Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Okay, I'm telling you trust me when I tell you this.
We have now come up with the most difficult, toughest
pole question you are ever gonna have here on the
Cooner Report. I'm telling you trust me when I tell
you this. This one, it's it's gonna break your brain
(00:21):
because I don't know how to vote, Mike doesn't know
how to vote, and Sandy, well, we don't know what's
happened to Sandy in the last five minutes. But out.
But I'm telling you, Mike and I are you. You
could go on all three, You could go A, B
or C. What is that pole question? Stay tuned eight thirty.
I promise I'm gonna give you out the Cooner pole
(00:43):
question of the day, and good luck. That's all I
have to say. All right, let's go back to Dan
in Plymouth. Dan, you were on a roll, my friend.
You're a nurse. I mean you're also you know, you
ran a very good race, by the way, for Congress.
You got what is it forty three almost forty four
(01:04):
percent of the vote against Keating. Correct.
Speaker 2 (01:06):
Then, just to punctuate that point, we have the mo vote.
Go ahead, Anxious, depressed, obese, and addicted young school age
and young adult generation in the history of time, and
we were familiar with the term the access of evil.
(01:29):
We have an access of evil in this country, and
that access of evil is big Farmer, it's the top
food processed food manufacturers, and it's the federal agencies that
oversee our food health and drugs, such as the FDA,
the CDC, and the FI the FFIs. And what I
want to see our cage Nior do is to break
(01:52):
that access of evil apart and show that that big
corporations do not have our health in mind. They want
to undermine our health. They want to create patients for life,
and that's the essence of chronic illness and chronic disease.
So I think it's a potential boom for Trump in
(02:14):
his administration and conservatives who want to run on making
America healthy again going into twenty twenty.
Speaker 1 (02:22):
Six, Dan a big pharm. I'm with you. I mean,
I'm with you on every single point, But I think
big farm and now it's become so obvious that I
don't think you don't even need much of an explanation.
But when you say some of these top big food corporations,
could you be a little bit more specific are you saying, like,
(02:45):
is it the cereal makers? Where do you see a
lot of the toxins, the additives, the coloring that r. FK.
Junior and many others are saying is just not healthy
for us? Where do you see that coming from? Primarily
as a nurse yourself.
Speaker 2 (03:04):
Because we're talking about our children and young adults. So
it's General Mills, it's Kellogg Cereal, you know, obviously with
the cereals, it all begins with breakfast and and look,
I come from a different perspective too. My wife is
a public school teacher of thirty years and she has commented,
(03:25):
ever since COVID she has never seen school age children
as sickly as they are now. And it's not just
physical sickness, it's mental and it's emotional sickness. So we're
just rearing a whole generation of unhealthy young young children
and young adults. And it's all in our food. It's
(03:47):
in our diet. And one thing about RK. Junior, he
never loses an argument because he always has his facts
in command.
Speaker 1 (03:58):
Well, Dan, that's the thing I find most about him
is that's the thing where he's unqualified. He's the exact
opposite I think he's the most qualified person ever to
have that job. His command of the facts, his command
of the evidence, his command of the studies, his knowledge
on the issue. It's it's almost like an encyclopedia. So Dan,
(04:20):
I'm with you. I'm with you all the way. Dan,
thank you very much for that call. I appreciate it.
Do you agree with Dan? Do we have a chronic
illness chronic disease epidemic? And is a lot of it
tied to the foods that we eat, the processed foods
in particular, But also R.
Speaker 3 (04:42):
FK.
Speaker 1 (04:43):
Junior is saying, look at the additives, look at the fillers,
look at the color, and just look at the stuff
the talk sins that they put in this food. And
you combine that, you know, with kids being in front
of the screen all day, they're not exercising and they're
just eating all this processed garbage, and they go, that's
why there's so many of them that are pre diabetic. Agree, disagree?
(05:07):
Six one seven two six six sixty eight sixty eight.
Trish in Middleborough, Thanks for holding Trish, and.
