Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
He wants to talk about the state of California. Well,
you got some scandals in the oven. They're newsome as
you're trying to project yourself off across the nation. One
of those is his former top eight is chief of staff.
Got an indictment going on, and the governor's office put
out a new statement and I'm just going to read it.
(00:23):
Hear it in Gavin Newsom's voice. Hold on, let me
take my headphones off, select my hair back here trying
as much narcissism going as I can. My first reaction
was real shock and deep concern the seriousness out of
the allegations. K Newsom wrote, the impact on Dana's children.
It's his former chief of staff, and well the Trump
(00:45):
administration had politicized this. Yeah, Gavin, that's exactly what happened.
What was it, Eric Trump, Don Junior? Who was it?
They came out here and got her to put her
hands in the cookie jar? All right? Back to the statement.
We were first made a wear of this investigation almost
a year ago, and the moment I learned of it,
my legal team and I placed her on leave while
(01:07):
hoping it would be appropriately resolved. Yeah, brushed under the carpet.
He says, I wasn't privy to any details as it unfolded.
It's not the kind of thing I'm used to seeing
in public service. I'll hold our team to very high
standards of ethics and accountability, and I'm still processing the
(01:27):
seriousness of the allegations. So he knew about it a
year ago, but he didn't know any details as it
worked out. Did he didn't check in to see how
his former chief of staff being indeted. Yeah, I wasn't
privy to any of the details. Just not what I'm
used to seeing. But I'm still processing the seriousness of
the allegations. Thank it a Taylor that emailed me at
(01:52):
Trevor at power Talk ninety sixty seven dot com. He said,
wanted to share with you. I saw the new Wicked film.
During the song no Place Like Home, my sister leans
over and says, this is every California Republican's anthem. He said.
Minutes later, when the Wizard was doing a big musical
number about how wonderful he is, we realize he is
Gavin newsom master, illusionist, nut job and word salad spinner. Taylor,
(02:14):
thank you for that email update. Let's go look at
our California budget. Shall we hit one for English, two
for Spanish. We're going to get our bank account here,
let's call in. We got a eight We're eighteen billion
dollars in the hole. Yeah, our bank account's negative eighteen billion. Well,
(02:37):
hold on, I got to call a bank. That's six
billion more than I was thinking. Yep, that's just what
happened in California. Spending continued to not catch up with
the growth of the or the people that are leaving
the tax paying base or starting to see those results.
Are we not so now? It's a I guess we
(02:58):
have an official number to throw out there. It's eighteen billion.
Maybe you wish he didn't he didn't give away all
that money. Newsom's guide issues going on with the fires.
More than seventy percent of people affected by the fire
from January or still living in temporary housing. Survey did
(03:21):
twenty three hundred fire impacted residents across La County. According
to the La Time, seventy five percent do not have
anywhere to live other than temporary There's been a lawsuit
filed by three thousand residents of the Pacific Palisades, a
legend of state California failed to properly monitor the imbers.
We've heard that right, that the arsonists started and six
(03:44):
days later it grew into the most destructive wildfire in
LA history. And it began in the early morning of
January first. But here's a new headline.
Speaker 2 (03:52):
Guys, should I we have new exclusive details on the
investigation into the handling of the deadly Palisades fire in California.
Speaker 1 (04:00):
Well, let's de till now we're getting a little more
information here. Newsom's office denied responsibility, said it was an arsonist.
The state's not responsible for responding to or monitoring the fire.
That's what the governor's office said. Now let's go listen
to what's being uncovered.
Speaker 3 (04:17):
Well, it's really shocking and ultimately comes down to two
really big questions. Number one, did state mismanagement ultimately cause
the Palisades Fire? And did they lie about it in court?
I'll lie about all of it in court.
Speaker 1 (04:29):
All right, let's go back. Let's go back to January first,
when it first started in.
Speaker 3 (04:35):
The early morning hours of January one, when an alleged
arsenist started the Lockman fire, and we know underground embers
reignited six days later, starting a second, more devastating fire
that was the Palisades Fire. In response to a lawsuit
from over three thousand Palisades residents alleging the state failed
to monsor embers from that initial fire, Governor Newsom's office
(04:56):
told News Nation the state didn't start this fire. That
was an arsonist and the state wasn't responsible for responding
to or monitoring this fire.
