Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Here for coming back in Man.
Speaker 2 (00:01):
Absolutely glad to be back.
Speaker 1 (00:03):
Good to be here. It must be easy to campaign
in California and just at least take high speed rail everywhere? Right, absolutely,
Imaginally it.
Speaker 2 (00:10):
Gets you, It gets you there very fast.
Speaker 1 (00:11):
Hey, you're a good guy to ask law enforcement security
on high speed rail. I've been talking a lot about,
you know, Sheriff Sononi, the President, Candid. They catch I
five a lot of drug runners high speed reil. To me,
if it doesn't have high security or at least enough,
it seems like it'd be a good drug runner paradise.
Have you heard anything about security on high speed rail?
Speaker 2 (00:31):
I have not, But from a law enforcement perspective, there's
going to have to be something. I mean, whether you're
talking about the Metro in LA or even Amtrak going
from we have it going from Riverside into LA, they
all have security. And when they don't have security, bad
things happen on trains and so there, it's going to
be a must. They're going to have have to have
some version. It may not be super high security, but
(00:54):
there's going to be something.
Speaker 1 (00:55):
All right, good, I got that out of the way. Okay,
three months into the campaign, now, right, three absolutely. Yes,
we're three months in. Now you got yourself a run.
I'm sure you've never ventured into politics. You never ran
for city council. You're never on a school board, nothing
like that. In high school, were you ever class president? No?
Speaker 2 (01:14):
I think in junior high I was vice president.
Speaker 1 (01:17):
Okay, so you you had a little taste for it.
Then early on it sounds like, yeah, have people been
giving you a whole lot of their advice? I'm sure
they have. Okay, they have.
Speaker 2 (01:29):
I mean, get you get it from from all sides.
I mean your friends. That there's and I think especially
right now in where we are and where we're heading
in California and the direction that people wanted to one
hundred and eighty degrees and let's go back to sanity.
There's a lot of people that want me to succeed,
and so everyone feels like they should tell me how
(01:51):
it should happen, or they offer their advice of how
to make things better or how to make things work.
So it's nice. It's nice at times. There's a it's
certainly a lot a lot of social media, a lot
of conversations, but it's it's good. It's part of campaigning.
Speaker 1 (02:05):
You strike me as a you're being you kind of guy.
Speaker 2 (02:08):
Though I'm definitely that I you know, you say, not
a politician. Unfortunately I run for election as the sheriff.
But it's a it's we all look at it as
something different because we had to be a leader in
our organization to get that far. We couldn't. You couldn't.
You can't have the support of your troops and and
them want to support you during an election and not
(02:29):
come out and say no, he's a train wreck. I mean,
they supported me and they still do. So you're a leader.
So it's a little bit different than a politician who
we elect these people and have they have no leadership
ability at all, or we don't know that when we
elect them, and we're finding out in Sacramento that you know,
that's not a requirement unfortunately. So for me, I'm just
(02:50):
being myself. I'm not going to change regardless of who
I'm talking to. You're going to get the truth from me.
You're going to get the same answer that I would.
Even if I know that you're not going to like
me answer, I'm still going to give you that answer
because it's the truth. So in the end, if I
if I'm being me and in this campaign they don't
want me, then I'm not going to win. But I
have a feeling that I am exactly what California is
(03:13):
starving for.
Speaker 1 (03:14):
Sriff Fianco refreshed me again. How many years Riverside County?
How many a sheriff? And how long were you there
before that?
Speaker 2 (03:19):
Yeah? I started in nineteen ninety three, so we're talking
thirty two years, okay, and I've been the sheriff since
November of twenty eighteen.
Speaker 1 (03:26):
With the election. Those thirty two years, how close do
you remember a fire almost becoming like a Palisades fire did,
because you know, they sprout up everywhere. I'm sure in
your thirty two years, Yeah, you guys have responded to
quite a few fires.
Speaker 2 (03:37):
Every single year. I mean we have fire season, we
have fire season, we have win season. This is nothing new.
It's every single year without fail. And so the difference
is what we're seeing though, is in the last you know,
especially ten years, they've a lot bigger and more disastrous,
more destructive. There's there's just too much fuel, so over
(04:00):
decades and decades of fuel just piling on top of
each other. When we do have these fires there it's
almost to the point where there is so much fuel,
they get so big, so fast, and then if you
do have a wind, it's going to drive it to
where it's unstoppable.
