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May 4, 2025 55 mins
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I think there's some kind of deviated prebod. Oh yeah,

(03:20):
let's go. It is Sunday Night.

Speaker 9 (03:29):
I am your humble host, Alan Ray. Sunday Night with
Alan Ray. Wow, Sunday Nights on kayl Iron Radio are
like you need to be here. I mean, starting at
six pm, you got the Bencent Charles Project. That's that
is the funniest thing that is. That's a riot. I
love listening to that. After Vincent Charles Project, you have

(03:51):
our new show, Korn's Reading Room with Korn Nemick. I
mean that was great. It was his first night tonight.
We welcome him to the kayl Iron Rady your family,
great job, great job. And then Jeff the Lost Wonderer
who you heard leading up to the show, and then
you got me. Yes, you're a purveyor of doom doom

(04:14):
food and all that is catastrophic.

Speaker 4 (04:17):
Allenrae Sunday Night with Allan Ray. Welcome. We're gonna have
some fun tonight. All right, I gotta do this.

Speaker 9 (04:24):
I have to do this because well, curious things are afoot.
Let's talk about the Detroit Tigers. We's talk baseball. Okay,
something really crazy and really cool happened over the week.
And if you haven't you know, if you follow baseball, great,

(04:48):
I don't really follow baseball, but I you know, I'm
you can't help it. You're here in you know, I'm
an hour and a halfway from Detroit. So you're gonna
hear what the Tigers do and whether you like it
or not. And I'm not gonna lie to you. I
don't watch baseball on TV. I will listen to Tiger
baseball on the radio as God intended. Jeff, It's not

(05:16):
that I'm going to talk bad about the Angels. I'm
just going to talk what the Tigers did. And yes,
it's it's been a pretty dismal outing for the Angels
even today they beat them, what thirteen to one? I
want to just narrow it down to basically one game

(05:37):
and just like an inning or maybe a game. It
was absolute insanity. When was this the May third? Of
course yesterday? And I think it actually happened May second. Yeah,
the game was May second, twenty twenty five. The Tigers

(05:58):
had a game that set all kinds of records. And
you know, I'm not gonna bad mouth the Angels because
I'm not. I'm not not an Angels fan, Okay, I
used to watch them all. I used to watch baseball
when I watched TV. But like I said, baseball is
to be played on a transistor radio in a hammock
under a shade tree on a summer's day. That is

(06:20):
how God intended you to absorb baseball. Okay, that's just
the way it is in Anaheim, California. This is according
to the Trait News. The Tigers, with an astonishing eight
run ninth inning. Eight run ninth inning, had the record
keepers at Elias Sports Bureau working double time Friday night,
and it ended up being a bountiful research hall. It

(06:42):
was not normal, said Javier Biaz, whose third homer in
three games was part of the barrage that gave the
Tigers a nine to one win over the Angels. Says,
we will play twenty seven outs, for sure, but that
was not normal.

Speaker 4 (07:00):
There was some things, some.

Speaker 9 (07:01):
Statistical history that happened Friday night, and I'm going to
go over them. First of all, the big one, the
huge one, Riley Green. This is what we got to
talk about. One inning, Riley Green hit two home runs
in the ninth inning. He hit two home runs in
one inning. And not only that, you know, but two

(07:24):
home runs in the ninth inning. That remarkably shockingly, has
never happened before in the history of the game. Green
is the first and only player to hit two home
runs in the ninth inning in Major League baseball and
I think maybe even minor league baseball. That's exceptional. Jeff says,

(07:50):
he's got me muted. He's producing me i met as
marsay Ah. Anyways, Green joins some elite company in Tiger's
lore as well. He's one of three, one of three
to hit two homers in any inning. Now, you might
have heard of the others. One was al Kaelin on
April seventh, nineteen fifty five. One was Magli o'dorniez on

(08:13):
August twelfth, two thousand and seven. Green is the only
one of the three to do it on the road. Green,
as is his way, was already focused on the next game.
He said, that's cool, but that game was over. We've
got a game tomorrow and we've got to take care
of business. So yeah, he was already focused, so he
no big deal with him. Another factoid about that game,

(08:39):
it was a four homer ninth inning. You had Green
who had two, you had Cole Keith, and you had
beez All hitting home runs in the ninth inning a
franchise first. The last team to do that was the
Dodgers on September eighteenth, two thousand and six. And the

(09:00):
Tigers were the first team to hit four ninth inning
dealers on the road since Cleveland did it at Seattle
on July sixteenth, two thousand and four. Another thing for
the record books. The Tigers are the third team in
history and the first in seventy five years, to score
eight or more runs in the eighth inning or later

(09:21):
in back to back games. The Boston Braves did it
in nineteen fifty, Pittsburgh Pirates did it in nineteen twenty one.
And by the way, the Tigers made that history against
one of the more decorated relievers in the game, a
sixteen year veteran and four time All Star ken Lee Jansen.
So it was a historical game. And of course they

(09:45):
beat him again today, what thirteen to one? Sorry, Jeff, Sorry,
but you know, when things like this happened, you gotta
say something about I mean, you know, when the Tigers
do well, everybody during the summer just kind of had
as this little all little extra pep in their step.
You know, I'm not afraid to wear a Tiger's hat.

