Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:03):
What we need is more common sense, the.
Speaker 2 (00:08):
Common breaking down the world's nonsense about how American common sense.
We'll see us through with the common sense of Houston.
I'm just pro common sense for Houston.
Speaker 3 (00:19):
From Houston Way dot com. This is the Jimmy Barrett Show,
brought to you by viewind dot com. Now here's Jimmy Barrett.
All right, so welcome to the show. Today is our
one thousand, three hundred and first show. And the only
reason why I know that is that we do a
(00:43):
podcast of the show. We put this on our podcast
page at k t R h R now at KPRC
Radio dot com. Uh, if you ever want to listen
back to one of the old shows, they're there. And
Will Melbourne informsley this yesterday he sent me a little
you know, I just put up our one thousand, three
hundredth podcast.
Speaker 2 (01:02):
I thought, how is that possible? Have we done that
many shows?
Speaker 4 (01:08):
Gay?
Speaker 3 (01:08):
I guess yeah, I guess it would be right? Four
years worth four four years since we started doing this
afternoon show. So you know, the first year or so
was like the two hour show. So maybe that's why
are they separated. Anyway, we got a lot of podcasts
up there if you want to listen. But we're working
on number one three zero one today and I thought
(01:30):
i'd start off with some immigration news here in Houston.
There's been a lot of ICE raids. ICE has picked
up the pace. I think they heard and maybe President
Trump heard that. There were some people saying, huh, they
got up to a big start here. But we haven't
been hearing much about deportations lately. Well they've they've really
taken it up a notch in the last week here
(01:52):
in Houston. Well over four hundred illegals rounded up for deportation.
And know, these are are not people who are just
doing nothing other than being here illegally. These are all
people who are known criminals, convicted criminals, have orders, had
(02:13):
had orders or had orders to be deported. Maybe they
didn't show up in court, whatever the reason, orders to
be deported and then therefore the deportation order already exist.
It's not just you know, now going into neighborhoods and
you know, looking for people here illegally. These are all
people that they have some sort of a criminal record.
(02:33):
Here is the report from Fox's Brooke Taylor.
Speaker 5 (02:37):
We joined ICE on this exclusive week long operation in
total they arrested four hundred and twenty to illegal migrants.
The majority had criminal convictions or pending criminal conviction, So
we're talking everything from murder, aggravated assault to sexual assault
of a child's.
Speaker 6 (02:56):
Twenty one plus years for murder in Columbia, oh was
involved in a lot of organized crime in Columbia.
Speaker 7 (03:04):
ICE officers pull up and arrest this, a legal.
Speaker 5 (03:07):
Migrant who, according to ICE, is a convicted murderer from Columbia.
He was caught by border patrol last year, then released
under the Biden administration's catch and release policies and watched
this a twice supported illegal migrant from Mexico. He tried
to flee in his car then make a run for
it before he was captured and eventually arrested.
Speaker 7 (03:27):
According to ICE, he has.
Speaker 5 (03:28):
Multiple convictions in the US, including arson, aggravated assault with
a deadly weapon, and DWI.
Speaker 6 (03:36):
This is a week long operation where we really fled
the zone with additional resources from all these agencies and
come together trying to make the biggest impact and get
as many of these folks off the streets as we
possibly can.
Speaker 5 (03:48):
And more than two hundred of the illegal migrants arrested
during this operation had final orders of removal, including this
thirty six year old criminal migrant from El Salvador.
Speaker 7 (03:58):
Ice is speeding up that removed process. So this is new.
Speaker 5 (04:01):
Fox got an exclusive look at eighty detainees aborting this
plane to the.
Speaker 7 (04:05):
Al Paso Hub.
Speaker 5 (04:06):
So instead of bringing them to detention centers taking up
that limited space illegal migrants with final orders of removal,
they are being transferred to these hub locations immediately so
that they could be quickly deported to their home countries.
Speaker 6 (04:21):
We can arrest the individual this morning, process them this afternoon,
and have them on a removal flight this evening same day,
saving taxpayer costs and just to make it a more
efficient and expedited process to get these folks out of
the country.