Speaker 1 (04:15):
The one billion dollar deficit in LA I think Fresno,
we're like twenty what is it, twenty million to fifty
million dollars, But San Francisco has a billion dollar deficit.
News Some say in the state's not in a position
to write a check. But the what what would you
do as governor to help palisades down there? But yeah,
(04:36):
you know, I put yourself in the position of not
in position to write a check, you know.
Speaker 2 (04:43):
Yeah, so right now I would be doing I would
be doing everything in my power to get along with
the president, get along with the federal government, because in
the end, California isn't going to do anything. Newsom is
doing absolutely nothing. Bass is going to be able to
do absolutely nothing to help fifteen thousand people who lost
their ten million, twenty million, fifty million dollar homes. They're
(05:05):
going to do nothing. We've seen it in five months.
They're doing nothing. It's going to be ten years, five years,
ten years before these houses are rebuilt with billions and
billions of dollars spent or needed.
Speaker 1 (05:19):
And so like you're saying you're not gonna let your
dog defecate on your neighbor's yard and then go ask
to borrow some sugar.
Speaker 2 (05:24):
Exactly, yeah, exactly, it is It is common sense to
tell you that this has to be a national problem
or a national solution to make sure that we are
taken care of here. And for to have a governor
who is basically a child and bringing his childhood buddies
along with him to now fight with the president when
(05:48):
that's who you should be asking for help, it's crazy.
It just it truly shows you that.
Speaker 1 (05:52):
We'll it's unfair to the people.
Speaker 2 (05:54):
Oh yeah, it's proving that it's politically driven in California
and not Californians based.
Speaker 1 (06:00):
Yeah. Indeed, Riverside County Sheriff Chaby Uncle's my guest scubinatorial
candidate on the Republican ticket for twenty twenty six. I
read point in time count for Fresno and Madera County
showed homelessness has increased since the last count two years
ago three percent increase. The number of homeless un shelters
increased by about ten percent. At San Jua King valleysun
(06:20):
dot Com three percent. I'm going to tell you I'm
a semi pro homeless watcher because of where the station's
located here, because of Shaw and the freeway here, they
don't go to the corner. They cut through our this
back parking lot. And I judge that barometer and it's
it's only increased more than three. Yeah, twenty four billion
(06:42):
dollars spent. Isn't that somebody did some Sopranos stuff with?
Speaker 2 (06:46):
Yeah, statewide. You know, one of these things that for
me in this election is this is going to be
the first election in a long time where the candidates
are going to be forced to talk about truth. That's
all I deal with. We are going to talk about truth.
You're going to have to start admitting truth. You're going
to have to start admitting reality. And the fact of
this homeless issue is it was government caused. Government policies
(07:11):
and laws caused what we have seen to skyrocket since
twenty fourteen, twenty twelve, twenty fourteen. It was the government
that did it. Businesses didn't do it, families didn't do it,
coworkers didn't do it. The government caused all this to happen,
and it was a combination of everything. It was a
combination of free drugs, no consequences for drugs, no consequences
(07:34):
for crime, and then the money, the money in the votes,
in the backdoor deals for support, nonprofits, special interest groups
that we do not have a homeless problem here, we
have a homeless industrial complex. And if the homeless were
(07:56):
all no longer homeless, if we got them all saying,
if we got them all drug free and we made
them productive members of society again, that twenty four billion
that is missing goes away. So those people that have
got that twenty four billion for nothing, for three times
the increase in our homeless population, all that money's going away.
(08:17):
There's no incentive to stop the homeless. There's actually it's
decentivized to stop their being homeless in our communities because
the government isn't going to be being taxes for more
money and then giving it to their friends and business
partners or even themselves. Who knows where it's going. We
know it's going somewhere.
Speaker 1 (08:35):
Twenty four billion would go away, which would mean we
wouldn't be so upside down in the State Federation. American
Immigration Reform estimates thirty two billion dollars spent on illegal immigration,
and all the magnets in this state. Governor knew some
admitting that, hey, we got to cut the money that
we're given to people here. It didn't matter what your
(08:55):
immigration status was, you got your free health care. What
a what would a governor Chad Bianco, what would you
be doing right now with the new administration in Trump
and what would your cooperation level be like? Here in
this state.
