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April 1, 2025 33 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Ay, you know see all right, she hers, I'm your
own helps.

Speaker 2 (00:14):
Jana's ready for you, okay, bringing home now.

Speaker 3 (00:19):
And don't forget the new black man phrase, I touched you, poppy,
give me the.

Speaker 2 (00:23):
Sop, Yes, sir, remember that. I'll be right outside if
you need me. All right, Yeah, talk Mike some new phrases.
I want them to get to raise. It just can't
helpless out.

Speaker 3 (00:50):
And he never gives an answer. Letting the fool sees
the sun going down and eyes it is.

Speaker 2 (01:01):
Head, see the world spinning round.

Speaker 3 (01:17):
She was putting in my hands, so sweet.

Speaker 4 (01:22):
You know what she said?

Speaker 2 (01:23):
She said, telling your phone.

Speaker 3 (01:31):
Your and it makes me one lost by.

Speaker 2 (01:46):
The fool, full by person.

Speaker 3 (01:51):
So love just the.

Speaker 2 (01:54):
Pa, what about it?

Speaker 3 (02:00):
I'm on the load?

Speaker 2 (02:05):
Oh what meeds me?

Speaker 3 (02:09):
Do you believe me?

Speaker 4 (02:10):
Y'all a fool? You boy, It's lucky you have these
kind of moments.

Speaker 5 (02:23):
Use him for smuggling. I never thought I'd be smuggling
by myself. And this is ridiculous.

Speaker 4 (02:28):
Even if I could take off, I'd never get past
the tractor beam.

Speaker 2 (02:30):
Leave that to me, damn fool.

Speaker 5 (02:32):
I knew that you were going to say that.

Speaker 2 (02:35):
Who's the more foolish the fool of, the fool of
follows him. We don't get hold again.

Speaker 6 (03:14):
And what sounds to me more like a revenue generator
than a serious attempt at stopping troublesome short term rentals.
City Council to vote tomorrow on Houston City Council on
a new ordinance regulating short term rentals. The story from Khou.

Speaker 5 (03:33):
Party all nine loan, all weekend, loan for.

Speaker 4 (03:37):
Days, Kho.

Speaker 7 (03:38):
You first introduced you to Kathy Lang last year when
she told us about how units in her town home
community in Tanglewood became short term rentals. She said problems
quickly followed, with guests committing moot acts like sex on
a balcony and violent acts like gunfire. A year later,
Houston City Council will look to regulate the short term rentals,

(03:59):
requiring register stration fees and occupancy taxes. But very disappointed
Yang says the regulations just aren't tough enough.

Speaker 8 (04:07):
It might discourage some player, but with those severe ones,
like those ones by my neighborhood, I don't think it
would do much about that.

Speaker 5 (04:17):
This nine mayre probably won't be stopped.

Speaker 7 (04:20):
The proposal says violations of the ordinance provisions can lead
to fines of anywhere between one hundred to five hundred dollars.
Short term rental property registrations can also be revoked a
variety of mechanisms, like not paying the hotel occupancy tax,
if the property has two or more convictions for noise
complaint citations in a twelve month period, or if the owner, operator,

(04:42):
or occupants of the property has any convictions for certain
serious crimes.

Speaker 8 (04:46):
Put some teeth in it, because you know, we've had
so many problems.

Speaker 7 (04:51):
Gretchen Gillis echoes that disappointment. Her neighborhood between Montrose and
the Museum District has had its own issues.

Speaker 8 (04:57):
She says, because of short term rentals, we have a
tremendous amount of police activity. We have a lot of
ambulance activity. There are constant problems with noise and trash.

Speaker 7 (05:11):
She is glad the city is looking at solutions, but
wants to see more.

Speaker 8 (05:15):
It's this, you know, acting like a hotel but not
having any of the obligations or responsibilities.

Speaker 5 (05:21):
That's the real problem.

Speaker 7 (05:24):
I reached out to Airbnb, who offered inputs and feedback
and helping craft these new rules. They tell Khou eleven
home sharing offers an economic lifeline for many Houston residents,
boosts the local economy and helps the city absorb surges
in demand during major events. The sement goes on to
say travel on Airbnb generated more than one and a

(05:44):
half a billion dollars in the Houston economy in twenty
twenty three alone, and that they are committed to ensuring
her post regulations make it as easy as possible for
Houston residents to continue earning extra money by sharing their home.
Tuesday is the last chance for residents for public comment
on this issue before Kasta City Council takes it up
for a vote on Wednesday.

