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.
Speaker 3 (00:12):
How American common sense.
Speaker 2 (00:13):
We'll see us through with the common sense of Houston.
I'm just pro common sense for Houston. From Houston. This
is the Jimmy Barrett Show, brought to you by viewind
dot Com.
Speaker 3 (00:29):
Now here's Jimmy Barrett. Well, welcome to our Tuesday edition
of our show. Today. You're an AM nine fifty kPr
C Jimmy Barrett Show. Glad to have you out there.
We're starting off today with words that sound dirty or erotic,
but they're not. We had some fun with this one
this morning, although I didn't get as many contributions from you,
(00:51):
our listeners as I kind of hope I would get.
But anyway, I'm going to before I give you some
of mine, I'll give you well, I'll give you the example.
Here's an example. Something that sounds like it might be
kind of erotic or dirty, but it isn't mastication, which
sounds a lot like, yeah, pleasuring yourself. It is not.
(01:12):
Mastication is the actor process of chewing. When you are
chewing on a piece of meat, that's you're masticating. I
don't know if you knew that or not cockles. Another
one comes to mind, small edible bivalve mollus similar to clams.
Sounds like it might be something that's kind of dirty,
but it isn't. So our listeners also weighed in, at
(01:35):
least a couple of our listeners wait in words that
sound erotic, but they're not.
Speaker 4 (01:41):
This is Bryce in magnolia, and my word is come quiet.
Speaker 3 (01:47):
How about the word wenus as then I really love
your wenus? That is the outer portion of.
Speaker 5 (01:54):
The skin down at the elbow joint, also known as
the cranial skin.
Speaker 3 (01:59):
So when you hear I love your weenus, they're not
saying dude. See that one. I didn't know. It made
me nervous when I first heard it because I've heard
weenus before, but I've never heard it refer to some
elbow skin. There's other things. The words that you know,
they also kind of sound like they could have been erotic,
(02:20):
but they're not. Homo erectus. Homo erectus that is actually
the first human species to evolve a human like body
and gait. How about gesticulate gesticulate to make her use gestures,
especially in an animated manner. Yes, you've ala uve ala
(02:42):
it's that little fleshy, hanging ball in the back of
your throat. I even had to look that one up
because I was thinking of myself, is that What was
the purpose of the uvula? What does it really do?
Speaker 1 (02:53):
Well?
Speaker 3 (02:53):
It helps with speech, evidently, but it also helps, you know,
block certain things from getting into your throat, so it
has it has a purpose. Just something you don't think
of very often, sex tuplet. Most people know that's just
a group or combinations of six things. In this case
sex topless would be six babies. So there's nothing really
(03:13):
erotic about that. Succulent full of juice or juicy also
a type of plant. Penal code. I had to laugh
about that penal code. Everybody knows what a pedal code is.
Everybody knows has got nothing to do with, you know,
the male members. It's the law. I don't think anybody's
(03:34):
confusing that for any sort of an erotic term. Cockles.
I already did that one. Shuttlecock, that's a good one.
Shuttlecock is the object that is struck back and forth
in batmant, that little little round rubbery thing with I
I'm not sure how they came up with that whole thing,
but do you ever play badmint anymore? I used to
play that one as a kid. I can honestly, I
(03:57):
can't remember the last time I played badminton. Cocsix the
small triangular bone forming the lower extremity of the spine. Thespian.
No I didn't say the lesbian. I said thesbian. Thesbian
is pertending to tragedy or the dramatic arts. If you're
an actor, you're thesbian. Vestibule vestibule also known as what's
(04:25):
the other word for vestibule? The uh. It's when you
walk into the house, the little area there where you've
got a little closet, and yeah, the vestibule, that's another
name for that, the passage between the exterior and the
interior of the house. Undulating. Fallacious, fallacious, No I didn't. Yeah,
fallacious has got nothing nut. I can't even describe what
(04:47):
it has nothing to do with. It's deceptive or misleading.
