Episode Transcript
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Speaker 6 (01:39):
One Yeah, yeah, condition condition, I will cook the smoll
and with the sundown.
Speaker 7 (02:00):
And I found my mind in a brown paper peg.
Speaker 2 (02:08):
But then.
Speaker 8 (02:12):
I tripped on a cloud in paily eight miles high.
Speaker 2 (02:16):
Hi, I told mine back on a jagged sky.
Speaker 8 (02:20):
I just dropped in to see what condition my condition
was in.
Speaker 7 (02:28):
Yeah, my condition.
Speaker 2 (02:42):
Welcome everybody to doctor Grippa's Natural Health Hours. It is
July ninth, and uh wow, we're already in the middle
of it. We've had lots of rain here. We're broadcasting
almost life somewhere outside of Cypress, Texas, and we've got
Susie and Bill. Bill's back from birthday cake and horrible
(03:08):
dental trips. Oh he said, it wasn't that bad, nevermind.
And we've got our producer Steve hidden behind the curtain.
So we're all here and it ought to be fun,
of course. You know. We've got the best jokes, the
best music, and one thing Bill and Steve both agree
on is they like good music. And that's all I play.
(03:31):
I got it figured out, though, guys, Susie wants me
to play all female country singers. Steve wants all love songs,
and Bill, I think you were up for rap. I'm
not sure. Anyway, you guys want to go ahead and
say hello, Susie, take it away.
Speaker 9 (03:50):
Hi everyone, thanks for joining us.
Speaker 2 (03:55):
All right, and Steve's in the background. Steve, anytime you
want to jump in, go right ahead. It's always good
to hear from you. He did a really good job.
Speaker 8 (04:05):
Bill.
Speaker 2 (04:06):
He learned how to do like you do, say no
or nothing, you train.
Speaker 1 (04:13):
It's it's important to do to be able to do that.
Speaker 2 (04:18):
I'd say, do you have anything? No, you'd nothing, just
like you. I mean, you'd have been proud. All right,
tonight we're talking about water and this. This is kind
of an interesting thing. A lot of people don't think
much about the water. And I don't think a lot
of people know much about the water, because I see
(04:40):
people buying all this water that says vitamin water or
alkaline water are distilled water. Uh So they obviously don't
know or they wouldn't be doing that. The the greatest
thing about water is and it's not state, and its
(05:02):
natural state is rain from the heavens through the earth,
and it is filtered through the earth and picks up
the minerals and trace minerals and everything we need to survive.
And magically it pops up in a well our spring,
(05:28):
so we can go drink it. But man is managed
to mess that up a little bit. That man likes
to play with things and make them worse. They think
they know about filtering, and so that's never a good thing.
But like here in my neighborhood, they used to just
(05:49):
put chlorine, and that kills all the good bacteria and
it's not good for us. So we need that bacteria well.
Because they are incredibly stupid but think they're smart. We
got a letter one day. It said, we want you
all to know that now we've added ammonia with the chlorine,
(06:12):
which is called chloramines. And they said, but don't drink it,
don't put it in your aquarium, and don't give it
to a diabetic. Then what are we paying for? They
send us poison and people are drowing it. So I
(06:34):
guess the only thing you can really do in a
home is put a filter or by spring water, or
if you're blessed like Sussy, they have their own well
and that's that's wonderful. Spring water and well water very similar,
very similar. And the thing about water is it not
(06:55):
only hydrates. We all think about hydrating, but water doesn't
hydrate very well if you don't have the sea salt
in your system, because water follows sea salt into the
cell and then you get hydrated. This is why you've
heard of a lot of star athletes and people out
(07:16):
in the summer practicing, passing out, some even dying, and
they were drinking lots of water, but it didn't have
any salt. When I was a kid and we played sports,
they had sea salt tablets on the field and we
(07:36):
eat some sea salt tablets and nobody ever passed out
or got messed up. Then they came out with Gatorade,
and initially gatorade was a lot better, and they even
had natural organic gatorade, but you can't hardly find it anymore,
and now they've added all this junk to their gatorade.
(07:58):
But originally was for the University of Florida where they
created gatorade, and this helped hydrate because it had the electrolytes,
the water and the salt, so it was a good thing.
It's still better than just pure water, unless you've got
your own sea salt. But water also cleanses, it's involved
(08:24):
in lubrication inside the body, it's involved in transporting the nutrients,
and it regulates body temperature. It helps in that natural
unrefined water, you know, just through the earth to the
spring or the well, provides us with the minerals and
(08:48):
trace minerals that we need. And what man has come
along and done is they add chlorine fluoride. For a
long time, people were thinking floora ride was good for you,
and that was a big scam brought about by the
aluminum companies. And then water softeners. A lot of people
(09:08):
don't understand. And maybe water softeners have gotten better, but
the ones I remember use salt, and that would cause
all kinds of problems. Salt and a water softener demineralizes
the water. It takes out to trace minerals and the minerals,
(09:30):
and one of the things that we really need in
the water before it's demineralized is calcium bi carbonate, which
is readily absorbable in the body. Now, in the supplement world,
we use calcium loctate because it quickly gets to that farm.
(09:50):
But a lot of places have calcium carbonate, not good.
But calcium bicarbonate comes with our water if it hasn't
been messed up, and that's very important because it carries
the critical nutrients like the calcium bicarbonate, and that helps
build your bones, and it blends with phosphorus in foods
(10:17):
and less it's in in natural fats, So that's that's
really important. And as doctor Lee said, good water is
water that has been filtered to the ground to reach
the well or spring and thereby accumulated a load of antigens. Now,
antigens are the bacteria that stimulate our immune system. And
(10:42):
these these antigens are also called pyrogens. You may hear
that term, but they cause fever if injected into the bloodstream,
so you know that that's a bacteria. But the residue
of disease producing the bacteria, and by drinking them we
(11:02):
develop an immunity. So it's very important that your water
not be all beat to hell. And one of the
things that they showed everybody tried to give salt credit
for polio, Well, just like momps, measles, chicken pox, all
(11:23):
that most all of us naturally got immune to that
because we had those things, and there are several countries
I'm trying to remember if I made a note on
it where the children were tested. Nobody got polio because
they already had the bacteria that allowed them to build
(11:49):
up an immunity. So the germ or virus that was
put in the water helped them build immunity and they
didn't have the problem. And these these children were immune
to that stuff the natural way. They didn't take the
salt vaccine, so that that was a big deal. Years ago,
(12:12):
the aluminum companies making aluminum discovered they had in the
wastewater this fluoride component and they were dumping it on
the land, and the farmers and the ranchers sued them and,
you know, to get them to stop because it was
(12:32):
causing problems. And I don't know what all happened, but
somehow they convinced the government that fluoride in the water
was good for your teeth. Well, we know it's bad
for your teeth, it's bad for your thyroid, and it
really causes a lot of problems. And I think just
(12:54):
recently Florida became one of the first states that banned
fluoride and water, which would be really really great. And
if anybody doubts about the quality of your water, go
buy an aquarium and fill a full of fish. And
the first thing you're gonna have to do is is
(13:15):
treat that water, dechlorinate it, otherwise your fish are all
going to die. And then you've got to start getting
the bacteria back in that water so the fish can
survive bad, bad stuff what they do. And most people
(13:36):
are drinking like I see, the vitamin water and the
alkaline and distilled distilled. The only thing good about distilled
water is it's wet because they used to use it
in irons and other things like that. But if you
drink it, Nature does not like a vacuum, so your body,
(13:59):
if you drink the stilled water, it will steal from
your body all the minerals and trace minerals. It needs
to make it regular water again because it doesn't like
the vacuum of having lost all of its minerals and
trace minerals. If you drink alkaline water, and you drink
(14:21):
enough of it, you will raise the pH of your
stomach to alkaline or alkalinity, and you will cause your
food not to break down, and you won't be able
to digest properly, and you will have a bad, bad
assembly line of food from mouth to stomach and not
(14:42):
going very well anywhere else because you raise the pH
for most of your minerals to break down. We need
a two point zero pH or lower. Alkaline water is
above seven. I've seen it at nine, and so if
you put that in there and you drink enough of it,
(15:04):
your food can't break down. So that's a bad thing.
And then the vitamin water craze and all these other crazes.
What do you add in that stuff too? First off,
I know they're not using good vitamins, and secondly, the
water needs to have minerals and trace minerals. You'll get
(15:25):
the vitamins from other sources. So I doubt, very seriously
there's much in the way of vitamins that should be
in your water. And if you put it in the
water and the water's got even a neutral pH in
seven range, that's not going to let those minerals break
down if you drink a lot of that water. So
(15:47):
the best water you can drink is well water and
spring water natural. A lot of people with wells are
worried about what they call hard water, and that that's
the calcium by carbonate, but we need a certain amount
of that, so you don't want to get rid of
all the calcium by carbonate because you're worried about hard water.
(16:10):
And if you filter your own water is the only
one I know because it actually takes bad water and
kind of creates spring water or well water. It's a
great system. Ad Ya. I think Susie's got a link
(16:31):
on our our page, our website, and I think it's
on the homepage. I'm not positive, but anyway, water very important.
I don't like any of my scotch, but other than that,
water is really important. And the cleaner that we are,
(16:57):
the less stimulated are immune system. So it's you don't
want to be taking that water and scrubbing yourself constantly.