Speaker 6 (06:06):
I am all for commerce. I am all for the marketplace,
creating efficiencies using unspoiled inventory.

Speaker 5 (06:17):
If you.

Speaker 6 (06:19):
Own a place, you're not there year round, to be
able to rent that to someone who only needs it
for a period of time, they find something typically if
that's what they're seeking, more to their needs than a hotel,
a little more relaxed, a full on place, more space,

(06:40):
typically at far less cost than a hotel. I get
that all of that is wonderful, absolutely wonderful. What happens
when you live in a condo, shared walls, shared entry space,
shared parking.

Speaker 7 (07:01):
And.

Speaker 6 (07:03):
You've got an eighty thousand dollars condo, which in the
city of Houston means you can't move and find something else.
You've lived there for a long time. You don't have
the financial means to move to a night and you
shouldn't need to. And you have a neighbor, often a
foreign owner, who is renting these things out. They do

(07:23):
not care that it's absolute thugs in there. They're holding
house parties, making thousands of dollars a night for twenty
dollars and come and do whatever you want. They're having
sex on your balcony in front of your front door.
The parties and the sex on the balconies in the

(07:43):
common areas. The door is wide open while you get
up to take your kids to school. All of this happened.
All of this happened just west of the Galleria, in
an area where you wouldn't expect it to happen. There's
a huge racial element because the woman who complained is Asian.
The people who are doing this or black. You see
video of the parties and they're literally, I mean it's

(08:05):
it's the worst kind of lounge party, thug event. You
can imagine. They're throwing their bottles everywhere, and you wake
up to this every day, and the city tells you
they can't do anything about it.

Speaker 9 (08:19):
Really, it clings key, It clings key.

Speaker 2 (08:25):
It's Luneberg Girl and the Boy nakel.

Speaker 4 (08:28):
A Berry Show.

Speaker 6 (08:31):
Poor, here's nostalgia too.

Speaker 2 (08:36):
I don't know what I'm gonna do about these damn yellings.

Speaker 6 (08:39):
Yesterday I tore up my yard.

Speaker 9 (08:42):
There was out here playing funeral home and just digging
holes out over the place. And I went out there
with my switching my hair. I start hollering, what is
wrong with y'all. Don't y'all know y'all was supposed to
call downtown before you dig. Y'all could be hitting a
gas line or something out here. And I look over
and they had two of my twin babies bearing up

(09:02):
to their neck and they were trying to do voodoo
on them.

Speaker 2 (09:05):
I got to take them children to church. I keep forgetting,
and I know it's.

Speaker 9 (09:09):
My best possibility, Oh Lord, to take them children down
there and get them raised right, But I don't know.
I keep forgetting, and I'm so sleepy. I seem like
all the time I'm just so sleeping. That's probably why
I've been knocking obamaing them don't go to church.

Speaker 2 (09:25):
It's just so earning, you'd be so tired.

Speaker 9 (09:28):
I has no mom in them during just a minute,
what easy?

Speaker 4 (09:32):
What is there?

Speaker 2 (09:32):
Come in?

Speaker 6 (09:42):
Well, it's almost been six years already. John Corning is
up for reelection. We don't get it shot at him
very often, but when we do, we gotta make it count.
So the other day he posted on Twitter, I mean,
it's just it's pit it's pitiful that he thinks we're

(10:02):
this stupid. Posted a picture of him reading the Art
of the deal. I'll just read to you what Houston chronicles.
Jeremy Wallace writes, quote, the magic word in US Senator
John Cornyn's reelection is obvious Trump. Cornyan on Wednesday launched
a new campaign kickoff video where half of the first

(10:25):
fifty five seconds are images of Trump and the President's
name is uttered seven times throughout the duration of the
two minute clip. Make it eight, John, Now I'm running
for reelection and asking for your support. So President Trump
and I can pick up where we left off. Oh,
the tired cliches, they're really grotesque, they really are. Later

(10:52):
he adds it, quote, President Trump needs a partner who
is battle tested. Oh job, Wayne mccornyn. He's pulling out
the Western's imagey imagery. He's battle tested. President Trump needs
a sundance kid. He needs somebody that can be there

(11:16):
on the battle front with him, that's been in the trenches. Cornying,
you're eating thousand dollars meals courtesy of the lobbyists every
night and rubin elbows with Mitch McConnell, your best friend,
who now now that he's not able to run again,
is voting against Trump on everything, and you will too

(11:38):
when you're lamed up and.