Speaker 4 (05:15):
Welcome, good morning Jeff and Rich out there.
Speaker 5 (05:20):
I definitely agree with him, and I can take it
so many steps further. It has so much to do
with everything our body. Our skin is the largest organ
on our body. When we wear clothing that is made
from recycled plastic and we're supposed to you know, the
advertising bit behind that is to make us feel good.
(05:41):
Oh we're recycling, but we're putting this petrol chemical on
our skin.
Speaker 4 (05:44):
We're absorbing it. It has all.
Speaker 5 (05:48):
Types of hormones in it that leaps into us systems.
We wonder why there's so many.
Speaker 3 (05:54):
Young children being confused about what sex they are.
Speaker 5 (05:56):
The glyco states that are being sprayed, that have been
being sprayed fifty years. It just the list goes on
and on. I personally am an integrated health coach. The
people that I see on a daily basis that I
introduce to so many wonderful modalities quantum healing, laser healing,
(06:20):
alternative diagnosis or you know, to be able to track
your health and pay attention. And it's just about really
paying attention, opening your eyes, start reading labels, start being
in touch with how do you deal within seventy two
hours after you know, using products?
Speaker 1 (06:41):
That's great advice. Okay, my friends, this is this is this,
This is what John messaged me. I believe it was
John who messaged me on messenger. Jeff, No, Tom, forgive me,
this was Tom on messenger. Jeff, I thought Biden was
(07:02):
gonna cure cancer. Well yeah, yeah, all right. Here it is. This,
I'm telling you, is the toughest, most difficult Cooner Country
Pole question of the day ever in the history of
this show. You are now listening to history and the making.
(07:23):
Now you tell me how you're gonna vote on this one,
because I'm telling you I'm torn. Mike is torn. I
don't know about Sandy. She just came back to the
control room, but I assume she'd be torn as well.
So here it is. Get ready, get ready, your brain
is just gonna break. Here it is, by the way,
(07:47):
brought to you the Cooner country Pole Question of the Day,
brought to you by Marios Mario's Quality Roofing, Siding and Windows.
What is your favorite it chip? What's your favorite chip?
A potato chips, B corn chips, see cheese puffs? Eh?
(08:20):
Did I tell you? Eh?
Speaker 2 (08:22):
So?
Speaker 1 (08:23):
I mean that's the potato chips. I love barbecue chips, okay,
just and but I got I love original, just plain.
I just love plain chips. Plain potato chips, Lays. I
don't know what it is about Lay's potato chips. Okay,
I love them, so I'm like, my first instinct is
one but whoa hey, hey, no, no, no corn chips, Doritos,
(08:48):
especially nacho cheese. Now, Ashton loves you know, ranch, but
he I know he would go for me because he's
a Dorito's ranch guy. All the way you got Frito's.
That to me is it's not just the original chili cheese.
The Frito's chili cheese, I'm telling you, I think is
(09:10):
the best chip ever made on planet Earth. As I said,
I looked at the ingredients. Okay, it's horrible for you.
They got corn oil, vegetable oil, canona oil. I mean
they that thing is an artery plugger. Okay, that thing
is gonna plug your arteries. However, man does it taste good?
(09:33):
Holy mackerel. I don't know if it's crack cocaine. I
don't know what they got in there, but man, oh man,
I don't have it often because I don't feel good
after I eat it because it's got all that garbage
in it. But man, does it taste good. That's all
I gotta say. So corn chips right around. I'm like,
I gotta go with Bee. Then you got cheese puffs
(09:57):
Cheetos in particular, Ava loves Cheetos, loves Cheetos. Mike is
a huge cheese puff guy loves Cheetos. So now, Mike,
who did you end up voting for on this? I
think poor Mike was like, Hey, no B no no
C no B no cee no A no ce What
(10:19):
did you finally force your hand? Literally and and and
and and you know, and and and and on the computer?
What did you have? What did you end up voting for?
Speaker 4 (10:28):
There?