Speaker 5 (04:38):
And meanwhile, at the southern border, CBP just release those
monthly numbers yesterday, and according to those numbers, it just
continues to stay significantly down at the southern border. Apprehensions
right now about ninety percent lower right now than this
timeframe last year.
Speaker 3 (04:56):
So she used an interesting term there, kind of a combination. Uh,
you know, so many people don't want the term illegal
alien used, so they use the term migrant instead. She
used the term illegal migrant. So I'm not sure why
she's substituted migrant for alien. Maybe that's a Fox News thing.
(05:18):
Maybe that's what they want them to do, Because Mike,
what do you think of when you think of a migrant?
You know, I think of somebody who's who's you know,
looking for a job, right They're they're they're moving from
place to place looking for a job. You know, a migrant. Somebody,
for example, who would come from Mexico to California or
(05:39):
Texas to pick fruits and vegetables, work in the farms.
That kind of thing that, to me is a migrant.
We're not talking about people who are coming here for work.
We're talking about people who are coming here committing crimes,
murdering people. That type of thing that to me is
not a migrant. So I just I'm so I decided
(06:00):
let's look this up. What what do they mean by migrant?
A migrant is a person who moves from one place
to another, often crossing international borders, whether temporarily or permanently.
The term migrant is an umbrella term that encompasses various
reasons for moving, including work, education, family, reunifiation, or fleeing persecution.
I did say anything about crime, did saynything about murdering people.
(06:22):
Doesn't say anything about gang affiliations. To me, that's not
a migrant.
Speaker 2 (06:28):
You know.
Speaker 3 (06:28):
Maybe I'm being too specific in splitting hairs, but I
don't really appreciate that particular term.
Speaker 2 (06:37):
Anyway.
Speaker 3 (06:38):
Speaking of the whole illegal immigration situation, we've got, you know,
the Department of Homeland Security now having to deal with
these these democrats, these rogue democrats from New Jersey who
want to protest outside of the Newark Ice facility.
Speaker 2 (06:55):
We've talked about that for several days this week.
Speaker 3 (06:58):
AOC, you know, Alexander Cartez, you know, issuing a threat
I think to DHS, to which an assistant DHS spokesperson
is more than happy to answer the threat.
Speaker 8 (07:11):
If anyone's breaking the law in this situation, it's not
members of Congress, it's the Department of Homeland Security. It's
people like Tom Holman and Secretary Christy nol. You lay
a finger on someone, on Representative Bonnie Watson Coleman, or
any of the representatives that were there, you lay a
finger on them, we are going to have a problem.
Speaker 9 (07:32):
I'd like to ask AOC, who does she want out
of that detention facility. Is it the MS thirteen members,
is it the known terrorists? Is it the child rapist?
Is it the murders? Who is she fighting for? Because
she's not fighting for Americans, she's not fighting for American victims.
And I'd like to lay out the facts, the fact
that it was these three members of Congress who trespassed,
broke the law, and stormed that ICE detention facility. They
(07:55):
put law enforcement at risk, They put our detainees at risk,
and they put.
Speaker 7 (07:59):
Our staff at risk.
Speaker 9 (08:00):
Had they asked for a tour, we would have happily
facilitated one for them, But there was absolutely no notice.
And the fact that they put hands, they body slammed,
body rammed, push up, whatever you want to call it. It
was assault on our ICE agents. And it's unacceptable.
Speaker 3 (08:14):
Yeah, I mean, who's who's who? And who here? Who's
touching who? The Democrats were touching the ICE employees, the
ICE agents. They wasn't the other way around. They only
got the Democrat congressman only got man handled any way,
shape or form after they had already accosted the ICE people.
