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December 2, 2025 45 mins
Rover watches the cameras at bankruptcy box to see the final inspections being done. Cure for cancer. Vitamins. 

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Speaker 1 (00:01):
RNG is available in HD on four g LD E
BBC j O I CFNN M four c OTDHJ in
on the radio.

Speaker 2 (00:10):
If you're Vanilla rovers Money Glory.

Speaker 3 (00:13):
Is backing.

Speaker 1 (00:19):
Jesse.

Speaker 4 (00:19):
He is coming up in just a moment. What do
you have on the.

Speaker 5 (00:22):
Way, dug Rover's not the only one that has some
issues doing some remodeling. I'll tell you who is not
happy with their remodel build out.

Speaker 6 (00:30):
I'll have that story for you next.

Speaker 4 (00:31):
All right, we'll get to that in just a moment.
And he says, speaking of not being able to have
a baseball bat like Snitzer said, it must be illegal
to have a baseball bat like in your car, he says,
my kid lost his baseball glove at school, walked home
with just the bat. They put them away for life,
thirteen years old, and threw his entire life away.

Speaker 6 (00:54):
You see told you?

Speaker 4 (00:56):
He says, Snitzer is an idiot, just naming everyday things
like they were weird to have or illegal. And my
dad got arrested once or a ticket for.

Speaker 7 (01:07):
Unlawful tools because he had a I don't know, weird
tools in his car and they didn't they they said
this is our criminal tools. Criminal had like it was
like a hammer and stuff, and then he was clearing
out like an empty house and then he got arrested.
I don't remember the exact specifics, but I remember criminal

(01:29):
tools and he just had normal tools.

Speaker 6 (01:32):
Rope.

Speaker 1 (01:33):
Well.

Speaker 4 (01:33):
I have seen like they'll have on episodes of cops.
If you have tools that they think you're going to
burglarize somebody with, they can get you on that, but
it was never My dad was normal. Yeah, but hammers,
how would they get them. I don't remember all the tools.

Speaker 7 (01:49):
I mean, I was really young when that happened, but
I remember you just had some tools, wrenches and stuff.

Speaker 4 (01:54):
I don't know what he was saying.

Speaker 8 (01:55):
If a cop pulls a teenager over in a car
and there's a bat in his car, he's not to
know good.

Speaker 4 (02:00):
That's you know, that's he's thinking. I'm just saying. John
sent a screen grab and says this is an AI
overview for so take it with a grain of salt. No,
it is not illegal to drive with a baseball bat
in your car in the state unless you have the
intent to use it as a weapon.

Speaker 9 (02:20):
I was thinking those small baseball bats that are filled
with like lead, that you could like really take somebody
out with Have you seen you? It's like, yeah, it's
like a billy club or something like that, but it's
it looks like a little baseball bat, but it is
it's heavy. You could really like break somebody's arm or

(02:41):
leg with it.

Speaker 4 (02:42):
We had our numbchucks hanging from the river mirror. I mean,
you know, it's crazy times. I do remember the thing
that Smith's like, he's talking about you have to have
your baseball glove with you where there was But I
I just told me that there's stupid stuff that kids say,
you know, like I just pulling stuff right other asks
or whatever. Douji, Are you ready for the award winning sizzy? Yeah,

(03:06):
here we go.

Speaker 6 (03:08):
Hitdah Shizzy on Grovers Morning Glory.

Speaker 5 (03:11):
An anonymous donation expected to exceed fifty million dollars is
helping cover tuition costs for medical lab science students at
the University of Washington for the next half century.

Speaker 6 (03:24):
How very cool is this?

Speaker 5 (03:26):
The Dean of the University School of Medicine, doctor Tim Dellitt,
made the surprise announcement yesterday to about thirty grateful undergrads,
who will each see two quarters worth of tuition covered
for their senior year clinical rotations.

Speaker 6 (03:41):
So this is very cool.

Speaker 5 (03:42):
It was an anonymous donation that will help a lot of
people with their lab and their costs.

Speaker 6 (03:50):
The President of the United.

Speaker 5 (03:51):
States posted a very cryptic message on social media, and
there are some setbacks on the ninety thousand dollars square
footballroom under construction at the White House Road on thousand
dollars ninety thousand square foote.

Speaker 4 (04:06):
Okay foot okay?

Speaker 6 (04:07):
Now ballroom?

Speaker 4 (04:08):
There are some setbacks, Yes, he.

Speaker 5 (04:10):
Says, quote, as long as we are going to do it,
we are going to do it right. So he's not
the only one suffering from some issues with remodeling.

Speaker 6 (04:21):
Well, I presidential ballroom is not where it should be.

Speaker 4 (04:26):
I okay. So at at bankruptcy Box, they've passed all
the inspections except for the final inspection. I don't know
when the last time I gave you an update, So
I've been monitoring they. They told me, oh, we have
the final inspection. This was last week before Thanksgiving. We

(04:47):
have the final guys coming to do the final inspection.
Once that's done, Hey, we're done. Everything's good. So I watch,
I go back. I didn't hear from the content, so
I go and I look at the cameras and go
what what what happens? So one of the not the
main contractor, but one of his guys that works there,

(05:09):
who is also Italian, doesn't speak a lick of English,
also doesn't speak Spanish. He just speaks. He just speaks.

Speaker 7 (05:19):
Interesting, at least can at least get the Spanish being guys,
so they could talk to other guys.

