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October 30, 2025 35 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Swell within his rights as Commander in Chief of the
United States of America to defend Americans that are being killed.
What if the United States of America laws, I don't know,
one hundred thousand citizens every year for a couple couple years,
that's what happens here. Well, they know the risk of
the drug over you know, when you hear that, it's like,

(00:23):
now you're not getting it. This is a poison man.
It's a synthetic opiate fifty times more powerful than heroin,
manufactured in China, comes to Mexico mainly, but other countries
as well, where these cartels produce the fatnyls smuggle it
across by land or by pirates on the sea. Cheap,
easy to produce, there's no growing season, there's no cocaine fields,

(00:50):
cocoa plant or poppy for heroin, you don't got to
worry about that. And then they fake it out as
a painkillers oxy cotton and totally unaware thinking that they're
not really purchasing fatanol. And it says a teeny tiny
little molkin can kill people. And I did a little

(01:13):
looking into researching some of these topics and what people
are talking about it, and this one gentleman in a
post and a reply said, no, this is a symmetrical warfare.
I said, all right, And he explained it. It's when
a country or group employees means to weaken a potential adversary. Okay,

(01:34):
it's not declaring war on them, but you're doing something
to weaken it down. Hey, before we invade Poland, let's
give them all chicken pox. You know that would weaken them, right? Yeah, Okay,
one hundred thousand people died. And if that's not an
example of a war, then what is. Also there's two

(01:58):
types of policing. He brought up reactive and proactive. He said.
Reactive is you wait until a crime occurs. Proactive if
you prevent crime from occurring in the first place, like
keeping criminals locked up. That's one way. But we've seen
a shift here President Trump, a shift in the war
on drugs. He's ordered the military to hit him where

(02:18):
it hurts our military. They're destroying these boats with all
the drugs in the Atlantic and the Pacific and the Caribbean. Now,
and you just heard there they're talking about that was
a Fox News talking about possibility of land action against
the cartels and the Narco states in Venezuela and Colombia.
That means Americans are going to die. Well, I have

(02:40):
service members die if boots hit the ground there. Now,
I don't know if they're gonna go that far. Here's
what we got to ask ourselves again. Anytime we talk
about boots hitting the ground, we have to be saying
we'd be willing for one of our loved ones. Yes, military,
get in there and get them. Hey, let's go down there. Checklists.

(03:00):
Are you ready for one of your children in the
military to go die, one of your loved ones, somebody
that you know on the block, friends, or your family.
Would you be willing to die to go down and
protect us one hundred thousand Americans that are dying from fetanyl.
I think there's going to be a lot of people
that'll say, well, no, I just don't go around that. So, no,

(03:22):
I wouldn't be willing to go down and risk my
life in limb to destroy the cartel and the jungles
out there like it'd be Vietnam twenty twenty five, that
kind of terrain fighting that would be going on. But
as we look at this, a lot of people will

(03:42):
look at this as no, I don't think we should
go that far. Here's the way we could destroy him
with drones. This is a whole new world. I mean,
we have overhead satellite. They can tell us the military
pete hegseth. Right now, you still don't have him in
your Yeah, you lost his contact numb. If we called

(04:03):
him and said, hey, we got a quarter right out
here in a parking lot, right Sean Blackstone, look back
here and tell us which side of the quarters on,
they can eat it pretty quickly. I'd say maybe within
a minute. They can zume in and probably tell us
what side that quarter's on. Have you ever seen the
imagery of how many satellites are going around the world,
Just amazing, kind of take your breadth away when you

(04:26):
see this. So I think we can knock the cartel
in the Narco States really really hard from the air.
With all of that, then then take those armed service
members who are willing to risk their lives. They'd be
willing to go down and do that to save one
hundred thousand people and all the other crimes that come

(04:46):
from it, the sex trafficking, all of that, the human trafficking.
They would be willing to do it. But let's bring
them in and let's just put them on our own border.
So why you stop it? Almost like the Romans did
in England, each Roman soldier could look and shout to
the next tower where there was another human. And we

(05:09):
can do that with censors and technology. But anyhow, that's
King Trevor's idea. King Trevor, I'm not the media and
the Democrats or with no proof or are talking about, well, no,
you're not doing due process. You got to do your
due process. You're executing people. They seem to have forgot that.

