule, listen to that. That is
a good roar.

Speaker 1 (01:22):
Where did I come from? Huh? Where does it come from?
All the anger and frustration I have living on this
planet makes it okay that that's what I buried. I've
told you how bottled up I am. Well, there's a
little glimpse to what's underneath. Well, see you could take
a pill or you could do that, and that that's right. See.
I don't go any therapy. I'm not taking any drugs.

(01:45):
I just out naked in the backyard every once in
a while on roar. That's what we call healthy masculinity.
That's all right. Onto the business of the day here,
Michael Monks KFI news He unfortunately, the LA County Supervisors
and LA City Council and now the LA County Supervisors

(02:07):
voted to ban ice agents from wearing masks. I mean,
Knewsom already did a state ban a few months ago,
and there have been local initiatives too.

Speaker 2 (02:18):
This is a policy that seems intended to communicate to
a certain constituency that hey, we're hearing you, we're doing
something about your concerns. But technically this does not seem
enforceable and it will most certainly be challenged. In fact,
Supervisor Jennis Han, who was a big proponent of this,

(02:38):
alongside Supervisor Lindsay Horvath, they co presented what they what's
called a motion to this effect. She held a news
conference before yesterday's vote, and here's part of what she
said about this.

Speaker 3 (02:48):
This ordinance will prohibit all law enforcement, local, state, and
federal from wearing masks or personal disguises while carrying out
their d the unincorporated areas of La County. We could
not stand by today and do nothing. Yes, this is
going to be argued in court. Yes, we will have

(03:13):
a judge ultimately decide the legality of what we're asking.
There is no anytime we have to stand up and
say that this kind of secret police hair rising our
county is unacceptable.

Speaker 1 (03:30):
So she is she serious or is she performing there?

Speaker 4 (03:35):
Right?

Speaker 2 (03:36):
I think she's serious because they did vote on it. Yeah,
so she presented it and they voted on it. This
does technically require a second vote. It's one of those
types of audiences. So they'll vote on it this week,
so she could give another self rite your speech next week. Yeah,
that could be on the schedule as well at next
week's supervisors meeting. You know, these meetings take nine hours
because there's so much talking they do. They literally take
nine hours every single Tuesday. That it's brutal.

Speaker 1 (03:59):
And and then and then, and her big moment is
announcing something that everybody knows is illegal. She can't control
what the federal government does, how they dress their law
enforcement agents. Bill A.

Speaker 2 (04:10):
Saley, whatever title we're giving him now over at the
US Attorney's the West first assistant exactly. It's something he
tweeted out that this is. You know, the federal government
does not have to answer to the local government. This
is a federal law and it Trump's whatever county policy
that they put out.

Speaker 1 (04:25):
Don't you learn that in third grade? You do learn
the different branches of government.

Speaker 2 (04:29):
And you know, there have been some court battles over
immigration enforcement that have gone the way of the local
or state governments against the federal governments. This one doesn't
seem to be stacked in their favor, though you heard
Jennis Han there the supervisors say this will be challenged
in court.

Speaker 1 (04:46):
We will have a judge says you're gonna lose in
five minutes. I mean, even if you get a don't
be judge, the Court of Appeals of the Supreme Court
is gonna block this thing. By the way, since the
state ban was put into effect, are you aware of
any federal ice agent who has been arrested by state
law enforcement for wearing a mask?

Speaker 2 (05:06):
Well, what would you do if you saw a federal
agent behaving in a way that you, as an individual
thought was unlawful or unconstitutional?

Speaker 1 (05:15):
Who were you supposed to call? If you don't know
the answer to that question? John?

Speaker 2 (05:19):
Incidentally, just today, California Attorney General Rob Bonte has announced
a special website where you.

Speaker 1 (05:26):
Can do just that.

Speaker 2 (05:27):
He's announced this new portal that is designed to report
misconduct by federal agents.

Speaker 1 (05:34):
Here's what the Attorney General said just a couple hours ago.

Speaker 5 (05:37):
Federal agents can enforce federal laws.

Speaker 1 (05:42):
If they do it lawfully.

Speaker 5 (05:44):
No one should interfere or obstruct with lawful actions.

Speaker 1 (05:47):
Federal agents take that's what the law requires, and everyone
should follow that law.

Speaker 5 (05:52):
But federal agents can't operate outside.

Speaker 1 (05:56):
The bounds of the constitution.