Speaker 2 (09:08):
We've got a twelve billion dollar deficit and we have
roughly eleven points something twelve billion dollars in free healthcare
to illegal immigrants that would go away as soon as
I was the governor. That's not going to happen. I
pay roughly three thousand dollars a month for my insurance,
my kids roughly the same. Everyone is paying through the
(09:30):
nose for our health insurance. But yet you come here
illegally into the country, abuse this system, and we're going
to give you free medical care. At now I'm going
to pay for that too. It makes absolutely no sense
off the backs of hard working Californians that we are
going to invite people into legally and then give them
free stuff, not just healthcare, but the rest of the
things that they're getting for free.
Speaker 1 (09:50):
Now, there's a lot of people in the valley that
applaud that. Yeah, all right, way to say that. Then
there's those that say, I'm in big AG and I
need these workers here. Totally different, all right, explain totally different.
Speaker 2 (10:02):
Well, those those workers are actually working, and for the
most part, it's illegal to employ them technically, they're not
supposed to be there. For the most part, are big AG.
They're taking care of their employees, Their employees are making
a decent wage, they're paying taxes there, they have their families,
they're working hard that they.
Speaker 1 (10:22):
Have their families. That's twenty thousand dollars a kid for
education over crowds of schools. So what would you say
back to that.
Speaker 2 (10:30):
That's it. That's a good talking point, but the reality
is that that's not taking advantage of and it's not
really used that much. We can say, yes, the possibility,
but that's.
Speaker 1 (10:37):
You're saying, what legal alien kids in school?
Speaker 2 (10:40):
Oh no, I'm saying that at all, But it's not
every single one of them.
Speaker 1 (10:45):
And well every kid that's here that's they come with
an illegal alien family into the state. There they got
to be in school. Is that in our school systems. Yeah,
oh absolutely, yeah, two dollars a major rank. See, oh yeah,
it's amazing.
Speaker 2 (10:58):
It's a major drink.
Speaker 1 (10:59):
We go back to how it was done in the fifties,
where you would come up work legally even though you
weren't from here. Then you go to Oregon and do
apples and go up to Washington and then return back
home with a great paycheck a gold mine. Basically, they
didn't bring the entire family with them. So see that's
the problem. I know they need workers here. I understand that.
I know enough AG people have been here a decade.
(11:21):
All jobs depend on AG. I know that right now
you probably don't have quite a few eighteen to twenty
six able body young people that just want to get
out there and do that. It's not the nineteen fifties anymore.
So I understand what AG goes through. But I don't
think they need to bring the whole group.
Speaker 2 (11:37):
But see, and that's what I meant what we were
talking about almost two different things. Okay, the workers that
are coming over here to work the field, they're not
all bringing their families. They don't have their wife and
five kids, and they're they're working the fields. Most of
them or maybe not most, but a very good majority
(11:57):
of them are. Some of them were coming here illegally.
They're working and they're sending their money back to their
families wherever it is that they are, and that's historically
it's always been like that, Just like you just explained it.
You go everywhere you can get as much money as
you can and then take it back to your family
and support them, even though they know they're here illegally.
If they get caught, they know they're getting sent back.
Speaker 1 (12:17):
Yeah, would you. I know this was settled in nineteen
eighty two by the Supreme Court of the United States.
When I looked it up, I'm like, when did illegals
get okay for the kids to go to a public school?
And it was a cake In nineteen eighty two in Texas,
the Supreme Court ruled they can have education. But that
is a huge magnet, along with the free healthcare, which
you said you would not have. So I guess you're
(12:38):
cut half that magnet and half by that decision.
Speaker 2 (12:40):
Yeah, it is a big magnet, and it's something that
we have to stop. I mean we can't. We can't
as a country, we can't absorb all of that. We
can't just take it all in and say, oh, look
now we're going to give everybody free things, because and
then you're also you're creating this. It's not a class warfare.