(08:37):
So come on, AOC, you know, I'm sure she's just
putting out her narrative. She wants her people to think
that this is all the fall of ice, you know,
big bad ice. They're the ones that cause in the trouble,
when the reality is this the other way around. All right,
quick little break, We are back with more in a moment,
Jimmy Barrett Show here on AM nine fifty KPRC. All Right,
(09:15):
President Trump in Saudi Arabia yesterday. His Blane Ladin did
the cutter this morning. That's whereas now, you know, home
of that big, beautiful jet, that jumbo jet that the
President has accepted to be the next Air Force one,
which will require a whole lot of work and a
whole lot of more money spend. But you know, hey,
(09:38):
it's amazing to me that you know that the Democrats
are making such a big stink about this. There's a
personal gift. Well, it's not a personal gift if it's
uses Air Force one and then it was done being
used as Air Force one. I guess it does become
a part of the Trump Trump Presidential Library or something
like that. So I guess we can argue about the
ownership of the thing. But President Trump said, hey, why
(10:01):
wouldn't why wouldn't you want me to save, you know,
billions of dollars on the next Air Force one, and
Boeing hasn't bothered to deliver the next Air Force one
to us? So why not kind of a thing. It's
about building relationships. Let's get to that part of it.
I mean, he was the Saudis gave him like a
royal welcome, and so did so did Cutter. I mean
(10:22):
they literally rolled out the red carpet for President Trump
and Air Force one. And President Trump is making deals.
He took Elon Musk and a whole bunch of business
leaders with him. He's getting these countries to invest hundreds
of millions or hundreds of billions. Actually hundreds of billions
of dollars. The Saudis is something like six hundred billion
(10:46):
plus dollars they're going to invest in the United States.
Here is retired General Jack Keane on Fox talking about
the importance of this trip.
Speaker 4 (10:55):
I think what's really happening here is is something of
a reaction to the Biden thatministration. Because when Biden came in,
he immediately appeased Ron, cut back on the Trump sanctions,
went into negotiations over the nuclear deal once again, and.
Speaker 2 (11:13):
Stiffed the Arabs.
Speaker 4 (11:14):
There were military foreign military sales' supposed to go to
UAE and Saudi Arabia, and he held them up and
the Arabs said, what is going on here? We have
a major change in policy from the Trump administration and
moved closer to them and helped to normalize relationships with
Israel to the Biden administration that was stiff in them.
And as a result of that, they began they have options,
(11:36):
and one of those options was China, to bring China
closer economically and also geopolitically, because they are very concerned
about their own security dealing with Iran and their own
economic viability. So Trump is back on the scene again
and his first visitor is into Saudi Arabia. Primarily this
(11:56):
visit is about strengthening the economic relationship and obviously comes
with that will be the geopolitical relationship will be strengthened
as well. And he brought with him, as you know, Maria,
a continuon of American CEOs to meet the Crown Prince.
And what he is seeking is major investment by Saudi Arabia,
(12:18):
by the UAEDI next country and cutter in the United States,
half the capital of the world. As we know is
already invested in the United States, and President Trump wants
more of it. And he thinks our technology, our innovation,
our ability to execute much better than any other country
in the world by far, to include China, there are
no match to what we can deliver here. And he
(12:40):
wants to make that point to these major investors, these
three countries that have obviously a significant amount of sovereign wealth,
and the mission here is to invest in American enterprises.
Speaker 3 (12:51):
And what I find particularly interesting about this is I
think we have a lot more in common with the
saudi of today. Maybe not the Saudia's of twenty thirty,
forty fifty years ago, but I think we have more
in common with the Saudi's now than maybe at any
other time in history. They've gotten into a new program there,
(13:13):
it's called the twenty thirty Project, and what they're trying
to do is they're trying to modernize the country in
a whole variy of different ways, not just politically, socially,
and especially as it relates to technology. And they have
a minister there in charge of the economy and economic planning,
(13:35):
and retbar sat down and did an interview with him,
and as you listen to this, I think you'll find
a lot of similarities between what they're trying to do
in Saudi Arabia and what we're trying to do here.
Speaker 10 (13:44):
Today, we saw from both speeches, from His roy Highness
Crown Prince Pembus and Man and from the President Donald Trump,
that there's a lot of common values or a lot
of common approaches to addressing global challenges. We heard both
leaders talk about peace and prosperity, heard both leaders talk
about dialogue, and we've seen what dialogue has led to
(14:08):
in terms of the US and UK deal, US and
China deal, and what the Saudi has led also through
dialogue in the region to bring more stability. We're talking
about prosperity, about investment, about the growth of the private sector,
growth of competition and innovation.
