Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
When I heard mass shooting in Texas right there, I went,
what's the city? Family in Waco?
Speaker 2 (00:06):
Now?
Speaker 1 (00:07):
So I was relieved to hear it wasn't in the
town that I had family in, but man, a lot
of families right now running around crazy this crime across
his country.
Speaker 2 (00:19):
Why is this important?
Speaker 1 (00:22):
Listen this guy on MSNBC, lit's send these analysts on
here another one songing about it because he's racist. This
is how broken Democrat ideas are. They'd be like having Dandriff. No, no,
I'm refusing head and shoulders.
Speaker 2 (00:34):
It's a President Trump. It's time to stand down.
Speaker 3 (00:37):
It's time to make another phone call to Greg Abbat.
Speaker 1 (00:40):
This time instead of what in the world where did
they go? Here's why that this is important here.
Speaker 3 (00:49):
Race that tourists and visitors and.
Speaker 1 (00:51):
Thetings my word. All right, I'm gonna get my audio
and order here. But this is my fault, not Director
Ryan Nigel's, as they're talking about, you know, saying to
the public that he's not gonna put up with it
anymore no longer. He's now giving us details how he's
going to clean it up. He said he's gonna make
it safer, more beautiful than it ever was before he's
(01:13):
even talking about making the homeless have to move out. Good,
that's how it should go. I wish that would happen here.
Can you imagine being law enforcement? What are Democrats thinking?
Speaker 2 (01:29):
Are they? Is this like, this is beyond.
Speaker 1 (01:33):
Trump derangement syndrome. In my opinion, this is really boils
down to that They're not gonna like this. Whatever he does,
it doesn't matter if it helps the city, and it is.
He's also deploying one hundred and twenty FBI agents to
the streets of DC. He's gonna have law enforcement fight crime.
(01:54):
These agents are primarily, they're saying, from the Washington Field Office,
and they're going to be reassigned from COW or Intelligence. Well,
I good, disrupted, disrupted all all together. They're talking about
four hundred and fifty federal officers from these agencies, including
(02:14):
the FBI, the DEA, the Marshall Service, the park Police.
And you watch how can you How could you argue
and fight back against before and after images that are
going to come forward?
Speaker 2 (02:30):
You can't.
Speaker 1 (02:30):
You won't be able to. I mean, this is going
to be the ultimate end. Before and after. I know
during the COVID lockdown when I got to go back
for that Federation American immigration reform. You couldn't go to
any I couldn't go see the Constitution because of COVID lockdowns,
Thanks Biden. Yeah, really what it called COVID right there
at the Constitution. But yeah, you couldn't see much of
(02:53):
the city. But I saw a whole lot right there
at the train station, just encampments out there.
Speaker 2 (02:58):
Couldn't believe it. I filmed it.
Speaker 1 (03:00):
Believe it, I thought, And that's what five five years ago,
four years ago, I couldn't believe it. Then. Who knows
what it's become right here? He announced that the homeless
people need to move out of DC, and criminals, the
President said, can stay because we're going to put you
in jail. Well, why is he overreacting like this, because
(03:22):
we know how the crime rate has done. We've heard NBC, ABC, CBS,
we've heard them all, and what if they told us
crime dropping? Well, now we find out the DC commander
Police union stated confirmed by the police union in NBC
that the DC commander is on paid leave under investigation
(03:45):
for directing officers or reclassified felonies, which then falsified to
twenty five to twenty eight percent drop in violent crime
last year. And I'm sure we saw something from the
AP that picked that up that came out here and
spread all across media, across the valley and across the country,
and it was parroted and paired it. But I wonder
(04:09):
how many other cities, you think, blue cities that don't
want to show that, look what our policies have done.
Crimes off the chart have done the same that they
did in DC, falsifying a twenty eight percent drop in
violent crime. That would be something that I would applaud,
(04:29):
but no, they don't, do.