Speaker 6 (05:26):
But his wife speaks Italian, so she can.

Speaker 4 (05:28):
My wife does not speak Italian, She's an Italian citizen,
but does not speak Italian. So anyway, so the inspector
comes in. The the worker who's there with the inspector
doesn't speak English. The inspector is speaking English. So the

(05:49):
worker is on a cell phone on speakerphone with a
woman who works at the contractor's office, and the inspector
will say something that she picks up on the speaker phone.
She then relays it in Italian to the guy. The
guy then speaks an Italian back to the woman, who

(06:12):
then speaks to the inspector. This was for the fire inspection,
not the final inspection, I guess.

Speaker 5 (06:17):
And so.

Speaker 4 (06:20):
I could not believe what I was witnessing because they
were so wrong about everything. The fire inspector goes, maybe
I told you guys this story already. I don't know.
But the fire inspector comes and he goes, okay. So
he's pointing some things out and he goes, okay, so
where is the emergency exit? And then there's a discussion
between the Italian guy. The woman's asking the Italian guy

(06:43):
an Italian, and then the Italian speaks an Italian back
to her, and then she tells the fire inspector there
isn't one. And the fire Inspector's like, hold on a second.
So the only way in and out of this this
this condo unit is the elevator. That and the elevator
opens up right into into the inn. The only the
only way is the elevator. Well, in a fire, you

(07:05):
can't use the elevator, So what are you gonna do.
You're gonna climb, You're gonna jump out the building or what?
And and the guy's like, no, that's the only entrance
and exit in Italian there back and forth, No, this
is the only way. And then the fire inspector's like, okay, well,
let's start looking around and then they see where the

(07:27):
you know, there's a back hallway, a door that goes
to the you know, a hallway where there's stairs down
for the building right the fire escape. And this guy,
the Italian guy, who's been working in the condo for
more than a year, he knows this. He knows that
there's a door back there the service entrance. I don't
know what. I don't know how they anyway, so they

(07:49):
failed that inspection. They eventually passed that a couple of
days later. The final inspection they failed. I watched that
on camera. I forget why they failed. That something was
open in the ceiling. There's a hole in the ceiling
that that they had cut that they had to close up.
Then they they do the inspection. They schedule it for

(08:10):
the next day. I watched as the inspector came in
at about nine to twelve am and he's like, hello, hello, Hello.
Nobody was in there, so then he left, and then
five minutes later I see the Italian guy come in
and he just waits two hours for the inspector who

(08:32):
had already been there. So they failed it twice. Then
they do the final inspection. They call the guy in
I think it was on Friday. I think it was Friday.
They call him in the same inspector comes back finally
going to pass this final inspection. They have the blueprints
laid out everything for whatever you have to do with

(08:53):
his final inspection. And the guy goes the inspectors like,
these aren't the right these aren't the right plans, this
isn't the right thing. And he was in there for
a grand total of forty five seconds that he left.
Oh you looked at the planet, went he's are wrong yep,
and then just leaves. So then they had the they
had the inspection rescheduled for yesterday at I think one

(09:16):
thirty pm. Nobody showed up, so I don't know if
there was some sort of communication, maybe they said, but
now I know they haven't rescheduled again for today. So
fourth time perhaps is a charm. So today could be
the last day at bankruptcy box, well, the final day
of the final inspection. And then what does it mean

(09:38):
that everything is moved in? Ready?

Speaker 6 (09:41):
No, but you could move in.

Speaker 5 (09:43):
It might not be perfect, but you can live there
or host a dinner party.

Speaker 4 (09:48):
Not yet, not yet. What's to be done after the
final inspection. Oh, they've got clean up. They have I
don't know, they got stuff. They got it. They still
have more stuff to do, the end of the tree stuff. No,
they're definitely not going to be out by the end
of the week. I'm hoping now by the end of
the year.

Speaker 6 (10:06):
It's my what's wrong with the cabinets.

Speaker 5 (10:10):
It's just they're not cabinet list cabinets.

Speaker 4 (10:14):
There you go, Okay, all right.

Speaker 5 (10:19):
Charlie down for you.

Speaker 4 (10:24):
Okay, go on.

Speaker 5 (10:26):
There is a bear that is moved into a home's
crawl space more than a week ago, and it's not budging.
The homeowners are desperately trying to keep the animal out,
but the animal is staying put.

Speaker 6 (10:39):
I kind of think this is cool. Remember I had
a raccoon.

Speaker 5 (10:43):
That lived in my roof in my house and I
was like, what the hell is that? These guys have
a bear for about a week now this bear is
This is in California, Los Angeles area, and the bear
had a history of frequenting the house, but now the
animal seems to have found a place to call home
despite getting out of there from the homeowners. I think

(11:06):
this is pretty cool. I'm not gonna lie. It's a
huge bear.

Speaker 4 (11:09):
No, that's not cool. That's just tagged.

Speaker 6 (11:12):
I think that is cool.

Speaker 5 (11:13):
Yeah, I guess known to the officials with the Department
of California Fish and Wildlife. Is a male waits up
to five and fifty pounds. I think it's fantastic. It's
aff Yeah, very cool, Rover. This is a news story
that I know that you will love. Prada says that

(11:33):
they've purchased fashion rival Versacei in a deal worth nearly
one point four billion dollars. This is pretty big. They
officially purchased Milan fashion rival Versacei, and it puts the
fashion house known for its They call it sexy silhouettes
under the same roof.

