Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:02):
Well, what we need is more common sense.
Speaker 2 (00:10):
Breaking down the world's nonsense about how American common sense
will see us through with the common sense of Houston.
I'm just pro common sense for Houston. From Houston dot com.
This is the Jimmy Barrett Show, brought to you by
viewind dot Com. Now here's Jimmy Barrett.
Speaker 3 (00:31):
All right.
Speaker 4 (00:32):
I have another another food topic to start our program
off today. Surprise, Surprise, Surprise, and it is kind of
Halloween related. We had a lot of fun talking about
this this morning and I didn't get it out of
my system, so let's go ahead and continue to talk
here this afternoon. Here's how it started. There, there's betting
(00:52):
odds as to how likely your child is to get
certain candy in their trick or treat bag this Halloween,
and the favorite, at sixty seven percent is Reese's Peanut
butter cups. That's the most likely dand up in your bag,
and the odds kind of go down from there. Sour
Patch Kids was very very high, especially here in Texas.
(01:14):
There are a a lot of candies that had been
around for a long long time. But I looked at
the list of candies and I thought to myself, you know,
that's not the candies that were in my Halloween bag
when I was a kid. You know, taste, I understand,
tastes change, tasting candies change. There are some things that
have been around forever, you know, Hershey's chocolate bar. You
(01:37):
don't get much older than a Hershey's chocolate bar. But
things change and tastes change, I guess, and candies come
and candies go. Not that there's anything all that new
under the sun. I mean, after all, there's only so
many ways you can put together chocolate and caramel, or
do you prefer caramel and nugat and whatever else is
(01:59):
in there. It's generally a combination of all those types
of things. But the names change over the course of time.
Snickers Bars has been around since I was a kid, obviously,
and they're still popular, although I don't think there's popular
as they used to be. My dad was a fiend
for Sneckers bars. He had he had in the kitchen,
you know, we in the house I grew up. In
the kitchen, there was like a desk at the side
(02:22):
of the kitchen, and that's where you put It's like
the junk desk. That's where you put your car keys
and the change in your pocket and all that kind
of stuff. He had an entire drawer devoted to Snickers bars.
He just just chock full of Snickers bars. And the
old man has a sweet tooth, and every now and again
that sweet tooth would kick in and he's getting into
(02:42):
the Snickers bars big time. So I think we used
to used to give him the Snickers bars that we
would get. I mean, I like Snickers bars, but not
the way he did. Anyway, got me thinking. When I
was a kid, my favorite thing to get in my
Halloween trick or trig bab was a clock bar. A
love Clark Bars. You know, they're they're similar to a butterfinger,
(03:05):
but not quite the not quite the same. There's something
different about the whatever the that the in between part was.
I mean, it's still a chocolate covered candy bar with
you know, he has a bit of a peanut butter
taste to it, but there's something different about the consistency
of the inside of that Clark bar. I love Clark Bars.
Now you can find Clark Bars if you go to
(03:25):
a specialty store, you know, an old time candy kind
of store, or you can order them online. Same kind
of thing. You could order all kinds of things online. Uh,
except maybe candy cigarettes. This guy Mike brought that up today.
He wants to bring back candy cigarettes and he Terry
Smith are our weather person in the morning for the
(03:47):
weather Chrail. We're threatening to make them make them up
in the garage kind of thing. And they're mainly chemicals
that are in that. It's not it's not much of
what you would call it. I mean so like dextros
and corn syrup and and uh, all kinds of other
things that are just really not so good for you.
But that's not what got candy cigarettes band. But got
candy cigarettes band was you're you're you're you're telling a
(04:09):
child it's okay to smoke. They're simulating, they're simulating smoking.
And yeah, that's how they ended up getting banned. Anyway,
we put the word out. Okay, what's what's an older
type of candy that you remember getting for Halloween that
you really really liked that you wish they still made
or wish was more readily available, because they're really really
(04:31):
hard to find.