Speaker 4 (04:31):
They and placing the DC Metropolitan Police Department under direct
federal control, and you'll be meeting the people that will
be directly involved with that. Very good people, but they're tough,
and they know what's happening and they've done it before.
In addition, I'm deploying the National Guard to help re
(04:54):
establish law order of public safety in Washington, d C.
And they're going to be allowed to do their job properly.
Speaker 1 (05:01):
Good and integrate the people that are in place right now,
like Judge Janine here, she is, she was there this
morning at the press conference. But we're going to clean
up this this place she's new attorney in town, going
to be take care of taking some of these criminals down.
Speaker 5 (05:17):
We all want the same thing. We all want a
safe city. We want a safe capital. We want to
be able to bring our families here. We want to
be able to come and enjoy the history that makes
this place great. And unfortunately we are not in that
position right now. And mister President, I want to thank
you for taking the step that we need right now
(05:40):
to make criminals understand that they are not going to
get away with it anymore. And I'm not going to
stand here and go over and over the cases.
Speaker 1 (05:49):
Go get them, Go get them. This is what we need.
We need to call out the punks. Let's what you
call them, let's go.
Speaker 5 (05:57):
I see too much violent crime being committed by young
punks who think that they can get together in gangs
and crews and beat the hell out of you or
anyone else. They don't care where they are. They can
be in DuPont Circle. But they know that we can't
touch them. Why because the laws are weak.
Speaker 1 (06:19):
And listen to what this judge did. Listen to the
punishment probation. Listen to what judge and Heine said that
this person did. This team.
Speaker 5 (06:30):
I can't touch you. If you're fourteen, fifteen, sixteen, seventeen
years old and you have a gun. I convict someone
of shooting another person with an illegal gun on a
public bus in the chest, intent to kill. I convict him,
and you know what, the judge gives him probation, says
you should go to college. We need to go after
(06:53):
the DC Council and their absurd laws. We need to
get rid of this concept of no fail. We need
to recognize that the people who matter are the law
abiding citizens.
Speaker 3 (07:06):
And it starts today.
Speaker 1 (07:08):
Yes, we got the judge. Here comes the judge. Judge
Anine go get them and she's going to make them understand.
Speaker 5 (07:18):
But it's not going to end today because the President
is going to do everything we need to do to
make sure that these emboldened criminals understand. We see you,
we're watching you, and we're going to change the law
to catch you.
Speaker 1 (07:32):
Yes, and the feel I get from this is somebody's
now in control. I'm going to do something about it,
and other cities are going to go, hey, please come
help us over here. Thence Corner americanthinker dot Com wrote
the word dictator gets a bad rap I'm like, whoa okay,
(07:53):
do speak at thou? What does thou mean? He said,
Slom was a dictator, so we're male hitler Ayatola Kamanie
Hugo sha is. Over one hundred million people lost their
lives because of those guys over the last century. So
there's that. But dictators take power legally, sometimes illegally, refuse
to give it up. They ruled by violence that he said.
The original Roman dictators were different. Julius Caes most famous
(08:14):
dictator in history. He took power and intended to keep
it for life.
Speaker 2 (08:18):
He says.
Speaker 1 (08:19):
We see stories across the country every day of violent
criminals being let out of jail on bond and without bond.
It all let out of prison. We know that here
in California, right And we see judges who sentence violent
criminals to little short sentences if they do it all,
he said, across the country, Das prosecutors seemed to put
the criminals above the communities are sworn to defend. Our
(08:41):
system is failing. George Crol spent forty million to put
DA's in into cities that are now responsible for rivers
of blood. The Roman solution was dictatorship, not a dictator
in the sense of Stalin or Hitler, but rather in
the style of the traditional Roman Republic, where in office
is created to deal with the problem that the normal
bureaucracy can't seem to fix. In any city across the
(09:05):
country where the violent crime rate is out of control,
the federal government should impose a dictator. Justice dictators, he said.
I'm like, yeah, that's how the Romans did it. That's
why you know. Ponch's pilot was all like I watched.