Speaker 6 (11:53):
God, this is so lame as Prada's ugly.

Speaker 5 (11:57):
Cheek chick cheek chickie and Mumu's youth driven appeal.

Speaker 6 (12:05):
God, that's so lame. Why do you ugly chick that's
what you like? Product? So ugly?

Speaker 5 (12:16):
Is that what it says aesthetic is ugly cheek? I
got two ugly cheeks. They can take my esthetic. Or
science is handing us a reason to be okay with
cold temperatures, Rover. I know you don't like the cold,
but they say that it turns out the during the

(12:38):
winter months and when you're cold when temperatures drop, we
burn more calories to maintain our internal temperature. It's a
process called thermogenesis. And there are two kinds of fat,
white fat, which is the bad stuff, and then the
brown fat, which is the good stuff. When we get
cold or we shiver, it activates brown fat to burn
calories and warm our bodies. According to research, just fifteen

(12:59):
minutes of shit ring in the cold is the psychological
equivalent of moderate exercise.

Speaker 6 (13:04):
For one hour. So if you are.

Speaker 4 (13:06):
Cold, torture, I would I hate exercising. I would rather
exercise for one hour than shiver for fifteen minutes. That's miserable.

Speaker 5 (13:16):
But if you see people that are always cold, they're
always skinny.

Speaker 6 (13:20):
If you think about that, think about that.

Speaker 4 (13:24):
People that are always really really maybe they're cold because
they're skinning.

Speaker 6 (13:30):
I don't know.

Speaker 4 (13:30):
They don't have that layer of fat, brown fat, white fat.
Now is that a thing? I've never heard of this.
You're telling me there's brown fat and white fat. Never
heard that either.

Speaker 6 (13:38):
Yeah, I think visceral bell.

Speaker 5 (13:40):
Yeah, belly is usually the white bad stuff, visceral fat,
and then the brown fat is the healthier fat.

Speaker 4 (13:47):
I've never heard of such a thing.

Speaker 5 (13:48):
Okay, speaking of being cold with the holidays, coming up.
I know. One of the coolest things I would love
to do is go to New York City to see
the Christmas Light. How fun would that be. I've never
done that, see snits. That'd be very cool. Well, New
York's New Year's Eve Wishing Wall is finally up and running,

(14:09):
and it was erected yesterday in Times Square.

Speaker 4 (14:11):
Is that I've never heard of this?

Speaker 5 (14:13):
It stands at the crossworlds of the world. You can
submit a wish virtually online or if you go to
New York City you can place a wish directly on
the wishing wall. Between now in December twenty ninth. So
what happens for.

Speaker 7 (14:27):
Somebody to come up and because like my girlfriend wants
to do something some angel tree thing?

Speaker 4 (14:32):
What's that? It's like a tree?

Speaker 7 (14:34):
And some stores we saw in Walmart it was like,
I don't know, an underprivileged child writes down what he
wants and you go, you pick up the piece of
paper and then you buy what it says, and then they.

Speaker 4 (14:47):
Give it to the kid. Is that like this? This
is on confetti.

Speaker 8 (14:49):
You put your little wish on a piece of confetti
that's dropped on yours.

Speaker 6 (14:52):
Oh yeah, and this goes into.

Speaker 5 (14:55):
Oh okay, so we do this is gonna sound we
do at our dance studio what you're talking about. At
the Walmart store, they have a tree with two families
in need and they have ornaments and this is what
they want, and this is what they're asking for. And
sometimes they're asking for detergent or you know, nothing that's
even fun for themselves. Right, But if you take one

(15:17):
of those ornaments and you fulfill it and then you
give it back to them, that's actually really cool. My
building year, I love that. Yeah, they like they adopt families.

Speaker 4 (15:25):
Yeah, and where do they get these families from? Like
where ours is? The area ours is?

Speaker 6 (15:31):
Yeah, ours is out west, like Lorraine County Families in need.
So it's actually pretty cool.

Speaker 5 (15:35):
So if you do head to New York City, you
can be part of the Wishing Wall and you can
have the confetti drop at Times Square.

Speaker 4 (15:42):
All right.

Speaker 5 (15:42):
I'm only saying this because I think it's really really
cool because I remember exactly where I was when this
happened forty two years ago. I was in Detroit in
my grandma's little tiny den, waiting, sitting really close to
the TV.

Speaker 6 (15:56):
My mom and dad yelling at me.

Speaker 4 (15:58):
Back away from the TV.

Speaker 6 (15:59):
It'll yes cross side.

Speaker 5 (16:02):
I was waiting for Michael Jackson's Thriller to come on.

Speaker 6 (16:06):
It was nineteen eighty three.

Speaker 5 (16:08):
Yep, forty two years ago today Michael Jackson's Thriller video
debuted on MTV. I think that's something I don't try
to didn't come out to young. You're in Halloween forty
two years ago today, December second, nineteen eighty three.

Speaker 6 (16:23):
You remember were here?

Speaker 4 (16:24):
Were because it would be I mean you sort of
associate that with Halloween, I guess because he was like
a zombie guy in the video. But now maybe that
wasn't at the time. I don't really.

Speaker 7 (16:37):
It's one of the only like three Halloween songs that
could play too. Yeah, that's Monster Mash and there's probably
some other.

Speaker 4 (16:43):
One I can't think of right now. But yeah, that's
it all right.

Speaker 6 (16:48):
There you go.

