Episode Transcript
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(00:00):
You're listening to KPI AM six fortythe Bill Handle Show on demand on the
iHeartRadio apps. You know, there'san answer to poverty. There's an answer
in dealing to poor people get rich. Don'll straighten all of it out.
And on this day, his hotscrew two times larger. Okay, and
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now handle on the news, ladiesand gentlemen, here's Bill Handle. Yes,
it is a Thursday morning, Junetwenty seven. And tonight is it?
Tonight? The CNN presidential debate Andthis is probably the most hotly contested,
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will be the most watched television debateamong presidential candidates since Nixon Kennedy debates.
It's gonna be good. Oh,here's a little quick factoid. Do
you know who produced that debate fortelevision? Nixon Kennedy debates in nineteen sixty
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or nineteen fifty nine? Actually thatit was Don Hewitt who created sixty minutes.
Oh wow. Yeah. Hewett wasin his twenties when he was named
producer of the debates. He's theone that put it all together. Do
you have a locker in your assthat you pull the kind of information out
of for yeah? Yeah, andjust nodded, went yeah, pretty much
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a trick. Yeah, just saying, okay, guys, right, good
morning Neil, good morning, WillyWolf, and good morning good morning.
I'm going to start calling you wolfnow too. You know I love it.
Yeah. It was my best friendSaville, who he's the only one
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that ever called me Willy Wolf becauseI am not a Willie. I am
not a Bill. I am aWilliam legally, but basically my parents was
it for William Uh not a billybob wolf. I'm not a wolf.
I wish I had kept that name. Yeah, God, I wish I
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did. I mean, I stillhave it. It's William wolf handle.
Yeah, but you know, youcome to the United States with the name
Wolf, but it's like you're you'reborn with the name Aristotle, and you
go, but can you call meDave? Yeah, but it's I chose
a name William, by the way, I know how many people choose their
own names. So when we becamenaturalized, lot of were you a nerd?
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No? What made you pick William? I don't know, William tel
cartoon or something. I don't remember. Something something out there, maybe because
it w with wolf. I haveno idea. I don't remember William Wolf
I like it. Yeah, it'sWilliam wolf Handle. Yeah you should.
You should hear some of the namesthat your listeners give you. Yes,
yeah, all with starting with adouble the talk back. Yeah, every
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day, that's true. Amy,Goodmarny. Well, Hi Bill, and
there's cono. Good morning, Goodmorning Bill. And I just want to
say, I know it's not myshow, but happy birthday to my mom.
Oh that's sweet. And my kid'sbirthday today. Well, my daughters,
my daughters are also they're twenty nineyears old today. God, remember
you were around Neil when they wereinfants. I was around before they were
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born. Yeah, I was thereat the conception. Well then since they
were since they were born IVF,did I invite you into the bathroom to
join me? Yeah? Did youactually see the dixie cup upon their conception?
I was dressed like one of thoseguys leading the planes with the little
flashlight over here to the left,to the right. My kids, because
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they were born IVF. As theywere growing up and you know, g
Dad, where did we come from? You know kind of thing that kids
ask. I have over the mantleat my house. I have this loose
sight plexiglass sort of you know,obelisk if you will. You know how
they give awards and inside is aDixie cup, And I said, yeah,
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oh yeah, yeah, that's whereyou came from. Yeah, and
the girls put it down on allof their applications. So you were born
in Dixie. That's true. Standingyeah. Now, actually, when you
do IVF, the women have areal rough time because the eggs have to
be quote harvested, and that's whatthey are, and they do it via
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transvaginal aspiration. This is this isme going way back when when I actually
made a living doing this stuff,not the actual medical procedure, and transvaginal
aspiration is a needle probably twelve incheslong that go into the vagina. It
goes into the vagina through the cervixand then punctures the the ovary and sucks
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out the fluid, the grenagular fluid, and then in there are the eggs
and the women get super ovulated.Anyway, it is not fun for women.
For guys, it's not so bad. Do not tell me that God
is not a man when you undergoIVF and and go ahead, No,
I'm curious about the process. Youstarted that process when you were very young.
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In any case, when I Uhwas. It was one of the
doctors I was working with, andit was time Marjorie is doing her thing.
