Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Well, well, come in.
Speaker 2 (00:02):
To your say I gets saying you a conscious.
Speaker 1 (00:08):
Sun will be dire and if you want a little banging, ye.
Speaker 3 (00:17):
I come along. Could Biden have won the twenty twenty
four election had he stayed in the race. Truthfully, I
categorize his statement as flat out bonkers.
Speaker 2 (00:24):
Despite what you have heard from Caruso, no firefighters have
told us that they are running out of water.
Speaker 3 (00:30):
Gg, what can you tell us? Well, firefighters have told
me they have no water on this block right now.
Speaker 4 (00:35):
If you need help, emergency information, resources and shelter is available.
All of this can be found at your elf.
Speaker 1 (00:44):
Fradom is back in style.
Speaker 3 (00:47):
Welcome to the revolution.
Speaker 1 (00:50):
Come in to your city, don't way get tals and
saying you a conscious silt. The New Sean Hannity Show
more behind the scenes information on freaking news.
Speaker 3 (01:06):
And more bold inspired solutions for America.
Speaker 1 (01:10):
An hour two Sean Hannity's show told Free It's eight
hundred ninety four one, Shawn. If you want to be
a part of the program, you know there's a lot
of outrageous moments in all of this. What's going on
in southern California as the fire continues to spread now
in the Hollywood Hills now Santa Monica evacuated, no end
in sight, no containment that is happening, all these people
(01:33):
losing their homes. A mayor that is just totally, completely
and utterly clueless, beyond the fact that she was out
in I guess on a trip to Africa and Ghana
at the time, didn't make her way back quickly enough
as far as I'm concerned, And then when questioned by
a reporter about her absence and about the fires, she
(01:56):
just refuses to answer any questions. And it even got
worse during a conference when she doesn't even know what
website to give out for people to go to to
get help, what number to give out for people to
get help list?
Speaker 5 (02:10):
Do you owe citizens and apology for being absent while
their homes were burning? Do you regret cutting the fire
department budget by millions of dollars? Not in there? Have
you nothing to say today that? Have you absolutely nothing
to say to the citizens today? Elon Musk says that
you're utterly incompetent. Are you considering your position, madam mayor?
(02:37):
Have you absolutely nothing to say to the citizens today?
You're dealing with this disaster. There's no apology for them.
Do you think you should have been visiting Ghana while
this was unfolding? Back home.
Speaker 4 (02:54):
And conserve water to the extent that you can. We
want to make sure that we are ready if we
need more water. But make no mistake, Los Angeles will
rebuild stronger than ever. Right now, if you need help,
emergency information, resources and shelter is available. All of this
can be found at URL.
Speaker 1 (03:17):
Now we can go back and play Donald Trump warning
about this four months ago, Donald Trump warning about this
in twenty eighteen, Gavin Newsom slamming Trump for politicizing cow
the wildfires. Back in twenty one, Gavin Newsom suggested that
wild fire preparedness will be better under Biden one season office. Well,
(03:38):
it turns out not to be true. And all Joe
Biden seemed to care about he happened to be out
in California. I'm sure he would not have made the
trip otherwise. He didn't make the trip to East Palestine
after that train derailment. He never made the trip after
Hurricane Helene devastated areas in Georgia and South and North
Carolina and Tennessee. Never bothered to help those people out
(04:00):
at all. And I mean, it's unbelievable. The science of
forestry is real. Now they have an insurance crisis that
we've discovered. All these insurers have pulled out because they
saw the risk, They knew this was likely to happen,
they knew they would not be able to stay in business.
And when these you know, California rules, their adherence to
(04:22):
environmental radicalism rather than the science of forestry, caused them
to get out of the insurance business, the home insurance business,
you know, going back well over eighteen months ago, and
now a lot of the people involved don't have insurance,
are way under insured. I mean, thousands of structured structures
now destroyed, and it's getting worse by the day and
(04:46):
there is seemingly no end in sight.