Speaker 11 (14:23):
There were some news out of that speech from President Trump,
a number of pieces, but one of the big ones
was that the Syrian president will be here tomorrow because
the President Trump announced that sanctions against Syria were going
to be pulled. It seems like there is and I
saw the Crown Prince applauding loudly, so he's definitely for that.
(14:44):
It seems like there is going to be an effort
to bring Syria into the fold.
Speaker 2 (14:49):
Is that what you see, what we see is.
Speaker 10 (14:53):
The need in a country such as Sia for institutional
capabilities to do the right thing and social capability can
be created through. You know, they have a challenge with
the institutions there. Kingdom has Step ten and other countries
in the region to support Syria financially to go into
some of the multilateral platforms. But is something as strong
(15:14):
and meaningful and material as lifting sanctions can help a
country such as Syria to invest more capital in building
the institutions They need to be a more stable country,
but also bring more stability to the region and be
a force for good.
Speaker 3 (15:31):
So I think the Saudis and the government and Cutter
or Qatar or how however they pronounce it. It's a
country name I pronounced different wise. I cant beginning to
know which one is correct anymore. But what you say
is is Saudi Arabia and Cutter have munch in common.
They are the stable part of the Middle East. They
(15:54):
are the country's where it's peaceful, where the technology is modern,
where they are they're building, and they are working towards
I think a little bit more of a Western civilization
model as relates to society in general. And wouldn't the
(16:14):
entire Middle East be a better place if all the
Arab nations were like that? If you could get rid
of the rebels and the terrorists from these Middle Eastern
countries that are going to be probably and have been problematic,
the Iraqs, the Irans, if you could somehow mold them
into the type of nation that Saudi Arabia is, how
(16:37):
much better off would the world be? How much more
peaceful would the world be, how much more secure would
the world be? So I think it makes all the
sense in the world to try to encourage that, And
the best way for us to encourage that is to
become closer with those governments who want to be close
with us, who respect the United States and Saudi Arabia.
(16:57):
It would appear, at least to me, of those countries
from a business standpoint too. You know, there's a lot
of investment money that has just been talked about. No
Saudi Arabia and cuttering to the United States, a lot
of trade opportunities to here's Kevin O'Leary.
Speaker 2 (17:15):
Most of its Ai.
Speaker 12 (17:16):
This trip is about two things, China and Ai what
people don't realize that region is one of the fastest
growing on Earth. I'm talking about the circle of friendship
here Saudi Arabia, Qatar, United Ara at AMers Who's number
three in AI development right now? US China's number two,
number three UAE. So that's why all those AI guys
are there. They are so advanced. I just got back
(17:39):
there two days ago. From there, from Abu Dabi in Jubai,
I saw for the first time ever a real estate
development completely AI driven. We have nothing like it here.
You talk about a smart home, they're way past that.
The medical AI technology they have over there. I got
a procedure there we don't offer here. FDA doesn't allow
it called EBU where my blood was filtered, oxygenated, then ozonated,
(18:01):
and then injected with fifty billion exosomes. I walked out
of there like a teenager. I feel like a million
bucks right now. I said, can I do this again
next week? They said no, you got to wait four
more months. They are so advanced by getting this whole
thing worked out with these countries. We need to align
with them because they want to be in the circle
of friendship on all of these metrics. Whether it's going
to be AI, whether it's going to be real estate,
(18:23):
whether it's going to be development. And we don't want
China doing that, We want the US forming that relationship.
Speaker 2 (18:31):
Yeah, makes a lot of sense.
Speaker 3 (18:32):
S that's that And did you does that not surprise
you a little bit to learn that Saudi Arabia and
United Arabet merts and guitar are I had of most
other countries when it comes to artificial intelligence. I mean
that like it or not, that's the future, right, That's
(18:52):
where the future is going, and they are way ahead
on that kind of technology. So it's you know, I
think people will still think of these Middle Eastern countries
as being backwards countries and that that certainly can be
said at places like Afghanistan, but you can't say that
about Saudi Arabia or United Arab Emirates or Qatar. That
(19:14):
that's a whole different deal. There, a whole different deal.