Speaker 5 (04:33):
Hey, yes, Andrew from spring candy from my childhood that is,
or bottle caps, those are hard to find and they
were good. You had the ruby or the cola, the
orange and the gray those are how those are awesome.
Speaker 4 (04:44):
This is Jack from Connecticut.
Speaker 1 (04:45):
Two of my favorite candies that you don't see.
Speaker 6 (04:48):
Anymore is fireballs and been a Honey.
Speaker 1 (04:52):
Yeah.
Speaker 7 (04:52):
This is Jason from Spring. If I could bring back
any candy bars, when I was a kid in the
seventies and eighties, there was a marathon on bar. It
was caramel and chocolate. And another one that I would
bring back is the chunky Everybody remember that square, thick
chunky bar.
Speaker 4 (05:09):
That was awesome.
Speaker 5 (05:10):
It's Robert from David.
Speaker 2 (05:11):
I haven't seen big leak cho.
Speaker 7 (05:14):
That's what we need to bring back.
Speaker 8 (05:16):
This is ed Enough from Summerwood. If I could bring
back one candy for Halloween, it would be the peanut
butter kisses that were in the orange and black wrappers,
sweet toffee on the outside, you chew on it almost
lose a two, and then inside was the wonderful peanut
butter and then they mixed together. Amazing.
Speaker 4 (05:33):
Yo. I just realized something. A lot of the candies
you can't find anymore were the candies that would pull
out fillings in your teeth. You know, they were really
they were really chewy and really sticky, you know, like
the milk duds. I mean you could find milk duds,
but people don't pass out milk duds like they used to.
(05:54):
Let's become more of a theater candy than a trick
or treat candy. I wonder if this has got some
thing to do with the Dentist of America. The dentist
of America behind all all this getting rid of all
the sticky candy.
Speaker 6 (06:06):
A candy ball, I would say you bring back is
the Marathon candy bar. Favorite candy was a Sugar Mama.
It's just like the Sugar Daddy, except for it's covered
with chocolate. And they had it going for a little
while and you can find it nowhere now Sugar Baby,
Sugar Mamma, and Sugar Daddy, but I can't.
Speaker 4 (06:29):
Find it, so Dave on Lake Conrad. Yeah, I like
those little wax bottles with the juice inside, but I
ain't got enough teeth left to see on that right now.
Speaker 9 (06:38):
But pay Days, the old pay Day bar.
Speaker 4 (06:42):
Good morning.
Speaker 5 (06:43):
This is Mike and Cyprus, and the candy I miss
is bit oh honey.
Speaker 10 (06:49):
I actually did see them a couple of weeks ago
for the very first.
Speaker 3 (06:52):
Time at a SPECS, and I can't find them in
the candy store.
Speaker 4 (06:57):
Huh. This two votes for a bit honey. I remember
a bit of honey. I don't remember if I liked
them that much, but I remember them in pay day bars.
You can find payday bars. You can get that a
the grocery store. What's hard to find is really good.
By the way, are the chocolate covered pay day bars.
If you haven't tried that, try that the chocolate and
the peanuts together. Oh yeah, that works.
Speaker 11 (07:19):
Hey guys, this is Marty and Cyprus. Here is another
filling remover, the hot cinnamon Jolly ranchers. I think they
must have discontinued them because of that red dye. The
closest thing that you can find is watermelon yuck.
Speaker 1 (07:39):
My favorite was the black wax mustaches.
Speaker 4 (07:42):
Oh, I liked those.
Speaker 12 (07:44):
This is Melanie from Katie and I absolutely loved the
marathon bars.
Speaker 1 (07:50):
Good morn the candy. I didn't miss the bit o honeys.
I'm glad they mentioned that earlier. That was a really
good one, but one that was one of my favorites
back when seven to eleven was around in Texas, when
I was a kid, was called the Dinah sour Egg.