Uh in the O r U.Yeah, you know, basically sitting
there and getting transvaginally aspirated. Youjust like saying that I do. It's
this medical term and uh, Ihave to go in and basically the same
time zone you frame. You haveto go in, and you know the
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guys as a thing. And asI walk into the doctor's office, I
knew the entire staff. Uh,they all lined up. You know.
Usually it's the homistery handle when yougo to that door over there, and
if you would please produce a specimen, we'd appreciate it. Everybody is lining
up. I get handed a dixiecup. Hey Bill, you know where
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to go? Oh wow? AndI looked at the nurse who handed me
and said, you know, verynervously, I've been practicing for this moment
since I've been twelve years old.Oh, that must have creeped the hell
out of everybody. Oh, I'vegot some there's a book that I can
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write on those that part of mypractice. I mean an entire book.
Honest to god. I'm fascinated thatthe even the needle emasculated you twelve inch
needle going into your wife. Yeah, oh very well, said yeah do.
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And they used to do it laparoscopicallybefore that. I mean it was
a mess. It was a mess. So the technology, I've ye,
it's just exploded and it's really goodstuff. I just had a colonoscopy and
that thing sounds horrible. Uh wellit actually uh yeah, you feel like
you feel like yeah, afterwards,you feel like you've been kicked in the
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growing the lower stomach. Women do. It's just not easy, guys.
All right, that was good.I'll try it again in a few hours.
Not a problem. But we don'tneed it to get in a few
hours. Well, I just wantto make absolutely sure that everything is okay.
All right, why don't we dothis? I just could picture you
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screaming your own name in the shutdoor and then everybody knocking, going,
mister handle you can stop now,Yeah, well you don't. We have
plenty when I in my younger days, when I went was single and actually
was able to get laid. Okay, really, I always conflated my girlfriend's
names. I was always scared todeath that I would scream the wrong ones.
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So if I screamed my name.I would just be a jerk,
and it really helped ow. Yeah, all right, now we're going,
all right, let's do it.Handle on the news with Amy and Neil
and me. And what a startthis morning. Huh came out with a
bag, Happy birthday mom. Agift card would have been nicer. I
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think going on all right, leadstory tonight is the CNN presidential debate probably
the most It will probably be themost watched debate, certainly in terms of
numbers, yes, but anticipated debatein terms of number of people in the
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population watching since Kennedy Nixon. AndWell, I'm going to talk more about
that seven at seven o'clock. Whatwe can expect and we know it.
O Biden's going to say, it'sthat sort of a given because you know
what debates are all about, notwhat Donald Trump. No one really knows
which Donald Trump is going to bethere, combinations. I don't think he
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knows which Donald Trump is going tobe there, and that he's not sure
if he's asking which one should Ibe. So, I think that's the
biggest thing is is are we goingto see you know a more Tam?
I think I think so. Ithink he's listening. I think he is
listening to his advisors. Although youknow, when you look at these rallies,
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most of these rallies are is himrailing against the Department of Justice and
the election was rigged. I mean, it's the same mantra that's for his
base, and they're already is that'sthe point So to the I don't know,
because he he doesn't do that forpolitical purposes. He genuinely believes that
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he has been ripped off. Hegenuinely leaves the Department of Justice has been
weaponized and is going after him ina big way. So his advisor saying,
leave that alone. Everybody knows yourposition. You do not have to
doubt your position on that. One'stalk about the issues. Talk about Biden,
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how old Biden is, or howhe looks, and his position.
Look at the border, look atinflation. That's what you have to talk
about. We'll see, Well,he will talk about that. But how
much of the debate is going tobe former President Trump rehashing, which he
does every single speech, of whathappened? All right, Well, the
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pressure to pull down that misinformation isprotected. The Supreme Court throughout claims that
the Biden administration unlawfully pressured social mediacompanies into removing contentious content. The court
overturned an injunction that would have limitedcontacts between government officials and social media companies
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on different issues if it was alife to go into effect. Now,
Bill, I have a question foryou about this though, because the court
found that the plaintiffs did not havestanding right sue did not, so they
didn't really make a ruling. Theydid not make a rule. They send
it down to the court, theysend it down to the district court.