(05:31):
President Hope and change, Change and hope. President Obama, he
authorized more drone strikes than any US president. I'm talking
about Pakistan, Iraq, Afghanistan, Syria, Oliviaalimali, Samalia, and Yemen. Yeah,
he killed thousands of terrorists. You didn't hear him crying

(05:52):
about that. You didn't even hear him crime. And he
killed hundreds of civilians. He didn't hear him crime about that.
You didn't even hear him cry when those civilians included
some American citizens. No tears on that right there. Eh.
You know Obama acknowledge years ago that yes, civilians have
been killed who should not have been. But here we

(06:13):
have Narco terras on boats out there, and they're crying foul.
President Trump is taking the war to our enemy. I
see that as are enem me. Not all Republicans agree.
I pretty much always agree with Senator Rampaul. He's he's
kind of like Connerson Tom McClintock with the Constitution. They

(06:36):
stay so much on it that it doesn't live in
the reality of it. That's kind of how I feel
about this comment here.

Speaker 2 (06:46):
So for they have alleged that these people are drug dealers.
No one said their name, no one said what evidence,
no one said whether they're armed, And we've had and
no evidence presented, So at this point I would call
them extra judicial kill. We haven't had a briefing, to
be clear, We've gotten no information. I've been invited to,
no briefing. But a briefing is not enough to overcome

(07:07):
the Constitution.

Speaker 1 (07:08):
It's not they haven't they're running drugs in they don't
have a constitutional right. So I guess what he's implying
is that they haven't done their due diligence. They're just
out there. Could be a speedboat enthusiast with darker skin
who happened to have a lot of luggage and aqua

(07:32):
gear and you know going under you know, pack lunch
and all this in big big white suitcases or something.
You know. No, I'm going to say they're doing their
due diligence. US military deleted fourteen more MARCO terrorist three

(07:52):
new strikes in the Caribbean. Here this week, at the
direction of the President, Department of War carried out three
lethal strikes on the vessels operated by designated terrorist organizations
trafficking narcotics in the Eastern Pacific. He said. The four
vessels were known by our intelligence. Secretary Pete Hegseth said

(08:13):
they were known transitting along known NARCO trafficking routes and
carrying narcotics. Eight were aboard the vessels during the first strike,
four were aboard the vessel during the second strike, three
were aboard the vessel during the third strike. Total of
fourteen were killed one survivor. All strikes were in international waters,
with no US forces harmed. They said. Mexican authorities picked

(08:38):
up a long survivor after the USS Southcombe did a
search and rescue SUITEP so they missed him in Mexican
authorities picked him up. Maybe somebody there has a honing
tracking device m lit'tle deal with the Mexican guy. No,
I'm just playing Hollywood movie. They're not messing around. On

(09:04):
another front, there's a shift taking place within Homeland Security
and Fox News. They're talking about people that they've talked to.
Now this is me talking about Fox News who said
they talked to somebody who knows what's going on. But
they're gonna kind of refocus on deporting more illegal aliens.
They said. On one side, his borders are Tom Holman
and ICE director Todd Lyons, and he said they really

(09:27):
want to focus on criminal aliens and those with final
deportation orders. On the other side, Christy Nome, Corey Lewandowski,
Order Patrol Commander Greg Bovino, they want more broader, more aggressive.
They want to boost the deportation numbers. Now this is
all talk here. We don't know if all this is true,
but to Washington Examiner reporter said, iis top officials in Denver, La, Phoenix, Philadelphia,

(09:51):
San Diego were relieved of their duties last Friday. They
said it came from the Trump administration in DHS. So
we'll follow that. President Trump, though he's not messing around.

Speaker 3 (10:02):
Our sea drugs, as they call him, they used the
term sea drugs. The drugs coming in by sea are
like five percent of what they were a year ago,
less than five percent, So now they're coming in by land.