Speaker 5 (05:59):
This portal gives Californians a safe, accessible way to share
what they've seen so we can review it, so we
can take action when and as appropriate.

Speaker 1 (06:10):
So what will that action be?

Speaker 2 (06:11):
We don't know, because again, federal law, state law, local law,
it's all very depending on the very specific circumstance.

Speaker 1 (06:19):
It's more posturing and virtue signaling. What's he good? All right?
Let's say that a citizen sees an ICE agent detaining
an illegal alien and the agent's wearing a mask, and
then they report it to Rob Vonta.

Speaker 2 (06:33):
Then what Yeah, the question is what law has been
violated there? Technically it might be the local ordinance that
will likely be voted on and improved next week, But
does that actually indicate unlawful, unconstitutional practice at the federal level?

Speaker 1 (06:48):
Can there be any prosecuting We'll go back my other question.
The state law has been in effect for a few months,
nobody's been arrested. Right with ICE? I think the good
news is judges are going to be busy.

Speaker 2 (06:58):
What a waste of time, I mean, just what a
silly waste of time that has absolutely no effect and
everyone knows that.

Speaker 1 (07:05):
It'll have no effect.

Speaker 2 (07:06):
I think a lot of the elected officials, whether at
the state or the local level, are speaking to as
they said at the beginning, a constituency. They want to
show that they are taking a stand.

Speaker 1 (07:16):
We heard it zero tuper. But the immigrants know better.
They know that there's nothing janis Han can do to
stop ICE. They there's hundreds of thousands that have been
arrested by ICE and Janis Han hasn't stopped any of
those arrests. So I think they got the message that
she has zero power.

Speaker 2 (07:32):
Incidentally, the immigration enforcement actions we saw much higher volume
in the early part of the late spring, the early summer,
we saw a lot more activities. We haven't seen as
much since then. So you have to wonder in Minnesota today, Well,
that's right. I mean you still have the administration directing,
you know, a surge of agents into various different other municipalities.

(07:55):
But this will this end up being a poke the
bear situation, like we will come back with the full
four course that we had here in June. If you
want to play these games, this is an administration has
shown that they're willing.

Speaker 1 (08:05):
To do that.

Speaker 2 (08:06):
They're probably still working at a quieter level, no question
about it. I mean, there's reforcement immigration going on here exactly.

Speaker 1 (08:13):
Yes, for sure they have. I think they do this
because part of the success the federal government has is
a lot of people is self deported. I mean they
think a million and a half two million of self
deported already. And that comes from watching the TV and
seeing what's going on and saying, you know, what, climate's change.
We got to get out of here.

Speaker 2 (08:30):
If I have to watch one more nine hour supervisor meeting,
I might self deport.

Speaker 1 (08:33):
I don't know how you do that the Miami Big
Do you know what? When I started, I used to
work for a newspaper. Yeah, and I covered mostly sports.
And then I got into radio and you probably started
a small station where you do everything.

Speaker 2 (08:48):
So I was a news report, not me. I started
in Cincinnati, but go ahead, well I covered news for
like a couple of days at the radio station.

Speaker 1 (08:57):
Went to a meeting. One meeting, and I thought I
always like news, right, I thought, I did newscasters someday,
you know, an anchorman or something like that. I'm looking
after one day at a local council here, It's like,
I am never doing this again, Okay, never ever, ever
am I gotta sit through a municipal meeting? So I
can't tell you how much respect and admiration I have

(09:19):
for this particular brand of insanity.

Speaker 2 (09:21):
That yeah, I've got a good sense of humor, and
I get to talk to you about it.

Speaker 1 (09:23):
So thank you for coming on my pleasure. Michael Monks, Uh,
give him a John, come on a little roar. No,
it wouldn't come out right. I'm too nervous now. It's
gotta have my day. By the way, you are such
a trouble baker.

Speaker 6 (09:45):
You're listening to John Cobelt on demand from kf I
Am six.

Speaker 1 (09:49):
Forty Moistline for Friday eight seven seven Moist Steady six
eight seven seven Moist Steady six or use the talkback
feature on the iHeartRadio app. So, the La City Council
yesterday had had its meeting. Apparently it was quite lengthy,

(10:11):
and one of the things they were supposed to once
and for all is pass a waiver for all the
rebuilding fees for people who lost their homes in the
fire for La City. That would be specifically Pacific Palisades,
you know, Ta Dina and Malibu. That's you need the county.

