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June 19, 2025 • 34 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
That's right. You got manners Arnold Schwarzenegger. He got a
w there a big win for Arnold on the view.
He got them all riled up. But yes, yes I'm
in the majority. You're in the majority. If you want
criminals supported, you're actually in the majority. If you want
illegal support, it all have committed a crime. Yes, we

(00:23):
have the violation of the US immigration law that they've
all committed, all the way straight up to cold blooded murder.
But we don't know who are the ones that you
could leave your kids with or give them your four
digit pen to your ATM code and they would treat
your kids right, and they wouldn't take a dollar from you.

(00:44):
We don't know, though we didn't vet. We don't know
who the murderers are and who the good people are.
We don't know. And if you're a good person, we
actually have a policy. We accept good people. You get
in line over there and we find out who you are.
But I'm telling you we're going to have to pull
back on our exits of how many people are going
to be deported. I'll get to the math in a moment,

(01:05):
but I got to read this post from a woman
called traditionally Sarah. Sarah writes, So I went to Costco
without a membership. I snuck around the card readers, you know.
I didn't want to wait in line to get an
actual membership or a one day pass, and they they
ended up they caught me in the store. They asked
me to leave and go to the service desk or

(01:27):
get it, you know, to get a membership. But instead
of leaving, I demanded free products and food, and I
took out a Sam's Club flag right in the middle
of their store to show them just how much I
love Costco and want to stay. When they still asked
me to leave, I began stealing whatever I could and
through frozen hamburger patties at security. They should have just

(01:49):
let me shop there without a membership. I'm spacial, well put,
extremely well put. Wouldn't you not say? I would say
that kind of sums it all up. That's better than
my Hey, we don't let people cut in the food
line at the tackle truck. Well, you try and cut

(02:09):
in line when people have waited the right way. That's
one way to get people angry. You know what Aristotle
had to say, He said, it is the habit of
tyrants to prefer the company of aliens. Citizens they feel
are enemies, but aliens will offer no opposition. We know

(02:33):
everybody in America stayed in a hotel that has hired
illegal aliens, right, we know we've all been in restaurants.
Maybe you've hired an illegal aliens. Maybe there's a legal
alien in your family. So in some shape, form or fashion,
we can say we're all guilty for allowing all of
this to happen. Yeah, we've been mad about it, we
get but we kind of, let's admit it, over the decades,

(02:55):
have gotten kind of comfortable with it. Well, you know
what needs to happen right now, it's they need to
go after the businesses that aren't doing everify you draw,
you dry up jobs and again in California, man, all
you would have to do because I'm going to say, okay,

(03:17):
the majority of people are good hearted that break into
our country illegally and bring their family in twenty thousand
dollars a kid. You cut out public education, you're going
to have the good people go back home because they
want their kids to be educated. I know that's it's
easier said than done. Right now, they're talking about I
don't know, defense Secretary of head Sex has twenty one million.

(03:39):
We use that eleven million term for like eleven years.
I think there's eleven a million here, so let's just
take the term eighteen million. That's what President Trump has
talked about. Well, it kind of looks like it's going
to be unlikely to succeed in carrying out even the
levels that were seen during the Bush and Cli year

(04:00):
or even during the Obama years. And part of the
reason is that is we had zero border crossings in May. Guys.
That's bravo President Trump, Bravo, Tom Homan, Bravo, DHS Secretary Nome, bravo.
All the agents work in the border, and military work
in the border. So why I'm saying that they might

(04:22):
not reach the levels that Bush Clinton Obama did because
a lot of those that they caught were made near
or around the border. Itself a low hanging fruit for
these agents to go out there. They're going to have
to do a lot more work. Now, they're going to
be going into neighborhoods, they're going to be going into
private business. All the barriers that are put up that

(04:43):
weren't there during Bush Clinton Obama. So if they're going
to hope to put a large dentt in the number
of illegals that are currently in the United States. I
really think the only thing is going to be self deportation,
and to make that happen, you got to target private employers,
the people that hire the private sector workers out there.

(05:05):
NBC News said the latest deportation numbers come out of
the Trump administration. In April, the last month which the
data is available, ICE supported seventeen two hundred people. That
is an increase of twenty nine percent compared with the
April of last year. But it's when he looked back
over history kind of small numbers. This NBC story continues.

