Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
The blame game is.
Speaker 2 (00:02):
The big headline is elected officials are teaming up in
groups now to defend themselves while others that they used
to be best friends with are now pointing the finger
at them. This has taken on an entire life of
its own.
Speaker 3 (00:17):
Now.
Speaker 2 (00:17):
The reality is you've got a twenty plus thousand five
acre fire only eight percent contained as we speak. Five
thousand plus structures have now been destroyed. They're expecting that
number to continue to rise. And we are now seeing
actors and actresses and Hollywood producers who are now angry
that their homes have been burned to the ground because
(00:40):
of government incompetency. Now, the democratic mismanagement is really coming
further into focus at this hour, and that is what
is erupted into this blame game of one person saying
this is your fault. No, no, this is your fault.
A Pacific Palisades resis we also now know for a fact,
(01:03):
was closed when wildfires swept through the area and devastated
the community.
Speaker 1 (01:08):
Officials have officially told the Los Angeles Times.
Speaker 2 (01:12):
The Sana Yents Reservoir is connected to the Los Angeles
water supply system, and authority said it was shut down
for repairs at the time the fire erupted.
Speaker 1 (01:23):
What does that mean?
Speaker 2 (01:24):
Well, it left one hundred and seventeen million gallon water
storage complex empty in the heart of the area where
these fires are the worst. How do we know this?
This again coming from the La Times. Their tweet put
it perfectly. A reservoir in the Palisades that holds one
(01:46):
hundred and seventeen million gallons of water was all fined
this month for previously scheduled maintenance. It was empty when
the fires exploded. Again, I'm getting this from the La Times.
Why do I keep saying that because the White House
wants you to believe in Gavin Newsom, want you to
believe that anything that I just told you is gotta
be a lie, disinformation or misinformation. Which brings me back
(02:11):
to what I said a moment ago about the blame game.
Joe Biden, Kamala Harris sitting in the Oval office looking
at a flat screen TV that they've rolled into the
Oval office. And on that screen you see Gavin Newsom
and you see Mayor Kieran of LA And what was
said by Joe Biden might be the most shocking thing yet.
Speaker 1 (02:32):
Take a listen.
Speaker 2 (02:33):
In his own words, as he said, you guys are
getting a bad rap.
Speaker 4 (02:36):
The other thing is, look, you know, I think you
getting a bad rap.
Speaker 5 (02:41):
I know you're getting a bad rap about these fire
hydrants don't have enough water in them.
Speaker 3 (02:45):
Give me a brivige, give me a privage.
Speaker 6 (02:47):
What's just small about.
Speaker 3 (02:49):
Is the utilities. Understandably, what they did is they cut
off power because they're worried about these high tension lines
coming down and causing.
Speaker 1 (02:58):
More fires than the win.
Speaker 7 (03:00):
Right.
Speaker 1 (03:00):
When they do that, guess what if they shut off
the tire.
Speaker 8 (03:03):
Of the controls, the ability to pump the water and
so now they're figuring the generators here.
Speaker 1 (03:09):
I mean, this is complicated stuff.
Speaker 2 (03:11):
You're going to have a lot of demogogues out there
trying to take advantage of it.
Speaker 1 (03:15):
But you're doing the right thing.
Speaker 7 (03:17):
We're going to get it done. God willing.
Speaker 2 (03:19):
You're doing the right thing, folks, God Willing. We're gonna
get it done.
Speaker 1 (03:23):
Now.
Speaker 2 (03:24):
Did the President just lie to you? Absolutely he lied
to you. Are there a whole lot of fire hydrants
that aren't working?
Speaker 1 (03:30):
Yes?
Speaker 2 (03:30):
And I love when I get to use the liberal
medium to prove my point. This is NBC News's own
reporting on the ground listen.
Speaker 7 (03:39):
Apartment building in gulfed in flames. I saw the fire
inch and pull up. This afternoon a fire captain have
one of his firefighters attach a hose to a hydrant,
and that hose didn't fill up. Alex and I asked
the captain, out of every ten hydrants you attached to today,
on average, how many are you getting full water from?
He says little to none. And it was at that
(04:01):
point that really the whole crew stopped, looked up at
this apartment building, and they realize there was nothing they
could do.