(10:06):
I was in Nashville, Tennessee the last time the Tigers
won the Pennant. I was watching it in a college.
They can't They've come close. They've come close a few times,
but it's always it always warms my heart to see
the Tigers actually do well, and they got a good
team this year. They're they're setting all kinds of club recordsards,

(10:29):
and now they're setting major League Baseball records. You gotta
kind of love that. So, yeah, we'll talk about baseball
for just a little bit because it is kind of cool.
We will get to the fun stuff. We will get
to the dum because hey, it's not Sunday Night with
Alan Ray without a little bit of doom.

Speaker 4 (10:51):
And you know what I think on.

Speaker 8 (10:52):
What I think, I think there's some kind of deviated
prebrid I think General RUPA found out about your preversion
and that you were organizing some kind of mutant.

Speaker 9 (11:00):
On what I think, Yeah, I think you're all a
bunch of preverts, some kind of mutiny of preverts. Anyway,
we got a lot to talk about tonight, my gosh,
and I am going to I'm going to infringe on
Jeff just a little bit because something cool happens if
you know me, and I played radio today, Okay. In fact,

(11:23):
I really had to seriously put the Ham radio away
so I can focus on getting content because number one
ten meters fifteen meters, and there was a lot of
bands that were open today. I made context. Now I'm
just running. I'm not running the one hundred thousand dollars
big Ham radios set. You see these guys with big

(11:45):
pot bellies sitting behind and they've got big headphones on,
and they got like ten twenty radios in front of them. No,
I got my little humble yazu FT seven ten. It's
a tiny one. It's one hundred watts. I've got one
hundred and thirty two foot wire that runs across the
back of my yard. That's all I'm using, guys, It's
all I'm using. And today I made contacts in Chile, Peru, Guatemali,

(12:11):
Italy and a couple other places. Says, oh, look, I
can hear all again.

Speaker 4 (12:22):
He's mute at me.

Speaker 9 (12:23):
Ah, that's what happens when you piss off the producer guys.
So anyways, and the reason I've been able to make
these contexts today is we had a pretty decent number
of sunspots and we didn't have solar storms. Now, yesterday
morning we had some solar winds, some solar storms hitting

(12:44):
and it was horrible.

Speaker 4 (12:46):
Yesterday morning.

Speaker 9 (12:47):
I do a forty net, which if you don't know
what a net is, it's basically a group of people
that get together and they talk about different things on
the radio, and it's just kind of what And then
I've said this before on this show and I'll say
it again. It's one of them deals that we're having fun,
we're making contacts, we're making friends. I've made some great
friends on radio. But deep down inside, we all understand.

(13:11):
We all realize that if the proverbial doo doo hits
the fan, that these little nets that we have, these
little for fun nets, are going to turn into something serious.
And making contacts all the way across the country, see
what's going on, making news, travel, keeping the word going,
figuring out what's happening in different places and planning accordingly

(13:36):
becomes vitally important. And I know, I know there's people
out there will crack me up. And I've mentioned this
before too, and I repeat myself, I'm sorry. When the
hurricane hit back last year, and North Carolina was without power.
Florida during the second Hurricane was without power, no cell service,

(13:57):
no internet, no power. Amateur radio was getting out. Amateur
radio was getting the job done. People running on battery backup. Now, Yes,
Elon Musk has Starlink, Starlink. In fact, I think they're
launching some more more satellites, like today or something tomorrow.

(14:22):
They are populating the upper atmosphere, the lower Earth orbit
and they are going to make Internet available anywhere. However,
you do have to have electricity to get your Internet
unless you've got one of those portable setups. And I'm
gonna tell you right now, those portable starlink setups are
huge in the Ham radio community. They love them because

(14:46):
I'll tell you what to do. Both is great saying
that still still Ham radio, amateur radio has a place
in modern society. And at one news outlet did HER's
story in North Carolina and they said, you know, an

(15:08):
old fashioned way of communicating might be saving lives in
North Carolina. And all this Ham radio operators looked at
each other with old fashion when's the last time you've
looked at what we do? Some of the craziest, most
wild technology modern technology goes into amateur radio right now.
In fact, artificial intelligence is being injected into some of

(15:33):
the ham radios, filters and everything, and artificial intelligence is
actually filtering out everything except human voice. So you can
get somebody that's way down into your noise flore, that's
way down into the static, eliminate the static, and hear
nothing but their voice. I use for artificial intelligence, and

(15:56):
I have that program on my computer and I've been
messing with it, and any radio any rate, even in
an am radio, you can put in there that you're
just barely receiving and it'll pull that voice out of there.

