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October 28, 2025 • 44 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:11):
You are about to listen to the Doctor Dahlia Show,
sasey stimulating medical talk radio. Any medical advice doctor Dhia
Wax gives on her show should not be substituted for
an actual visit to your medical provider. And now here's
doctor Dahlia.

Speaker 2 (00:36):
All right, we are back on the Dollar Dahlia Show
one eight seven seven eight seven seven Doc Dolly one
eight seven seven D host d d a l I.
So we're coming into what are we day twenty eight
of this shutdown?

Speaker 3 (00:52):
Uh?

Speaker 2 (00:52):
You know, I this is probably gonna go on even longer.
And I don't understand why the Democrat I understand the
game they want to play, but I don't understand why
they think they're going to be successful in terms of
using Obamacare as the reason why they can't keep the

(01:13):
government open and have air traffic controllers getting paid, our
military getting paid. Now, there was a private donor, a
friend of President Trump, I think Timothy Mellon, who donated
one hundred and thirty million dollars to pay our military
during this fiasco. But unfortunately there's it's going to take

(01:37):
a lot more money to pay all the federal civilian
employees as well as the military and to try to
keep the government open. Air traffic controllers are about to
miss their first full paycheck. They got paid partially, now
nothing as this goes on day twenty eight, I believe

(01:57):
Secretary of Transportation Sean Duffy, it's about how yesterday I
think was the or today was the first day that
air traffic controllers are not getting any money.

Speaker 3 (02:08):
Now we need our air traffic controllers, and already we.

Speaker 2 (02:11):
Are seeing the ramifications of people now being incentivized to
try to come to work without getting paid.

Speaker 3 (02:17):
They will get back.

Speaker 2 (02:18):
Paid, but it's you know, not easy when you're seeing
that there's no end in sight. And were my son
and his girlfriend were traveling a couple of days ago,
and the delays were just they were you know, for
non holiday, for being a non holiday time of year,

(02:41):
you don't usually see this kind of these kinds of delays.
But pat but the Secretary of Transportation Sean Duffy, and said, look, you.

Speaker 3 (02:49):
Know, they they're they're making sure that it's safe.

Speaker 2 (02:54):
Now he had reassured the American public today that flying
is safe. However, we are going to have to understand
that our schedules are gonna you know it may not
be able to our our travel time, might not fit
to our schedule. If they don't have enough air traffic controllers,
then what they do is they slow down flights. Sean

(03:20):
Duffy said, the first day is hard, the second day's
even harder than that. The third day because they have gas,
they have childcare costs. One air traffic controller told them, quote,
my ten year old daughter made the traveling volleyball team,
and it costs hundreds of dollars. I had to tell
her I couldn't pay the money because I don't have
a check coming in.

Speaker 3 (03:38):
I have to put food on the table.

Speaker 2 (03:40):
It's tragic. But here's what's even worse, he said, Democrats
aren't voting to open up the government. He says, you
are safe to fly because these controllers come in. They're
the most amazing professionals.

Speaker 3 (03:51):
They do their job. They keep you safe.

Speaker 2 (03:53):
But again, I don't want them driving door dash, I
don't want them going to the food bank. I want
them focused on keeping you safe. So what's been happening
are are these individuals. If money's not coming in, it's
one thing to come to work and still be there
for the team and for the country. But some of

(04:13):
these other workers are driving for door Dash or Uberine
to get some money into their bank account because their
landlord still wants rent. November first is coming up. Mortgage,
they still want money. And you know, remember the eviction
moratorium when that went on, you know, the landlords still

(04:35):
had to you know, maybe the government could say, all right,
you know, tenants don't have to pay rent, But those
individuals who had to then turn around to pay on
the mortgage, the bank didn't give them a moratorium. And
so it's a mess when money isn't coming in, and
it trickles to everybody. This isn't just a well, it's government,
and it's Trump's government, So who cares? This is what

(04:58):
you see people's attitudes towards this, And I go, are
you planning on flying Thanksgiving in three weeks?

Speaker 3 (05:06):
You might want to care if you are hoping that.