Speaker 2 (04:07):
So clearly the President of the United States of America
was lying to you, so was the mayor, and so
was the governor as they were putting out this propaganda. Now,
I said at the very beginning, what is happening right
now is people are choosing, like who their friends are
and who their enemies are in this blame game. Many
of these people used to be friends. Now they're trying
to save their own ABS's. I'll give you a perfect
(04:30):
example of that. This just coming in as we're recording
the Los Angeles Fire Department chief. You know, this is
the lesbian woman that was going to hire a bunch
of lesbians and gays and trans people to over a
three year initiative to completely change how they did firefighting.
And then they hired another woman who was gay below her,
(04:52):
and another woman below her.
Speaker 1 (04:53):
That was gay.
Speaker 2 (04:54):
So the top three people and the Los Angeles Fire
Department are gay women. Well, now she's the finger saying
this isn't my fault that I was doing DEI, this
is the fault of others. The Los Angeles Fire Department
Chief Kristin Crowley turns on Los Angeles' leadership, saying, quote,
they failed her. This might be one of the most
(05:17):
remarkable interviews I've ever heard.
Speaker 1 (05:20):
Listen, it's period.
Speaker 9 (05:21):
Did the City of Los Angeles fail you and your
department and our city?
Speaker 10 (05:24):
It's my job to stand up as a chief and
exactly say, justifiably what the fire department needs to operate
to meet the demands of the community.
Speaker 7 (05:35):
Did they fail you?
Speaker 10 (05:36):
That is our job and I tell you that's why
I'm here. So let's get us what we need so
firefighters can do their jobs.
Speaker 9 (05:41):
Did they fail you, yes, Chief Kristin Crowley. I believe
the anchors wanted to ask a question. Yes, had some comments.
Speaker 11 (05:52):
We do If you could please ask her regarding the
Times article that came out that the Santa Inez reservoir
was close to her pairs and it was empty.
Speaker 1 (06:01):
One hundred and.
Speaker 11 (06:01):
Seventeen million gallons of water could have been used in
this fight.
Speaker 9 (06:05):
The question is about the Santa Inez reservoir being empty.
Speaker 1 (06:10):
There's been a lot of questions about that. Sure.
Speaker 10 (06:12):
So my stance on this is when a firefighter comes
up to a hydrant, we expect there's gonna be water.
We don't control the water supply. Our firefighters are there
to protect lives and property and it make sure that
we're properly trained and equipped.
Speaker 1 (06:28):
That's my position on this.
Speaker 10 (06:29):
So if there's no water, I don't know how the
water gets to the hydrants.
Speaker 1 (06:33):
Please hold on a second.
Speaker 2 (06:34):
You're just telling me that you're the fire chief and
you're in charge, by the way of making sure that
the fire hydrants work correctly. You're in charge of the testing,
which you canceled recently because of budget cuts, is what
you said. But you're telling me you don't know how
the fire how the water gets there. Your entire job
revolves around water going to a hydrant that you go
(06:59):
out and you test, And now you're telling.
Speaker 1 (07:03):
Me I don't know anything about water. I have the water.
Speaker 2 (07:05):
All I know is when I pull up there, I
expect there to be water there.
Speaker 1 (07:08):
But I don't know nothing else about nothing.
Speaker 2 (07:10):
This is what wokeness does, folks. This is what a
DEI hire sounds like. This is also And I'm gonna
hit pause here because I'm going to go back to
something else that happened in the blame game. You want
to who started the blame game now that you have
a little bit of context.
Speaker 1 (07:25):
Gavin Newsom, how do we know this?
Speaker 2 (07:27):
Gavin Newsom on TV with houses behind him on fire
and there are five raging wildfires in La County, four
of them at the time.
Speaker 1 (07:36):
He said this with zero percent containment. And what does
Gavin Newsom do when he's talking to Anderson Cooper.
Speaker 2 (07:42):
He throws his hands up in the air like you
just don't care and says, well, this is not my
problem when it comes to all these issues locally, Listen, what.
Speaker 1 (07:52):
Is the situation with water? Obviously in the helsage ran
out last night in the hydrants. I was started the
firefighter in this block. They left because there was no
water in the hydrant here.
Speaker 3 (08:00):
The local folks are trying to figure that out.
Speaker 2 (08:03):
I mean, just when local folks gotta figure that out,
gonna figure that out.
Speaker 1 (08:06):
Now my problem, I'm just a governor. I'm now the
water gets here.