(05:27):
It says deporting more than seventeen thousand people in a
single month does not put President Trump on track to
make good on his inauguration day promise to deport millions
and millions. In fact, seventeen thousand per month is less
than half the pace it would take to reach the
number of four hundred and thirty thousand deportations in a
single year. That's what Obama did back in twenty thirteen.

(05:51):
So if the pace we're at right now, we're not
even halfway of doing what Obama did in twenty thirteen,
so he would have to Trump administration would have to
double the current pace to even match his first term,
when they deported two million people when Trump did. During
Obama's first term, the government deported more than three point

(06:13):
one million. During Bush's first administration more than four point
seven million deportations. During Clinton's second term, six point seven
million were deported. So just take in the pace in
April right now, the Trump administration is not gonna get

(06:34):
anywhere near these numbers. By the end of the year.
You have a White House Stephen Miller said the goal
of three thousand apprehensions a day, and let's just say
all those inding deportations, it's still fewer than four million
deportations by the end of the four years of the
Trump term. So it's go to be pretty difficult to

(06:55):
match the numbers of Really, I hate to say this,
even the Biden administration. The numbers under Joe Biden or large,
legal and illegal. But it was kind of easy for
Biden to deport what he did because, I mean, the overflow,
the influx that was coming in. They didn't allow every

(07:18):
single person in. They allowed a bunch in. Now we've
hired more ice agents we've hired more private contractors, we're
building up the detention capability out there. Now, is this
going to allow Trump to deport a million people a year?
Even if he did again, that's under four million, and

(07:39):
they're saying that's the best case scenario. So right now
where we are, we put the Trump administration back to
near where the Obama administration was more than a decade ago.
And they say there's more than eighteen million in the
United States. I don't even know if it will get
a quarter of those deported. It's the number. And again

(08:00):
this is NBC News numbers, but I they're reporting to
Trump administration numbers. And as these numbers show up, they're
not going to afford even half of that eighteen million
to actually remove if we wanted to remove a majority
that should not be here. Think of the huge increase

(08:22):
in the federal police power that we have, because look
what they're up against, Look what they're facing. So there's
gonna be a lot of people that I think might
have a problem with this sort of thing. When these
numbers start to come out at the end of the year,
maybe they'll be an increase. I just don't see it
happening because again, a lot of the numbers of the

(08:43):
previous administrations were done when a border was in chaos.
I'm glad to say the border has been locked down,
but it's gonna be kind of taxing and tiring to
go out and prove your citizenship. Rome parking Lots apartment
complex is gonna round up. This guy's a mechanic, he's

(09:05):
this guy's in janitor. He hadn't been here. He's not
filling out the right government forms. That's why we have
to encourage some kind of self deportation. There'll be a
lot of illegals that stay, but if you go out,
if you implement an everify, that would kick in self
deportation because those that are only able to support themselves financially,

(09:26):
as you know, a person or a family would be
even able to make a go of it here. Self deportation.
That's the that's the actually the only way that this
would work. That's my opinion. And I get paid to
do it. And guess what they're coming after people now
that are going after in some of these riots, people
with the flags, the yelling, the cursing, the spitting, you spit,

(09:52):
we hit. They weren't kidding. Listen, to US Attorney Bill
as Sale here. This is also a Killed Davis of
the FBI and Tyler Hatcher of the IRS. Yeah, this
is kind of gave me an elliot ness feel when.

Speaker 2 (10:09):
Wili Saley, the United States Attorney for the Central District
of California, and I'm.

Speaker 3 (10:14):
A Kiel Davis, the Assistant Director in charge of the
FBI's Los Angeles Field Office, and I'm Tyler Hatcher, the
Special Agent in charge of IRS criminal investigation here at
Los Angeles.

Speaker 2 (10:23):
The right to assemble and protest peacefully is protected by law. Unfortunately,
we have seen individuals whose intentions are to cause damage.

Speaker 1 (10:31):
And to assault law enforcement.

Speaker 2 (10:33):
For example, last week we arrested an individual who was
charged with conspiracy to commit and aiding and abetting civil disorders.
These violent agitators put peaceful demonstrators at risk.

Speaker 1 (10:45):
Ye during George Floyd Dinny just irk you down it
and just enrage you to see the violence against law enforcement.
And that was during the Trump administration. President Trump has
stated he learned a lesson he was going to put
up with it. No violence against law enforcement. These individuals
are speaking with the authority of the President of the

(11:06):
United States.