All right, quick little break. We are back with mort
to moment, Gregory Wrightstone's going to join us. We've had
Gregory on the program before to talk about a whole
variety of different things. He wrote a book. In the
book is called A Very Convenient Warming How modest warming
and more CO two are benefiting humanity. He's a geologist,
(19:37):
executive director of the CO two Coalition in Arlington, Virginia.
He's going to react to the Energy Department pulling back
on regulations, the EPA pulling back on these things, and
what it might be able to do for the for
the near term future of our country without harming the planet.
I also want to pick his brain about the hurricane
season coming up, because we've been sharing on the morning
(20:00):
show this week K T R H about all these
you know, all these what I call fear porn stories
about the hurricane season and how bad it is going
to be and how the coast is in danger, et cetera,
et cetera. We'll talk to him about all this coming
up next here on AM nine fifty KPRC. I'm joined
(20:34):
by Gregory Wrightstone, geologists executive director of the COO two
Coalition in Arlington, Virginia, best selling author of A Very
Convenient Warming, How modest warming and more CO two are
benefiting humanity. Before we get into some of the changes
with the Trump administration, which I'm sure you're very.
Speaker 2 (20:49):
Very happy about it. I know I am.
Speaker 3 (20:51):
I want to ask you about the fear porn industry,
as I call it as relates to weather. We're already
seeing stories about the twelve only twenty five hurricane season.
I saw one story that the ghastline of the United
States is in danger, you know, horrible hurricane season predicted.
(21:12):
We had these predictions of bad hurricane seasons before, and
lately they just haven't come to fruition. We haven't, you know,
had the horrific hurricane season. First of all, what do
you think of what kind of a hurricane season we
are likely to have in twenty twenty five? And what
do you make of these stories, these doom and gloom
stories that were just going to be destroyed by hurricanes,
(21:32):
super hurricanes caused by global warming.
Speaker 1 (21:36):
Well, they're right, this might be just a terrible hurricane
season we're about to get experience, or it might be
a very gentle experience hurricane season with much fewer storms.
They don't know, they get it wrong almost every year.
If you remember last year, at this time, they were
predicting that twenty twenty four was going to be record
(21:57):
breaking and it wasn't. We actually lower number. And if
we look you got to look at hurricanes in particular,
Noah recommends for long term hurricane tracking, we can go
back to eighteen fifty and we know every single hurricane
that's made landfall in the United States because they're hard
to mess and so we know that we know that
(22:21):
there's actually been a slight decline in landfalling hurricanes in
the United States, not an increase, And so it's they
just it was I forgot. I think it was a
oh Yogi bearra that said making predictions is really hard,
especially about the future, which is rather humorous. But I'm
(22:43):
calling you. I'm talking to you from my home south
of Tampa. And they lied to me when I moved
here a few years ago. They said, don't worry about hurricanes.
Tampa never gets it. Yeah. I got slammed. Yeah last year.
But you know, hopefully we'll go another one hundred years
without getting another hurricane here in the Tampa.
Speaker 3 (23:00):
Are Hurricanes just kind of strike me as kind of
like the proverbial random act of God. I mean, we
don't know when they formed.
Speaker 2 (23:08):
They did.
Speaker 3 (23:09):
We have a better idea than we ever had had
before about where they're going and how big they're going
to grow. But the reality is is that you know,
there's there's a lot we still don't know about them,
isn't there?
Speaker 1 (23:22):
Yeah, there is, And there's a lot that Noah National
Notion and Graphic and atmosphere administration just gets wrong. They
were lying to us. Whenever Milton came in. It was
making a beeline right from my home at Apollo Beach
south of Tampa. And our experts, we have some true
experts like Joe Dealo and others, and my experts here
(23:45):
at the CO two coalition nailed it exactly where it
was going to make landfall, the timing. And while Noah
scientists were predicting that Tampa would be under a huge
title surge, they they were laughing at them, at those experts.
