Episode Transcript
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(00:00):
You're listening to Bill Handle on demandfrom kf I AM six forty Alfresco dining
out on the sidewalk. It's becomea thing and it's a good thing.
Well, now they're about to unfingthis thing. Wait, how is that
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for a promo that works? We'llbe back to a thing that is about
to be unthinged, that is goingto be thinged again. And now Handle
on the news. Ladies and gentlemen, here's Bill Handle and it's a thing.
(00:41):
We are a thing. I thinkthat's enough of singing? Is let
me ask something? Is that goingup and performing in front of an audience.
If you have a lisp, you'resinging? Okay, I hope I
have at everybody who's out there witha lisp. Hey, good start,
(01:04):
first sentence, right out of theblock. Huh nice, well done,
Thank you very much. Neil,Good morning, sir, Good morning to
you. Willie Wolf. All right, Neil having Oh he's back again.
We had petros in yesterday and Monday, and now Neil has returned. Neil
does a lot of fill ins,I must tell you. And this is
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a good sign, a very goodsign that there's no one else. Yeah,
there's that, but it's it.It sets you up for the future,
is what it is? That right? This thirty years Yeah, yeah,
thirty years really coming into my own. Yeah, but this is the
way it works, you fill in. I remember, oh good god.
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When I was doing weekends, therewasn't a there wasn't a shift that I
didn't do overnight's vacations. It wasjust that's what you did. That's what
you do. That's how you paythe dues. Normally it's not thirty years.
Normally it's two years, three yearsmore. I think was ten years,
(02:10):
wasn't he Well, yeah, butit depends. I mean that's the
same with Gary Hoffman, I thinktoo. He was working on your show
for ten years before, yeah,ten eleven years, Yeah, until he
got that spot. A lot ofit has to do a lot of it
has to do right place, righttime. You can be the most talented
person, and if there isn't anice slot that opens up, it's you
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know, John and Ken had leftKFI to go to another station for a
year, and they left that stationand if the afternoon hadn't opened up again,
they wouldn't have been here. Well, that's why a lot of people
ask you how you're feeling they're justwaiting for you to die. Yeah,
pretty much. Yeah, it isright place, right time, And I
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think that people are just doing thislonger than they used to. It's a
pretty neat job. Yeah, it'spretty good now. I felt pretty miserable
yesterday as I'm fighting a cold orsomething. But I will tell you it
is an honor to be on thisstation in any capacity. I wouldn't go
that far. No, I wouldn'tgo that far. Our listeners are pretty
amazing. They're pretty neat people notarguing that, but I wouldn't go that
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far. So it's it's just alonger haul. People just stay around longer.
Oh, I don't know. Iwant to drop some names. Handle
about staying around July mid July.I think July sixteenth, thirty one years
in the morning. Wow, Ithink that's the record I hear at KFI,
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and it's pretty close to the recordin Los Angeles. It's in the
There's only been a handful that havebeen around magic Well would who would compare
to that? Who would? Actually? John beat me by about beats me
by about six months for a majorday party. Doesn't talk about it,
but he has been here at KFI, Well, morning Afternoon Drive. I'm
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talking about major day part. Iwas here for four years before I went
into a day part. I didSaturday and Sundays for four years. Ellen
k she's been doing mornings in oneform or another, but not at the
same station. I don't think.I think she was a different station,
and I thinks I'm sorry. Whatabout Seacrest went? He started at another
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station, then he went to Kissand now he went to basically rival billionaires
out there because he's let's see,certainly out of Los Angeles, nobody's done
better than Ryan hard Worker two greatestguy in the world anyway. Good morning,
Anne, Good morning, Good morningKno, good morning, Good morning,
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Amy, morning, Hi Bill,Hi, how are you Amy?
How long you been on the MorningShow? Less than a year? That's
okay. I thought you came inyesterday, and how long you been around?
I make quite an impression. Justover a year? Okay. See
we're brand new and Cono just undera year. See it's about and I'm
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the I am the old war horsehere actually the show. Con don't you
come up on your year this month? I do? Yeah? Did they
promise you a review at a year? I think a review usually comes in
a year. Let me tell youthat is the best joke here at KFI.
You're going to get a review.Well, no, you are going
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to get a review. You aregoing to get a review. You walk
in and they go, hey,have a nice day. That's your review.