Speaker 3 (04:48):
Now.
Speaker 1 (04:49):
Somebody that was deeply impacted by all of this front
of this program, Jillian Michaels I called the workout Guru,
but I mean fitness guru of all gurus. She's so
good at what she does, and this is not the
first time she's had to deal with this. Now she
made the move out of the state of California to
the free state of Florida, and I think she didn't
get out soon enough. And she was back helping her mom,
(05:12):
who happened to be sick. And it turns out that
in California wildfire territory, she lost one, but not two
houses at times that she had owned. Jillian Michaels joins
us now. She put up on x a big picture
of Gavin Newsom with the word resign on it. I'm
so sorry about all you going through. I really am.
(05:35):
I want you to explain it so people understand just
how bad. It is.
Speaker 3 (05:39):
Of course, Well, first of all, Sean, thank you so
much for having me and allowing me to discuss this
on your platform. Second of all, I'm lucky. I lost
the house in the twenty eighteen fires, so I am
uniquely familiar with what goes on in California to mention
the forestream mismanagement, the water misappropriation, seeing of that nature.
(06:00):
But I was in short, I got lucky, I got out,
hoold my family, hold the animals. So it's not about me.
It's about watching this happen in California over and over
and over again. It's about watching firefighters putting flames out
with women's purses because the fire hydrants are broken or
(06:21):
the reservoirs are empty. It is about watching people lose
their homes. Several people, we don't even know how many
right now have lost their lives. And the reality is
there is simply no excuse for this. And I'm not
trying to politicize a catastrophe. And I'm going to go
so far as to tell you, listen, California has the
Santa Ana wind. It's always going to struggle with wildfires.
(06:45):
We know this. On top of that, I'll tell you
climate change. Listen, there's no snow on the ground in
New York right now in January. Definitely, I'm willing to
go there. I don't know anything.
Speaker 1 (06:54):
About it, but I'm willing to say, actually, there was
snow on the ground in New York. I hate the
burst bubble, but the only other person that said that
was I think Bernie Sanders was blaming, you know, climate
change on it. But I think the bigger focus is
why why do they seem to care more about endangered
species environmental radicalism? Why, for example, why did they cut
(07:17):
the budget of the LA Fire Department while simultaneously, you know,
getting federal funds and state funds appropriated six hundred and
fifty million to make the Port of Los Angeles environmentally friendly?
Shouldn't they be knowing the problems exist out there and
this was not a drought year in Los Angeles, But
(07:38):
knowing that this exists, why didn't they spend the money
and clear the brush the kindling for these fires? Why
didn't they practice forest management? Why didn't they have hydrants
that actually worked? Why didn't they have more, you know,
firefighters available, And why are they appropriating six hundred and
fifty million dollars to the Port of La to be
enron environmentally friendly? This is insane.
Speaker 3 (08:01):
You're completely right. I'm simply trying to play devil's advocate
so that when people make that argumentble California has fires
and there's global warming, my argument would be, I'm going
to give you all of that. Let's say you're one
hundred percent right, all the more reason that you needed
to be prepared. And this is where we launched into
everything you just said. So let's start at the beginning.
(08:23):
Why are you not doing controlled burns? I grew up
in California. We the controlled burns every year. Native Americans,
the two Mash used to do controlled burns. Everybody knows
that California needs to burn at least a million acres
a year to keep these things from happening, and yet
they don't, and they haven't for about twelve years now,
(08:46):
maybe a little bit longer. And the question becomes, you know,
people hypothesizeable. Is it that they don't want to spend
the money doing it. Is it because you know it's
bad publicity with the potential for the fire to escape
and there to be law suits, or people don't want
the bad air? Well, how about now when the fire
is destroying acre upon acre, when people are losing everything,
(09:11):
lives are being lost. You want to talk about something
getting out of control. You want it out of control
when you've got seventy to one hundred mile an hour
winds instead of when you can control this during a
controlled burn. Nobody really has answers. That's the other problem
with the leadership in California. If they just deny negate
(09:31):
avoid nobody has answers on why they don't do it,
And then when you look at the water, you know
in this one really infuriates me. In twenty fourteen, Californians
voted for Proposition one, and that was meant to allocate
literally billions of dollars to build new reservoirs, and you've
(09:51):
got Gavin Newsoen standing out there going, well, do you're right?