And you gotta be careful what they put in the
water because the toxicity of fluoride caused a lot of
dental problems, which they told people it was good for
(17:20):
the dentists, and a lot of problems for the thyroid.
And then you got to worry about all the pesticides
and herbicides. I saw a thing on the news the
other night. I don't know if it was the old EPA.
They still got too many of them guys around. But
(17:42):
they wanted to treat a bunch of lakes and rivers
with herbicides and pesticides, and I think it was being stopped.
I hope so, because that's bad for us, the fish,
the wildlife, not good for anybody, all right, So anything
on water, Susie, did we lose her bill? Are you there?
Speaker 1 (18:17):
I think so?
Speaker 2 (18:18):
Okay, you're not sure.
Speaker 9 (18:21):
I'm here that that was. That was kind of weird,
but I'm not surprised. Yeah, I like water. I fail
for the alkaline water craze a long long time ago.
Don't do it anymore. But yeah, I've got the well water.
It's hard. I have to wonder, being so close to
(18:42):
the flood if it's going to affect the aquifer. You know,
I wonder about that. But uh, I have put a
link to the water filter in the common section at
the Rumble and it is on the resource page.
Speaker 2 (18:58):
Oh great. I knew you had it on the website
because I saw it recently, but I forgot where. Thank
you for doing that. And that's the best filter I've
ever seen. They had a chemical spill somewhere on the
East coast, and IDA went in with their filters and
cleaned up the bad water, removed all the junk, and
(19:22):
the end result with the Ida water filter is basically
spring water. It's got an earth looking filter that actss
like what the Earth does when rain comes through it.
And then it had a carbon filter and a ceramic
I think, but the main thing was that earth filter,
and then it has this liquid you put in and
(19:44):
basically you turned that bad water into spring water or
well water. And I saw a video where they cleaned
up an entire lake, a small lake, maybe a pond
you could call it, with their stuff. But they were
the only one when they had that chemical spill that
was able to come in and clean that up. For So,
(20:05):
if you guys get a chance, it's on Rumble, and
it's also on our website that Susie put it there.
So I had thought it was on the front page.
But where'd you say, was that, Susie?
Speaker 9 (20:19):
You know it's on the resource page.
Speaker 2 (20:21):
Resource Okay, Yeah, I saw it just recently. I forget
what I was looking at. But water very important and
a lot of a lot of the people get caught
up in the latest fads. I remember a very good
friend of mine was selling alkaline water, and he couldn't
understand why some friends were sick. And I remember he
(20:45):
told me one day, he said, they're drinking the good water.
And I said, what are they drinking? And he said alkaline.
I said, I don't want to hurt your feelings, but
that's not good. So he quit that eventually, and that
phased out. I think, Bill, how about you, what what
(21:07):
is your water kind of situation?
Speaker 1 (21:12):
Yeah, I just as you were talking about that, I
was remembering that when I was an undergraduate, we had
to h we had to take courses in various departments,
and we all had to have a biology. We had
a biology requirement that we had to take the course
of biology.
Speaker 9 (21:30):
It took a.
Speaker 1 (21:30):
Course of a fellow named Barry Palminer, who was a
very prominent biologist who was very concerned with what you're
talking about with water and really began the whole, the
(21:51):
whole kind of effort at understanding to understand what how
important water was to almost every form of life on
this planet. And of course one of the things that
when if they look at other planets or asteroids or whatever,
they look for signs of water, either ice or places
(22:15):
where water had been. And I find that an interesting
dicholomy for those those folks, But it's it's just hugely
important to every form of life on our planet and
we need to understand it. H We can only continue
to put bad stuff in the water for so long
(22:38):
and then we're going to have some trouble.
Speaker 2 (22:42):
Yeah, and the and they know, I mean, do you
think they would know? But like here in my neighborhood,
they had enough nerve to send out a letter. If
I'd have been able to afford to deal with them,
that's the one time in my life I would have
hired a lawyer to to the idiots for trying to
kill us. I mean, the letter clearly said do not
(23:04):
drink the water. Well, we're paying for water every month,
but you can't drink it, you can't put it in
an aquarium, and you cannot give it to a diabetic.
These people are nuts. And you know, natural spring water
and well water is the way it's supposed to be.
(23:28):
It's it's it's when it's unrefined. It's a food. Water
is that important. A lot of people think just hydration,
but it carries the nutrients. It helps us with the
immune system because of the the antigens and the pyrogens
(23:48):
and just so so important. Plus if you've got good
ze salt in your system and nice refreshing, cool glass
of water when you're hot and you know you've been sweating,
just feels wonderful. And when you take a shower or
a bath, you don't want chlorine and ammonia in your water.
(24:14):
God only knows what that can do to you. So
it's very important that you check up and find out
what's in your water. And if if you live somewhere
and you don't know, get it tested. Susy, have you
ever had the well tested?
Speaker 9 (24:30):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (24:31):
We have, and did it come out you know, really great?
Speaker 9 (24:37):
Yeah, the problems. The only thing I don't like is
you know, the high the hard water, the hot calcium.
Speaker 2 (24:45):
Yeah, that you got that calcium by carbonate. And I've
heard that from a lot of people with wells, and
I think you could probably uh find a natural way
like the ida to filter that and maybe we get
rid of some of the calcium that's too heavy. There's
also other things to do, but we don't want to
(25:06):
get rid of all of it because it's very important
for us. So if you have too much, yeah, then
you can maybe do something about it. I'm just amazed
how many people were drinking alkaline water and selling it.
And like I said, this one friend of mine, he
(25:26):
really meant well. He thought he was making a few
dollars and helping people with good water. So I did
a console, not a console, more of a little seminar
for a large group of them, and you know, I
felt really bad because I had to tell them all
that the alkaline water you're buying is bad for you.
(25:52):
And you know that didn't sit well with a lot
of people that have been spending a lot of money
and the people that were selling it. But I had
to tell them the truth for their health, and I
think in the end run they appreciated that they knew.
And just like distilled water, there was people I remember
(26:12):
seeing drinking distilled water. And that's really bad because it's
like nature doesn't like the vacuum, so it goes into
your system and steals everything from you to get it
back where it's got minerals and trace minerals, so that's
a bad thing. And then the chemicals. You got to
(26:32):
be very careful. Susy, you brought up a very good
point from that flood. Hopefully, though, if any water comes
your way, it will not be the top dirty nasty water.
Because one of the things in the old days, if
you ever watched Old Western or anything like that, people
(26:56):
knew that the bad stuff settled out after the water
or if it was running steady. But in the beginning,
like with that flood, you had all that nasty stuff
for a while it was not running clean. But in
the old movies, if the water was running clean and
it looked clear, they knew the bad stuff had settled
(27:19):
out on the bottom if there was anything, and they
would drink from the top. That you'd see them scoop
the water out of the top or fill their canteen
from the top, and they knew they were getting healthier water.
So that was, you know, just one of those things
they knew. The animals knew that. The animals also knew
not to drink from water spots that smelled bad, So
(27:41):
if there was a bad smell, they didn't drink that.
But you can imagine traveling somewhere like a desert trying
to find water. I mean, that's when you realize how
important it is, very very quick. But hopefully, Susie, you
guys will be okay. I saw again on the major
(28:02):
news networks where they're now admitting that the guys were
seating the clouds to make it rain right before they
caused the flood.
Speaker 9 (28:15):
Yeah at the second.
Speaker 2 (28:17):
Yeah. So I've said this before and people think you're
talking about a conspiracy theory, But they can make weather.
And I'll never forget. I saw that documentary from the
guy who used to work at HARP. It's up there,
not too far north, but close to Alaska, I think,
(28:40):
and he said they had at that time two hundred
and fifty antenna things that they could shoot up into
the ionosphere and move it two hundred and fifty miles up,
and he said we could make weather. Well, everybody said, no,
that's not true. It's this radio antennas. But he used
to work there, and he had some pretty impressive things
(29:05):
to talk about that he only could have known from
working there. So it's really sad that I am a
believer that the same guys that fly around on their
personal jets while they tell us to shut your car
off and your air conditioner and walk, they are part
(29:29):
of that climate change, global warming. They've covered it all,
but every time there's a catastrophe or something happens, even
if it's a natural they make money by talking about
we're causing it. And I always say, you know, we
(29:49):
had an ice age, that they proved that the Earth
had an ice age, but there wasn't no people driving
their cars, so I wonder what made it melt? Well,
natural cycle of the Earth and the universe, and people
don't want to talk about that. They want to try
to pretend that we caused an ice age to melt,
(30:13):
even though it was a long, long long time before
we were here. And I don't think we make that
much of a difference anyway. And I remember NASA guys
from the space station said the greenest places on Earth
that they saw flying over were the highest CO two concentrations.
(30:36):
So that's the way it's supposed to work. CO two
is good for vegetation, all right, Susie. Anything before we
go to.
Speaker 9 (30:46):
Break, well, just making sure you can hear me.
Speaker 2 (30:52):
Yeah, I can hear you.