It's basically just a warfare between the illegals and the
(13:01):
non illegals, because as a citizen, why I'm struggling? I mean,
why am I not getting free education? Why am I
not getting free food? Why am I not getting all
this free stuff? I was actually born here, did everything right,
and I'm struggling. So that's where the malfunction is right now,
is you've got one group saying kick all of them out,
and you've got the other group saying, give them all
(13:23):
free stuff. So they stay here and they keep voting
for us, and the adults need to come to the table,
circle up the table and find a solution to this
because fighting over it and blaming everybody else for everything
and picking out outliers isn't helping anything at all, And.
Speaker 1 (13:37):
It's not a healthy way for people to live, always
looking over their shoulders, not always being concerned and worried.
I wouldn't want to live that way. If I snuck
into China or some other country, it would just be
uncomfortable and it's not healthy. It's not healthy for any
He is the gooblatorial candidate republic Can ticket Ripside County
Sheriff Chad Bianco. Let's come back and talk some high
speed rail on anything else you want to throw out
(13:58):
there so outs standing.
Speaker 2 (13:59):
Just what I wanted to talk about is that rail
huot you to know where.
Speaker 3 (14:02):
This is the Trevor Charry Show on the Valley East
Power Talk.
Speaker 1 (14:07):
Would you like to get up in the morning and
I have to throw those sheriff boots and not have
to put the badge and gun on it? Have you
thought about it? If you win? Boy, big change in life, right, big.
Speaker 2 (14:18):
Change in life. And it's almost I got to be
really honest with you, especially for Denise and I my wife,
this is this is not ideal for us. I mean,
I've got a great life. I've got a great job,
a great county, a great family environment at home, a
great home with animals there. I'm living my perfect, perfect,
perfect life going into my twilight years of retirement. And
(14:41):
I'm I'm truly giving it up to really to go
into a disaster and Sacramento. But I truly do feel
that I am going to be the only person on
this ballot that's capable of doing it. And I truly
just want to make life better in California for all
of us.
Speaker 1 (14:58):
Sorry I didn't do radio for Matos correctly. I should
have said this is Riverside County Sheriff Chad Bianco before
he started talking Sheriff. You know what I was. I
actually heard another talk show host bring this up. I
think it was Glenn Beck bay Help talking about how
we need Republican candidates that just don't aren't getting in
it for to be noticed in the hotel lobby or
(15:20):
they just aspire. And there's nothing wrong with going into
you know, political science and wanting to be in politics,
Nothing wrong with that at all. But he was saying
that how much we really need people Well, just like
kind of like what Trump did. What you're talking about,
you you're in the twilight of your career. You could
do a few more and then retire and life would
be a whole lot easier, and it is your career
(15:42):
change at that point. But we need people like that.
We need people that were successful in other industries, that
have proven themselves that they're committed, They've been committed to
people following through on promises, because the biggest gripe I
have with the Republicans, they campaign on the pedestal, go
back to DC, drink that Potomac kool aid, and suddenly
don't execute what they say they would.
Speaker 2 (16:01):
Yeah. Well, and that's exactly what I have to offer
that is different than everybody else on this ballot. Thirty
two years of public service that was actually successful. That
I have a proven record and a resume of irrefutable
record of integrity, honesty, and service to everyone else, sometimes
to my own detriment. And that's what I have to
offer to California, which I believe we are all starving
(16:24):
for a person with leadership ability that says what they're
going to do, that can win elections, that has won elections.
That actually is what we expect our politicians to be.
And it's not that I'm telling you that, it's I've
already shown you that for thirty two years and seven
is your sheriff.
Speaker 1 (16:42):
All right, let's transition to hey, do you ever watch
Hell on Wheels on AMC about building the train? Do
you see that? Okay, how did they do that? After
the Civil War? Throo going from like Reno to Tahoe
to Sacramento. That's some of the most treacherous American Yeah,
we can't work through the grape vine. Yeah, exactly, bulldozers
have already made it. Exactly. We have a highway freeway there.
Speaker 2 (17:05):
You look at everything, especially you go through Europe and
you look at the buildings in Europe that are still there,
that that are two hundred, three hundred, four hundred, one
thousand years old.
Speaker 1 (17:15):
We're still living as Roman aqueducts.
Speaker 2 (17:18):
Oh yeah. And that that technology and that ingenuity, and
that that human spirit has been alive forever, and it
seems like here we do everything we can to stifle it.
Speaker 1 (17:30):
Are they just that dumb or is it totally soprano work,
slow down stuff to just milk money, the corruption that
goes into construction and all that kind of stuff.