Speaker 1 (10:29):
Mike?
Speaker 6 (10:31):
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Speaker 1 (11:32):
You went with A and Okay, so Mike went with
Now he wants to change it. You see, he voted
now he wants to change and I'm getting a lot
of that now. People are like, you know, Jeff, can
I take my vote back? That's what I'm telling you.
It's the toughest pole question we've ever had. Look, I
(11:54):
don't want to sound like Bill Clinton. Remember I voted
for it before I voted against it. Fredo's Chili Cheese
is my favorite favorite cornschip. Sorry, it's my favorite chip.
It's your last meal. You're about to be executed. You
don't care about what you put in your body. I'm
(12:17):
going Fredo's Chili cheese. But on a consistent basis. You
see what I mean. I voted for it before I
voted against it. I gotta go with A because I
do have barbecue chips much more often than I do
the fredos at chili Cheese. So I'm gonna go A
(12:37):
on this. I could go B. I love cheese puffs,
I could go see. So let me just go A
because I'm gonna change my mind so A. But that's me.
I want to hear from you. You can vote on
our web page wrko dot com slash Cooner wrko dot
(12:59):
com Slashooner. Kuh And is in national Er. I'm already
in my brain saying I gotta go B. You see
what I mean. Look at this two seconds in change
the Vote, Jeff, change the vote. I'm sticking with A,
but I really want to go B anyway X. You
can vote on X at the Kooner Report all one word.
(13:21):
Kuh And is in national Er. My prediction, I think
we're gonna have thirty three thirty three thirty three. I
could be wrong, but I think this is one of
those and a lot of vote changing, and I suspect
for the first time in the history of Kooner Report,
we're all going to become Democrats, double voting, triple voting,
(13:45):
voter fraud. I'm just saying, let me vote all of them, Jeff.
You can only vote once. No, No, I'm gonna go
A B and C. Okay, So all right, So Sandy
is saying, look, Jeff, you got in force some standards.
You can only vote once and you can't change your vote.
So there you go. Let's let's try. Let's try to
(14:07):
run an honest election here for God's sake. Six one
seven two six six sixty eight sixty eight. I mean,
we're not Democrats. John in Lowell, thanks for holding John,
and welcome.
Speaker 4 (14:22):
Good morning, Jeff. Jeff. Let's get your whole question out
of Let's get the full question out of the way first, Jeff.
As gross as they are, it's salting vinegar. It's like
being a kid sticking your tongue to a nine volte battery.
I don't know why, but I love them. I know, Jeff, Jeff,
(14:43):
as you know, I have cancer, right, okay, Jef?
Speaker 1 (14:47):
So John, I didn't know that, Yeah, Jeff, I.
Speaker 4 (14:50):
Told you a while ago, stopped off as lung cancer,
and now it's on stage four withinth noma. Well, sorry,
I can't.
Speaker 1 (14:59):
I thought you would. I thought you had beaten the
cancer in remission.
Speaker 4 (15:05):
It turned on me. But listen, Jeff, I've gotten more
out of it than it'll ever get out of me.
It's taught me a lot about life, Jeff. You know
how to love people, have compassion.
Speaker 3 (15:13):
You know.
Speaker 4 (15:14):
You don't even think about yourself, Jeff. You think about others.
But anyway, Jeff, treatable but not durable. Well, the treatments
themselves are causing cancer. What they give me can cause cancer.
The scans can cause cancer, Jeff, Jeff. I want them
to address forcing the insurance companies to pay for alternative
(15:35):
medicines of the work, Jeff. Each treatment, every time I
go in, it's two hundred and fifty thousand dollars Jeff.
The alternatives are less, but I can't afford those either,
So they really should open this up. There's a lot
of other things. There's sound waves is you know. Yeah,
nutrition is a big part of it, but you have
to do a lot of other stuff with it too,
(15:55):
and you need someone to guide you. Jeff. You get
so much information thrown at you know what to do.
You know, it's kind of like Trump throwing the appointments.
