Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Governor Satan's unveiling his new podcast just him, Oh not
Marshan Lynch on there with him and I guess one
of their latest had under one thousand people listening. Gavin,
I don't know what the draw is gonna be, Buddy.
You'll be talking high speed rail and his new Homeless. Yeah,
we'll talk about the new homeless website that that's out
(00:21):
there to you know, to track the twenty three billion
that we can't track. Yeah, brilliant, brilliant. He's onto a
new podcast. He's going to talk directly with the people
that he disagrees with. Well, interesting, okay. He said he's
going to be talking to to MAGA people. Some of
the biggest names and and Maga are going to be
(00:42):
coming on now. If that's the case, that might be
interesting if he would actually sit down and have a real, unedited,
not sixty minute edited kind of conversation in a podcast.
I don't know if he'll be originally live with it
and then you can listen to it later on like
this show is, or whether he'll be like, well, when
(01:03):
I was down in is that nicaragor Kit, hold on,
we'll do it with that nicarag Honduras all right three
two one when I was down in Honduras. You know,
it's a lot different. Hey, here's his promo for this
(01:23):
is the real Gavin Newsom here, not the AI. We
need to change the conversation.
Speaker 2 (01:29):
And that's why I'm launching a new podcast, and this
is going to be anything but the ordinary politician podcast.
I'm going to be talking to people directly that I
disagree with, as well as people I look up to.
But more important than anything else, I'll be talking directly
with you the listener, real conversations. What's going on with
the cost of eggs, what are the impacts real impacts
(01:51):
to you around tariffs? What power does an executive order
really have? And what's really going on inside of dotch. Look,
there's an onslaught of information that we take in, so
let's take it to the sources without the typical political
mumbo jumble. In the first few weeks, we're going to
be sitting down with some of the biggest leaders and
architects in the Mega movement. This is Gavin Newsom.
Speaker 1 (02:17):
Yeah, biggest names. Well that that might be interesting. I
can replace my joy read audio Gavin Newsom arguing with
Steve Bannon. Steve Bannon and Knewsome going at it now,
that would be yes, that would be podcast worthy. Well,
Gavin's going to have a whole lot everybody was. I
(02:39):
saw some of the comments about his podcast. They somebody said,
let's start with, why did you throw a party for
yourself at the French laundry with no mask on in
the middle of COVID. Now, if Gavin Newsom had to
sit down and kind of well, Hu's stupid, wasn't it.
You know, we'll see how real he'll be. Uh, maybe
he that's why he wants to do it. He wants
to change the there if he wants to be the
(03:02):
friend to America, because see, we know what this uh
governor ditty doo is like. We've we've watched the young
man grow into a middle aged man here in this state.
He is a whacked out lib that doesn't give a
rats crack about the people that he's been elected to
govern over. And I can't believe there's so many foolish
(03:22):
people in this state that continue they're support of this guy.
But see, there's people in Minnesota, there's people in South Carolina,
there's people in Pennsylvania that really don't know much about him.
And he's he's a better communicator than Kamala and Kamala
Harris was, so he has the ability to fool those
and this podcast is the I'm going to Fool America podcast. Hey,
(03:49):
Kevin new Some, why did thousands of small businesses go
out of business with your policies? Can you talk? Can
you talk to those people and say why you wouldn't
implement that across America? Those kind of questions would be great. Hey,
Gavin Newsome, the Panama Canal took ten years to build.
You do know the Golden gate Bridge took four years.
(04:09):
It was amazing. There's so many great documentaries about the
building of the Golden gate Bridge. Really it really is.
China has a high speed rail. They built it in
three years. So Governor, sixteen billion dollars in sixteen years
and we haven't laid one track down, just a couple
of bridges to nowhere and hold on, hold on go.
(04:31):
Did you watch Hell on Wheels on AMC. Did you
check that out? Yeah? Oh you did? Okay? How did
they do that back after the Civil War? And yet
we can't do it now? Be quiet? Watch Gavin Newsom respond.
California Watchdogs says California High Speed Rail is on now.
Project is on track to blow even more deadlines. There
(04:55):
has not been one headline that's been positive. I've been
back here in California ten years and it had been
Now they've done their ribbon cutting things. We just had
a recent one with Mayor Dyer and a lot of
dignitaries around and high speed Rail people, and they had
hard hats on and big pair of scissors and they
were cutting in the opening of I don't know what
(05:16):
The area where there's going to be walking pass and
bike pass didn't have anything to do with the train.