Speaker 2 (05:10):
Your food stamps are are going to your card is
going to be full. Now, if you are concerned that
the food banks are not going to have food for
our homeless and for our populations that are cold and hungry,
because we have to feed our.

Speaker 3 (05:31):
Air traffic controllers and our military because they don't have
money coming in. This is ridiculous. So Senator Ted Cruz.

Speaker 2 (05:43):
Is submitting a bill proposing a bill to at least
get air traffic controllers to pay or paid.

Speaker 3 (05:49):
The Senate may vote on that bill this week.

Speaker 2 (05:52):
But unfortunately, every time the Senate says, Okay, while you
guys are doing this and making a stand for Obamacare, which,
by the way, Obamacare is the Democrats fault now. But
I guess they want subsidies, and they're saying that millions
of Americans are going to they want to start.

Speaker 3 (06:09):
Renegotiating the big beautiful bill.

Speaker 2 (06:12):
I think that is a bad move and sets a
bad precedent. C rs are supposed to be designed to
be quick and simple to keep the government funded. But
it's when politicians go, well, why don't we use this
opportunity as leverage, Why don't we make a stand. We
don't like Trump and the government, so why don't we
disable it temporarily? So he loses a month of his presidency.

(06:37):
As you see, the Trump's not stopping. He's you know,
you know, meeting Asian leaders, working on on trade talks
and tariffs, and he's still working.

Speaker 3 (06:49):
He's not going to let this stop him. He's still working.

Speaker 2 (06:54):
But Senate Democrats are going to have to pass the
Continuing Resolution because it's too it's it's too much of
a not it's a different issue to start negotiating Obamacare.
Trust me, nobody wants to renegotiate Obamacare, maybe even make

(07:16):
it Trump Care than the Republicans. I mean, if we
have an opportunity as this country to fix the mess
that ACA caused, I think all hands on deck.

Speaker 3 (07:28):
But that is going to that's going to take some time.

Speaker 2 (07:32):
It's not going to be able to get done in
time for people losing their snap benefits and paychecks. So
five more Democrats need to just sign the same CR
they signed before, and they didn't have a problem with
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Speaker 3 (10:22):
All right, we are back up Doctor Dollie Show. Thank
you all for tuning in one eight seven seven Doc
Dolly one age seven seventy o C D A. L I.

Speaker 2 (10:31):
Big thanks to Talk Media Network from making the show happen.
Big thanks to Daniel, our producer. Big thanks to y'all
for tuning in. We really do appreciate it. Don't forget
to follow us on Twitter or acts, the Doctor Dollia Facebook.

Speaker 3 (10:41):
The Doctor Deli Show, and on YouTube. Click like and subscribe.

Speaker 2 (10:46):
So, the Oversight Committee has released a report on President
Biden's presidency and what is cognitive decline could have done
and if his use of the auto pen or whoever

(11:08):
used his autopen was that legal? Was it legit? Was
it under the president's orders? And so according to the
Oversight Committee. They House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform
released a staff report titled hey, this is their title,

(11:28):
the Biden Auto Pen Presidency Colon Decline, Delusion and Deception
in the White House. Now, according to their website, it says,
the report exposes our President Joe Biden's top advisor's political
operatives and personal physician concealed the President's mental and physical
decline from the American people. The findings revealed that as

(11:52):
President Biden's condition deteriorated, his aids exercised presidential authority and
facilitated executive actions without his directtion authorization, including misusing the
autopen and failing to properly document decision making processes.

Speaker 3 (12:09):
Now there's.

Speaker 2 (12:12):
You know, the key findings. You know that that that
it delineates. You know, we're looking at the coordination to mislead,
getting people, uh to uh not disclose you know what
he was doing the need to use big letters and

(12:35):
and pictures and and choreograph his press conferences. And you know,
why didn't the doctor order an MRI? Why didn't he.

Speaker 3 (12:45):
And and here's the thing, Even if.