Speaker 3 (11:07):
You put them in there, FBI and our federal partners
will continue to investigate individuals and organizations who are knowingly
funding and committing acts of violence against law enforcement, as
well as the destruction of property. We are currently tracing
money to determine who is providing funding for these riots.
Funding crime doesn't just affect the criminals, it also disrupts

(11:27):
entire communities.

Speaker 1 (11:28):
Shut it down.

Speaker 4 (11:29):
Each dollar funneled into illegal operations fuels violence, undermines law
and order, and perpetuates fear. Make no mistake, we will
identify and disrupt financial network supporting these criminal activities. Think
before you act.

Speaker 2 (11:42):
The legal consequences for financing or aiding and embtting these
crimes are harsh. They include imprisonment and fines.

Speaker 1 (11:49):
Good we want that imprisonment and fines. And I always
remember if you if you see something, say something.

Speaker 3 (11:58):
If you have any information regards adding individuals and organizations
providing financial support to commit acts of violence or destruction
of property, please dial one eight hundred, call FBI, or
visit tips dot FBI dot gov. You can also upload
your images and videos to FBI dot gov. Forward Slash

(12:18):
LA Officer Assault.

Speaker 1 (12:20):
I thought Director Ryan Nigel knew something in there right
when he was giving the phone number. I saw his
hand move. I thought he was grabbing a pen to
any it's took a drink at doctor Pepper. Okay, here's
Bill Assale. Here's his update.

Speaker 2 (12:34):
The United States government will continue to safeguard constitutionally protected rights,
but we will not tolerate assaults in law enforcement, destruction
of property, or any violent acts that puts the community
in harms.

Speaker 1 (12:45):
Way and they found some people, they've already gone out
and found them. Update law and order returning.

Speaker 2 (12:53):
As I mentioned last week, much of the violent violence
has been directed at law enforcement police officers who are
just trying to do their jobs and protect the community.
As you saw on the news on June eighth, our
Highway Patrol officers were violently viciously attacked by individuals from
an overpass above the one on one freeway, throwing rocks

(13:14):
and explosive devices, and lighting CHP cars on fire. On Friday,
federal agents and the CHP arrested mister Adam Charles Palermo
for his role in the attack on our CHP officers.
Palermo was caught on video participating in the attack. His
social media account contained a collage of photographs and videos

(13:35):
depicting a man holding flying debris, a HP patrol car
on fire, and various other damage to HP patrol cars.
In the caption, he wrote, all of the protests I've
been involved in, which is well over one hundred, now,
I'm most proud of what I did today. Idiot mister
Palermo is charged with a violation of eighteen United States

(13:55):
Code Section eight four to four I attempted arson of
the vehicle use an interstate of foreign commerce. He faces
a mandatory minimum penalty of five years and a statutory
maximum penalty of twenty years. He will not be doing
any protests for the next foreseeable future.

Speaker 1 (14:13):
Does it make you feel good ramifications for their actions?
It wasn't just mister Palmro.

Speaker 2 (14:22):
Another case filed yesterday involves an individual who spit on
a military serviceman and a law enforcement officer. On Saturday,
California National Guard and Federal police were outside the Federal
Building on Los Angeles Street trying to protect federal property.
Angus Johnson confronted a California National guardsman and after heckling him,

(14:44):
he spit on him. Johnson then spit on other federal
police officers President, who are trying to keep the peace.
As our president said, if you spit, we hit, and
we will hit you with a felony. Mister Johnson is
charged with assaulting a federal agent and violation of eighteen
in the United States Code, Section one eleven. He faces
a maximum sentence of eight years in prison.

Speaker 1 (15:05):
Good you spit, you'll be spitting on the prison yard.
And they don't take kindly to spitting in prison. This
is the Trevor Cherry Show. On the Valley's Power Talk,
A lucky woman won over a million dollars Sunday evening
after a ten cent spin and a table Mountain casino

(15:26):
slut a dime. Her name was Heather, frequent visitor probably
all those years put money in. Hit the jackpot at
one point well one million, two hundred sixty and thirty
seven dollars and fifty seven cents. She played the are
you ready the Whitney Houston slot machine? I did not

(15:48):
know there was a Whitney Houston slot machine. I wonder
if there's a Bobby Brown slot machine.