Speaker 9 (30:53):
Good, Okay. So I see day before yesterday I said
in on a like a conference call. It was like
a introduction, question and answer kind of, and it was
with that Augustus DII Rocco Diarroco. He's at twenty five
(31:21):
year old, want to be Little God, the CEO of
rain Maker, and so yeah, if people think this is
a conspiracy, we can go to Well, Texas is amongst
nineteen states that use his technology, and the Curville area,
(31:50):
so the state can contract with the rain Maker, and
local districts, counties, communities, whatever can contract. So let me
say this correctly, South Texas Weather Modification Association. Yeah, okay,
(32:12):
And so they admit it on their websites. If you
go to South Texas Weather Modification Association, it'll show maps
of where they are seating. And it's pretty disturbing. I'm
pretty angry. I mean, I'm twenty minutes away from the
flat area. Even though I'm twenty minutes away, that's my
(32:35):
stopping grounds. Practically do very little in Fredericksburg. It's just touristown.
But Kerville's where we go eat and shop and have
friends and pretty tore up. And you know, if we
find out, you know that this guy's I mean, I'm
(32:57):
not gonna say it, but look at New Mexico. It
does so Chicago, Texas. Something ain't right here.
Speaker 2 (33:05):
Yeah, and we don't unless we're suffering with no rain.
You don't want somebody trying to seed clouds. And one
thing this nation has had a lot of the last
few months is plenty of rain, so we didn't need
that and that's why the water roads twenty six feet
in less than an hour. All right, Bill, anything for
a break? Yep, Bill's back.
Speaker 9 (33:32):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (33:32):
You know, if you talk to people about this sort
of thing, they're just so unable to accept that things
like weather modification exists. And there's so much that goes
on that we don't hear about that has tremendous effects
(33:56):
on our lives and our lifestyles. The people just don't
they don't want to know. It's too much for him.
Speaker 5 (34:05):
Well, yeah, they'd like.
Speaker 2 (34:06):
To believe the government wouldn't let this stuff happen, but uh,
it's so serious that it made the main news for
a change, and Marjorie Green uh is, before the flood happened,
had filed to get a bill passed to stop these
people from doing weather modification. And so maybe that'll maybe
(34:30):
that'll go through and that'll help. All right, guys, Well
let's go to break.
Speaker 10 (34:34):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (34:34):
This is doctor Krupa's Natural Hot Dours. We've got Susie, Bill,
Steve and myself will all be back right after the break. Please,
listen to our sponsors.
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Speaker 10 (36:33):
He wore that cowboy I had to cover up his horns.
Sweet talking book in tongue had attempted charm before I
turned around.
Speaker 2 (36:54):
That girls gone.
Speaker 11 (37:00):
All I can say is bar tender, put me something strong.
Speaker 2 (37:07):
Here's to the past. They can kiss my glass.
Speaker 10 (37:11):
I hope she's happy with him.
Speaker 2 (37:16):
Here's to the girl wrecked my world.
Speaker 7 (37:20):
That ain't Junia did me.
Speaker 11 (37:26):
I think the devil drives a good will.
Speaker 2 (37:30):
I watched them drive.
Speaker 4 (37:31):
Away over the hill, nodding against her will.
Speaker 11 (37:36):
And I've got time to kill.
Speaker 2 (37:39):
Down and broken horse fill.
Speaker 4 (37:58):
It was long.
Speaker 10 (38:00):
Chrome sitting in the lot.
Speaker 7 (38:07):
Firing Jenrey and that things huh.
Speaker 11 (38:17):
He reve did shen't wave goodbye. Luve's gone hill, and
so we have.
Speaker 2 (38:32):
Here's to the best. They can kiss my glass.
Speaker 10 (38:36):
If she's heavy with him.
Speaker 2 (38:42):
All right, we are back. I think I know him anyway,
We are back. Welcome back to Doctor Trouper's Natural Health Hours.
It is July ninth, and we've been talking about water.
And I guess that's a good subject because we've had
lots of rain lately. It rained here twice today, yesterday,
(39:04):
it rained right now, it's about eighty degrees and the
humidity is eighty two. I could be a weather man.
All I do is look at that thing, see if
it's flesh and rain. But anyway, we are back. We've
got Susie, Bill and myself, and we've got our producer
Steve in the background behind the curtain. Do not pull
the curtain. He doesn't like that. And we just finished
(39:28):
discussing water and before we get to the most fabulous
jokes ever, Susie, do you have anything to follow up with? Yep,
oh no, not another one. All right, Bill, you've ruined everybody. Bill,
you know that they're all saying what you say.
Speaker 1 (39:49):
At least you could have done it.
Speaker 2 (39:51):
At least you could have done us brought cake.
Speaker 1 (39:56):
It didn't work well from Adams.
Speaker 2 (39:59):
I say, ladies and gentlemen, because Bill had a birthday
a while back here and we didn't get to say
happy birthday on the show because he had a bunch
of things going on. But we're glad to have him back.
You'd have been really proud, though. Our producer Steve filled
in for you real well, which is pretty trying when
(40:21):
you're running all the stuff on Rumble where we are
alive and trying to do all that, but he did
pretty good, and he learned how to say no, just
like Susie just did for you.
Speaker 1 (40:30):
Bill.
Speaker 2 (40:31):
All right, here's a joke.
Speaker 4 (40:34):
Bill.
Speaker 2 (40:34):
I think we told this a long time ago, but
I figured out this guy might have been you. They
were sitting in a concert hall and the ensemble had
just finished playing for a moment, and a guy jumped
up and said, piccolold players a son of a bit,
(40:59):
and everybody looked around. Nobody could see who jumped up
and said it, and they were looking, and the director
said who said that? And nobody would answer. So finally
a guy stands up and I think this was Bill,
and he said, no, I didn't. I didn't call him
(41:20):
a son of a bitch. And I'm not sitting next
to the guy that called him a son of a bitch.
But I want to know who called that son of
a bitch A piccolo player? Tell me that's not hard,
all right. I thought that was funny because they thought
(41:41):
he was the guy that did it. All right. So
we had a husband and a wife at work a farm,
and the husband's wife just nagged him from son up
to sundown. And the only rec Lucy could get was
he would go out and plow the field with his mule.
(42:06):
And one day they were out plowing the field and
the wife came out and brought him a sandwich and
something to drink, and he thought, wow, maybe you know,
maybe things are going to be different, and he said
him and the mule went up behind it under a
shade tree so he could have lunch and the mule
could rest, and they both get some shade, and she
(42:28):
started nagging and nagging and nagging, and she just wouldn't stop,
and finally the mule turned around and kicked her with
both feet in the head and she died. So at
the funeral, the pastors up there doing all the stuff,
(42:48):
and it was a lot of friends and people showed
up in the community. And the pastor noticed that a
woman would come up and she'd say something to the
husband and he would shake his head yes. And then
he noticed the men would come up and every time
(43:08):
they said something, the husband would shake his head no.
And he was getting really curious, but the service is
going on. He couldn't do anything at the time, so
he finally waited till the service was over, and he
went up to the husband and he said, I got
to know what's going on? He said, I was watching
during the whole service, and the women were coming up,
(43:32):
and whatever they said to you, you always shook your
head yes. And the men would come up and whatever
they said to you, you always shook your head no.
So the gentleman said, well, the women would come up
and say, doesn't she look lovely? Or her hairs and eyes?
And I would agree, he said, but every one of
(43:54):
the men wanted to know if the mule was for sale.
All right, guys, I know that's funny. Steve probably fell
out of his chair laughing. All right. Another one. A
husband and wife are talking. They got three kids, and
(44:15):
a husband tells the wife he said, you know, I'm
really concerned our middle son doesn't share any interest with
me at all. We can hardly talk. We just don't
get along. And she said, quit worrying about it. He's
not yours. All right, You guys are killing me here.
(44:36):
That was funny. That was funny, all right? All right.
A wife and a husband went out to dinner, nice
fancy restaurant, and when the food came, the husband started
eating and the wife said, wait a minute. When we're
at home, you always pray. He said, yeah, here I do,
(44:58):
but here I know the chef can book. All right.
You guys are killing my jokes. You're killing them. They
were good, all right. I was looking at the political
world this week, and they came out after telling us
(45:21):
that there was thousands and thousands of files and films
and all kinds of stuff about Epstein, And in the
last couple of days they have said, now, why are
we talking about it? President Trump even said that, and
(45:44):
Pam Bondi said there was just a few things and
it was this kitty porn that he had. And I'm thinking, okay,
wait a minute. I know they think we're gullible, but
there's a lady in prison. I think she got twenty
years for child sex trafficking. He was in jail and
(46:09):
they said he committed suicide, which nobody seems to believe.
And now all of a sudden, there's nothing there. Why
would she be in jail for twenty years. So my
own gut feeling said, there's something going on here. We're
(46:29):
not being told the truth, and you can't go from
thousands and thousands of stuff and we're going through it
and we got to protect the victims. To all of
a sudden there's nothing here, and now they say Epstein
didn't he did commit suicide, and they're wrapping it up,
(46:49):
and I kind of feel like they forgot to show
the movie. But maybe it's just me. Maybe I'm suspicious
because we've been lied to about so many any things
for so long. But even in the the news that
is very favorable to this administration, they had a lot
(47:10):
to say in the last couple of days that this
isn't adding up. They don't buy it. So maybe it's
not just me.
