Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:06):
Did you forget what day it is?
Speaker 2 (00:07):
Of course not what calculations are corrected? Is now the
sise October? It's the first, twenty first, It's October twenty first.
Speaker 3 (00:17):
That's the future day from the future, the future ass Finally, Alve.
Speaker 2 (00:21):
You're telling me that this soccer is nuclear. We're taking
a trip where the future from r.
Speaker 3 (00:28):
In this present crisis, government is not the solution to
our problem. Government is the problem. This is Charlotte County Speaks,
your chance to let your voice be heard on local, state,
and national issues, and now broadcasting live from a dumpy
little warehouse.
Speaker 2 (00:49):
Behind a taco bell.
Speaker 3 (00:51):
The host of Charlotte County Speaks Can love Joy.
Speaker 2 (01:00):
News Radio fifteen eighty and one hundred point nine FM,
Wccfradio dot com and on your iHeartRadio app. This is
Charlotte County Speaks. I'm Ken Lovejoy. How you doing? Tuesday?
Ten o Eight's the time. Phone lines are open for
whatever you wish to discuss at nine four one two
zero six fifteen eighty toll free eight eight eight four
(01:21):
four one fifteen eighty. I can email us the address.
CEC Speaks at live dot com. Miss the show Find
them all at our homepage or on the app in
the podcast section. And also when it comes to the app,
please make us a preset. And also don't forget about
that talkback feature. If you don't have time to call in,
(01:41):
but you want to make a comment or a suggestion, whatnot,
use that talkback feature on the app. And uh and
we'll get it, okay, right, Hey, where you listen listening
for the keyword so that you can win a big,
big beautiful bucks. One thousand bucks can be yours and
(02:03):
win was the big number for the ten o'clock hour.
Win Win, So text it where it's supposed to be
texted to, and good luck to you from all of
us here at Charlotte County Speaks who are not eligible
to win the thousand dollars. All right, So huh, yeah,
(02:26):
I don't know. I don't know what they're spraying, but yeah,
my allergies just kicked in big time yesterday and that
usually doesn't happen. So yeah, I don't know what's going on,
but I do know this a lot of people out
there doing the ozempic, risking blindness and intestinal injuries, but
(02:50):
they're doing it anyway. And forty one percent of GLP
users credit their weight loss with career advancement after they
started to choke it or what are you inject that stuff,
don't you ew? Anyway, they lost the weight and they
credit their career advancement from using the eozepic that raises promotions,
(03:13):
new opportunities. But here's something even better and it's non invasive.
Check this out. Israeli researchers have been getting promising results
from testing hypnosis based weight loss surgery. Yeah, you're not
(03:36):
really getting the surgery, you're just being hypnotized in the
thinking that you're getting surgery. Huh with me on that. Well,
the early findings show that participants lost about ten percent
of their body weight within three months after this hypnosis treatment. Yeah,
(03:58):
you get hypnotized and they hypnotize you into thinking that
you're actually under anesthesia and that you're getting the weight
loss surgery. Pretty cool. Most participants lost an average of
ten percent of their body weight within three months. And
(04:20):
one of the participants says, it's really magic. I'm no
longer tempted by pastries at all. And a few years ago,
we'll call her Rose from Jerusalem underwent a conventional bariatric
surgery that initially helped her shed about one hundred and
thirty two pounds. She was large, but over time, as
(04:42):
happens with a lot of those people who get the
bariatric surgeries her weight, they wind up regaining the weight
and the honeymoon period ended and the demon's return. She
said she tried weight loss injections but suffered severe side effects.
And again, yeah, close to two thousand people have lost
(05:03):
their sight or had eye damage of some kind after
taking the ozepic the gl ones I guess they're called.
And she says she felt hopeless after she couldn't lose
weight on her own. She was afraid to cut into
her body again, and so she tried this little hypnosis
(05:24):
routine where they hypnotized her into thinking she was under
the knife for another gastric shortening, and it works worked
for her, She says, you know, she was initially worried
(05:44):
how she would handle it, but she was really surprised.