Speaker 2 (17:42):
I want to say yes, But on the government side,
it's not the private world. The private world would want
to do They would. There are builders out there, home
builders that would build US five million homes in the
next two years if the government would allow them.
Speaker 1 (17:57):
Get out of the way.
Speaker 2 (17:58):
Exactly. That's why it's happening. It's not because of the builder.
It's not because they don't make enough money or they're
making too much money. It's because government is preventing them
from building. That's more of the truth that we're going
to have to truly start talking about the regulation, the taxes,
the red tape, the bureaucracy. It's give me more money,
give me more money, give me more money, and draw
that out for so long that you have to recoup
(18:20):
that money when you sell that property. That's why we
can't afford to buy a house, not because the builder's
getting rich.
Speaker 3 (18:25):
They're not.
Speaker 2 (18:26):
It's because the government's getting rich on purpose to prevent
the growth of homes from happening.
Speaker 1 (18:32):
Okay, you're governor in twenty twenty six, do you halt it?
Do you say it's we're too far in? Do we
make it be? Hollywood can use it for film production
up on the big bridges. What do we do with it?
Speaker 2 (18:46):
It's concrete steel, Basically, it's going to lat and dirt.
I mean there's no there is no steel yet other
than in the concrete. There's no rails line, no rail
lines laid yet. Eventually, maybe in the future, maybe there
will be a big need for that, but it certainly
isn't now. We have to we can't let government decide
when technology is going to do something. We have to
(19:07):
have the drive, the technology, the desire for it to happen.
Government did not say get rid of your horses and
your carriages and your buggies and you all have to
go to a car by next Tuesday. That's not how
it worked. It's technology advanced to the point where now
they were able to build roads, They built everything, the
infrastructure was all there. Price of cars came down to
(19:29):
where everybody could afford it, and now people got rid
of their horses and went to cars. That's where the
point we are right now, with electric and gas and
all of that stuff. It's not up to the government
to say when this happens. It's American ingenuity, it's technology,
it's advancements, it's it's it's inventors, it's it's what made
us great, and that's what will make us great again.
(19:50):
So right now, that train is doing nothing for us.
That rail line is doing nothing. There's not a benefit,
especially for the billions that it's costing a and I
think that's the problem.
Speaker 1 (20:01):
Benefit for the major population centers of the state.
Speaker 2 (20:04):
No, not when it costs forty nine dollars to fly
on Southwest then there's ten flights a day. Yeah, it
makes no sense. And I think a lot of the
problem right now is government is so bloated and so
drunk on our taxpayer money that we've all become numb
to them throwing out numbers. And when we say a
billion dollars, the normal person cannot fathom how much a
(20:29):
billion dollars actually is. We can think of a million.
This was put to me the other day. This way
a million seconds. If you had a million seconds, that's
eleven days. But a billion seconds is thirty one years.
Think of that.
Speaker 1 (20:47):
Yeah, so when you mess a billion, we're talk talking
about twenty four billion wasted and that they can't account
for with a homeless Yeah, it's astronomical. Don't get to
trillions because then our mind blows out, Oh yeah, you
just you just managing the spending programs. It reminded me
of some audio I was going to play later, but
I think it's fitting right now because these are the
words of a man that used to be governor of
(21:09):
this state and went on to be President of the
United States. He was on with Johnny Carson. Listen to
President Reagan here.
Speaker 4 (21:16):
Why shouldn't we have in addition to a simplified income text,
why shouldn't we also have a law that says that
anytime a legislator or a congressman introduces a spending program,
he has to introduce with it a tax program to
pay for it, and let the people find out. There
was a woman that from a financial firm that was
back of the President's Economic Council, and her words weren't quoted.
Speaker 3 (21:38):
Everybody else's words got in.
Speaker 4 (21:39):
The paper, all the Heller's and the gall breaths, and
all the so called economists. And I have a degree
in economics, so I can say this, I think an
economist to someone who has a five data kapakey in
one end of his watchchain and no watch on the other.
This woman said that you go to the polls and
you ask the people do they want some social service,
some program government can give, and the people in the
(22:01):
polls or have to read and say that sounds good. Yeah,
But she says that isn't exactly accurate. She says, put
an one hundred dollars bill in each person's hand and
then show them the program and say, now, isn't that
a nice program?