Speaker 2 (09:19):
He didn't.
Speaker 1 (09:19):
He didn't want to get Rome involved. I washed my
hand into this. Uh huh, send them back, Send them
back to Herod. I don't want the Roman Republic coming
in here something I can't fix. I didn't create this.
But we got a lot of people like that now,
don't we. We got a governor like that acting like
he didn't create any of this. So he wrote here
(09:44):
americanthinker dot com. It's called maybe what we need in
America as a dictator, not the type you're thinking of,
he said. Justice dictators. Their role would be to decide
on bail released for criminals accused of any violent crime.
They'd be liable if the people they allow out on
bail commit so while waiting for their cases to be adjudicated. Huh,
(10:04):
what if we had a point system for judges? You
let them out on bail, then they went and rape Grandma.
We give you a ranking. My word, if we do
it for Uber drivers and Uber passengers, we need to
do this for judges. But we don't because there comes
the justice dictator. You want your social justice.
Speaker 2 (10:24):
Here we go.
Speaker 1 (10:27):
Now, I guess that would depend whether or not you
agreed with the social dictator. Right, Yeah, it's a crime
to hold a Bible study at your house.
Speaker 2 (10:39):
Yeah, we don't.
Speaker 1 (10:40):
We didn't need a dictator like that, but we do
with the laws that are on the books of any state,
them actually being implemented, and they're being actually a punishment
for them, because criminals again don't really really really really
really like to be shot, and they really really really
don't like to go to jail or prison for a
long time. But if you've got fewer criminals out on
(11:02):
the street while they're waiting for trial, and you expect
they might be a little better behaved. We've seen majority
of criminals commit a majority a minority of criminals commit
a majority of America's crimes. Remember the stealing of the
catalytic converters. We got rid of one guy in jail,
(11:23):
Like seventy percent of the crimes went away. So if
you got fewer criminals out there running on the street,
that means the police have more time to solve crimes,
all the cold cases, and to have federal help. Who
would turn that away? Man, Our system is broken, needs
(11:44):
to be It needs to be fixed. And President Trump
is going to fix the District of Columbia and I
applaud him for doing that. And we're going to see
a before and after in numbers and images, and let
me remind you of what he said a long time ago.
I think this is during Trump one point zero. But
(12:04):
here's what he's going to put into DC.
Speaker 4 (12:06):
We know that the only way to stop a bad
guy with a gun is a good guy with a gun.
Speaker 3 (12:13):
This is the Trevor Carry Show on the Valley's Power Talk.
Speaker 1 (12:18):
It's been a bit since I've driven through a McDonald's
and ordered a hash brown with anything or eating there.
I could not believe the sticker shock on this, and
I found out McDonald's the franchisees franchise doors. People that
own them. They can kind of basic kind of depending
(12:40):
on their location. You know, with the rent labor costs,
it's easier to run one in which Dal, Kansas than
it is in San Francisco.
Speaker 2 (12:50):
I saw this. You're talking about a.
Speaker 1 (12:53):
Charging four dollars and thirty five cents for a hash brown,
I when I haven't bought hash Browns in a while,
but the frozen ones, I get food for less three
bucks or two eighty for a dozen. You know, in
the frozen pack. My word, you can buy a three
dollars sack of potatoes and make one hundred of them
four thirty five. Now that's awful high. Normally, they said.
(13:17):
Day at the office of McDonald's said, normally ranges anywhere
from a buck ninety nine to three ninety nine. This
MSN dot com article said the highest price they could
find was downtown San Francisco three ninety nine. The lowest
price downtown Boston a buck ninety nine. DC was charging
two sixty nine again for hass brown. They went back.
(13:42):
In an O four article San Jose Mercury News, they
said a hash round costs eighty nine cents in Milpedis
two thousand and nine. USA Today's story had it on
the dollar breakfast menu sausage McMuffin was a buck twelve
ounce coffee buck. They've been on the rise fast food prices.
The average price McDonald's increased forty percent since twenty and nineteen.