(10:34):
And it didn't happen again. And in January, shortly after
the fire after Karen Bess made it back from Africa.
Remember the press conference with Well with Trump and Newsom
said this separately, and they both promised that process is
gonna be streamlined. Fees are going to be waived. They

(10:57):
were never waved. Now listen to this report Matthew Sheedorf
from Fox eleven on the latest city council debacle.

Speaker 7 (11:07):
Fire victims are still waiting to see if the City
of La will cover the.

Speaker 8 (11:11):
City can't find its way out of a paper bag.

Speaker 7 (11:13):
Fire victims are still waiting to see if the City
of La will cover reconstruction permit fees. Now almost eleven
months since the Palisades fire.

Speaker 8 (11:22):
You want to have a permit today, you actually have
to pay the fees, or you have to sign a
document agreeing to pay them if the city council cannot
agree on it.

Speaker 7 (11:30):
Some council members are pushing for a plan that would
cost roughly eighty six million dollars and cover the reconstruction
permit fees of single family homes up to one hundred
ten percent their original size, while another plan would cost
roughly two hundred and eighty million dollars and cover all
reconstruction permit fees, for homes, apartments, mobile homes, and businesses.

Speaker 4 (11:50):
Seems like every step of the way the money that
we were paying in taxes seems like we're begging to
get it back when we need.

Speaker 1 (11:58):
It the most.

Speaker 8 (11:58):
They're nickel and dine us on who's going to get
what and how much and why should we get it.

Speaker 4 (12:05):
And now they're just trying to like get more money
from us so we can rebuild homes that were burned down.
It's so gross.

Speaker 1 (12:14):
Homes that the City of Los Angeles allowed to burn.
They allowed to burn that the Department of Water and
Power Jenice Qinonias allowed it to burn.

Speaker 2 (12:28):
No water in the uh, no water in the reservoir
that the State of California.

Speaker 1 (12:33):
This fire started on state land and the state employees
interfered with LA Fire Department to put out the original
fire because they wanted to save the milkves plant. So
the fire reignited, and then they allowed the Palisades to burn.
I have heard from too many people that I know,
people that I've randomly met in the Palisades, people that

(12:54):
I have read about online. They let it burn. That's
not a conspiracy theory, that's not crazy talk. The fire
department stood down, who ordered them to or whether it
was they really didn't completely run out of water and
there were no backup lands and no personnel and no equipment,

(13:18):
but they didn't fight the fire effectively and a lot
of neighborhoods were allowed to burn. That is true now
when you have the government through their all their incompetence
from beginning to end. Now you got thousands of buildings

(13:39):
that need to be rebuilt, and you promise, okay, all right,
we're going to wave the rebuilding fees, wave the permit fees.
And look what they did. I talked to Michael Monks
about this because he actually watched part of this city
council meeting yesterday, and I asked Michael, I said, well,
wait a second, why is it. Why does it cost

(13:59):
eighty six million dollars not to charge people a permit fee? Right?
Doesn't cost money to say yes? And he said, well,
they were counting on the permit fees and their budget. Well,
it's a new fiscal year. Well why did they count
on the permit fees when Basst Newsom said immediately there'd

(14:22):
be no permit fees. See they in the budget they
expected to get two hundred and eighty seven million dollars
in permit fees. Even though Newsom and Bassett said no,
it's going to be free. They put it in the
budget and now they're claiming, well, this is going to
cost us two hundred and eighty seven million dollars. Well, no,
it's not. It's not costing you anything.

Speaker 2 (14:44):
They claim it's a cost because people aren't going to
pay the permit fees.

Speaker 1 (14:49):
Well that was the deal. You let the place burn
and then you said, okay, we will charge you permit fees.
But they put the permit.

Speaker 2 (14:56):
Fees in the budget and they were saying, well, wait,
well hold on, we need them.

Speaker 1 (15:01):
But you got two hundred and eighty seven million dollars
from those corrupt homeless programs that you're all feeding on.
These are a bunch of criminals who've enabled billions of
dollars a homeless fraud. That brings me in another thing.
But we got to take a break. I want to
talk about this when we come back. Somebody has got
to explain to me. There's this frenzy in Minnesota.

Speaker 4 (15:23):
Now.

Speaker 1 (15:24):
He talked about it at the beginning of the show.
You could hear on the podcast.