Speaker 1 (05:05):
Come on, man, it's not the state's responsibility. Come on, man,
I know, I get it, I know you do. California
claimed in court filings that the fire victims cannot claim
that the state failed to monitor the original fire. You
never let us know. We never had noticed. Soviet guys,
how can you blame us? We didn't have notice. You
didn't call us firefirefire, Well, what have we learned about?
(05:29):
Some state records shows LA Fire Department contacted state officials
early morning of January first, A park rep from the
state arrived at the scene by four a m. Do
tell News Nation did now?
Speaker 3 (05:43):
In new court filing as the state goes further and
says the Palisades victims cannot allege the state that the
state had noticed of the luck and fire because it
never had notice. State records show a call at twelve
twenty seven am on January one, but with the rest
of the incident report redacted completely blocked out, basically including
(06:04):
their response to that call. But a Los Angeles Fire
Department record tells us all the details.
Speaker 1 (06:10):
Come on, man, I get it, and.
Speaker 2 (06:13):
The lafd's record show not only did the LAFD notify
the state just after midnight, the state sent a park
representative at one forty six in the morning on January one,
and that state park representative arrived on scene at four
am on January one.
Speaker 1 (06:33):
All right, if I'm in the jury, I'm going h
If the state had no responsibility for this, lambwe are
they sending a state park rep down this? So you
tell us you send a state park rep. And then
you tell us what the state park rep did. Then
you tell us the next day that you sent another
state park rep. They're saying they directed firefighters to not bulldoze. Interesting,
(06:58):
he said. For six days after that fire start on
the first people were hiking and biking through the area
while there were smoldering embers right there. Report of a
State park rep coming to the area to the burn
scar with a map, and he directed firefighters, what they
could touch and not touch, what they could bulldoze and
not bulldoze. That sounds like somebody from DC going over
(07:19):
to Vietnam and telling them how they fought. You don't
win a war that way. You don't beat a fire
back this way. Even nine to eleven calls show one
resident called January third, nine one month, what's your emergency? Yeah, hi,
I'm calling from the Pacific Palisades. I'm seeing puffs of
smoke in the hills nearby. Nothing done, nothing done, Twelve
(07:41):
people killed. A few days later, seven thousand structures burned down,
estimated twenty billion dollars in damage. And we got Newsome,
Newsom avoiding accountability, focusing it away, focusing on climate change,
insurance access. We had an r is, we're blessed in curs.
(08:02):
Come on, man, it's climate change. Things are hot, getting
a lot hotter the dry, the dry is drier, one
hundred mile an hour winds. We couldn't help it. I
know roads were gridlocked and choked, but that's what happens.
No answers to nothing, no responsibility. The state states, Well again,
(08:27):
who was that state park rep down there telling them
what they could bulldoze? And not here.
Speaker 2 (08:31):
If the state had no responsibility for this land, why
are they sending a state park rep. The state is
playing hide the ball. They're not being transparent with the public.
Tell us that you sent a state park rep. Tell
us what that state park Rep did. Tell us on
the next stage January two, that you sent another state
(08:52):
park Rep. Who directed firefighters and said they couldn't bulldoze.
Speaker 1 (08:56):
Yep, these California Democrats And is someone now California two
er any General Rob Bonta? What did he do? It's
normal to spend half a million dollars of your campaign
money to help legal help with a federal bribery investigation
going on in Oakland. What are you? What are you
talking about it? Well, we don't know how much the
money it is for him to lawyer up and how
(09:18):
much of it was maybe to assist there. This thing
is confusing.
Speaker 4 (09:23):
Tonight we're learning Rob Bonta has spent a lot of
his own campaign cash on legal help amid a federal
bribery investigation.
Speaker 1 (09:31):
Now, two days before he announced he would not run
for governor and seek reelection as attorney general. Back in February,
they're saying he made these five separate payments to a
law firm totaling four hundred and sixty eight thousand dollars.
Campaign finance records of the payments were professional services legal accounting,
but the money, saying came from his reelection campaign account,
(09:54):
which at about six point two million in and a
few months ago.
Speaker 4 (09:58):
His campaign is saying that the money is to help
with that investigation. But this is the first time we're
hearing about this now, ten months after that investigation started.
Speaker 1 (10:08):
Interesting, boy, they're in hot water? Are they not? Democrats
in California? Good luck guys.