Speaker 1 (10:16):
I saw this Fresnel Bee headline. A judge asked to
block expansion a California city ice center California City down there,
high desert south of Ridgecrest, North Lancaster. They said. A
coalition of immigrant right groups have followed a lawsuit behind
to halt the expansion of California's largest iced attention center,
attains now seven hundred and fifty people since it opened

(10:38):
in August. They said, two people detained inside have attempted suicide,
according to the lawsuit and previous Fresno Bee reporting, So
why is that ICE's fault that somebody wanted to commit suicide?
John Doe, a plaintiff in the lawsuit, said he was
denied medication, received no medication for flu like symptoms or

(11:00):
to manage his diabetes. He was subject to physically invasive
prison style searches. He said there also isn't enough seating
for everyone in the communal dining spaces and a lack
of privacy when using the restroom. One of the attorneys
representing the plaintiffs in the suit said, you didn't do
anything that you would have done for a restaurant to

(11:21):
open in California City. So they're now equating ice detention
centers needing to be nice as a restaurant and follow
the same building zone laws as well. You know, I'm
not ready for a king that I agree with, not
a dictator, but a king, King Trump, then King Pants,

(11:45):
then I'll be gone to heaven.

Speaker 4 (11:47):
This is the tremortary show on the Valley's Power Talk.

Speaker 1 (11:53):
Scare you or if you're ever planning on being on
a specially California freeway ever again, Republicans have moved to
actually codify President Trump's crackdown on illegal alien truckers, introducing legislation.
It's called the Safe Act. It would bar federal funds
any state that issue license to illegal aliens at old

(12:15):
states accountable for the commercial driver's licenses the CDLs. Back
in September, Transportation Secretary duff He said, we need to
remove nearly two hundred thousand illegal foreign drivers from the highways.
Well you don't think they can drive. I'm sure they
can drive. My word, I've seen the driving in some
of those countries that they come from. This crazy drive

(12:38):
and the fact that they're still alive means they can drive.
But can they read English? Even if they can read it,
do they understand what that means? What that correlates to?
You see a stick figure of an older or an

(12:59):
adult woman with a stick figure of another a child?
And are they walking? What are they doing? What's that mean? Oh? Wait? Wait,
wait wait, this is in Arkansas. Listen to this trooper
pull over this Chinese man driving a big rig that's there.

Speaker 5 (13:17):
Yeah, good morning.

Speaker 3 (13:18):
Yeah?

Speaker 5 (13:19):
Why are you parked here? Yeah? I'm talking at the hour.

Speaker 6 (13:24):
Why did you park here? Do you understand English?

Speaker 5 (13:33):
You do? Why did you park here? Yeah?

Speaker 6 (13:39):
No, no, good I'm Offster Headings, Arkansas Highway Police. I
need your driver's license, registration and insurance for this truck.
Is there anybody else in the truck? Is there anybody
else in the truck? Your company? Okay, you don't understand English?

Speaker 5 (13:58):
Where's your log book at?

Speaker 7 (14:00):
Put you some clothes on, pants, put your pants on,
put your pants on, pants, put.

Speaker 5 (14:13):
Some pants on.

Speaker 6 (14:14):
Yeah, yeah, okay, we don't understand English.

Speaker 1 (14:20):
I'll wait, there's mar That's just the beginning. He was
asked who do you work for? What's the name of
the company that you work for? How ironic? Listen to
the name of the company this man from I'm gonna
assume China here, I'm just assuming. Guys, I don't know.
Maybe he was born in Tampa, been here his whole life.

(14:41):
Listen to who he works for? Here?

Speaker 5 (14:43):
What company do you work for? Uh? Company? Uh? Your
company is called California. Yeah, you don't understand me? Okay,
all right?