That's what that means. Exacerbate. I use that word all
the time on the air. You don't think I'm saying
something dirty. Do you to increase the severity or violence
of something, come quat, which is what one of our
listeners suggested of course, that's a small round citrus fruit
papoosa papoosa, a thick grittled cake or flatbread made with
(05:09):
cornmeal or rice flour. And the last one for you,
corn hole. We're referring to the game played out on
the lawn with the little beanie bags. What did you
think we were talking about? Okay, not of that for today.
Let's let's concentrate on something else that's going on. Let's
try this one there is and this is kind of
(05:31):
the beginning of our conversation today about what's going on
in Los Angeles and how it may end up spreading
to other states. I mean, we had we had a
protest that happened here. We talked about it yesterday. Wasn't
much to it, maybe one hundred people participating Saturday. This
(05:51):
Saturday is supposed to be a day of protest. So
this is this is one of the events that the
progressive left and the anarchists had been waiting for as
an opportunity to get out there and to cause trouble
and in to you know, it's summertime. Time to get
out there and get our nation cities burning. That's that's
the progressive left likes to do in the summer. You know,
(06:13):
some people go to summer camp. They go to the
cities and set fire to cop cars and stuff like that.
Here is a report from our television partner KPRC two
about how the city is preparing for what might happen
on Saturday here in Houston.
Speaker 6 (06:31):
Communication is key in these situations.
Speaker 7 (06:34):
This is one key way to avoid civil unrest. According
to former US Attorney Ryan Patrick, who was in charge
of the US Attorney's office in Houston during the George
Floyd March in twenty twenty.
Speaker 6 (06:46):
I was in constant communication with our major and even
smaller city police chiefs, sheriffs, the state police, our National Guard.
We were in all We were in communication the entire
time to make sure that there were not the holes
that could create other problems.
Speaker 7 (07:03):
The situation in Los Angeles is one that already the
Houston Police Department has its eye on HPD.
Speaker 8 (07:09):
Are they already on alert?
Speaker 1 (07:11):
Yes, sir, We're We're prepared.
Speaker 7 (07:12):
Union president Doug Griffith says the department embraces demonstration in
the city under one condition.
Speaker 4 (07:18):
We have no problem with peaceful protests all day long.
Speaker 8 (07:21):
Come on down.
Speaker 1 (07:22):
We have plenty of bossters to handle that.
Speaker 4 (07:24):
Our issue is when you have those attitators that want
to jump in the mix and this stupid stuff.
Speaker 8 (07:27):
But those people need to stay away, and real.
Speaker 9 (07:30):
Peaceful protesters need to get rid of those people from
their ranks.
Speaker 7 (07:33):
State and federal law enforcement already are aware of an
immigration protest being planned for this Saturday, but immigration attorney
Naimi Asylum says that there is one type of person
who should not take part in the demonstration.
Speaker 8 (07:46):
I would frankly say that this is not the time
to go out and protest if you're undocumented. But undocumented
people need to be aware that they are at risk
right now if they go to any type of manifestation.
Speaker 3 (07:58):
Ooh, big word manifestation. Don't In other words, if you
are undocumented, don't go to the protest because ice may
be there. You may end up getting picked up. That's
a possibility. All right, quick will break. We're back with
more in a moment, Jimmy Bart Show. You're on AM
nine fifty KPRC. All right, let's continue our conversation on
(08:43):
what's going on in Los Angeles, what could potentially go
on in Houston, what's already happened in Austin. Austin was
a place where, well, you would expect that in Austin, right,
a lot of people turning out to protest ice in Austin.