Speaker 5 (15:53):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (15:53):
She bet ten cents for the spin. She had a
total of a twenty dollars bet before the win. Spoke
to him for the casino, said, moments like this what
makes it so special seeing her guests win big and
create unforgettable memories. Jack Pot one of the largest at
the resort this year. Congratulations a dime. You know, in

(16:19):
the heartland of America, nobody knows it better than Jim
Suit and Tie Antifa, Guy Costa Acosta. He's no longer
at CNN.

Speaker 6 (16:31):
He's the far right in this country is kind of
figured out a way to infiltrate, you know, the heartland
and to you know, basically pull you know, mom and
pop from from the farm to their point of view.
And as it turns out, a lot of those folks
vote in these elections, and a lot of those folks
have been completely led astray. I hate to say it,

(16:52):
but they've just been completely led astray. And we've all
just let this happen on our watch. With essentially a
business model for delivering the news in this country that
just does not work anymore.

Speaker 1 (17:03):
Oh, it doesn't work anymore. Notice how he says the
media's business model doesn't work anymore now that he's no
longer part of it. He was so good at his
job at CNN that he no longer works there. Yeah,
little house cleaning, Scott Jennings. The only thing that makes
me even want to look at any kind of thing
from CNN. That's how bad they've gotten. Yeah, Jim Acossa,

(17:28):
a lot of these folks have been led astray, figured
out how to infiltrate the heart. Who wants to tell him,
who wants to tell him that they're not led astray,
that they actually believe it, Jim, They actually believe in
God and country and constitution and not having little boys

(17:48):
wear girls' panties. Somebody telling they haven't been led astray. No,
we're just delivering the news in this country. That doesn't
work anymore. Yeah, listen to this Democrat, Senator Elisa Slackin.
I'm gonna talk to Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, and I'm

(18:10):
going to go to berserk on it. Yeah, listen to
her right here heg Seth wins, and the Senator you'll
hear she takes the Lord's name in vain.

Speaker 7 (18:18):
Listen, not want citizens to be scared of their own military.
I love the military, I served alongside my whole life,
so I'm worried about you tainting it. Have you given
the order? Have you given the order? That they can
use lethal force against honor. I want the answer to
be no. Please tell me it's no. Have you given the.

Speaker 4 (18:36):
Order, Senator, I'd be careful what you read in books
and believing it except for the Bible.

Speaker 1 (18:41):
Oh my god, that's the guy I want sitting around
with the commander in chief when America is on the
edge of war. Perfect love it. That's that's how you
win back. And of course one of the biggest scandals
that we've forgotten about, right the auto pen Biden went

(19:05):
in control of the country. It cancer, dementia, all of this.
But that kind of came and went. But I'm reminding
you of it again because Senator Ron Johnson try to
hold a committee meeting to get people to come talk
about how we can never get to that point again
where we have somebody there and you should have seen
the wide angle shot. I'm going to have had chairs

(19:27):
for about I don't know twenty people or so around.
It's like three or four cats sitting there, all Republicans.
The Democrats did not show up, not one.

Speaker 8 (19:39):
I will note that a few of my Democratic colleagues
are here today. Thank you to Senator Welch from day one,
not for being here, leaving us with no other option
than to take the boycotting of this hearing as an
admission of guilt for their role in this crisis. We
must not turn away from the search for answers.

Speaker 1 (20:01):
Yeah, they're turning away. It's an understatement. They're not even
showing up. This is the Trevor Charry Show on the
Valley's Power Talk. You got to put this on the
Dumbest Comments by a reporter on the Dumbest Comment Countdown
at the end of the year.

Speaker 7 (20:20):
Now, whether you are moving closer you believe the US
is moving closer to striking Iranian nuclear facilities?

Speaker 5 (20:27):
Where's your mindset on that? You're sure that right? They think?
I'm going to answer that question.

Speaker 9 (20:32):
Will you strike the Iranian nuclear component? And what time exactly,
sir sir, would you strike it? Would you please inform
us so we can be there and watch, uh.

Speaker 1 (20:43):
Mister Iantola Friday, five o three pm your time, during
rush hour traffic. That's when we're going to strike or
are we going to strike? Well, our commander chief is
keeping them off guard. It's keeping them on the back foot.
They don't know what he's gonna do.

Speaker 5 (21:02):
I mean, you don't know that I'm going to even
do it. You don't know. I may do it, I
may not do it. I mean, nobody knows what I'm
going to do. I can tell you this that.