Nothing comes a bit, of course, of course not. And then
there's Neil. Neil, how longhave you been on the Morning show?
Now? Since January seventh? Thisis the newest crew we've ever had at
one time except for when you werebrand new. All right, No,
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but no, because Paul the Wallwas already there, and so was Rich
Murata. Rich Murata was already there. Paul the Wall, Yeah, Paul
t Wall. If you if youmet Paul the Wall, you know I
had that name. Yeah. Paulwas a very big guy. I mean
he was big and not just itwasn't huge fat huge. He was just
a big, big guy, biggestGuamanian you've ever seen. Yeah, from
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Guam, Pacific Islander. Although Idon't think they called Pacific Islanders Pacific Islanders
in those days. They called themGuamanese, no Glomanian, Guamanians, Guamsters,
Guamanites, Glaminates, very strong,all right, guys, it's time.
I like Guamanites. They sound likea powerful Yeah they Okay, guys,
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let's do it. Handle on thenews on a hump Day Wednesday,
May fifteenth, with Amy Neil andme lead story after Joe Biden did withhold
at three hundred and three thousand,five hundred bombs from Israel because of the
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way Israel has been bombing Gaza.Guess what arm shipment is on its way
and it is seven hundred million dollarstank ammunition, five hundred million tactical vehicles,
six sixty million in mortar rounds.Not those big The big issue was
those two thousand pounds bombs that justto obliterate everything, and the United States
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and the rest of the world's going, you know that is not targeted.
You don't drop a bomb and wipeout two city blocks and call that a
targeted attack. So the arms aregoing, how does that pause mean anything?
Then? However, it was thepause coming up. It's gonna be
a it's gonna be a basically aceasefire for a truce is what they're talking
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about. But I mean our sowe say we're putting it on pause,
and that's what he gets a politicalstatement. It's a political statement, although
it was legitimate. You don't seethese big and they may never ship over
two thousand pound bombs again, althoughthe argument is that the big bunker busters
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that have to go way deep toget those tunnels. Those are big,
big bombs. So you know,it's it's always more complicated than first at
first glance or what we talk about. The headlines go much much deeper,
and we don't deal with the headlines. Oh, the Cohen, Yeah,
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the defense is getting a crack atCohen. Trump's self described fixer, came
under a sustained attack from defense attorneyTodd Blanche yesterday and across examination that was
supposed to shatter his credibility as thestar witness for the prosecution in the Husher
money trial, Cohen mainly retained hiscomposure. He directly implicated Trump and making
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payments to adult film start Stormy Danielsto cover up their alleged affair, and
apparently corroborated prosecution evidence that it wasmeant to influence the twenty sixteen election.
Yeah, this goes to show youthat the defense doesn't have a whole lot
of ammunition against Cohen. Even you'rea liar. You're a liar, You've
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lied, you went to prison.He goes, yes, I did.
Why because I would have done anythingfor the former president. I think it
proves the case as he said,I would have taken a bullet for and
he said, I'll take a bulletfor the president, and then he flipped
because he said that's enough. I'mnot going to do it anymore. And
so I think that bolsters his argument, or bolsters the prosecution and the defense.
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Defense just kept on screen. Andyou want Donald Trump to be convicted,
don't you? He goes yeah.And you hate Donald Trump, don't
you. Yeah? Okay, that'snews. Somehow that's gonna shatter his credibility.
I don't think it did. Andit's not illegal doing a hush money
payment, No, but doing ahush money payment and lying about where the
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money is going and deducting it anddoing it under the table and for the
purposes of the campaign, using acriminal act to further a campaign. That
is illegal. So how are theyproving that because of the tapes or something
that the tape because of the emails? Because it was stormy, Daniel said
as she flashed the courtroom for credibility, very strong, and it was you
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put it all together. There's theselittle bits and pieces, and I think
it it's I think it's going tobe enough my opinion. The way I
see it now, I'm not inthe courtroom every day, and I'm just
looking at the reports, and thoseare also very scattered. We're not hearing
every statement made by every witness.But I think they're gonna go overcome.
