Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Look at new some backtracking again that message brought to
you by Newsom twenty eight backtracking on illegal alien taxpayer
funded health care. All right, shortfall, I guess here about
twelve billion for the upcoming year. And if you're going wait,
did I just hear something or another back in just
(00:21):
a few Yes, you did. The governor presented in January
is his budget and it was going to have a
modest surplus of around three hundred million. Yeah, let's go
put that number out. That'll get us at least till May.
Then we'll cut that illegal doctor visits and crap. All right,
all right, let's roll with that, guys. Coch Yeah, today,
(00:43):
And of course he took the blame for it, man,
I got at least no, he didn't. He blamed it
on uncertainty cause by President Trump's policies. What a coward man,
He's going to continue with the flan seven point one
billion and withdraw from the state's rainy day fund. So
when you're in government and your policies are in place
(01:06):
and you're calling it just really rainy day, guys, that's
not sunshine, that's not brightness, that's not hey Golden State. No,
it's not it's having to go into our savings, which
currently holds about eighteen billion. The largest reduction, though, was
the medical for illegals. Now, if you're already in it, relax,
(01:28):
all you gotta do is pay one hundred bucks. You're
a pre existing patient, as they called it. So if
your grandfather did. Yeah, we're a long way from that
three hundred million dollar surplus. Right. Yeah, we got a
full on frontal assault on everything in this state that
he's put into place, and he wants to point to
(01:49):
President Trump even had a little word up there on
one of his slides called the Trump slump. Oh yeah,
the reason is we're losing out billions of dollars on
Tarot said. At his presentation, he highlighted what they've done
to save money, and they're trying to act all dozy. Yeah,
he said, new websites, We've improved efficiencies at the DMV.
(02:14):
That's all you who you kidding? Man, It's almost now
like comedy. This could literally be a Comedy Central political
show from two thousand and eight. Congress and Kevin Kylie
just posted here. Newsom just announced he's more than doubling
state funding for heigh speed rail. All right, look, up
(02:36):
in sanity, and I hope Newsome's picture pops up. He's
got to be working for somebody else just to run
this state. Is it a foreign country? Is it some
other state somewhere that's paying him to run? Is it
had DeSantis? That's yeah, human David Hamanti, he's an mdphd.
(02:58):
He posts it after listening to the presentation today of
the twenty twenty five twenty twenty six California budget. Soon
was saying, our populations up two hundred and thirty two
thousand in a year. Doctor Hamati says population of tax
paying citizens decline, but overall increased because of illegals flooding
the state for free healthcare, education, homeless coming in for
(03:20):
free housing, criminal immunity, et cetera. Right, and he talked
about the Trump slump. High income earners who pay fifty
percent of tax are leaving for lower taxes. We see
that everywhere. Man. He said, California's budget shortfall is tiny
(03:40):
as percentage of total budget. Doctor Hermani said, that's a
misleading statement. Our budget shortfall is tiny. Is a percentage
of total budget. Well, let's go back and think about
the budget. We don't have to think we actually keep
records of that. Yeah, we can't keep track of twenty
four billion dollars cent on homeless but we can keep
track of what we spend. Two thousand and nine budget
(04:03):
in the state of California was one hundred and twenty
nine billion. Let's jump ahead eleven years. Twenty twenty we
jumped up to two hundred and two billion. Let's jump
ahead to twenty twenty four, two hundred and ninety seven billion.
He's more than doubled the budget since two thousand and nine.
What have we gotten for it? When you happily now
(04:25):
go back to how things were in two thousand and nine,
when we thought maybe it wasn't that good then, Yeah,
he actually said homelessness is down in California. Nope, No,
let's go to the judges there, Governor dipty do yep,
oh we got three judges. All right, sorry judge too
(04:47):
and three all right, thank you, as he calls him unsheltered,
it's not down. It might be growing slower than some
other states. I don't know what he's comparing it to.
But if if you, if you have your your eyes
and you can look around and see, No, it's it's increasing.
(05:10):
But the low income, immigrants without legal status. That that
was the wording that. I guess that's a new term
for illegals, immigrants without legal status. That's all it is.
It's just you're an immigrant here, and you just haven't
you know the uh that document you're undocumented because you
just can't find that document. Why can't you find that document?
(05:31):
That would make you not be Well, you didn't wait
in line to get that document. He waited in line,
you wouldn't be undocumented. Those people that wait in line. Yeah,
they got to actually a file thing. They keep it home, Yeah,
to show it for their meetings and uh, make make
some payments, do it the right way. And so now
(05:51):
I wants to stop giving free health care to illegals. Well,
you know they're gonna get a little upset about that,
aren't they. Yes, they will be getting a little upset
about all that. Has there ever been a politician running
for president but not yet running for president? Well you
said it's sixteen billion dollars downturn at the very end
(06:12):
there you heard, yeah, but I'll do that, and said
I had a it's ah, he is just something, isn't
he telling us that we have to be honest? This
line sneaky snake dipty dew beels above of a governor.
Speaker 2 (06:35):
And so we have to address that.