Speaker 9 (21:11):
Iram's got a lot of trouble and they want to negotiate.
And I said, why didn't you negotiate with me before
all this death and destruction?

Speaker 5 (21:20):
Why didn't you nego?

Speaker 9 (21:21):
I said to the people, why didn't you negotiate with
me two weeks ago?

Speaker 5 (21:25):
You could have done fine. He would have had a country.

Speaker 1 (21:28):
Good money, could have done it. He sat down around
me the table. The view. Here we go, Alisa Parah Griffin.
The quote token Republican, that quote is a Republican on
that view, Well, she kind of stood up a little
bit for how people in Iran get treated by people.

(21:51):
I mean, women, you can't have open toes, sandal, your
arms can't show, you can't tell a man to do
Oh yeah, but that's it's just like here in the
United States of America.

Speaker 10 (22:07):
Let's just remember to the Iranians literally throw gay people
off of buildings they.

Speaker 6 (22:10):
Don't have buy here's the let's not let's not do that.

Speaker 3 (22:15):
Let's not do that, because if we.

Speaker 1 (22:16):
Start with that we had.

Speaker 9 (22:19):
We have been known in this country to tie gay
folks to the.

Speaker 7 (22:22):
Car where Hey, I'm but word, the Irani.

Speaker 1 (22:28):
Things are just hanging black people.

Speaker 11 (22:30):
So it's not even the same.

Speaker 5 (22:32):
I couldn't.

Speaker 1 (22:32):
No, that's not what you mean to say. It is
the same.

Speaker 10 (22:36):
No, it's not the year twenty twenty five. The United
States is nothing like if I stepped foot wearing this young.

Speaker 1 (22:41):
She said, that's not what you meant to say. No,
I would be excuse me. I know what I meant
to say.

Speaker 10 (22:48):
It is not even the same.

Speaker 11 (22:49):
I couldn't step No, that's not what.

Speaker 1 (22:52):
You mean to say. It is the same.

Speaker 10 (22:54):
No, it's not the year twenty twenty five. The United
States is nothing like if I stepped foot wearing this
young interactiled from So I'm sorry.

Speaker 7 (23:01):
I mean, I can't have my.

Speaker 10 (23:03):
Hair showing, I can't wear a skirt, I can't have
my telling you age. I literally said it was up
to the Iranian people.

Speaker 5 (23:11):
Ye sit up.

Speaker 9 (23:12):
And that's why I am saying say it that it
is the same.

Speaker 1 (23:16):
It's the same. The US is as bad as I
ran cuckoo. If you're black, I think.

Speaker 10 (23:24):
It's very different to live in the United States in
twenty twenty five than.

Speaker 1 (23:26):
It is to live in at you're for everybody.

Speaker 5 (23:29):
Not if you.

Speaker 1 (23:32):
Yeah, you're on the network TV show, you're a wealthy millionaire.
Beyond anyhow, we as we all know history teacher Whoopy Goldberg.
Here in the United States of America, we did not
let black people vote until what year was that? Oh,

(23:54):
after the Civil War, and that's why the KKK was
worn by the Democrats to suppress the black vote in
the South. No, it was in nineteen sixty five. Listen
to her, Listen. I'm sorry.

Speaker 9 (24:06):
You know when you think about the fact that we
got the vote in nineteen sixty.

Speaker 10 (24:11):
Five and can Okay, they don't have free and fair
elections in Iran.

Speaker 7 (24:15):
It's not even the same universe.

Speaker 11 (24:18):
They can't go out of their house.

Speaker 5 (24:20):
You know what.

Speaker 7 (24:21):
There's no way I can make you understand.

Speaker 1 (24:23):
Now, there's no way I can make you understand something
that's not true. But this is true. And let me
remind you of how this is true. In January twenty sixteen,
those the last few weeks that Obama was in office.
Oh no, that was seventeen excuse me, a year before
he was out of office. January twenty sixteen, yeah, you

(24:45):
show I have one more year in there. Listen to
what he did. Listen to what happened.

Speaker 11 (24:51):
Listen to Obama left office, he sent one point seven
billion dollars in cash to Iran. The money was delivered
in actual cash, stacked on pellets, and flown into the country.
It happened in January twenty sixteen, when Obama authorized the
transfer of the money to the nation known for sponsoring terrorism.

Speaker 1 (25:09):
Yeah yeah, let's go back goolttle history class.