Speaker 4 (16:08):
It's amazing.

Speaker 9 (16:10):
This is the future of amateur radio, but a lot
of it like today today. Here I am with my
little hundred watts and one hundred and thirty two foot
and fed antenna, my humble little setup, and I'm talking
to people in Chile. I'm talking to people in prove
I'm talking to people in Italy. I'm doing so because
the sun is acting right now with sun spots and everything.

(16:34):
It's enabling me to communicate on frequencies.

Speaker 4 (16:38):
Now.

Speaker 9 (16:39):
The ten meter frequency is also very close to the
eleven meter frequency, which is basically CBE radio, And if
you have a CBE radio, you'd be amazed to who
you can communicate with when you have solar activity like
this all over the country, maybe even all over the world.
It's true, it's true. I'm four watts. I've talked to

(17:01):
people on twenty watts in a portable unit.

Speaker 4 (17:03):
So there you go.

Speaker 9 (17:05):
So I say all this because we're talking about solar weather.
We talk about solar weather quite a bit on this show.
And I run across us this article today and then
I'm trying balley bally hard not to talk about politics.
We're going to talk about politics tonight, but I'm gonna
try really hard not to talk about politics. My god,
you can't turn on the TV, turn on the radio,

(17:27):
bring up the computer. You can't even take a dump
without hearing something about politics. You get tired of it
after a while, you really get tired of it. But
we are going to talk about it because we're gonna
make some fun of some people. So it's fine. And
if you're listening to my show, you have a pretty
good idea what my political view is. I'm not gonna
flog a dead horse, but what I'm talking about here

(17:49):
is solar not solar power, but solar as the sun.
Right now, there is a telescope with a powerful new
tool that can offer a better way to predict solar storms.
This is according to NPR. Now, I'm gonna make a
joke about this, and it's a political joke, and I

(18:11):
don't care if you like it or not, because I
laughed hysterically. But I'll tell you that joke now and
we'll get into it later. When I clicked on this article,
this article has nothing to do with anything except this telescope.
NPR almost made you swear allegiance to them because of
the terribly horrible Orange Man, and it was funny. We'll

(18:34):
get back into that in a minute. Anyways, I clicked
on this link and this is what I come up with.
The most powerful solar telescope in the world has recorded
a major milestone atop an active volcano in Hawaii, capturing
a detailed image of a cluster of sunspots with the
telescope's new visible tunable filter, which is VTF. Scientists hope

(18:59):
that in the future the instrument will help predict powerful
and potentially damaging solar storms. And we talk about this
on this here on this show. Corona mass ejections, solar winds,
things that can do a lot of damage.

Speaker 4 (19:15):
And we're going to get into the damage it.

Speaker 9 (19:18):
Does, because well, we're already seeing that some of the
wet dreams that certain people have about solar energy populating
the whole world and making us run on solar power.

Speaker 4 (19:32):
Is not such a great idea.

Speaker 9 (19:34):
We'll get into that in minute too, But scientists hope
that in the future the instruments will help predict powerful
and potentially damaging solar storms. The Daniel ka Innoy telescope
snapped the photo of the Roaring Start late last month
in the summit of I'm not even gonna try to
say that volcano in MAUI.

Speaker 4 (19:51):
Can't say it. Yeah.

Speaker 9 (19:53):
The National Solar Observatory, which operates the telescope, said that
the image was taken during a technical testing and that
the VTF is no even fully operational. But the fact
that the telescope was able to capture such an image
at this space shows how powerful the device.

Speaker 4 (20:07):
Will bentually be. And let's see if I can do
something here. Can I do this? Will it? Let me?
I doubt it? No, it won't. Anyways, I was going.

Speaker 9 (20:18):
To try to to skim that picture off the NPR.
But nope, they're not gonna let me do it because
they they don't want freedom, they want narrative. Anyways, the
NSO describes sun spots as areas of intense magnetic activity.
Yes we know that, and can trigger solar flares and
chronal mass ejections. Yes we know that too, because you
all listen to my show, and if you haven't listened

(20:40):
to my show, you should be listening to my show.
Because I'm not just gonna do politics, politics, politics, I
also participate in the wonderful world of doom.

Speaker 4 (20:51):
Yes, we like doom here because there's so much of it.