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Now, keep in mind, Trumpjust needs one juror to not even convict,
just say I'm not voting or goingfor an acquittal, or simply saying
I won't vote for conviction because there'snot enough evidence beyond a reasonable doubt,
right, yeah, yeah, andthen this thing is a hung jury and
depending on the kind of you know, the men that are on the jury,
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to be a well hung jury.Okay, So, after a series
of safety missteps earlier this year,we know the big door plug that blew
off the Alaska Airlines flight shortly aftertake off in January, the US Justice
Department notified Boeing just yesterday that itbreached terms of its twenty twenty one agreement
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in which the company avoided criminal chargesfor two fatal three seventy three Max crashes.
So basically they had come to thisagreement and now they're like, now
you've had too many problems since,right. I mean, they came to
basically a consent degree. They dida plea bargain. We'll do we'll pay
two point five billion, will doa B and C. We don't want
to be prosecuted criminally. Corporations canbe prosecuted criminally from Temple PG and E
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got nailed criminally and other corporations.Now, can you throw a corporation in
jail? Of course you can't.Basically it's a fine. That's basically it
fine, or the just Department doesn'tlet you do business. I mean that
is the ultimate, which I don'tknow when that happened, But corporations can
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be charged criminally, and by theway, that guarantees any settlement anybody that
sues. There's no defense anymore.That's the other part of it, the
backlash. So I think they're goingto go for it. Not guilty now,
but he will be soon. Theformer interpreter for La Dodgers Superstar show,
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he Otani, who just hit anotherhome run last night, pleaded not
guilty yesterday to bank and tax fraud, but he's already negotiated a deal with
federal prosecutors and will plead guilty tocharges at a later date. Yeah,
he's doing years. He's going todo years. There's no defense here.
I mean one defense he had asto four or five million dollars is that
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Ohanni wrote the check or okay,the wire as to four million dollars the
other thirteen that o'hanne says. Idon't know anything about what he did.
Mister r had access to the accounts. That is problematic. They got him
so that he's pleading guilty. Nodefense, fair enough, all right?
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A suspect in custody after a violentrobbery on a metro bus just yesterday in
Sino One are the odds third assaulton the transit system of the past twenty
four hours. So this guy's incustody. Latest attack happened on a metro
bus. Oh I know this areawell, Ventura and Balboa Boulevard arts around
two pm yesterday. Yeah, that'sthe third one in twenty four hours.
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Yeah, yeah, not good.That's uh so let's all of us get
on the on the bus. Hey, do you think the billboards for Metro
now should read ride the Metro,chances are you won't die. Oh gosh,
the murder bus come, you know. Talking about this filling in for
Jeri and Shannon yesterday, one ofthe listeners had had called in on the
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talk back and said, you shouldmaake that movie dial M for Murder and
it'll be dial M for Metro.Yeah, sad but true. Yeah,
at least no one was hurt onthis one. And they arrested him so
well he was hitting the chest witha wrench. Yeah yeah, but yeah,
well, okay, when I sayno one was hurt, no one
was stabbed, there was no blood, no one died getting hit in the
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chest with a wrench, Yeah,that's wrenching eye. It's good to know
what your limit is so that nexttime I'm going to carry your wrench and
I'm going to beat you with itand go. No one was hurt.
Yeah, that's not funny. Ithink you're paying too much gas tax Now
just wait gas taxes in California.Could he see a nearly fifty cent spike
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Tucked inside a little known draft reportthat's aimed at meeting the state's emission reduction
goals. It's a preliminary report includeda potential price passed through for consumers forty
seven cents a gallon next year,fifty one cents a gallon the year before
or the next year. Yeah,and what are the chances if this not
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passing? Of course it's going topass. Welcome to tell you that because
they can. Isn't that taxation withoutrepresentation? No? No, because no,
because they call it a pass through, it is a pass through,
and it's there's a as long asyou don't call it a tax, as
long as you call it fees orany other name, but a tax.
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I think Shakespeare wrote that a taxby any other name, you can it
goes through. This is why Californiais completely crazy. I mean, to
raise taxes, you need a twothirds vote in the Senate and the Assembly,
which, by the way, ifthere's a super majority, they would
have it anyway. So one wouldthey close the loophole. It's not a
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loophole. Oh you mean talk abouttwo thirds? No, it's a loophole
saying that if you call it afee, it's not a fee. Yeah.