And this was just standing. Nowis it going to fly in terms of
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the way they're feeling about it?You know, I don't know. Does
the government have the right to sayto these social media companies you have to
moderate, you have to get ridwhen you know this disinformation and we know
when there's disinformation. I mean,it's pretty blatant. If it's a wobbler,
there's no way you're going to beable to stop it, because there
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are our First Amendment issues. Butwhen it's not a wobbler, when you
have crazy people out there politically,or let's say flat earthers, they're okay,
no, no, you can't bringthat out as fact. Which is
what a lot of these social mediacompanies do. It's not they produce it,
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it's they say that people produce iton our platform and we are not
going to or we don't have theright to stop it. Here's what the
reality is. Cony Barrett Amy,Cony Barrett said, you know what,
two things. Number one, they'realready doing it. These media companies are
already doing So you're suing effectively forsomething that's already been done. So the
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question is almost moot. And theissue is at this point, the people
that argue they've been harmed have notThey haven't been harmed. So that is
a standing issue. You must havestanding. In other words, you have
to you have to be harmed.So can somebody else bring the lawsuit?
Then who does have standing? Yeah? Yeah, so this isn't necessarily over.
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No, No, it's not overat all. All right. The
United Nations stands just a little bitless united. They have warned that the
continued danger to aid workers there inGaza is becoming increasingly intolerable, as Israel's
ongoing military offensive in that part ofthe world, and that they say,
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continues to block most humanitarian assistance.Yeah, this is crazy. Making.
I mean, Israel is I thinkshooting itself in the foot, in the
arm, in the head on this. I mean, I don't have a
problem with Israel going after Hamas,as most people don't. But humanitarian age
should be pouring into Gaza with thehelp of Israel, and that's not happening.
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And the hypocrisy of Natanyahu. Israel, Oh, we're helping, We're
not stopping it. There are plentyof places to go in. We're allowing
Rafa, we're allowing that crossing.It's closed, shut down, closed,
And so I think Israel is well, everybody is saying that Palestinians are on
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the verge of starving, and youknow how many hundreds of thousands of children
are pretty severely suffering from malnutrition.It's bad and I blame Israel for that.
Students, your days with phones arenumbered. So New York is moving
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to ban cell phones a week afterLA schools decided to ban cell phones in
school and we're just also getting wordedthat the state California is working on banning
cell phones in schools statewide. It'sin the legislature, it's passed out of
committee, and so it moves onto the next step. Yeah, makes
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sense because those cell phones are reallyhaving a huge impact on students' attention span,
to students' focus, student's ability towell do everything other than be in
school and do school work they're onthe phone. You'd think there'd be something
like I've gone to special screenings whereyou couldn't bring a cell phone in and
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they lock them up. You'd thinkthat they would be able to walk into
the classroom, put them in aspecial holder is what they do, and
then the teacher locks them up andif there was an emergency that a button
could be hit and they can allbe access something they do. They have
that system. The technology is there, and some schools do operate that.
I don't know if any public schoolsdo, but there are plenty of private
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institutions that do that. So theUS Supreme Court maybe inadvertently and briefly did
a whoopsie when they uploaded what itwas said to be a document about a
ruling and a yet to be releasedhigh profile case. This has to do
with the with Idaho's ban on abortions, and it appears that it indicated that
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the state would be required to allowemergency success for now. Yeah, there's
a story here. First of all, it's going to be released today or
tomorrow anyway, probably maybe today teno'clock Eastern, which is what seven o'clock
coming up. It was, evenwith this insanely conservative court, I had
a hard time believing that it woulduphold Idaho state law that says no abortion
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unless the mother's life is at risk. She has to be dying before an
abortion emergency abortion is allowed. Theproblem is what does that mean life at
risk? Does that mean right thereat that moment. Does that mean that
she continues on she has a chanceof having a severe, severe illness,
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it blows up her reproductive system.For example, if she goes forward with
an abortion that's going to be stillborn. Her life's not in danger. Now.
If the medical doctor says this isa medical emergency, well someone's going
to make that decision. And Idahosaid there is no decision to make.