Speaker 4 (11:39):
We know this.

Speaker 6 (11:42):
That's that's not battle tested. You think we're stupid, We're not.
So you might as well get ready. You're gonna start
seeing pictures of John Cornyan. I'm sure he was at
the rodeo.

Speaker 1 (11:53):
Hellboy hat and his boots. Serious goodness, see you rodeo
boys here again this year. Sure do love rodeo. Y'all
pray for me because I'm stuck up Iron Washington, d C.
They ain't got no rodeo ear if you.

Speaker 4 (12:09):
Know what I mean.

Speaker 6 (12:11):
It's gross. It's this. This is politics the way it's
always been practiced. There's a poll that hasn't been released
that has Ken Paxton at sixty three, John Cornin at
twenty seven. That's it's the end of John Cornyn. So

(12:36):
what you're gonna watch is two things. They're gonna try
to push up his positives and push uh and push
up Ken Paxton's negatives. They're gonna start attacking Ken Paxton
committed murder. That's what Carl Ro's gonna do. It's what
he always does. So we're gonna get loads and loads
of John Wayne mccorny. You remember John McCain when he
came back to Arizona. He ran for President No. Eight

(12:59):
and he's traveling across the country and he says, they said,
but the people of Arizona won a wall. They want
a wall with Mexico. They want a wall built, and
they're not gonna build a damn wall. And Arizona felt betrayed.
Well ask forward. He loses to Obama, obviously, and then
in twenty ten he's running for reelection and he runs
and he's there and he's got all the sheriffs down

(13:20):
there with him. They're on their uniforms and their hats,
and they got all the brass like Don warsa dot
and they're standing in a circle and they're talking about
and the voiceover says, John McCain is tough on the border.
John McCain wants to keep Arizona safe. And then at
the end they pan in and he says, build a
damn wall.

Speaker 10 (13:38):
Oh, Don McCain changed his mind. After forty years in
the Senate, he came back and changed his mind. When
he come home and seen all his relatives and the people,
John has seen the light.

Speaker 6 (13:53):
He has come home to glory. Build a wall. Thank
you John for seeing things right way. And now you're
gonna start seeing. Here comes John Wayne mccornyn, cowboy boots,
cowboy hat. We're gonna see him in West Texas. He
gonna be back home and take Hey, y'all, I'm texting.

(14:13):
Remember I'm text I'm a pur battle testing.

Speaker 5 (14:17):
John Wayne mccornyn is one of us.

Speaker 11 (14:19):
His keychain has numerous loyalty cards, including Kroger's, CVS, Specs,
el Ablai, Spaniol, Connacento, Kes, Moriamericano Ioon Moss con to Cindiente.

Speaker 5 (14:32):
He loves his gun so much it borders on unnatural.

Speaker 11 (14:35):
He names them a Winchester thirty six called text a
Brown and nine to Mili goes by Mac a glock
named Demetrius and his Pride and Joy Perlein a cult
single action thirty eight. He was given an A plus
by the NRA. It was written in red on the
top right of the paper and circled there was a

(14:56):
little smiley face in the words great job. He also
got an ninety one from the Faith and Freedom Coalition,
but he's working real hard to get that grade up.
You can take John Wayne mccornan out of Texas, but
you can't take Texas out of John Wayne mccornyn.

Speaker 5 (15:09):
It's in his blood East Texas red and dirt runs
through his veins.

Speaker 11 (15:13):
When you vote at the twenty fourteen midterm elections, And
if you love America, you'll pull the lever.

Speaker 5 (15:18):
That says John Wayne mccornyn. He's one of us.

Speaker 6 (15:23):
Give us more, John, give us more.

Speaker 5 (15:25):
John Wayne mccornyn is one of us.