It was basically an oversized jawbreaker with the inside of
(08:12):
it was really tart, like sweet tarts. That was one
of my favorites. And damned if I can find that again.
Speaker 13 (08:19):
Hi.
Speaker 3 (08:19):
This is Bill from Cyprus.
Speaker 4 (08:21):
Maple nut goodies by Bronx.
Speaker 3 (08:25):
You can't find them anywhere. I don't think they're making
them anymore.
Speaker 4 (08:29):
Yeah, I remember, I remember sugar Daddies that got brought up.
Sugar Daddy's different meaning now used to be candy. Now
sugar Daddy's a whole got a whole different meaning, doesn't it?
All right, let's grab a couple more.
Speaker 14 (08:41):
This is cat from Brookside. My favorite candy was those
looked like colored dots on the piece of paper that
when you pulled the dots off you got paper with them.
Those were fun, along with the wax lips I know,
know that bit of honey. You need them at like
Walgreens or CDs. I've seen those lots. But anyway, have.
Speaker 15 (09:03):
A good day.
Speaker 3 (09:04):
Hey, this is John in Houston.
Speaker 13 (09:07):
The candy I miss the most. That's what they call
the catfish Hunter and it's where you got the chewelebacco
and you take some big super double bubblegum and you
wrap around on it and you put that waden.
Speaker 6 (09:21):
Now, taste is real good.
Speaker 3 (09:24):
This is Chris from Lake Connor, and I miss all
the old candies that didn't have the ingredients that they
have today.
Speaker 4 (09:34):
Okay, the dots thing, What thought of the dots? I think,
if memory serves me, and it rarely does, I think
the dots ended up disappearing because they didn't they start
getting laced with drugs. Yeah, I think they start getting
laced with drugs, and and people didn't trust them anymore.
You know, some of those things that weren't particularly well wrapped, Yeah,
(09:55):
they don't. You know, those kind of went out along
with some of the other scares we start you're getting
for Halloween? All right, quick, a little break back with
Mortar moment Jimmy Ferrett show here at name nine fifty KPRC.
(10:21):
There was a lot of town halls on TV last night.
I don't know if you saw neither or not. I
doubt if you watched the CNN town hall that was
with Bernie Sanders and AOC. All right, I know I
know that CNN hasn't turned over a new leaf clearly
on politics, But why are you having those two together?
(10:41):
Why are you doing a socialist CNN town hall? And
by the way, they got repeatedly asked about the government
shutdown and just basically ignored the question, talked all around
the question, made it all about Trump. So Trump derangement
synd him alive and well and all over CNN. Last night,
somebody who doesn't seem to suffer from Trump derangement syndome,
(11:05):
but as a d next to his name is John Fetterman.
And I saw another town hall. This was on News Nation.
Bill O'Reilly was a part of the panel, and they
got into a discussion of what John Fetterman stands for
and what he believes in and how maybe that just
doesn't seem to jive with the Democrat party. And he
(11:28):
got asked, why are you a Democrat and why are
you not an independent? And I heard his answer, and
I've heard that answer a million times. It makes no
sense to me. However, anyway, take a list to this
and we will discuss.
Speaker 9 (11:43):
Right now, I'm only one of two Democrats that are
voting to keep the government open, and I have chose
to do that because I think it's like a core
responsibility as a Senator to keep our government open. The
Democratic Party, my party, the Republican Party. They have different
priorities and that's how democracy. You sort those things out.
(12:03):
But you don't hold shutting the government down as a hostage.
Speaker 15 (12:06):
Why are you a Democrat though? And I don't say
that being a wise guy. You support Israel? Correct?
Speaker 9 (12:13):
Yeah, well I do, and that's been that's been isolating too.
Speaker 15 (12:17):
But look, you support Israel and a progressive stone generally speaking,
you are for a very rigorous defense against Putin in Ukraine.
Speaker 3 (12:26):
Correct, You want to stop them? Right?
Speaker 9 (12:29):
Well, yeah, of course, I mean I would fully support effect.