We're just not gonna let it happen. Supreme Court said you can't do that,
and will say that because this becausethis decision released early. I mean
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these are draft to say they goafter revision, after revision. Okay,
I have a question for you thoughabout this. Are they making a decision
on this what's improvidently Granted, that'swhat they're saying, that the justices had
voted to dismiss the Idaho case asimprovidently Granted. I have no idea me
either, but I'm wondering if they'remaking a decision or if they're saying,
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we're not making a decision, so, yes, you can do the abortion.
I think they're making a decision.Yes you can do the abortion.
Yeah. I believe that the billis not constitutional. We'll find out for
sure a little later. I yeah, Hey, Bill, So in this
you refer to them as the incrediblyconservative Supreme Court, but recently they upheld
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the gun decision when it comes topeople with temporary restraining orders, which you
mentioned. And now this, atwhat point do we just say, Okay,
they're being as fair, they're beingfair, they're making fair decision because
when you instead of always referring tovative, because they are, because they are,
because for them to make any otherdecision, for example, saying someone
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who's in a restraining order for domesticviolence still has the right to carry a
gun around, but it doesn't makethem any less conservative. What it does
is still insanely conservative and the decisionis okay, this time around, under
these circumstances, a rational decision wasmade. Under these limited circumstances. For
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example, a woman cannot have anabortion unless she is dying right there on
the table. Okay, that's alittle insane, don't you think. But
they didn't. That wasn't you evenagreed with their decision when it came to
abortion. You said, it's astate issue. No, no, no,
no, no, it's not theSupreme Court. Well, it is
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a state issue now, But theSupreme Court held that a woman has a
right to have an emergency abortion.Just saying that. Everybody refers to them
as this conservative court. I know, and I know they are, but
these are not necessarily typically conservative alonglines, which means that maybe they're making
decisions based on the Constitution. Godforbid. No, it's it's with the
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logic. What does the law actuallymean? But it is. It is
very, very conservative. The mostconservative court we have had in many,
many years. Just give me anexample. During the War in court,
William O. Douglas, who wasthe last Supreme Court justice that actually was
nominated and got the the got theposition. FDR nominated him, and there
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were a whole series of cases inthe seventies on on pornography, right,
and which way did the court go? Douglas wouldn't even go. They had
screenings, actually, they actually hadscreenings to show the justices what's pornography and
what is pornography? And others wouldn'teven go. He said, I don't
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care. You got First Amendment right, I don't even have to see it.
I don't give a damn. Yougot the right to do it.
Leave me alone. And I rememberThirdgod Marshall, the first black justice of
the US Supreme Court LBJ nominated himand he was actually lead counselor for Brown
versus Board of Education, great civilrights have, first African American, great
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civil rights attorney and very liberal justice. When they had those porno films shown
in the projection room at the SupremeCourt, not only was he rushing to
see those films, he wouldn't missone of them. He almost ran to
see those films. See different kindof view. We got popcorns? Yeah,
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I know. Is that what madeyou want to be a lawyer?
And I'm not even going to goin terms of the popcorn jokes, Okay,
nothing to worry about here. TheDepartment of Homeland Security has identified four
hundred migrants migrants smuggled into the USthat may have ties to ISIS. Isn't
that lovely? Now? They don'tknow what kind of ties. They're being
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deported, They're not being arrested oraccused of terrorism, just having ties.
I don't know what ties are.By the way, is it just going
on the website? Is it conversing? Is it having chats? And I
don't know. They don't tell us. I don't care. Okay, fine,
And obviously the government doesn't care,and the government wants those out.
How many of them have come inillegally and asked for asylum and I think
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that I think that's what happened withthose four hundred. We should get an
asylum and put them all there.Yeah, good point. You think a
civil libertarian or two would have aproblem with that? Oh I don't care.
Yeah, I forgot to say that. Yeah, horrible story, But
a little more information on it.We heard about Titus Mark Winninger. He
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was actually eleven years old. Itwas reported that he was twelve years old.