Speaker 1 (22:14):
Do you want it?
Speaker 4 (22:15):
Give me the one hundred dollars, and she says, see
what the poll says then, and how many people hang
on with one hundred dollars instead of the program.
Speaker 1 (22:22):
All right, we can move that up to a thousand
a day. But you get the point.
Speaker 2 (22:26):
Yeah, I mean, that's this drunkenness that the state has
for our money when we should be we should be
able to decide where we're spending our money. And honestly,
that's what would grow the that's what would grow our economy. Yeah,
when we make money and we spend money, that grows
the economy.
Speaker 1 (22:42):
You know, healthcare for illegal aliens. I want people to
get in line and do it the right way. I
love the fact that this is an experiment. This country's
an experiment. We allow all religions, face nationalities. We all get,
we get. But we have a culture here as well.
In the melting pot. The culture actually celebrates all the
(23:02):
other cultures. It's never been done before. It's an experiment,
and I just see it being blown up. But I
you know, we pay for let's just take a legal
alien in health care. I wonder how many Democrats in
California if you did the Ronald Reagan thing where you
put the money in their hand and it was theirs
to keep. And they said, hey, do you want to
pay for health care for illegal aliens? Here? Hand it
over to us. People be no, I think I'm going
(23:24):
to hang on to this. I need health care for
my own kids.
Speaker 2 (23:27):
Yeah, because we don't see where the money's going, don't
We don't know it's gone. Eventually, it's just more and
more taken out of our income tax, from our from
our checks from our businesses that were making their businesses
pay more and more. That's why businesses are leaving. This
is the least friendly business state in the country. That's
why businesses are leaving going elsewhere because they're able to
(23:48):
expand they're able to grow their business employ more people.
Imagine that if we were a business friendly state where
all of the businesses in the country wanted to relocate
to California and bringing all their jobs with them. Imagine
how great it would be then.
Speaker 1 (24:02):
To have you all reversed where they're coming into California.
Speaker 2 (24:05):
Except instead of going out.
Speaker 1 (24:07):
Absolutely, Sheriff, thanks for coming in in person. Much appreciated.
Direct folks to your campaign. If they want to donate
or get involved.
Speaker 2 (24:15):
Please Bianco for Governor Dot com. You can sign up
for announcements, you can sign up to help and especially donate.
It's gonna be a it's gonna be a big, big campaign.
I truly I am. I'm not saying this to be
you know, selfish or anything, but I am making a
huge sacrifice in a pretty good life that I have
to make this state better. If you could make a
small sacrifice and donate to the campaign, donate to making
(24:37):
California better, we could, We would truly appreciate it.
Speaker 1 (24:39):
And that's f O R. Bianco, f O R. Governor.
Speaker 2 (24:42):
Absolutely, go for governor dot com. Thanks Chreff, absolutely thanks.
Speaker 3 (24:47):
This is the Trevor Cherry Show, Condom Valleys, Power Talk.
Speaker 1 (24:52):
I tay you, We're gonna blink it. It's gonna be
Thanksgiving and the fair is gonna be over. It's gonna
be cool again. That's what I'll keep telling myself. And
it's a one hundred and twelve high speed rail. Wonder
what the air conditioning will be like on it? Probably
like the trains back East, you'd have hot cars and
cold cars. You'd literally check it before, especially if it
(25:13):
was close to the time of taking off. I had
met it, because I would take a subway up to
Grand Central and then Metro north of Stanford, Connecticut, and
that was about a forty five minute You're trying to
get the express, not the local, that stopped at all
the little towns to get up there, and you would
like if it was ten minutes till the train was leaving,
(25:33):
this is not a cold car. I'd go walk up,
walk out, go up, find it, walk in, kind of
move my arms around a little, get the air. Okay, yeah, okay,
this one feels good. Yeah it was. It was always
now with subways. You didn't care because it wasn't that
that long of a of a quick journey up there,
and there would be so many days. Imagine this now
when it's hot here. I just want you to think
(25:55):
of this. And I've told this story before and I'm
gonna tell it again because I love your new listeners
out there. I'm five five and a half five six
and three quarters of boots on all right, so I'm short,
so I'm waiting. In a lot of times you go
down to the subway and it's like like cattle or
all shoulder to shoulder. Subway car comes in and then
(26:18):
you get a little bit closer like at a long
traffic light. The next one that comes in. You're hoping
that this crowd that you're in will fit into it. Oh,
it does, So you make the second car aw you
squeeze in. You don't. You don't have a seat. You don't.