It's going to be round the train in case you
want to walk to the train and ride your bike
to the train. But celebrating the opposite of what were anyhow,
don't let it, don't let it get you down. Biden
promised four billion. Secretary Sean Duffy was out saying we're
(05:40):
investigating this. We don't know if that four billion should
be invested. The Office of the Inspector General California release
an update estimated cost now over one hundred billion, and
the review found at the high speed Rail Okay, sixteen years,
sixteen years, keep that in mind. Sixteen years. There were
thirty eight agreements that they had to identify to move
(06:02):
to the construction phase, so they had they had some
kind of plan. They had thirty eight agreements that they
had to check off a list. How many do you
think are still left after sixteen years? Twelve Presne may
Or Jerry Dyer said, there's been cost overruns, are been
(06:23):
delayed in the project, but I hope the end of
the day we continue with the high speed rail project
because it's so important for the people of Fresno end
quote why is it so okay? But why is it
so important to the people of Fresnoe Idiots? So you
can get to Baker's Field. I already can get to
(06:46):
Baker's Field, Yes, but you got to be ready for
the day when you can't afford an EV and it's mandated.
So the the pedestrians here, not the equestrians. They'll have
their evs and pedestrians they'll need the high speed rail here.
So that's we got to plan for the future. Mayor
Dyer said high speed rail will connect people, but even further,
it's going to help the Center Valley thrive economically. How
(07:09):
can you say a project that's taking our money and
wasting it. And you want to tell us that in
the future. Is that when? So we got to waste
all this money so we can thrive economically in the future. No,
I'm worried about our money right now. Oh you got
the cheerleaders. You got the Jim Costa cheerleader, you got
the Jerry Dyer cheerleader, you got Louis Chavez board of
supervisor cheerleader. He said, high speed rail has already been
(07:32):
a vital source creating jobs and investments for thousands. Well,
maybe we should doze these supporters of this because they're
supporting the waste of our money. How could how could Jim,
Jerry and Louis back this? Wait? Wait?
Speaker 3 (07:53):
Wait?
Speaker 1 (07:53):
Mayor DIYer has high praise RelA Mayor Karenbasso obvious. I
guess there's support for losing things in this state. This
is beyond supervisors. Shop has said. I'm gon quoting here.
There's been a number of delays, but I think what's
important is the jobs that's created. Over thirteen five hundred
jobs have been created, over twelve point five billion invested
(08:15):
in the Central Valley end quote. So you take our
money and you create jobs for a project that's twelve
steps out of thirty eight from the construction phase and
it only took sixteen years, and you call that leadership. Guys,
Come on, that's these are statements from people that obviously
(08:38):
I don't have a stake in something. Maybe I said,
maybe I don't have any proof, But why would you
keep on with this bandoggle? It is a doggle guys?
Come on. There's an independent auditor appointed in twenty twenty three.
He found delays or due to challenges and re locating
(09:00):
utility facilities such as power lines and water supply. Yeah,
you got to come up with a reason sixteen years
later of why you're why you're slowing down, Why why
it's not you're not speeding Gonzales here, Well, we got
utility facilities and power lines and water supply. Okay, isn't
that in the like original plans, Like when you're going
(09:24):
to build a house, you have plans that show power
lines and water supplies. Sixteen years Oh. Also, high speed rail,
according to the independent auditor, does not have enough attorneys
on staff to review contracts. Well, that's a Tony Soprano
way to slow it down and milk all the money
that you can possibly get How's congressoon gym Costa defending it.
(09:48):
He's calling for the federal support and do you know
what he referenced Democrat Congress and Jim Gossa. He referenced
the success of similar projects in Europe and Asia. Yeah,
they actually built track, your slacker, Come on, they did
it the right way. We now got a new Gavin
(10:08):
Newsom website for for homelessness. Boy, you know, somebody serious
when they build a website. He released it early this week.
It's called Accountability dot caa dot gov and it shows
homeless stats from all the fifty eight counties in California.
Your censeral Valley dot com had supervisor Nathan Maxis, said
(10:29):
he doesn't believe the website will actually help. Well, I
have to agree. You know, we can argue back and
forth all that they want until they physically remove them
from the streets. Nothing will change. Nothing will change. So
now that one hundred and sixty more million dollars in
new homeless money that's not twenty three billion like we wasted,
(10:52):
has now been out there, they want to track it
across the valley. Let's see Viselia is going to get
three point one million or set to get three point
three million modesto five point eight million down in LA.