Speaker 11 (15:27):
His business card has his fax number on it, and
his belt has his name on the back in an
old Western font called tin Can. And his belt buckle
it's big, looks like a pewter toilet seat lid. He
slips that belt through the loops of his wrangler. Big
and tall, rugged ware, cowboy cut blue jeans. Some folks

(15:49):
brag about the audacity of their leather boots. John Wayne
mccornan has boots made out of the actual Clydesdale's from
the nineteen eighties TV commercials. Don't get more American than that.
And speaking of the eighties, did you vote for John
Wayne mccornyn. He'll bring back alf An Airwolf family ties.
What other senator will bring back the eighties for you?

Speaker 2 (16:20):
John Wayne.

Speaker 4 (16:24):
Of the.

Speaker 6 (16:26):
Michael Verry Show.

Speaker 11 (16:35):
Him, John Wayne mccornyn is one of us. He loves
guns so much it borders on fetishism. John Wayne mccornn
believes that every American has the god given right to
bear arms, and he will fight for your right to
bear arms. He would fight a bear with his bare

(16:56):
fists for your right to bear arms. He would burrow
through a barricade of Barbarrett bears because he believes in
the Second Amendment. In fact, there's not an arm out
there that John Wayne mccornyan thinks Americans shouldn't be able
to bear. He ain't just talking about peace shooters and shotguns,
no assault rifles, fully automatic anti tank bazooka's stinger surface

(17:19):
to air whatever. If it's an arm, John Wayne mccorny
thinks you have the right to bear it. Obama wants
to take your guns from you. Well, John Wayne mccornyn
wants to say no, sir, not in my America, Obama.
In November, vote for your gun loving doppelganger. Vote for
John Wayne mccornyn.

Speaker 2 (17:41):
He's one of us, John Wayne mccarden, one of them.

Speaker 6 (17:58):
There was a phenomenon that went viral a few years ago.
The woman's name is Abbie Abby Abby Abby, the spoon Girl,
I think she's called And it's this woman who's wearing overalls,
no shoes, and she's out on a broken down deck

(18:22):
in front of a trailer. She got her hair pulled back,
no makeup. She looks like she's been guarding all day
and dressed up with the brown overalls. I don't think
she's wearing a shirt or anything under it, but it's
not really revealing. She's tall and very skinny, the gaunt face,
no teeth, so her face is sunken in. She never

(18:46):
makes eye contact with the camera. She is the type
of person who would be made fun of by kids
for her funny look. But you see her playing the spoons,
she pulls them out, she keeps her head down, and
she looks down in time. Very very I don't know
demur would be the right word, but almost as if

(19:08):
she's shy or just focused. But she's in no way,
in no way seeming to be overly confident or showy.
She's just going about the business of playing the spoons.
And she pulls the spoons out from her overalls, and
it's so natural the way it's done. It's almost as
if she doesn't know she's being filmed. She's just going

(19:28):
about this trance like performance. And the guy beside her
looks like he could be a member of Mumford and Sons,
and he sings and she plays the spoons, and your
range of emotions while you watch this video runs the
gamut to my goodness, she's from my goodness, she's hideous

(19:50):
to towards the end, I'd really like to be friends
with her. I really like to hang out with her.
I really like to talk to her. I'd like to
hear how she ended up here, How did she start
playing the spoons? Where does she live, what does she
do all day? How often does she play the spoons?
Who she played the spoons with it's mesmerizing. You will

(20:11):
sit there or I sit there and watch her for
a long periods of time. Well, Harris County is determined
to name everything they possibly can after that scoundrel Sylvester Turner,
while half his cabinet is riding in jail from taking bribes.

(20:32):
Nothing for George Foreman, everything for Sylvester Turner. And they're
trying to name the airport for Sheila Jackson Lee. It's embarrassing.
I mean it's embarrassing. It's Baltimore or Detroit. It's this
hero worship of the black corrupt politician. You take the

(20:55):
worst black politician you can find, and then you name
everything for him, and you act like they were some
messianic figure. It's very common phenomenon. It's disgusting. Coleman Young
in Detroit, there was a federal investigation going for twenty
straight years. Mayor for twenty years stole the city blind

(21:17):
and he died and I watched a video of his funeral.

Speaker 12 (21:22):
This man gave his life for this child. This man
loved Detroit and the people of it. He loved the
soil and the sand and the people of Detroit.