Speaker 1 (14:59):
He really he does so, doesn't he? He knows that's
that's what he signed up with here California. You heard
him say. Well, this Arkansas state trooper now and they
have this all in in Oklahoma, Arkansas. Now they're going
along with the the Transportation Department. They're getting these illegal

(15:19):
alien truckers off the road. Not because we're racist or
hateful of or xenophobic. It's because they can't read the signs.

Speaker 5 (15:26):
All right, you see this sign? Yes, it's over. What's
that sign say? Thanks? Must most of the enter right?
Can you tell me what does it say? I need
you to read that sign? Yeah, we're casting our next threat. Okay,

(15:46):
read it again? Wait, read it again? What is this word? Tense? No? No, no,
what is it? What does that sign mean? What's that meant?
What does this sign mean? Break or breaker? One? Man?

(16:10):
Got that fun illegal muster enter muster mustard.

Speaker 1 (16:17):
Yeah, that's it.

Speaker 5 (16:20):
Okay. So if you see this sign, what do you do?

Speaker 6 (16:25):
Yeah, Trevor Green, Yeah, Trevor Greeen must go with where.

Speaker 5 (16:32):
West Tishing all trucks go?

Speaker 1 (16:35):
I heard was station?

Speaker 5 (16:36):
What kind of trucks have to go to the Waite station? Yeah? Tishing?
I didn't know. Over a team over ten? What over ten?

Speaker 3 (16:46):
What?

Speaker 5 (16:47):
Okay, let's try another one. We don't get that one.

Speaker 1 (16:50):
All right, he's laughing about it. It's not funny. Here's another sign.
What does this one mean?

Speaker 5 (16:54):
Here? Read that sign to me? No puking? What does
that mean? Yeah? Here are no parking. What does it
mean when it says no parking? I don't know? Yeah, no,
feel bored. That's no pracking, media hockey, susy the no parking. Okay,

(17:19):
So when you see this sign, what do you do?
No parking? What do you do? No parking? Okay? Does
that mean you can park your truck there? Yeah? He said, yeah,
no no praking.

Speaker 1 (17:35):
Yeah, you're on the highways and byways right now? I
will be tonight after work. He had no idea. The
Chinese truck driver didn't know. He said, two people. I
think people walking. I'm gonna assume it's watch out for
people running out on the road here. Maybe kind of sign.
It's not the family thing you would see down in

(17:56):
San Diego back in the day. I think that's those
are races since now to put up or something. I
don't know, I've been down there in a long time.
Maybe they're still up here.

Speaker 5 (18:05):
But it's to me, yeah, because because no, no, come now,
come you cough. So what does that mean? That's Tine
read it to me.

Speaker 1 (18:23):
Stay safe, my friends.

Speaker 4 (18:25):
This is the Trevor carry Show on the Valley's Power Talk.

Speaker 1 (18:30):
I don't know anybody the weather recently, that haziness that's
in the air almost that mix of fog with smog smell.
And I missed that almost like for the lass ten years,
because that was a memory of like the early nineties
in Fresno, that hazy, foggy smell, and I liked it.
It wasn't a turnoff. It was just that and it

(18:53):
I don't remember the last few years, probably, but it's
it's been back in the morning because I've been driving
to work and be going this is what it used
to feel like driving down the forty one. When I
did it in nineteen, I'd drive down Herndon, hang a
right on forty one and go all the way down
there to McKinley. The old B ninety five is not
there anymore. They got torn down. H It was sketchy

(19:15):
back then. Oh yes, boy, we had many times and
what it was and I felt bad, well bad. I
was a night guy there for a couple of years
at the start. But you could walk right down McKinley
turn no gate, no nothing, walk down a side walkway
driveway and make another little turn and you were in

(19:35):
the front entrance. You weren't in the front door, but
it was a glass studio, just like I'm looking at
you right now, Ryan, So a stranger off the street
could walk up and be staring at you while you're talking.
And there would be times late at night where somebody
would wander up and just or like four dudes just
would be standing there. It was unnerving. Beyond now. Most

(19:57):
of them would just wave and do a high and
hey hi to you, you would say if you were talking.
But that was not like bulletproof glass or anything that
was that was really unnerving. And to leave at night
down in that parking lot, oh boy, you'd always we
would have a little buddy system. This is before the
advent of computers in technology twenty four to seven. Somebody

(20:19):
in there and they're looking out. You would watch the
person make sure their headlights came on out in the
parking lot through the glass studio. That was the thing
that we'd do for each other. Do you do you
remember the uh uh the story I was talking about
how if you're antifil or whatever or anybody ram and ice.
A car is a vehicle. How could just squash you?