Speaker 11 (25:11):
The Buns were allegedly part of a longstanding financial obligation
stemming from a pre nineteen seventy nine agreement. Prior to
the Iranian Revolution, the United States had committed to supplying
Iran with military equipment. However, following the revolution, the transaction
was abandoned, leaving Iran to claim reimbursement for the four
hundred million dollars initially paid with accrued interest. This amounts

(25:35):
bike to one point seven billion. The Obama administration decided
to resolve the debt.

Speaker 1 (25:41):
Creates of cash flown over in airplanes. I wonder what
kind of kind of security that was on those planes
out there. Yeah, cash, real cash stacked up on pallets.

Speaker 11 (25:53):
On January seventeenth of twenty sixteen, and aircraft arrived in
Iran carrying four hundred million dollars in cash on the pellets.
The remaining balance of the one point seven billion dollars
was delivered in subsequent shipments. Now, as Israel continues its
attacks on Iranian nuclear and military sites, President Donald Trump
is deciding how involved the United States will become in

(26:15):
this war, many pointing straight back to Obama as the
reason Iran had the funding to continue paying for terror
and start building up their nuclear programs.

Speaker 1 (26:25):
We go back to wars in the Middle East. You
think of the Six Day War in nineteen sixty seven,
Yan Kapor, nineteen seventy three, Iraq two thousand and three.
Israel would like a nineteen sixty seven kind of war.

Speaker 5 (26:42):
Man.

Speaker 1 (26:42):
They destroyed the Egyptian Air Force on the ground, They
were sitting ducks right there, and they had early success.
And they have also with Iran, taken out a lot
of their missiles on the ground that kept we got
air superiority, and to remind you, that's something that Russia
has were even done in Ukraine at this point. But

(27:04):
the fear is that the nut jobs that i RAM
could feel cornered and just lash out in desperation. That
could also happen. I hope cooler heads prevail in all
of this, but I don't know if they are not.
President Trump is playing I guess a weight game. He

(27:24):
was planning of flags. They erected two flags in DC
out in the White House grounds, and he had a
message to Iran out there surrounded by construction workers.

Speaker 9 (27:36):
It's very sad to watch this. I mean, I've never
seen anything like it. So everyone thought it was going
to be the reverse.

Speaker 5 (27:43):
I didn't. I didn't think so.

Speaker 9 (27:45):
And they're telling him, you got to you gotta do something,
you got to negotiate. And at the end, last minute,
they said, no, we're not going to do that, and
they got hit. Remember sixty days and then came to
sixty sixty one is going to become a very famous number.

Speaker 5 (27:58):
That was one hell of a hit. That first said
that was one hell of it.

Speaker 9 (28:02):
Not sustainable, to be honest. That's where it ended. It
ended on the first night.

Speaker 1 (28:06):
Yes, too late, though, do you think it's too late
to now? Really, nothing's too late now, No, nothing's too late.
The International Atomic Energy Agency stated Iran has a stockpile
of uranium that they've enriched to sixty percent. They at
the Office of How We Put Nuclear Warheads together said
they would need to get to ninety percent to make
a nuclear weapon, but it could be done within days

(28:30):
now if they just use their sixty percent again from
the International Atomic Energy Agencies. They said they could possibly
fashion a crude nuclear weapon with uranium at sixty percent,
and it would have to be delivered like from a
boat or a shipping container or a truck or something
of that nature. I read something today about talking I'm

(28:51):
about to tell you what I read. It was about
how now with autonomous vehicles, you know, remote controlled cars, trucks,
how the terrorists can use that. Now many thought of
that angle, right, But Iran could get or maybe does
have some kind of crude nuclear weapon. They could shock
Israel set off a dirty bomb that spreads radioactive material.

(29:17):
President Trump was talking about that, and he was also
talking about how how war is complex. Wars are unpredictable, Yes,
they look.

Speaker 5 (29:26):
Nothing's finished until it's finished.

Speaker 2 (29:28):
You know.

Speaker 5 (29:28):
War is very complex.

Speaker 9 (29:29):
A lot of bad things can happen, a lot of
turns are made, So I don't know.

Speaker 5 (29:33):
I wouldn't say that we want anything.

Speaker 9 (29:36):
Yet, I would say that we're sure as all made
a lot of progress and we'll see the next week
is going to be very big.

Speaker 5 (29:42):
Maybe less than a week, maybe less.