Speaker 5 (16:48):
That's a shizzy on rovers Wonning Gloy. Oh wait, I
just saw this come out.

Speaker 4 (16:53):
Sorry.

Speaker 5 (16:54):
Dave Coolier, the comedian actor, he's back on the news
because he made an announcement I think this morning that
remember he had revealed that he had stage three non
Hotchkin lymphoma and he had beat that he was in remission.
He just got a pet scan and he got checked

(17:15):
with the scan and in October they found it neck
and head cancer head returned.

Speaker 6 (17:21):
It's at the base of his tongue.

Speaker 5 (17:24):
So he says that he's got a pretty good chance
of targeting that tongue area at the base to get
rid of it.

Speaker 4 (17:32):
But it has you have to cut it out. Yeah,
this is why I I my mind is blown.

Speaker 8 (17:38):
That's his things from the show.

Speaker 4 (17:43):
A famous My mind is blown. That we don't have
the technology to I get it. It's very complicated, but
that there's nothing we can do to cure cancer, to
get rid of the these cancer. With all his AI
stuff and everything else we have, people are I mean,

(18:05):
look what we're using it for. We're using it for
utter nonsense. You would think that we could somehow get
I think there's so many different cancer. Your mother died
of cancer snitz. What kind did she have?

Speaker 8 (18:17):
I don't know, But there's just so many different types
of cancer. That's that's the problem. But here's the hard
to attack.

Speaker 5 (18:24):
So I lost a brother and a dad from cancer,
and my aunt ovarian cancer. I was just talking with
somebody and he said that he in his opinion, he
thinks that there is a cure for cancer, but.

Speaker 6 (18:43):
Because they make so much money, no way that they
and I said the same thing.

Speaker 4 (18:50):
There for cancer, that would make you a lot of money.
There's no way that that's the level of evils in
this world. There can't be. I don't want to believe
it in the way I don't want to believe. I
don't believe that. I do not believe that. No, that's
that's ridiculous.

Speaker 5 (19:04):
How do you sleep at night? How do you knowing
that we have well? And wouldn't that have been like
somebody would have said, hey.

Speaker 4 (19:11):
If we had the care for cancer, don't you think
somebody else would have figured out the care for cancer?
And then and they're not in on the conspiracy, and
they would have been like, hey, our company developed a
care for cancer, Like this is this is nonsense.

Speaker 6 (19:24):
This is I don't believe.

Speaker 5 (19:25):
I didn't we actually was a pretty good conversation about it.
But I don't think there are that many evil people
out there that could hide that.

Speaker 4 (19:33):
Oh, I think there are a lot of evil people.
There's time you would.

Speaker 5 (19:36):
Put money over saving people's lives, that those all those Yes.

Speaker 4 (19:41):
There's a bunch of people that put money over saving lives. Absolutely,
I can't. Yeah, but you'd have to have a lot
of people in on a conspiracy. And on top of that,
what is the conspiracy for? You go, oh, well, it's
to make money. Well, do you know how much money?
If let's just say, by some miracle, Charlie and I

(20:04):
discovered the cure for cancer. Later today, maybe we go
out for a couple of drinks, we go, oh, we
should try this and we cure cancer. You think we're
showing up the work on Monday, You think we're doing
this radio show. No, we're going to be the world's
richest men because we've cured cancer. What do you mean
they make too much money? This would be how you

(20:24):
make more money than you could possibly imagine if you
cured cancer. Think of the demand that would be required
for that so or the demand that there would be
for the cure to cancer. No, this is a weird
conspiracy theory. Although I did just see that the head
of somebody sent me a clip. It was the head

(20:48):
of I don't know if it's the FDA or who
it is, saying that lime disease was created in an
American lab. This is the guy who's I think in
charge of the FDA. He says that he believes that
lime disease is man made, made an American lab, escape
the lab, and and and he's like, oh, it's sure
for sure thing. I did a quick Google search of it.

(21:09):
There is a conspiracy theory that says that, but there
is no evidence as far as I could tell, that
that's actually true. You know, there's a couple of books
written making that claim or whatever. But that's the dangerous
time that we live in. These people who believe these conspiracies,
they're actually in charge right now. So I don't know.

(21:31):
Maybe there is a cure for cancer and I'm the
stupid one.

Speaker 6 (21:34):
Perhaps, All right, there you go.

Speaker 5 (21:37):
That's this shusy on Rovers Morning Glory.

Speaker 2 (21:40):
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that winter weight, put on this new RMV hoodie very
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Speaker 1 (21:53):
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Speaker 4 (21:57):
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Speaker 1 (21:59):
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Speaker 4 (22:11):
You can't get that hoodie at roverradio dot com right now.
Ship's December eleventh. I got the first one off the
presses yesterday I'll bring it in so you can see.
Patty says that her brother isolated a protein. He's a
doctor and need a government funding for his trials. He

(22:32):
was refused. He left his lab that he ran at
Tulane University and moved to the Caribbean. He had a breakthrough,
lost his wife to cancer, dedicated his life to be
stopped by funding. Whatever that means.

Speaker 5 (22:48):
Couldn't we raise money and raise awareness to help him
get what he needed so that we can get it.

Speaker 4 (22:53):
Here every time I turn on the TV, they're raising
money for cancer. I don't know what you got. I mean,
there did somewhere when he's going somewhere.

Speaker 5 (23:00):
Especially with AI, like with all of this stuff that
is about to happen, I just I don't know. It's
just so devastating.