(20:41):
You know, a bullet hit you. If it hits you,
you can be instantly dead. Like the Semmerdino County Deputy sheriff.
One shot hit him in the head. He was dead.
Now we have law enforcement other people that get shot
where they survive a car coming at you. You don't
normally survive. That twenty one year old from Pennsylvania behind bars.

(21:02):
It left two police officers hospitalized. One of them had
to go under emergency surgery. It started as a routine
traffic stop. It was a luxury Mercedes g wagon. So
you're walking up thinking, probably don't feel like okay, who's
this rich person that was speeding? What happened? It started

(21:23):
about noon in this little township up in Pennsylvania. This
sergeant attempted to stop this car reckless, reckless driving. He
refused to comply, then started weaving through traffic, jumped the median.
Forty five minutes later, another cop sees him in a
Double Tree hotel parking lot. They approach him. He slammed
his car and reverse hit the police cruiser a couple times.

(21:45):
Stop stop, stop, they're yelling. He accelerated toward the officer
and the cop pulled his gun out, and that's self defense.
Even after being shot, he rammed the officer again, knocked
into the ground, circle back, deliberately running over him as
the officer was trying to apply a tourniquet to his

(22:05):
own leg. He came back for the kill shot. He
didn't get him. He had to go emergency surgery. He's
gonna survive, but he fled the scene again, led police
on another chase. He plowed into another police car, injured
that second officer before they surrounded him and he surrendered.
Now what kind of criminal background does this guy have?

Speaker 5 (22:29):
Nothing.

Speaker 1 (22:30):
He had a privilege upbringing. He went to Loyola Marra Mount.
He was a freshman on the men's rowing team. His
dad was a partner at a big law firm there
in Pennsylvania. He just lost his mind, didn't he. Yesterday
there were three businesses near old Town clothes. This had

(22:52):
to be extremely scary. This involves a hangarnade yesterday afternoon.
I guess it was two hand grenades. Two grenades now,
Either the person that brought them down to half Cock
Gunsmith and Firearms in Woodworth and FOURD Street in Old
Town Clovis. They either thought they were dummy, somebody gave

(23:15):
them to them, sold them to them. Hey these aren't real.
These are dummy. They don't have any power at it.
It's either that or you're dealing with somebody that is,
I hold, not a psycho, but really dumb. You don't
go traveling around with live grenades. And I'm gonna assume
that they weren't like brand spanking new grenades either. So

(23:39):
the staff at half Cock Gunsmith and Firearms called the police.
They believe the two grenades run in by a customer
might still be live. As a precaution, the gunshop to
other businesses. They evacuated Clovi's police call them the bomb squad.
Bomb squad determined both of them. Yep, they're live. Good
move everybody getting out of there. They disposed of them safely.

(24:02):
Wonder how they do that. I'll have to ask a
police officer next time that I speak to one here.
I wonder if they go and explode them somewhere, probably
out somewhere. Yeah, I do have to say that. The
little boy and me thinks that would be a fun
job because it's not in battle. You're not having a
throw a grenade. You know, it's like controlled. But I

(24:22):
got they got robots that would pull the pin.

Speaker 5 (24:25):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (24:26):
I wouldn't want to be a pin puller. I just
want to be an observer. And uh, did anybody watch Oppenheimer?
I watch that, And I've watched many documentaries about building
the nuclear bomb. But the first time they tested it
down in Los Alamos, they had no idea what was
going to happen. There were smart people around them saying, Oh,

(24:48):
it's all gonna glide together, and it's the whole world's
going to blow up. They had no idea. Can you
imagine that anticipation? That's not two grenades. That was the
atom bomb. Wow, I wonder what they all felt like
after all those years of secrecy and working on it.
And these are like neurotically driven individuals who yelled and

(25:12):
fought and argue with each other. You know, they didn't
have an HR department out there.