I just on social media encourage President Trump to provide
tomahawks to the Ukraine acts. I mean it's like he
is probably the only person in the world that could
end this terrible war. And I think, why can't we
all agree.
Speaker 15 (12:45):
That that's that You're not a wild spender. You want
to get dead under control. So why are you a Democrats?
That's your party is against you on all three of
those issues?
Speaker 14 (12:59):
Uh?
Speaker 9 (13:00):
Well, I mean a lot of the things that maybe
I really believe in calling balls and strikes and I
think I want to follow the truth. Yeah, And why
as you an independent now, well, well, I mean those
are some independent thoughts, but overall, I mean, you have
to pick one side. Republican Democrat. That's always been my.
Speaker 4 (13:17):
Party, that's always been my party. That that's the reason
he gave. And it sounds like the lamest possible and
it is the lamest possible reason. That's always been my party.
But I hear it a lot, especially out of Jewish Americans.
(13:38):
And we've talked a little bit about this before. I
don't know how if you're Jewish, I don't know how
you are a Democrat at this point, knowing where they
stand on the Palestinians versus Israel. How in the world
are you still a Democrat? How is John Fetterman still
(13:58):
a Democrat because he's always been a Democrat? Is the answer.
And in a lot of households that seemed to pass
along their political party affiliation like it's a birthright or
like it's on their birth certificate. That doesn't make any
sense if you haven't changed, the party's changed. Now in
(14:23):
my case, I've changed as I've gotten older. I was
not a Republican when I was eighteen years old. There
are very few eighteen year old Republicans out there. I
was a more liberal person. But I grew up, I
started to make a living, I started having a family,
providing for my family. I started to see, you know,
which social programs made sense and which ones were destroying families,
(14:47):
and I made a conscious decision that they don't. They
are a part of my belief system. I don't believe that.
I don't know what I thought I believe when I
was eighteen, but sure as hell didn't believe it by
the time I was twenty eight, or haven't forbid about
the time I was thirty eight. But John Fetterman says
he's always been a Democrat. He doesn't believe in the
same things that his party believes in, but he's always
(15:09):
been a Democrat, So he's a Democrat. You're allowed to switch.
It's not on your birth certificate. There is no You're
not born a Democrat or born a Republican. You're just born.
And then you make your own decision, hopefully as you
grow up and mature about where you stand politically, who
(15:29):
it is you want to be, what you stand for.
But not in that case. And he's not alone, he's
by no means by himself on that. I see this
stuff all the time, and it continues to mystify me,
especially when you have people who are doing do you
hear what they're doing on Los Angeles? Now, here's what
(15:53):
they're doing on Los Angeles. They are evidently ready to
spend taxpayer dollars in order to be able to provide
for illegal aliens who've had a family member that's been
apprehended by Ice. The people who have been apprehended by Ice,
for the very most part, are criminals. But evidently that
(16:17):
doesn't provide for anything but sympathy when it comes from
the progressive left in Los Angeles. They want to provide
food and shelter for people who's family member has been displaced, kidnapped,
to use the words of one of the La County
(16:39):
Board of supervisors, kidnapped by Ice here, or they are
discussing about what it is they want to do for
these people.
Speaker 16 (16:46):
Up against the federal government. It feels like we're David
and Goliath. We're David going against Goliab. We have entire
families who are destitute because their fathers or mothers were
taken from their workplaces and they have no way to
pay their rent, put food on the table. I want
our immigrant communities to know that we are in this
emergency with them.
Speaker 17 (17:06):
For months, families have been living under threat, workers have
been kidnapped from job sites, and children have been coming
home to empty dinner tables.
Speaker 10 (17:16):
Yeah.
Speaker 18 (17:16):
I just can't stop thinking about beautiful black women in
Maga hats Wow. Yeah, Greg, it's not an emergency when
Wan has to go back to Honduras.