They'll get forty five point two million most of that
to clean up it ten. Looking at the website, san
Ue King valleysun dot com said Fresno County completed over
(11:12):
fourteen thousand housing units from twenty nineteen to twenty twenty three,
has enrolled one thousand people in full service partnership or
behavioral health. But it said Fresno County does not have
a housing plan that's compliant with state standards. Oh, the
state has standards. Well, look you there, would you The
state of California has standards, and we don't live up
(11:34):
to it, they said. This website said the number of
homeless and Fresnel County decrease by four point two percent
in twenty twenty four. What a con it's increased. We
can see it with our own eyes. President is so far.
I think, here's how much money we've We've received one
(11:55):
hundred and ten million dollars just here in Fresno, and
the situation's worse. Boy, that's an only in California thing.
When well, no, also like New Jersey and New York,
in Connecticut and Massachusetts and Illinois, they act the same way.
Spend all this money on it, and the problem gets worse.
And you got Mayor Dyer and Governor Dippy do the
(12:16):
podcasting presidential candidate. They congratulate each other on a job
well done. Guys. We have noses, noses that smell, and
the concoction that you're brewing it smells like the I
don't know the aftermath that shall I say, a bulls dinner?
Is that the hell's going on? Clean it up. You've
(12:37):
heard him bloviate on TV interviews and social media, but
never before have all his failures been brought together in
one collection.
Speaker 2 (12:46):
We all need to self medicaid periodically.
Speaker 1 (12:47):
The people that brought you Biden's blunders and Kamala's cackles
now probably present Gavin Newsom's greatest hits.
Speaker 2 (12:55):
This whole damn border debate is made up. It's made up.
Who could forget well, Finally, California is going to get
it right with this new high speed rail timeless classics.
If we can just get everybody vaccinated that's not vaccinated,
that's refusing to get vaccinated, that's living vaccine free and
impacting the rest of us.
Speaker 4 (13:14):
It's like drunk drivers and cliches. These are organized gangs
of people that are coming.
Speaker 2 (13:20):
And forgive me for saying gangs, I know.
Speaker 5 (13:22):
That's not a majority.
Speaker 2 (13:26):
They're organized groups of.
Speaker 4 (13:28):
Folks everyone's favorite.
Speaker 2 (13:30):
Deeply sorry about that. I've heard someone I care deeply
about Alex Turk's friends and family platitudes. I thought I
was dumb.
Speaker 3 (13:41):
I'm gonna look like a third world country.
Speaker 2 (13:43):
We haven't been looking that good in the last few
decades in the stake and failures like and that's why
we established this framework, what we call a ten year
plan to end chronic HOLEMA.
Speaker 1 (13:54):
Since again, do some great state it's not available in stores,
Please love four to six weeks for delivery, money back guarantee.
Please put the litle God to keep this guy out
of the White House.
Speaker 4 (14:00):
This is the Trevor Carry Show on the Valley's Power Talk.
Speaker 1 (14:05):
I see Henry here in Kerman has a new name
for the show, a new description. I like this, Henry.
I'll let you go ahead and announce it. Thank you
for calling. Well.
Speaker 6 (14:16):
I was driving home from work and I heard you
guys were talking about the high speed fail and I thought, i'd,
you know, give you a little bit of information that
I came across just because I work with a lot
of people with I, you know, the job I do.
And there was an high speed rail employee that I
was doing some work for out of his house and
(14:37):
he had didn't take He said he was taking some
time off unemployment until they get to draw up more
sections of the high speed rail. You know, the architects
and engineers are doing the plans. They're doing just a
section at a time, So they work on that section,
get it done, and then maybe a certain percentage of
(14:57):
get sent home. Maybe they have a clean up crew
took around the area to clean up, and a lot
of the workers don't get to go back to work
until the other sections are drawn up. So we get
to play for those people's unemployment too as they're doing
this high speed fail in sections.
Speaker 1 (15:15):
Wow, Henry, that just adds on to the list, doesn't it.
Speaker 6 (15:19):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, I never.