Speaker 4 (23:10):
Jason says health insurance wouldn't pay a lot of money
for a cure. They would pay as little as possible
to keep you alive as long as possible, to keep
paying your premiums and deductibles. Well, would you still be
paying your premiums and you'd still be paying that if
you're alive, if they cured you of your cancer, you
still have health insurance. You're still paying. In fact, you're

(23:31):
paying for longer. I don't know why you're Why would
your health insurance That doesn't make any sense. Wouldn't health
insurance companies actually want cancer to be cured, because then
it would be a major expense cancer care taking off
their bucks. They go, we don't have to pay for

(23:52):
that anymore because we have the cure for cancer.

Speaker 5 (23:54):
No, but you're going all the time and doing all
kinds of blood work and tests and scams.

Speaker 4 (23:59):
And why would your insurance company want to pay for that?
They tried to pay as little as possible, right, we
all know that, So why wouldn't they Why would they
be in on this conspiracy that doesn't make any sense.
If you told me healthcare company hospitals didn't want he
secure your cancer, maybe I will believe that. But your
insurance company you but you're asked they would want that

(24:20):
to be cured. They don't want to have to pay
for your treatment. They don't want to have to pay
for anybody's treatment for all that stuff. They'd rather just
pay a one off care, be done with it, and that,
and then you're still alive, paying your insurance premiums, and
they're collecting the cash that's that's just that's crazy. And
Matt doesn't believe that Snisser doesn't know what kind of

(24:41):
cancer killed his mother. Who wouldn't know that. He wants
to know. We don't know where it started. It just
spread quickly through around everywhere.

Speaker 6 (24:50):
Could have started her lungs and went to her brain.
It could have.

Speaker 4 (24:53):
Yeah, I just don't know where. How fast does that happen?
Within months? Yeah, I'm only okay. And then like she
just goes, ah, I'm feeling often you go to the
doctor or or or was there was it like for
a year, so like I don't feel right or whatever?
Like how does that?

Speaker 8 (25:12):
That's pretty exactly, that's pretty quick because I was I
was going to plan on seeing her like later because
she didn't live she lived in Florida, and we're going
to visit like later. And my aunt calls me up
and says, you need to go now, go visit her now.
So I did, and she died within a month, so sheeez.

Speaker 4 (25:31):
Yeah, Well, I I hope we use this technology that
we're developing instead of making AI generated videos of Jeffrey
flying at fifteen's around, let's use that compute power to
you know, carre some cancer or something. I've got to
take a break. We'll be right back on Rover's Morning
Glory Hanging ROMI has said, did you ever notice nobody

(26:00):
died from COVID nineteen at home? Only after the medical
system gets them? Do they die now? One person dropped
dead during the pandemic at their own home. I can't
believe it. I didn't know that statistic. I'm sure more
people died at the hospital than at home.

Speaker 5 (26:17):
I don't know.

Speaker 4 (26:18):
I wonder why that would be. Why would more people
die in the hospital than at home.

Speaker 3 (26:25):
I don't know.

Speaker 4 (26:26):
I'm really racking my brain. Can anybody think of it?
You think people might go to the hospital when they
get sick? Oh, my god, I might die. Let me
go to the hospital. Oh. I hadn't considered that possible.
Oh okay, Mustang, James is very he sent a lot
of this. Might be the guy who calls in yelling

(26:47):
at us.

Speaker 6 (26:47):
Why don't you think one?

Speaker 4 (26:49):
Oh? Is that? Okay? Well, he's texting and calling simultaneously.
I guess all right, James, good morning, Mustang.

Speaker 3 (27:00):
How you do it?

Speaker 4 (27:01):
I do it? Sir? Hey man, Hey.

Speaker 10 (27:04):
I wanted to talk about people with gene mutations when
they eat processed food. There's something there's synthetic vitamins in
our food, and there's one called folic acid. Well of
the population can't methylate fullic acid. Pullic acid is responsible
for making the main detox or in our body that

(27:25):
prevents cardiovascar disease and cancer.

Speaker 3 (27:28):
That's called that's called glue defcion.

Speaker 10 (27:31):
When the body can't be tox the oil gets contaminated
because the hydrocarbons from glucose and because of the machine mutation.

Speaker 3 (27:41):
There's three of them.

Speaker 10 (27:42):
One's called com T, the other ones called sam EAT
and the other ones called mphf R. Due to that,
people have.

Speaker 4 (27:52):
R because I too long, I didn't read. I mean,
this is really getting involved here. Let's cut right to
the chase. Give it, give me the cliss knouts of this.

Speaker 3 (28:06):
Okay.

Speaker 10 (28:06):
When they in animals in the nineteen thirties, they found
out why they had heart disease, and what they started
doing is they started giving them real supplements, and people
they give us fake supplements. The food contains synthetic vitamins,
and because of that, you can't make the proper levels
of your detox or your body. Your body becomes oxidized
and toxic. And you get cancer and cardiovascuer disease because

(28:31):
of fake vitamins.

Speaker 4 (28:32):
Okay, anybody get these before fake vitamins?

Speaker 10 (28:38):
Yeah, people did, but not to the level they have
it right now. Half of women get breast cancer, half
of half of people get cardiovascar disease. Number they go
up and down, they go up and down a lot.

Speaker 7 (28:52):
Wouldn't they kill off the population that has this mutation
and then eventually none of us would have it?