At them, you get all confused. So I'd really like
to see him address that, Jeff.
Speaker 1 (16:09):
John, if I'm getting too personal, please tell me h
and again my pology family. Okay, John, my understanding is
I thought the cancer was in remission.
Speaker 4 (16:20):
Well what I Jeff, I don't know the technical words.
I was doing okay for a while.
Speaker 1 (16:26):
Then it thought understand and so what's happened now? John?
Speaker 4 (16:32):
It's stage four leinth and normal. Thank god. They sent
me in for a brain scan a couple of weeks ago.
Thank god that came back made. But they're growing in
my in my fire, not my fire, is my wimp nodes.
Speaker 3 (16:45):
You know.
Speaker 4 (16:45):
I literally just put my hand to my neck yesterday
felt a lump. I got another one growing into my
arm pit. So it's a full body scanner, Jeff, Jeff, listen, listen, Jeff,
with the great life of I'm Frank Sinatu. Believe me.
I did it my way. It wasn't always right, but
I did it my way. Jeff. I'm good with God.
(17:05):
I have the best family. I have ten brothers and sisters, Jeff.
I have friends that are just amazing. You know, one
buddy's letting me use his shop. I'm in here because
I get tired easy. I can't work all the time,
and I'm building little craft things when I can and
selling them. Jeff, It's been a blessing, don't.
Speaker 3 (17:25):
No.
Speaker 4 (17:26):
And hey, Jeff, if I were to die tomorrow, guess what.
I'm happy because my nieces and nephew stand a chance
of growing up in the America. I grew up in, Jeff,
and that's all I have wanted to see. And I'm
not saying I'm going anywhere.
Speaker 1 (17:44):
John. I'm going to need you around for a long time. Okay,
my friend, John, listen, God bless you and I want you.
I'm going to pray for you. And you're a warrior man.
I'm really honored to call you my friend. John. Please
don't be a stranger. You keep calling us Okay.
Speaker 4 (18:02):
John, Jeff one of the best minds ever in a
movie that smiles on all of us. Do you smile back?
And I do?
Speaker 1 (18:14):
John, God bless you, man. You got a great attitude.
May God bless you. John, take care of my friend. Okay.
Six one seven two, six, six sixty eight sixty eight
is the number.
Speaker 4 (18:26):
I mean.
Speaker 1 (18:27):
That's that's tough. You know, that's tough. And you know,
that's what I love about Cooner Country. That's really what
I love about this audience is And I can't tell
you how many people told me this. And these are
more obviously elderly people, you know, in their eighties or
whatever they go. You know, Jeff, I don't know if
I'm gonna have another four years left in me. Six
(18:47):
one seven two, six, six sixty eight sixty eight is
the number. Okay, many of you are texting, emailing the
Cooner Man saying, Jeff, please please please mentioned the pesticides
because Robert F. Kennedy Juniors made a big point about
it's also the pesticides that they put not just as
(19:09):
additives in our cereals or foods, but also you know
on fruits and vegetables. That we have much more lack
standards here than the Europeans do, and that's another reason
why we have a chronic illness epidemic. So please mention
the pesticides, Jeff. So, yeah, you're right. Look, what I'd
(19:32):
love to do is just this, Honestly, have Robert F.
Kennedy become HHS secretary and then just do a compare
and contrast the Europeans have all of these stricter regulations
on everything, on pesticides, on food additives, on talk sins,
on everything we put in food. Now, can the FDA
(19:56):
explain why our standards are so much lower? Or you know,
they're lower than those in Canada, They're lower than those
in Australia or New Zealand or all of Europe, or
Japan or Israel or anem you a, you know, a
first world country. So why can somebody and then follow
(20:17):
the money? And I think that's where Americans are going
to say, ah so, And that's why Robert F. Kennedy
Junior is pointing out our agencies are basically now bought
and paid for. They have been taken hostage captive to
the very companies, to the very corporations, the very industries
(20:42):
that they're supposed to be regulating. And that, my friends,
is a blatant conflict of interest. Agree, disagree six one
seven two six six sixty eight sixty eight. Trump goes
for it again, swinging for the fences, nominates Robert F.