Speaker 9 (47:18):
Susie, Well, you shouldn't have called them me, you know,
I Trump, But uh, I'm not happy. It makes me
want to say, Wow, somebody's going the deep state again.
(47:41):
If there's nothing, why is Maxwell in prison? If all
of it is is porn, child porn, when do they
arrest all those people? I'm disgusted. Tom Finton with Judicial
Watch an article came out and the headline was Dan
(48:05):
Bonzino and Cashpitel absorbed by the deep State. And I
never liked Pam Bondy. I didn't want her pointed in
the first place. I knew what she was and was
all about in Florida. No, it stinks to high Heaven.
(48:26):
And when I heard Trump say that what's wrong with you?
You bring him up again? How stupid does he think
we are?
Speaker 2 (48:39):
Yeah? I was really surprised because one of the things
that came out in the last couple of days is
they now say there is no client list, but everybody
knows there is one. So who on that client list
is powerful enough and rich enough? Because I have a
feeling it would have cleaned out Washington, d C.
Speaker 9 (49:01):
And Hollywood one word Massade, mm hmm.
Speaker 2 (49:09):
Interesting, Bill, What do you think about all this?
Speaker 1 (49:16):
We have business as usual. I think we're just the
period of euphoria that we anticipated change. I think that's
probably over. Yeah, I don't know. I was thinking of
(49:38):
the day about mister Obama running for president saying he
was going to have the most transparent administration in the
history of this country. Well, you can't shine light through bs,
that's true. Well, the transparency is you know, No, people
(50:03):
can't deal with the honesty. What was it, uh, that
line that that Jack Nicholson said in a Few Good
Men about the honesty You couldn't handle the honesty. Yeah,
I think that's kind I know where we are with it.
They just figured we can't handle the honesty. So you
(50:23):
don't need to know.
Speaker 2 (50:25):
But what blows in my mind is they told all
of us there's a client list and all these films
and files. And now when I heard Trump say that,
I was very disappointed because he's done a lot of
good things and that one is going to be one
(50:47):
that everybody's going to migrate to and try to figure
out what's wrong because the now the mainstream media and
nobody on the left is saying anything, but the regular media,
the people that are pretty good supporters of anybody that's
a conservative and a Republican and decent, you know, they
(51:12):
were blown away and it was on every channel. So
I don't know what's going on, but I feel cheated
and disrespected, you know, like they think we're too stupid,
Like you said, what are you gonna you can't handle
the truth?
Speaker 9 (51:29):
But I've heard that about eighty five percent of Congress
is on that list, So that's one thing to consider.
And you know there's you know, dignitaries from around the
world that's on the list. Several years ago, the flight
log for you know, Lolita Island Epstein's place was put
(51:56):
on the internet and I downloaded it because I said,
this is going to go away, so I still had that.
It's on my desk. Doc.
Speaker 2 (52:10):
I'll tell you what to show you at the difference
here P Diddy, who I think his worst crime is
that rap music. It's been in prison a long time,
and they finally had a trial and they threw out
all the really important stuff and they got him on
a couple of things convicted, but they're not even letting
(52:32):
him out now. They're keeping him in till October when
they feel like having a sentencing. So that's a big deal.
This man can't even get out of jail. And somebody
that killed somebody, I don't remember it was an illegal immigrant,
just had something happened with their trial today where they
(52:54):
said he may get off and everybody and their brother
knows he's guilty. So you can't tell what's going on anymore.
But this Epstein stuff and her being in prison in
twenty years and I don't know how long he was
going to be there, and all the stuff we were
told when they first got their hands on all this stuff,
(53:16):
and now it's all gone. There's nothing there, no client list.
Speaker 9 (53:20):
I mean, let's don't forget that they erased one minute
of his cell video and they left up in the
top right hand corner. Steve's going to understand this more
the edit menu. So a minute of the video that
(53:42):
they released with there is no file. Yeah, it stinks
to high Heaven.
Speaker 2 (53:50):
Yeah, and Bill said it, well, same old stuff happening again.
But I thought we got past that. I thought maybe
we had turned the corner. And the only thing I
could think of is too many of them are involved,
and too many foreign dignitaries and important people around the
world that if you drain the swamp, there won't be
(54:11):
nobody showing up for work up there. So I don't
know what's going on, but it's very suspicious. And the
news media that I watched, and I watch a few
different channels, all of them are saying what we're saying.
Something's not right, and everybody was very upset, so really,
(54:34):
really really sad that they think we're that stupid. I'm
just fed up with politics and they keep talking about
California and Newsome and those people out there. Have so
many restrictions in California and LA and La County to
(54:59):
rebuild your home that only a couple have been rebuilt.
But New Something today announced one hundred and one million
dollars that he's going to fund low class kind of housing,
you know, the kind where you put in a bunch
of apartments and you make the rent real cheap. In Palisades. Well,
(55:24):
Palisades was a pretty nice I don't know if it
was middle or upper class or what, but it seemed
pretty damn nice when they showed it before and after
the fire. And they're not letting them rebuild. But he's
going to put in low cost housing in their neighborhood.
(55:48):
And he's and he can't eat. There's budget so bad.
He's begging the president for money while they're bad mouthing.
I'm saying, they're not helping ice, So it's bad. I mean,
politics normally sucks, but right now it's it's really putting
on a show to let you see how evil and
(56:09):
corrupt these people have become. And I laugh every time
when these idiots say our democracy. How do you get
elected and not know that this is a republic. How
can you be that stupid and think this is a
democracy when it certainly is not, and it was never
(56:31):
intended to be. And they're running the country and making
decisions for us. I don't think so, all right, anything
for we get closer to breakers, is he yep? Oh,
come on, I know I heard Bill female voice, Bill,
You've ruined everybody. I hope you're proud. Everybody knows what.
Speaker 1 (56:55):
I think done a spectacular job.
Speaker 2 (57:00):
Yeah, you got them saying no and nothing nothing more.
That's so funny. Uh yeah, I'm just I guess. You know,
I thought when this bill went through and they weren't
going to attack Social Security and they were getting away
from that EV mandates and some other law, some other
(57:24):
executive orders that are kind of come law, I thought
that would be a good thing. And then you know,
you had all these political judges playing president and trying
to block everything he did. Well, the Supreme Court's kicking button,
taking names and the and the last one, the Supreme
Court said federal judges cannot do this stuff. So what happens.
(57:47):
They just passed the bill and one of the things
that went into affect a new law. Uh, this woman
judge says she blocked it. It's not an executive order,
it's the law passed by the Senate and the House.
(58:09):
And they still got to deal with her. So the
Supreme Court just got done saying don't do this, and
she did it anyway, So I don't know. The swamp
may be so deep that you can't ever clean it out.
And I'm just blown away. Bill, you got a weekly
topic up your sleeve?
Speaker 1 (58:29):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (58:29):
Kind of well, I kind of hope. So, especially since
you didn't bring cake and susy, you got a recipe
up your sleeve.
Speaker 9 (58:44):
Yep, I got one.
Speaker 2 (58:47):
It's not funny, Bill, Uh, not funny. Shame for shame
for shame. Who used to say that ComBar pile, Yeah,
gomber pile. That was funny. He had the strangest voice
and when he sang it was amazing. I don't know,
(59:08):
I don't understand that at all. All right, guys, well,
we were a little late going to break last time,
so we're going to go to break a few seconds
early this time to offset it. Ladies and gentlemen, this
is doctor Krupa's Natural Health Hours, and we have touched
on water and a little bit of politics, because politics
seems to be getting involved in our lives, like that
(59:30):
flood just recently. I hope I'm wrong about some of
the things that I think, but they keep proving these
conspiracy theories right, and that's scary. So anyway, Steve and
Susy and Bill and myself. We'll all be right back
after this break. Please listen to our sponsors.
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Speaker 2 (01:00:54):
You've heard me te Susy about not knowing the company's
name and putting tequila and her t. Well, the company
name really isn't Ranchers and Dancers. It is Renovation and
Design eight three zero three seven seven two one three one,
and she likes her tea plane. By the way, what
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and call Renovation and Design eight threes zero three seven
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Speaker 7 (01:02:05):
Wasn't a hacking to.
Speaker 11 (01:02:06):
You did not show with, and if I ever heard
of you, I didn't do with. If you think God
on't care, then you're misted kid. My little was always there,
(01:02:33):
but now my heart breaks.
Speaker 7 (01:02:36):
It old baby by a lot of clay letty slip
bay call yesterday.
Speaker 2 (01:02:53):
Oh bab bab.
Speaker 7 (01:02:56):
I got be some blow are not ready? A lot
of crin.
Speaker 2 (01:03:12):
Those I believe in you.
Speaker 7 (01:03:15):
From the BEG. I'm not our logos true.
Speaker 4 (01:03:24):
Now it's all.
Speaker 7 (01:03:27):
Baby, cry it away.
Speaker 2 (01:03:41):
All right. We are back. Welcome back to doctor Cooper's
Natural Health Hours, and we've got Bill. We're ready to
do his weekly topic. So we're gonna go right to him. Bill,
take it away.