Speaker 10 (28:59):
Yeah, Charlie, it's exactly why people have metal disease. And
you could look this up online.

Speaker 3 (29:03):
This isn't me making this up.

Speaker 10 (29:04):
Fullic acid, the mt h R, sam eat and comte
are why people mainly comp t slower fast.

Speaker 7 (29:12):
Can I visit you in your doctor's office? Where can
I visit you your doctor's office? Mustang James?

Speaker 10 (29:18):
You can go right online right now and look through
the national No.

Speaker 4 (29:21):
I just want to I want to visit. I want
to get a consultation at the doctor's office.

Speaker 3 (29:24):
Do you work at I don't work at a doctor's.

Speaker 4 (29:28):
Western medicine, Charlie, don't be so stupid all right now,
Mustang James. So you say follic acid is synthetic, and
that's what's making us sick? But aren't they did? I
just read that that RFK wants. Isn't he treating autism
with fullic acid?

Speaker 10 (29:48):
No, it's full late the real form.

Speaker 4 (29:50):
Oh, with full late, not full lick acid. Okay, I
don't know if I read that, I don't know.

Speaker 10 (29:58):
I don't The population cannot convert fall the acid. Everybody
else it works fine, sixty percent, it works fine. But
the forty can't. They get either cancer or corgnitive aster disease,
or they get mental illness.

Speaker 4 (30:10):
So why don't you present it? We could cure mental illness.
Why don't you just present this? Why don't we do it?
Why don't we cure it? You could have.

Speaker 3 (30:20):
The scientists know it.

Speaker 10 (30:21):
It's plastered all over.

Speaker 3 (30:22):
The internet, Rover.

Speaker 10 (30:23):
You could look up anything I just say, and you
will find out it's a medical fact.

Speaker 4 (30:27):
There's there's necessarily there's a lot of stuff plastered all
over the internet. It doesn't mean that it's necessary.

Speaker 10 (30:33):
Trust the National Institute of Health and pure redewe papers,
predude papers.

Speaker 4 (30:39):
Yes, So why don't you take this information? And why
don't you cure mental illness? Then? I don't know how
we got from cancer to mental illness. But whatever, why
don't you cure mental illness? And you will go don't
once you go down in history as the cure of
mental illness, Mustang James.

Speaker 10 (30:58):
Everybody's trying to do it right now, but the medical
scientific community and medical community are extreme skeptics. How can
I or anybody else know what they're talking about? They're
the experts.

Speaker 4 (31:10):
Okay, well, I about this, how about this? Hold on,
hold on home? Why do I round hold Let me
just tell you what. Why do I round up ten
of these homeless people that are crazy that I see
downtown every day when I come into work. How long
do you need with them? A week, a day, a month?
How long I'll round up ten of them and then

(31:31):
and then like in thirty days. Let's see what you
can do. Can you cure them?

Speaker 3 (31:35):
All?

Speaker 4 (31:37):
Yes?

Speaker 3 (31:37):
I can't?

Speaker 4 (31:38):
You can?

Speaker 3 (31:39):
I do it all the time. I do it all
the time.

Speaker 4 (31:42):
Really, okay, all right, all right, all right, I.

Speaker 10 (31:47):
Have to give them Okay, if you would like to
do that, I could take Can I tell you what
to give them?

Speaker 4 (31:53):
If you can make it quick?

Speaker 3 (31:55):
Yes, ten to twenty thousand.

Speaker 10 (31:58):
I use a vitamin D with three hundred and fifty
to four hundred milligrams.

Speaker 4 (32:03):
Why do you put that on your chin?

Speaker 3 (32:05):
No, you can.

Speaker 10 (32:06):
It's a supplement with fifteen miligrams two one hundred milligrams
of sink and fole eights kind of fifteen miligrams of
full A.

Speaker 4 (32:15):
Where do we get this time? Where do I get
this stuff?

Speaker 7 (32:18):
If all of the vitamins are synthetic and are bad,
where can I get good vitamins?

Speaker 3 (32:25):
You go and you find the real supplement.

Speaker 10 (32:28):
Well, food has synthetic stuff in it, not the vitamins.
I mean, if you go, if you could buy also,
you could buy another form of full of acids, which
is flanic acid that ninety nine percent of.

Speaker 3 (32:39):
People could mathlight into fole a.

Speaker 10 (32:41):
The problem is if you give somebody something that's fake,
like a fake hormone or fake vitamin, is their body
able to do anything with it?

Speaker 3 (32:49):
And D nine is.

Speaker 10 (32:51):
The most instrumental thing in all those diseases, because without
it you can't get enough oxygen into the cell to
get the carbon molecule out.

Speaker 4 (32:59):
When that sale, I say, now this sounds according to you,
it's just a very easy thing to do to cure
this mental illness. Now, I used to work in a
mental hospital when I was much younger. For the state
of Nevada, we were always stretched budget wise, and so
on and so forth. Why hasn't somebody who operates a

(33:20):
clinic or deals with the mental, you know, mentally incompetent.
Why haven't they taken this very simple approach and and
just said, hey, look, we'll cure everybody who comes in here.
We'll just we'll do this. Why hasn't anyone done that yet?

Speaker 10 (33:39):
They're really not allowed to. There's a lot of parameters.
When you're in the medical industry.

Speaker 4 (33:44):
You could only do.

Speaker 10 (33:44):
What everybody else is doing. There has to be an
exception to that where you.

Speaker 6 (33:49):
Go, don't sound like what you are, what.