Speaker 2 (12:47):
You don't want to talk about Biden's decline, I'm pretty
ticked off that one of our former presidents did not
have the proper care, which i'm as assuming based on
the White House story, such that prostate cancer, which usually
takes time to grow and spread, was not picked up

(13:12):
early enough to the point that we were told it's
stage four and as metastasized. You rarely see that in
somebody who's getting regular exams. They say, well, it's aggressive. Well,
isn't the medical team's evaluation aggressive?

Speaker 3 (13:35):
I mean you, well, they didn't want to screen.

Speaker 2 (13:38):
Up for prostate cancer because you know, they thought it
was a personal decision.

Speaker 3 (13:44):
Really and if it did spread.

Speaker 2 (13:47):
To the brain, they would have been able to pick
up on that on the on the MRI when we
were concerned about his memory and his cognitive issues. They're
such gross malpractice and negligence unless unless his doctor did
want to do standard of care, did want to be

(14:10):
on top of his processect did want to be, even
though I understand the USPSTF backed down from regular screenings,
especially of Biden's age, but you know, if his if
his doctor did want to do mini Mental status exam,
full Mental Status ExM Cognitive assessments MRIs, and he was told.

Speaker 3 (14:31):
No, no, no, no no.

Speaker 2 (14:34):
All right, well, then he better document that because I
am assuming the state Medical Board that.

Speaker 3 (14:40):
He's licensed in.

Speaker 2 (14:42):
Virginia, Maryland, to DC whatever is going to investigate.

Speaker 3 (14:49):
Are they not? I haven't heard that they are. You
know they're there.

Speaker 2 (14:56):
Many people say, let him go through his cancer treatment,
let us lie, just move on.

Speaker 3 (15:03):
The problem is is he pre pardoned people? Why did
he parton Adam Shift? What did Adam Shift do?

Speaker 2 (15:15):
And and the slew of pardons even though a lot
of presidents do that before they.

Speaker 3 (15:20):
Leave, whoa was that really him?

Speaker 2 (15:26):
And then you know, did some of the things he
technically autopenned and didn't efficiently sign or was it involved
in the decision? Now he's going to say he was
involved in the decision, But if it show, if they
have proof they're emails and texts that Biden wasn't asked,

(15:46):
that's huge. You couldnt have somebody else Erster or hijack
the presidency and then yes, that would negate those decisions.

Speaker 3 (16:01):
And those pardons. But that's for the politicians to go
back and forth on. I really don't care what happens
to Adam Schiff. I don't care.

Speaker 2 (16:11):
But but you know, my job, you know, in media
and and for you all is to clarify he Now,
why the commander in chief, who should have the best
medical care in the world, be so publicly a parent

(16:35):
about it, you know, about his his deterioration.

Speaker 3 (16:38):
We see him publicly deteriorating. Well, how does that happen?

Speaker 2 (16:43):
And then how does the president's cancer get missed? Or
by the time we're told about it, it's farther along.
So there's only a few possibilities. One is they knew
about it, they were treating him, but they kept it
from the public, which is bad. Or they played I
don't know, And then if they are going to double

(17:05):
down on this, well, I don't know, play dumb.

Speaker 3 (17:10):
We doctors now have a lot of explaining to do.

Speaker 2 (17:15):
You know, we are told to not be aggressive as
it pertains to prostate cancer screening, and that it should
be an individualized decision between the person and their doctor
because prostate cancer allegedly is so slow growing that it
will outlive you.

Speaker 3 (17:37):
You will die of something else.

Speaker 2 (17:39):
Now, that is what we have been told, and this
is why patients are not getting aggressive prostate cancer screening.
It's because of that theory that prostate cancer is so slow.
You'll see aggressive ones in African American or BLA black males,

(18:00):
you'll see it. And you could see aggressive prossect cancer
and younger individuals like you saw with Gunther from friends
Tyler Gosh. I forget Gunther's name, but may he recipeace
because he ended up dying of prostact cancer at a
young age.

Speaker 3 (18:17):
I think he was only fifty. But we know the
public is like whoa, whoa, whoa, Wait a second.