Speaker 9 (20:55):
Anyways, after all these years, the VTF is a great
success for me, he said Thomas Kentisher, co principal investigator
at the Germany Elimnitz Institute for Solar Physics, where the
BTF was designed. So this instrument is going to allow
them to basically, hopefully predict more accurately solar flares, coronal

(21:16):
mass ejections. Things that are damaging to our infrastructure could
be damaging to our infrastructure, and if you don't know
the damage it can cause. And I've spoken about this before,
you guys you're the usuals, the guys that listen to this.
People listen to this all the time. I know I
repeat myself, But to the new listeners, I want to

(21:36):
tell you, when we have coronal mass ejections, we have
high powered solar winds, when we are bombarded. Right now,
we're at solar maximum and we're just coming off of it.
Solar maximum is just where the Sun has just a
ton of activity. You don't understand how much of the

(21:57):
power that you know, these the these corona mass ejections,
these charged particles.

Speaker 4 (22:03):
Hitting the Earth.

Speaker 9 (22:05):
Even though we have a great magnetosphere out there, you know,
a shield basically blocking a lot of this. The ionosphere is,
you know, forcing around us. A lot of it still
gets to the Earth and your power company has to
bleed off thousands, thousands of volts of electricity to keep
from overloading everything. We didn't understand this back in the

(22:27):
days where the Carrington event took place. Which Carrington event?

Speaker 4 (22:31):
Look it up.

Speaker 9 (22:31):
I've talked about it add nauseum on the show. Look
it up Carrington event. You'll realize that the sun can
do a lot of damage. Now if we get hit
by another when I should say, when we get hit
by another Carrington event. There's a lot of speculation on
what's going to basically get blown up. Will all of
these fragile little cell phone gizmo's gadgets we have get

(22:55):
blown up in another Carrington event, probably a lot of them.

Speaker 4 (23:01):
Will it be earth ending?

Speaker 5 (23:02):
Hmm?

Speaker 9 (23:03):
I don't know, because we understand what's going on in
the sun right now. We didn't really understand it back
when the Carrington happened.

Speaker 4 (23:11):
But we know how to bleed off power.

Speaker 9 (23:13):
We have a different kind of setup for electricity, so
there may be some issues. There may be widespread blackouts,
there might be satellite blackouts, there might be cell phone blackouts.
And if you are an amateur radio operator and you
have one of these wonderful, colorful waterfall displays like I
have on mine, I have literally watched and yes, I

(23:36):
said literally, Ah, deal with it. I have watched a
chrawlal mass ejection solar wind hit the Earth on that display.
And go from watching a lot of people talking in
peaks and valleys and you can see, you know, with
your eyes, you know, you can see who's talking, who's what,
where the active frequencies are, and all of a sudden,

(23:57):
this thing hits and everything just goes black. The noise
flore comes way up and everything just goes blank. It disappears.
That's the power of the sun. So this thing is
going to more accurately predict it. I recommend if you
want to learn more about and I don't get paid
to say this, because she's kind of a you know,

(24:20):
acquaintance of mine, I recommend you go to YouTube and
look up doctor Tamatha SCoV Skov, doctor tamotha scop She
puts out solar weather once a week and it gets
pretty interesting and she's pretty excited about it, and she's
very very intelligent, and she's pretty darn accurate too. So

(24:44):
look up Tamotha scob not right now, wait till you're
done with my show, otherwise I'll be upset with you
and you'll understand solar weather a heck of a lot better.

Speaker 4 (24:55):
All right, So we got that? What else we got here?
And you know, this is the thing. The last couple
of weeks.

Speaker 9 (25:02):
I've really you know, I've poured the last two or
three shows I've done, I've poured myself into them.

Speaker 4 (25:08):
I've taken all these notes. Start everything.

Speaker 9 (25:10):
No, today's off the cuff, off the cuff, not even
gonna pretend like it's not.

Speaker 7 (25:16):
So.

Speaker 4 (25:16):
Speaking of doom, the end.

Speaker 9 (25:19):
Of the world was predicted by Stephen Hawkins, and NASA
is kind of supporting this theory. Hopefully this is the
NASA that Jeff in The Lost Wonder was just talking
about that gets cut because well, as I get into this,
you're gonna see how silly it is.

Speaker 4 (25:38):
Don't go anywhere. I'm gonna be right back in a
few minutes. We're gonna take a quick break.

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U A.

Speaker 4 (28:24):
Good evening. We're back. It is Sunday Night with Alan Ray.

Speaker 9 (28:27):
It is the show where we gaze about this giant
blue ghetto rock that we are hurtling through space at
a goodly speed.

Speaker 4 (28:34):
And we asked the eternal question, what the wide, wide
world of fortunes are going on here?

Speaker 9 (28:40):
I don't know. If you find out, let me know.
Before his death in twenty eighteen, Stephen Hawkings made a
startling prediction about Earth's future During the twenty seventeen tencent
World Economic Summit in Beijing. The celebrated physicists warned that
our planet might transform into a massive ball of fire. Well,
wait a minute, that's a direct quote into a mass

(29:02):
at ball up fire by approximately twenty six hundred.

Speaker 4 (29:06):
That was distaste. So I don't know, I don't care.