Speaker 1 (01:04:03):
It was kind of an interesting discussion I had was
from friends a few days ago. That got me kind
of thinking about about this particular area. And these people
(01:04:24):
were talking about a friend of theirs who was a
young woman. I'm thinking probably and I don't know this one,
but she from what they were saying, she was probably
in her mid thirties, been married, was not currently had
a couple of children that were teenagers well into their
(01:04:45):
teenage years fifteen sixteen, and was living with a guy,
which was just fine. But this guy apparently was telling
her what she could do, she could do.
Speaker 5 (01:05:02):
Where she could do, she couldn't go any wherever that
isn't known where she was, he was, she had had
high colonies. And because I had said thoughts years in
my in my practice and of course before real and
(01:05:23):
the question that came to mind was why why an
attractive man who didn't like them? And accord to Kara questions,
because there is one that has now why why are
some men attracted to women who don't like men?
Speaker 1 (01:05:44):
And always.
Speaker 5 (01:05:46):
Around?
Speaker 1 (01:05:47):
What leaves all of the relationships and relationships which are
essentially destructive struck it to one person and probably two
in the long run, but one person anyway. And the
other more recent term was a toxic relationship that's kind
(01:06:10):
of was the buzzword in my business for a while.
It was a toxic relationship. Well, what is what is
a toxic? What is what does toxic mean? It's it's
a poison and it destroys, it destroys a personality. And
you know, you deal uh, you deal with with health
(01:06:31):
issues that were destructive, are destructive? How do we approach that?
You know, we've all had that. I think in our
lives we've all had unhealthy relationship relationships which are damaging
to us. And sometimes we were probably in relationships that
we damaged other people. I would prefer to think that
(01:06:56):
we didn't do it intentionally, and I think a lot
of a lot of relationships there is there.
Speaker 5 (01:07:03):
Is a lot of technology involved with destroying another person.
Speaker 1 (01:07:08):
And my question in a psychological boy of you, where
where does that come from?
Speaker 5 (01:07:15):
And why.
Speaker 1 (01:07:18):
Why do people do that? Why do destroy other people
once once more to come back to because you're basically
everything that we are and that we do happen in
the first five years. What we saw as as children
sometimes is very small children. A year less than a year,
(01:07:43):
a little more than determine determine much of our lives.
For the rest of our lives and all of these
these kinds of unhealthy relationships they happen. What what do
we do when we're when we're in one? And then,
as I say, we've all been in them, but we're
(01:08:08):
looking for things that when we're around somebody that is
not being a positive influence online? How do we A
lot of times it's so subtle that we don't even
realize it until we're in so deep that this that
we've got to dig our way out. But you know,
(01:08:29):
we've we've all been around people that and I think
first first meetings, we've all we've all known people that
we know right away that we're going.
Speaker 4 (01:08:37):
To get along with and that we like.
Speaker 1 (01:08:40):
And we've all been around people that we know right
away that we don't like. And how do we what
what is that feeling of I don't like? What is that?
How does how do we recognize it? Well? Is there attention?
Is there is there contention in conversation? Is there is
this a wa where the other person's always got to
(01:09:02):
talk over us and always got to have an answer,
always has to know just a little bit more, has
to add an opinion. People who have those kinds of
controlinges usually had, and I think it's this it's a
little too a psychobabbly, but usually had very tough childhoods.
(01:09:22):
And I don't say that as an excuse. I don't
care what kind of childhood you have. What are you
doing to do about it? Now? Does it work for you?
If it works for you, get out of my office.
If you want to do something about it, we can
do something about it. But ultimately it comes down to
that person having to deal with their own stress and
their own anger, and their own bitterness native things they
(01:09:48):
did they push off on to anybody who has a relationship.
And you know, when we talk about relationships, typically the
term is used for couples, marriages, you know, but it
goes far beyond that, because unhealthy relationships can and do
(01:10:10):
certainly occur in uh, non intimate relationships, in friendships, in
their personal kind of personal relationships, acquaintanceships, businesses. We've all
worked in businesses where there's always some somebody that's got
to got to be a problem, and how does that
(01:10:31):
affect us?
Speaker 2 (01:10:31):
And how do we.
Speaker 1 (01:10:34):
How do we how do we deal with that? But
that for a moment, you just you know, as we
used to call intimate relationships where where you know, husband
and wife, boyfriend, girlfriend, that that kind of closeness. So
many times seeing both men and women who stay in
(01:10:57):
damaging relationships, not just emotionally damaging or intellectually damaging, but
also physically damaging. I mean, how many shelters are around
for abused women or abused men? I mean, I had
a patient before I came down to this little slab
(01:11:17):
of paradise called Southeast Texas. Was a fine guy. He
was I'm going to death him in mid forties. I
don't remember exactly, doesn't matter, but he was blind and
he lived by himself for a long long time, but
(01:11:38):
he had flowers of a gal to live with who
beat him up physically as well as emotionally. And I said,
why why do you stay at Why don't you get
out of that? He said, I'm a blind guy. Who
(01:12:00):
the hell else is going to want to be around
a blind guy? I didn't have an answer to that.
But I think a lot of people who are in
destructive relationships stay in them because he they think they're
(01:12:21):
they're not they're not worthy of anything else, that this
is what they deserve, or because it's just too much
work to go off and start all, start a whole
new relationship somewhere or some place else with somebody else,
not realizing that the change in relationships has to start
(01:12:43):
with number one. You know, if you're not somebody beat up,
why what's your We look at unhealthy relationships. I think
one of the first questions they have to ask ourselves
is what's my part of it? What have I done?
Let this develop and let this continue. Nobody's making me
(01:13:06):
stay here, nobody's forcing me to be part of this.
Speaker 2 (01:13:11):
How do we.
Speaker 1 (01:13:13):
How do we begin to develop the apparently unattainable inner
strength to say, hey, you know, no more of this.
There's a door use it. There was a TV show
and I've been able to use this line once, and
I keep waiting for another opportunity to use it. But
(01:13:33):
the guy was in his office, and the office jerk
showed up, and the guy at the desk was busy
and he was doing stuff, and then jerk was talking
and talking, and the guy at the desk said, could
you please close the door? And the jerk started to
shut the door, and the guy at the desk said no, no, no,
from the other side. Oh, what a great answer. I've
(01:13:57):
been waiting decades to use that again. It's just such
a fine line. But where do we draw the line,
Where do we say enough of this stuff is enough
of it? We have to be able to somehow move
past the usual responses to being in an unhealthy relationship.
(01:14:19):
And usual responses are we withdraw, we shut down, we
shut up, we just take it, we just we don't.
We really don't become an active part of that relationship
by responding to the kind of anger that we're being
(01:14:39):
faced with, except to just as I said, you know,
it's like the clan to just close the lid down
and shut it out. But that really doesn't take care
of the issue. We can't fix the other person, We
can't make the other person change, but we can begin
to change ourselves. But I think the first step is
having to realize that where we are are is not
(01:15:01):
a good place, and then to begin to somehow repiece
the courage to do something about it. Because it ain't
easy McGee, which is the line from River McGee and Mulley.
It ain't easy, McGee. We don't want to. I can't
(01:15:22):
think for so many people there are such a deep
fear of being alone, because if you're alone, you're a
failure because in our culture, if you're not part of
a relationship a family that you haven't, you haven't made it.
Speaker 2 (01:15:45):
Where it is.
Speaker 1 (01:15:46):
Where it is kind of headed for me is that
while the focus has always been in my business about
about personal relationships, there is a broader perspective, of a
cultural perspective. Because we can have unhealthy relationships with as
(01:16:06):
I should our bosses or people will work with it.
We can have unhealthy relationships with our government, with other
members of our culture, of our society. Do how do
we begin to understand that we have to first of all,
in any relationship, we have to pick our battles. If
(01:16:28):
there's one kind of rule that say to me over
the years to be always there is if we're careful
about picking our battles, the relationship has so much better
chances or vival if we just we're back and fight
at every opportunity. With God, you're playing their game, you're
not playing your game. How do we pick our battles?
(01:16:51):
How do we redefine what's important to us? Because I
think a lot of times when tough stuff happens in
our lives, it happens because we need to redefine our
sense of values. Maybe we've slipped a little, maybe we've
changed a little bit, Maybe our environment has changed a little,
our cultural environment has changed a little bit. How do
(01:17:13):
we how do we get our footing back? And I
think a lot of folks, or are you you were
talking about this just few minutes ago, a lot of
folks are kind of all of a sudden coming to
grips with the disillusionment that we felt in the last
eight or twelve years before this administration, that what's happened? Something,
(01:17:39):
something I'm not good is going on here? How do
we how do we begin to to find ourselves again?
Speaker 7 (01:17:46):
With all that?
Speaker 1 (01:17:48):
It's a very difficult question. And I you know, as
I said, there's really the only answers that we have
are without ourselves. How do we decide, beyond the opinions
of others what really matters to us? What's important? What
(01:18:09):
are my values? What am I What am I willing
to put up with?
Speaker 2 (01:18:13):
And what am I not?
Speaker 1 (01:18:14):
How am I picking my battles here? Am I going
to Am I going to take on something that there's
no way I can change? Or am I going to
begin to work on something that I can do something about?
In a lot of track that starts. As I said
with number one on I begin to redefine who I
am and what I want.
Speaker 5 (01:18:33):
Early in.