Speaker 2 (15:27):
But Tim Watts is getting all kinds of crap shoveled
at him because he let the Somali steal a billion
dollars new some let thirty two billion gets stolen from
the unemployment fund during COVID thirty two times what Waltz
allowed to be stolen and that's only the beginning. Well,

(15:48):
where are the investigations here? Why is nobody looking into
the thirty two billion that was stolen bury fraudsters from
around the world just for the unemployment And then let's
get to the twenty four billion stolen by these homeless nonprofits.
Talk warm, we come back, but there's no way, there's

(16:14):
there's no way they should be charging permit fees. Eleven
months they still haven't. Weived the permit fees.

Speaker 1 (16:19):
In Los Angeles at Bass is such a stinking wire,
it's just unconsiontable.

Speaker 6 (16:24):
You're listening to John Cobels on demand from KFI AM
six forty.

Speaker 1 (16:29):
Were on every day from one until four o'clock. After
four o'clock John Cobelt Show on demand on the iHeart app. Now,
we talked about this early in the show about Tim
Waltz getting under a lot of fire because he allowed
and he knew what was happening. He allowed a billion
dollars of state welfare money to be spent on massive

(16:52):
illegal alien fraud. He was told repeatedly, he was investigated,
there was no question what was going on. But he
didn't want to piss off the community because there's eighty
thousand of them in Minneapolis that have accumulated over the years.
A lot of them are citizens, so they vote. They
all vote Democratic because you ever get a lot of
freebies I guess some of them, huh, And so you

(17:14):
don't want to piss them off because there's one local
political type set. It's like, hey, to win Minnesota, you
gotta win Minneapolis. To win Minneapolis, you gotta win the
Somali vote because there's such a political force because this
is not it's kind of sparsely populated outside the major cities.
So now so now he's getting a lot of crap

(17:35):
and the House, a House committee is referring an investigation
in the Department of Justice on criminal charges against Waltz.

Speaker 2 (17:45):
It's it's a big mess. Shocking to believe that could
have been the vice president. I mean, but but it
also shows you just a bad judgment, like stupid people
hire stupid people. I used to tell people like you
never meet like a couple that's crazy and you know
they're always screaming and fighting and there's trouble. It's like, well,

(18:08):
crazy people find crazy people, and stupid people find stupid people.

Speaker 1 (18:13):
So Kamala Harris found Tim Waltz. It's like, well, of
course she did. You think she'd be impressed with an
intelligent person.

Speaker 4 (18:19):
No.

Speaker 1 (18:20):
In fact, you know, she had Josh Shapiro as a
candidate the governor of Pennsylvania. He's a smart guy, No
way she's picking him. She's comfortable with the stupid. That's
why Tim Wilts got picked to be the vice presidential candidate.

Speaker 2 (18:34):
So he.

Speaker 1 (18:36):
Watched a billion dollars And by the way, he's getting
pilloried by Minnesota state workers and I didn't understand why,
but they were blowing the whistle and they claim he
retaliated against the whistleblowers. Also, if there's a billion dollars
missing from the budget, well guess who's going to lose
their jobs. They're going to probably cut government positions, salaries,

(18:59):
probably try to cut who knows what. So now it's
every man for himself.

Speaker 2 (19:05):
But if Waltz is getting all this, why was newsome
allowed to have thirty two billion dollars disappear in unemployment
benefits during COVID thirty two billion. Much of it was
stolen by people overseas, and he knew it was going on,

(19:25):
He was told it was going on, and he didn't
do anything to stop it. And then there's the twenty
four billion in homeless money that he admits disappeared and
doesn't know where it went. Sets thirty two billion, and
then twenty four billion. Then he got seventeen billion on
high speed rail. And again they've done audits. They don't

(19:47):
know where the money went. All these audits, and because
people don't line up, they audit. Let's do a forensic audit.

Speaker 1 (19:56):
Well they have and the answer is we don't know
where the money went. But you take thirty two and
add twenty four and you get fifty six at another
seventeen and you get seventy three. That's seventy three billion
dollars in those three categories. No, there's no dispute. By

(20:21):
the way, I'm this, this is all factual. He's the governor.
He has three major categories. Were seventy three billion dollars
wasn't just misspent? They don't know where it went. A
lot of it was stolen. Well, if Walks is getting
investigated by the Department of Justice, potentially is true. Now

(20:45):
I'm wondering, is Trump's saving this until Newsom is like
the lead candidate for the Democratic nomination. Is this bomb
going to get dropped? Let's say in you know, in
twenty twenty seven, you get past the twenty twenty six elections.
Now the presidential candidates start running, they're raising money, they
start doing debate, and then they're gonna drop it on Newsom.