(14:07):
Man Big mac Rose twenty one ed McMuffin twenty three,
ten piece nuggets ten piece went up twenty eight percent.
I mean, what's a hash round one fifth, one sixth
off a potato? I guess it depends how big the
potato is, But my stars, that is I if I
(14:28):
pulled up, I said, yes, can you give me a
water with ice? Yeah, and a hash brown? And they went,
all right, your order is a four oh seven pull
around please wait wait, I thought you said the water
was three oh it is. Hey, I'd be shocked. I
wouldn't drink McDonald's tat water, but you never know, right,
(14:49):
I've gotten picky with water. I tell you when I
got picky with water. So when I worked at a
radio station back in western New York outside Buffalo, there
they had this water treatment and this guy that listened
to the to the morning show I did. He's like, hey, man,
come on down by here and say, hey, with the
city water, I'll give you a whole tour, and I
was kind of modern marvel ish kind of interested, like yeah,
(15:13):
and he goes, you gotta wear a hard hat. I'm like, hey,
that he makes it sound more fun. Let's go. So
I met him down there and he gave me the
whole tour. And when I got back in the car,
I'm like, I'm not gonna be guzzling tap water unless
I just didn't at the end of my rope because
I thought I was going into i don't know, sparkling
Olympic pull looking blue kind of taints and stuff.
Speaker 2 (15:37):
That's what I was envisioning. This is the the clean
part of it all.
Speaker 1 (15:41):
You know they get it if I knew they got
it from other places, and that's where I went to
get clean. But normally when you think of getting clean,
you don't think of it looking like a dirty battub.
Speaker 2 (15:51):
And that's what it looked like.
Speaker 1 (15:52):
Maybe it was just the lighting and the paint, you know,
if they painted the sides of whatever.
Speaker 2 (15:56):
All that water was in blue with lights on. But no,
it was not what I was thinking.
Speaker 1 (16:06):
I thought it first of all, that it was all
stored somewhere where an eagle or a raccoon or any
kind of vermin could get it. Oh no, no, no,
it's not out in the wild open. But still I
was a little bit taken back by that one right there.
Not that I'm a water snob. If you it was
(16:28):
at your house and you said, hey, make a dust
of water and you'd be like, yeah, you need poured
it from the sink. I thank you, and I'd drink it.
But yeah, no more, no more lemon put in that either.
After seeing those, yeah, I'm not going to get into
that one again. This was a very scary thing for
a sure family right here. President Native Maurice Norris the
(16:53):
NFL preseason game to the Lions and the Falcons former
Bulldog serious injury. They all stopped playing right in the
fourth quarter, I mean out flat. Falcons quarterback took a snap,
then held the ball. They stood at the scrimmage line
and just let the clock run out. After he was
taken off the field. He was a Bulldog, started in
(17:14):
thirteen games a senior year, named second team All Mountain
in twenty twenty three, went undrafted last year, but got
signed with the Lions as an undrafted free agent. He
was then signed to the Lions active roster last December,
so he was down and they held the game out
and then they just decided to run it out. And
I feel for everybody involved, and I know it would
(17:35):
be hard to get your head back in the game
like that, and maybe some people, and I hate to
say it in the town he's from, and I don't
know how he would feel about it, but yes, that's
a risk you know you take when you play that game.
Darryl Steingley. I always think of him with the Patriots
the Raiders paralyzed. I read his book The Risk that
(17:57):
you take. But there's also somebody else on the other
team over there that did not know that team, and
the other man that went down, who's trying to make
the team. It's preseason, in the regular season. The game
I assume would have gone on. Now. I'm just I'm
(18:18):
not putting my head where they were. And again I'm
not saying that you don't stop and realize. And they
all prayed right there, and I thought that was awesome.
Man really did for I was on Native Maurice Norris.
He's in stable condition, feeling and moving in all his extremities.
I should have said that at the start. Sorry, Sorry,
don't you hate when people call it, you're.