Speaker 1 (01:18:35):
My second academic career, we we're talking about marriages, and
that was, in fact one of the areas of specialties,
this marriage and the family, which is basically a therapeutic
discipline that's pretty much pretty much standalone. It requires its
(01:18:57):
own vocabulary, it has its own kind of a series
and approaches itself, but instructure. At that point said, you know,
there are that any marriage is a sacred contract. It
is a sacred contract between two people. A typically sacred
(01:19:20):
involves some aspect of a church, but there's a personal
sacredness that is It is certainly, I think at least
an equal and sometimes even greater part of a marriage
than a religious aspect of it. But at any rate,
a sacred contract between two people. And there are three
(01:19:46):
three things, three aspects that can nullify that contract. Three
things that can occur within our marriage that can nullify
that contract. They all begin with a addiction. You marry
somebody and all of a sudden they begin to You
(01:20:07):
begin to understand that they drink a lot more than
you thought they did, or they used drugs, and you
didn't know about the addiction is one of those things
that can nullify that contract. Adultery, Yeah, where's the respect,
where's the trust? Where is the where is the feeling
(01:20:28):
of safety? The last one is abuse. An abuse can
be who think of abuse as being physical, but certainly
in my business abuse was as much evident as emotional
intellectual abuse as it was physical abuse. Okay, those are
three things that can can really destroy that contract, Which
(01:20:52):
if you look at that in a larger context, in
a societal cultural context, how do we as people, as
members of a society, this society, this country, this the
United States, this America, how do we how do we
(01:21:12):
deal with these three things? Because they're certainly very much present,
and we have addiction all over the place, addiction of
politicians who refuse to get out of office, who refuse
to listen to what the people want, who refuse to
to do anything other than the way they've been doing
it forever, adultry, Have they betrayed us? Have we felt
(01:21:37):
betrayal on the part of our leadership? Sure? Sure? Abuse, Yeah,
intellectual emotional abuse. We can't believe anything anymore. This is true,
not only of that kind of mega level of our
government and our society and ourselves. But it can be
true of our boss, it can be true of the
(01:21:58):
place we work. You know, the things that we look
at in my in my late Greek business as being
personal issues are merely mirrors of much larger, greater issues.
But they're all there. And I think if we begin
to recognize these kinds of things, it can kind of
(01:22:22):
give us the kind of give us permission to say, yeah,
no we don't need we don't need you in office anymore,
or no I don't need to work for you. Where
where do our values lie? What do we what do
we really believe in? So unhealthy relationships, toxic relationships has
(01:22:42):
to start at home, has to start with number one.
We got to learn how to protect ourselves, how to
take care of what we believe in our own show respect,
respect others. But we you know, how can we respect
others if we don't respect ourselves? How do we How
(01:23:04):
do we give ourselves a permission to say, yeah, this
isn't work and what am I going to do about it?
And then and then, as one of the thing, as
you will find out DOC when you when you get
to be this ancient, is it one of the things
about about the end of our life is that we
have to at some point begin to confront, to confront
(01:23:29):
the things that we said we were going to do
and didn't. Right, we have to be able to confront
that inconsistency. Okay, what what do I readly? What did
I really mean?
Speaker 2 (01:23:42):
I mean?
Speaker 1 (01:23:42):
How many people have have I said? And you know
that I'm thinking two of them? And of course there
are Navy guys, because Navy guys say about everything. Oh man,
if there is a nuclear war, I would drive right
into it. I wouldn't try and get away from it.
I'd r drive into the blast. So okay, would you
really Yeah, we have a lot of goals that we
(01:24:03):
say we're going to do, but what are we going
to do? We have to begin to confront these inconsistencies
in our lives. That helps define who and what we are.
And by defining who and what we are, I think
gives us the strength to say enough, you know nothing
that means we drop out? Maybe does that mean we
(01:24:23):
kind of go away or hide or do whatever we do? Yeah, well,
maybe if that works for you? Or do we begin
to begin to really understand that if we can make
a sumptence to change with ourselves. Other people can see
that and hopefully benefit from it. Oh yeah, there we go.
Speaker 2 (01:24:42):
Wow, Bill's back. Thank God. I think you said it well.
For most people, even in a bad relationship, it is
so difficult to walk away. First off, it's like it's
like moving where you got to sell all your stuff
(01:25:04):
and pack up, and uh, that's a nightmare. So I
think a lot of people just stay because it's so
much easier. And if you do, like you said, pick
your medals, maybe you get by. I always said the
best relationship needs two houses. That way you can see
(01:25:25):
each other when you want and escape when you don't want.
And I have a friend that is doing that exact
same thing. Him and his wife each have their own house.
And I knew him for many years working out of Budweiser,
and that's what they were doing. They didn't get a divorce,
they still saw each other, but they had each had
(01:25:49):
their own home. Uh, that wouldn't work for a lot
of people.
Speaker 1 (01:25:53):
And we talked about people idea.
Speaker 2 (01:25:58):
Yeah, well we talked last week. Susie's about the only
person her and Huntley that I know that it's never
been through the horror of a divorce, and it's it's
I'm so glad that they haven't and that I know them,
but I don't know many. It's like everybody I know.
(01:26:19):
It's got step mom and stepdad and stepkids and you
know my ex and it's just it's very sad. But
I think it's very difficult for people to walk away. Susie.
Speaker 5 (01:26:32):
This is.
Speaker 2 (01:26:34):
Probably something you experienced when you were younger and dating,
but you've been married and it's been a good thing,
so probably a little harder for you to even relate to.
Thank God.
Speaker 9 (01:26:48):
Yeah, I you know, people ask me. I think it's funny.
Who have ever thought that it would be a question
you've never been through divorce? No? And they always you know,
they they're curious and it's just.
Speaker 4 (01:27:06):
And right.
Speaker 9 (01:27:09):
My comment is I've only had want patience enough to
train one.
Speaker 2 (01:27:14):
Man, poor Hunley. I don't think we could send him
enough sympathy. Guards That reminds me of this. This guy
was talking to his friend and he said, whatever happened
to that witch you were dating? He said, I married her.
(01:27:36):
You know that guy felt bad.
Speaker 4 (01:27:38):
Bill.
Speaker 2 (01:27:39):
I think in your field, with the consoling, I think
that's where people really need to go when they're in
those bad relationships because you have a way about you
and the experience and maybe you can put him on
the right track.
Speaker 4 (01:27:58):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (01:27:58):
And you brought up a really good about how we
grew up. I grew up in a physically violent home,
and as soon as I could, I joined the Navy
and left. And six months after I did, they got
a damn divorce. And they were both good people in
(01:28:21):
their own right, they just didn't belong together. And it
was horrible, and I swore I would never get in
those kind of fights, and I never have. I've never
laid a hand, And it was because of watching all
the things I watched growing up. And it was rough
(01:28:43):
and I couldn't believe it here. I joined the Navy
to get away, and six months later they got the
damn divorce that I prayed for. So but they were
good people, and they both changed over the years, and
I think they both looked back and wished they were
still together there, but it was too late. But some
(01:29:03):
people do get back together after they've figured it out
and changed. And I think people can change it.
Speaker 1 (01:29:10):
Can it can't happen?
Speaker 2 (01:29:12):
Is he any last thing before we go to break?
Speaker 9 (01:29:18):
And well, you know, it's a marriage is not always
you know, a piece of cake. There's you know, there's.
Speaker 1 (01:29:27):
Times when lots lots of kinds of cake.
Speaker 9 (01:29:31):
Lots of times, well sometimes it's chocolate cake. But you
know it's really hard, you know, when you're an independent person. Uh,
there's there's times when you know, Holly has been around
too much and I'm like, can't you go somewhere? So,
(01:29:54):
you know, sometimes you need that at least I do
that private quiet time. And you know, during that private
quiet time, it's like somebody hooks me up to a
battery charger and then I'm buying. And so I would
say that that would be one of the things that's helpful.
Just recognize your private time and don't feel guilty about
(01:30:19):
wanting it.
Speaker 1 (01:30:21):
It's very important. I've other than been a believer for
many years and in separate vacations, I think people should
be able to go away for a long weekend by themselves.
The thing. I think that's a very good thing to do.
It's together the stuffing the other day. There are three
three poison arrows in a marriage. First one is sex,
(01:30:45):
the second one is money, and the third one is retirement.
I know many relationships too well together for many years
and he or she retired, but that was it. They'd
like that, you know, it was fine to come home
to it. I don't want you around twenty four to seven. Huhs,
(01:31:05):
that don't work. Absolutely, we need to have yep, we
need to have that private time alone times. It's very important.
Togetherness can be can be as destructive as it can
be constructive.
Speaker 2 (01:31:22):
Yeah. Well, you know they say the reason women live
longer is they're not married to women.
Speaker 1 (01:31:31):
Or the other side of that is that the reason
that men died before their wives do it because they can.
Speaker 2 (01:31:37):
Yeah, Al Bundy said, because we want to. Yeah, we
want you all right, guys, it is break time. Little
welcome to our little funny stuff here and we will
be right back after break. You'll see Susie bringing up
her recipe of the week and hopefully it's got booze
(01:32:00):
in it. We need some and anyway we've got Susie, Bill,
myself and our producer Steve behind the curtain will be
right back. Please listen to our sponsors.
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Speaker 7 (01:33:17):
Not if you feel that you can't go.