There's been lawsuit and lawsuit after that. For example, in the court,
you get tagged for a speeding ticketone hundred and twenty five bucks,
let's say, or eighty dollars.You're going to pay four to five hundred
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dollars in assessments and fees. It'sa revenue call. It's a revenue call.
And this is not a revenue call. This is to lower your carbs,
which a lot of us do.Doctors will tell you lower your carbs.
The California Air Resources Board. Ithas to do with cleaning up our
environment. It's not going to doa damn thing. Well what they will?
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What are they using money? Theythink we're going to not drive?
Well, when it gets expensive enough, people do drive less. Not in
California. Man, Yeah, wellI don't even know. We should look
that one up. You know what'smore expensive than driving going on the Metro
and dying? Yeah, it's thefuneral. Yeah, yeah, that's true.
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U c l A may have topay to not play. Yes that
right? Yeah that wait a secondahead, No, it's yeah yeah all
right, amye gone for two days? Yeah, nor I know, trying
to let you rest your voice.Yeah that works good for you, all
right. Los Angeles County Probation Department. By the way, you've got twenty
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eight hundred sworn officers in that agencyalone. So they announced on Monday that
it has put sixty six of itsofficers on administrative leave in the past five
months for alleged defenses, including excessivefor sexual blue abuse and drug possession.
Hey, what do these guys thinkthey are Catholic priests with the sexual abuse.
(18:17):
Well, I think sexual abuse goesacross. I think there are a
lot of kids involved too. Butnever mind that was It's no when you
think about when you think about sixtiesand when you think about sixty six probation
officers out of twenty eight hundred,you know, is that a huge number?
Yeah, because the number of people, you know, a number of
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people. Yeah, that's well,first of all, you have all the
vetting, et cetera. So Idon't know if that's a lot or not.
Certainly if you're a victim, that'sa lot. But don't know.
And by the way, they're onleave because just an allegation will put an
officer on leave too. Keep thatin mind. Gosh, I wish that
(19:03):
worked for TUK show hosts. Yeah, okay, you're rop amy. UCLA
have to pay to not play,Okay, So here's the deal. The
UC Board of Regents is expected toaccept a recommendation that UCLA pay UC Berkeley
ten million dollars a year for sixyears as a result of the Bruins upcoming
(19:25):
moved to the Big Ten, whichled to the demise of the PAC twelve.
So apparently they're going to pay themoney because the cal athletic program is
going to be affected because they won'tbe playing Ucla anymore. Yeah, and
they're out of the league too.Basically, Ucla went to UCLA went is
going to the Big ten Big ten, and that's that basically destroys the PAC
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twelve. Right, So col isgoing to the Atlanta at the Atlantic Coast
Conference, and the PAC twelve isnow literally the PAC two. It's Oregon
State and Washington State. Yeah,and if they if those games are going
to be broadcast, it'll be Nickelodeon. It's there's nothing there anymore. So
they get ten million dollars a year, which is not even a drop in
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the bucket relative to what they wouldhave if they stayed, if the PAC
twelve stayed put Tom Brady, whowas roasted on the Roast of Tom Brady
back on May fifth, he saysthat he regrets his Netflix roast because jokes
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affected his kids. He went onto say that he loved when the jokes
were about him. He thought theywere fun, but he regrets it now
and wouldn't do it again because itaffected his children. I mean, what
did he expect when you do theseroasts? What do you expect they are
so they can be so blue thatit can get pretty outrageous. Those kids
(20:57):
are sixteen, fourteen, and eleven. Yeah, I mean they but why
are they watching the I think maybethey heard, maybe their friends heard repeated
some of the jokes. Yeah,you're probably right. Where's Rudy? Arizona
prosecutor has been trying four weeks unsuccessfullyto serve Rudy Giuliani with notice that he's
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been indicted in an alleged scheme tooverturn the twenty twenty election results in Arizona.
He's one of a group of formerPresident Trump's allies indicted last month,
and the summons the formal notice thatJuliani has been criminally charged and has to
appear before judge May twenty first,not too far away, and they can't
find him to serve him. Imean, is he trying to evade service?