Speaker 4 (10:14):
Two days before announcing he would not run for California
governor and seek re election for Attorney General, this was
in February, campaign finance records show he made five payments
to a private law firm, totaling four hundred and sixty
eight thousand dollars. That law firm, Wilson, Cincini, Goodrich and Rosati,
has a wide range of services, including legal help with
(10:36):
government investigations and white collar crime. Bonta's campaign confirmed the
payments were for legal help with the ongoing federal bribery
investigation that's happening in the East.
Speaker 1 (10:46):
Bay that involved the mayor over there. That involved a
couple called the Dungs. We'll get it's five hundred thousand
dollars on legal fees. Guys, that's not normal, is it?
Maybe if I talked to many in politics, but that
isn't some normal sitting on this side of it.
Speaker 4 (11:02):
That's the investigation in which Oakland may Or Shang Tal,
the ex mayor there, and a family full of business
people known as the Dongs, were indicted earlier this year.
In a statement, his campaign's senior advisor, Dan Newman said,
there are of course ongoing legal proceedings in the East
Bay in which several people were charged with serious crimes.
The AG wants to ensure that anyone who committed a
(11:25):
crime is held accountable, so he engaged outside legal counsel
to help his law enforcement partners pursue justice.
Speaker 1 (11:31):
Listen Casey r Up in Sacramento. No, so, such a
good job of reporting and staying on top of these guys,
saying Bona Leiden said he spent the money to help
the investigation. Then they pointed out that might not be legal.
Kim and go backwards. Yeah, he's walking it back. They're
(11:53):
now clarified they spent nearly five hundred thousand dollars so
he could have legal counsel because authority's asked him for
information during a federal bribery investigation, and his campaign campaign said,
the use of the funds is absolutely proper. So they're
just asking you for information. You're just a witness in it.
Speaker 5 (12:15):
Right.
Speaker 1 (12:16):
Let's say your your neighbor killed his wife and you
saw him arguing in the front yard camera show you
never leaving your house and they want you to come
in and you know, give them information. Are you Are
you going to go hire an attorney. No, You're a
witness in it. So if he's if he was just
asked for information during the federal bribery investigation, you don't
(12:38):
suddenly go hmm, they're asking me for something. I better
put about half a million dollars towards this. His campaign again,
absolutely proper case. R A doing a good job on
that someone and Carl Demayo doing a good job in Sacramento.
He's actually said ring ring, hello, Feds, Yeah, I got
some information on Gavin Newsom. He's formally asked the Trump
(13:02):
DOJ to open a criminal investigation over three billion dollars
in taxpayer losses. Now I'm going to read this. According
to Carl Demyo, California Democrats force CalPERS into a bogus
Green New Deal investment fund and blew through billions of
taxpayer dollars the fund collapse. They refused to answer questions.
(13:22):
Someone needs to be held accountable. Here's the math. CalPERS
put four hundred and sixty eight million dollars of yours
into the fund, four hundred and sixty eight million. By
March of twenty twenty five, it was worth one hundred
and thirty eight million, seventy one percent wipeout. Demayo said,
(13:44):
if that same money it's simply put in an S
and P five hundred fund, it would be worth about
three billion dollars today. So he said, it's not mismanagement,
it's a violation. He wants a DOJ to treat it
as such. So interaction seeing Newsom may finally have to
have to answer, right, you know, come on, man, I
(14:05):
get it.
Speaker 6 (14:06):
This is the Trevor carry Show on the Valley's Power Talk.
Speaker 1 (14:11):
Five five forty two forty two. Number you to me
two thirty forty two forty two. Unless he's listening on
the iHeart App, I'll assume he's listening on thirteen sixty
in Modesto. Eric, thank you for your patience. Welcome.
Speaker 7 (14:23):
Hi, Hey, Trevor, a longtime listener, even when you're back
here in Modesto.
Speaker 1 (14:28):
All right, Eric, thank you. Man.
Speaker 7 (14:30):
Hey, Uh, before I get into what I want to
said as a as a therapist, what I just heard
you play that that's just crazy insanity. But here on
the on the fire situation, so other than the just
the incompetence of not you know, taking care of the
forest and all that stuff and having the water available.