Speaker 6 (21:35):
No, he's a fraud. He's a scoundrel, it's a criminal. Well,
at least the state of Texas is doing the right
thing today. This was yesterday. Actually, think I got the
day wrong. I think it was yesterday. A portion of
Highway fifty nine Southwest Freeway named in honor of Harris

(21:59):
County Deputy Sheriff Darren Almandares, who was murdered in front
of his wife trying to stop three men from stealing
his catalytic converter. The state deserves credit for this. City
of Houston would never Oh you know what, it's actually

(22:20):
fifty nine between Little York and and eight, So that
is northeast, says Southwest Highway. Is that called northeast Highway?
Oh yeah, I think that. What's it called It's fifty
east text, East Tech. Yeah, yeah, yeah, East Text. You're right. Okay,
here's the story cut is number four, box twenty six.

Speaker 13 (22:43):
This is from me that he loved me very I
love you, and we kissed and I knew at that
moment and.

Speaker 5 (22:57):
I just felt it.

Speaker 13 (22:59):
I just felt that was that was his last breath.

Speaker 14 (23:04):
When armed thieves fired a fatal round into the body
of Deputy Darren Almondatdas, they inflicted a wound to his wife,
Flor that may never fully heal. Broken hearts are like that.

Speaker 13 (23:17):
But during today I'm constantly thinking about it. To me,
it's like it's still surreal that I just want him
to come back, and I feel like this is just
a bad dream.

Speaker 14 (23:29):
Twenty four hours after the Texas Senate passed legislation cracking
down on those who steal and traffic catalytic converters, Flora
Almandadas sees the measure as her peace officer husband continuing
to protect the public.

Speaker 6 (23:43):
Ye.

Speaker 13 (23:44):
I was selden in his heart that he needed to
do something for people.

Speaker 14 (23:47):
Always, always, the beloved wife of a fallen deputy says
the remainder of her days will be devoted to completing
the mission. Darren Almandadas began to the Harris County Judi Sherry,
who viewed catalytic converter theft as victimless. She offers her
loss and her pain as proof it is not.

Speaker 13 (24:08):
It's the worst fan I've ever felt before to see
my husband and die, for him to die in my arms.

Speaker 6 (24:20):
You know, how do you recover from something like that?
Remember they called those guys and put them back on
the street again. Oh, it's unbearable. It's that pain and
we're watching this happen.

Speaker 5 (24:34):
Wow.

Speaker 6 (24:35):
A big congratulations to Cash Rees, our own Robert Reese's son.
Today he signs to play soccer for Shriner University in
the beautiful Kerville, Texas. A law a lot of hard
work to get to this point. That's that's a big deal.
Congratulations cash Res.

Speaker 3 (24:52):
A big love.

Speaker 6 (24:56):
Is As based company headquartered in way Plaza called Sonova
sun an Ova, and they have been the darling of
the business press for years and now they're struggling.

Speaker 5 (25:18):
There's there's some.

Speaker 6 (25:20):
Pretty reasoned opinion that they will go out of business
or be bought. They have just adopted a poison pill,
which the short version of is a measure put in
place to prevent someone from coming in and swooping up
the company on a deep discount while it's struggling. Companies

(25:44):
will do this because they fear a takeover. And so
in this case, if a buyer hits beyond four point
nine percent, if someone were to acquire more than four
point nine percent, so if they were to hit five
percent of Sonova's stock, or if anybody over that amount

(26:06):
were to acquire additional stock, then what is called their
tax asset preservation plan would be triggered, which would allow
the shareholders except for the one who just triggered the plan,
because then he would be able to increase his share
to be able to acquire more shares of common stock
at a fifty percent discount. So they're basically if you

(26:28):
start trying to come in and buy a larger percentage
of the company, they will dilute the shares to prevent
you from doing that by giving a discount to the employees.
But the reason they're doing this is they fear a
takeover because the stock price has dropped and somebody is
going to pick through what they think is an undervalued

(26:49):
asset or an undervalued company and buy it up, and
obviously the management would be would be pushed out, and
they think it's undervalued at present. Normally, you want to
share this. You want to sell as many of your
shares of stock as you possibly can, because that's how
you capitalize your company, and you don't want someone to
take it over. But at five percent is pretty low

(27:11):
cap in any case. I say all that to say this,
So the CEO and chairman and founder of the company
is a guy named John Berger, b E R G
E R. I don't know John Berger. I happened to
meet him the other night. After the police officer event,
we stopped by some friends of ours were at the
Oak Room. Uncle Jerry was driving me, so Uncle Jerry