She hasn't felt the need to go back, She hasn't
felt tempted by the pastry and the heavily sugared coffees
and stuff like that. It actually worked for and it's
probably a lot cheaper than going under the knife. In
surgery too, So I mean, yeah, like doctor Gill was talking,
(06:09):
he got one line everybody going for bariatric surgery, and
then you got the other line to the gym that's empty.
You know, I don't get why. I don't understand why
people don't want to just it's so much easier just
to take care of yourself. Really, it's true. Go figure.
I know, commercials be damned, but you can do it
(06:33):
on your own. You are strong enough to do it.
In case you ever, you know, want to, you probably
should too, do it yourself or get that we'll get
mark or we'll get rich too. That's another one into
a weight loss. There's a big one too. He does
it only now we know you have to create the
whole operating room environment as part of the hypnosis routine.
(06:57):
It works even better. Who knew, engineer knows which gear
there is. You need to run your source to the
DNS fifteen hundred first.
Speaker 4 (07:04):
This always did feel like one of those shows that
would go for a while. Will be right back with
Charlotte County speaks on news radio fifteen eighty WCCF. So.
Speaker 5 (07:15):
The United Nations has caved on their proposed carbon tax
for now yeah, we warned everybody about this. They wanted
to impose a tax on shipping moving packages for around
the globe. They wanted to charge a carbon tax, and
that money would go directly to the United Nations. Again,
(07:37):
we're supposed to have that whole no taxation without representation
thing right. Anyway, they caved on it after we threatened saying, hey,
anybody signs off on this thing, we're going to smack
you up side the head with tariffs. I am ready
of The whole thing is is that our argument is
is that this climate tax is inflationary, so it's tariff
(07:59):
tariffs inflationary to But neither here nor there. Why I
say for now is all it takes is another nonsensical
green president to say, hey, that's a great idea. Get
rid of it once and for all. Watch dog on
Wall Street dot com.
Speaker 2 (08:44):
Who is this man?
Speaker 4 (08:48):
And who is this man?
Speaker 2 (08:53):
Bet again?
Speaker 6 (08:54):
Him out. We've got a problem.
Speaker 4 (08:58):
He's gotta go.
Speaker 6 (09:00):
If he don't leave, can't leave here no more. If
we want to say my home, we need to get
him out. When I come home from work. There he
is again talking loud, talking trash. It's always something about here.
(09:20):
Everything's out of place where it just don't belong, can't
get no sleep because it's up on the phone the
morn to save my home, we need to get about.
Speaker 2 (09:39):
News Radio fifteen eighty one hundred point nine FM WCCF
ten twenty two at Charlotte County Speaks. Phone lines were
open at ninety four one two zero six fifteen eighty
toll free eight eight eight four four to one fifteen eighty. Hey.
Also uh, Coming up November eighth, CDBIA is grouping up
(10:08):
over at the Port Charlottetown Center for the show Me
the License Home Building and Remodeling Show, presented by Elite
Hurricane Protection. Gonna have live giveaways, demonstrations, paneled discussions, kid
zone activities, contractors right there, got their boots. All set
(10:30):
up November eighth, ten am to five pm at the
Port Charlottetown Center, free of charge, open to the public.
Be there, won't you. Hey?
Speaker 4 (10:43):
Uh?
Speaker 2 (10:45):
That all happened to Canada. I mean that didn't take long,
did it? A few years of Trudeau? And wow, what
a crap hole. I mean it should be one of
the world's best countries to live in for many people.
It once was for many years. It once was They
(11:07):
possess vast natural resources, reserves of energy exceeding those of
the US on a per capita basis, endless natural space.
The world's second largest country by area, adequate infrastructure, no
enemies yet, paramilitary democracy, and an educated population, it should
(11:30):
face no problems beyond winter. But a decade under the
effeminate Justin Trudeau has reduced a first world country to
the level of a failing, although not yet failed state.