He's the boy that died at theWild Rivers Park in Irvine. If
you remember back on the twenty second, Well, it seems that he suffered
a medical emergency. We didn't knowwhat it was. It was a medical
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emergency, not drowning or being ejectedor anything. Well that's what we found
out. If you remember, theywere saying it had nothing to do with
the why. But it was arare congenital heart defect. And that happened
before. Was it that basketball playerwhat was his name, Ken Bias or
the died of a heart attack,a young man right on the court.
He died and Jim Fix remember therunner who was created jogging, I mean,
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was the guru of jogging. Andhe died at fifty two and he
had a heart attack right there.They didn't know he had a congenital heart
issue. That's when I stopped jogging. Well, jogging will kill you every
time. That's why I don't jog. Bad for you, So it's it
unfortunately happens. And there's no JohnRitter, right, No one knows he
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hadn't He had an aneurism and therewas no way to tell because it was
behind his a order and it's justit just happens. Yeah, And unfortunately
the kid and most of the time, if you read the story, it's
out of the Orange County Register.It affects only one percent of the population,
and usually with no consequences. Youdon't even know it. It's say,
symptomatic, until it kills you.So this poor kid in the parents.
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Yeah, well, the death knollwill soon toll for the International Space
Station. Not tomorrow or anything,but a few years. NASA's going to
pay SpaceX eight hundred and forty threemillion dollars to develop a vehicle that will
help steer the International Space Station outof order or order out of orbit and
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basically to go back into the atmosphereand burn up for re entry at a
place specific. Because usually when thesesatellites burn up, they know they're going
to burn up, they know thetime they're going to burn up. They
can't tell you within I don't knowa million square miles where it's going to
enter. Usually it's in the ocean, but sometimes it hits you know,
people look around and there's a livingroom couch that just caught on fire because
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a piece went through the roof,or it takes someone's head off, which
is a little more problematic. Remembera long time ago, Space Lab was
the big one that they were worriedabout where it was, and they thought
it was in eastern or Western Australia, and they found that big chunk of
it out in the bad lands ofWestern Australia. So this is going to
steer it. So it lands probablyin the Pacific Ocean, and it's not
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going to be for a few years. It's like in twenty thirty or something
like that. And that's a bigdeal because it was going to be big
chunks of stuff left. As itenters the orbit, most of it burns
up, but there's enough there thatcould do some harm. Could you squat
if you could get up there,if you get a ride to space,
Could you go on the space stationand squat like they do in empty houses
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here? You know what? Itprobably I think you just say this is
my place. I don't know,because it depends on the rules. For
example, if the part of thatof the space station that is American,
they would probably have to evict youlegally, makes sense because of the rules
of tenancy and the Russian part theywould just then just shoot you. That's
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it. General Juan Jose Zaninga dismissedhis commander of the Bolivian Army just days
earlier. He's a Bolivian general.He had been arrested now or he has
been arrested now and accused of mountinga coup against the government after attempting to
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storm the presidential palace. And hedid. You saw the troops lined up,
you saw the armed personnel carrier bashthrough the front door. It was
a coup and it didn't work,and so he was arrested. Hilarious,
the the whatnot the dictator? Imean, the president said later that the
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coup was in fact, you know, it failed. And what Nigga said
was that the president in fact orderedthe coup. That's his defense. I
was just following orders. Let meget this right. The president ordered a
coup to overturn his presidency. Don'thave that right. That's not gonna be
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a good defense. And they handcuffedhim. Yeah, that's kind of rough.
Yeah, he's going to have aproblem, not a very great.
Well he told me to He's like, I told you to break down the
doors of my palace. Yes,keeping track of cars is really tough right
(26:52):
now because there's been a massive weeklong outage of c d K Global And
I said to myself, what isCDK Global? Well, it's software used
to track what vehicles are on carlots. It does credit checks, it
generates interest rates for auto loans,and complete sales contracts. And the system
(27:15):
has been down and no big dealexcept the fact that thousands of car lots.
This is the eight hundred pound gorilla. This is what all the car
dealerships use. So they've been shutdown for what a week now? Amy?