Kennedy Junior to be the next Secretary of Health and
(21:06):
Human Services. Like it, don't like it? Do you support
this pick?
Speaker 3 (21:12):
Or?
Speaker 1 (21:13):
Many in the media are saying he's not going to
get confirmed. They're calling him a quack, a conspiracy theorist.
They're saying he's anti vaccine, which is a lie. He's
against the COVID nineteen vaccine, and he asks questions about
some other vaccines. But being skeptical, being questioning it doesn't
(21:34):
mean you're gonna ban him. So what do you make
of RFK Junior at the head of Health and Human Services?
I love the pick, do you? Kathy in Maine? Thanks
for holding Kathy, and welcome.
Speaker 3 (21:53):
Hi Jeff. This is the first time I'm calling that.
I have listened to you for years. In fact that
I can't please. I put on your podcasts and listen
to it again, and I sing all your jingles as well.
But I want to pass along. I wanted to pass
along from the information. Please tell your listeners to ask
(22:15):
their pharmacists if the vaccines are mRNA, because I know
the RSV is an mRNA, and if they really want
to get the COVID vaccine, there is a non mRNA.
So I wanted people to do that. Ask ask your pharmacists.
They have a lot of knowledge. Also, everything you say
(22:36):
is so close to my heart. I'm in my early seventies,
retired nurse to children in their thirties. My son came
down with asthma when he was about ten years old,
and he loved all the junk foods and I provided them,
you know, the cereals with the food colorings. And it
turns out he was highly allergic to the food dies,
(22:58):
especially the yellow and red food dyves. And when he
was in fifth grade, he was a very active young man.
When he was in fifth grade, his teacher said, there's
something terrible. Her words were, there's something terribly wrong with
this child. He can't stay to see if he won't listen.
(23:20):
She wanted him on the attention deficit drugs. We fought
it too, Nail, and I can tell you without going
into details, it turns out he was very, very smart.
She's a graduate of MIT. He's internationally known in his world.
Speaker 6 (23:37):
And Black Friday is coming, And for the adults in
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(23:58):
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Speaker 1 (24:00):
You can get one hundred.
Speaker 6 (24:01):
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(24:23):
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Speaker 3 (24:40):
You know, it doesn't mean there's not a place for
those attention deficit drugs.
Speaker 2 (24:45):
There is.
Speaker 3 (24:46):
But all parents, if your kids have allergies asthma, look
into what they're eating, look at the dice and the
addit is. Yeah, and all of this is so connected.
I also wanted to tell you about additives in dog
food products.
Speaker 1 (25:06):
And can you just hold on one second, I promise
I'll let you finish your second point. I just want
to go back to your first point, because I think
it's a magnificent point. You're one thousand percent correct, as
I like to say, And just to reinforce what you're
saying again, for some people, they may need it. Okay,
I'm not saying don't take any drugs to deal with
(25:27):
ADHD or other issues, but in full you know, to
be like again, to be brutally honest, like I'm in
the confessional. Ashton has ADHD. He's also dyslexic. Ava has
ADHD slightly dyslexic. Actually, forgive me, she's more dyslexic than Ashton.
So Ashton is the one who's slightly dyslexic. Ava is
(25:47):
the one who's more dyslexic. Now that has led to
learning issues for them at school.
Speaker 4 (25:52):
Now.
Speaker 1 (25:53):
The only reason why I'm mentioning this is the teachers. Notice.
They go, hey, they're constantly inverting the numbers and shapes
and letters, and they're struggling with reading, and they're just
and they were complaining to me, go, Daddy, I just
I'm not keeping up. I can't follow. And so I realized,
I go, oh, I mean it's ADHD. But b you know,
(26:14):
a D looks like A you know whatever. You know,
a B looks like a D, and you know, everything
is sort of inverted, right. So we went to see
the doctor, and very good doctor. She's very qualified, highly educated.