Speaker 2 (18:25):
I don't want to be like Biden, where we're told
he's healthy, he's running for office, doing all that, and
then a few months later he's got stage four cancer
and patients are now going to their doctor going whoaha, whoa,
whoah woah, I I you make sure I don't have
stage four prossect cancer and doctor's like, it doesn't kind
of happen that way, So we need some explanation. Either

(18:48):
they knew about it the whole time, and they lied
that he was sick. And then if that's the case,
why on earth would you make him run for office again?
Why would you have him go through that? Or the
doctor was completely inapt and ignored standard of care and

(19:13):
evaluating him for things if somebody has altered mental status
or memory issues. Of course we scan the brain to
look for tumors, to look for atrophy, to look for
signs of vascular dementia, or look for you know, signs
that that could be indicative of Alzheimer's. That standard of care,
Why the hell did is doctor O'Connor nod do that?

Speaker 3 (19:39):
And patients are you know? All of this is when
I talk about things I want to teach.

Speaker 2 (19:46):
One of the reasons why I went into medicine is
not only to heal, but to teach. One of the
reasons why I went into radio.

Speaker 3 (19:52):
Is to teach and help heal.

Speaker 2 (19:56):
So this isn't a good teaching point when you're command
in chief, which is supposed to have the best of
the best healthcare is publicly deteriorating and then ends up
getting a very poorly prognosed cancer just out of the blue.

(20:16):
That usually doesn't move that aggressively that quick there needs
to be explanation, and so I don't mind that this
committee is moving forward with that, because every future president

(20:37):
needs to have, you know, a good medical team.

Speaker 3 (20:41):
They're a commander in chief. You know how embarrassing this is.

Speaker 2 (20:44):
And poor Biden, he's actually the real victim here. In
addition to the American people who relied to one eight
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Speaker 3 (22:18):
All right, we're back of not ly show. Thank you
all for tuning in.

Speaker 2 (22:22):
One eight seven seven Doctor DOLLI one eight seven seven,
DC Dli So, I don't need my job any harder
than it is as it pertains to taking care of patients.
But after the COVID fiasco, trust and doctors and the
CDC were at an all time low.

Speaker 3 (22:40):
In fact, they did a study.

Speaker 2 (22:43):
The Kaiser Family Foundation did a study in January of
twenty twenty five looking at we're now five years past
COVID and they said trust and physicians and hospitals decreased
substantially from seven twenty one point five percent in April
twenty twenty to forty point one percent in January twenty

(23:05):
twenty four, and individuals with lower levels of trust were
less likely to have been vaccinated or received boosters for
COVID nineteen. Now, this study was more based on the
COVID nineteen issues, but we have been hearing and seeing
time and time again that the mandates that the uh uh,

(23:26):
the doctor O'Connor's medical care of Biden. And you know,
isn't a man who's deteriorating in front of us, shouldn't
he be getting cognitive test? Shouldn't be he get an MRI?
How did we miss prostate cancer? Aggressive prostate cancer in
the commander in chief? And it's not that we missed

(23:46):
it and it was stage one or stage two. We're
talking stage four metastatic. You know, the American public is
looking at all this going.

Speaker 3 (23:54):
What what what? What's going on here?

Speaker 2 (23:57):
And so to get patient trust back, Oh, it's gonna
it is gonna take decades to reverse the damage.

Speaker 3 (24:05):
Now, why did patients.

Speaker 2 (24:07):
Lose trust in doctors? It wasn't just all COVID and
the Biden administration. I mean this, this happened even even before,
back in the late nineties and the early two thousands,
when doctors were getting sued, you know, sometimes for ridiculous things,
sometimes for justifiable things. But when the lawsuits were going
absolutely exponentially crazy in numbers, and doctor's like you need

(24:33):
a test, and the patient's like, yeah, but I don't
want to test. But they're like, but you or your
family will sue me. I'm or to read the test,
all right. If there's a barrier between a patient and
a doctor and there's an obvious uh source of contention
or the need for somebody to protect their own interests,

(24:53):
that already starts to wheedle down trust. Now you know,
patients would say, you know, don't send me to that
doctor because you know they always want to do pelvic
exams and papist smears and me do my mammograms. I
don't want to do mammograms. And I'm like, well, that
doctor is not going to want to be your doctor
if you end up having breast cancer. And your lawyer says,
let's sue everybody that didn't, you know, recommend proper standard

(25:17):
of care.