Is that right? Yeah, it'sbeen a week, and they're saying
that they're thinking that maybe they'll havethem up and running by June thirtieth,
(27:38):
which is Sunday. They've got acouple that they've kind of tested to get
them back up and running again.But I guess buying a car is a
little more difficult this week. Allright, after a year long battle,
I'm happy to hear this, MarilynMonroe's Brentwood home has been saved from destruction.
So just yesterday the La City Council, in a unanimous decision voted or
(28:03):
decision, but unanimously voted to designatethe Spanish colonial style residence as a historic
Cultural monument. So that's the onlyhouse I believe she owned. That's the
house she died in. And theysaid the only the only thing was they
probably should have done this sixty yearsago. Yeah, she paid, which
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is not good for the people thatbought it. They bought it for eight
point three five million and bought itwith the plans to demolish the house.
Yeah, so what do they dodo they think, Katie. All they
can do is probably got the insideand the house has to stay on the
outside. They can't do much aboutit. I want to know what seventy
five thousand dollars is the equivalent ofand would you look that up? Seventy
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five thousand dollars in nineteen sixty two, what is the equivalency today of that?
Because I want to know what MarilynMonroe paid for that house, or
if today she had bought that house, what would she have paid for it?
So bill of a historic landmark orwhatever like that. They they don't
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buy it from the city, doesn'tend up owning it. They just the
owner keeps it. They just can'tdo anything. Yeah, you can't do
it. It's its historical monument.Thank you. You can't do Jack,
You could do it to the inside, you said, Yeah, they can't
control the inside. Sure, it'dbe like the Brady Bunch House, Yeah,
or the Anaheim White House. Whenthe Anaheim Whitehouse went up in flames,
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Bruno had to bring it back becausethere was enough standing and it had
been declared a historical landmark. Theyhe had to rebuild it on the same
footprint to look exactly like they didbefore. Now the inside he could do
whatever he wanted. Yeah, ninetysixty two seventy five thousand dollars in seven
(29:53):
hundred and forty seven thousand dollars theequivalency. Oh, so it would be
a tiny little house. Now,No, it's a how in Brentwood?
I think No, I'd say ifyou bother Yeah, yeah, I mean
this is in Brentwood and it's sevenhundred and sixty seven thousand dollars. So
to give you an idea of whatthese folks pay, that's eight point three
five million dollars. And so wecan go the other way. What is
(30:17):
eight five three point never mind?Okay, I think we're done, guys.
Oh only the last story amy thatmulti vitamins will kill you. Yes,
So the question is does one today give you more days? The
answer is no. The study fromthe National Institute of Health reports that multivitamins
will not help extend your life.So that's the gist of it. Yeah,
(30:41):
so here's a takeaway. And we'vebeen doing study after study and reporting
after reporting. Taking vitamins, eatinghealthy, exercising will kill you. I
don't look at him fixed. Yeah, there's a lot of stories that prove
that. This morning, I willsay this that now this doesn't this doesn't
represent this study doesn't represent who havevitamin deficiencies and doctors have prescribed them.
(31:03):
But I will say this. Adoctor a long time ago told me that
people at take vitamins have very expensivepe and that is it. Yeah.
Well I was talking I was talkingat this morning about my vitamins and the
vitamin intake. And she was talkingabout how when she used to work for
doctor Dre. Uh it was whatnot doctor Dre, doctor Drue. Yeah,
(31:23):
I know one or the other.I always get the too complated has
the headphones. Yeah that's right.And she said that he said that you
can get all your vitamins, whichis true, he is doctor uh got.
You can get your vitamins from food. And I said that's why I,
uh, I get Costco burritos becauseI get all my vitamins. And
(31:45):
then we talked about vitamin D.Well, that's an easy one. You
take a Costco burrito and you eatit out in the sunlight and you get
all the vitamin D on your homefree. Okay, we're done. I
also want to point out something thatI just noticed, and that is that
Amy King giggles like Wilma Flintstone.Oh stop. Nobody else picked up on
that, no, but now isthe first time now that it's hit me.
(32:07):
Okay, yeah, now you gotmy attention, all right, kf
I am six forty five everywhere onthe iHeartRadio app. You've been listening to
the Bill Handle Show. Catch MyShow Monday through Friday six am to nine
am, and anytime on demand onthe iHeartRadio app.