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October 18, 2025 • 34 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Can you imagine going to pick your kid up from school.
I'm sorry, someone else already picked them up. Did they
fill out the state required paperwork?

Speaker 2 (00:10):
Ah?

Speaker 1 (00:10):
Yeah, the school released your child. Inno their custody. We'll
call the police. Nothing to do. It wasn't illegal, entirely
plausible in California. Now Newsom signed ABE four ninety five
in the law. This is a big thing Pastor Jack
Hibbs has been talking about. Big busloads went up to Sacramento.
NIP didn't change Newsome at all. You had a lot

(00:32):
of people, you had parental rights people, you had conservatives
up there. You had religious people of all kinds of
faith talking about no, they we actually have a god
given parental A forty and you're defying that. Well, we
have too, because Trump's ice are coming in. They're tearing
families apart, and we have little illegal alien children here,
and there's somebody needs to be in control of them.

(00:54):
So we'll just never let a good crisis go to waste.
That's what they're doing. No, no, no, you're not. It
expands the use of the caregivers authorization out of a David,
which allows any adult claiming kinship with a fifth degree
within the fifth degree. What does that mean, like five
removed from you down the blood light to make medical

(01:16):
and educational decisions for a child, well, without parental consent
or verification. Well, they do background checks and notarizes. Nope,
neither could a stranger claim to be a relative. Yeah,
how do you think three hundred thousand kids disappeared during
the Biden administration, twenty seven of them found dead. You

(01:39):
think they did background checks? Well, we can't do this,
so we get a notary out here. No, they could
have access the kid, even enroll them in another school.
What if is this just some opening construction to get
to build the doorframe, to open the door up to
walk through that. Oh wait, Mom and dad don't want

(02:02):
them to have the surgical mutilation of their genitals, so
need to separate them. We're going to give them to
somebody else here that will take care of this. Already
got the system in place. I'm just thinking out loud here. Yeah,
the state would do that. We're already a trans kid
Saint Struary state where they can kidnap them from Kentucky
and bring them right out here. Pastor Jack Kibbs, who

(02:23):
joined us once on the show, we should reach back out.
He's on a mission. He's called the bil demonic. He's
urged parents to fulle public school. You can do homeschooling
or private school. And I would say, if you go, oh,
I can't do either of those who can't afford it, Well,
can you afford to have your boy be turned into

(02:44):
a girl? I would have to get out. I would
have to have had school age kids. I would not
feel comfortable. Now, are there still good public schools? Yeah, yeah,
there are some. But even those good people in those
good public schools have laws that come down that fight
against you. The state has ordered public schools to start

(03:05):
purging their emergency contact records. Why would you do that, Well,
we're going to decide who the emergency contact is. San Francisco, Unified,
Chino Valley. They've already begun to start purging contact records.
And he got Governor Satan claiming that this would actually,

(03:28):
in his words, make children safer. This is a direct
assault on the relationship between kids and parents, and this
violates constitutional protections, violates the Bible as well. Their governor
bails above. Who's that cheering the sun? Well, ladies and

(03:49):
gentlemen over here in this corner, is the human traffickers.
Look at them celebrating. Boy, that's a dream bill for him,
isn't it. They already had the hundreds of thousands of
unaccompanied illegal alien miners that were somehow lost lost in
the nut Where are they are they roaming the streets
now we don't see them. They're not lost. They're either

(04:13):
doing slave labor with their hands out in like marijuana
fields in California where they got caught and everybody got
mad that law enforcement found those kids and got them
out of that situation. As they were driving them out
of the pot farm, you had people throwing cinder blocks
at ice vehicles. Guys. It's like they want kids to

(04:36):
be harmed. They create laws to harm kids. ABY four
ninety five takes effect January first of this year. There's
some people that have been fighting this back, California Family
Counsel being one of those. They're exploring legal challenges to

(04:56):
strike down ABY four ninety five. We should have a
Jonathan on California Family Counsel since they're fighting this as well. Simily,
Woman Alexandra Mosito, she's warning this bill signed by Newsom
will actually harm them. It allows extended family to say

(05:18):
you're a caregiver, and I'm sure there are some that
would be good caregivers now if their parents are deported.
I can understand a parent wanting a child to stay
in the land of milk and honey. But keep your
family together. Take your kids with you. You messed up,
you came here, you broke the laws, you got deported.