Speaker 4 (17:25):
It's not even an emergency for Wan. He got here,
he can get back. Fine.
Speaker 18 (17:29):
An emergency is like a pandemic or a riot, or
a natural disaster, and usually both parties agree, we want
to stop financial disaster, the riot, or the pandemic. But
this case, one party wants to keep illegals here and
the other party does it.
Speaker 4 (17:49):
We have not seen this.
Speaker 18 (17:51):
Even during COVID, we all kind of agreed that COVID
needed to go away.
Speaker 4 (17:55):
This we haven't seen. They're setting up like many confederacies.
Speaker 18 (17:59):
Well, what is this a foreign welfare state in the
middle of California, So you can break into the country
and you can just live for free in La.
Speaker 4 (18:08):
Now is that what we're doing?
Speaker 9 (18:10):
You just live for free.
Speaker 18 (18:11):
In La illegally. And so this other guy in Chicago
says he wants to go after ice. If you pull immunity,
then it's dangerous. That means we can go after you
because you have blood on your hands. If someone dies
from an illegal in a sanctuary city, you go after
the mayor for wrongful death.
Speaker 4 (18:29):
You hit him civilly for millions of dollars. You know,
if only you could do that with all government officials.
If only we could sue the judges who let people
out on no cash bail with nothing more than an
ankle bracelet when they are facing a murder charge and
they present a dangerous to society. If you could sue
(18:51):
the judge who made that decision when they go out
and murder somebody again, wouldn't allow of this stuff stop?
I mean, I I'm listening to myself, and I'm angry
at myself for even wanting to think that I should
support the idea of more lawsuits like law fair like.
We don't have enough law fair right, But there has
(19:13):
to be consequences for the actions of people. As long
as there's no consequences, then all this stuff will just
keep happening because we're not changing anybody's mind. On the
progressive left. There may be a few moderates whose binds
have been changed Independence whose minds have been changed, But
not the progressive left. No, their hell been on this mission.
(19:36):
They aren't going to change at all. All right, quick
little break back with more in a moment, A little
interview with Congressman Chip Roy, who wants to make it
illegal in America to adhere to sharia law. That's coming
up next here at am nine to fifty khprcing the
Jimmy Batt Show. All right, Uh, let's talk. We haven't
(20:12):
talked a little bit about the government shutdown. I've got
an interview I did this morning with Congressman Ship Roy
coming up here in a moment to talk about his
bill about sharia law and gets his thoughts on where
he thinks we're appy with the government shutdown. But I
think we'll get the wisdom of Senator John Kennedy on
the government shutdown. First, Senator Kennedy, who I love, doesn't
(20:33):
think that this is going to be over anytime soon.
In fact, I think it's safe to say that he
thinks that we're going to set a government shut down
record with this one. Here is Senator John Kennedy from
the Great State of Louisiana.
Speaker 10 (20:46):
Even if we renew the subsidies. He's not going to
fix the problems in the Affordable Care Act. U any
increases that people see November or a result of the
fact that the Affordable Care Act, I mean, it just
hasn't worked. When it was passed, we were told that
(21:10):
it would make health insurance affordable. Obviously hasn't. It would
make it more accessible, it hasn't. You have to go
on in exchange that created by the government. You can't
just go into the private market, and it's been very expensive.
And to me, the whole thing's broken. And I would
(21:31):
like to see that the Congress of Senates sit down
and say subsidies are no subsidies, What can we do
since this is costing people so much money to try
to fix it. You're not going to do that over
a weekend. You're not going to do that over a
week It's going to take a while. And that's why
(21:52):
if my Democratic friends stick to their guns and say
we're not going to open up government until you you
tell us your plan and we want and we want
to make sure it works for fixing the healthcare delivery system,
they're gonna be whiting and we're.
Speaker 19 (22:09):
Gonna be shut.
Speaker 4 (22:10):
So far the longest shutdown the history of ever is
thirty four days. I believe it is the last time
we had a government shut down lasted thirty four days.