Speaker 9 (29:45):
But is there anybody here that said it would be
okay to have a hostile very you know, zealous, really,
but to have a hostile country have a nuclear weapon
that could destroy twenty five mile but much more than
that could destroy other nations just by the breeze blowing
the dust. You know that dust blows to other nations

(30:06):
and they get estimated. This is just not a threat
you can have. And we've been threatened.

Speaker 5 (30:11):
By Iran for many years.

Speaker 9 (30:13):
And if you go back and look at my history,
if you go back fifteen years, I was saying we
cannot let Iran get a nuclear up. But I've been
saying it for a long time. I mean it more
now than I ever mentioned.

Speaker 1 (30:24):
I was President Trump live this morning at the White House.
He has yet to say We're going to go in
with US air superiority an attack, but he was attacking.
He did create a little war out there on the
White House lawn against his favorite enemy, who's President Trump's
famous domestic enemy. Starts with a sea Nana Nana, CNN, Ye.

Speaker 9 (30:55):
Bake not Unfortunately nobody watches. Is anybody watching CNA now there?
I haven't seen it in a long time.

Speaker 7 (31:03):
Some of your supporters are wary of the US getting
involved in another.

Speaker 5 (31:07):
Room at all.

Speaker 9 (31:09):
Any do you ever ask a positive question?

Speaker 5 (31:13):
My supporters are more in.

Speaker 9 (31:15):
Love with me today, and I'm in love with them
more than they were even at election time where we
had a total.

Speaker 5 (31:22):
Landslide.

Speaker 9 (31:23):
We had, you know, we won all seven swing stats
and c and then report that we won all seven
out of seven, which everyone said would be almost impossible.

Speaker 5 (31:30):
We won by millions of votes.

Speaker 9 (31:33):
We won two thousand, seven hundred and fifty districts versus
five hundred and five districts. Think of that, two thousand
and seven hundred and fifty versus five hundred and five.

Speaker 5 (31:43):
Yeah, and CNN.

Speaker 1 (31:46):
See it. Yeah, that wasn't drones in the background. That
was the construction equipment going on raising the two American
flags out there on the White House lawn. And President
Trump was surrounded by construction workers kind of looked like
he did when he was driving the garbage truck. Remember
that he had a little message to the reporters here,
and I.

Speaker 9 (32:04):
Hope you enjoy it, and let's see how real people were.

Speaker 1 (32:08):
The assistant Trevor Jerry showing Londo Valley's power dog. Well,
Big Lou, he's like you. He's on meds too, and
he's streaming. Americans watch more TV via streaming than they
did through cable and broadcast network in the month of May,
first time that has happened over an entire full month.

(32:29):
Nielsen started comparing the two back in twenty twenty one
and back in just four years ago, the gap between
the two was huge. Two thirds of all TV was
spent watching cable and broadcasts, only twenty six percent was streaming,
and now TV's lead has collapsed, said younger viewers for
the first of jump to streaming. But another group has

(32:49):
made the leaf as well. Viewers over the age of
sixty five. Younger and older watch a lot of TV,
more than any other demo out there, so older viewers
over sixty five one third of all viewing comes from
this group. YouTube watch time last month grew one hundred

(33:09):
and six percent from May of twenty twenty three. They
said the amount they're watching. Talking about older generation is
equal to the viewing totals of kids under eleven another
group that watches a ton of TV and YouTube, in
particular two b Roku free streaming services. They say they
have a lot of ads, but older generation used to

(33:30):
watching ads. Yes we are, they said. Older viewers are
a major reason that gun Smoke went They went off
there in nineteen seventy five, but it's becoming one of
the most watched streaming series. Nielson has said over the
last few months, many of the channels are and I

(33:51):
noticed this before I cut the cable. They'll play like
a marathon of I don't know Law and Order all
day long, and I didn't understand that programming. I'm like, well,
if I don't like that show, then I'm not watching
your network all day long. Well, they're going to be
spinning off. I even hear CNN could be being spun off.

Speaker 5 (34:13):
Wow.

Speaker 1 (34:13):
Remember back Netflix nineteen ninety nine, those red envelopes of
the DVDs and you had to subscribe and then I
don't remember what time it was where you could start
then watching them you had to have high speed internet.
That's when I remember that was one of the big
things to get high speed internet. They assistant Trevor Jerry
show monda Valley's Power talk,
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