Speaker 9 (29:08):
Uh. This alarming forecast wasn't based on mysticism, but on
scientific analysis of current human consumption patterns and environmental degradation.
Hawking's concern centered on exponential population growth and resource depletion. Okay,
here he goes here, here it is here, it is.
Here's his prediction. By twenty six hundred, Earth will transform

(29:32):
into a giant fireball.

Speaker 4 (29:34):
Should I say it like Stephen Hawkings?

Speaker 9 (29:36):
Okay, by twenty six one hundred, Earth will transform into
a giant fire ball. Humanity must make plans to leave
the planet or we risk extinction. He declared during his
presentation the fit. I'm going to hell for this in
it by twenty six hundred. I mean, who's gonna Who's

(29:59):
going to hold them to it? If it doesn't happen
twenty six hundred, I'm not gonna be around.

Speaker 4 (30:05):
I don't care anyways.

Speaker 9 (30:10):
The physicists elaborated that continuing population expansion would create unsustainable density,
describing a future where people would stand shoulder to shoulder
across the globe dube.

Speaker 4 (30:24):
Ah.

Speaker 9 (30:29):
Many archaeological discoveries remind us of civilization's fragility. Recently, a
two thousand year old tax fraud case resurface thanks to
a forgotten papyrus, showing out even advanced societies can collapse
under various pressures. Hawking's timeline suggests we have five hundred
and seventy five years before such a catastrophic planetary transformation occurs.

(30:49):
Who wrote this drivel? Farmingdale observer dot com. Now, while
NASA hasn't explicitly endorsed hawking specific twenty six hundred timeline,
agency has acknowledged the valid a validity of his underlying
environmental concerns. The organization confirm that humanity indeed faces existential
risk if current resource consumption rates continue unabated. If if

(31:15):
you get this, if current resource consumption rates continue unabated.

Speaker 4 (31:20):
Now I remember this one show.

Speaker 9 (31:22):
I can't recall the name of that who did an
entire special on the population implosion, where we are heading
for an actual collapse of the population, and that collapse
is going to cause a lot of issues, one of
them one of them probably being a lot of funding
for NASA China a lot of Asian countries are already

(31:46):
experiencing population collapse. So does that mean it's going to
get bumped out to maybe twenty seven hundred, twenty eight hundred,
who's right? I mean, statistics say that we are heading
for a level off in the next twenty years. Some

(32:07):
statistics say point two hint at if we keep sterilizing
our kids, if we keep rushing little Johnny to the
doctor and having his little weenie cut off when he
gets caught playing with Barbie dolls, If we rush a
little Mary to the hospital and shove a bunch of
puberty blockers down her throat and cut her breasts off

(32:28):
and sterilize her and little Johnny at an alarming rate,
and we keep killing our infants in the womb, and
we keep having death panels in places like Canada, where.

Speaker 4 (32:40):
They what do they up to?

Speaker 9 (32:41):
Thirty five forty thousand people that the government has state
sanctioned murdered since they've welcomed in you know, assistant suicide,
This giant push to kill people to reduce the population. Oh,
by the way, the elites, the people that are enacting

(33:03):
all this, you don't see them doing this to themselves.
I think they ought to set the example. But anyways,
NASA has acknowledged their interest in Hawking's research on the topic.
They stated, for over fifty years, NASA has studied our planet,
providing information that directly benefits humanity and producing observations that

(33:25):
can only be gathered from space, addressing some of the
areas mentioned by Hawking. This alignment between the world's premier
space agency and the legendary physicist adds substantial weight to
these environmental warnings doom. So you guys, there it is.

(33:47):
You've got just under six hundred years to prepare for
the end. Just under six hundred years in this entire
planet is going to be this flaming, wrecking ball. It'll
be just like Mars, just be this desolate used to
be water here. Six hundred years from now. That's all
you got left is six hundred years. Mark it on

(34:10):
your calendard. If it doesn't happen, you can have your
money back. So therefore, you must give the government all
of the power. You must give more of your paycheck
to politicians. You must live in shipping crates back two
hundred high. You must live in fifteen minute cities. You

(34:33):
must not drive cars. You must eat bugs and grass
and maybe, just maybe, in six hundred years we'll fix this.

Speaker 4 (34:52):
My god, I.

Speaker 9 (34:58):
Didn't even know what to think of this anymore. I
look at all this and it's like God, but when
you look at all this, when you when you when
you read things like this, and they put things out
of reach, So they won't you know, the people that
make these predictions, then I'm not going to have any accountability.

Speaker 4 (35:12):
Stephen Hawkins not gonna have any accountability. He's dad. The
people who are on NASA.