You're not even close enough to have a strap to
hold on to. You're in the middle of the humanity.
(26:40):
So you're swinging with shoulders and you're up and next
and people and forward and backward as the car gets going.
And we made it on dingch doors closed and the
air was out, and it was already hell hot out
on the platform with that humidity. It was one of
the hottest August humid, hottest, sweatiest. Couldn't wait to get
(27:03):
on that subway car for that air conditioning and lo
and behold it was hot, I mean sweaty hot. And
my arms are down at my side next to humans.
I got a work bag around me and I'm trying
to keep my right arm on so nobody gets into it.
Keeping the mind on. Okay, my wallet's there, because you
gotta watch that. With the human swing and moving back
(27:23):
and forth, I'll make it easily pickpocket. They can get you,
and it wasn't winter, so I didn't have like zip
up coats and stuff. So I'm all worried about that.
And then girsh comes to a stop in the dark
tonnel hot. Suddenly I feel cool here on the top
of my head. Ah, what is That's a tall man
(27:46):
behind me. His nostril breath. It was so hot in there.
His nostril breath felt cool. His mouth was closed when
I looked up, and I felt his nostril breath on
the top of my yead. That's hot. So when you're
complaining about one hundred and fourteen here, uhh, that's worse,
(28:06):
way worse. Okay, how did I get talking about high
feed rail and air conditioning? See how I went from
trains to not have an air conditioning? The nostril breath
on my scalp. Now, I hope high speed rail all
the airworks all the time, and that there's no graffiti
in the restrooms smell nice and fresh and clean, and
they and the stations that it pulled into look just
(28:29):
like the artists renderings that they've been doing for seventeen years. Guys,
you're gonna have to update style's change how long you're
taking Come on, right, style's change from nineteen oh eight
to nineteen twenty five. They were already in the Art
deco thing in the twenties didn't look like that old
(28:49):
tired Victorian crap. See things change, But yeah, they'll have
to update it by is it twenty forty two? I
think now if we can get some kind of private
funding in, I know we're gonna do a billion dollars
for Captain Trade, billion dollars a year. We'll keep putting
in newsman. We can do it ourselves. Had a ten
point two billion budget gap. That's more than they expected
(29:13):
two months ago. So we can't expect two months from
now that it'll be even more than we expected. Now
we got we got their system, We got their flow
down decades behind scheduled, tens of billions over budget. Remember
it was a It was a decent idea when you
thought it was from from smell Lay to San Francisco
(29:34):
because you can jump on Sheriff Bianco said, a Southwest
flight relatively cheap used to be. I don't know how
much of these little quick trips around here are these days.
Used to see it fifty nine dollars get away anywhere.
You know, those kind of things. But you'd have to
you know, if you went to lax or Burbank or
you know, San Diego, you know it's ours. You got
to get there beforehand. You never know what's going to happen, traffic,
(29:58):
all of that. Then you gotta get their board. You
never know how long you're gonna sit on the tarmac
when you land. Then you know all And they're like, no, man,
we can just get you there like zippity, dude, you
can have a fresca, have some corn nuts and fresco
on high speed rail, just be zipping it up there.
(30:18):
What's a Dodger game in the afternoon? Boom bam boom?
What's a Giant game that night? Now we're back to
you're a merced and you go, I think I want
to go to Target in Bakersfield. Okay, let's jump on
high speed rail. Behind scheduled ten billion over budget, Newsom
(30:40):
gives it a big funding boost. He just he can't
read the room, can't he? No, he again, it's not
that he can't read the room. He can't even read
the directions to get to the house where the room
is located. He doesn't even have keys, a bike, a skateboard,
he has no way to even get over. That's how
far removed this man is from reality. And they're gonna
(31:03):
They're gonna keep it out because to abandon it would
equal a waste of money. Newsom said six years ago,
let's go back in the time machine.