Speaker 1 (15:21):
Thought of that that during the delays, they get unemployment
and we taxpayers. I wonder if they factor that into
the cost. Well that's a good question to ask, right, Henry. Well,
thank you for thank you for your Colombo detective work there.
Speaker 6 (15:38):
Yeah, I just I couldn't believe, you know, I, you know, just.
Speaker 1 (15:42):
Take that out of your vocabulary, Henry, we live in California.
Don't say I couldn't believe. I stopped saying that. All right,
how long you lived here?
Speaker 6 (15:52):
I've lived in the Fresno County area of all my
life and I'm sixty two and.
Speaker 1 (16:00):
Not going anywhere else.
Speaker 6 (16:01):
So I'm gonna wait another year to see if California
gets turned around.
Speaker 1 (16:08):
So you are a potential. Where do you have? What
do you look at zillow at night or YouTube the
pros and cons of living? I know you're probably searching
some places. Then by by your reaction, are you at
that point yet where you're kind of looking?
Speaker 6 (16:21):
I have searched. I've looked at two different states now.
One was Texas and another one was Oklahoma, and I
knew they. I know they have adverse leather there more
than us. At least they're getting rain.
Speaker 1 (16:35):
But yeah, Henry, I can put you in touch with
a good buddy and ad to Oklahoma. He can give
you the pros and cons of Oklahoma. And if I
went anywhere in Texas as a kid, I lived in
Waito in Austin. If I go anywhere, I think I'd
go about fifty miles out in the hill country outside
of Austin the hill country out there. I don't know
(16:58):
that's where I would go. Where are you looking? You
got any family back there that might direct you in
one area?
Speaker 3 (17:04):
Uh?
Speaker 6 (17:05):
You know, my my mom used to live in Texas
for a short while in New Mexico as she was
growing up, and she loved Texas, you know. And so
there's a little town called the little city called Aubrey, Texas,
which I'm kind of looking at, and it's, uh, you know, beautiful.
Speaker 1 (17:24):
And what part of the state's at? What part of
the state?
Speaker 6 (17:27):
Oh, gosh, I think it's near Honestly, it's nearer Houston,
I think.
Speaker 5 (17:33):
But it's a house.
Speaker 6 (17:35):
I want to say. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (17:37):
Well, hey, Henry, have you ever spend any time in humidity?
Speaker 5 (17:42):
I haven't.
Speaker 1 (17:43):
Well, I'm gonna suggest that you go back to wherever
you're thinking about living there in the middle of July
and spend some time into August and feel it out,
because it's crushing to a lot of people that never
felt it. When I was back a few years ago
in Tennessee in the middle of the summer, and I
grew up back there, it was unbearable to me, It
really was. I mean it was oh wow, yeah, but hey,
(18:03):
there's a lot of good upsides, a lot of trade
offer that humidity. That's positive. Well, Henry, thanks for calling
in with high speed failed man. And if you go
to Texas, you got the iHeartRadio app. You can keep listening.
All right.
Speaker 6 (18:15):
Oh hi, thanks for taking my call on God blap.
Speaker 1 (18:17):
God bless you. Henry right there, he might be going
to the People's Republic of Texas. Let's go to Santa Fe,
where a nine to one to one phone call came in.
Actor Gene Haatman and his wife Betsy found dead in
their New Mexico home. They're still saying, no foul play suspected.
This is sounds like a gardener or somebody a caretaker
(18:40):
that he and he couldn't get into the house. He
kind of conveyed that to the nine one one operator.
They figured it out here.
Speaker 5 (18:50):
Hello, my name is the caretaker for Santa Fe Summit
up here about past ten thousand of eight. I think
we just found to a one decease person inside the house.
But there this year, there's no there's no address. I'm
gonna wait for you at the gate. I'm gonna wait
for your send somebody's really quick.
Speaker 3 (19:09):
Okay, what's gonna be the address.
Speaker 5 (19:11):
It's gonna be down at the gatehouse. I'll meet you
over there. I'll meet them over there. I'm the caretaking
for the subdivision that I'm gonna bring him up here.
Speaker 3 (19:20):
Okay, give me want that, let me take it. The paramedics,
thank you, I want to say, damn, yeah, yeah, what
are you with the patients?
Speaker 6 (19:33):
Now?
Speaker 5 (19:35):
Yeah, I'm over at their breath, their property. There's no
address here, so I have to meet the then most
or the police whoever, down at the gatehouse. I'll bring
him up here.