I don't want to seem like I'm criticizing her, but
the first thing out of her mouth was medication. The
(26:35):
first thing I could. Grace and I looked at each other.
The first thing was get her on this pill. Get
them on this medication. It's always big pharma, it's always
a pharmaceutical. And we started to ask about some of
the side effects short term, long term, and we said no.
On for both we said no, and we've dealt with
(26:58):
it in other ways, and there are other ways you
can deal with it. And they're doing fine. In fact,
I mean, you know, Ava's now pretty much caught up
with the other students who's a little bit behind. She's
practically there. Ashton is doing great. He's more of an
audio learner, not a visual learner, and once they know that,
(27:18):
he's starting to really excel. So my point just is this,
sometimes you have a problem with your children. What I
found shocking was I had to push them, Grace and
I had to push them for non pharmaceutical alternatives. And
I'm like, and you can just tell they're being pressured
(27:41):
by the medical establishment, by big pharma, push the drugs,
push the pharmaceuticals. Why because that's where the money is.
They're not making money with the way Ashton, sorry, with
the way Ashton and Eva are now being looked after
by Grace and I and how we're dealing with their
(28:02):
cognitive issues. You know, they're learning issues. They're not making money,
so it's a natural way. It's more time intensive. We
have to work with them and have other people help them.
But slowly but surely, you know, it's they're getting better
and they're catching up. So I realized right away that's
(28:23):
when it began to click in my mind. I said, no,
RFK Junior is onto something. You can just see. I mean,
they barely finished a diagnosis bang, you know, and they
had a whole series of drugs and it was like
a cocktail. You can do this one, or you can
do that one, or you can mix and match. And
(28:44):
they were you know, now they're fourteen and twelve. They
were much younger when they were diagnosed. I'm like, their
brains are still developing. They're so young, can't we try
something that's non pharmaceutical. Now she did concede, Yes, there
is and you can try it. But I just noticed
their first go to option is always the drugs. It's
(29:08):
always the money. Please, Cathy, pick up where you left off.
I know you want to make a second point about
dog food. Please go ahead, right.
Speaker 3 (29:18):
I just want to say I agree with you as
you say one thousand percent. Look at some of the
other alternatives and challenge your kids and they respond, They
respond beautifully. Yes. The other thing is, I know how
much you love your Rocky. I have two dogs and
have always had dogs and love them. But be careful
(29:39):
of what you're feeding your dogs. In fact, my daughter
left the big corporation, gave up her apartment in Manhattan
is here with me in Maine, and she actually started
a dog treat and so that the only additive is
vitamin E as a preservative. She had a large company
(30:01):
out in the Midwest package them for her, and they
sent an internal manum email saying if they they handle
like eighty some odd dog food companies right that they
manufactured for But they said it was the best product
(30:21):
they ever heard. But it's ever had. But it's very
expensive to get these things to the market, and supermarkets
charge plotting fees, which can be as much as depending
on how many skews you have, can be as much
as one hundred thousand dollars. But if you look around
(30:41):
you can find products. So be careful, be careful what
you seed you feed Rocky because they're they're in the
dog food as well.
Speaker 1 (30:51):
Well, Kathy, I'm just curious. We we give them very
good food. We picked top dollar for you know, it's
it's as all natural as you can possibly get. I
would give him regular food, but the vet said, don't
do that. They're like, don't do that, so okay, fine,
so we get them this all natural dog food. It's
(31:11):
very good, highly recommended. But we also leave kibble for
him on the side. You know, I never want the
Rockster to go hungry, so he's always got you know,
fresh water all the time, and we feed him in
the morning, we feed him in the in the evening.
You get two meals a day, and we always have
a little bowl of kibble just in case if the
Rockster wants to snack on anything. Is kibble bad for Rocky?
Speaker 3 (31:38):
I think you have to talk to your vet. But
there are foods out there that are better than others.
Air dried is better than a lot of the commercially prepared.