Speaker 2 (08:09):
So the fire chief doesn't know how the water gets
to the fire hydrant. And the governor says, not my problem.
You got to ask the local people that I'm just
a governor of California.
Speaker 1 (08:18):
Where we do with wildfires and earthquakes. I don't know.
Speaker 2 (08:21):
You're gonna have to ask some local folks. And you
notice how the blame game got started. Keep listening to
his logic.
Speaker 3 (08:26):
You have a system that it's not dissimilar to what
we've seen in other extraordinarily large scale fires, whether it
be pipe electricity, whether it just be the complete overwhelm
of the system. I mean, those hydrants are typical for
two or three fires, maybe one fire. You have something
at this scale. But again that's gonna be determined by
the local.
Speaker 1 (08:44):
Got to be determined by the local. So let's just recap.
Speaker 2 (08:47):
Joe Biden Mox reports of any empty fire hydrants and says,
I know you're getting a bad rap talking to the
governor and talking to the mayor about these fire hydrants. Quote,
they don't have enough water in them, give me a break.
The fire captain then comes out and says, hold on
a second, most of the hydrants are empty. I don't
know how the water gets there. And then we circle
back to the governor. He's like, well, I don't know
(09:07):
how the water works and how the water gets the hydrant,
so you need to talk to local officials, as he
throws his hands up.
Speaker 1 (09:12):
Not my problem.
Speaker 2 (09:13):
All of these people, democrats, all of them. I want
to go back to the Los Angeles Fire Department Chief
Kristen Crowley. Not only did she say a moment ago
that I played for you that yes, the Los Angeles
City did fail her, but then she went on to
also say this.
Speaker 10 (09:29):
Refer that to DWP or whomever controls that part. But
I can tell you the resiliency of our firefighters. If
there's no water, they're gonna go find water. They're going
to figure out a way to do the best they
can with what they've got in a very dynamic situation.
Speaker 2 (09:45):
So to be clear, what she's saying is, hey, I
don't know how the water gets the hydrants.
Speaker 1 (09:50):
That's not my job.
Speaker 2 (09:51):
Apparently that's a puff above her pay grade to like
know how that works. And then she says it's the
LA mayor and the governor's fault that they let her down.
And then she says, as it's scorched to earth, but
we're gonna find water, like we're resilient.
Speaker 1 (10:08):
Like that's these are such.
Speaker 2 (10:09):
This is not some motivational poster on a wall in
the nineteen nineties in a dentist's office. Okay, Like this
is real life. People's lives are at stake, people are dying.
More than ten have died is the number we've heard
so far. Everyone's life out there has been ruined. And
you guys are sitting there like I don't know how
the water gets there. I don't understand it.
Speaker 9 (10:29):
And I know you express concerns that those DWP hydrants
would not be inspected thoroughly because of the budget cuts.
Speaker 10 (10:37):
That is something to discuss, and we're going to look
into that in regard to how we can ensure there's
going to be water when we need it. But in
the end, you know, I'm going to defer that to
DWP and whomever else controls the supply I can guarante.
Speaker 2 (10:53):
And whomever else controls by because I don't even understand
where the water comes from, Like they're all Democrats, folks.
None of them are going to take responsibility for this disaster.
And if you are a citizen in California or anywhere
else and you listening to this and you wonder why
bad things happen when you elect incompetent leaders, this is
(11:14):
your reminder that it actually does matter who you vote for,
because you've got multiple problems here. You have a governor
that was incompetent. You have an LA mayor who's fire
budget cuts preceded the wildfires. You've got empty reservoirs when
you know this is the season where fires can break out.
You have total mismanagement of the forestry and everything around you.
(11:39):
You've got dams that you got rid of, you got
water that you purposely let run off into the ocean,
And the Los Angeles Fire Department chief said she had
a three year plan to get you a bunch of
gays and lesbians and.
Speaker 1 (11:49):
Trainees in there.
Speaker 2 (11:50):
And then the assistant police chief even did a video
telling you that if you're in a spot where you
need a woman to carry you out of a house,
that's your fault for being in a bad spot.
Speaker 1 (12:01):
Well, yeah, my house on fire.
Speaker 2 (12:03):
These are the people that you elected like this was predictable.
Speaker 1 (12:07):
Keep listening to you that.