(05:38):
Take your kids with you. That's what Sacramento should be saying.
But no, let's sit down and come up with something
the opposite of this. It's called this the Family Preparedness
Plan Act of twenty twenty five. It separates the family.
It keeps the kids here and hands them off to
somebody else while while they're actual closest family are deported.

(06:02):
A Family Preparedness Plan Act of twenty twenty five. You
know what that would really be if the state told
it legal aliens here, Yes, you could be deported. So
you need to start planning what school you're going to
roll your kids back in your own country. That's the
Family Preparedness Plan Act that they need to have. Fifth
degree of kinship includes all step parents, step siblings, all

(06:24):
relatives that are preceded by the words great, great, great
or grand as well as any spouse of any of
those people, even in the case of divorce. Guys, that's
people like well, I guess five times removed. I guess.
I thought it would have to maybe involve some blood
some blood family, maybe step siblings, step parents, It could

(06:48):
be the it could be the chick that your stepdad
was married to before. Wow, maybe four ninety five dollars.
Also requires schools to provide information to parents and guardians
regarding the kids right to a free public education. That
would mean, oh, you're here illegal. Nineteen eighty two Supreme

(07:10):
Court with Texas. They granted that, yes, you can go
to school for free. It also requires daycare facilities to
report to the Attorney General's office any request or information
or access to the facility by law enforcement. Fighting back
against the fans, they said the relatives can sign the
caregiver affidavit allow them to enroll the child in school

(07:32):
and consent to medical care. They do that in there.
Huh kids transanctuary state. Yeah, you come back, you see
your kid in two years. Jose's now Josephina knew some supports,
he said, parents' rights. By taking away parents' rights, I

(07:56):
it's now too easy. It's like everything that they say
that they're doing, it's the opposite. There's really nothing that
I've they've put out there that actually makes sense. Nothing
U California wants control of your kids. And if you're white, Hispanic,
or Asian, those groups will also now be forced here

(08:16):
in California to pay for the he sends of slavery.
Somebody's always these days demanding some kind of compensation from
somebody who had no part in hurting them. To even
begin with, Yes, California super majority, we're here to save
the day. Democrats want reparations. No other bills now pass

(08:37):
through the Assembly where they hold the supermajority. So what
they're gonna do is they're gonna create an agency. Let's
get some business cards, let's get some parking spots, let's
get some expense accounts. We got a new agency. They're
gonna help track black family lineage. So they're gonna ancestry

(08:57):
dot com it up. This is all under reparations for
people that live in California right now who were never slaves.
California was never a slave state. The California thinks it's
a good idea to get other citizens of the state
of California that aren't black Americans or black Californians to
pay for a atrocious sin, slavery. But we never did it.

(09:23):
Senator Stephen Bradford said, if you can inherit generational wealth,
you can inherit generational debt reparations as a debt that's
owed to descendants of slavery. All right, how many people
out there started out like Kamala says on third base,
and you inherited generational wealth. Well, I guess you're just

(09:47):
assuming everybody that's not black inherited generational wealth. So we
can now inherit generational debt. If I inherited generational wealth,
there's no way I would remember as a seventeen year
old cleaning up out a rabbit farm for money. No,
I wouldn't remember working out in that hot, sweaty trap
club out in your kern uh down their second with

(10:09):
clay pigeons on there. If I inherited generational wealth. By
inherited generational wealth, I wouldn't even be sent here talking
to you. I'd be out somewhere in the Bahamas. So
in that such a blanket statement to make, But that's California.

(10:31):
We're gonna claim damages because they're of hurt feelings. Hurting, Yeah,
that you never felt. But we're winning the culture wars.
We really are. I think Republicans are now. I think
that there's this there's a there's a tide coming back
in this reparation plan. You think about it, Anybody else

(10:53):
in California that's not black is going to just be
livid what you're saying. I gotta pay for great great
great great great Grandpappy's thing. That do you even know
if my family owned slaves? Have you researched it? Think
of the Hispanics that came here. You know, over the decades,

(11:17):
Asians will have to pay. That's not I guess a
black Californian. I guess that's what it boils down to here.
But I think a lot of people are getting tired
of this man. That's why I'm saying Conservatives are winning
the culture warror. You even had that young lady ask
Bernie Sanders at that CNN Communist panel about how Republicans

(11:37):
are winning on social media. It's because Republicans are creative
and funny and know how to bring the point home
and that makes people be interested in it. We had
Katie Porter blow up this week. Here, here's somebody else
that's running for governor, Betty Ye. You guys heard of