The strains of O Canada are giving ways to the
cries of whoa Canada Well. The recent book by journalist
(11:55):
Tristan Happer, titled Don't Be Canada. How one country did
every thing wrong all at once and It's True, documents
the national malaise with many examples of stagnation in confidence
and just total folly. Epithets such as Awoke, Dystopia, and
(12:16):
The Sick Man of North America. Those are what's now
heard when you're discussing Canada. Where did it all go
so wrong? Canada's most urgent self inflicted problem is their
stagnant economy, which has been ailing since twenty fifteen. Canada
has the largest increases in government spending and the second
(12:39):
slowest gross slowest growth in GDP per capita in G seven,
averaging a mere point six percent annim for the past
two decades. Half of the US rate. Chronic underinvestment has
produced low productivity, and even government pension plans direct much
of their investment towards more profit suitable US companies in
(13:01):
a slow death spiral as manufacturing capacity is hollowed out,
business is mired in red tape. Jobless rate is at
seven percent. Household debt relative to GDP is the highest
within the G seven. Gross national debt has grown faster
than in all advanced countries for the last decade, now
(13:23):
increasing at one hundred nine million dollars per day and
amounting to over forty thousand dollars per taxpayer for federal
debt plus similar figure provincially. The pale pink Liberal government
under Mark Carney plans to run huge deficits for the
next four years, to the tune of fifty seven billion
(13:47):
per year, much higher than under Trudeau, whose deficit for
the last year before COVID when than the largest in
seven years that was a mere twenty five billion, more
than double in it for the next four years. The
Canadian dollar wants at parody with our dollar today is
worth about seventy cents. The economist Dave Chappel describes Canada
(14:12):
as quote the worst developed country in the world with
the housing costs they got. Their housing costs are on
par with New York. However, they got the wages of
Mississippi and the prices of California, same size economy as Alabama,
and they've got taxes that are higher than in any
(14:35):
of the fifty United States. Wow, that was quick. A
second problem is bloated government. What's new an unbound sense
of entitlement among the nomenclatra public servants constitute nearly a
quarter of the population, each costing one hundred and seventy
(14:56):
two thousand dollars annually on average, is overregulated but under governed.
The ten provincial governments have mixed records, but the federal
government falls between lame and broken, as shown by the
analysis of the political commentator Andrew Coin in his book
The Crisis in Canadian Democracy. Canada flounders under weak and
(15:19):
semi functional central government, so that, for example, after one
hundred and sixty years, it's only now attempting to lift
inter provincial tariff barriers to trade. It also struggles with
jerry Mandard writings highly inequitable representation. Cronyism sometimes corrupts selection
(15:39):
processes for candidates and party leaders. It's sound familiar. These
failings are mainly due to the inflated role of the
Prime Minister, who functions not only as the head of
government but also as the de facto head of state,
with powers exceeding those of the US president. Prime minister
controls almost everything is a personal including the legal and
(16:02):
financial systems, and knows that the MPs of his party
will never contradict them. Just like the Democrats down here,
they all stay in line up there too, So he
rules over an obedient legislator a legislature as a democratic dictator,
and thus the Liberals, the perpetual ruling party in twenty fifteen,
(16:23):
selected as their photogenic Trudeau, a forty three year old
form of drama coach, lacking experience or wisdom and MP's
acquiesced as he turned Canada into the world's most woke
country disastrous policies for the economy, energy, the law, indigenous issues,
mass immigration. The public was less impressed, abuse was heaped
(16:47):
on him by angry crowds. By the end of his reign,
national institution. Institutions such as the postal service, public broadcasting,
passenger trains, and medicare are all dead or morribon, but
devour billions in everizing public subsidies. The Conservative Party offers
alternatives that roughly corresponded to the policies of the UK
(17:07):
Labor Party, which is probably why they haven't won anything.
Third issue, Canada is now nearly unaffordable for most of
its citizens. The property prices in Vancouver and Toronto are
among the world's highest, the world's highest, so that an
average house costs around one point seven and one point
(17:28):
four million dollars, while wages have fallen well behind. Family
incomes average seventy four thousand a year. Three quarters of
Canadians live in large cities where these problems are the worst.