Speaker 3 (19:44):
Okay, hold the division.
Speaker 5 (19:49):
I'm I have no idea.
Speaker 3 (19:51):
You don't know. Okay, that's why the male or female?
Speaker 5 (19:55):
A female and the male probably I don't know. I
don't know. He's just send somebody up here real quick.
Speaker 3 (19:59):
Okay. Are they awake?
Speaker 5 (20:02):
I have no ideas.
Speaker 3 (20:05):
Are they breathing?
Speaker 5 (20:07):
I have no idea. I'm not inside the house. It's closed,
it's long. I can't go in. But I see them least.
She's laying down on a floor from the window.
Speaker 3 (20:15):
Are they to be awake or alert?
Speaker 5 (20:18):
No? No, no, no, no, no, it's not.
Speaker 3 (20:22):
Are they moving at all?
Speaker 5 (20:24):
No, they're not moving, just sing somebody up here really quick.
Speaker 3 (20:28):
Give it on their way.
Speaker 5 (20:29):
Okay, I'm sorry, I get it on their way right now. Okay,
I'm leaping down there to get the house because they
might not have a coach.
Speaker 3 (20:37):
You don't have the Actually, I just have the house
of where these person lives.
Speaker 5 (20:41):
I have no idea, there's no address. There's a reading
client for that. Okay.
Speaker 1 (20:49):
They said Gene Hatman was found dead in his mud
room and his wife, Betsy was found dead in a bathroom.
Originally they thought space heater, that it could have been
something with the gas and doesn't seem like that. They're
saying sheriff didn't discover any visible trauma on Gene Hackman
or his wife. They said they could have been victims
and they do not know double homicide, suicide, accidental death,
(21:10):
or natural causes. They were somewhat mummified, stating they had
been there for quite a while. So very sad. He
was never in a bad movie, was he he played?
Gene Hackman played one of the best, always corrupt US
government officials. He was always the best guy. That was
(21:32):
your friend, your pal, your buddy. Get to know the
wife of the person that he was corrupting in something
like that, right always, but the wife would always know.
I know it's some movie I'm thinking of right now,
that honey. He seems kind of strange, right, what a
great actor. But was he ninety four? I think was
he ninety five? I read a headline here just in
(21:55):
the last few minutes. His daughter said he was in
good health at ninety five. Director Ryan Nigel said he
saw video a few weeks ago of him out and
getting coffee somewhere, looking looking good. So very very sad,
and we thing is, we don't know what happened. Okay,
I'm gonna come back and talk about something that's sad,
(22:17):
not as sad as loss of life, but loss of jobs.
Remember the minimum wage hike up to twenty dollars an
hour for fast food. What has that done well? The
Service Employees International Union, the SEIU, which was for the
wage hike, by the way, now says that has cost
(22:38):
over ten thousand fast food jobs in California. Way to go,
gave way to go, buddy, Spread that across America.
Speaker 4 (22:47):
This is the Trevor Charry Show on the Valley's Power Talk.
Speaker 1 (22:52):
Mental cognitive Decline. Laughed at it. Biden Gap Biden Gap,
Biden Gap. It got kind of like serious, like is
this elder abuse to make fun of him? Then he
got real scary that he had the nuclear codes and
his freeze outs and is not looking at the right
(23:14):
parachute kind of you know, the list goes on and on.
He was telling everybody, Hey, don't jump, don't jump. There's
about a twenty five minute montage of the President of
the United States at a very odd times telling people
not to jump. But we're going to get to the
(23:35):
bottom of it because we have investigative reporters that have
interviewed a lot of people that were around and showed
the cover up that was done by the media to
deny the fact that the sitting president of the United
States of America did not have all his marbles going
at the right time, always on vacation, his classified documents.
(24:00):
The cat that sat down with him said he's too
old and feeble of a man. No jury whatever, convict.
I mean, it was so obvious, but it was so
good that we had journalists in America, especially the nationals
at the big networks, well used to be big like CNN,
guys like Jake Mouthflapper Tapper Boy. They really let us
(24:24):
know the condition of the president, and they really questioned it.
Anytime that well, he wouldn't do press conference? Has been anytime?
You know? Jen socket to yasak or Uh? What was
what was chick? Why am I forgetting her name right? Oh?
Jean Pierre? So soon that I forgot her name right? Yeah, Jake,
(24:45):
Jake Tapper always had his microphone. What's the president's condition?