Speaker 2 (18:40):
Like, what's wrong.
Speaker 1 (18:41):
Well, I'm at the hospital and it was I was
running up here and I just need to stop and
I need.
Speaker 2 (18:47):
To tell me what's wrong? All right.
Speaker 1 (18:50):
That's kind of how I felt with that. He's looks
like recovery and on the way. That's that's good to hear.
Did you see that seventy yard field goal Jacksonville Jaguars.
He would have been a wrecker, but it was preseason,
but quite a kick. He kicked it from his own
forty yard line through the uprights. Cam Little was his name.
(19:13):
He's the nuclear leg of the NFL.
Speaker 2 (19:16):
Now.
Speaker 1 (19:16):
So I have a few things now to watch. Like
I said, I'm a player player watcher now, so I'm
gonna be watching Cam Little of the Jaguars and hope
Maurice Norris of the Lions makes it former bulldog there.
I don't know nothing out yet about you know, return possible.
(19:37):
Just glad he's healthy and not paralyzed. That's what it
looked like, and that has to freak everybody out playing.
I mean right, yes, you think the very next play
that could happen to me? And I tried to slow
it down with my finger scrub there on my phone
(19:57):
to actually see right when it happened, and it was
like some blockets of other players there. He came in
fast and then was down. I couldn't really quite tell
how the hit happened. He's other players need to hit
his neck while he's going down, so we call that
a freak accident. Yes, Well, speaking of football, the Trevor
(20:17):
Nation All Over the Place Tour is going to kick
off not this Friday, but the next and on Sports
Fox Sports thirteen forty. It's gonna be joining me for
the first hour of the show simulcasts there, and we'll
both be live every Friday afternoon before a Fresle'll State
football game. So looking forward to that, I said, well,
whose name's going to go first? And I said, let's
(20:40):
play cornhole for it, So we'll play Cornhall. So he's
gonna be on me for an hour. It's gonna be
great to get his insight. He knows the players he's
out on the field. So as we head into this season,
we'll have the first hour there with c K and
then I'll be last two hours of the show out
there live and the first show is on the twenty
(21:01):
second because the twenty third Bulldogs take on Kansas.
Speaker 3 (21:04):
This is the Trevor Carry Show on the Valley's Power.
Speaker 1 (21:08):
Talk, playing how Cam Little did that seventy yard field goal?
Speaker 2 (21:11):
Daniel? How did he pull that off? Sir? Thanks for calling.
Speaker 6 (21:15):
Well, I was checked it out. I watched the field
goal at first, But now they've said something about they
get like a week or several days to manipulate the ball.
The kickers get the ball several days before the games.
So the video that I saw, they were polishing out
the ball like oiling it. I'm sure the pressure has
(21:37):
to be the same, but they were manipulating the ball.
Speaker 1 (21:40):
Different, all right, Daniel, So that I understand the story correctly.
The kicker gets to come out on the field for
a field goal with their own football they've had back
in the hotel room and on the on the boss and.
Speaker 6 (21:53):
Yeah wherever it was in the training room whatever. But
they have several they have several days to work it
out out where before I think they said they only
had like a couple hours.
Speaker 2 (22:04):
So An, right, where did you where did you hear this?
I got director ride Nigel.
Speaker 6 (22:08):
I saw it. I saw it. After I saw the
field goal, I watched another video that said how we
did it, and they showed them buffing out the balls.
They showed them oiling them and trying to soften them
up or whatever they got to do to kick further.
But the YouTube that I saw said that there's gonna
be a lot of that because of what they're able
(22:29):
to do with the ball now, and this guy doesn't
have the real leg that will normally kick that.
Speaker 2 (22:34):
So we're gon we're gonna check with the rule. We're
gonna check with the roll.
Speaker 6 (22:37):
Daniel, Yeah, check it out.
Speaker 1 (22:39):
Yeah, we'll check it because people say things on YouTube
all the time.