Speaker 10 (12:09):
When our firefighters showed up on that day with what
they had, they did absolutely everything they could do to
rescue and to save people's wives and property. And that's
the bottom line. Now, let's get them what they need
to do their jobs, and so.
Speaker 9 (12:25):
Let's get them water, Chief, because I was with your
firefighters and they literally were watching a house burn down
with pain in their eyes, not being able to do
anything except pull put water from a swimming pool to
try to save a nearby structure that wasn't burning, and
literally watching a house burn to the ground because they
had no water.
Speaker 1 (12:44):
That's exactly right.
Speaker 10 (12:45):
But did they continue to work and did they continue
to do what they had to do to do the
best they could with what they had.
Speaker 9 (12:51):
Yes, keep follow up me. Thank you very much for
talking to us. We appreciate it.
Speaker 12 (12:56):
I believe we have a follow up question at this
question on that reservoir issue. Is the fire department aware
of when these resources are depleted? Just like that reservoir
had no water, Was she aware of that fact that
it was under construction and there was no water there?
Speaker 9 (13:14):
Sandra Endol, one of our angers, wants to know if
the Department is advised that the Santa Ynez Reservoir was
going to be emptied.
Speaker 1 (13:21):
Were you aware that there was no water there? No,
we weren't aware of that.
Speaker 10 (13:25):
They don't have to advise you, not that I'm aware of.
Speaker 9 (13:27):
No, So you had no idea that there wasn't neither
no such needed, such needed resource.
Speaker 1 (13:32):
No, we weren't, all right, Keith Kristian Krau.
Speaker 2 (13:36):
I mean, it's amazing, by the way, I love how
she's like all I do every day is I just
wake up and fight fires, and I put my hose
up to them fire hydrants, and I just you know,
they're just supposed to be.
Speaker 1 (13:46):
Some water there. I don't know how to do anything else.
Speaker 2 (13:48):
By the way, I got you a bunch of lesbians
down here because we do some dyah stuff. You want
to know what they did do? Let me tell you
about some facts. Because I don't think she's this stupid.
I think she just thinks that she acts stupid. She's
might get away with this. This is what they did
to firemen, and this is everybody's fault in leadership there
in California. Firemen that didn't get the COVID vaccine they said,
(14:12):
you're fired, you can't work here.
Speaker 1 (14:15):
Let me say that again.
Speaker 2 (14:17):
Firemen and women who refused, even on religious grounds, to
not get the COVID vaccine, they were told, go home,
you are fired. How do we know this well, Fox
eleven and Santa Anna had the story when it happened.
Speaker 6 (14:35):
After nearly fifteen years of serving with the LA Fire Department,
he was terminated for refusing to take the COVID vaccine
without applying for a religious or medical exception.
Speaker 5 (14:46):
Look, everybody, everybody in this state of feel good land,
of newsom land, believes that if they were in Germany
in nineteen thirty five, they'd be pushing against the Nazis.
Speaker 1 (14:56):
They'd go to try to kill Hitler.
Speaker 5 (14:58):
I suggest if you were involved in firing that fire department,
that fireman, you would have been a prison guard in
nineteen thirty Germany. And you need everybody that reported their
neighbors or who took an issue with somebody who was
just asking questions or for standing up for their civil liberties.
You must examine yourself and realize you would be a
(15:18):
prison guard, not somebody fighting against the Nazis. You are
in the delusion. You are part of the problem. You're
in the mass formation, and you must fight against that
and think independently and defend the founding principles of this
country which are designed as a buttress against exactly this
kind of thing. And thank god it got us through this.
Speaker 2 (15:41):
By the way, that's doctor Drew that was giving that
commentary at the end quote if you were involved in
the firing of that fireman, right, because that was a
sanctimonious time. Oh well, if you won't get the vaccine,
then we're going to fire you. You would have been
a prison guard in the nineteen thirties Germany. You were
in the delusion. You are part of the problem. He
is absolutely right, this is part of the problem. So
(16:03):
we go back to the fire chief and you look
at what she said, Well, it's their fault. They're the
ones that didn't give me what I needed. Yes, they
failed me. And then you go back to the conversation
as Democrat Governor Gavin Newsom, and this is my I
almost led the show with this, and I decided to
(16:25):
use at the end because I think it's more powerful
after I go through this blame game. The wildfires in
southern California have burned tens of thousands of acres, They've
killed more than ten people, They've caused more than sixty
billion in damage, and they destroyed more than ten thousand structures.