They said, there's not only not going to be a
title surge in the bay, it's gonna because of the
(24:07):
wind direction. It sucked the water out of the bay.
The water dropped by several feet along along the beaches
along around Tampa Bay because of the rotation of the winds.
And they said was they were absolutely confident. But at
the same time, no scientists were going disaster disaster, flea
tamp everyone get out and it just didn't happen. We
(24:29):
actually evacuated across the state to Vera beach on the Atlantic,
and there's a big mistake for us. We got the
condo that we were staying in friends got hit by
the swarm of tornadoes. So I went from the frying
pan into the fire.
Speaker 2 (24:44):
Oh man.
Speaker 3 (24:45):
Yeah, it just strikes me, Greg, how how you know
with as much equipping, as much information that metaologists have,
we really haven't gotten any better predicting the weather. And
I here in Houston is a great example. You can't
count on a twenty four hour weather forecast here, let
alone a forty eight hour a ten day forecast.
Speaker 2 (25:04):
I don't know.
Speaker 3 (25:05):
I don't even know why they try to do a
ten day forecast. It's never right.
Speaker 1 (25:10):
Okay, we'll think about this. They're telling us they can
confidently predict within one tenth of a degree centigrade what
the temperature will be in the year twenty one hundred,
but yet they can't predict twenty four hours or sometimes
five hours into the future. It's just crazy. We should
(25:31):
rely on these people to make to set policy for
the United States to send spend trillions of dollars to
supposedly cure a non existent climate crisis, and it's they're
Also they're predicting the alarmists. They're telling us we dare
not get more than one and a half degrees above
the pre industrial temperature, where we're all we've already increased
(25:55):
one point two degrees of that one point five. So
what they're warning us about is is a three tenths
of agree centigram. It's about half a degree fahrenheit, And
if we get to that, it's all over, it's baked
in the cake. We're all going to die from climate crisis. Well,
half a degree fahrenheit increases between eleven am and noon
(26:17):
almost every single day, more than that. And if you're
that worried about half a degree fahrenheit, move seventeen miles
farther north in your average temperature will drop half a degree.
Great place when you look at it, and that it's
just silly what they're telling us.
Speaker 3 (26:33):
Yeah, I think I figured that out to see if
you agree with me on this. I think that what
we really have been dealing with. I think the climate
change industry has been all about. It's been a great
big hoax to be able to spread the money around
to the politicians who want to get their hands on
the money, and they're all helping each other out, and
they're all making each other rich by taking tax dollars
(26:55):
and pushing them towards non government organizations on climate change
and whatever other projects they have that are headed up
by former politicians who they're trying to pay off in
one way form or another. I mean, how else do
we have people who are going to Congress and making
you know, one hundred and fifty hundred and sixty thousand
dollars a year and end up leaving Congress with twenty
(27:15):
five million bucks in the bank.
Speaker 1 (27:18):
Yeah, go explain that, well, Nancy's that's an easy explanation
for Nancy Pelosi. But you know, they all seem to
be get part of this climate grift or whatever the
other grifts are, to get the money and pad their
bank accounts. So we're we're here at the CO two Coalition.
We're we have a growing budget, but we're nowhere near
(27:40):
funded like the other climate of armist groups are, and
we don't take if most of our donors ninety nine
point nine plus percent are all individuals to support and
love what we're doing, and what we're doing is providing
the science, the facts and the data that we've moved
(28:01):
beyond there is no climate crisis. We know, absolutely, categorically,
beyond doubt, there is no climate crisis occurring. But we've
gone beyond that. Here, we're looking at that the modest
warming we've see, we've seen combined with increase in C
two by almost every metric. What we see is a
(28:21):
huge improvement and thriving of our ecosystems from the near
polar regions to the equator. And that's benefiting humanity primarily
in the form of increasing crop productivity. One should we
should praise that, we should celebrate that. Yeah, but again,
just this morning I saw claims of the future of famine,
(28:43):
hunger death because of declining the global warming related crop failure. Well,
my goodness. If you look back in my new book
of Very Convenient Warming, I look in there and have
a chart on the eight top crops in the world.