Speaker 9 (35:16):
Are not going to be held accountable because in the
six hundred years, probably won't even be a NASA. And
you wonder why people are rejecting leftist ideologies. You wonder
why people are cheering on things like our current president
cutting funding to things like PBS and NPR Propaganda Broadcast

(35:47):
System and National Propaganda Radio, which, by the way, the
PBS CEO is cutting himself and rending his clothes because
President Trump as issued an executive executive order last week
aimed at cutting federal funding to the two major public
broadcasting systems, PBS and NPR. He said, this is different.

(36:12):
They're coming after us on many different ways. Well, what
do you think you'd been doing to him for like
eight nine years. Listen to you people, listen to your
own broadcasts. You have been attacking this president, lying about him,
openly lying, and then when you're called out on it,
you step back and, oh, he didn't do it, which

(36:34):
is reporting what the facts are. Yeah, but you reported
a lie. Oh we didn't do that, deny it. My
big question to all of this is why do they
need my paycheck? Why do we have state funded media?
Why is that our forefathers would just vomit, They would

(36:59):
go to the near bar and just stay the rest
of the night if they saw how we fund these
propaganda outlets. We all know that media has gone hard left.
We all know that media is just they're just spitballing now,
trying to get anything, anything at all.

Speaker 4 (37:21):
To stick to this administration.

Speaker 9 (37:23):
It's not working. But what it is working is people
are dumping leftist ideologies, not just in the United States
of America. And I've reported on this. I've talked about
this before, and I have two more examples of it.

Speaker 4 (37:40):
Number One, Romania.

Speaker 9 (37:43):
British broadcasting company Romania reruns controversial election after earlier vote
was annulled. Says Romanians will try again to elect a
new president today, six months after the first attempt ended
in scandal and confusion. A radical outsider with mystical leanings
Callen Georgiuscue came first. I know twenty fourth November that
the result was annulled over allegations of campaign fraud and

(38:06):
Russian interference.

Speaker 4 (38:07):
Does that sound familiar to you now?

Speaker 9 (38:12):
In February, US Vice President Jdvance sharply criticized Romania for
that decision, sending shockwaves through a Romanian political establishment which
leans heavily at it special relationship with the US. Georgies
U was nevertheless barred from taking part in today's rerun.
Why because he's a right wing So this election pits

(38:36):
a nationalist George Simeon, leader of the Alliance for a
Union of Romanians, against three centrists. Those aren't centrists, by
the way, they're leftists. They don't like to call CenTra
or the leftists. They don't like to call him leftists
because it sounds communists, it sounds socialist. You gotta paint
him with a prettier picture. The problem is is Simons,

(39:01):
who is the leader of the Alliance for Union Romanians,
which is basically right wing kind of their version of
Trump is leading. He's leading the polls. Good chance he's
gonna win, very good chance he's gonna win. They're gonna
have to rerun the election again because they can't have that. See,
the globalists, the Sorels worshipers can't have this. The World

(39:25):
Economic Forum and the United Nations can't have this. This
is this is not helping them take power of the
whole world. Number two. Australia's opposition party has been left reeling.
Opposition party is basically the leftists, the Democrat Party of Australia.

(39:45):
Opposition part What are they opposing their own power? They've
been in power for a while there. Remember COVID in Australia.
That was fun. Australia's opposition party Opposition Party has been
left reeling after a bruising defeat in Saturday's federal elections,
with the result all that is shaping up to be
its worst loss ever. Peter Dutton, a Liberal Party leader,
also lost his own seat of Dixon, which he had

(40:08):
held for the past twenty four years. Labour's landslide victory
means the Liberal Party is now scrambling to find a
new leader and figure out what went wrong for them
this election cycle. Okay, the labor leader in Australia, and
that's according to the BBC as well, is right wing
leads to the right as much as possible.

Speaker 4 (40:28):
Two more examples of global.

Speaker 9 (40:33):
Global basically fed up with rejection of leftist ideologies, global
rejection of World Economic Forum, United Nations New World order
type And it sounds so Alex jonesy when you say
that crap, but they use it themselves. New World order

(40:58):
type government where you will own nothing and be glad.
Come to find out, well, it's being rejected by the people.

Speaker 4 (41:12):
It's being rejected.

Speaker 9 (41:14):
Don't put it past these people to try complete violence
to force people into leftism. That's the only thing keeping
them from doing this here in America is we're all armed.
That's the only thing. Never give up your guns. The
only thing keeping them from making You're trying to bring
this to the United States by force. And the United

(41:39):
Nations wants us disarmed. They say all the time they
want every private citizen disarmed. They don't want you to
be able to defend yourself. They want to control you.

(42:00):
Speaking of leftistityologies, let's talk about what happened last Monday.
Last Monday, was scary. Last Monday was a wake up
call to the United States of America and many many
other countries. Last Monday was a tough day for citizens
in Spain and Portugal. Both countries were hit by hours

(42:22):
long power outages. Some say it was the worst such
event in living memory. Now out here in the cornfield,
I laugh at hours long, Okay, if I know it's
only gonna be like eight, nine, ten eleven hours, I
don't even fire up my generator unless it's tenblow zero, okay.