Fires obviously seasonal fires have been going on forever. But
(14:54):
what I wanted to kind of like, uh, tell the
audience is what they're not being taught in school. My
hobby is astronomy. The Sun goes through a twenty two
year cycle. For eleven years, it puts out a lot
of solar floor active. You have a lot of black spots,
and those solar flares hit our atmosphere and they hit
the magnetic field, and they go to the poles and
(15:16):
they charge the nickel iron core and it's like the
Sun is like a battery charger and the Earth is
the battery and all the other planets And then for
eleven years that charge goes off and then you'll have
cooler weather. But during the charge, you have more volcanoes popping,
you have more hurricanes, you have a lot more fires.
It's like where all the seasonal fires come from. But
(15:38):
if they would just teach the kids that, because they're.
Speaker 1 (15:41):
Teaching me that, I'd never heard that, let me ask
you a question. I mean, go back, Eric, thank you
for this information. But is it similar to like a
mild e mp up in the stratosphere kind of thing
that happens?
Speaker 7 (15:52):
Yea, yeah, of course. Yeah. So it's so every planet
has a magnetic field, so it literally, I mean literally,
do we're batteries. The nickel iron core absorbs the heat
which charges it actually goes back and charges our magnetic field,
so you'll have more The oceans will get warmer, which
(16:12):
causes the hur Hurricanes are like air conditioning systems. They
suck out the heat, they go to the land, and
then they they cool. The crust volcanoes are like poores
on your skin. It takes that pressure and heat and pops,
and then of course you have more earthquake because of
the lava gets center so that the crust moves a
little easier. So all that stuff happens like for for
(16:37):
about eleven years, not exact.
Speaker 1 (16:39):
Did you say, did you say you're psychologists?
Speaker 7 (16:43):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (16:44):
But okay, well man, why aren't you working for that
geo somewhere around doing stories up on sides of volcanos. Boy,
you got a passion for it.
Speaker 7 (16:53):
But that's you know, they would if they just would
pay attention. It's there's a there's a satellite in front
of the Sun called Soho that constantly monitors the Sun.
I mean, you can anticipate this stuff. I mean the governor,
I mean all the way down to the mayor. I mean,
we know this stuff's coming.
Speaker 1 (17:10):
You know, we get a case. You're right, occasionally I'll
see a report of this big explosion from the Sun
and it knocked out telecommunications or something for a period.
Speaker 7 (17:19):
But it's not just that season. I mean, it's like,
you got about ten to eleven years. We know that
it's gonna get hotter, so freaking prepare. I mean, these
guys are just but they don't. And that's what drives
me crazy.
Speaker 1 (17:30):
Well, how do we prepare for hotter? Because it's not
gonna be that big of a difference, is it. It's
not that big?
Speaker 7 (17:36):
Oh no, no, no, no, it doesn't. No, it actually
I can make a case that the hotter it gets,
the actually the better it is. But U but like
as far as the fires are concerned, I mean, we
can prepare better for that.
Speaker 1 (17:48):
Well, yeah, you named a bunch of things we could.
Let me let me ask you here, Eric, why I
got you on here? H Do you think Tesla was
onto what he said he was that we could send
electricity through the earth.
Speaker 7 (18:01):
You know, theoretically, Yeah. I do you.
Speaker 1 (18:06):
Think they stole those papers and all of that and
shut it down?
Speaker 7 (18:10):
Yeah? I man, I'm not a conspiracy guy, but I am.
Speaker 1 (18:16):
Get me and thraw, go ahead.
Speaker 7 (18:18):
I mean it it just makes sense.
Speaker 6 (18:21):
Man.
Speaker 7 (18:22):
Too many things lined up, like how you know, his
relationship with Edison, his relationship with the government. I mean,
too many things lined up for it for it to
just be a conspiracy, you know what I mean?
Speaker 1 (18:34):
Yeah, imagine what that would have done for the world
for you. Let well not great?
Speaker 7 (18:38):
Yeah, and dude, if you want to go go down
that route hole, I mean, I don't know if you
watch any of the Grand Grandham, Graham Hancock stuff or
the guy named Michael Heiser that wrote The Unseen.
Speaker 1 (18:49):
Realm yes, oh Cam leave, he brought him up. He
passed away recently.
Speaker 7 (18:55):
Yeah, so the the technology. Think about it, logically, you
and I both believe in the Bible. So Adam and Eve, dude,
they were made. They were handmade, so they were they
would make Einstein look like an idiot. So you have
not only do you have a genetically supreme two individuals
that have like, now, all these kids pre flood, they
lived long periods of time, they had that, they were brilliant,
(19:17):
they accumulate knowledge. They're the ones responsible for all these monolists, dude,
not aliens. And so h the technology that they must
have had, dude, So I think Tesla maybe had had
tapped into some of that. But yeah, that's again that's
what I believe.