Speaker 5 (31:14):
Abandon in the High speed Rail entirely means we will
have wasted billions and billions of dollars with nothing but
broken promises, partially fulfilled commitments, and lawsuits to show for it.
And with all due respect, I have no interest in
sending back three and a half billion dollars a federal
funding that was allocated to this project to President Donald Trump.
(31:39):
That would that fundamentally would have to happen.
Speaker 1 (31:42):
Did you hear him hitting the podium like that. Yeah,
he didn't want to send that didn't want to send
that money back because we had to pay for artists
renderings and for bike paths that they do little ribbon
cutting ceremonies. Hey, high speed rail has a pedestrial walk
path and a bike path. We're celebrating other for people
to get around, other than trains, and they make a
(32:04):
big dude, guys, they've had. You got to give them
a little bit of credit, don't we I think, you know,
to have seventeen years to have to keep coming up
with stuff that makes you think that things are looking good.
That's a full time job, just in an of itself.
Speaker 3 (32:22):
Assistant Trevor Cherry show on The Valley's Power Talk.
Speaker 1 (32:27):
Andrew's a Democrat and he was talking about being a
Democrat and how they let him down and how they
can you know, why did you he felt he told
him he couldn't leave, that he endorsed Hillary after what
they did. They're like Democrats that actually like care and
are mad. I don't know why they would want a
Bernie Sanders. He's a he's a socialist, but at least
(32:49):
he's honest. At least we know. We know where Bernie sanderstands.
We know where he honeymooned. We know that he's fighting
the Ola garswall I think multimillion dollar mansions being he is,
he's an oligart. You know, he was over there hanging
with all the Russian oligarchs. Anyhow, that was. That was
(33:13):
back in the eighties. When Bernie was a young man.
He looked like a He's kind of like Woody Allen.
He looked old young. You know what I'm talking about
I mean a young skin, but he had the old
look while young. Well, he said, well, let's just listen
to what Bernie said. What Bernie agreed to. These Democrats
(33:34):
are like, come on, man, Democrat party is a threat
to democracy?
Speaker 2 (33:36):
Can we not also say, if ostensibly there hasn't been
a fair primary for the Democrats since two thousand and eight,
are they not also a threat to democracy?
Speaker 3 (33:43):
We often hear fair enough that is?
Speaker 2 (33:46):
That is?
Speaker 1 (33:47):
Yeah, I'm not going to argue with that point. Wow,
fair enough, I said, what all of this fair enough?
Speaker 3 (33:56):
That is?
Speaker 2 (33:57):
That is?
Speaker 1 (33:58):
Yeah, I'm not going to it was up, thank you.
See he's an honest commie, an honest list. Speaking of
the other his nurse on the tour that they're doing, Yeah,
they're done in Baker's whill, flying in in their private jets,
acting like they're the backstreet boys. Back in the nineties,
the uh where AOC is from. In Queen's students that
(34:23):
go to classes there at this elementary school where AOC
in her district, they'd come out and shut down a
busy brothel. See, the students on the way to class
had to run around prostitutes and temes and it was
called the Bedego brothel by the locals. It was on
the second floor of a convenience store. Any I'm had
(34:43):
to get some doritos and head upstairs. All right, Hank,
I'll see in a minute. Yeah, lay the money right
there in the cap. Yeah. They's located across the street
from two public elementary schools, and they said students and
parents have been forced to walk past the seconds workers. Well,
you've seen in San Francisco since Senator Scott said, hey,
no more loitering laws, the prostitutes can be out here.
(35:05):
You had the parents, I'm about even at a in
front of a Catholic school. Yes, hooker's on the streets.
Come on. Well, New York Police Department shut it down,
came in and arrested trying to clean up the rampant
street prostitution right there in AOC's district. And where is
she out in Bakersfield? Wow? Man, that's a real representative
(35:30):
of the people, isn't it. Yeah, AOC. What about the
street walkers? What about the migrant trenday or Ragua, they're there,
They're in Queens. Why aren't you there? Why don't you
get something going on? The FBI even got involved because
of the drug trafficking AOC, the illegal gun sales. They
(35:50):
busted a lot of identity that oh yeah, it's just rampant.
Way to go, girl, you're right on top of this.
Speaker 3 (36:00):
This is the Trevor Carrey Show on The Valley's Power
Talk