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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Stop college students. People are talking about Canning. We are hammah,
just turns my stomach. Fifty five krs the talk station
Ato six fifty five KRCD talk station and a very
happy Tuesday. It being Tuesday at eight oh six, it
is that time of week. Get the inside scoop with
bright Bart News b R E I T B A
(00:21):
r T dot com book Market. You will be glad
you did because you get to read there the stuff
written by Senior editor at Large Joel Pollock. A return
to Joel Pollock. Welcome back, Joel. Love having you on
the show.
Speaker 2 (00:33):
Well, thank you, good morning to you.
Speaker 1 (00:35):
And Shenanigan's declaration for the state of California and the
leftists that run it feels so sorry for a lot
of Californians. But they voted what they get what they
voted for. And uh they reaction to Donald Trump and
hitting the around sprinting he is fifty million dollars to
fight Donald Trump's agenda in the courtroom. Tell us all
(00:55):
about this. I read your article on it over at
bright Bart Joel.
Speaker 2 (01:00):
Well, let me just back it up for a second.
So it is true that California as a whole voted
for the mismanagement of Gavin Newsom and the Democrats. That
is true. But I'm going to defend my community here
and say that my community did not vote for wildfires
that destroy the entire town, for fire hydrants that don't
(01:22):
have water in them, for police that don't show up
to direct traffic, and an evacuation, for a mayor that
goes overseas when she knows there's an extreme weather event coming.
My part of the town voted for the mayor's opponent,
Rick Caruso, who is a real estate developer, who managed
(01:43):
to defend his property using private firefighters. So there's some
political diversity in California.
Speaker 1 (01:50):
Pockets of sanity, Joel, pockets of sanity.
Speaker 2 (01:53):
Yeah no, but I want to blame my neighbors.
Speaker 1 (01:55):
No, no, no, no, And I didn't I know. It's
paint with a broad brush, Listen. I lived in Chicago
for eight years, man, and it's difficult to be a
conservative there. But you know what, the rest of the
state is more conservative and they feel ill served because
of the massive population. The city of Chicago's corrupt as
it is, But I get it. But on that note, Joel,
while we're there, do the folks that invited this type
(02:18):
of mismanagement, and have they woken up after the realities
were unfolded the mismanagement, the you know, the misspent money,
the water that isn't flowing, and in the reaction to
the wildfires. Do you think that's going to have an
impact longer term?
Speaker 2 (02:32):
Well, it's really just too early and too close to
me personally to speculate about politics.
Speaker 1 (02:38):
I'll just tell you what's going on.
Speaker 2 (02:40):
So the residents of Pacific Polisades are really waging a
baliant fight to rebuild the community after the wildfires of January,
and without the intervention of the Trump administration, it would
not be happening because the city and state governments don't
(03:00):
know how to build anything, and they are throwing up
all kinds of roadblocks that only the residents working with
the Trump administration have been able to overcome. And you know,
in the beginning, they didn't want to let people go
to their property even to start sifting through the rubble
or start clearing it out. When Trump was here on
(03:22):
January twenty fourth, he told the mayor that residents needed
to be let in right away, So that happened. Then
they can't sort out the system of permits that would
allow the Army Corps of Engineers to start clearing the debris,
or that would let people hire private contractors to clear
the degree from their own sites. That's also something that
(03:42):
Trump administration has had to intervene to do. And we're
still getting the run around from La County. I remember,
we have Los Angeles City and Los Angeles County, two
lairs of government, both dysfunctional in their own special way,
and we are having to figure out how to make
them work finally for the benefit of the residents who
(04:04):
want to rebuild. And if they don't work, you're just
going to have empty lots on the most beautiful real
estate in the world, really, because this little portion of
Los Angeles is built on a hillside that overlooks the
Pacific Ocean that is at the base of the Santa
Monica Mountains. It's really spectacular and it's an incredible community,
wonderful people. But we've had to band together and help
(04:25):
each other out to figure out how to circumvent the
red tape and how to deal with politicians who are
functioning as big city politicians do in Democrat jurisdiction. The
latest scandal is that they hired this consulting firm supposedly
to rebuild the city. They did it behind closed doors.
No one knows what the firm's supposed to do. No
one knows how much they're supposed to earn from this.