You know, the progressive left remains evident of the belief
that this is a country that should not have borders,
(09:03):
and your country of origin doesn't matter. Why you're here,
doesn't matter. What you plan to do while you're here,
doesn't matter, what your intent is, doesn't matter. We owe you,
We owe you an opportunity to live in this country
and to educate your children. By the way, we had
to report this morning that up to twenty five percent,
up to one fourth of all school children here in
(09:25):
Texas are what you would call an anchor baby. They
are the children of illegals. So imagine what that adds
to the cost the billions we already spend on education
here in Texas. Educating the children of illegal people who
came here illegally. The schools don't ask, The schools aren't
allowed to ask. Their job is just to educate every
(09:46):
child that comes in. They don't ask for any documentation,
and quite frankly, you know they're never going to if
they don't have to in any way, shape or form.
So that's going to be a cost that's not going
to go away unless we get this immigration issue under control.
In the meantime, of course, you've got all this rhetoric
coming from the left, and Tom Homan ain't having it,
you know, Tom Homan, the borders are, he ain't having it.
(10:09):
Here's Tom Homan, you know, kind of responding to to
to all of you know, people like Gavin Newsom calling
on him to arrest him, and I dare you, and
and and and and complaints about you know, the job
that Ice is doing. Here he is explaining exactly what
Ice has been doing or was doing in Los Angeles
(10:29):
up until the problems with the riots.
Speaker 1 (10:31):
I keep praying his term Ice rais Ice rays What
happened with with this, with how this riot started, is
that Ice was serving a series of criminal warrants at
a business being investigated from money lundering, customer fraud and
and and and serious violations on on on. If you're
sending money to criminal cartels in Columbia Mextro, that fun
(10:53):
carto activities in I cases is part of an overall
conspiracy that Ice is investigating. So we're arresting bad people,
We're we're enforcement laws and follow up on a serious
criminal investigation on cartel financing. So that's exactly what I said.
And ICE took a lot of bad people off the
street that day. We arrest as sexual prior to arresting
Game marriage rust as somebody had an armed robbery conviction.
(11:14):
So we made LA safer, men and women the ICE,
the men, women, the board. Joe made LA safer that day.
But you're not hearing any of this. Oh, he hears
a rhetoric about ICE being racist and ICE being Nazis
and terrorists, and government do wh feeds that, just like
Hakeen Jeffrey feeds it that he's going to unmasked ICE agents.
And you know the members of Commissre hep feed this writer,
(11:36):
they're the ones that are causing this riot because they
don't listen to the truth about what the men and
women ICE are doing. We're keeping I promised American feedle
and make these streets safe again, and that's exactly what
we're gonna do. Then we're not going to stop doing it.
Speaker 3 (11:49):
He ain't having it. He ain't having it. In the meantime, Gavinnison,
as I said, begging to be arrested because he wants
the publicity. There's nothing he would like better than the
opportunity of himself in shackles. So he's praying that something
like that happens. Not likely to happen, unfortunately, because honestly,
(12:10):
pretty boy Newsoman in jail at that. That's that's kind
of a I kind of like the idea of that.
I kind of like the sound of that of him,
you know, being being sent to jail for obstruction of justice.
So here, here's a little popery. You've got Gavin Newsoman. Here,
You've got Maxine Waters in here. Who is you know,
talking to I mean, she's shouting at the National Guard?
(12:31):
Why are you here? Uh, if you're gonna shoot me,
you better shoot straight. All kinds of provocative things. By
the way, to his credit, before I forget to mention this,
to his credit, John Fetnerman, the Pennsylvania senator, the Democrat, said,
you know, what are we doing. We're we're not standing
(12:52):
on the moral high ground here. If you are basically
saying that we should go ahead and attack our National
Guard troops if we could, if we should allow people
to burn cars in the streets, if we're not willing
to denounce this kind of violence, then we have no
moral high ground to stand on, and he's absolutely right,
(13:14):
and I'm still trying to figure out, for the life
of me, I'm still trying to figure out what the
strategy is here, because Democrats are all about strategies. Say
what you want about them, but there's always generally a
method to the madness of what it is they're trying
to do. I've yet to find out what that is,
unless they're just hoping that there's enough chaos in the
streets and enough destruction that they can somehow blame Trump
(13:36):
for that. When the midterm elections come around, people will
not be voting Democrats to the Republican because they will
associate the Republicans with the violence in the streets. I
don't think that's likely to happen. I think most people
have figured out who's causing the violence in the streets
and it's got nothing to do with the Republicans or
Republican policies. But that's the only thing I can figure
(13:58):
They must think he's going to work, and I think
that backfire is in a a stupendous way. But anyway,
here again, Gavin Newsom, Maxine Waters, and some response to
all of it from Jesse Waters on The Five.