Why is he acting this way? Is he? Is he right? Right?
Speaker 5 (24:51):
Right?
Speaker 4 (24:51):
Clearly?
Speaker 7 (24:52):
A cognitive decline, That's what I'm referring to.
Speaker 4 (24:54):
It makes me uncomfortable. You, it's so amazing. It's a
amazing to me.
Speaker 7 (25:00):
That trying to figure out an answer a cognitive decline.
Speaker 1 (25:04):
You can tell me.
Speaker 3 (25:04):
That what I was suggesting was I.
Speaker 7 (25:06):
Think that you were mocking his stutter. Yeah, I think
you were mocking his stutter. And I think you have
absolutely no standing to diagnose somebody's cognitive decline. I would
think that somebody in the Trump family would be more
sensitive to people who do not have medical licenses diagnosing
politicians from afar. Plenty of people have diagnosed your father
(25:27):
from afar, and I'm sure it offends you.
Speaker 1 (25:30):
Wow. Okay, let's go on a time machine now to
do and improved, Jake Tapper, when.
Speaker 7 (25:34):
We've challenged Democrats and White House officials about it, but
Alex Thompson of Axios and I have spent the last
several months talking to more than two hundred insiders and
officials and donors and activists more willing to talk post election,
of course, to explain the last couple of years in
politics and how we as a nation got here with
(25:56):
never before heard stories from behind the scenes. You will
not believe Eve what was really going on. You can
pre order the book at Original sin bookaj dot.
Speaker 1 (26:06):
Com Jake Original sin Man. You need to confess. There
was somebody called I don't know Laura Trump trying to
tell you and you argue with her. Sorry, the Internet
lives forever their mouth Flapper. The Service Employees International Union,
they had a study commission that showed that California's new
twenty dollar an hour minimum wage for fast food may
(26:26):
have cost ten thousand jobs. Bravo brilliant. Study by Berkeley
Research Group admitted California's twenty dollars minimum wage for fast
food workers led to job losses, higher food prices, and
increase automation. Isn't that what most people said would do. Yeah,
job losses. We said that, yeah, check that out. We
said it'd be higher prices and it would lead to automation. Man,
(26:48):
that's exactly what happened. California's fast food restaurants lost ten thousand,
seven hundred jobs between June of twenty twenty three and
June twenty twenty four. How much have food price has
gone up at fast food only fourteen point five percent.
That's all nearly double the national average. I was talking
(27:10):
to my mom and dad in Tennessee this morning and
they had a full breakfast out at a restaurant complete
with eggs, eggs. Look at them living like Trump's eggs,
hash brown bacon. You could have biscuits and gravy or
toast seven ninety nine. That's in Tennessee, West Tennessee. So yeah,
(27:31):
we're double the national average here in California. So you
see why that now cost you fifteen dollars. This is
the same labor union that pushed for the twenty dollars policy.
I could walk in any university in the first week
of any economics class, any student in there, and I
would ask him, hey, if you if you hiked up
(27:53):
the minimum wage. Would that would that price workers out
of the job market. Yes. See, fast food is a
business where people get a start and then you can
lead up to an assistant manager or manager. Then you
can be a regional manager. You can make a career
(28:15):
out of fast food. But nobody says you're gonna be
able to raise three kids and have a house working
the front counter.
Speaker 6 (28:24):
No.
Speaker 1 (28:25):
Ten thousand, seven hundred jobs loss according to the US
Bureau Labor Stats the quarterly Census of Employment and Wage
data ten thousand, seven hundred fourteen five percent increase in
prices and more kiosk, more AI drive through robotic kitchen automation.
(28:46):
But this is the big picture. Why is the government,
See this is what they do in socialist countries. Why
is the government getting involved in an agreement between McDonald's
and the guy that wants to work there. Why are
they stepping in that. If you got a kid in
high school that's willing to flip burgers for eight nine
(29:08):
bucks an hour, why is the government getting involved? See
that's the big question nobody really really talks about. And
why is it just the fast food industry that the
government got involved. And if they can get involved with that,
then they can go in and say, hey, car dealership,
you can't make them work on commission. They're sitting here,
you know, waiting for people to walk up. So you
(29:29):
got to pay them thirty dollars an hour. And then
what happened with the price of cars? Price would go up.