Speaker 5 (25:19):
See.

Speaker 1 (25:19):
That is the beauty of the forties. And even back
in the day, you could be more normal and natural
at work. Now there are some things that I'm glad
that went away, like a boss that can just brate
people and they hate going to work, but they got
to put up with it for the for the paycheck.
But we need to give back some kind of balance,
I think where people don't feel all you know around it.

(25:42):
You know, I work at a radio station. We don't
really have that problem, but we have to. We had
to take all those classes, all those things you know
that you can't say with all the actors in it.
There's so many times that I don't want to be
put on an iHeart, But when I'm taking these tests,
I'm like, no, I agree with with Sergio there. Yeah,

(26:05):
I think you should be able to say that. I
want to click see, but I know no click d
to get that correcting right, we've all taken that.

Speaker 5 (26:15):
Well.

Speaker 1 (26:16):
If you have it, I guess maybe you own your
own company, if I own my own company, or was
it not? Would that be against California state something or another.
Would you have ag bonta coming in and knock it,
knock it on the door. Anthony hadadgvwire dot com had
an article here about something that I'm extremely looking forward

(26:41):
to this weekend. Now, God willing that we that I
make it to this weekend. You make it to this weekend. God,
thank you for every day you give us on this
glorious planet. Thank you for Sunday, your day, the Sabbath day.
I'm going to try and keep my attitude holy because
there's some people that like to run the two City

(27:06):
Marathon coming back, and the gv wire headline was two
City Marathon returns with scenic Fresnel Clovis course and then
it ends the headline ends with the next sentence, which
roads will be closed scenic A All right, it's the
seventeenth year. I guess now I've gone through nine of these. Yeah,

(27:33):
nine of the seventeen I had. One year, I posted
the video up. I think I got rid of the video,
but It's probably in our social media somewhere, but I
thought I'd take one of the country roads, and I
wouldn't take the one detour road. Hey guys, think so
the one detour road that's not gonna be congested is
one one so everybody can get a scenic view of neighborhoods,

(27:56):
scenic view a CVS, a scenic view of food for less,
a scene view of churches, a scenic view of roadblocks.
Where's the scenic view would be out yonder a little ways,
not smack dab through where regular life goes on on
a Sunday. We only get four weekends a month, and
you're really messing up half of one of those weekends.

(28:19):
I'm not against marathons. I'm not against yay. We get
to be one of these that gets to make somebody
get to the Boston Marathon.

Speaker 5 (28:27):
Yay.

Speaker 1 (28:28):
But closing roads at five am all the way through
the afternoon and saying it's a scenic route to California
Central Valley. No, No, this is tough. Fresno, Northeast Clovis
Northwest Life organizers promise sure hoodies, a pot roast breakfast,
oh no, a hot post race breakfast, a pot roast breakfast.

(28:52):
But I don't know runners, maybe they need that meat,
you know, I get that proaching a hot post race breakfast,
a lively fitness expo, a finish line celebration with live
music and free beer for finishers. Good, enjoy yourselves. But
allow us to be able to go to the store
and it's some for breakfast. Allow us to have a

(29:13):
celebration at church. Allow us to go get some It
won't be free, but maybe we want to go to
Saint Martin and get some beer for the afternoon football game.
Allow us to do that and celebrate. No Beheimer Shepherd,
try it peachin at Louvio Pulaski Sierra. You don't drive there.
All right, let's go see what we're advised to do

(29:35):
with this. Drivers are advised to plan alternate roots well,
no kidding, Shirley, and expect delays near the course area
during the event. Near the course area. No, it's the
whole part of town is is frozen. There's two words,
not right.

Speaker 4 (29:54):
This is the trebortary show on the Valley's Power Talk.