(21:08):
Something's got to drop on Newsom.

Speaker 2 (21:10):
It can't possim I mean, Walts is getting this for
a billion, Newsom has got to get it for seventy
three billion. This is not in dispute that it happened,
because I was watching this yesterday and I think, I
think Watts is a big dope. He's kind of stupid,
kind of stupid.

Speaker 1 (21:26):
He is stupid. But Newsom he's stupid and conniving a
little different, like he knows what he's doing. Now. Because
of the Somalia situation, the Trump administration has halted all
immigration applications filed by people from nineteen different countries. And

(21:48):
it doesn't even matter if even if you were on
your way to citizenship ceremonies. I guess even if you
pass the tests and your applications are approved until he
gets sworn in citizen yet and so these nineteen countries
everything right on the edge of becoming naturalized American citizens.
Now it's it stops Afghanistan. By the way, I'm gonna

(22:12):
list the countries. Guarantee you probably don't know where ten
of them are. And I'm not I mean most people
don't know where ten of them are. There's a few
of them. I don't know where they are. Afghanistan, Me
and mar Chad, Republic of the Congo, Equatorial Guinea. But
it's our name for a country, Equatorial Guinea. I have
never heard of that. You've gone to these places?

Speaker 7 (22:34):
No.

Speaker 1 (22:35):
I thought maybe a lot of them are in the
midst of civil wars. So I thought maybe this was
This sounds like a Deborah Summer to me. Yeah, never
had a travel agency. These are the countries you didn't go. Yeah,
me and mar that's in Asia, uh Chad's in Africa.
Uh Ritrea? Not sure where that is? How that's in Africa.

(23:02):
That's an Africa. Look at you. I just know because
there's a rapper who's from there? E r I t
r e Atria. We're not taking any more immigrants from
Eretria Nowhereretreans, Uh, Haiti, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan. Yeah, and

(23:23):
well nobody. We shouldn't have been taking people from these countries.

Speaker 2 (23:26):
All run by terrorists.

Speaker 1 (23:30):
You went to Haiti, Yeah, of course you did. It
was a little cruise. It was one of the stops,
a cruise to Haiti. Yeah, a long time ago. I
can barely remember it. That's because they have earthquakes and riots.

Speaker 9 (23:49):
You know.

Speaker 1 (23:49):
I was waters Yeah, I know, I wasn't. I wasn't
wow a BRUNDI. I'm not sure where that is? Cuba
to Cuba. I've been to Cuba. No, and I know
where Cuba is. Burundi, I don't know where he was Laos,
Sierra Leone, uh Togo or is it to go Turkmenistan

(24:17):
and Venezuela. Nobody can't immigrate from there anymore. And there
was you know, there also was a big immigration fuss
over that Afghan who killed the National Guard soldier in Washington,
d C. Young woman twenty years old, and she got

(24:38):
she got murdered, and another National guardsman was severely wounded,
and everybody wondered how this guy get in. And it
turns out he was working as an Afghan for the
US government during the war, and when Biden pulled the
plug on the war and there was all that chaos,
he was waved into this country. And a lot of
people said, well, he was vetted. He was vetted. We

(25:00):
really can't criticize that. And Mark Recording in the National Review,
who we've had on the show many times, and he
knows more about immigration law than anybody. He says, you know,
when you hear this phrase vetted, it doesn't it doesn't
mean anything. He says, First, many of these countries that
immigrants come from are so backward or chaotic. There's no
systems for recording basic information about the citizens. So that

(25:23):
list of nineteen countries I gave you that were not
accepting immigrants from anymore.

Speaker 2 (25:27):
You can't vet people. There's no public records, there's no
there's nobody, there's nobody to call.

Speaker 1 (25:33):
I mean, there's bitterly anyone coherent to call in this
country when you're trying to do a background check. He writes, this,
a government has essentially ceased to exist in Libya and Yemen,
in Haiti and probably never really existed in the first place.
In Somalia, these are places where people often don't even

(25:55):
know their own birthdays. A study some years ago found
that fourteen percent of refugees admitted in the year two
thousand and nine listed January first as their birth date
because they didn't know the real date and there were
no records to check, so that became the default. And
he says, what are vetters supposed to do? Ask about
someone's background at the DMV and Mogadishu, which is in Somalia,

(26:19):
or the Social Security office in Benghazi. A UN report
on Afghanistan last year wrote, the absence of civil documentation
continues to be prevalent. Yeah, we're coming up.