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Last week reported he lost his gigat WABC, and he was getting
several hundred thousand dollars a year forthat. That was a mercy stop as
far as I'm concerned. Then helost Prior to that, he lost his
biggest endorser, I mean, hisbiggest advertiser. And I asked, remember,
I know someone who knows someone whoknows him. And I called this
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person yesterday and I said, Hey, you who knows someone who knows someone
who knows him? What the hellis he doing? How's he surviving?
He has a podcast, a subscriptionpodcast, and that is how he is
surviving right now. Don't know howwell it does. But when you talk
to that person, did you hearsomething in the background that sounded like Juliani
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going, Giuliani want funians? Ishe housing him? No, no,
because that would be that would bevery fun. No chance in the world
is Rudy Juliani? Yeah? Wow, Yeah, you know what we need
to do. We need to waituntil it rains, and then his hair
coloring will drip down his face andwe'll know exactly he'll leave a trail.
(22:48):
Ya hanseling Gretel's situation. All right. The Biden administration is suggesting the possibility
that additional penalties can be put inplace. The Chinese makers of evs try
to move their production to Mexico.Now, this would of course be to
avoid newly announced import taxes. It'slike, well, you're gonna put those
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on us, We'll just move everythingto Mexico. I mean, that's not
fair because they were already looking atMexico for an import to bring in cars.
But the duties because we have NAFTA, and I think there's a subsequent
bill that supersedes in n AFTA whereI don't even know if there's terraces from
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cars being built in from Mexico.So the North American Way, the North
American Free Trade Agreement, was thatReagan, you know, I don't know,
I don't know. It seems likeit's been around forever. It has
been around for decades and decades.At eight o'clock, I'm going to do
a story on this trade war now, especially since Biden said we're going to
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we're going to tax Chinese ev importsone hundred per cent. Dealers would sell
them or manu a word, distributorswould buy them for twenty thousand dollars.
Now they have to give a twentythousand dollars tax on top of that.
Still than a Tesla, right,still way less than a Tesla. They're
(24:19):
able to produce good evs for tengrand I mean, no one else can
do it. But I'm gonna talkabout how they do it. There is
some magic to that. Not magic, there's well, there's some reasons.
You know, they have a newbrand coming out, Moo Goo Guy Car
that is very inexpensive. And I'lltalk about eight o'clock. I'll talk about
(24:41):
the trade wars, of which thisis part of what. Okay, eight
o'clock. Guess who's a cover modelCBS Morning's co anchor Gail King. Yep,
you heard right. She's turning seventythis year. She found out yesterday
during in CBS Mornings that she wasgoing to be on the cover. She
(25:03):
says she told the magazine she didnot want retouching done on her SI swimsuit
shoot, equipping that she just hada cheeseburger the day before. Martha Stewart
now Gail King, in their seventies, are now on the cover of Sports
Illustrated. If Mother Teresa was alive, we'd be looking at a cover a
different cover girl. Oh yeah,she'd make it a habit, be on
(25:29):
there every year. Not bad,Now, that's horrible, horror bad.
She was quite the looker just beforeshe died, wasn't she? Actually she
was quite the looker many years beforeshe died. She was well worn from
her heart and her service to God. How do I respond to that without
being a complete a hole? Thegood news is you're getting a raised.
(25:53):
The not so good news, noone's going to pay it. So California
is leading the way nationally in termsof strong state and local minimum wage laws.
Right, Well, we also foundout that minimum wage violations have more
than doubled in California cities like LosAngeles, and it's costing workers billions.
(26:15):
So no surprise. I mean,yeah, I mean restaurants, and well
primarily restaurants. I'm assuming this ismainly in the restaurant field, but also
nanny's housekeepers. So how do youdo that without just kidding? Is it
just people? Aren't It seems likethe enforcement is the lack here? Well,
yeah, how do you enforce wheneverybody does it? And who complains?
(26:38):
Because look at you've got, forexample, you've got caregivers, and
how many of them are illegal they'renot going to go forward and complain to
anybody. And they are vulnerable.People are easy to take advantage of.