What's happened over the last fifty years. They're breaking records
year after year after year after year, and it's primarily
(29:06):
due to more CO two describing vegetation and crop growth.
And it's I call it the greatest untold story of
the twenty first century, that of a thriving planet and
the thriving of the human condition.
Speaker 3 (29:19):
That's why we love having you on to tell the story.
Let me ask you about one thing though, that does
seem to make sense from a global warming standpoint. If
we are indeed warming, at some point in time, do
we get to a temperature where the alarm store are
concerned about the polar ice caps? Do we get to
a point where they start to melt? And do we
end up with a sea level rise enough to wipe
(29:40):
out some of the coastline? For example, you're in Tampa, Florida.
Could you be underwater? Could we be underwater in one
hundred years in Tampa, Florida.
Speaker 1 (29:47):
Well, let's get some put some light on that subject.
It's one of my favorite subjects. And if we look
at forget the satellite data, they're notoriously difficult and need adjustments.
The best way to look at long term sea level
rise or these tie gages, and a lot of those
go back into the mid eighteen hundred, it's early nineteen hundreds,
(30:09):
so we have really good one hundred plus years of data.
And from those tie gauge records, you're around the world,
sea level is rising. I hope you're sitting down. It's
seven inches per century.
Speaker 2 (30:24):
Okay, yeah, okay.
Speaker 1 (30:27):
So we've got plenty of time and it's not increasing accelerating.
And if you look at the most at risk islands
that the UN says is that are the Maldives of
the Indian Ocean. Well, they're highest points fourteen feet above
sea level. Fifteen thousand years ago, the Maldives were also
just above sea level, and in that last fifteen thousand
years sea level has risen four hundred feet. Now, the
(30:52):
question you're about to ask me is why are the
Maldives not, in all these other islands not under four
hundred feet? Good question, yeah, yeah, And nobody knows that.
It's a it's a combination. It's a geologic process known
as accretion. And these money these are written by corals
and coral reefs, their coral with polls. Coral can grow
(31:14):
really quickly, and you can keep up with really accelerated
sea level rise. But how do you get the sands
and the gravels up in these sands that ring the
islands are washed up during storms, Winds blow them across
the island, Critters move them around. It's a slow process,
but the act of the island actually grows along with
(31:34):
sea level rise, and they're telling us that by twenty
fifty the Malvis will be under underwater. Well, what they're
telling you then, and in that time, at the rate
of sea level rise, it will increase two inches. All right,
that's not even up to your ankles.
Speaker 2 (31:52):
Yeah, that's amazing.
Speaker 1 (31:54):
What they're telling you is the last four hundred feet
didn't put them underwater, but that next two inches. Look out,
it's all over.
Speaker 3 (32:01):
Oh well, it's a great sales job. Luckily it feels
like less and less people are buying into a Gregor,
I have to leave it at that for today, but
always a pleasure to talk to you, sir, Thank you
very much, Thank you the author of a very convenient warming,
how modest warming and more CO two are benefiting humanity.
That's Gregory Wrightstone from the CO two Institute in Arlington
(32:22):
or CEO two Coalition. I should say back with more
in a moment. Jimmy Verir Show, AM nine fifty KPRC.
(32:46):
All right, we're in the show today talking about psychopaths.
Do you know any psychopaths? How about narcissists? You know
any narcissists, any Mockvelian creatures. They all have certain things
in common. There's a study out that claims that psychopaths
(33:07):
and narcissists are successful because they are more attractive than
the rest of us. They're they're better looking, they're more charming,
they're more disarming than the rest of us are. And
there may be some truth to that. I mean, think
about think about some of the best known psychopaths of
(33:29):
all time, and the first one that comes to mind
would be a Jeffrey Dahmer. I mean one sick dude, right.
I mean he basically was, you know, killing people and
eating them. You know, he dismember them, stick them in
the freezer and whatever and they eat eat them. I mean,
that's one sick puppy, right, But he looks very very normal,
(33:51):
Ted Bundy, they very very normal mass killer, but look
completely normal, good looking guy by all you know, by
all accounts, charming individual, you know, just the kind of
person you might want to hang with until they kill you.