(11:59):
Betty She's a former state budget director controller, current vice
chair of the California Democratic Party. She's she's coming out
saying that she thinks men who you know, think they're women,
she said, have every right to compete against the females.
She thinks we should throw everybody into the to the
ring together. Now, I added all the crazy stuff in

(12:22):
California that has come out in the last few weeks,
I have to say this. This is the topper. When
she said just throw everybody in the ring together. She said,
and this is a California governor runner, Betty Ye. She
would like to see a gender neutral Olympics take place
in La. Yeah you heard that. You heard that right,

(12:47):
All gender Olympics, gender neutral. She wants the world to
come together and allow that to happen. It's kind of
it's really, it's kind of simple. Uh, miss listen carefully,
really pay attention. God does not allow us to pick
our gender. There are men, there are women, and if

(13:08):
there weren't, you wouldn't be hearing this right now because
you wouldn't have been born.

Speaker 3 (13:13):
This is the Trevor carry Show on The Valley's Power Talk.

Speaker 1 (13:18):
Regular customer at the Shrimp Basket restaurant in Pensacola, Florida,
made a habit for the past decade to come in
at eleven am every single day and order a cup
of gumbo for his lunch. The staff said the man
was like a grandfather figure to him. They even threw
him a party for his seventy eighth birthday a few
months ago. He's a loyal customer and he they know,

(13:40):
he wasn't there for a few days in a row.
So the staff from the restaurant tried calling his house,
even knew him. That boy got no answer. So cook said,
I'm worried. I'm gonna go over and check up on him.
And Pensacola, Florida is not a small little town, but
it's not a huge megatropolis as well. But it's not
like a little town where you know, walk down town

(14:02):
street and turned the corner and there was his house.
But he found out when over where he did. He
knocked on the door two times and he didn't answer.
Third time, he said he knocked knocked and he didn't
hear anything. He said, I kind of stayed up for
a minute. I knocked and I heard him like help,
a faint voice, going help, who is that? And he

(14:23):
would say it's done. Well, it's done now, he said,
the guys all come in, he said, we he When
he got into the door, the elderly man was lying
on the floor and he'd been there for days. He
he'd suffered a fall and broke ribs and he couldn't move.
He's singing in the hospital rehab and he's on the

(14:45):
road to recovery. Should have told you that at the start.
But yeah, in that, in that a great story. Man
checking up on people. That's why I say when it's
really hot here, like check on people that might live
on your block, things like that. But and it made

(15:05):
me think, well, I live alone, and I thought, well,
if it's an early Saturday morning fall, I might not
get there. Hey, where's Trevor till you know, like Monday morning?
Is I answering phone calls? Now? My mom already I
took it. I remember, Mom. If you're listening, you know
this is a funny story on the iHeartRadio app in

(15:25):
Tennessee where you make a listening around the world podcast
available at power Talk ninety six to seven dot com,
the new preset make it at number one preset, the iHeartRadio.
All right, good, I got that all out of the way.
Uh but yeah we were Uh now what was I said?
All that? Now I'm going back to the Joe Biden
nights with my mom. I know. Oh okay, yeah, thank you.

(15:50):
See see where like a married couple. Now you can
finish my thoughts in there. The funny story of finding me.
I had taken a nap on a weekend and I
don't know how long I was out, but she thought
it was odd that I wasn't responding. And I woke
up from the nap and I had missed calls from
some friends down in Tai Larry that she called to
maybe check on me. She was ready to call my

(16:11):
neighbor next door because she has those numbers in case
she can't get a hold of me. And I woke
up and I was like, no, I'm okay. I just
took a nap. And I said, well, it's good to
have people concerned about you like that when you don't
respond like you normally respond. I guess I'm maybe I
don't know, getting to that age where I need that

(16:32):
the help I fall in and I can't get up button.
I think anybody that lives alone might want to have that.
I don't care what age you are. I have my
in case I'm choking. While when you live alone you
got to plan these things. You know. If you live
with somebody else, you can be like, oh, pointing at
your neck and they'll come around and do the Heimlok
on you, hopefully right. No, I got a bench that

(16:55):
has these two knobs up at the top at the
end of the bench, and I'll put it right under
my rib cage and just knock myself down on that
thing right there. And if that doesn't work, then I
think I'll still have enough oxygen in the brain to
run to neighbors and bang on the door and ring
the doorbell. That's it. I don't know. Maybe if I
fall halfway on the run right there, maybe I should

(17:17):
get rid of that first thing I'm trying to do
with the bench knob, because they say, if you're alone
like that, get that like a chair the back, you know,
the angle top of the chair. If you can get
underneath there, underneath the rib cage where you're supposed to
pull up with your fist when you put your arms
around somebody, do you know how to do the Heimli?