Speaker 4 (42:40):
If it's this time of year and my house days
fairly warm, ay, I would.

Speaker 9 (42:45):
Probably break out some of my blue Eddy AC one
eighty and my EB three, and I'll just charge one
with solar while you know, a couple solar panels, while
the other one has got lights, and maybe keep the
refrigerator a little cool. If I need water, I'll fire
up the generator. Anyways, we'll talk more about that. What

(43:08):
they did not get clear, because both countries are hit
by hours long powers is that some say was the
worst such event in living memory. What they did not
get clear was a clear explanation of how it all happened,
at least not from their government.

Speaker 4 (43:19):
Of course.

Speaker 9 (43:20):
The government's not going to tell them how it happened,
why it happened, because well, we're getting a really good
idea of why it happened, and this is all from
Fox News Business. Daniel Lacale, chief economic economists of Madrid
based investment company tress Us, told Fox Business this was
not a normal blackout. Phones didn't work, there was no

(43:44):
four G phone connection. Additionally, some people were stuck in
trains or elevators and could not access the internet. One
of the first claims as to what happened there was
a so called induced atmospheric vibration that happens when there
are rapid changes in the weather, all to the oscillations
of the electric grids overheadlines. According to professor Jianzong Wu

(44:05):
at the University of Cardiff, focused on multi vector energy systems,
sounds like crap. However, nobody was aware of extreme weather
conditions in Spain that was the problem, he said, So
he's not sure this. Wu guy said, I'm not sure
whether this is the real case or not. Another early

(44:29):
effort to point a finger included claims the power outage
was due to green energy such as solar and wind
now that was rebuffed by Spain's Prime minister, who claimed
people propagating that explanation were lying. However, however, none of
the government's excuses were making any sense. Here's where things

(44:52):
get complicated. While the renewable energy sources did not disrupt
power generation on their own, they were part of the
mix that it happened. The background to the outage begins
with the efforts to increase the use of renewables. There
is a move across Europe to cut back on fossil
fuels and nuclear use. Ben Habib, chairman of the Great

(45:12):
British Political Action Committee, told Fox Business in twenty eleven,
Spain renewable energy fuel thirty one percent of its electricity.
According to statistical data, that share grew to fifty seven
percent last year, meaning a significant drop in the combined
use of fossil and nuclear fuels. This is part of
Spain's gold move closer to net zero carbon emissions, whatever

(45:34):
that's supposed to mean. Additionally, Spain did get its net
zero wish for the first time. They achieved that goal
on April sixteenth across the entire grid. However, that achievement
was both a success and the problem, in effect that
it began a knock on effect that would lead to
the recent blackout. The massive electricity output increase from wind,
solar sent power prices tumbling. On January twentieth, electricity and

(45:58):
spain spot market cost one hundred and forty five euros
per megaa hours. It's about one hundred and sixty five bucks.
That fell to eleven euros by March twenty first. In turn,
those falling prices meant Spain's nuclear power plants could no
longer afford to pay their taxes when producing electricity.

Speaker 4 (46:15):
Lacall said. The results saw.

Speaker 9 (46:18):
The nuclear power plants temporarily stop operating, and natural gas
plants cut back on generating electricity, so they said, I'm
going home. However, the near total absence of natural gas
or nuclear power also created instability in the grid. Much
renewable energy is unreliable. We know that the sun does
not always shine and the wind is not always who

(46:43):
So basically what happened was all of the prices plummeted.
Power prices plummeted. Nuclear power plants said, screw it, it's
not worth generating electricity. We can't even pay a tax
for these prices, so they quit. Natural gas plants said,

(47:06):
we can't do it either, so they quit.

Speaker 4 (47:10):
So all you had.

Speaker 9 (47:12):
All you had was the left wings, wet dream, solar
and wind.

Speaker 4 (47:20):
That was it. And guess what happened.

Speaker 9 (47:24):
It could not sustain the power grid and it shut down.

Speaker 4 (47:30):
They got their net zero wish. Yes, they did no
power at all.

Speaker 9 (47:40):
Now a lot of people look at me and they say, well, Uj,
you might to kill the planet.

Speaker 4 (47:47):
Uj, you wight to destroy the planet. We gave fossil fuels.

Speaker 9 (47:52):
Yeah, and you want to destroy the planet by paving
it with these unrecyclable, unrenewable, toxicly made solar panels, oil
filled fans. None of them, None of them will pay
for themselves. All of them are very temporary. The only

(48:17):
and I repeat myself, the only source of electricity we
have right now that will hold our electric grid, even
half of our power grid, reliably efficiently without destroying major

(48:38):
chunks of ecosystem is nuclear.

Speaker 4 (48:42):
That's it.