We went through the reservoirs. You know, it's just this
is it's meant to handle just a few fires and
you're the own Well there, the people will figure it out. Well,
you know what, Gavin, we voted to figure it out
in twenty fourteen and build new reservoirs. Ten years later,
not one is built. Seawan, Or how about the fact
(10:13):
that eighty percent of the state's water goes to big
agg And I'm not talking about little, small local farmers,
that is not what I'm talking about. I'm talking about
one family in particular, that controls hundreds of billions of
dollars worth of water.
Speaker 1 (10:28):
If they have gallons worth of water and they've put
thet but they're also putting pure water into the ocean,
why would you do that?
Speaker 3 (10:37):
Yees?
Speaker 1 (10:37):
Why haven't they built aqueducts from the northern part of
the state where they have plenty of water down to
the southland.
Speaker 3 (10:45):
It is the most ridiculous. So you've got the ecological
piece of the environmental piece of vout we need to
protect and listen, I'm all for environmentalism. I agree, but
when you're prioritizing human lives and homes, you can't find
a way to strike a balance. So they're diverting water
to these small smells that ecosystem. It's people are getting
(11:13):
five percent of the water that they're requesting from the state.
But here's the other part where this connects back to
big agg is They've got this thing called the Delta tunnel.
So you're like, oh, way is Homan? Now? Is Gavin
Newsom doing the right thing with this Delta tunnel Where
some of the water is going to you have the
smell of fish, and some is going back to the
urban areas where people need it. Nope, that's going to
(11:33):
big eggs. So it's literally a toss up between billionaire
big agg companies and tiny little fish while people are
literally running And this is the next thing I want
to bring up, running on foot from fire. You've seen
cars stacked up in the streets like it is the
(11:54):
walking dead because there is no plan in place. There
is absolute grids. Before I went on your show last night,
my wife had stayed behind, stayed with my mother. They'd
relocated to West Hollywood. Another fire cropped up the sunset fire.
Everybody's evacuating and it's redlock. Nobody can move, nobody, and okay,
you're shutting the power off. Get people out there to
(12:16):
direct the fires, to direct traffic during the fires. You know,
on Sunday he put out across release saying like, oh,
I had three positioned fire truck. Why did you not
call in the national board. I have friends that are
reserve sheriffs that still haven't been called in to help people.
I cannot. I don't. I can't wrap my head around it.
(12:37):
And this isn't about saying what happened in North Carolina
wasn't awful. It was awful. What happened in hurricanes awful.
This is about the has greatly exacerbated this problem. Lives
have been locked. I don't even know how many homeshown.
I can't even keep tracking it with like one hundred
thousand people had been evacuated as of this morning. People
(12:58):
are in flux as fires burning all over the city.
No one can get out. It's gridlock. Hydrants are broken.
And let me say this, I'm so sorry. I'm so
upset that I neglected to mention what started my fire
was an electricity pole that was one hundred years old
that hadn't been updated. The infrastructure of California wasn't updated,
(13:22):
and it started a fire from a private utility company
that the governor protected. So where is the money when
you're charging Californian's the highest state tax, the highest sales tax,
the highest tax on gas, and your fire hydrants don't work,
and the equipment on your electric poles is one hundred
years old, and you have no emergency plan in place
(13:43):
for evacuation, and you didn't build all the reservoirs that
the citizens voted for in twenty fourteen. I'm outraged. I
cannot wrap my head around how people are not demanding
that this guy resigned. I can't believe it.
Speaker 1 (14:00):
Right, quick break, we'll have more with Jillian Michaels than
your calls coming up. Eight hundred and ninety four one sean,
as we continue straight ahead, all right, we continue now.