Speaker 12 (01:33:21):
Because all of your puppies God, and you're not spelling
much confusion until you get this is just an illusion
and your world the rodd is coming an.
Speaker 7 (01:33:37):
Don we just help me without the billing. Will the
lad that was shout with you with the see your
(01:34:01):
food when you be out and about to give up?
Speaker 5 (01:34:11):
God, and you well go and you.
Speaker 7 (01:34:21):
And you need and don't it? Don't we have.
Speaker 2 (01:34:37):
All right? We are back and this is the time
where we like to help Susie after she's had the
tequila and her tea with the company name, and we
know for a fact that the name of the company
is redone and dazzling Susie.
Speaker 9 (01:34:59):
That uh so, that's kind of funny. It's uh, I'm sorry,
I'm not I don't think very well today. I don't
even name my company Renovation Renovation and Design Construction. When
the Texas Hill Country pray for our neighbors right next door,
(01:35:22):
it's uh, it's heart wrenching. It's been tough, I mean kids, boss,
But anyways, keep us in your prayers. We've got people
that we know. My son's volunteering, and it's tough on everyone.
Kind of makes the company business not be very important.
(01:35:44):
You can go to doccrouper dot com on the home page.
Scroll down, I think it's only about page scroll down
and you'll see a link to our business and we
can be reached at eight three zero three seven seven
two one three one.
Speaker 2 (01:36:00):
All right, well, take it away with your recipes. I
know you've been a bad week up there, but you
seem to come to life on the show, and I
think it's good therapy, So take it away.
Speaker 9 (01:36:14):
So one of the flowers that I've been using for
I don't know, a couple of years.
Speaker 1 (01:36:20):
Is spelt.
Speaker 9 (01:36:22):
Now I've really grown to like it. It's it's got
an earthy, nutty flavor. It just when you when you
eat anything made with spelt, it just feels like, you know,
nutrition has just thrown a bomb right at your body.
It's the only way I could explain it. So I
don't think there's anything any better than you know, spelt
(01:36:44):
with chocolate chips. So this is sprouted spelt chocolate chip muffins.
There's some reason I like muffins. I think it's like
a grabbing go kind of thing, you know, and it
keeps me from skipping breakfast because I'm bad about that.
(01:37:06):
So there's two cups of spelt flour and you can
use the sprouted or you can use their all purpose.
A cup of whole cane sugar and I don't like
that it says in parentheses or brown sugar. You know,
when do that? You don't need that. A cup of
the whole cane sugar, teaspoon of baking soda, half a
(01:37:28):
teaspoon of salt, one egg, half a cup of milk,
and half a cup of greek yogurt and half a
cup of olive oil, and it calls for a cup
of chocolate chips. You can use the chocolate chip chunks,
large chocolate chips, you know, the little minis doesn't doesn't matter,
(01:37:51):
and so you're gonna preheat your other four hundred degrees.
So it's a little bit different, you know than a
regular or even whole organic flour, which would probably be
it three point fifty. But you just add to a
large mixing bowl all of your dry ingredients and then
(01:38:17):
you start adding your wedding ingredients, the egg, milk, yogurt,
olive oil, and then at the very end just fold
the chocolate chips in and just don't over a mix.
It does say to line a muff and pan with
parchment paper cups.
Speaker 2 (01:38:37):
I like the.
Speaker 9 (01:38:40):
Sorry, I like the brown ones, the unbleached ones. I
just feel better. And then you just spin it into
each one of those little cups until it's just to
the top and twenty minutes, I mean, that's really it.
You know, check them with the toothpick, make sure that done.
You don't want to overcook them, so probably check them
(01:39:04):
in about eighteen minutes and then you let them cool
for you know, a few minutes, five minutes if you can.
I don't think there's a it's carved into stone, but
I mean most of us could wait five minutes. And
like always, I'm going to put this at doctor Cooper's
(01:39:26):
Natural Health hours at at Rumble. You know, go over there,
and you know, give us a follow on Rumble, give
us a like on our thumbs up on the video.
We'd appreciate it.
Speaker 2 (01:39:40):
Well, good stuff. If you had me at Chocolate, I
was there. I saw some coffee that said chocolate bourbon pecan.
That's got to be good, and you ought to you
ought to see here. I noticed we've got a really
cool thing where you scan the what do you call it?
Speaker 9 (01:40:03):
Pure?
Speaker 2 (01:40:05):
Yeah, you scan that and you could set up an account.
That's pretty cool. And there's a great thing on Rumble
right now with the picture of you in the kitchen
and looks like you're the boss over all the poor
guys with tall hats and white coats.
Speaker 9 (01:40:21):
Yeah, but they're all looking at their phone, so I'm
not a very good boss.
Speaker 2 (01:40:26):
And then you're giving the evil eye to me. I'd
all of a sudden jumped up in the picture.
Speaker 6 (01:40:32):
There.
Speaker 2 (01:40:33):
Good stuff. You guys have really got some great stuff,
and I'm proud of you, Susie. I know it's been
really tough, and this flood thing being so close to
you even worse. And God knows how many wonderful places
that are part of your stomping ground are damaged really bad.
(01:40:53):
And now New Mexico is getting hit. And I saw
a thing that you had posted about how the guy
admitted that they were seating even after the flood warning.
Speaker 9 (01:41:07):
Yeah, so sad, and that's that's the law. I mean,
the interview, I didn't like it. I got a call
from a good friend that works in Ken Patson's office
and she said, you want to be on a conference
call with that rainmaker CEO. And I said, oh, heck yeah.
(01:41:30):
And so I've got a link. Actually, I'm going to
go grab the link and I'm going to put it
into the comment section of today's show. But he admitted
so many things. He admitted that they seated that area
(01:41:50):
on the second, I'm kind of thinking that man might
need to hide somewhere.
Speaker 2 (01:42:01):
Well. The sad thing is why were they paying a
man to seed clouds and make it rain when we've
had too much rain? And maybe he's responsible for a
lot more than we know about. Up in Saint Louis,
where my family lives, not too far from the Mississippi River,
(01:42:23):
they've had rain so much that the Mississippi River's flooded
several times, but not like what we seen. You could
definitely tell the difference from Evidently, cloud seeding makes it
happen very fast, very hard, because when you jump twenty
six feet of water in less than an hour, that's
(01:42:44):
that's unbelievable, that's not nature. So very sad build as
you see that twenty six feet of water in less
than an hour, and he admitted it, and he was
needing the clouds.
Speaker 1 (01:43:00):
You know, people, peoples, the slash flood things. I mean,
it's always been a problem, even before all the seating.
But I mean, if you if you read diaries from
the eighteen seventies, eighteen eighties, eighteen nine out west and
some of the flash floods that happened out there that
miles miles away, you didn't even know it rained, and
(01:43:23):
all of a sudden, you've got twenty feet of water
coming down esher. It's in the hill country, it's it's
it's been that way for a long long time, and
even up and up in our part of the woods,
up up in the Saint Louis area, but where the
Missouri River comes into the Mississippi up north of Saint Louis,
(01:43:47):
as well as on some of the smaller rivers in
Missouri as well as the Mississippi. People have been building
these houses on these floodplains. You know what's going to happen.
Speaker 2 (01:43:59):
You know what going to happen.
Speaker 1 (01:44:01):
They keep building them. We get a flood, the government
gives them all kinds of money, the insurance people building
new houses. Another three or four years, another flood comes through,
just up in the up By Curve with some of
those places that were, you know, twenty yards away from
(01:44:21):
the river.
Speaker 4 (01:44:21):
You got to know.
Speaker 1 (01:44:24):
That floods happen. And I'm not saying that they the
people did. We just get too comfortable, We don't We
don't realize that nature doesn't always play by our rules.
And I you know, I've seen so many times up
in the Midwest that where tornadoes or floods happen, and
(01:44:44):
they happen regularly at the same kinds of places, and
it's almost as if they're encouraged to build there. I
think that people just make too much money rebuilding houses,
but the human costs is unforgivable. You know, these poor
people up up there with these kids that were lost.
It's just it's unbelievable.
Speaker 2 (01:45:08):
Yeah, and you're you're absolutely right. I can remember some
pretty good floods growing up as a kid from the Mississippi,
but I don't know if they were seating things back then.
This is a case where there was a flood warning
and the guy said he still was seating. I mean,
(01:45:33):
just unreal.
Speaker 9 (01:45:35):
That.
Speaker 2 (01:45:36):
And this Epstein stuff right now has got to make
everybody doubt the things that we've been told. So very sad,
very sad, Susie, what are they saying up there? Is
the river going back down?
Speaker 9 (01:45:57):
It's gone down quite a bit, it I think they
I think they finally found This is so hard. They
found three camp go or kids yesterday and they were siblings.
And I just sat there and you know, my mouth
(01:46:21):
hung open. I couldn't say anything. And you know, Bill
Mock can chime in on this. And I thought to myself,
after it sunk in, if it really sank in, how
do you sit in front of three caskets of your children?
How how do you do it?
Speaker 1 (01:46:42):
How do you do it, Well, I how do we
deal with it? That kind of grief in the in
the immensity of it is just unimaginable.
Speaker 2 (01:46:57):
I have never met of.
Speaker 1 (01:47:01):
A psychologist, a therapist who has anything to say to
something that that emmits.
Speaker 2 (01:47:10):
What how do you?