Speaker 3 (25:17):
And so we were seeing doctors discharge patients.

Speaker 2 (25:21):
We even saw this with doctors and pediatric patients, were
kids couldn't go and see the pedicatrician if they weren't
vaccinated because doctors are like, I just can't I can't
take on the liability. I can't let another kid get
sick if that kid couldn't be vaccinated and this unvaccinated
kid comes in with Jacobox and so that that was
a big part of the change that started in terms

(25:42):
of trust. Also the HMOs and the eighties and nineties
corporate sort of takeover where you know, people thought their
doctor was their friendly neighborhood doctor and that you got
corporate politics and government out of the equation. No, once
that got more confused. So like, is that you talking

(26:03):
to the corporation? Is there now a bottom line?

Speaker 3 (26:07):
You mean?

Speaker 2 (26:08):
I can't just now bring you in some chicken, you know,
or bring you in some cake and you take that
as payment anymore. No, Now we have malpractice insurance and
workers' comp assurance, and we have to pay for billing software,
and doctors had to be more business minded. Then Obamacare
came around and by and Obama says, you're gonna keep

(26:30):
your doctor. You will not lose your doctor, and doctors
were telling their patients, I'm not going anywhere.

Speaker 3 (26:36):
By Obama says, you won't lose your doctor. So I
don't know what's in this bill, but I'm not going anywhere.

Speaker 2 (26:45):
And then what happened Their doctor left, The doctor couldn't
keep the doors open. Deductibles were too high, so patients
weren't pain insurance wasn't pain and the average neighborhood doctor
closed down and they did lose their doctor. I remember
telling my patients, I don't plan on going anywhere. Well,
seven years later I had to. I had to go
and teach. I couldn't continue this. I probably had another

(27:07):
year or two left before we would run out of
money to pay staff.

Speaker 3 (27:11):
It was. It was that bad. And so when you
don't have that.

Speaker 2 (27:18):
Longtime medical provider that you have been with for decades,
like my gynecologist.

Speaker 3 (27:23):
I love her so much.

Speaker 2 (27:25):
I've had a hysterectomy and I still use her as
my doctor. She's amazing and and I've been going to
her since the late nineties. I mean, my relationship with
her is so strong. I have that trust. How many
of you have a medical provider that you have And
one of the reasons why I go to her is
I don't have a primary care provider.

Speaker 3 (27:46):
It keeps changing. So if you don't have that one
on one.

Speaker 2 (27:51):
With somebody who knows you, and you got to start
from scratch, like Okay, well nice to meet you.

Speaker 3 (27:56):
What's wrong.

Speaker 2 (27:57):
Well, this is the fourteenth time I've at colitis.

Speaker 3 (28:01):
When was your last colonoscopy?

Speaker 2 (28:03):
Well, your office sent me for you don't know any
you don't remember all that, and then you got to
serve from scratch. You're not going to really bond with
that medical provider. Then came the COVID campaigns where rather
than I credit Trump and Biden for getting the vaccines
created and rolling them out, but the message the Biden

(28:26):
administration should have had is, guys, these are the numbers
that we're getting. Bill And I know some people think
it's COVID secondary or COVID primary, but because COVID is
killing and hospitals are overwhelmed, we have a vaccine.

Speaker 3 (28:41):
We are urging you to get the vaccine. We're not
going to fire you.

Speaker 2 (28:44):
You're not going to be kicked out of you know, school,
You're not going to be you know, kicked out of
the hospital.

Speaker 3 (28:49):
God bless our nurses. We're not going to fire our military,
but we are recommending you do this.

Speaker 2 (28:53):
Instead, it was we are going to pull federal funds
if you don't mandate your employees vack to okay, Well,
that turned into a cluster and a seventh and the
same nurses that were heroes that were busting their butts
to save lives. An early COVID pandemic end up getting
fired a year and a half later, leaving their shoes.