Speaker 1 (30:00):
I see it one day in California where this is
actually going to happen. It seems that there are some
public toilets in China that are taking the concept of
pay to use to a whole new level. They're making
a if you're visiting the idea of bathroom there, you

(30:20):
have to get an advertisement before you can get toilet paper. Hum,
all right, kind of like gas stations here, I guess,
and I've told you. On the gas pump, there's four
little square things on the left or a little square
things on the right, little butt you can tell you,
little buttons that you could push. They have nothing on them.

(30:42):
On the far right, the second one down. Pushed that
and it mutes. It means the commercial. But you're not
going to be able to do that. I guess, all right, Now,
what do I do? What do I do? Oh? I
got to listen to this. It's commercial. Hold on, it
gets even beyond cre China Insider shows a person scanning

(31:03):
a QR code on a smart smart toilet paper dispenser.
To actually receive a few squares of paper, you must
either watch a short ad or pay to skip it.
And I didn't know how to translate the money thing
here into American American. I should have American this up

(31:25):
so they're not saying this is everywhere, but they're saying some.
The word some was used by China Insider. Some Chinese
restaurants may begin forcing you to watch an ad before
giving you a few squares. What if the phone is dead,
you have to scan this QR code and watch it
on your phone. I'm sure it has to have something
like the emergency like for change. Hey, can you help

(31:50):
me out here?

Speaker 5 (31:51):
Please?

Speaker 1 (31:53):
No, you can't come in. I need your phone. It's
not their first attempt to control toilet paper. I found
out Back in twenty seventeen, Beijing's Temple of Heaven Park
introduced a dispenser that used facial recognition that means a camera.
They said they use facial recognition to stop visitors from

(32:14):
taking too much paper. The machine would only release a
sixty centimeter strip at a time, and wouldn't dispense more
till to the same person for nine minutes. They did
say the staff were instructed to help in case of
urgent need. So right, okay, facial recognition that requires a camera,
does it?

Speaker 5 (32:34):
Yes?

Speaker 1 (32:35):
Well, we only have it from the shoulders up. Oh okay, good,
all right, good, okay, you're only doing it for there? Okay, good?
You know because cameras in a toilet stall to seem
a little big brother watching maybe ads like that. Tried
the gas station trick and then pass it on to others.
I do if it seems like an approachable kind of person.

(32:58):
I don't want go up and hey, excuse me, what
are you doing here to I wan't scare older lady
or something. But I'll go ahead and people are thankful.
They're like, oh good, thanks, and I go now pass
that on to somebody. I do say that. Let's see
Samsung they're gonna roll out a update to their smart fridge,
and the smart fridge is now going to can you

(33:20):
guess deliver ads right right there in your in your kitchen,
your family hubed smart tridge. Well, you can turn off
the ads in the settings. Okay, good, right now, we
got that switch right now, we have it. They started
about two thousand dollars a new widget for day to

(33:41):
day information. You don't get your news, your calendar, your eventsure,
weather forecast, and advertisements. Samsung said the screens are not
collecting personal information. I took a picture. I still got
it on here. I'll show you during the break. You
remember when not talking about Denver Airport and all the
Nazi symbolisms and all of that on YouTube that night.

(34:03):
It was weird things about the dinner. Airport was my
first recommend. See this phone over here listening. You think
that fridge, it will be listening to. You started getting
ads for divorce lawyers because it listened to your argument
in the kitchen. All right. Uh, when this first fridge
came out, this did not exist. It's an update, they said,

(34:25):
Amazon Fire tablets for a slight discount, you can now
let Amazon show you ads on your tablets lock screen.
When that happens, I've noticed insinity. If you have something
on pause, you go away, you know, the screen becomes
something else, And normally it's their own kind of things
they're promoting. But pretty soon we'll see tied, we'll see pepsi.

(34:49):
All right during those ad pauses. Anybody noticed when the
game went eighteen innings the other night with the Dodgers
and uh Toronto the

Speaker 4 (35:00):
Trevor carry Show on The Valley's Power Talk
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