But they'll go on shouting for increases, won't they. They
just don't. They just don't get it. So ten thy
seven hundred jobs lost, you know, that's also that's that's taxes.
(29:53):
You wonder about the tax base. We're twenty million upside
down here in Fresno.
Speaker 4 (29:58):
It's a Tremor Charry show, the Valley's Power Talk.
Speaker 1 (30:01):
You sleep pretty good, and I don't remember my dreams.
And I used to remember my dreams, and now I don't,
So I looked up why that might be happening. Do
you remember what you were dreaming about last night? On occasion,
I'll remember, like a every once in a while, just
very few, and I'll wake up with this sense of
(30:22):
I almost remember, I can't quite grasp it, and I
actually I'm glad about it, because that means I don't
remember bad dreams or dreams that make you sad, or
things of that nature. They say, when you ask what
were you dreaming about last night, one in four people
do not know, so I'm one of the four. To
(30:42):
a lot of others, it comes pretty easy. They got
all the details. I was flying through the clouds, man
had on a blue shirt, and they remember everything about it.
That's why I used to not like to. I remember
as a kid, like twelve thirteen, up in the Capitol
rotunda in Austin or something, looking down going and remembering
my flying dreams, and I never was going to jump,
(31:04):
but I thought, Wow, wouldn't that be cool? I remember
to really be able to fly down for this capital
rotunda as a kid, boy you remember and as yeah,
and maybe people throughout their whole life you remember them.
But there was this Italian research institution and they did
dream recall itgs in communication psychology. That's where I found this,
and they kept uh more than dream journals. They did
(31:27):
brain tests and more sleep tracking wrist bands that had
their brain activity monitored. In the nineteen fifties, they came
out with rim sleep. We've all probably heard of rims sleep, right.
They thought they solved the mystery of dreaming by linking
it to rimsleep, but they later discovered that people dreamed
(31:47):
during non rim sleep, and even though those dreams are
harder to remember. But they found that if you're frequently
caught day dreaming or engaging in spontaneous thought as you
said there in the day, they said, those individuals are
more likely to recall their dreams. If you have time
to sit in daydream. They said, people who spend more
(32:10):
time engaged in mental activity during the day are better
equipped to remember their dreams at night, and people who
typically had longer periods of light sleep with less deep
sleep or better remembering their dreams. So maybe that's why
I'm sleeping better. Deeper sleep, they said, slow waves helped
consolidate memories, but make it harder to generate or remember dreams.
(32:32):
And here it comes. I knew this had to be it.
They said. Age was a factor in dream recall. Maybe
that's why my grandma never says, you know what I
was dreaming last night? They said younger younger participants were
better at remembering specific dream content, and the older that
you got, the more frequently reported white dreams. Ah, So
(32:56):
if you wake up and you can barely I kind
of remember. It had something to do with Agent Squires
that are car dealership, but you can't remember it. It
all it can be. They call those white dreams, and
they say it's frustrating because you wake up knowing that
you had a dream, but you can't remember anything specific
about the dream. They said, the patterns suggest the way
(33:17):
our brains process and store dream memories change as we
get older. So that makes sense because that's what's happening
to me and everybody else every day. I knew I
had the dreams. We can't describe or place them white dreams.
So now we know it's aw quid. It's just the
term white white dreams. They discovered that dream recall fluctuates
(33:42):
seasonally better interesting. The colder it is, the better I sleep,
So the deeper sleep I'm in, you know, I'll go
track that this summer to see if I'm all, oh,
it's hot out there, and this air condis is not
putting up, maybe I'll remember my dream because I'm not
sleeping as well. I tell you the fears that most
(34:03):
people have about going to prison, you know, the shower
fears or whatever. My number one fear of going to
prison is not being able to control the temperature. No,
you imagine being down in the southern desert of California
in one of those places in the air is not right,
(34:24):
or being somewhere up in Alaska and it's just so
cold and not being able to control the temperature. That's
another reason to not ever get remarried again. That battle.
I'm telling you, before you get to hey, what religion
are you? Conversation to see if you're maybe compatible at all,
(34:45):
you should go, hey, what temperature do you like to
have around you? Because that is everybody Mary knows that
if you're not the same temp person, that is a battle.
That is I remember, crack the windows, get some pressure.
It is thirty eight degrees outside.
Speaker 4 (35:04):
This is the Trevor carry Show on the Valley's Power
Talk