That was the longest one ever. Where are we at now,
eighteen nineteen somewhere around there, so we might be halfway
through this. The question is, again, as it's been since
(22:32):
day one, who blinks first? Republicans have a tendency to
be the first ones to blink. But I think at
this point they might as well stick to their guns here.
They can't. They can't capitulate when it comes to renewing
all the Obamacare subsidies because that was supposed to sunset.
(22:53):
That was a temporary thing, and that needed to be
a temporary That needed to be a never thing. But
it certainly needs to be everything. All right, Let's get
Chip roy on to talk about a couple of things.
We'll get to the government shut down in the back
half of the interview, but in the beginning here he
has a bill he's proposing that would basically ban those
(23:14):
who follow Sharia law and continue to follow Sharia law
from being here in the United States. This is we
have our own constitution, we have our own laws. We
do not follow Sharia law. It is called the Preserving
a Sharia Free America Act. What is in this bill?
What does it call for?
Speaker 3 (23:32):
Well, first of all things, I mean, and I think
for all your listeners out there and understand what we're
observing around the world.
Speaker 4 (23:38):
What we've seen with France.
Speaker 3 (23:39):
Now being ten percent Muslim, in the United Kingdom being
seven percent Muslim, what we're seeing happen in Dearborn in Minneapolis.
Now what you're seeing with the possibility of the election
of the mayor in New York, you're seeing the results
of the purposeful action to plug the zone in the
West with people.
Speaker 4 (23:58):
Who are not sharing our values.
Speaker 3 (24:01):
In Western civilization. Now that's not to say that under
our constitution you can't believe what you want and practice
your faith. But what it does say is that when
you've got a set of religious values that actually are
political values that are extending into a political movement, like
(24:25):
we see with respect to Shria and with Islamism, then
you've got a conflict with our constitution, the principles of
the rule of law in our country. And I believe
that is an anaphthema to our constitutional republic, and now
we're seeing it. You mentioned the situation in Houston. There
are other examples throughout the country of what we're starting
(24:47):
to see here, and particularly when you talk to people
experienced what they've been experiencing in London and in Paris.
We've got to address that now. And we're a great
country and people can come here from all over the
world world, but you've got to subscribe to our constitutional
order in our way of life, in my opinion, and
(25:07):
I think that is an opinion that is increasingly shared
by members of the United States Congress. And this bill
would simply say that we are going to have a
process for vetting individuals that if they subscribe to Syria
and we go through that process, Sharia is in conflict
with what we have in our country. Then we should
(25:28):
not be bringing people from around the world who do
not share our westernes.
Speaker 4 (25:32):
And that's the purpose of the bill.
Speaker 3 (25:34):
And we've got to work through it, have hearings, figure
out the best way to do it. But that's what
we need to do.
Speaker 4 (25:39):
Let me quickly ask you too about the government shutdown,
because what are we are day eighteen now. I heard
the Senator John Kennedy yesterday predict that this will be
the longest government shutdown in history? Do you agree with that?
Speaker 3 (25:50):
Well, when I first joined Congress, it was in January
twenty nineteen, and it was in a shutdown, if you
might remember, that was over the border wall. President Trump
was and trying to force Democrats to get or to
work with us on the border wall. That one the
last that I came over with the total number of
days like somewhere around thirty days, Yeah, thirty four. I
think this one I think could very well. This one
(26:11):
very well could go into November. Democrats are pretty stubborn
right now. We only need five Democrats to join us
in the Senate to literally just pass the clean R
that we passed until November twentieth village the simple R
through November. So what do I think will happen? I
think Democrats right now are trying to pose some ideas
where they vote inde penant on some subsidy extensions. Now,
(26:35):
these subsidy extensions are our dollars to go right into
the pockets of insurance companies. I oppose them, like forty
billion dollars a year going straight into pockets of insurance
companies that raise the price of insurance for the averagear
working American family, so they might want to force a
vote on that. They're starting to get a little wobbly
because they know there's no justification of what they're doing.