Speaker 4 (14:12):
Gavin NEWSOMBI he's daring Tom home and become an arepto.
Speaker 3 (14:19):
Did he do it? I would do it because I
were Tom. I think it's great. Yeah, I but likes
the What do you making the fact that he says,
you want a civil war on the streets of America.
Speaker 9 (14:31):
No, that's just the app I said, I don't want
a civil war. Civil war would happen if you left it,
if you left it.
Speaker 3 (14:37):
To people like him.
Speaker 9 (14:38):
And I liked him, you know, I always got along
with him, never had a problem with him. But he's
grossly incompetent.
Speaker 10 (14:45):
Bug Gavin Newsom, he's firing back. California is suing the
federal government over the deployment of the National Guard in
Newsom has been daring Trump officials to arrest him.
Speaker 5 (14:55):
Really, bag your hands off. These poor people are just
trying to get live their lives. Man, trying to live
their lives, paying their taxes. If the hell is this guy,
come after me, arrest me. Let's just get it over with.
Tough guy, So Tom, arrest me.
Speaker 3 (15:08):
Let's go.
Speaker 2 (15:08):
What do you go?
Speaker 1 (15:09):
Do you go shoot some cats?
Speaker 3 (15:10):
He's afraid of your life. You gotta shoot in a
night at this show. As you showed her, you better
shoot straight.
Speaker 2 (15:18):
Out of a lie.
Speaker 1 (15:18):
You're in my city.
Speaker 3 (15:21):
If the governor was not contacted, you.
Speaker 4 (15:24):
Cannot have immigration with that assimilation.
Speaker 3 (15:27):
Does this look like a melting pot to you? It
doesn't look like a melting pot to me.
Speaker 4 (15:31):
And California has moved right, Every county in the country
has moved right. So for the Democrats to side with
these people, it's just crazy. There's money in the big
beautiful bill for ice for these mass migration deportations.
Speaker 3 (15:48):
You gotta do it, absolutely have to do it.
Speaker 4 (15:51):
And the pictures that are coming out of this, when
you have the tessel terrorism and you have a guy
with a flag over a burning vehicle, you're gonna just
jam that right down the throats in the midterm elections.
And I don't know how the Democrats can survive siding
with Mexican flag waving arsonists.
Speaker 3 (16:09):
And it's not just Mexican flags. There's been a few
Palestinian Free Palestine type flags. The only thing they've done
with American flags is burn them. How does that help
your cause with your average American? If you're seen out
there in the street, you're anti American. You're not just
anti Ice, anti Trump, you're anti American. You're burning the
(16:32):
American flying. I don't think that settles really well with
most of America, at least I don't think it does.
God I hope it doesn't. If that's the case, I
don't see what they're going to gain by doing any
of this. The good news is is that I think
that if there were any other administration out there, they
probably would be backing off right Scared the death of
(16:53):
all this, Scared the death of getting over overally involved
in California, and scared the death of the politics Democrat
politicians there. You don't see any of that with the
Trump administration, and in fact, the only thing they're doing
is getting tougher. First, first, the Trump sends in the
National Guard. Now he's sent about seven hundred Marines to California,
(17:15):
and you know the Marines. Marines are going to mess around,
so he's going to send whatever he thinks he needs
to send there in order to put these riots down.