Speaker 6 (22:43):
Right, Yeah, I saw it on YouTube after I saw them,
you know, kick the field goals. But yeah, they showed
them buffing it out and like a like a glove,
they were oiling it and they had like a like
the old shoe buffers.
Speaker 1 (22:55):
Well, Daniel, now that I'm thinking about it, the Colorado
Rockies would put all the base balls and humi doors
because of the elevation. Because of I guess so the
condition and skin of the leather on a baseball or
a football, I guess that does make a difference how
far they travel when you think about it.
Speaker 6 (23:13):
It had several days to do that or before they
only had like a few hours or maybe one day.
All right, but yeah, they were doing some weird stuff
with it.
Speaker 1 (23:21):
Hey, if that, if I had control of that, I'd
be pump a little helium in there.
Speaker 6 (23:26):
Well, like I said, I'm sure that pressure has to
be the same.
Speaker 1 (23:29):
You know the ball, Yeah, but your confidence could be
higher if you know you're juiced up the football.
Speaker 6 (23:35):
Yeah, especially you know if you made the outside softer
and not so hard. And you know you see them
walk on the field and squish the ball all the time.
You know they squish the corner.
Speaker 1 (23:44):
You're right, you do see them standing on the side. Well,
you're not seeing anything, director, Nigel, do that? No, Well,
gotta be careful sometimes what that old YouTube tells you. Well,
I've thought people have died before by what I've seen,
and I go look it up on the phone.
Speaker 2 (23:58):
I'm like, they're lying.
Speaker 6 (24:00):
They did do them manipulating the balls. Maybe there's a
new rule, Like.
Speaker 1 (24:04):
I said, all right, well, we'll appreciate you check it in, Daniel,
Thank you, sir, appreciate your calling. Readley there five five
nine two three zero forty two forty two. I'm getting
the shaking of the head left and right now it's
it's not a rule. Here do we go again? For months,
construction equipment has been parked around the intersection of Golden
(24:25):
State Highway and Shaw at northwest resident What does that mean?
Speaker 2 (24:29):
Got train coming through town? When's in a.
Speaker 1 (24:32):
Set to arrive? We don't yet quite. No, we're gonna
just eat throwing years out there. So they're preparing for
high speed rail to come through the area. Growing pains
are felt by some nearby businesses. Well, surprise, surprise, surprise,
we've already seen and felt. That took you eight years
of building underpass plans. They say businesses can stay open
(24:55):
during it all. The first part, it's the thirty two
mile stretch between the county in Presno County. The Lawn
term goals to make Shawn Overpass in the area, so
it's no longer gonna go across Golden State Highway or
(25:18):
the rails. Here's what the idist figure Rail Regional director said.
We're planning to close SHAWL all the way from Bly
to about Forestier Forster, and then we close to the
south piece of Golden State connection. It's just ensured that
we can build the detour of the bypass around you
know around that construction area. Huh, just get your bulldozers
(25:41):
moving out of the way and shut down. The shall
bypass Road will be used by drivers for the next year.
Thoughts On the end of the year, they said the section
of Golden State will remain closed. July twenty twenty six
(26:02):
is the target date?
Speaker 2 (26:08):
Do you think?
Speaker 1 (26:09):
They said? Here's what Haycheriel said. The lessons that we've
learned from there are some of the things that we're
going to be doing here in advance. Oh, they learned
things from taking eight years of build an underpas, did they?
And every time I say that, I have to alert
you to the fact it took eight years of the
Romans to build the collism. Well, here's why it's taken
so long, they said. We're still digging into the ground,
(26:32):
and sometimes when we want to do that, we find,
you know, things that we don't anticipate. What dinosaur bones,
ancient burial grounds.
Speaker 2 (26:43):
What do you know?
Speaker 1 (26:44):
You know where you plan to dig? Don't you have
the water Department's number to see where water lines are?
Don't you have PG gene see where gas lines are?
Speaker 4 (26:54):
Late?