(26:58):
God was President Trump Russ vote. They're doing the hard
work of finding money to keep our troops paid during
this time.
Speaker 4 (27:05):
And you know, I.
Speaker 3 (27:06):
Think right now we're winning this argument, smarit to. People
don't see what why the Democrats are doing what they're doing.
But we'll see. I think they're going to keep going
for at least another week or two, and then we'll
see whether they go into November.
Speaker 4 (27:18):
Yeah, I bet they will go into November. You want
some good news though about the shutdown, Well, here's some
nearly half of the IRS workforces furlough do the government shutdown.
That's right about thirty four thousand. That's half half half
the workforce of the IRS. Thirty four thousand are currently
(27:38):
off duty without pay. Huh. Well, I guess you don't
probably have to worry much about that audit right now,
wouldn't think? All right, quick little break back with for
in a moment Jimmy Barrett show here at a m
nine to fifty KPRC.
Speaker 14 (28:09):
All.
Speaker 4 (28:10):
I think we'll call our final segment today the progressive
left behaving badly. That covers a lot of topics, But
let's start with Nancy Pelosi, who decided that she was
going to get in the face of reporter who asked
her a question that she clearly didn't want to have
to deal.
Speaker 20 (28:29):
With Congress On Pelosi jefers, are you at all concerned
that the new January sixth committee will find.
Speaker 1 (28:34):
You liable for that day?
Speaker 18 (28:35):
I am right here.
Speaker 20 (28:36):
Are you at all concerned about the new January sixth
committee finding you wiable for that day? Why did you
refuse the National Guard on January sixth?
Speaker 2 (28:46):
Shut up?
Speaker 4 (28:47):
I did not refuse the National Guard. The President didn't
send it.
Speaker 17 (28:51):
Why are you coming here with Republican talking points as
if you're as serious journal.
Speaker 20 (28:55):
The American people want to know. We still have questions?
Thank you?
Speaker 4 (28:59):
Shut out? Oh yes, we do have questions, and she
is not the least bit interested in providing you with answers.
All right, that's one example. Then you got the view.
Of course, the view, they're in a whole different category.
By the way, the view actually on the view this
is on Tuesday show. I think it was. They actually
(29:21):
asked out loud, why don't more Republicans. We would love
to have more Republicans come on our show, but they
don't want to come on our show. Yeah, well, why
would you want to come on a show when you
know what kind of treatment you're going to get. They
think that the Republicans are afraid of them.
Speaker 16 (29:41):
No.
Speaker 4 (29:42):
I think most people, when given an opportunity to decide
whether or not do you want to spend time with bitchy,
angry women, would prefer not to. I know that's I
would go out of my way not to have to
spend time with bitchy angry women or bitchy angry anybody.
But they're all women on the view and you know
(30:02):
where they stand, and you know that they're not interested
in your opinion. They're just interested in sharing their opinion
with you. And that even happened to I won't say
one of their own. I don't know what the politics
are of Cheryl Hines. You know who Cheryl Hines is, right,
she's an actress. She she's in Curby. Your Enthusiasm was
(30:23):
the latest thing that she's been in. She'd been a
number of things. But she's married to Robert F. Kennedy Junior.
The Health and Human Services secretary. So I don't know
when she came on the show if she knew she
was coming on that show to defend her husband. But
if you're an actress and famous in your own right,
you would probably like to think that the reason why
(30:45):
you're being asked to come on the show is to
talk about yourself or something you've done, or book you've written,
or whatever not about your husband and to listen to
them tell you how horrible your husband is. So here's
Cheryl Hines being very diplomatic despite she's being fact she's
being treated badly. Here's Cheryl Hines on the View. And
(31:06):
then at the other end of it, well, well, well,
let Dana Perino analyze what the ladies of the View
are up.