Speaker 1 (19:36):
I'm glad you tapped into that. Can you imagine back
in the pre flood days, I'm about to turn sixty
and people could be like, come on, man, you still
got some more time. Keep kick. Imagine back then you're
only six hundred, man, come on, you still got more time? Right? Yeah.
Speaker 7 (19:53):
Yeah. The so when you're born, you have like a
net gain of cell so you're every cell that dies
two cells replaced, and you have this like net game
till your plate to around thirty, and then around thirty
you have for every one cell dies, one cell replaces it,
so you have like a platote about forty. Then you
start to have a net loss, so that the pre
fled civilization, they would hit thirty and they would look
(20:15):
thirty till her about seven hundred, eight hundred years old.
Speaker 5 (20:18):
Dude.
Speaker 1 (20:18):
Can you imagine that being a teenager at one hundred
and eighty seven, How mature you'd be.
Speaker 7 (20:22):
Oh, but that's also that's why God probably had to
destroy it, because I mean, imagine having a bunch of
Einstein Hitler's running.
Speaker 1 (20:29):
Around right Maagine an eight hundred year old man. They're like,
come on, man, she's only three hundred and eighty. She's
not even four hundred yet, she's too young for you.
Speaker 7 (20:37):
She's at your league.
Speaker 2 (20:38):
Man.
Speaker 1 (20:40):
I wonder what the physicality look like a four hundred
year old woman. Maybe like a forty year old woman today.
I just take a zero off. I guess.
Speaker 7 (20:48):
Well, even like post flood, like right after the Tower
of Babbel, I mean Abraham's wife when they were going
through Egypt, he had to say he was her brother
because everybody wanted her. She was like eighty years old
and he was a hot mama. Man.
Speaker 1 (21:01):
They were whistling at her, right. Yeah, all those construction
workers on the pyramids, well all done. They did they
even build those? If you want to get into real
conspiracy here, did the Egyptians build the pyramids? Because what
would chis? Come on?
Speaker 7 (21:16):
No they didn't.
Speaker 1 (21:17):
No, no, no, that took some. That took some. Nephelon, Eric,
this is I'm going to put this down as well.
It's in November. One of the best calls of the year. Yeah.
Director Ryan Nigel agrees, Thank you, sir. I love your
show man, thank you. I love that information.
Speaker 6 (21:34):
This is the Trevor Charry Show on The Valley's Power
Talk Freedom.
Speaker 1 (21:40):
This is the big news. I didn't even know it existed.
I'm gonna talk more about it tomorrow. That would be
a good place at the Expedite Urgent Care. Since it's
still I guess legal and over the counter. I know
Fresno's bandit. I'll get to win. It goes into effect counties.
Bandit for most people. They say it's a natural herbal
supplement that comes from the leaf of a tree which
(22:01):
grows in Southeast Asia. Thailanded on Asia Malaysia. People grind
it down into a pattern, make capsules or teas. In
small amounts, it's a stimulant. In large amounts, it's like
a pain reliever and opioid withdrawal symptoms can come from this.
Some people, I guess, use it responsibly. Some people do not. Well,
(22:23):
look at that. Have we ever heard of that before?
I mean for about four years, I responsibly sniffed glue.
I didn't overdo it. Now people overdo things all the time.
We'll just take alcohol, right. So the city today city
City Council they proved an ordinate's banning it sail in
the city. If you're caught, you can be fine one
(22:44):
thousand dollars, spent up to a year in jail. The
county they are going to allow some uses in their
ban after hearing from some of the users talk about
the health benefits. But president City Council said, nope. It
almost seems like that's thee doesn't it. It's like our
board of supervisors are more conservative minus a few that
(23:07):
than our city council. But this seems like a more
conservative view of coming from the city. I'm glad they
did it. Now that I'm finding out about this. I
didn't know about this. The County's going to hold a
second meeting in December. Reproved the band would take effect
in January. All right, they said in right doses that
it doesn't affect you. So I guess tomorrow. The best
(23:30):
place to try this would be at the expedite urgent
care at are all over the place. Tour there because
there's something goes bad. I have medical right there. It's
still legal, I guess until when the band goes in effect,
so I'm not breaking the law. Maybe am I breaking
an iHeart law by doing an herbal supplement?