Jillian Michaels. She now lives in Florida. She was out
protecting her elderly mom from the struggles of the wildfires.
She lost two homes in wildfires over the years. Pretty
(14:20):
unbelievable when you think about it, and we're talking about
the disaster unfolding before our eyes and is probably will
go down as the worst fire in the history of
the country when it's all said and done. You know,
I'll probably keep you through the break because I mean,
I've got so much to ask you and so much
to tell you as well. I don't know if you
knew this, but a number of years ago I went
(14:40):
to the San Joaquin Valley and all of the you know,
probably hundreds of thousands of acres, certainly thousands and thousands
of them farmland were not usable because the state refused
to give the farmers the water to protect the delta smelt.
The delta smelt is like a minnow fish that you
would use for bait if you like to go fishing.
(15:03):
It is not an endangered species. But they chose that
little minto fish that dey'll just smelt over the ability
of farmers to feed human beings. Can you explain that
to me?
Speaker 3 (15:14):
Well, they're there, they're giving it to big act. There's
one family in particular, the Resnicks, that control a vast
majority of the Sneak's water, and they have done it
systematically over the past two decades, and our top contributors,
they were top contributed to Stam Feinstein and now they're
top contributor to Keavin Newsom. But yes, the regular farmers,
the family farmers, the smaller farmers, the middle sized farmers,
(15:36):
they're not getting the water they need. It's extraordinarily corrupt,
extraordinarily corrupty.
Speaker 1 (15:43):
Aren't you glad you moved to the Free State of Florida?
Speaker 3 (15:47):
Yes, I just need to get the rest of my
family own.
Speaker 1 (15:50):
I think you're going to have to move everybody, you know.
I think Florida's population is about to go up significantly.
Jillian Michaels as well us. We have a lot more
to play for you. I want to play gas I
and actually saying well, locals will have to figure this out.
I mean, I think that was the one statement that
angered me. And you know, then standing there with Joe Biden,
who's cellar for talking about his son Hunter maybe losing
(16:11):
his home, but then you know, celebrating the birth of
his great grandchild and taking no questions. It's just so outrageous,
so out of touch, so disconnected from what is actually
happening out there. More with Jillian Michaels on the other side,
we'll get to your calls as well. Eight hundred ninety
four one, shawnas On number. If you want to be
a part of the program. Twenty five till the top
(16:31):
of the hour. We'll get to your calls coming up.
Eight hundred ninety four one, shawnas On number, if you
want to be a part of the program. Everybody that
listens to this program knows I love to cook. I
cook almost every meal I eat. I when I go
out to eat, If I don't really love what I'm eating,
I won't eat it, and I'll wait till I get
home to eat. That's how much I love to cook. Anyway,
it relaxes me now that I have chef iq Sense.
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(17:59):
a favorite appliance. I promise you just get it at
chefiq dot com. Make every meal a masterpiece chefiq dot com.
Which is kind of appropriate since we have health and
fitness UH star Jillian Michaels with us and UH we've
had a lot of discussions both on and off air
(18:20):
about fitness and nutrition. And you know, the one thing
you did convince me I needed to add more vegetables
to my diet of basically meat and eggs.
Speaker 3 (18:30):
This is good. I'm glad I accomplished something so far
this year. Now, I just got to get you to
we am I allowed to put you on blast. There's
one thing you do.
Speaker 1 (18:39):
You can blast me. Everyone knows it's it's been viral
for a long time.
Speaker 3 (18:42):
Go ahead, you gotta stop vaping, Sean. You gotta stop.
You must stop. I'm going to get and hang on.
Speaker 1 (18:51):
Let me let me check this out of my mouth.