And there are slime buckets out therelike me. Why are they? Why
are they vulnerable? I mean,if anything in California, we would just
(27:03):
give them a house. Yeah,that's true. But they they don't want
to talk to authorities. They're notgood witnesses because they're afraid, because you
know, you talk to authority,who deports you, who prosecutes you,
who separates families, although that's notbeing done anymore. It's the authorities and
everybody, and they conflate it.They conflate whatever governmental ingacy, it's the
(27:23):
government. So more kids are drowningand it's being blamed on COVID. The
number of kids in twenty twenty twowho died of a drowning accident between the
ages of one and four was fourhundred and sixty one. That's twenty eight
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percent higher than in twenty twenty one. Yikes. And they're right, well,
they're saying because during the pandemic,pools were closed, everything was closed.
It was harder to find swim lessons. Young kids aren't learning how to
swim. The story doesn't say theincrease is in public pools. No,
but kids learned a lot of publicpools generally. Well, yeah, that's
(28:08):
true. I mean, that's true. My kids learned to swim at a
YMCA has did did Mex. Yeah? And these with the my kids at
I think they were in at twoor three and they were swimming, which,
of course they completely forgot because that'swhat kids do, how to swim,
unless you keep them in the waterall the time. No, Mex
was swimming underwater when he was sixmonths old or something like. It was
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a big deal for my wife tohave him trained in to swim. Oh
yeah, because Tracy swims a lot. She's in there almost every day.
She is in there every day,at least once a day swims. Here's
here's something and I know at firstglance it's very cruel, but it makes
sense. Here's what I did withour pool at home after the kids learned
(28:53):
how to swim, is without knowing, I threw him into the pool with
their clothes on, just threw themin. What do you mean without knowing.
They didn't know. Oh, theydidn't know. They didn't know.
I just I literally pushed them intothe pool and the deep end. And
I'll tell you why, because kids, if you fall into the pool,
it's a very different way of gettingout with your shoes, with your clothes,
(29:18):
and I wanted to make damn suremy kids in swimsuits weren't going to
drown. And also if they fellin per chance walking along the pool edge,
which they did all the time,why how I didn't I did not.
I mean I was there watching,but you know, they went ahead
and you know, swam out tothe shallow end and climbed out with white
(29:38):
clothes. And then when the officersgot there, they're like, well,
why were you holding their heads underwater? That is a problem too. Yeah.
Yeah, but I tell you Iheard I heard about that, and
I'm going, you know what,that actually makes sense. And I explained
to them why that it is alot you would drown if you didn't know
what to do because everything is soheavy. We trained Max to be able
(30:03):
to swim with clothes on too.He fell in, Yeah, he just
didn't push him in. Well,I'd say, you don't treat your kids
the same way I do mine,because there's a lot of joy I have
in doing that to my kids.How you were ever allowed to be a
father. Yeah. Just oh,here's someone who's almost dead. You know
what. So Jason Carter, thegrandson of Jimmy Carter, thirty ninth President
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of the United States, who's beenin hospice for a year and a half.
Yeah, that's a long time inhospice. That really is. That
is but he's punched through. Imean he has. Look at what he's
done. He has brain cancer,liver cancer. Uh, and he's lasted
all this long, he had surgeries. He's almost one hundred years old.
(30:47):
Yeah. Yeah, it be theoldest president living president in history. George
h. W You know when theysay president's age very quickly, that is
such a croc Look at how longex presidents live. Well, they age
very quickly, well in office,and then they have great medical everybody takes
(31:08):
care of them. I gotta tellyou, it's retire from the presidency,
you're going to live a while.Well, you don't have to worry about,
you know, getting hit by acar if someone drives you. Yeah,
and you don't have to worry aboutstanding in line for fast food either.
So you tell your secret service,you take your secret service agents,
you go stand in line over there. But anyway he's about to die.
(31:29):
Well, that's what Jason Carter,his grand son, says. I like
this, he says. You know, I've said this before, but I
think he's pretty close. You keepcoming out going, you know, I
don't want to be you know,saying this all every single year, but
he's pretty close. Yeah, heis. Matter of fact, we may
even get a statement out of himbasically, really, ladies and gentlemen,
(31:56):
the thirty ninth President of the UnitedStates for bunk I have, We're done.
In my heart, we are done. Okay KF I am six forty
live everywhere on the iHeartRadio app.You've been listening to the Bill Handle Show.
Catch my Show Monday through Friday sixam to nine am, and anytime
(32:17):
on demand on the iHeartRadio app.