Speaker 2 (23:45):
No?
Speaker 1 (23:46):
I didn't think so. No, I wouldn't. I wouldn't try this.
That's people have actually lost their life of this, so
I shouldn't make jokes about this. I guess some people
been addicted to it. Running by their liquor stores or
their smoke shops. I said, it's right there at the counter,
looks similar to energy drinks in a form like a candy,
saying the colored packaging aimed at young people. Why I'm
(24:08):
sure I was there a Did you have to be
eighteen or twenty one? To buy it? Well, we know
how easy that hey, man, can you go in there?
They're gon id? Come on, you can probably buy weed
at sixteen at a lot of the places around town
that have been busted for doing things of that nature.
So we'll get more into that tomorrow. I'm looking for
(24:31):
a drug expert if you're recovering kreatum addict. If I'm
saying that right, Kretim Trevor Power Talk ninety sixty seven
dot com. But we'll talk more about it tomorrow as well.
I saw this and yesterday I played you Pastor Ken
Grimes from Maine. Up there. He's speaking at a men's
conference talking about the feminization of worship, anyone just talking
(24:53):
about women. And sometimes when I drive home, I think
was I too hardcore about that? And I don't think
I was, But I do want to say, listen, women
are as important spiritually as any man in any church
building that is a soul right there. You're a We're
(25:14):
all children of God. He doesn't look at the men
any more important than the women. But there is a
different makeup that God gave men and women, and that
makeup of women is to be nurturing also maybe a
little more. I know a lot of men would disagree
with us, and I'm kind of disagreeing with myself, but
more forgiving, more, accepting more, not as stringent to the rules, right,
(25:39):
I mean? Am I wrong? Here? Women? Are you disagreeing
with me?
Speaker 5 (25:42):
Here?
Speaker 1 (25:44):
Christianity Today named a female pastor is a new president
and CEO. She is a black lady pastor, and she
is extremely woke. This is Christianity Today, Doctor Nicole Massey
Martin next president and CEO. She's got a good resume.
She's a founder of Soul Fire Ministries. Degrees from Vanderbilt
(26:05):
and Princeton and Gordon Cornell Theology Seminary, where she currently works.
Let's see what. Oh, here's a good article about a
year ago. Good doctor here at Christianity Day voting for Kamala,
one of the transit kids and the inmates, and killed
that baby up until a moment of birth. Here's what
(26:25):
the new president and CEO of Christianity Today. Let me
tell you again what the organization's called. She writes, an
age designer left in my girls, watch my husband, and
we vote for the one we believe would be the
best qualified vice president, Kamala Harris. And now we witness
the grief that comes from knowing that the candidate we
champed and lost the race. We watches. Our faces fell
(26:49):
when we heard the results. Our daughters experienced our sorrow,
not for this loss, but for the fear of what
might happen in the coming days and years. See that's
a woke Marxist left well. She goes into the black
hate crimes in her book about Suffocating. She talked about
George Floyd and black men dying for a small infraction
(27:12):
is common in America, going after the police. She's a
big supporter of same sex marriage and LGBTQ ia causes.
Why don't they just drop Christianity from their name call themselves? Hey,
we're today. This is what today's about. I'm trying to
(27:33):
get my voice to sell.
Speaker 5 (27:35):
One of the pastors here in southern California actually stated
that Christianity has been hijacked by hyper masculinity. Hey, there's
no such thing as hyper masculinity, and b church is
not suffering from too much masculinity. Brothers, and anybody who
(27:57):
thinks it ends has been femed. Now let me I
didn't know, well, I didn't write this, but let me
if I may, I happened upon an article I'll share
a portion of it. It with you, and it's about
(28:17):
super feminine worship leaders. The lights dim, A soft purple
haze spreads across the stage. I carefully manufactured misted rises
from hidden fog machines, like some mystical veil between heaven
and Earth. The lead singer, the guy with the vocal
(28:38):
timber of a teenage boy penning poetry in his journal,
Breeze into the microphone, eyes closed, hands outstretched and longing.
Take me back to the garden, Lead me back to
the moment I saw your face, he croons. The melody
(29:01):
drips with sentiments a love song aching for a cosmic embrace,
and the crowd hands sway, heads tilt, and a soft
collective sigh rises. This isn't the church worshiping the ancient
of days. This is a girl novel set to music.