(29:17):
And they did this in one of our local hospitals,
leaving their shoes with the note of how many years
they put into the medical field or they worked at
that hospital because they chose to not get a vaccine.
You know.

Speaker 3 (29:31):
I that come on, man, really and.

Speaker 2 (29:36):
That hurt that that completely, you know, devastated a lot
of people's trust. And once people thought that there was
politics involved. Politics should never be involved in medicine. You
want protection against a pathogen.

Speaker 3 (29:51):
We have a vaccine. It is a new vaccine.

Speaker 2 (29:54):
The the the methods of m R and A technology
has been around for a while. We trust that, but
it is a new vaccine we get instead, it was
a vilification. And then Trump brings up you know, he's
looking at some of the studies on hydroxylorcorin and other things.
And then all of a sudden, whatever Trump says, people say,
oh no, no, no, no, you got to do the opposite.

Speaker 3 (30:14):
And then boom, it became became a right left thing.

Speaker 2 (30:17):
Why and doctors like, come on, man, and then doctors
started to split along party lines. Meanwhile, I had a
lot of liberal left leading doctors that did not want
to get the vaccine. I had a lot of conservative
doctor friends that didn't. We're pro vaccine. We're trying to
explain to everybody this isn't a right left thing, but
the media and the country wanted the divide. So here

(30:38):
we are now with RFK Junior, and we're starting to
see a little bit of a shift because even though
RFK Junior has been criticized for his attitude on vaccines,
et cetera, the one thing that I think bipartisanly doctors
are starting to agree upon is one, educating the public
and making sure the public has access to that education

(30:58):
so they could make an informed decision. Number two is
let's look at something we've been doing and see if
we need a reevaluation of it now. I am no
fan of taking the MMR and splitting it up into
three shots. You know, if the MMR is as safe
as it could be in that three shot form, you know,
to add three more shots onto the tens and almost

(31:21):
hundreds of shots that these kids are getting, I think
that's gonna be too much. However, should we have a
measles vaccine, a month's vaccine, and a rebella vaccine because
as we're seeing measls come back do some people need
a booster and they don't want the whole MMR, you know,
looking at look what are we doing and what can
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(31:43):
I want to know that this isn't a right left thing.

Speaker 3 (31:45):
You know, or a big pharma thing. You know? Are
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Speaker 2 (31:52):
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Speaker 3 (34:17):
All right, we are back on the Notre Doli Show.
Thank you all for tuning in.

Speaker 2 (34:21):
One eight seven seven dot Dolly one eight seven seven
d O C D.

Speaker 3 (34:25):
A L I.

Speaker 2 (34:26):
I was driving home the other day and there was
a guy on his motorcycle with a uh skeleton uh
sitting on his back seat right and yeah, I'm looking
at that, as you know.

Speaker 3 (34:39):
Pretty cool.

Speaker 2 (34:40):
I love it when people decorate their vehicles, you know,
for for holidays. And I went and got some after
I saw that, I went and got some reindeer. I
understand the skeletons for Halloween, but Halloween that's over on Friday,
you know, by Saturday morning, Halloween's over.

Speaker 3 (34:56):
And as much as I like to celebrate Halloween. Uh not.

Speaker 2 (35:00):
I don't like celebrated, celebrated. I just like, you know,
going out and hanging out. And I usually don't decorate
my house for Halloween. I'll tell you why in a second.
But I went and got reindeer ears for my car.
I'm excited about this. According to Amazon, the tushy of

(35:21):
my car is going to light up, the front of
my car is going to light up, and I.

Speaker 3 (35:25):
Am going to have reindeer ears.

Speaker 2 (35:28):
I don't know how they don't fall off during freeway driving,
especially with the way I drive, so it'll be interesting.
But I really like when people decorate. But I'm noticing
some of my listeners have noticed this too, that where
their communities aren't really decorated for Halloween. I probably can
count on my hand how many houses, and I think

(35:51):
there's about two hundred houses in our development that are
decorated for Halloween, maybe five of them. There might be more,
I walk the Dog. I'm kind of blown away by that.
And I just remember growing up, I mean even in
the teens, you know, but before the recession, I after admit,
before the recession, it looked like everybody and their mother

(36:12):
dressed up their house you know, for Halloween. And then
candy got expensive, decorations got expensive. And I started to
notice after the Great Recession, so we're talking two thousand
and nine to twenty fifteen, I started to notice fewer
people decorating, and Halloween really start to take a change.