Speaker 6 (26:35):
You're listening to John Cobelts on demand from KFI AM
six forty.

Speaker 1 (26:40):
Follow us at John Cobelt Radio at John Cobelt Radio
on social media and subscribe on YouTube. The Furry Dances
on YouTube, The Full Thing, The Full Thing YouTube dot com.
Slash at John Cobelts Show to subscribe YouTube dot com
at John cobel Show. I was talking about how I

(27:03):
was watching some of the coverage of Tim Watts and
the billion dollar fraud by the Somalis, and I'm thinking,
when are they going after Gavin Newsom. Carl Demile was
thinking the same thing, and he posted this online. Listen,
Blake cut two.

Speaker 9 (27:22):
If you're a California taxpayer, You're going to get really
pissed by what I'm about to share with you. And
if you're an American voter, you got to get really
worried if Gavin Newsom ever becomes president. I'm Carl Tomayo,
chairman of Reform California and a California state legislator, and
my office is releasing independent budget data today showing that
not only does California have an eighteen billion dollar deficit,

(27:45):
but it's largely driven by free healthcare for illegal immigrants
that Newsom and California Democrat politicians crammed through the system.
In fact, the cost for illegal immigrant healthcare to tax
bearer has from six billion dollars to thirteen point one
billion dollars this year, and it's expected to hit fifteen

(28:05):
billion dollars next year. Plus the budget deficits is going
to climb the thirty five billion. Now, Newsome is claiming
that all of these budget problems are Trump's fault. Please,
it's all your fault, Gavin, because other red states are
running surpluses while you're running a massive, multi billion dollar deficit.
And it's traced all back to wasteful spending like free

(28:26):
healthcare at taxpayer expense for illegal immigrants. Let's spread the word,
get the truth out there. What Gavin Newsom has done
to California is atrocious, and guess what what he'll do
to America is going to be even worse.

Speaker 1 (28:39):
Spread the word and warn all Americans.

Speaker 2 (28:43):
And he followed up with another post. Newsom allowed thirty
billion in fraudulent welfare payments to be issued by the
Unemployment Agency. Thirty billion. This is Newsome's carnage. Okay, Walts
one billion, Newsom thirty billion. Newsom's foodstack fraud rate is
thirteen point four percent. Thirteen point four percent of the

(29:06):
food staff payments fraudulent. He says, California is money laundering
through nonprofits and then using that money for political purposes.
If you thought Minnesota Governor Tim Wats had a real
bad problem with welfare fraud in the state, Gavin Newsom
is saying, hold my beer, buddy. Newsom's welfare fraud is

(29:27):
exponentially worse than Tim Watz's. And it's true, and it's
been reported on for years, and nobody's disputing these facts.

Speaker 1 (29:38):
NEWSOM just ignores the story. They just don't comment. And
the dumbass, lazy progressive media in California should be chasing
him around from morning tonight about the tens of billions
of dollars that he has blown, welfare fraud, unemployment fraud,

(29:59):
illegal ailien and how much how much broad do you
think is the illegal alien healthcare the budget the budget
is eighteen billion in deficit, and the illegal alien healthcare
fund is thirteen billion.

Speaker 2 (30:14):
And it's like he's he's it's almost.

Speaker 1 (30:17):
Like where we live in a separate universe. All the
shouting that's going on in the rest of the country.
And look at here in California. Oh, and the and
the gas gas price is at four fifty two a
gallon national price to ninety nine today, ninety nine, unemployment
rate in California five and a half percent, number one,

(30:42):
number one in unemployment, number one in inflation, number one
in gas prices. And the guy's the leading candidate, the
leading Democrat. Well, we will continue trying to decipher this
alternate universe that we're living in tomorrow and Conway is
next in minutes. Michael Krozer has the news live in

(31:05):
the KFI twenty four hour Newsroom. Hey, you've been listening
to The John Cobalt Show podcast. You can always hear
the show live on KFI Am six forty from one
to four pm every Monday through Friday, and of course,
anytime on demand on the iHeartRadio app

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