(27:34):
and I stopped by the Oakroom and visited with some friends,
and John Berger happened to be there. And I had
been having a conversation about him and this company with
Dancy Ware a few days earlier. Who is she does
strategic public relations and she represents Sonova And she had said,
would you ever be willing to talk to Sonova on

(27:55):
the air? And I said, yes, but you have to
understand i am very very anti Solar and I'm not
going to hide that. I'm going to ask skeptical questions.
And she said, I would expect you to do no less,
because what I don't want to do with a friend,
which I considered Dancy to be, is have someone pitch

(28:18):
me on a guest to talk to, thinking that they're
going to come on and I'm going to say, it's
really great. You're being owned by the American Heart Association
gala as Father of the Year, and you've been nothing
but successful. I hear your golf handicap is three? How
did you get to be so? Golly? G you is
awful awesome? Not awful awesome? How did you get to

(28:38):
be so great? And that's what they're expecting, And instead
I'm saying, all right, here is Houston Business Journal, Here
is Houston Chronicle, Here is a Chamber of Commerce, Here
is Wall Street Journal, here is Texas Muntly hear all
these articles saying so nova is the next big thing,
because solar is the next big thing. And I have

(28:59):
believed all along that solar is not sustainable. And I
don't mean sustainable in this stupid environmental way. Even that
word is such a scam. It's up there with the
big pharm of hoax on COVID. What I mean is
in the traditional business class use of the term sustainable.

(29:20):
A company that has revenues of one hundred thousand dollars
a year and expenses of one hundred and ten thousand
dollars a year, it's not a sustainable business model. You're
not going to survive. It will not sustain operations, not survive.
So that's what I've believed for a long time until
and I don't believe it will ever happen the technology
dramatically changes. I don't believe that's going to be the case.

Speaker 13 (29:41):
Now.

Speaker 6 (29:41):
I'm not rooting for SONVA to fail. That's not me.
I don't do that. There are investors and probably scientists
who were attempting, some of them, were attempting to diversify
America energy provision. And I am for that. But let's

(30:05):
be honest. If we're serious about diversifying energy, if you're
serious about efficient energy, then you would scrap everything else
that every alternate energy fuel source today and you would
go nuclear. And scientists will tell you this. People who
are serious about energy will tell you nuclear is by

(30:26):
far the most efficient. Politically, it is repressed because everyone
is scared and the fear, it's an irrational fear. It's
the same irrational outburst of applause that occurs when a
plane lands. Did you think it wasn't going to land?

(30:46):
How about I show you the data the data doesn't lie.
How About I show you how many planes take off
in land every single day safely compared to the likelihood
that you die in a car wreck within two miles
of your home. Even even adjusting for how many hours
you engage in each behavior, and you will see that

(31:07):
it's far more dangerous to drive on roads with parallel
parallel drivers, some of them drunk, some of them stupid,
some of them crazy, as opposed to being in a
well oiled machine that's well maintained.

Speaker 4 (31:18):
That used to be the.

Speaker 6 (31:19):
Case until DEI took over the airline business. Maybe that's
why people cheer. But back to Sanova. I'm not taking
a victory lab. I'm simply pointing out that we we
need to when we see these things happen, we need
to understand how far we went down a road chasing

(31:41):
ferry dust. Do you know how many billion dollars of
tax breaks have been given out for these solar panels
on top of roofs. It would shock you. I saw
the number. I don't recall it, and I don't want
to get I don't want to get to scale wrong.

(32:01):
But I remember it being so much more. I can't
tell you how many people I've known who are a
waitress at a restaurant, uber driver, some other random thing
who tried to sell me on solar panels, to which
I would respond, those things are hideous. Do I look

(32:21):
like Jimmy Carter? No, I'm not putting solar panels in
my house, to which they respond, you get up to
seventy five income tax break when you're selling a supposed
form of energy based on lowering the person's income taxes.
Does that Does that start to give you the idea

(32:44):
that this is not really a sustainable business model, that
we're not really providing energy, and energy is everything we
talk so much about race and silly things that politicians
talk about. If you don't have cheap, reliable, plentiful energy,
your economy will die.

Speaker 5 (33:02):
In fact, mmm
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