(17:37):
What happens in here? We need to learn that. We
need to have an iheartmedical person come in and train us. Okay,
the first the first aid kid in there doesn't do
the Heimlich. I guess I shouldn't be eating while on
the air, right, that's that's that's the best thing to do.
But I would think as anybody, especially if you're an

(17:57):
elderly and live alone, you should have that button. I
know they still got them. They got to have. I
bet it's even more high tech now these days because
that man down like that fell, broke his ribs. Poor
man probably couldn't even slide anywhere without the intense pain.
But way to go, Gumbo guys coming over and saved them.

(18:20):
I briefly mentioned this yesterday and didn't have time to
get to it. But I saw this study that they
did about what age people hit their functional peak. It's
from the University of Western Australia in the University of Warsaw,
and we know those are two highly esteem universities. I'm

(18:45):
sure that's Warsaw, Poland, not Warsaw New York. They did
a study tracking when humans peak, and it's not physical.
It's not the physical aspect of that, because we all
know that's what like on your twenty first birthday on
the Downhill site, right, I think like twenty might be
your physical peak there, but no, what they factored in

(19:08):
was intelligence, personality, wisdom, decision making. And this actual number
the age when you hit your functional peak. I'm going
to say it's decades later than most would think. So

(19:29):
I got the number.

Speaker 3 (19:30):
Next, this is the trebor Tary show on the Valley's
Power talk.

Speaker 1 (19:36):
S and a protein could be to blame. I've looked
this up. You can find this at study finds dot
o rg. I highly recommend that site if you're tired
of your browsing being boring. Studyfinds dot org. They say
aging expreads of the body via protein called h m
GB one that's h as in Harry Emas and Mary

(19:58):
g as in George b as in boy one, which
sends pro aging signals between cells. And what they did
they injected this protein into mice and they they witnessed
signs of aging, but they said they got a new
path for anti aging, including drugs that block this HMGB
one and the effects. So run into your doctor, doc.

(20:22):
What do you guy that can block the HMGB one?
You can go look it up. A study publishing the
journal Metabolism. They said it's an aging messenger. So if
they can find a way to block this, to block
the form of it from binding to its receptors, maybe
that's some of the Maybe that's what Tom Cruise has

(20:43):
already taken. You got people that don't seem to age, right,
Dolly pardon, you know only skin, you know surgery, and
I can do so much. But they say these strategies
are already feasible. The research was funded by the National
Research Foundation of Korea and the Trevor Carey Show. Thank You.

(21:06):
New research also shows people reach they're all around mental
and emotional peak, not in their twenties. Here's the age
age sixty, So I got like three and a half
months to enjoy my rise to peakness. They say quick
thinking slows with age, experienced judgment and emotional balance keep

(21:27):
improving through midlife. Did I tell you what the peak
age was yesterday? Okay, Sarah? Do you knew that was coming?

Speaker 3 (21:34):
So?

Speaker 1 (21:35):
I think most people would have said, what forty forty
five something like that. That's probably what I would have
guessed no. They said. After the mid sixties, scores start
to dip a little, dip a little more sharply into
the seventies. They said, aging isn't decline. It's a long
build up to the most capable stage of adult life. Again,
aging isn't decline. It's a long build up to the

(21:58):
most capable stage of adult life. They said. A lot
of humans don't reach functional peak until late fifties, early sixties. Now,
physical strength that starts to go down in your twenties.
But they say when they do it all together with
the personality and your emotions and all of that, the

(22:18):
apex is aged sixty. They said. The research also indicates
individuals best suited for high stakes decision making roles are
likely to be younger than forty or older than sixty five.
So I guess, when you reach your peak, what on
your way to the peak? You're not into great decision
making time. I kind of contradict each other. Now, when

(22:44):
I was twenty five, I could process information faster. You know,
we have more of a working memory. I look at
it as we got more ram in there, it hadn't
all bit. We haven't saved a bunch of files. In
the files, the computer has it worn down like an
older computer. Our brains are the most ultimate computer. We give. Wow,