All of those numbers, we are fearful are going to
go up. And what was Gavin Newsom's number one thing
(16:47):
he was talking to President about in the Oval Office
via satellite link today.
Speaker 1 (16:53):
You want to know what the number one thing he
was worried about.
Speaker 2 (16:55):
Gavin Newsom is angry that they are spreading lies about
him on the internet, he says, and we need to
crack down on that, not actually put out the fires
that are raging. As he's saying this, not asking for
you know, like water or tankers or more airplanes or
National guardsmen or whatever whatever.
Speaker 1 (17:15):
Government.
Speaker 2 (17:15):
I said, no, no, hey, miss President, my name's Gavin Newsom,
and I'm asking by an administration to use the federal
government to go after what he claims is disinformation about
him making him look bad, because remember, Gavin Newsom wants
to be president.
Speaker 4 (17:31):
I ask you, We've got to deal with this misinformation.
There were hurricane force wins of miss and disinformation lies.
People want to divide this country and we're gonna have
to address that as well. And it breaks my heart
as people are suffering and struggling that we're up against
those hurricane force forces as well. And that's just a
(17:53):
point of personal privilege that I share that with you
because it infects real people that are out there. People
I meet every single day, people the mayor has been
meeting with, and they're having conversations that are not the
typical conversations you'd have at this time, and you wonder
where this stuff comes from. And it's very damaging as well.
But we're here to get.
Speaker 1 (18:13):
The job done.
Speaker 2 (18:15):
It doesn't sound like. It doesn't sound like you're there
to get the job done. Sounds like you want the
federal government to come in start locking people up who
say things that you don't like about you, calling them
hurricane force winds of lies about me on the internet.
Speaker 1 (18:34):
You want to know why.
Speaker 2 (18:35):
They hadn't gotten the fires out yet. Maybe it's because
of this guy. Maybe it's because of all the people
I just played. Maybe it's because they care more about
them being criticized and then when to lock up the
people that are criticizing them than they actually do.
Speaker 1 (18:47):
About doing their damn job.
Speaker 2 (18:50):
You know, you listen to just some of the audio
I played for you, whether it's Newsome or the president
or the mayor. And there's part of this it just
sounds like it's like a spoof, a scene out of
the TV show The Office. You listen to the last
the Los Angeles Fire Department Assistant Chief Kristin Larson, and
this again goes back to the to the blame game.
(19:13):
Here this is what she said on camera about her
job and DEI and having lesbian tired.
Speaker 13 (19:21):
You want to see somebody that responds to your house,
your emergency, whether it's a medical call or a fire call,
that looks like you.
Speaker 2 (19:28):
That's not true, by the way. That is the DEI
line that people want you to believe. When I call
nine one one or anybody I know and they're having
a heart attack, the house is on fire, by the way,
I've had my house on fire before. My house is
on fire. We lost part of our backyard a couple
of years ago. I assure you, when nine one one
was called, I didn't say, hey, can you send some
white guys that look like me?
Speaker 1 (19:50):
When I was in my shooting, I did not go
to the police.
Speaker 2 (19:53):
In fact, the first police officer I went to was
African American, and I promise you. I didn't even notice
he was African American because he's a guy with a badge.
Speaker 1 (20:00):
He's a good guy with a gun.
Speaker 2 (20:02):
I didn't go, excuse me, officer, can you point me
in the direction of a white police officer that looks
like me. When your house is in the middle of
a inferno and a fireman shows up, you're not like,
thank god you're Asian, because otherwise I knew I was
screwed today and we weren't gonna get this fire out.
But now that you're Asian and I'm Asian and you're here,
(20:22):
we're gonna figure this out.
Speaker 1 (20:24):
You think some guy whose house is burning down the Hispanic.
Speaker 2 (20:26):
He's like, no, no, no, no, no, gringos, no, I want,
I want, I want. If you don't speak Spanish, you
ain't putting out this fire on my house is burning down.
We're gonna let this burn, this house burn to the ground.
But the first thing she says there, that's when they.
Speaker 1 (20:41):
Should have fired her.