Speaker 4 (33:53):
You're recommending, is just taking environments I don't even need.
I don't need a prescription for that stuff, do I?

Speaker 10 (34:00):
No, But here's the thing you bring when you buried.
When you vary from what everybody else does, you have
to go buy what everybody else does.

Speaker 3 (34:09):
You're not allowed to do that. Rover as a you're
not allowed to do that, do it?

Speaker 4 (34:18):
Ah? Okay, all right, So Charlie, that's the that's a
secret to success. You asked where his doctor's office was,
if he had an office able to give you the vitamins.

Speaker 10 (34:29):
That was as could you? Could you write all this,
stop down and do the research. You'll find out that
everybody's saying this with me.

Speaker 3 (34:41):
Okay, this is myself.

Speaker 4 (34:44):
Okay, all right, well I think no, I know. Okay,
all these problems.

Speaker 10 (34:50):
Let's solve these mental ill illness problems. Please research this.

Speaker 3 (34:54):
Please.

Speaker 10 (34:55):
You could be the guy to tell everybody nobody's gonna
believe me.

Speaker 3 (34:58):
Okay, that's true.

Speaker 4 (35:00):
Well, if you have somebody with mental illness, if you
have like if you're a mother and you have there's
this is like a former UFC guy or something. I
always see this guy. I don't know whatever ended up
happening to him, but he was always yelling at his mother,
threatening her. I mean, the guy's complete he's a complete lunatic,
and you're telling me all she has to do is

(35:21):
give him some vitamins and he's gonna he's gonna care.
People would do this there, this would be this would
be all over. Anybody who's been touched by mental illness?

Speaker 6 (35:31):
Are you yelling?

Speaker 4 (35:32):
I don't know, I don't know why he's yelling. Anybody
who is touched by this, they would just go, oh,
let me try this. These are like people who try
weird things. They get cancer and they go, oh, I'm
gonna go on an all fruit diet or whatever, and
then you know it doesn't work, you know, and so
they'll try anything. I would assume people would have tried
this and they would have had success with this if

(35:52):
this were this revolutionary. I don't know, but all right,
Mustang James will thank you. I appreciated one.

Speaker 10 (35:59):
More than you. Be slow and the fast cop tea
have everything to do with addiction and dopamine levels and
why people are addicted to drugs, like Doozy's.

Speaker 3 (36:10):
Sister and stuff like that.

Speaker 10 (36:12):
She had that gene mutation. I could tell you for something,
you could have helped your sister help other people. Please
tell people about this. Don't let this go by the wayside.

Speaker 4 (36:23):
Actually, I think you should just start going around the
streets handing out falling the people.

Speaker 6 (36:29):
No, I think that I'm going to let.

Speaker 5 (36:31):
Professionals handle it recovery places.

Speaker 4 (36:36):
No, they're not all right.

Speaker 10 (36:40):
If they work it out for you, how did it
work out for you.

Speaker 5 (36:43):
I can't force my sister, who is now dead, and
you know that I can't force my sister at the
time to seek help, to seek treatment, to get counseling.

Speaker 3 (36:53):
Help.

Speaker 5 (36:53):
But if I would have given her a I do help,
if I would.

Speaker 4 (36:57):
Have given her some okay, could be all right, all right,
thank you about staying, James. I'm sure we'll probably be
inundated with success stories. I'm guessing probably when we come
back from Christmas break in a month or something. We're
not going on break yet, but I'm just saying sometime
in early January, I'm anticipating a flood of emails, phone calls,

(37:18):
text messages of saying, you know, my uncle, he's schizophrenic.
He's been living on the streets. But I gave him
some of that full eight, not the foll I guess
I gave him a full eight. The good stuff. Knocked
it right out.

Speaker 5 (37:32):
Man.

Speaker 4 (37:32):
Wow, he's crystal clear right now. He actually got a job.
He's the CFO of a company. I mean, okay, we'll
see how it all works out. Jim, you're on Rovers Morning, Clory,
Good morning.

Speaker 11 (37:46):
Jim, Good morning, Rover.

Speaker 4 (37:48):
How are you hey? What's happening? Bud? Oh?

Speaker 5 (37:52):
Not a whole lot?

Speaker 11 (37:53):
Hey, I got two stories for you, okay, real quick.

Speaker 4 (37:58):
About a year.

Speaker 11 (37:59):
Ago, there was a gentleman who was dinosed with cancer
and he uh, he lived, he had about a month
to live. So he got a hold of this nutritious
uh private doctor.

Speaker 4 (38:16):
Uh this doctor and made nutritional value. He was very nutritious.

Speaker 11 (38:22):
Yes, so he so he did so, I think to
get to get rid of the cancer.

Speaker 4 (38:33):
And cut out I think the government cut your phone
out there for a second something to get rid of
the cancer. What did you say?

Speaker 11 (38:39):
Okay, So the nutritious guy told him what to do,
what to take to get rid.

Speaker 3 (38:44):
Of his cancer.

Speaker 11 (38:46):
So so he did it. So he did it, and
about a month later, Uh, he went back to the
doctors and his cancer was completely done. And the doctor
asked him what he did, and he told his doctor

(39:06):
what he what he did, and the doctor told him, uh, yeah,
I knew that would that would help it and that
would cure it. But he said, being under the laws
and regulations, I'm not able to tell you that.

Speaker 4 (39:23):
I'll tell you that or something.