(04:48):
And they're from Evanston, Illinois, which is my old stomping ground,
which to ask me, doesn't really know how to manage
very much either. No, these consultants are going to come
in and tell us what to do with our town
after they basically mismanaged Evanston. You know, Evanston didn't even
have a city manager for several years. It's spent one
hundred thousand dollars just on looking for a city manager
(05:09):
because they couldn't find one, and they had one for
a while, but she was too pro police for the
Black Lives Matter crowd, so they rejected her. I mean,
that's Evanston, Illinois, and what they're going to send us
someone and knows something about rebuilding. They also got tied
up in this corruption scandal during Hurricane Sandy because two
of their consultants were discovered to have defrauded New York
(05:31):
City using reimbursements for housing and for travel expenses. They
pleaded guilty so we were bringing this group in to
rebuild LA. It's just nuts. And I think that we
are applying a level of scrutiny here to these elected
officials in California that they've never actually seen before, because
you're right in a sense that the electorate generally takes
(05:54):
what they're given here in California because they say the
right things about social issues. They have the left wing positions,
and they fight those nasty Republicans and the bad Orange Man.
But it turns out the bad Orange Man cares more
about the residents than Democrats do. So I do think
people are having a change of heart. But really we're
not focused on the next election right now. Right now,
(06:14):
we're just focused on clearing the debris and getting the
houses going again.
Speaker 1 (06:17):
Well and apparently not landscaping. Recording an article I read
about Gavin Newsom, he's prohibiting people from planting a vegetation
within five feet of their homes. Yeah, this is crazy.
Speaker 2 (06:29):
So clearly newsen doesn't understand what caused the fire and
how the fire is spread. But they're gonna blame climate change.
They're gonna blame vegetation near people's homes. You know, my
house did very well, we've got lots of plants around
our house. My house did not burn even though it
was in the center.
Speaker 1 (06:45):
Of the fire.
Speaker 2 (06:46):
Oh yeah, that's because some of the vegetation actually kept
the fire off the house. So there are some species
evidently that are fire resistant. Ficus trees, for example, they're
very thirsty, they drink a lot of water. They kind
of destroyed my vegetable garden, but they're very fire resistant
for that reason because they store so much water in
(07:06):
their trunks and branches and leaves and so forth, and
so telling us what to plant, that's what the state
has decided it needs to do. There's no reevaluation of
overall water policy, overall forestry emergency services, a crazy insurance
policy that has resulted in insurance companies leaving the state
and dropping consumers. So they're not focused on anything that
(07:29):
really matters. They're just going to try to regulate their
way out of the pr crisis that just created for them.
Speaker 1 (07:34):
Well, do you anticipate the rumors were flying in the
during the raging part of the Fire's Joel that somehow
this was I don't want to say intentional. There's conspiracy
theorist out there all over, but look, there was all
kinds of dry vegetation, sparks happened, and wildfire's raised. It's
been happening in California for a long time. Hew Bad
Religion wrote a song about it. So you have all
(07:54):
this awareness of potential for fires. But like what happened
in Lehina, with those homes that are now, they can't
rebuild them the way they originally built, and they're planning
on remaking that entire city into something it wasn't before.
Conveniently they've burned all to the ground. Do you anticipate
these rules and regulations having an impact on maybe the
size of homes and whether or not they can be
(08:16):
equipped with Oh, I don't know, gas lines or something.
I mean, is this going to be the fifteen minute
city remaking, Joel?
Speaker 2 (08:25):
That's what people are afraid of. People are worried about
that kind of intervention. I don't see that happening just yet.
But I do think that they're going to try to
put a stamp, put a kind of liberal or climate
change stamp on whatever the rebuilding is, and they're not
really going to address the fundamental issues, which are the
(08:47):
poor design of the water system, the poor design of
some of the roads. For example, there's one part of
town that only has one road in, one road out
for thousands of residents. They're not going to change that,
going to change the Santa Monica Mountain Conservancy and how
they deal with brush and brush clearance and fire breaks.
(09:07):
They need to the residents want them to, So maybe
it'll happen if residents continue to be as active as
we've been. But left to their own devices, the local
officials would simply remake California in their image, and that's
the problem. Their policies have led to this disaster well.
Speaker 1 (09:24):
And the frustrating part for me, just being an outside observer,
that there was a lot of money, literally millions, if
not billions of dollars allocated for clearance projects to get
rid of the brush, to do forest maintenance, responsible for
its maintenance, and anytime they try to engage in one
of those projects, environmental groups would pop up and sue
them to stop it in its tracks.