(36:34):
And so I think, you know what, when you go
online to look for I mean, I have hundreds of
dollars maybe now almost in the thousand dollars mark of
Christmas decorations. To decorate the house, I always kind of
have to buy new, you know, at the start of
the year and for lights and all that, and it
just gets more and more expensive. So I try to
buy them after the holidays, but the prices don't go

(36:56):
down either because they know people are like, okay, well
i'll buy I'll do after Christmas shopping, and then they
end up, you know, spending money anyway. So I think
the best time to buy Christmas lices is like June,
but I'm noticing it.

Speaker 3 (37:09):
It is getting more expensive. So one, if.

Speaker 2 (37:11):
People are struggling to pay you the rent and to
spend one hundred or two hundred dollars decorating not good.
Another thing, too, is if your house isn't decorated, the
kids don't come for candy.

Speaker 3 (37:27):
Candy's getting expensive now.

Speaker 2 (37:29):
I want kids to get their candy, But I don't
decorate for the holidays because the dogs I have.

Speaker 3 (37:38):
Once I got oozy.

Speaker 2 (37:40):
She really freaks out every time the doorbell comes or
somebody comes, and it was so bad and I didn't
have anything to relax her that I had to actually
take her away from the neighborhood until.

Speaker 3 (37:55):
Halloween was over.

Speaker 2 (37:57):
And now we have another rescue or we have another dog,
and every time, like like if the doorbell rings in
a movie or TV show, they just you know, they
go crazy. And I love having dogs like that because
if there ever is you know, a criminal in the
house or somebody who.

Speaker 3 (38:13):
Breaks in, I'm gonna know about it. You know, if
Corey's ever out.

Speaker 2 (38:16):
Of town, I I have plenty of time to get
my gun now, which is usually next to me, you know,
if the dogs start going crazy and nobody should be
entering the house and so uh. But for Halloween, if
my house is decorated, people are gonna think that they
could then ring the doorbell for candy.

Speaker 3 (38:34):
So I make it dark and and and.

Speaker 2 (38:37):
That's my excuse, not that candy's expensive, but I think
for a lot of people, it is candies getting ridiculously expensive.
What I used to do is put a bowl out,
you know, so everybody could grab candy, and one kid
just takes a whole candy and I mean that takes
a whole bull And so every time I would come back,
uh there, we go to a neighborhood where they do
a uh like a block party. So we go to

(38:57):
the next neighborhood and go to that block party, and
I come back and the bowl of candy is completely empty.

Speaker 3 (39:02):
I'm like, come on, man, really, you know.

Speaker 2 (39:04):
There weren't that many kids. So tonight, this uh, this Friday,
I'll stand out there. I'll give candy to whoever walks by,
especially with these cute little kids coming by, and then
I'll go to the block party. It's a Friday night,
so it's going to be really, really fun. But for
those of you that have neighborhoods that are you know,
you got kids, you got grandkids, and you're like, this

(39:26):
kind of stinks.

Speaker 3 (39:27):
What's going on here? Well, I think there are different attitudes.

Speaker 9 (39:31):
Now.

Speaker 2 (39:31):
I know, in a lot of religions, we're not supposed
to be celebrating. I remember there was Hebrew school on
Halloween nights and parents were complaining to the rabbi, going,
why is their Hebrew school Tonight's Halloween?

Speaker 3 (39:45):
And he's like, Halloween is not a Jewish holiday, and
they're like, come on, man.

Speaker 2 (39:51):
And and also you know with Catholics, you know, they're
they're like, if it's a it's if you know it's
about it has its pagan roots. It's not really something
that that. But in America we do because you know,
we teach our kids to extort and blackmail, trick or treat.
We tell our kids to go to a completely unknown
stranger's house, threaten them with trick or treat, have them

(40:14):
give you food when you're not really supposed to be,
you know, taking food from strangers.