Food transportation also a problem for most people, as are
(17:49):
very high taxes. About a tenth of the population has
to rely on food banks. Young people facing straightened futures
in rental accommodations are now more more conservative in polls
than their elders. Socialism is not working for them. Seniors
suffer because the Medicare system is slowly dying, so that
despite paying taxes for medicare, they're often forced to use
(18:12):
semilicit private clinics where they receive good care at a
premium price. If they can't get that, they're encouraged to
kill themselves. Hey, we'll help you. The fourth failure is
seen in the snarled, inept justice system worse than ours here,
which has devolved into a system based on inverse culpability.
(18:36):
Minor misdeeds. Traffic violations are punished briskly, and there are
fines for not turning off the motor promptly or for
failing to brush all the snow from one's car, but
repeat drunk driving offenders continue to re offend regardless. Likewise,
speech deemed hateful can lead to years of imprisonment in Canada,
but actual assaults and homicides often result in a slap
(18:59):
on the wristun Familiar corruption often semi legal, is pervasive,
bales almost automatic. Even for violent criminals. Judges must apply
the Gladeo principle, and that mandates lighter penalties for Indigenous
miscreants due to their victimhood, because they're all victims the perpetrators,
(19:22):
not the actual victims. In the extremes of I see
are exemplified by the way that an angler in Nova,
Scotia risks a fine of one hundred thousand dollars for
failing to kill a small invasive fish or five hundred
thousand dollars for a second offense. Amyham, a gender skeptical nurse,
(19:47):
recently fined ninety three thousand dollars for putting up a
billboard saying I love JK. Rolling. That's all it was,
I love JK Rolling. Billboard up. She paid for it.
She got fined ninety three thousand dollars for liking JK. Rolling.
(20:07):
Compare this with the six year prison sentence given to
indurgent Singh Rayat in connection with the bombing of Air
India Flight one eighty two, which killed three hundred and
twenty nine people in nineteen eighty five. He got six
years for that. She got ninety three thousand for liking JK. Rolling.
Fifth problem is a recent flood of Just like everywhere else, immigration,
(20:34):
Canada has admitted half a million newcomers annually from a
half from Asia, one of the world's highest rates and
thus contributing to severe housing shortages. A quarter of the
population is now foreign born. Many immigrant. Mind you, now,
the total population of Canada is about the population of California.
(20:56):
Many immigrants become assimilated in succeed in areas like business, academics,
and other professions, but not all cultures are equal to
the challenge. Dozens of lethal ethnic gangs have proliferated in
cities like Vancouver and Toronto. Murderous conflicts between Sikhs and
Hindus simmer. Over half of all Canadians believe that the
(21:19):
inflow of migrants is too rapid because it is other
national failures too. The perennial English, French, Aboriginal lack of
national unity, the substandard conditions of life on reserves, the
Indian reserves, the lawless homeless encampments and big cities, epidemic
of opioid drugs, all the problems we have here. Rising
(21:41):
rates of crime, drug abuse, car theft is rampant, sound
familiar common factor. The sentimental national characteristic of wishing to
see everyone except white males in the best possible light
means that every failing is attributed to victimhood, producing ludicrous,
woke culture. It's an embarrassment, that's all Canadians feel. Embarrassment,
(22:09):
not pride over the past accomplishments. So that statues of
her national founders like Sir John A. McDonald are hidden
behind plywood sheets on grounds of political incorrectness. The mighty
projects of the past, like the impossible trans Continental Railroad
trans Canada Highway Saint Lawrence Seaway brings ocean going ships
(22:29):
into the heart of the continent, almost unthinkable in today's
climate of national self doubt, self hatred, attacks on white privilege,
and performative displays a virtue, although some national projects are
now mooted by Carney. Recent billion dollar publicly funded fiascos
such as failed battery plants, raised doubts as do foolish
(22:50):
choices made by bureaucrats and handing out public money, for example,
nine million dollars for a company that produces edible crickets
it costs faith Anto to eat the bogs. Or they
handed out twenty million dollars to help people focus on
improving gender responsive and climate resilient agricultural practices, not in Canada,
(23:15):
in Tanzania, like they got enough to give out foreign aid.