(23:07):
look at what Bill Gates. Wow, look at what these
people have done with computers. Right, but you think of
we need to be like, wow, God, look at this
computer you gave us. In our mind, you know, we're
fascinated by AI and some of what these robots can
now do almost looking human, right almost look at okay,
right now, this is the most amazing computer in the

(23:29):
world that in less than one second, I can think, clap, bark.
That brain's incredible. There's no lag, there's no nothing, and
it retains memory. My mom and dad and I were
talking about dreams, like who writes that screenplay? There's some

(23:52):
horror writers in there. There's somebody writing a screenplay in
our brain right now? You know, when you're like surfing
on a Hershey's Chocolate bar through midtown Manhattan, way go,
Why was I dreaming about surfing on our What is
it me? Who's writing those screenplays in our brain when
we're asleep? The brain is amazing, isn't it? And I

(24:15):
think that even those that know the most about it
only know just less than five percent of it. But
how we process information, and you know, as you get
older it is harder. Physical peak age twenty, but our

(24:36):
knowledge and even vocabulary keeps rising until in our sixties.
They say it continues improving into your late sixties. They
said personality also matures with age. I was talking with
Deborah Rush who were talking about the mindset. The front
cortex of the brain doesn't fully form until like twenty

(24:57):
five years old. I mean, as humans, let's just be honest.
When did some of our dumbest stuff ever that we
ever did? That You might think it's funny or embarrassing
or maybe criminal. It's the young brain. Yeah, the body's
physicals going, but that brain is still still learning. And

(25:21):
the personality with age also, they say that you start
to peak because you have more career success and that
can give you more life satisfaction. And they said that's
from early adulthood into your fifties and sixties. All right.
Why success peaks around sixty They said people typically earn
their higher salaries between ages fifty and fifty five. They

(25:44):
said political leaders in most countries are most commonly elected
in their mid fifties to early sixties. All right, figuring
all this out. Research doesn't argue that everyone over sixty
five is unfit for leadership, right Joe Right. Trump I said,
some people maintain strong performance well into an older age.

(26:07):
Others experienced earlier declines. I mean, my dad's eighty and
although retired, he's still filling in and preaching almost he's
booked up till the end of the year, till they're
gonna be coming out for Christmas. And there are certain
kind of jobs, in certain kind of careers that, of course,
you can do to a longer age. If you're a

(26:29):
telephone repair poll man, you're not gonna probably be shimmying
up that pole in your in your sixties or seventies.
But if you're a writer, you can do that. Accountant,
I get, you know, there's all different kind of jobs
that that you can do in radio being one of those.
I think of Paul Harvey till to an old age.

(26:53):
Art le Beaux, that's right, Michael Savage, now he's getting
up there and he's still he's still doing it. But
Paul Harvey, he's one of the best. And there's so
many great Paul Harvey's on YouTube. Yeah, and people that
don't know who Paul Harvey. You need to go listen
to He's one of the best theater of the mind painters.

(27:16):
And I loved how you wouldn't even know it and
he'd be into a commercial. He'd be talking and you
had no idea that he had segued right into that
to that commercial. And it's truly fascinating to see how
he took a story and could just keep you on
the edge of your seat. Speaking of seats, I would

(27:40):
like to endorse. See say I'm no good at it,
See he was good at it. He'd be talking about
seats and suddenly you'd be into a pitch for a
commercial while you need a new chairs in your dining room,
and he'd segue right into that. Now, I know I
can't process information as quickly as twenty five years old,
but you know, when you have decades And I've always

(28:01):
said this, how many times did we say, Man, if
I just knew at age thirty what I figured out
by forty, If I only knew at age forty what
I figured out by fifty, you know, you keep going up.
So whatever your age right now, and God willing, you
have another decade or years to live, you're going to
realize that you're doing something wrong today. It's just it's

(28:24):
what it boils down to, doesn't it. Now we know
with Joe Biden President otto pain, we noticed a serious
decline in that in that man, from even when he
was starting his campaign to during his presidency. It almost
seems like a dream, doesn't it, The COVID lockdowns and
Biden being the president. But Newsom never mentioned anything about

(28:48):
Biden being off track.

Speaker 3 (28:49):
I never had period, full stop.

Speaker 2 (28:50):
I would be lying to you and I won't lie
to you as it relates to the direct engagement I
had with Joe Biden. That ever suggested a cognitive decline.