Speaker 2 (09:46):
Yeah, there have been huge problems with that. In fact,
fire creders have told me that they are frustrated with
the fact that environmental groups won't let people clear brush
in certain areas that would reduce the risks not eliminated,
but the risk of wildfires to structures and reduce the
risk of the out of control blazes that we've seen
(10:07):
where you know, one structure goes up and then there
are embers that fly and hit the next structure. So
we have a problem in California where because of the
beautiful weather and the beautiful natural resources the coastline, the
mountains and what have you, people get the idea that
we can make life perfect here by creating a utopia.
So that's what we plan for. So Gavin Newsom wants
(10:29):
to get rid of all the gas powered cars and
have an electric vehicle future. By twenty thirty five, you
can only buy electric vehicles, but he doesn't think about
the worst case scenario. And actually, the EPA is in
my town right now clearing out electric vehicles because it
turns out that the lithium ion batteries are pretty hazardous
and a fire. So it's just a misorientation. The purpose
(10:53):
of government, the first and fundamental purpose, is to protect
the lives and property of the people. So you've got
to deal with that before you deal with whatever pie
in the sky utopia you want to create. Because frankly,
we're human beings, and only God can create perfect things.
We create imperfect things. And so when we create our
imperfect things, we need to create systems that deal with failure,
(11:14):
not systems that are guaranteed to succeed, because we can't
guarantee anything excellent.
Speaker 1 (11:18):
Observation Joe Pollock from Breitbart Do you have do you expect?
And I know many people were kind of caught with
their pants down because they didn't have insurance. They couldn't
afford insurance. Perhaps maybe the insurers left the state because
of the the the outrageous risk analysis there actually said,
you know, we shouldn't be here because of the fire risk.
(11:39):
Do you anticipate an exodus of a lot of people?
They just going to give up. I can't rebuild. It's
going to take too long. I have I have to
get out of here.
Speaker 2 (11:48):
I think a few people will say that, but I
think most people are committed to rebuilding because Specific Palisades
wasn't is such a special place. It really was a
small town in LA where everybody knew it body, where
kids played baseball incessantly in the public park, and where
people went to church on Sunday and the farmers market,
(12:09):
and it's just an idyllic place. People really loved it.
It was a down to earth community.
Speaker 1 (12:14):
You know.
Speaker 2 (12:15):
The New York Times has really defamed us. They've said, oh,
you know, it's a bunch of rich people.
Speaker 1 (12:19):
Most people in.
Speaker 2 (12:19):
The town, although they are rich on paper because of
the value of the property, they didn't start out rich.
And many of the homeowners, especially the elderly homeowners, bought
right after the Second World War, when most of the
housing stock was just two bedroom bungalows. So this is
a town of ordinary people, some extraordinary people, but it's
(12:40):
really just a great American town, and people want to
preserve that. So I think most people are going to
try to do that if they can, if the government
doesn't get me away.
Speaker 1 (12:49):
Ford Park Company. Joe Pollock. Obviously, this is a This
is so personal to you because you live there in
the heart of where all this happened. It had to
have impacted you psychologically, pacted your life, like the death
of a loved one kind of thing, or like living
through the horrors of World War two. If you were,
you know, in London being bombed, I mean, what how
(13:10):
do you cope with that? Joel? We just move forward.
Speaker 2 (13:15):
I mean, we're Americans if you drive around the town
right now, you'll see American flags on a lot of
the destroyed property. Is a giant's American flag. I mean
it must be like fifty feet by one hundred feet
or something, hanging from one of the homes on the
hillside overlooking Sunset Boulevard. You can't drive into town from
the east without seeing it. So we're Americans rebuilt. We
(13:36):
don't give up. But California sureius trying to make us
do that, But we're not going to give up.
Speaker 1 (13:43):
Joel Paul Locke, Senior aut at Large, Breitbart Bookmarket, Breitbart
dot Com. God bless you, Joel. I wish you all
the best of luck in the world helping to rebuild
your community, and I appreciate your optimism in the face
of all this tragedy and all these seemingly insurmountable hurdles.
I wish you like all the luck in the world,
my friend. Thank you, sir. I'll look forward to having
you back on the fifty five Carsy Morning Show real soon.
(14:05):
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