So maybe there's some truth to that. Here's Greg Guttfeld
and his panel last night talking about psychopaths and this study.
Speaker 12 (34:17):
A sick psychopathic or machavelian are often seen as more
attractive and trustworthy due to their ability to manipulate people's perception.
Speaker 13 (34:26):
You, but people who fall for that, I feel like
there there's a there's a potential for it to begin with,
you know what I mean. Someone who's secure and confident
and doesn't have time for that, they're not going to
fall for the psychopath.
Speaker 7 (34:40):
In sheep's clothes.
Speaker 14 (34:41):
I will say this, and guys, you could back me
up on this, but I know you agree with me.
Speaker 4 (34:45):
How many times do you see somebody and they're with
this really hot girl and then.
Speaker 2 (34:49):
You see him three months later like what happens? Like
she's crazy? And you think of yourself. So that's the dumbest,
fat dumbest thing I heard, yea to yourself.
Speaker 14 (35:00):
Are the good producers at Fox and Friends just watched it?
Speaker 2 (35:03):
They came out of your mouth.
Speaker 14 (35:05):
Listen, Greig, you were so right when you said women
mask it more.
Speaker 2 (35:10):
See what's funny is women?
Speaker 14 (35:12):
When a guy is crazy, the girl knows going in
he's crazy, he's a murderer, he's in prison, but I
love him. Men we don't find out. So we're one
kid in and we're trying to trying to go out
with our boys. The boys call you up, No, you
come to sell the game. Yeah, I'm coming. As you
get to the door, then all of a sudden, the
house gets dark and you start hearing Michael Myers music.
Speaker 2 (35:36):
Right, you're not going.
Speaker 14 (35:37):
Anywhere without me, are you?
Speaker 10 (35:38):
Like?
Speaker 3 (35:39):
No, men, we find out too late then you're stuck.
You know, there's a lot of truth to that. But
but I women I think are better at, you know,
identifying a psychopath that men are, at least before they
get too terribly involved. But some of them decide to
(36:01):
get involved with them anyway. I mean, how many how
many stories have you heard the like prison pen pals,
you know, women writing to serial killers in prison. What
would attract what would attract a woman to that sort
of person? Why would you want to be a pen pal?
Sometimes even get married to these guys. Now granted, I
(36:23):
mean they're you know, they're in prison. They're not going
to ever get out of prison, and and and the
woman is not. But what would why would you do
something like that? Why would you tie yourself down to
somebody like that? That makes no sense at all. Have
you ever heard of of a man getting into a
a you know, a prison pen pal situation where he's
(36:45):
writing with a woman, you know, like a mass There's
not a lot of mass murderer women. That's another thing
I always find interesting that the phenomenon serial killer phenomenon
is not quite but almost exclusively men. But why would
a woman be attracted to something thing like that and
men are not. I've never heard of a guy you know,
marrying you know, a serial killer, or a you know,
(37:08):
or a woman who's in prison for murder or whatever.
I'm sure it probably has happened at some point time,
but that's the level you hear about ben So I
find that interesting. I also find it interesting that, you know,
in the case of men, I think in the case
of men, maybe it's not that they don't realize that
(37:29):
they're dealing with the potential psychopath. It's just that they
are so turned on, especially you know, the psychopath is
really hot, you know, to to the one point that
was made. They're so turned on by that that they
just they just kind of conveniently ignore all the warning
signs until they're far enough into the relationship where the
(37:50):
the the the sexual desire against the other person's worn
off to a point where they can they can see
a little bit more clearly what's going on underneath. I
don't know, I don't know, but I do know. Again,
the psychopaths are charming people, and they can. They have
a tendency to be able to manipulate people very well.
That's that's that's part of what they do. All right. Listen,
you'all have a great day. Thank you for listening. I
(38:13):
appreciate it. We'll see you tomorrow morning, bright and early,
starting at five am over on news Radio seven forty KRH.
Speaker 2 (38:18):
We are back here at four on AM nine fifty
k PRC.