And you've got an Attorney general who's willing to prosecute
and willing to go to the full sticks of the
law to prosecute people involved in this rioting in fact,
there was one guy that they were looking for who
(17:37):
was wearing a mask that they were able to identify,
and they've been searching his house. They're looking for him.
Here's Attorney General Pam Bondi talking plenty tough.
Speaker 10 (17:49):
We are going to enforce the law regardless of what
they do. Look at it out there. It looks like
a third world country and it's not. It's the United
States of America. We are not standing for what Donald
Trump won't stand for it and something else tonight. Look
at all those great men and women in the LAPD.
We are going to protect them if they will not
(18:09):
protect them and prosecute people that abuse the LAPD in
terms during a civil unrest. Under eighteen USC. Two thirty one,
we can prosecute federally people who assault state law enforcement
officers with a maximum of five years in prison, and
we are going to do it. We are going to
prosecute them federally. If California won't protect their law enforcement,
(18:33):
we will protect the LAPD and the Sheriff's office out there.
Not only that, we have nine open cases right now
and more to come on assaulting federal officers, the Molotov
cocktail cases that you've seen. We've charged one more to come.
Three outstanding. The looters. You saw they begin to loot
last night, going into seven elevens, going into drugstores. Typically
(18:56):
you don't charge those. We do under federal law. Now,
under the Hobbs Act, we are charging robbery.
Speaker 3 (19:02):
You loot a.
Speaker 10 (19:02):
Business in California, you are looking at maximum of twenty
years in prison. You spit on a federal law enforcement officer.
Speaker 2 (19:12):
No more.
Speaker 10 (19:13):
As President Trump said, you spit, we hit. Get ready.
If you spit on a federal law enforcement officer, we
are going to charge you with a crime. Federally. You
are looking at up to five years maximum in prison.
The cender block case, Sean, remember that case. We have
breaking news right now. The case where the guy was
breaking up the cinder blocks and he was throwing them
(19:37):
at police cars. The police officer, I'm sorry, the federal
officer had injured his hand. He was wearing a mask.
The FBI has identified him. Bill Isale, our incredible US
attorney out there working with atf DEA and the FBI
have been doing a remarkable job. That guy has just
been identified and they are doing a search war on
(20:00):
his house as we speak.
Speaker 3 (20:03):
Ain't messing around. I ain't messing around, Pam BONDI taking
care of business, all right, quick little break. We are
back with mort Mom a Jimmy Fair show here on
AM nine fifty KPRC. How is your sense of direction? They?
(20:35):
The reason why I asked that question is we've come
I believe we've become very, very reliant on turn by
turn GPS. You know, most of us have that in
our car, or if we don't, we've got like waves
or or Google Maps or something else on our cell phones,
some sort of an application that give us turn by
turn directions on how to find something. And I have
(20:59):
to admit I myself have become kind of dependent on that.
I second guess myself even at places I've been at
a couple of times, I don't necessarily trust myself. Houston's
a big place, a lot of miles to drive. I
don't necessarily trust myself to remember exactly how to get there.
Not to mention the fact that if you run into
(21:19):
a problem along the way, at least if you have
a GPS up and running, if you have to take
a detour because of a big traffic accident or something,
the system will adjust and help get you where you
need to go. So, I mean, GPS is a great thing,
but if you didn't have if we didn't have GPS,
how do you think you would do? Only fifty three
percent of people believe that they'd be excellent or good
(21:41):
at navigating the roads without turn by turn GPS. Seventy
two percent, though, claim they're very good at reading physical
or digital maps. Do you remember, by the way, this
is going back aways, remember when you were a kid,
I mean before there was something like GPS, and you're
going to take a vacation somewhere and you'd get it
(22:02):
like a what they would call a trip tick from
like Triple A, you know where they'd have this actual
map thing that they put together for you and they
put the yellow highlight on there that would, you know,
give you a written version of the directions you needed
to follow to get to where you were going to go.