All right, go ahead? Oh, I know, I know in
my heart that you're right. I'm not going to sit
here and argue in favor of what I do. But
I'm on the air four hours a day, and it
just it's sort of like a couple. I'm not I'm
not gonna make a million excuses. You're right, I'm wrong,
and I will take the one hour class if you
(19:11):
have the quarter pounded with cheese. Although I feel awful
getting you to agree to that, because in your mind
you think it's poison. In my mind, it's like wow, one, two,
three times a year I get a treat because I
love the way a quarter pound of a cheese taste.
Have you ever been in an out burger when you
lived in California? You have to love it an out burger?
(19:33):
Do you not like it? You can get it, you know.
Speaker 3 (19:35):
Let us wrap out, Sean to me, I'm already upset.
I'm whipping you with friends of year. I haven't been
able to commote myself for days. I got you vaping
and freaking talking about fast food and then and then
you have the nerve to read.
Speaker 1 (19:54):
But if you watch how they make French fries, for example,
I assume they cook it in healthy oil. Be wrong.
I don't know what the oil that they use. I
hope they use absolutely not.
Speaker 3 (20:04):
They don't do that. They cook it.
Speaker 1 (20:06):
They still taste great, but they take they take the
potatoes right in front of you and they slice them.
Oh my, it is no I get a double double.
And I thought I was doing myself a favor because
I have it in a lettuce wrap because I don't
eat bread.
Speaker 3 (20:19):
Okay, do me a favor, Google, I'll take it. Oh boy,
levity to be dead honest with you, even though it's
extraordinarily upsetting, I will take it. Google. How seed oils
are processed.
Speaker 1 (20:34):
Well, seed oils are the worst. You know, I would
agree with you. The most is my daughter. My daughter,
she literally comes to my house and starts ripping out
things that she deems unhealthy, and seed oils like at
the top of her list. So I use avocado and
olive oil.
Speaker 3 (20:51):
Not when you're going and eating your quarter pounder though, No, But.
Speaker 1 (20:54):
I only have two a year. I don't eat them
that often.
Speaker 3 (20:57):
Metal of grass that beef. But it's shun me. You
more finicky than my twelve year old. I don't like
the smell of grassfed beef. Oh I love my quarter pounder.
Speaker 1 (21:08):
Were doing, man, Linda, what is the first thing that
we do? Tell Jillian? If we land in Utah, where's
the first place we go?
Speaker 4 (21:19):
I want Jillian to be your friend, so I'm not
going to tell her what you do when you go
on the road, because it's terrible.
Speaker 1 (21:25):
No. Where do I go the first stop? If we
end up in Salt Lake City, where's the first stop?
Speaker 3 (21:30):
God, it's Crown number, It's in and out Berger, It's case.
Speaker 1 (21:35):
What do we do in Chicago? What do we do
in chic Chicago? Hot Dogs? It's hot dogs. Yes, it's
hot dogs big time. Why if it's Georgia Atlanta, I
go to the Varsity, which probably is the worst of
all of them, but I still go there. It's sentimental
for me because I work four years in Georgia. All Right,
(21:56):
I did not mean to digress this much. But you
do have such a wealth of knowledge. And I do
pay way more attention to this than you think. And
I'm listening to you. I listen to my daughter. I
listen to everybody in my life that is telling me,
you know, to do this and that. And I'm getting better,
and I do work out every day and I do
have a healthy weight.
Speaker 3 (22:15):
You gotta quit that, Sean.
Speaker 1 (22:17):
All right, all right, it's on my on my two
do list.
Speaker 3 (22:21):
Chemicals, less about the nicotine, more about the inhalation of
the chemicals. Switch to nicotine gum. That is the most
important thing. You want to have your quarter poundter once
in a while, okay, fine, I mean I would much
prefer you have a grassbed burder, fries cooked, and beef palow,
(22:41):
for example. But your blood work looks kind you know.
That's fine. Once in a while, that's okay, But you
are simply not permitted to vape the way you do
on a regular basis. And to take a more serious
tone with you. People love you and this boy, So
get it together, Sean.