Speaker 11 (39:29):
So he had so he had to take a whole,
a whole lemon, eat a eat a pure lemon every morning,
and he had to cut out a lot, a lot
of different types of foods. And to this day it's
been it's been five six years later and he is
still cancer free. That that's the one.

Speaker 4 (39:51):
That's the one story. Tell me this though, I mean,
this actually is bringing a tear to my eye because
if only Snitzer and Ducie knew of the lemon trick,
they could have saved their loved ones.

Speaker 6 (40:04):
Well, and all of this started because I did.

Speaker 5 (40:06):
In the news, Dave Coolier announced the comedian actor that
his cancer has returned in his body. This time it's
at the base of his tongue. But he said it's
an area that can be treated, and he's you know,
obviously you wish for the best. So that's why we
started talking about all of this now.

Speaker 3 (40:23):
So maybe.

Speaker 4 (40:27):
Maybe now hold on, hold on, I'll say, I don't
know about the lemon trick, but I know other that
was only part the best second Steve jobs he had.
What kind of cancer did he have? Uh? Frank Creatic,
thank you. He tried to do this. He tried to.

(40:50):
He went to somebody and they're like, oh, you just
need to eat fruit and it's going to knock it
right out. He dropped that my agent Bob had cancer,
and he took some bad advice from people who are like, oh,
you have to do this. He has to do that. Yeah,
dropped that. Yeah, so uh. I'm not saying the guy

(41:12):
who ate the lemon didn't somehow have some sort of recovery.
But if it were that simple this doctor wouldn't He
just sort of tell people on the slide, to friends
and other people, like, hey, eat a lemon, it will
cure cancer. That would go around pretty quickly. I don't
think one person would drop that of cancer. They would
just eat a lemon.

Speaker 11 (41:29):
Right, Yeah, I don't know. The doctor asked him, He's like,
what are you doing? And he told him that was
part of it, and then some other stuff.

Speaker 4 (41:37):
I don't remember what.

Speaker 11 (41:38):
All, but he's like, yeah, He's like, I could have
I could have told you to do that. But he says,
under rules and regulations as a doctor, as a as
a professor professional medical doctor, I am not legal. I
am not allowed to tell you those things.

Speaker 4 (41:54):
And what is here's the point?

Speaker 11 (41:56):
Yes, okay, So the last one more. Last summer, my
mother in law was diagnosed with liver sir, and she
had a week to live. So she got ahold of
this nutritious doctor, private doctor out of southern Ohio. So
she went down there and started doing treatments, detox her body,

(42:21):
started doing treatments, and they changed her her beating habits.
Absolutely no sugar because cancer feeds off of sugar. Cancer
loves sweets. And so yeah, three weeks ago she went
back to the doctor and her liver's back to normal

(42:44):
and there's no sign of cancer and she's doing good.
And the doctors.

Speaker 4 (42:50):
They just can't believe it.

Speaker 11 (42:52):
And this guy that she went to, they're not they're
not medical, but he's he's helped hundreds of them become
cancer free. And that was my mother in law, and
I am.

Speaker 4 (43:11):
It was his mother in law. I think the next
thing he was gonna say, I don't think you never
met her and met this guy because it's my mother
in law, and you know how people feel about their mother. Right, Okay,
I lost my dad too.

Speaker 11 (43:22):
I lost my dad two years ago, dude to cancer.
And if I were only known that, I'd have tried
to get that.

Speaker 4 (43:29):
Guy to help my dad. But all right, Jim, thank you,
I appreciate it. Thank you. All right, let's see here,
we do have the aftermath coming up on RMG plus.
Charlie will cure your cancer. I'll give you the recipe.
A couple of slices of lemon and some fold eight

(43:50):
or and whatever else you need. If you're not an
RMG plus subscribers, sign up at roverradio dot com so
you could watch or listen live as they get started
in just a few minutes. You can watch or listen
there on the website or with the Rover Radio app
on your phone, your tablet, or your TV. While you
are at roverradio dot com, pick up the brand new

(44:10):
twenty twenty six r MG hoodie. It is available right now.
I know at least one size has sold out. I
don't know the stock levels on the others. I think
we can get through the week with most sizes. I
think I'm not positive, but grab one while you can.
They all ship out on December eleventh. Makes a great gift.

(44:34):
I'll bring one in. I'll show it to you. I
got the very first one off the presses yesterday and
it looks fantastic. So you can pick that up at
roverradio dot com. What do I have to give away today?

Speaker 5 (44:45):
You have a fifty dollars Circle K gift card. You
can see Charlie. You're out what Thursday, Thursday, December fourth
with Crystal. It's going to be Circle K on Talmadge
Avenue at Akron from noon until one, and you've.

Speaker 4 (45:00):
Got rolling seventy five rolls of wrapping paper.

Speaker 7 (45:03):
The first seventy five people get the special buzzard wrapping paper.

Speaker 4 (45:07):
Nice very all right.

Speaker 5 (45:08):
Let's also make sure that you have Circle K's Inner
Circle app on your phone and you could win Circle
K gift cards.

Speaker 6 (45:15):
So call her what thirty.

Speaker 4 (45:17):
Thirty right now? Eight six six ye, we're over eight
sixty six nine six seven six eighty three seven will
give you what'd you say? Fifty dollars? Yes, sir, all right,
good luck to you. We will be back live tomorrow morning.
Have a great day. It's Rovery's Morning Glory. Bye, Slovery's
Morning Glory.
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