You can't just go with the food because it says
all natural, So I think you have to do a
lot of homework with that.
Speaker 1 (31:56):
Okay, but you're saying air dried. You want to go
with the air dry kibble? Correct?
Speaker 3 (32:02):
Low Ear dried is better than these things that are
cooked at high temperatures that then, I guess promote percinogens. So,
but you do have to do your homework. Look around,
find a bet, just like when you're finding a doctor.
Find it, find it bad.
Speaker 1 (32:19):
No, we got an excellent vet. I got to say,
wonderful Vet, Kathy, incredible information. Please don't be a stranger, Kathy,
call again. Six one seven two six six sixty eight
sixty eight is the number, by the way, just a
full disclosure. I don't ever want to be dishonest with
this audience. I'm going to get in trouble now with
(32:41):
Grace and she's going to tell the kids. So the
kids are going to be mad at me at dinner today.
But you know, when the cooner man makes himself a
sandwich for lunch, there's the rockster with that tail is
always wagging, and I'll give him a slice of American cheese.
He loves American cheese, frankly. If he's really good, he's
(33:02):
a really good boy, I give him two slices of
American cheese. And the Rockster is very particular. He likes
it broken up. So I'll fold the slice of cheese
into four pieces and then just give it to him,
you know, one at a time. Oh man, he's he's
so happy you wouldn't believe it. And I kid you not, Okay,
I don't do this often.
Speaker 4 (33:22):
But I do do it.
Speaker 1 (33:24):
Loves lays or plain potato chips. So when the cooner
man is having a diet coke would say Lays plain
potato chips, you know, watching a movie or whatever. The
Rochester will curl up beside Big Daddy and I'll look left,
I'll look right, make sure nobody's looking, and I'll slip
him some of the Lays potato chips. He's in heaven.
(33:48):
He is in absolute heaven six one seven two six,
and loves apples too. When the cooonter man's having an apple,
he's right beside me and I just you know, but
not the he doesn't like the peel. He doesn't like
the covering, No, he just he wants the inside of
the apple. So I'll, you know, bite off a nice
piece and give it to the rockster. Six one seven
(34:10):
two sex six sixty eight sixty eight. Very happy dog.
Everybody comments when they see him, they've never seen such
a happy dog. Anthony in Michigan. Thanks for holding Anthony.
Speaker 7 (34:24):
And welcome doctor Kooner. When we had a dog on
rest her soul, you and Iron sabbatical buddy. I'll tell
you I always always spoiling dog and getting the here
can you even a lie from my wife?
Speaker 3 (34:35):
You know.
Speaker 7 (34:39):
They stay away from the American cheese that's just processed goo.
I do a little part time work at a restaurant,
and really the the inside skinny is cheddar is way
better probably for him. But I'm not a doctor, so Askervett.
Speaker 3 (34:54):
You know.
Speaker 7 (34:55):
So on the subject matter, Jeff, this is far and wide.
I've had my own jury health a bit of a
health food nut work out, working out kind of guy.
I got ten years on you. And here's the deal.
There's another subset to this that a lot of people
are not talking about it, and I've been made aware
of it in the last year. A lot of your soaps,
women's cosmetics and perfumes, and your household cleaning items are
(35:21):
hormone disruptors. Apparently did all that? A lot of our
plastic utensils, like for you know, picking up your vegetables
and stuff when you're serving them, and the coatings on
all are cooking wear. Maybe we need to go back
to cash iron and stainless steel because underneath that as
some of the teflon slash pifost type of articles and
(35:46):
all the health problems you're having, how much of this
is a combination of those hormone disruptors, the glio gliophosate,
as well as the Addressine in my room is a
medical professional that I occasionally consult with, and I asked
that question. There's a plethora of problems right now in America, fertility, obesity,
(36:09):
et cetera. And I asked about all these things I
did mention and they were like, yes, we made decisions
and went forward with them, and we didn't understand the consequences.