Like that Canada's problems they resemble the same problems such
as Australia, Germany even to a certain extent us here,
and they appear just unwilling to do anything about it.
(23:38):
Conrad Black noted that most countries go through periods of regression,
predicting that Canada will eventually shake off its politically correct
obsessions and recover a sense of purpose. If this reset occurs,
it would be a nice irony that Trump, although reviled
in Canada for his attacks on them dei, anti patriotism, transgenderism,
(24:01):
and public disorder, may through them have spurred a national reawakening.
And like here, a lot of the gen Zers are
a lot more conservative than their elders. I think you're
gonna start finding that in Canada as well. That from
Leo Standing Leo's an experimental psychologist. Crazy stuff. Yeah, well,
(24:30):
they do it to themselves. Canada has done it to themselves.
They don't see any way out two oh six fifteen
eighty toll free eight eight eight four four one fifteen eighty.
Other woke places here in the United States would be Cincinnati.
And you kind of knew it was coming. You thought
it would have happened right after the incident in Cincinnati
(24:51):
where the crowd beat up that guy and the lady. Well,
Cincinnati Police Chief Terry Theotage finally placed on paid administrative leave,
but at least she's out for now.
Speaker 4 (25:06):
Quote.
Speaker 2 (25:06):
The city continues to face serious public safety challenges that
underscore the need for stability at the command level. Therefore,
I've named Assistant Chief Adam Henny as interim police chief.
Our focus remains on maintaining stability within the department and
ensuring the highest standards of service to our residents. You remember,
(25:27):
police Chief Terry was actually blaming the victims for what
happened to them in Cincinnati, Yes, taking no responsibility for her. Well, again,
appointed police chiefs, when you've got a woke city council,
you're going to have a woke appointed police chief. And
that woke appointed police chief usually means that you're going
(25:52):
to have a higher crime rate, hence Cincinnati. Yeah, well,
well she blamed social media for the violent mob of
mostly black males beating a white couple at a jazz
festival over the summer. If you recall white couple brudely beaten,
(26:18):
blame them, blame blame the victims, blame social media. But
no responsibility for yeah, by the city at all for that.
So well you can, Yeah, she needed to go because
she was she had really just very poor leadership skills.
But at the same time is much gonna change. You
(26:38):
got another dude there, but you still got a woke
city council who doesn't seem to care about the ever
increasing crime. You're gonna hire more cops. You're gonna start
actually patrolling and fighting crime in Cincinnati. Just questions, just questions.
Speaker 1 (26:55):
The worst thing that could happen to a show like
this is that it would ever become predictable.
Speaker 3 (26:59):
I think are going to have a real humdinger, hilarious,
witty and inspired, very great show.
Speaker 4 (27:05):
We'll be right back with Charlotte County Speaks on news
radio fifteen eighty WCCF.
Speaker 2 (27:13):
Candy corn.
Speaker 1 (27:14):
They're using the word candy to describe it is wrong.
Using the word corn is wrong. It does not taste
like candy nor corn. You taste like something that was
made out of oil. You could take all the bags
of candy corn and actually, if you melted them down,
(27:36):
you could run a car. All the candy corn it
was ever made. It was made in nineteen fourteen. They
never had to make it again. We never eat ano them.
We only eat two or three or four pieces a piece.
Literally after Halloween, the candy corn companies send out their minions.
Speaker 2 (28:01):
And they go from garbage.
Speaker 1 (28:02):
Candy garbage can and collect it and throw it back
in the back.
Speaker 2 (28:08):
And it appears next to.
Speaker 4 (28:49):
Devil.
Speaker 2 (28:49):
And the daughter you mentioned the wanna try.
Speaker 6 (28:53):
To kill me with a genius?
Speaker 2 (28:56):
Said he down about it?
Speaker 1 (28:59):
What about.