Speaker 1 (22:58):
You know what it is. I feel like I'm getting
I'm getting the big loser treatment right now, all right,
But let me get back to Gavin and what's happening
because it's so serious, you know, it is so heartbreaking,
and you lived through it twice. You've had this happen
to you twice. But you know, when you really think
deep down, and people lose their home, it is the
American dream. People want a home. People you know, work
(23:22):
their entire lives to get that home and then they
finally get it, and then it goes up in flames
and all the dreams that were associated with that home
are just up in smoke. But Gavin Newsom says, well,
the let the local people figure it out. This is
what he said.
Speaker 3 (23:37):
What is the situation with the water? Obviously in a
pal stage ran out last night and the hydrants I
farmed the firefighter in this block they laugh because there
was no water in the hydrants here.
Speaker 2 (23:45):
The local folks are trying to figure that out. I mean,
just when you have a system there. It's not dissimilar
to what we've seen in other extraordinarily large scale fires,
whether it be pipe electricity or whether it just be
the complete overwhelm of the system. I mean, thoseros are
typical for two or three fires, maybe one fire.
Speaker 1 (24:03):
You have something at this scale.
Speaker 2 (24:04):
But again, that's going to be determined by the local.
Speaker 1 (24:06):
That's got to be determined by the local. When meanwhile,
it is a predictable event, a wildfire with Santa Anna
wins in southern California. I mean, what kind of answer
is that?
Speaker 3 (24:18):
Well, that's that's exactly the point. That's why I wanted
to play Devil's advocate in the beginning. If you're going
to say, oh, we're prone, oh this, oh dot, oh, well,
then shouldn't you take every single precaution? What is your
answer for one hundred year old equipment of the power line?
What is your answer for hydrant set don't work? What
(24:40):
is your answer for the backup reservoirs you didn't build?
What is the answer to that? Why, knowing that the
state has these problems, did you cut seventeen million dollars
from the budget for fire? Why? Why did you wait
days to call in back up for the fighter fighters?
Speaker 1 (25:03):
All right, quick break right back more with fitness and
health expert Jillian Michaels. Your calls coming up on the
other side as well. Eight hundred and ninety four to one,
Shawn our number if you want to be a part
of the program. All right, we continue now with fitness
health wellness expert Jillian Michaels is with us, you know,
talking about the devastating, you know, political side of what
(25:23):
is happening in southern California as homes continue to burn
out of control, no water available seemingly in many places,
and a lack of concerns certainly by the mayor, and
a lot of fingerpointing by the governor. What are these
families going to do? I mean when you look at
the issue of insurance out in California. For example, State Farm,
(25:44):
California's largest insurer, said last year it would not renew
policies for seventy two thousand property owners, and that puts
them on California's what's known as their Fair Plan, which
works as an insurer of last resort, which is more
than doubled in the last five years, with like a
half a million residents now turning to the program for
(26:07):
basic fire insurance, but then not going to be able
to cover. My understanding is most people will be underinsured,
incapable of building back the home that they loved, and
God only knows where they end up after that.
Speaker 3 (26:21):
Well, first of all, you realize Malibu just burned down
again a few months ago. All of North Malibu burned down.
It's like my home burned down in twenty eighteen. It
burns down every year and nothing is done, no fire abatement,
no infrastructure, nothing is fixed, nothing is done. So yes,
(26:43):
the insurance companies are going okay, no thanks, like we're
here ultimately to make money. They're a business. They're going
to pull out of the state if they're walking. It
burned down over and over and over again. And you know,
Adam Corolla said something I thought where he goes, good
luck getting your permits. When I'm twenty eight you're located
(27:04):
at the Coastal Commission tells you you can't rebuild. I
live that it took a year a year just to
get the permit to clean up the property. When I
tell you that the pool from my home in twenty
eighteen had it's actually disgusting and sad. But I'm going
to paint this picture for you because this is the reality.
(27:24):
Had dead animals in it that were running from the fire.
Speaker 1 (27:27):
Oh no way missed the water.