Speaker 9 (48:43):
We don't have a reliable source of power. And I
don't care what these moronic planet paving they used to
be tree huggers, or not tree huggers anymore, the tree destroyers,
environmental destroyers who are selling the solar crap. I don't

(49:03):
care what they say. It's not reliable. I know it's
not reliable. I use it. I have solar panels. I
know on a cloudy day they don't recharge my little
battery backup systems as well as on a sunny day.

Speaker 4 (49:21):
And even on a sunny.

Speaker 9 (49:22):
Day, the most the most efficiency they've ever gotten out
of a solar panel is forty seven point six percent.
That's it. The norm is right around thirty percent or under.
They don't tell you these things. And solar panels only last.
Industrial solar panels only last twenty to thirty years. Then

(49:44):
they have to be all completely replaced. They all have
to be completely replaced. And there's nowhere to recycle solar
panels because they're unrecyclable. In fifty years, we are going
to look back at this stupidity of solar power, and
who knows, maybe some genius is figuring it out right now,

(50:08):
and God bless them if they do. Don't get me wrong.
If we can have renewable energy, great, But if you
like living in the dark and in the cold during winter,
go ahead, put all your eggs in that solar basket.
Put all your eggs in that wind basket. See what happens.
It's not gonna be pretty. And these people are pushing it.

(50:29):
And this moron we have running the state right now,
Gretchen Whitmer, is one of the biggest pushers of this crap.
She wants to tear out farmland, acres and acres and
acres and acres of farmland. She wants to tear out woodlands,
woods where they have trees, you know, trees that produce oxygen.

(50:51):
And she wants to put up giant solar farms. She's
an idiot, she's a moron, and she's trying to pass
it off like, ooh, look green energy. It's not green energy, folks,
it's not energy at all. It's not efficient. If you
want to use it to supplement what we have, fine,
I don't care. There's a lot of flat roofs, there's

(51:12):
a lot of parking lots in cities where they use
most of the power. Put canopies up over every parking lot.
Put solar panels on them.

Speaker 4 (51:20):
Perfect.

Speaker 9 (51:21):
Great, it'll keep you out of the rain and it'll
supplement your power. I'm okay with that. I'm not antisolar.
I just know where its place is. If you have
a parking structure, put solar panels on it. If you
have a flat roof on your building, put solar panels
on it. Why wouldn't you? Why wouldn't you? We know
it does have some effect. Not tear out farmland. Why

(51:46):
would you want to tear out farmland, prime farmland where
they feed people to put up this not very efficient
power source. And then you have to run wiring all
the way into the electric grid a substation were SUI,
You're gonna lose even more of it. They don't want
you to think about these things. I think about these things,

(52:09):
and I know we're gonna end up like Spain and Portugal,
except it's not gonna be a few hours. If you
I laugh at if you I mock a few hours
of being without power. I've been out power for a
one two weeks. Ah, I'm Alan Ray. This is Sunday

(52:29):
Night with Alan Ray. I really want to thank each
and every one of you for.

Speaker 4 (52:36):
Tuning in.

Speaker 9 (52:37):
Sunday Nights on Klaar and Radio have just really gotten wonderful.
We've got a great lineup and you know, Jeff and
I kind of started doing the Sunday Night thing a
while back and it's turned out to be a pretty
good deal. And now we have Vincent Charles Project, We've
got corn Nemic, We've got to We've got a good lineup.
Keep it locked on KLARN Radio all week long, some

(53:01):
of the best programming. And it's not just politics, boys
and girls, it's everything.

Speaker 4 (53:06):
We got everything.

Speaker 9 (53:06):
We got books, we got space, we got just basically
screwing around. We got juxtaposition, which, well, I tell you
what if you missed jus last night, it was absolutely wonderful.
It touched on one of the things that you know,
the dead Internet theory. I already and I had a
discussion about it and Jeff and it's just like, oh
my gosh, you know, is this real?

Speaker 4 (53:26):
And we fell down that rabbit hole. And I'm telling
you what. I think.

Speaker 9 (53:30):
We're seeing it on Twitter, on Facebook all especially on Twitter.
I think a lot a lot of Twitter content is
dead Internet. I think it's just all AI pushed, AI
programmed and it's not real.

Speaker 4 (53:47):
There you go. I said it, and I'm not sorry.

Speaker 9 (53:51):
They had stuff on AI, which AI to me is
one of those deals that I'm not anti AI. I
use AI. I use AI a lot. I have found
a couple of uses for it that are kind of unconventional,
but by God, they work, so why not tap into it.
I don't think you should replace your thinking, but I
think it's a tool that can really be used to help.

(54:15):
And then, of course, Sunday night, nine o'clock, same bat time,
same bat place, Alan Ray, Sunday Night with Alan Ray.
I hope you all had a great time. I hope
you all had a great night. And Lord willing, I'll
be back next week. God blessom,
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