Speaker 2 (29:12):
News Radio fifteen eighty one hundred point nine FM WCCF
ten forty seven Here at Charlotte County Speaks phone lines
open nine four one two zero six fifteen eighty. Crime
depends on where you live, whether it's going up or down.
But threats to safety in the US come in all
(29:34):
kinds of forms public health crisis, a natural disasters, shootings,
traffic accidents. People can feel unsafe in other ways too,
Aside from the types of hazards that cause bodily injury
or their physical harm, taking out an unaffordable second mortgage,
forgoing health insurance, or even visiting unsecured websites are always
(29:57):
ways that people run into danger. One big worry for
many people right now is the cost of inflation, which
threatens American's financial safety. And no one can avoid all danger, however,
and we take on a certain level of risk based
on where we choose to live. As well, some cities
are simply better at protecting their residents from harm. Thinks
(30:19):
Charlotte County does pretty fine job to that myself. So
to determine where Americans can feel most secure in more
than one sense, wal it hub got in on the
game and compared more than one hundred and eighty cities
across forty one key indicators of safety, and their data
(30:43):
set ranges from traffic fatalities per capita and assaults on
per capita to the unemployment rate and the percentage of
the population that is uninsured. So, when that is all
figured out, the top five safest cities in the United
States to live in And I question this, but number
(31:10):
five Yonkers, New York, Number two Juno, Alaska. I could
imagine that Juno should probably be higher up on the
list when.
Speaker 4 (31:19):
You're that.
Speaker 2 (31:24):
Burlington, Vermont coming in at number three. Overland Parks, Kansas,
the number two safest city in the United States. The
number one safest city in the United States according to
wallet hub, based on their forty one key indicators, is Warwick,
(31:45):
Rhode Island. Really No, No, I've been there. I'm just
saying I'm kind of surprised that that would be the
safest city got a rank of seventy one point twoy one.
(32:09):
From going down the list past that, see where I'm
not seeing Florida in here yet at all. And I'm
well passed Providence, Rhode Island, and a couple of and
a couple of California, Seattle. I'm still not seeing they're
saying Seattle is say that is a load of crap.
(32:32):
I'm not seeing one Florida city. My hometown, Spokane coming
in at number ninety three. No, oh, here we are
number ninety nine, Saint Petersburg, Tampa one oh two. We
don't show up till then Miami one thirteen, Tallahassee won twenty.
(33:00):
That's weird. And you know, really, when you're looking at
the scores, we're only talking just a couple of points
away from each other for any ten or twenty. But
still you would think Orlando one sixty. You would think
that more Florida cities would have shown up in the
top one hundred. You would think so walle wallet hub,
(33:27):
I think they're a bunch of liars. You get nothing. Well,
we certainly didn't get anything in the top in the
top one hundred, and now it's time for five random
random facts. Number one of your five random facts, it
(33:54):
is possible that Prince was one of the first kids
to play the game Oregon Trail. It was created for
an eighth grade teacher in Minneapolis in the fall of
nineteen seventy one, and at that time, Prince was an
eighth grade student at that school. Other than that, we
(34:15):
have no info on it. Number two forty percent what
forty percent of cats are left handed and another ten
percent are ambidextrias. Huh. Number three there's a German word
that literally means a face in need of a slap.
(34:39):
It's pronounced back feifeen, guzikt, backfeife and gzickt. That means
a face in need of a slap. Number four it
is possible to win the US presidential election with just
(35:00):
twenty two of the popular vote. To have enough electoral
votes to win, you need to win the thirty nine
smallest states and Washington, DC. And finally, number five of
your five random facts. A group of parrots A group
of parrots the bird parrots. A group of them is
(35:23):
called a pandemonium. A pandemonium, and there is your five
random facts. Pandemonium. Yes, that's that's what we get. Yes,
good news, we've got it. Got a few good and
(35:45):
this pretty good idea. It's relevant for Halloween too, well,
I don't know how relevant, but nonetheless. A new study
found that giving peanut products to babies has prevented sixty
one thousand kids from developing dangerous allergies over the past decade.