Speaker 3 (27:30):
A year sean of rot and burning and chemicals and
debris to get a permit to clean it up. And
there are many way right.
Speaker 1 (27:41):
Tell me this, then, am I wrong? Is if there
was a if there was an election tomorrow, why do
I think Gavin Newsom would win by a healthy margin because.
Speaker 3 (27:52):
Of what I brought up earlier. Ready, Well, it's global
warming and you guys are denying that, and that's what's
really doing it. And we went through the three reservoirs
of water and California has Santa Ana wind and this
is this is the counter argument. And it's the counter
argument because nobody wants to take responsibility for the fact
(28:16):
that they fought so hard to keep this guy as
the governor year after year after year. Nobody. I have
a friend in California and we were arguing about this
and he's like, you know, you're politicizing this. And I'm saying,
am I politicizing this? This is causing people their lives
and their homes. So yes, if you're calling it politicizing,
I am. Here's a great video about what happened in
my fire with PG and E and how Gavin Newsom
(28:38):
let them off the hook and how they contribute to
this campaign. And he goes, well, I'm not going to
watch it, and I go, well, this is exactly why
you're here because you don't want to know, and they
make it partisan. So once you make it partisan, you
start a signing blame. And that's the part where I
want to just say, listen, forget this guy's a Democrat.
Can we just say he stinks? Is that okay? How
about we look at the budget. How about we look
(29:00):
at the crime. How about we look at the homelessness.
Now about we look at what's going on in schools.
Now about we look at the fact that this guy
is prioritizing, like Mouke department store play sections where it's like,
we can have gender neutral toy sections of department stores
and toy stores. It's instead of prioritizing infrastructure for people
(29:22):
to escape during a fire, having an evacuation plan. Sean,
it's so crazy, it's hard to wrap your head around.
Do you realize that there is a law in California
that was changed under Gavin Musen's leadership that he signed
that says a twenty four year old man can have
sex with your fourteen year old son and not have
(29:45):
to register as a sex offender if they deem it
to be consensual. He signed that into law.
Speaker 1 (29:52):
This is you can't make it.
Speaker 3 (29:53):
Up doing while none of the reservoirs. No, you cannot.
I couldn't believe it. It's something put forward, I believe
by Scott Wiener, and he signed it into law. And
you know why he signed it into law because I
believe that for heterosexuals, there's a ten year window starting
with fourteen year olds, where the man may not have
to registers or the woman may not have to register
(30:16):
as a sex offender if the sex is heterosexual and consenting.
So it wasn't fair to the gaze. So instead of
changing that law to protect heterosexual children who have been
abused by older sex offenders, now gay sex offenders get
the same liberties. I swear to you. You can't make
it up. This is the stuff that goes on in
(30:38):
California while the state burns year after year after year.
How about the billions of dollars, billions of dollars that
they sent to these corrupt NGOs to help the homelessness
crisis that's only increased by thirty percent instead of decreasing,
and the money isn't accounted for. But you're cutting a
fire budget by seventeen million, and listen, it's an eight
(31:01):
hundred million dollar budget clearly it's still not enough. You
really think you should be cutting it when the state
burns year after year after year. And the reason I
keep saying that is because you can't go well, we
didn't go well, we couldn't have predicted well, you know,
let live and learn. We have learned year after year
(31:21):
after year. And one thing I'll say is Adam Corolla
also mentioned Sudan summers and how she couldn't rebuild her home. Okay,
I lived in that home where before I bought my
house in Malibu and it burned down a few years
before that. The same beaches, the same mountains, the same
(31:45):
towns burn every couple of years, different areas, year after
year after year. I know this is the worst one.
And nothing improves, nothing.
Speaker 1 (31:57):
I always tell people on this program, don't ever count
on the government to do anything. Well, we appreciate your time,
Thank you.
Speaker 3 (32:05):
Well, thank you, Sean. I appreciate you giving me the
opportunity to speak about it.
Speaker 1 (32:09):
Eight hundred and ninety four one sewn on number