Speaker 3 (40:19):
And that's just a tradition we do in America.

Speaker 2 (40:21):
But you have a lot of people now kind of
questioning that tradition, going, I don't know who lives here.

Speaker 3 (40:28):
Now we have sex offenders nearby. I don't want my
child abducted.

Speaker 2 (40:32):
Cars are now quiet, These teslas are ridiculously quiet, these
electric vehicles and car accidents of pedestrian deaths are are
high on Halloween night, like, and you're starting to have
a lot of people have a different attitude towards that
what I'm seeing, which I think is a great idea

(40:53):
rather than not celebrating because Halloween is so much fun and.

Speaker 3 (40:56):
I got tall, it was one of my favorite things
to do with the kids.

Speaker 2 (40:58):
In fact, when my boys were too old to trick
or treat, you know, I made them with their teenage friends,
you know, go around, you know, because I still wanted
the free candy. And but I remember I was so
depressed that that, you know, they were. I just loved
go trick or treating with the boys. It was so
much fun. And one of them still likes to dress
up and walk around and hang out. But you know

(41:21):
the other ones, I come on, mom, I'm in my twenties.
I go, exactly, I could trick or treat at any age.
Don't trick or drink, but that's always fun.

Speaker 3 (41:30):
But don't do that. I can't say that. So what
I I do notice.

Speaker 2 (41:35):
Some families do, which I think is a great idea,
is get your neighbors together and say what we're going
to do is we're going to get those little street
signs and we're going to corner off the neighborhood and
do a block party.

Speaker 3 (41:47):
We will have tables outside. This way the dogs.

Speaker 2 (41:51):
Don't get you know, all you know, freaked out about
the about the doorbells. And we'll have tables outside where
they could trick or treat to come to the tables.

Speaker 3 (42:01):
We'll have hot dogs, hamburgers.

Speaker 2 (42:03):
In fact, I think the news was covering that there
was somebody offering hot dogs. I noticed that all I've
been noticing that the last ten to fifteen years.

Speaker 3 (42:12):
Where there are some homes where they have their.

Speaker 2 (42:16):
Wine, you know, for the adults, for the for the
for the parents.

Speaker 3 (42:21):
They have food.

Speaker 2 (42:23):
One of my dentist friends passes out toothbrushes and toothpaste.
Not the most exciting for the kids, but parents love that,
you know. And so where they actually make it more
of a block party. You have music, you have the
kids hanging out, they kind of trick or treat, or
you have the homes on that street, the homes they could.

Speaker 3 (42:45):
Go up to to trick or treat at. And then
you make it more of a block party.

Speaker 2 (42:50):
And I think that is a great way to keep
it safe, keep traffic away. You could warn traffic ahead
of time with some with some signs you could ensure
that these kids are not going.

Speaker 3 (43:01):
To get bad candy.

Speaker 2 (43:02):
You know, in the eighties that really freaked a lot
of parents out. I was a kid at the time,
but I would have to show my mom candy because
she had to look for razor blades. And I remember
one Halloween, She's like, you're just not eating any of this.
I just don't have the time to make sure nobody
injected it with something or And.

Speaker 3 (43:19):
I was like, but we went to that house. We
went to that house. She's like, what did that house
give you? I don't know.

Speaker 2 (43:26):
And so, you know, for those of you that are
kind of a little apprehensive, but you think your neighborhood
is not going to dejectably squ there's some other options
one eight seven seven doct Dolly, don't go away?

Speaker 10 (43:53):
Can you believe with all the recent violent protests, looting,
and destruction, some areas are considering either funding or abolishing
the police.

Speaker 9 (44:02):
At a time when America's neighborhoods need the protection of
police the most, some elected officials would rather create more
chaos by playing politics. If you're sick of elected officials
caving in to demands of the radical left, you're not alone.
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(44:24):
in protecting our God given rights.

Speaker 10 (44:27):
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