Speaker 12 (31:11):
To the problem, respectfully, is that your husband is the
least qualified Department of Health and Human Services head that
we've had in history.
Speaker 14 (31:21):
I don't.
Speaker 21 (31:21):
I think that's a very dangerous, strangerous, less qualified than
an economist. I feel that has been his career, studying toxins,
studying people's health, fighting for one guy who was using
round up for his job.
Speaker 12 (31:40):
Has also spread a lot of misinformation, a lot of chaos,
a lot of fusion.
Speaker 17 (31:46):
When you say, you know, misinformation, disinformation. We could go
back to COVID when he connects circumcision, May I finish?
Speaker 4 (31:54):
Please?
Speaker 17 (31:56):
When people fauci people were saying, when you get the vaccine,
you cannot transmit COVID, it will stop COVID, and that
was disinformation missing even baby formula. And now we were
finding out there's arsenic, there's lead. So the question is
who is running AHHS when they allowed lead and arsenic
(32:18):
in a baby formula, how is that person?
Speaker 5 (32:21):
Don't make a run.
Speaker 21 (32:24):
I'm saying, Bobby is the one getting this out right now?
Speaker 17 (32:26):
We don't have on that thank you.
Speaker 19 (32:30):
She didn't write a book about her husband. She didn't
write a book in order to go out there and
say I can't wait to go out there and answer
all these questions about him. But she loves her husband
and she is absolutely going to stick up for him.
And the thing is is that all of those women
there know that she didn't write a book about her husband,
and she is she making those decisions? Is she the
Health and Humans Services Secretary? Would they'd like to have
(32:52):
RFK Junior come on the show, because I bet it,
I bet he'd go on in a second fact way
if he were invited, and part of me feels like,
would this show have done better by saying, we're so
glad you came, thank you for being here. Your husband
is super controversial. We're going to skip over that. Let's
talk about you, because do they care about what women
(33:13):
are talking about?
Speaker 12 (33:13):
It would be so much stuff to ask her about
how her life has changed.
Speaker 1 (33:17):
And I don't think she was a Trump supporter.
Speaker 4 (33:20):
She lived in la you know.
Speaker 19 (33:22):
There's lots of other things. But her husband is a
lightning rod. She knew that. She went on for all
of those things. But as I said, I think it
was Monday when we're talking about Georg Stephanopolis. Every interviewer
gets a choice of what they want to ask about,
and she has a choice of how she wants to answer.
Obviously she's going to stick up for her husband.
Speaker 4 (33:39):
Well, yeah, obviously she is. You know, think about that show.
Not that I've ever been a big time viewer of
that show, I've heard it. I've certainly heard enough audio
cuts over the years from the view to know how
it's changed over the course of time. There was a time,
at least towards the beginning of the show that that's
what that show was. The view was about bunch of
(34:00):
women talking about women's issues, and they were much more
generic issues, the issues that we all have, you know,
raising a family, you know, fording groceries, whatever, you know,
the education of your children, those types of things women talk.
I would like to think that most women talk more
(34:21):
about that than they do about you know what kind
of a Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy
Junior is, or you know what kind of President Trump is?
But that's all they focus on. They have they turned
that into and it's because, you know, over the course
of time, the co hosts have changed, and you have
a lot of co hosts on this show right now
(34:42):
that that that you know, suffer from self importance syndrome.
They just they think that their opinions are something that
they need to teach women about. I really do believe
that that they they believe that they're the their their
job is to teach women how they should feel about
politics in general and life in general, and they aren't
(35:05):
interested in in the reality of life that most of
us live on a day by day basis, which is
why it doesn't have the viewership, at least not the
viewership it used to have. But you know, unless you're
going to do a wholesale change, it's not going to change.
All right, Listen, you'll have a great day. Thanks for listening.
We'll see tomorrow morning, bright and early, five AM over
(35:26):
our news radio seven KTRH. Hope to see you tomorrow
afternoon at four You're on AM nine fifty KPRC.