Speaker 1 (29:00):
Yeah, never saw it. Never saw a cognitive decline. But
the man that's moving at the speed of Trump doing
peace deals around the world, then back for Charlie Kirk,
and then back for this and all over the place
getting things done. Here's what Governor Biels Above thinks about Trump.

Speaker 2 (29:16):
Litten and increasingly this president appears unhinged, unmoored by reality
and facts, seems listless. He seems dare I say in
decline cognitively, and dare I say forgive me? Perhaps unfair physically,

(29:38):
And these are just rantings of someone that needs an intervention,
needs some help, needs to be stabilized.

Speaker 3 (29:47):
This is the Trevor Carrey Show on The Valley's Power
Talk you two.

Speaker 1 (29:53):
In the two decades, they've grown to be the most
powerful platform on earth. Neil Mohan, YouTube CEO. He started
out just working their weight, low level, rose up right
through the ranks and they had their first, uh, I guess,
big step into big time sports the NFL game that

(30:14):
was played down in Brazil. That YouTube posted Chargers and
the Chiefs. You had real football fans going, what is
that kind of Nickelodeon presentation? Was that? Well? YouTube generated
more than thirty six billion dollars in ad revenue last year.

(30:34):
All those five second ads, we skip all the fifty
Now they're and you saw how it happened, right, you
sid never have to sit watch sixty seconds used to
be like ten seconds. Thirty six billion dollars subscritch ins
to YouTube Premium and YouTube music top fifty billion, and

(30:55):
they revenue shared with their partner programs and people that
you know put their programs. I'm more than three with
three million different people that put things together like that.
What they need to have they need to have some
kind of I don't know a judge and official at
YouTube that puts it into pro and amateur. Amateurs can

(31:17):
be professional, but they need to really look at them
and be like, Okay, this is professional, let's put that
on the pro network. This is kind of amateurs. Yeah,
they got a great computer AI generated intro to some
guy at his card table with bad audio quality. Hate
when I get suckered into those. The first video to

(31:37):
ever go up on YouTube was in April of two
thousand and five, and it was a nineteen second video
called Me at the Zoo. Yeah, YouTube is saying, I
think that's probably the white like Stephen Cobert was canceled
and Kimmel and you know, the numbers have been dropping
so much in late night TVs in trouble and because

(32:00):
now at late night when we used to have time
to sit and watch back when I would stay up
that late, but a lot of America does stay up
that late. There's so much more now. You can go
pick what you want to watch. I don't want to
watch Cobert. I want to watch Cobert from four years ago.
If you're a Cobert fan, you can go do that.

(32:21):
YouTube cut a deal with the NFL for about two
billion dollars annually for the NFL Sunday ticket streaming that
started a few years ago. So they are serious about sports,
and they are growing, and they are eating up TV.
Jaquem Jefferies is trying to eat up the Republicans. Whould
lie after lie after live with his shutdown that is

(32:42):
continuing here blaming Republicans for having swastikas and the younger
Republicans out.

Speaker 4 (32:48):
Of deep concern, like we've already seen a rise in
political violence and hatred in America from the left, and
then you've got swastika's appearing in the offices of Republican
members of Congress. You've got young Republicans engaging in the
most anti semitic and racist speech possible, like this is

(33:14):
apparently who many of these people are. They are ripping
the sheets off.

Speaker 1 (33:18):
Ripping the sheets off like the KKK and the most
anti Semitic what do you mean, like antifi and pro Hamas.
People out there are attacking the Jews on campus.

Speaker 4 (33:29):
In plain view of the American people, their words, their actions,
revealing themselves in so many different ways.

Speaker 1 (33:38):
Review ripping the sheets off Man. Then he goes after
Press Secretary Levit.

Speaker 4 (33:43):
And then you've got Caroline Levitt, who's sick, she's out
of control, and I'm not sure whether she's just demented, ignorant,
stone coald liar, or all of the above. But the
notion that an official White House spokesperson would say that

(34:03):
the Democratic Party consists of terrorists, violent criminals, and undocumented
immigrant this makes no sense that this is what the
American people are getting from the Trump administration in the
middle of a shutdown, so their actions continue to speak
for themselves, which is why they're on the wrong side

(34:24):
of public sentiment.

Speaker 1 (34:25):
And Nancy's a little upset that she still not to
speak

Speaker 3 (34:28):
This as that Trevor Carey show on the Valley's Power
Talk
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