Speaker 1 (01:47:13):
How do you cope with that? And you look at
you look at history, and you look at at the wars,
and you look at things that have happened, and my God,
is this is? Is this what we are? How do
we deal with this stuff?
Speaker 9 (01:47:30):
Well, I will say this, I'm just very thankful for
this community. You know, someone said it best yesterday. It
was a man and a wife. They were pretty close
to Cam't Mystic and it was nighttime and there was
(01:47:56):
I can't remember if he said there was power or not,
but he's said that. You know, he just kept hearing
something and he went outside and well he went to
the window and he shined the light and he said
what he saw was unbelievable, that it was water as
far as he could see. And he helped his wife
(01:48:19):
and this is an older couple, get up into the attic.
He poured down, pulled down the attic stairs, helped her up,
and then he got up and he said, Okay, no
one knows who're in this attic. I need to text
someone that I can trust to to get this message
(01:48:42):
to someone. You know, we're in the attic, and here's
a description of our house. And uh he said that
the water was literally lapping at that door, that attic doors.
What the community is doing around here there, there's there's
(01:49:05):
people picking up anything that they could find, and and
they've got a Facebook page four items found along the Guadalupe.
And some lady found this little stuffed sheep. It was
(01:49:27):
in really bad shape. She took it home, she laundered it,
posted a picture. My son and his guys. Well, the
first day out, a DPS trooper told the first okay,
so on the fifth there was was it the fifth
(01:49:51):
or the evening of the fourth, the evening of the fourth,
we all started getting alert saying that there's another wall
of water coming, and so we had already sent that
to our son. So DPS, there's like one hundred and
(01:50:11):
seventeen of this guy, these guys, and they're just dividing
up into a couple of teams. And so when the
trooper pulled up, he said, more water can be coming,
you know, y'all, y'all need to get the higher grounds
and you know, y'all need to leave. He's like, no,
we're okay. And Trooper says, I can make you leave,
(01:50:34):
and my son said, good luck with that, and so
the water fortunately, you know, didn't another water wall didn't
appear again. But what I'm seeing, the Cajun Navy is here,
and Mountain North Carolina Mountain Mule Team is here, and
(01:50:59):
people heavy equipment. It doesn't matter if you have a wrench,
a business or what people are bringing in their equipment,
and people are donating you know, diesel like you wouldn't believe.
I just saw someone who's got a business up from here.
(01:51:20):
He does sand blasting and powder coating, and he's delivering
a sixteen foot trailer full of filled up gas cans
that people have been donating. So you know, the community
is pretty awesome here.
Speaker 2 (01:51:39):
Yeah. Well, we've always said if you leave people alone
and keep government out of their life, people take care
of things. In the old days, we didn't have anything
but each other and the people that would take care
of each other. And people are good. I think there's
(01:52:01):
many more good people in this world than bad. But
there will be some bad people. When it's been cleaned up,
there will be down there looting, and I hope that
they deal with them harshly. I think.
Speaker 9 (01:52:16):
There's a lot of people just doing that kind of thing,
trying to prevent the looting. I haven't heard anything about looting.
I did hear that someone set up a fake like
PayPal or you know, one of the venmo or whatever,
and I think that's been taken down. You know, as
(01:52:41):
a mom, I can remember, you know, my kids going
to summer camp, you know, every year, and you know,
I wrote their name with a short sharpie on the
labels of their new camp clothes. And you know, my
daughter would bring everything, but my husband, my son would
(01:53:01):
lose everything. And so I just took a sharpiend and
wrote their name, you know, on that tag. And kind
of hard to say, maybe I shouldn't, but my son
ran across a pair of little girl undergarments and it
had a name written on it. Well, he didn't want
to carry around the undergarments, so he tore the tag off,
(01:53:24):
and he was telling us that his wallet is literally was.
I think he's turned it all in full of little
camp kids clothing tags with names.
Speaker 2 (01:53:41):
How sad Well, it sounds like your son and his
group's doing a lot of good stuff, so.
Speaker 9 (01:53:48):
They haven't run him off. They say they're going to
and then they young.
Speaker 2 (01:53:52):
Yeah. Well the trouble is some people down there, I think,
live for this kind of stuff, and other people do
it because they've got a good heart. And it sounds
like your son and their group got good hearts. So
that's great.
Speaker 9 (01:54:08):
Yeah, they love that area. They're fishermen, you know that.
They just love that area. They love they we have
so many friends there.
Speaker 2 (01:54:16):
Yeah, that's good. Well, Bill, you got anything to close
up with?
Speaker 1 (01:54:21):
Nope, No, I think you're You're right. You're right about
these kinds of these kinds of events, and I'm thinking
of also about nine to eleven in New York and
all all of these kinds of horrible things. It really
brings out two kinds of people. It brings out people
(01:54:42):
with good hearts, and it brings out the kinds of
people that are trying to get get their own the luders,
the thieves. It brings out it brings out the bad guys,
and it brings out the good guys. But it brings
out more good guys than bad guys.
Speaker 2 (01:54:59):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:55:01):
One of the things that I find very moving about
all of this is the is the people who go
up to try to help, and who who can help,
and who give up their time and their jobs and
their families to try and bring some comfort and some
(01:55:22):
closure to the folks that really suffered with all of this.
It's it's there's something very reassuring to me about that.
Speaker 2 (01:55:31):
Yeah, and they're really good people don't need the spotlight,
they don't need the TV camera, and they don't need
a pat on the back. It's it's rewarding and they
know they're doing something good. I heard that they had
all kinds of chefs from all around showed up to
(01:55:52):
cook food for people. So that's that's pretty nice.
Speaker 9 (01:55:56):
One of the things that's happening is the search and
rescue people, and I want to I want to preface
what I said with or back up what I said
with Haunting and his best friend and the guys that
are helping them. They're not doing rescue. If they were
(01:56:18):
to find, you know, someone's body, they would not touch it.
They call the authorities. They've got the authorities numbers in
their phone. And I just want to make that clear
that they're not stepping over that that boundary, and I
(01:56:39):
don't think I did, you know, the first time around.
So when these guys are out there, uh, at some point,
you know, they'll take turns, taking breaks, go back to
the truck. They'll open up the truck door and there'll
be a pile of takeout food in bags and uh,
pizzas in boxes. They don't even have to ask for anything.
(01:57:02):
Tastes of water are set in the back end of
their truck. And I just wanted to make it clear
that they were not overstepping their boundary if they were
to find someone.
Speaker 2 (01:57:16):
Yeah, I think you did it really good the first time.
It's nice that you were coming back worried about that,
but I thought you did a great job. And I
don't I don't think anybody who heard you the first
time would have thought that they were doing anything like that.
They were helping out however they could so a great thing.
I guess. I guess he's got good parents. I don't
(01:57:39):
know would have thought, all right, well, Steve a really
great job behind the curtain with all that stuff in
the background, and you and you and Susie have become
a formidable team putting all this together. It's just it's
just fabulous, great job. And Bill, I'm so glad you're back.
(01:58:03):
We missed you. And like I said, Steve did a
great job. He knew how to say no just like
you do.
Speaker 1 (01:58:10):
So that part, you know, it's kind of like being
shot at. It's nice to be missed.
Speaker 2 (01:58:19):
Yeah, I remember this. This girl told me. She said,
if if you miss your ex, reload and shoot again.
I could picture that happening. I can picture that happened.
All right. Well, we're just about done, ladies and gentlemen. Uh,
(01:58:40):
it's been a rough time, uh in Texas and in
now New Mexico, and they're still fighting forest fires out
in California, and they've had flooding in a lot of
places up where my mom is in a I guess
you call it kind of an assistant. She has like
(01:59:00):
her own apartment, but they take care of her and
she goes to a place for meals. And anyway, the
road going there got washed out in a flood or
just a while back, and it took them a while
to fix it. The only problem is they said they
fixed it exactly like I was. They didn't do anything
(01:59:22):
to raise it or put something under it so water
could get through and not get washed away again. So
it's going on all around the country. I'm a little
suspicious about weather modification, especially after listening to Marjorie Green
talk about it today and a bill that she put
(01:59:44):
into Congress. So I just pray that we get through
all this and come out the other side. My heart
is broke when I think about the lives lost out there,
and no parent should ever outlive their child. It's just wrong.
(02:00:04):
But anyway, we hope you enjoyed our show. We added
Guatemala last week. We're very grateful for that. And it's
that time and night guys that say, May God bless
you all with health and happiness and keep your lives peaceful,
free and safe, and especially right now it is time
(02:00:29):
for good scotch, good cigars, and good night, good night home.
Speaker 9 (02:00:37):
Not everyone, God bless.
Speaker 8 (02:00:40):
Seems the love I have known has always been the
most destructive kind.
Speaker 2 (02:00:46):
Yes, that's why now I feel so old before my time.
Speaker 8 (02:00:54):
Yes, today, when I was your taste of life was sweet.
Speaker 4 (02:01:02):
Has to rain upon my tongue. I teased at length.
Speaker 8 (02:01:07):
As if it were a foolish game, the way that
even breathe may tease a candle flame. The Thousand Dreams
I dreamed, the splendid things I planned, I always built
to last. On weekend, shifting sand I lived by night
(02:01:29):
and shun them