Doctors used to tell parents to not let kids have
(36:08):
peanuts until age three because they thought it might cause allergies,
but the advice flipped in twenty fifteen and it's made
a huge difference. Peanut allergies are down twenty seven percent
since then, and forty percent since the recommendations expanded in
twenty seventeen. So give the peanut butter and the peanuts
to the little ones and they might not have the
(36:30):
dangerous peanut allergies that messes up everybody else's life because
we got to accommodate little acerbity in her peanut allergies.
Here's another one. A security guard at a train station
in Turkey jumped in at the last second to save
a woman's life. Happened at a station where you can
(36:51):
walk across the tracks. She, of course, like people all
over the world, she had headphones on didn't hear the
train pulling in. He grabbed her arm and yanked back
just in time. Security camera got it on video. He
literally saved her life. Good News and BuzzFeed has a
(37:12):
great list of twenty two ridiculously pure social media posts
to brighten your day. You can check that out. All
kinds of fun little yeah, fun little videos, animal videos,
little cat litl doggie puppies. You gotta love the puppies.
Puppy videos two six fifteen eighty, toll free eight eight
(37:36):
eight four four one fifteen point eighty. Also, uh, if
you can get them, I guess you can get them.
They say here that eating two to three kiwis a
day can relieve chronic constipation. I love the kiwi two
(38:02):
or three a day. It's a lot of kiwis. A
little sour there. They say about one out of every
six to seven people are affected by chronic constipation. Worldwide,
Nine to twenty percent of adults have some form of it,
and the cause is unknown. But they did find that
(38:24):
two to three kiwis a day, consuming two to three
a day is well tolerated. And it's kind of it's
kind of like eating six to eight prunes a day.
So if you don't have any prunes, but you can
get yourself some Kiwis, go for it. Kids. Also, Red
(38:51):
Cup Day, you know what Red Cup Day is? That
that's the big revealed day for Starbucks holiday cup.
Speaker 3 (39:02):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (39:02):
I know, nobody cares, but I got a couple of
minutes to kill and it was right in front of me,
So here we go. Starbucks revealed yesterday that Red Cup
Day is going to take place on November thirteenth. It's
an annual holiday tradition. It's Starbucks now, folks, so you
have to celebrate it. And it's going to see customers
receive a reusable red holiday cup when they purchase a
(39:26):
hand crafted holiday drink. Handcraft So just a venty will
my venty strong black coffee? Will that? Will? That work?
It'll work? Okay? All right? Well you know I might
go there just to get a just to get a
(39:47):
red cup. Oh it's a big Oh, it's a big,
big deal. It's a big deal at the Starbucks. Uh aggress. Yeah,
(40:07):
this is I've heard of this. Used to see it
in San Francisco, particularly down at gear Delli Square. The
sea lions just plopping all over the docks. Well, this
is actually up near Santa Cruz. These seals are steel,
(40:28):
very aggressive steals. Seals are biting people and stealing their surfboards. Yes,
biting surfers and stealing their surfboards. Yeah, there was one
teenage boy attempted to paddle away from the animal, but
the otter grabbed onto the leash connecting the surfer's leg
(40:49):
to his board, pulled him backwards. He disconnected the seal,
kept going with his board in the mouth, pull the
leash on it. Tone his board further out to see
the animals are turning on us, folks. That tells you
right there at end times, end times. So each your
(41:13):
each your three keyways. Yes, avoid your bowels safely, and
don't go surfing in California. And don't believe that Warwick,
Rhode Island is the safest US city. Don't believe it.
(41:34):
Anybody got any more jokes, any funny? Nope, nope, all right,
see you folks, you are not fad easily you're clothes.
If you're not the den, you are the crew. Please leave.
We are close.
Speaker 3 (41:51):
Make your way.
Speaker 1 (41:52):
To the door.
Speaker 4 (41:54):
We're a news radio fifteen eighty am w CCF Punda
Gordon and FM one hundred point nine W two six
five e A Ponda Gorda