And we're in a bit of a mess, Jeff, and
it's gonna take a while to get back. I think
you're gonna I'm gonna make a prediction organic farming is
gonna take off. There's a woman in my sphere, a
(36:31):
Catholic woman who tried to stays out of politics. When
we were talking about the subject matter the other day.
There's an organization Mom's to mom I believe, and they
were this whole organization is very big. Apparently it's been
a driver behind a whole Maha thing. And underneath it
is they've known about this for a long time. This
mom to Mom's network has been all over this and
(36:54):
underneath our our f R FK Junior is a gender
whose name escapes me. He's big into organic farming, even
not tilling, and he is a hero amongst this woman.
So his name will pop up soon.
Speaker 4 (37:11):
So you gotta I'll text it.
Speaker 1 (37:13):
I gotta say no. I mean, look, Anthony, you're clicking
on all cylinders. You really are. Look, I'll just give
you an example.
Speaker 4 (37:19):
All right.
Speaker 1 (37:20):
Grace and the kids, I think with last year, I
believe it was last year. Anyway, just it's been an
insane year, so forgive me if it was really it
was early this year or late last year, but anyway,
they went to France. Grace and the two kids went
to France. Grace has a very dear friend who lives
in Italy, and they said, hey, let's have a quick vacation.
(37:40):
I wasn't able to go because I want to be
on the air. I didn't have I want to take
vacation because it was such a such an important election. Anyway,
long story short, Grace meets her Italian friend in the
south of France. Her Italian friend has a daughter very
close with Ava. Now, what they all said was how
fresh the food France was because so much of the
(38:02):
food is organic, and how much better they felt even
after just a couple of days eating in France as
compared to say, eating a typical American diet. And Grace
was the one who came back and Ashton and Ava
and they're like, we love organic food, Daddy. So what
the Kooner Man has started to do, and I want
(38:23):
to do more of is go to these local farms
and you know, I get like, you know, apples, really fresh, vegetables,
really fresh. Nothing beats organic farming, nothing beats organic food.
Now I know what the supermarket they say stuff is
organic and it's not really organic, and you got to
(38:44):
be careful, you got to watch. I get that. But
if you go to a farm and you get exactly
what you're talking about, organic food. Organic farming. First of all,
you can't believe how good the food tastes. Like I'm
not getting like an apple from an apple orchard compared
to the apple you get at the supermarket. You're like,
h like, it's just bursting with flavor. Chicken, if you
(39:08):
can afford it organic chicken, it is incredible. I mean,
it's it is delicious. You usually get to, you know,
the chicken at the supermarket. There's no taste. It's like
eating a cardboard box. There's no taste. You know, you
got to put something on it to make it taste.
So you're dead on. I think organic farming is the
(39:29):
wave of the future, and I think our FK. But
believe it or not, you know, we're focused on gates,
and of course we should, and the deep state and
the FBI and the CIA and the NSA and the
DOJ and the FBI. But this pick of our FK
Junior is going to revolutionize potentially America in a good way.
(39:53):
We're gonna be eating healthier, We're gonna be eating fresher.
In fact, I think food's gonna become even more delicious.
I think food's going to become a lot more local.
I think you're going to get big agriculture now on
the ropes. And I think yes, in this way, we
will be more like the rest of the first world,
will be more like Australia, more like Canada, more like Europe,
(40:17):
where we're eating better quality food with higher more stringent regulations,
less pasticides, less colorings, less food additives. So and it's
going to make us healthier. I think the slogan is brilliant, Maha,
make America healthy again, Anthony, thank you very much for
(40:41):
that call. Now, and on that note, On that note,
this is what Mark sent me via messenger. He said, Jeff,
for today's show, it's perfect, all right, substitutes for a
healthy diet. Pasta, zucchini, chips, carrots, milk, almond, milk, rice, cauliflour, butter, sadness, cheese. Nope, tacos.
(41:15):
This is stupid. I'm not doing it, you know. I mean,
I'll do a little. I can do some, but I
can't do all.