I remember when I moved here to Houston, I a
(22:23):
GPS in my in my tahoe that I had at
the time, and you know, that got me all the
way here. I don't know if it was the absolute
shortest route or the best route, but it got me here.
But back in the day, you'd have to have a map.
You'd have to have a roadmap. You pull the roadmap
out and you maybe take a highlighter, and you'd figure
out what expressways you were going to take, what freeways
(22:45):
you're going to take, or maybe even toll waste to
get to where you had to go. It's kind of
the same thing with maps. Now GPS has made it
so we become dependent on that, and we aren't really
good at it's good at reading maps, are following other
kinds of directions as we used to be, just like
cell phones have made it so it's really hard to
remember a phone number. Wouldn't you agree, because you put
(23:09):
the phone number in your cell phone and you don't
have to remember it. It's there. You just call it
up under your contacts if you have something you really
really need. So, this poll on navigation skills said only
sixteen percent of people are confident that they're excellent navigators
without turn by turn GPS. Here's, by the way, here's
a sign that you might be a decent navigator or
(23:32):
have the ability to navigate. If I were to blindfold you, no, yeah,
if I were to blindfold you, spin you around, take
the blindfold off, would you be able to tell me
what direction you're facing. During the day. It's a little
bit easier because if you know what time of the
day it is, you know where the sun is supposed
(23:52):
to be, assuming the sun's out. If it's cloudy, that's
a different story. But if the sun's out, you know
where the sun is supposed to be. In the middle
of the day, and based on where the sun is,
you can probably figure out what direction you're facing. But
some people I think have a national a natural ability
to do that. I even when it's dark out, you
(24:12):
can usually I can usually point any given direction and
say that's north, that's south, that's east, that's west. A
lot of people can't do that. Seventy two percent of
people claim they're very good at reading physical or digital maps.
Sixty eight percent say their sense of direction is very good.
Sixty three percent say they can usually remember a new
route after traveling just once. Sixty one percent say they're
(24:33):
very good at giving directions. Fifty nine percent say they
enjoy reading maps. Really, it doesn't seem like a real
enjoyable activity to me, okay, fifty one percent say they
don't enjoy giving directions. Forty five percent say they don't
remember routes very well. If riding is a passenger in
a car. Oh, that's true, that's true. My wife is
(24:57):
a perfect Elizabeth. There is a perfect example of that.
She is a chronic backseat driver. So in order to
amuse herself and to keep herself from backseat driving while
I'm driving, as she's prone to do, she'll be on
her cell phone, whether it's checking emails or playing a game,
(25:17):
usually playing a game, and she's not paying attention to
what's going on in what direction we're going. And I
usually drive ninety nine times out of one hundred because
she prefers. As much as she prefers it that way,
is I prefer it that way. So I drive to
most places to keep from backseat driving. She's playing a
(25:39):
game or something else on her cell phone, so she's
not watching how I'm driving to criticize me, and therefore
she's not really looking at where we're going. She knows
where we're going, but she's not looking at the route
we're going to get there. So as a result of that,
I have found that even when she drives, even if
it's someplace we've been a million times, or someplace she
(26:01):
should know how to get to Oftentimes she doesn't because
she's never paid attention how we got there before. And
it's very easy to not pay attention if you are
not the person who's actually driving. Twenty eight percent say
they don't have a very good mental map of the environment.
Thirty seven percent of people say they'd be good, twenty
(26:22):
seven percent say they are just fair at navigating on
their own. Ten percent of people mean they're very poor
at it, seven percent no, they're terrible that they just
can't function without GPS. Interesting. Interesting, one of those things
that you know, what in the world did we do
before we had GPS. Hey, listen, y'all, have a great day.
Thanks for listening. I'll see tomorrow morning bright nearly five
am over on news radio seven forty KTRH. We are
(26:46):
back here at four them nine to fifty KPRC.