Speaker 2 (20:43):
But this is what the people chose, and I respect
the people, but if you do it again, it's on you,
Like this is the warning of this idea that you
can like com buy out of the world into some
sort of like change it into, oh, I need to
have exactly seventeen Asian people here and then seventeen white
people here in twenty three African Americans and eleven you know,
(21:05):
whatevers like, and don't forget the Native Americans are gonna
have just a small crew. If and a Native Americans
house gets on fire, do you send you That is insanity,
That is mentally delusional. It cost people their lives and
their homes. But the LA Fire Department assistant Chip's like,
I'm a lesbian. The person I'm bosso lesbian person, Malome's
a lesbian. We got a bunch of lesbians up in here,
(21:26):
by the way, I know there's a lot of gay
lesbians out in California. I don't know if the top
three spots is proportional, if that's what you're going for.
And I'm being serious when I say that, like, if
this is all about you know exactly, like how many
lesbian houses are there out there and palisades that burned
down compared to straight houses? Was the top three people
all lesbians? Is that adequately for what they like? For
(21:49):
the exact proportions that she's demanding. Well, I mean, and
let me, let me really break this down. If you're gay,
do you only want a gay officer showing up if
someone's about to kill you?
Speaker 4 (21:59):
Or race?
Speaker 2 (22:00):
If you're a lesbian, do you only want a lesbian
to come and show up if you're having a heart attack? Like,
I need a lesbian doctor. Oh no, you're a straight doctor. Sorry,
you can't work on my partner here because she's a lesbian.
I need a lesbian over here. Well she may die,
so be it. But I need you to find me
a lesbian. Excuse me, nurse, you're Asian.
Speaker 1 (22:17):
You don't look like me.
Speaker 3 (22:18):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (22:19):
I need a white lesbian over here right now for
my partner.
Speaker 1 (22:22):
I demand it.
Speaker 2 (22:23):
Or a black lesbian right now if you're black or
Asian lesbian, because apparently you got to look like.
Speaker 1 (22:29):
Me to do the job that I need you to do.
That is insanity.
Speaker 13 (22:33):
It gives that person a little bit more ease knowing
that somebody might understand their situation better. Is she strong
enough to do this? Or you couldn't carry my husband
out of a fire, in which my response is he
got himself from the wrong place. If I have to
carry him.
Speaker 2 (22:46):
Out of a fire, he got himself in a wrong
place like my house, my house on fire.
Speaker 1 (22:51):
I guess I'm in the wrong place. Let me burn.
Speaker 2 (22:53):
Thanks for coming, Lesbian, thanks for being there, lesbian assistant
fire chief. Just no, no, no, don't come get me. Don't
come now. No, it's my fault. I'm in the wrong place.
I'm in my home that's on fire. That is my fault.
It is my fault that I'm trapped in my home,
in my fire, And that is my fault that I
am here right now, and I'm sorry.
Speaker 1 (23:14):
Just watch me burn. This was all preventable.
Speaker 2 (23:18):
The point that I'm trying to make clearly today is
that all of this was preventable, every single bit of this.
The California politicians made deliberate decisions, all of them, the
liberal democrats, all of them, woke democrats, all of them
socialists and Marxists, and they made deliberate decisions made that
made this horrific disaster so much worse, so much worse.
(23:42):
The La Times quote a large reservoir in Pacific Palisades
that is part of the Los Angeles water supply system
was out of use when the wildfire destroyed thousands of
homes and other structures nearby.
Speaker 1 (23:55):
That is the LA Times.
Speaker 2 (23:57):
They have a picture of the Pacific Palisades Reservoir that
was off flying an empty when the firestorm exploded. The
La Times is also reported has also reported folks that
ten years ago they said they needed more reservoirs, and
guess what happened.
Speaker 1 (24:16):
They didn't build a damn one of them.
Speaker 2 (24:18):
Jenny's Quinnionez, chief executive officer and chief engineer of the
Los Angeles Department of Water and Power.
Speaker 1 (24:25):
You want to know what this chick makes?
Speaker 2 (24:28):
Seven hundred free thousand dollars a year, seven hundred and
fifty thousand dollars.
Speaker 1 (24:33):
A year, and she can't even explain why there was
no water. The reservoir holds one.
Speaker 2 (24:39):
Hundred and seventeen million gallons of water and would have
given the fire finals ample pressure to effectively fight the fire.
And these people make all of this money, and they
make all of this cash, and what happened. They can't
even explain how this happened. They can't even explain why
(24:59):
it happened. They all point the finger at somebody else
and they say it's their fault, or it's their fault,
or it's their fault, or it's their fault, or it's
their fault.