Speaker 4 (29:24):
Shut up.
Speaker 6 (29:25):
This is the Trevor Chary Show. On the Valley's Power Talk.
Speaker 1 (29:31):
Yeah right here. Shawn blackstone Ck on Sports joins me.
Three to four. We'll talk about the Dogs taking on
Utah seven thirty, Valley Children six thirty, pre game c
K and the crew kicking it all off. At five thirty.
We got your President State swag and I think I'll
stick with les nessmannd WKRP in Cincinnati will drop some
turkeys or some helicopters. Now we're gonna have some raffles
(29:51):
for turkeys in pumpkin pie. So it's gonna go oh indeed,
oh uh. We kind of start talking about our food.
I did a good win a few nights ago. I
had some pork chops i'd taken out and I was like, ah,
they've been in there. I need to get those cooked.
And the ones without the bones. I normally like the
bones because that's closer to the bone, sweeter is the meat.
(30:13):
But these didn't have bones, and I put them in
the cast iron. And you didn't like creama mushrom Remember
that night I was talking about it. I thought I
had cream and mushroom. It was cream a chicken. So
I put that overly, Who cares. I made some jasmine
rice on the side. I don't like the rice into
cook because it gets too soggy. I put it in
a kind of after it comes out and kind of
mix it up a little more and some green peas.
I had that two nights in a row, and I'm
(30:35):
sitting I wanted again tonight. Yeah, I'm gonna go ahead.
That's why I'm gonna do three nights in a row. Yeah,
replaced master toes. But no, that'd take too much work.
I'm not in that mood tonight. I potatoes green peas.
That does sound good, but the rice is already done,
so I'm not gonna do anything extra there as well.
All right from if you don't want to kind of
(30:57):
maybe run your dinner, you probably I want to hear
the next story this, especially if you love pets. This
is a Democrat. I love the stories when we make
them be pet abusers. San Francisco Democrat supervisor mayor called
this woman a bridge builder, a problem solfer. She'd only
been on the job one week. And see she's own
(31:18):
a pet store there. Oh, the city talked about her
animal connection, Yeah, from Alcatraz. Her name is Isabelle Alcaaz
twenty nine. Resigned because the mayor said you need to
because they went in there. The new person that bought
this store found a bunch of dead animals in a freezer,
hundreds of dead rodents. It sounds like a really biohazard lab.
(31:44):
Never found out about that, do we? I guess the
guy went to went to jail. But in this sick
they came in. I saw a little video of it,
and I didn't think. I don't want to. I'll just
tell you. They said, it smells like death, a dead
mice beneath the shelving on the sales floor. There was
(32:04):
a layer of animal pea and dust and poop on everything,
on the walls, on every cabinet. They ultimately buried the animals.
They found. The mayor appointed this woman to a supervisor position.
Had no prior political experience. They cited her work as
a businesswoman and a pet store owner. That's her credibility
(32:28):
right there. That was her example to get on the
on San Francisco board of supervisors. No political experience. Well,
she's a businesswoman. She knows how to do business. You
know what, It's almost fitting for that city, isn't it
almost fitting? They have an eleven member county board of
supervisors there. They said, this woman paid workers under the
(32:50):
table and rode off dinners and drinks with her friends.
A lower income tax or business and just a shyster.
But in that just disgusting people do that? Listen. I
have no affection for mice, but I don't want to
see any animal die or gruesome death like that. It's
(33:12):
just not right. Tomorrow we'll talk more about the kadum.
I hope I'm saying cretum. I guess it's been around
for a long time. I did not know of the effects.
The city of Fresno has voted to not sell it anymore.
The county is voted to not sell anymore except for
certain circumstances for health reasons. So I guess you'll have
(33:32):
your Fresno kreatum fans having to drive outside the city limits.
And anytime something is illegal, what happens black market. They
grind them up into capsules, and these coming prepackaged from
companies that I will assume have to follow at least
some kind of something. Maybe I don't know, But once
(33:56):
you take it out of that and you get it
into hey man, I got some cratile and for sale.
You don't know what's in it. You don't know what's
been sprayed in it, you know what effect has been
put into it. Maybe I'll talk about this more tomorrow
at Expedite Urgent Care and get somebody over there that's
a doctor to can talk about
Speaker 6 (34:12):
This, insisted Trevor carry Show, London, valley's power dog,