Speaker 1 (26:54):
Or just look at probably a quick internet search. I
don't know, so now it's they're having trouble digging and
what they're finding, like, what that's what? I like?
Speaker 2 (27:06):
What pull the brakes? Jack, come on?
Speaker 1 (27:10):
Still burning through billions, and here we are talking about
President is going to get this many million to pay roads.
Oh good, Yeah, I think we're a billion dollars in
the backlog. I think the county was way less than that,
about half that maybe. Yeah, things that were projected to
get done but won't can't. We don't have the money
(27:34):
over a billion dollar backlog. We spent thirty two billion
dollars a year in illegals. We've spent sixteen billion on
this train so far. Federal government said, not that four billion,
taking that back, Give it back, give it back. Joshua
Thompson Fox and News said, we can fly every Californian
(27:57):
round trip to Tokyo. Then we can have a bullet
train ticket bought for us to Kyoto and then put
the be put up for two nights at the Ritz Carlton,
and we would still have money left over for sushi.
Every Californian a round trip bullet train, two nights at
the Ritz Carlton.
Speaker 2 (28:16):
I trade that in any day.
Speaker 1 (28:18):
When you guys, how about you voters that were here
in two thousand and eight, you go, humm, what do
they want me to vote on a two hundred and
twenty mile an hour electric train from San Francisco to
LA And it's gonna be done with twenty twenty.
Speaker 2 (28:38):
Well, okay, that's that's not bad.
Speaker 1 (28:40):
That means less traffic on ninety nine. That's what I
would have thought. Now it's up to one hundred and
twenty eight billion, and it's not laatest ere versus got
some we're said to Bakersfield. Yeah, high speed rail. You
know what they talk about job creation? You hear that
all the time here. Mayor dre are talking about job creation.
(29:02):
Here politicians talking about job creation. Wow, job creation. Shove
already jobs. Well, we need thirty or we're launching thirty
four million dollars for road repair to fix our potholes
and our aging streets. Yeah, that's it was one point
(29:28):
two billion the backlog for our streets to repave. Mayor Dyer,
quoted here said, when you pave a new road, it
scores one hundred. Over time, that score drops. We have
many roads in Front and O that are in the
twenty some even below twenty. That's why you feel like
you're driving on a back dad highway after George hw
(29:50):
Bush bombed them back in ninety one. It's like driving
around like bombs have been dropped from the sky. I
can't believe shawl from right here at Blackstone heading west
to ninety nine, it's just just so horrible.
Speaker 2 (30:06):
They said.
Speaker 1 (30:06):
The city's launching the largest painting season yet, thirty projects,
an investment of thirty four million dollars, more than forty
nine miles of work. This year's for twenty twenty five.
That's what they have planned, and we're doing it with
thirty four million dollars. Can you imagine all the wasted
money in this state. Think of all that COVID money
that went to inmates, that paycheck protection program that went
(30:27):
to inmates in prison. Think of the twenty four billion
dollars unaccounted for for the transients. But we're talking about
thirty four million for our roads and it's not enough,
and we're one point two billion behind, and they can't
account for twenty four billion for the TRANSI. It's then
(30:47):
it make you want to scream. It's okay, you can,
you can let it out as long as nobody else
is around.
Speaker 2 (30:55):
Go right, Let it up, Let it up?
Speaker 3 (30:57):
Oh, I said, what all of this is the Trevor
Cherry Show on the Valley's Power.
Speaker 1 (31:03):
Talk chiv wire dot com at Smith Russell teachers demand
board members here NICKI Henry's settlement.
Speaker 2 (31:10):
See.
Speaker 1 (31:11):
They don't want to talk about it, they don't want
to publicly address it. Teacher Association president Manuel Bania said
it's about more than one payout. It's about the public
right to know how decisions are being made, how public
dollars are being spent. Trustee Susan Wittrup bull Bullard Area
Trustee said the board only directed staff to begin negotiations
(31:32):
and official votes should have been reported out to the
public in the same meeting. They're just, aren't they horrible people?