Speaker 1 (25:09):
None of them is taking accountability for anything.
Speaker 2 (25:13):
Now, there's two other things that have broken in the
last forty five minutes that I do want to add
in here, and I'm going to do a lot more
on this in another show, but I want to put
on your radar screen. White House is using this opportunity
with everything we just talked about to really hit the
pedal on pardons. White House Press Sretary Jean Pierre was
(25:33):
asked on Friday afternoon about pardons at the White House,
and they are going to load up on them, apparently
while you're watching la Burn listen.
Speaker 14 (25:43):
In his interview with the USA Today Arthur Speak, the
President talked a bit about pream to part.
Speaker 10 (25:48):
And say that they are still potentially on the table.
Speaker 6 (25:50):
Can you speak clovied about the scope that he is
considering when it comes to that, And.
Speaker 8 (25:55):
He's an US So we've been saying that the President
will have more to say, more to announce on partens
and commutations, so that is we have ten days to go,
so certainly that will be very soon that we'll make
those announcement. I'm not going to get into the scope.
I'm not going to get ahead of the president, but
we will be making some more additional announcements on pardons
and commutations before the end his term.
Speaker 1 (26:18):
There you go, here's what we got, folks.
Speaker 2 (26:20):
Yeah, we're gonna have preempted pardons for Biden's corrupt Democratic allies.
We'll be making some more additional announcements on pardons because
you guys are all watching what's going on out there
in California. Oh and while all that was happening, Mark Zuckerberg,
you know, the Facebook guy, He went on Joe Rogan's
show and this broke. Mark Zuckerberg also is now like,
(26:43):
I guess whistle blowing whatever you want to call it,
saying the Biden administration called his employees and screamed and
cursed them out to take down COVID vaccine content. He
said they wanted METAA censor memes as well, and he
said when we pushed back, what happened. They regime started
investigating his companies. He's saying, now I can tell you
(27:05):
this because they're leaving, and now you need to know
what pressure we were under.
Speaker 15 (27:10):
These people from the Biden administration would call up our
team and like scream at them and curse and it's
like these documents are it's all kind of out there.
Speaker 1 (27:20):
Did you record any of those phone calls? I don't know.
I don't think.
Speaker 14 (27:23):
I don't think we were, but but I think, oh, listen,
I mean there are emails that the emails are published,
it's all, it's all kind of out there, and they're
like and basically it just got to this point where
we were like, no, we're not gonna We're not gonna
take down things that are true.
Speaker 1 (27:37):
That's ridiculous.
Speaker 15 (27:38):
They want us to take down this meme of Leonardo
DiCaprio looking at a TV talking about how ten years
from now or something, you know, you're going to see
an ad that says, okay, if you took a COVID vaccine,
your eligible you know, like uh for for this kind
of payment, except this sort of like class action lawsuit
type meme. And they're like, no, you have to take
(27:59):
that down. We said, no, we're not going to actually
take down humor and satire. We're not going to take
down things that are that are true. And then at
some point, I guess, uh, I don't flipped a bit.
I mean Biden when he was he gave some statement
at some point. I don't know if it's a press
conference or to some journalists where basically was like, these
guys are killing people and and and I don't know,
(28:22):
then like all these different agencies and branches of government
basically just like started investigating and coming after our company.
Speaker 1 (28:29):
It was it was brutal.
Speaker 7 (28:30):
It was brutal.
Speaker 2 (28:32):
This is actually the first time that I somewhat believe
Mark Zuckerberg, because if you built this company and and
the entire government is pointing a gun at you, and
you've watched what they've done to Donald Trump, you know
what they've done behind the scenes with with with coming
to you telling you to take things down, you know
(28:53):
what they're capable of. And then they start investigating your
companies as a is a clear warning that if you
don't take down and censor what we say, we're coming
after your company.
Speaker 1 (29:03):
We're going to destroy you too.
Speaker 2 (29:05):
I actually, for the first time, I'm not saying I
feel sorry for him, but if this is true the
way he's describing it, this is the biggest attack on
free speech and the biggest abuse of power that we
have ever seen against a public company ever in this country.
Make sure you share this podcast with your family and
(29:27):
your friends, and I'll see you back here tomorrow,