Speaker 2 (31:39):
Not all of them.
Speaker 1 (31:40):
I'm glad people like Trustee wit Trup are talking up.
They don't care about the kids. There the wrong people
to have and control their Sunday, I was sitting here
and thank you Sandy. She sends me color and books
and some t shirts and old newspapers. Appreciate them. And
(32:01):
yesterday I was someone was downloading my computer and I'm
sitting there and I had the paper stacked up next
to my desk and I just opened OneD up. January first,
nineteen eighty nine, the Fresno b I said, Imagine a
city where public officials choose decisions on logic, in the
common in the common sense, not politics and contributions. A
city where crime doesn't pay, traffic doesn't jam, and water
(32:22):
doesn't need to be filtered. A city with a downtown
where people park and play and shop and live. Shaded
city dotted with parks. Imagine a city where each wave
of immigrants embraces the next, whether you're from Oklahoma, Mexico,
or Southeast Asia. It's hard to imagine. You spent a
lot of time in Fresno. You're aware of the limitations
(32:44):
and its possibilities, So it said January first, nineteen eighty nine.
Look at the city of Fresno, they said, everywhere. A
city of traffic jams everywhere, butt downtown where the homeless
fight for space, and condemned buildings, and these are the
good old days. Imagine middle class neighborhoods heavily fortified to
keep out unemployed youth and alienated refugees. Hard to imagine.
(33:07):
Maybe not agenda Fresno at ten day. Look at what
Fresno is and how it could become better. Where do
we go from here? What will we do about downtown,
social services, crime, transportation. The view of some residents is
that Fresno is a sleepy cowtown. They may not have
noticed the urban area is now home to an eclectic
population of four hundred and twenty four thousand. That's bigger
(33:30):
than Saint Paul des Moines, Santa Barbera, or Spokane. Conservative
projections are that Presnel County will hit the one million
mark in twenty five to thirty years. So this would
have been twenty five thirty five years ago. Yeah, nineteen
ninety one, thirty four years ago.
Speaker 2 (33:50):
Whatever. Downtown, they said.
Speaker 1 (33:53):
If Fresno is at a crossroads, his most obvious it's downtown.
New buildings are growing up, but the biggest is of jail.
City officials are planning a sparkling new city hall. We
got that, did we The nation's first downtown shopping mall
attracts more pigeons than shoppers. Well they close that, turned
it back into a street. All worked out, I said.
(34:13):
One of Fresne's shrinks is his ethnic mix, but it
could become one of the city's sore spots.
Speaker 2 (34:18):
Who are we now? How are we changing?
Speaker 1 (34:21):
The city is nearly one third of spans because there's
only one Hispanic elected official in the city. Now it's
what fifty whatever percent? It was thirty three then they
said the jails are full, the courts are clogged. Police
officials tell us the crime rates going down, but we
don't feel safe. Is a war on crime already lost?
Is the police department doing his job? Does it have
(34:42):
the resources they do? How do they use them? Kind
of sounds like today, doesn't it. They gave a growth
in population chart here They grouped Fresno and Clovis together.
They said by the year twenty twenty, Fresno and Clovis
would have a population of seven hundred and eighty six combined.
They said President County would be at one point one million.
(35:05):
As it stands right now, Presno and Clovis combined are
six hundred and seventy six thousand. They said seven hundred
and eighty six thousand, so about a one hundred off there,
And with the county it's at one million twenty thousand,
so they were pretty a lot closer with the county
growth at one point one million. It's at one million
twenty thousand, seven hundred and sixty eight. But here you go.
(35:27):
That was interesting to look at that, And the more
I read it, I was like, let me turn to
page A six, and I was like, I haven't turned
a page a paper, haven't read one in a long time.
Turned to page A six, had to fold the fold
and started reading, and I'm like, man, this sounds just
like August eleven, twenty twenty five, doesn't it.
Speaker 3 (35:46):
The assistant Trevor Kerry show Mondo Valley's Power Dog,