Speaker 1 (06:38):
Then you have to be honest about it.
Speaker 2 (06:40):
Our approach was not to kick people off and not
to roll back the expansion, but to level set on
what we can do and what we can't do, and
so we have to address that. Then you have to
be honest about it. Our approach was not to kick
people off and not to roll back the expansion.
Speaker 1 (07:03):
Level set, but to level set, level se on what
we can do and what we can sure what we're doing, Guys,
We're gonna level set on what we is that what
we can't, cannot can or cannot do.
Speaker 2 (07:13):
Gather on what we can do and what we can't do.
Speaker 1 (07:15):
Okay, level set, but to level set, level set, Okay,
explain level setting of what you can and cannot do
to a group of people that you're in charge of
and let them go. All right, we got it great.
Backtracking on his most idiotic policy and trying to act
like he's unreasonable. I have to letting us go to
(07:39):
pot for six years. He's trying to really be reasonable,
isn't he. It's the Trump slump. Ladies and gentlemen, Gavin Newso,
California announcement of a sixteen billion dollar loss in state
revenue tied to Donald J. Trump, who was the governor
here for the last six years. Boy, the nerve of
(08:02):
this guy some about how the on and off tariffs
have slowed the economy and weaken state revenues. Really, No,
California's money issues are President Trump's fault. Can't you come
up something better than that?
Speaker 3 (08:20):
This is the trebortary show on the Valley's Power Talk.
Speaker 1 (08:24):
So today the governor announced a budget as upwards a
twelve billion years of overspending, reckless programs. Projected cuts include
two point seven billion from K through twelve education, five
hundred ninety million from transportation, two hundred and ten million
from higher education, eight hundred and fifty million for natural
(08:46):
resource management. Does that mean fire natural resource? Yeah? Okay?
Similar Montanga Pop points out that it is important to
point out while these cuts are being made of cow
seeing an increase of almost three billion dollars in budget
cutting services for California is continuing to spend money on
(09:08):
illegal alien healthcare. Because if they all got in, which
millions flooded in after that, why wouldn't you being offered
for free? That's like President Trump going, what you're gonna
give me the putt? Well, you think I'm not going
to pick up the ball and walk away? So yeah,
sobering reality. Each year, it just keeps adding up. I mean,
(09:31):
we can go back and play up the highlights of
twenty twenty four, twenty twenty three, keep rewinding back and
being an audio hoarder, I play you a lot of
his words. I just played you right there where he
was talking about how what is going to help save
taxpayer money by giving taxpayer money for health care for illegals?
Speaker 4 (09:49):
And we believe in that for one reason, it's going
to save the taxpayers money, and ultimately it's going to
advance our collective goal, at least the goal that the
legislature is established. And I believe in universal coverage for
all of the remaining two point nine to three million
people without it.
Speaker 1 (10:05):
All right, no more new illegal aliens coming in to healthcare.
So if you're if your grandfathered in, you could roll,
all right. He's uh making some big announcements our governor
is here's one from calmatters dot org. We'll seek to regulate,
Newsom said, prescription drug prices. Where'd he get that? I
(10:31):
don't reget that idea, because eight months ago he vetoed
a similar bill that he's now agreeing with from Sacramento
Governor news So today's going to seek to regulate prescription
drug managers that he blames for driving up costs for patients.
The governor said in a statement, prescription drug prices are
(10:51):
out of control, and we're shining a light on these
hidden costs. Wow, man, again, no shame? Does he detO
it back in September? Now, Oh, I better agree with
but I disagreed with us because Trump's yeah, he's right
about that. I better get ahead here. Oh. VP Vance
on the side on his downtime is really paying attention
(11:14):
and taking notes for future presidential debates on all these flips.
Last year again made it to Newsom's desk. It would
have required pharmacy benefit managers to get license to the state,
disclose the prices they pay, the discounts they negotiate with
drug manufacturers, and then passed on one hundred percent of
(11:35):
those discounts to the insurance plan. That'd be on the
side of the people. It sounds like to me right
there with that description, and Newsom said, nope, me too,
got too much pharmaceutical money coming into the campaign. When
asked why dateline Sacramento, the governor's office, what not explain
(11:56):
why Newsom's perspective on regulations had shifted just so shifty?
So snaky knew some veto but did more action with
prescriptions because in twenty twenty three he ordered state agencies
the stockpile two hundred and fifty thousand pills what kind
(12:19):
of pills? Abortion pills? After that court ruling in Texas
temporarily overturned the FDA approval of the drug. He's he's,
he's sneaky, snaky inn' he let's see. Oh, he's cracking
down on homeless encampments as well, telling everybody that they
better do it. Here's some money that it gets. You
(12:40):
buy for like seven months and then figure it out,
clear it all out. Have on not clearing out the
jails in prisons. He's urging cities to make certain camps illegal.
Now listen to this plan. This is a bang your
head here. They're gonna force the homeless to move every
(13:05):
three days. So all right, Ryan can now go out
on his front porch and there's no homeless in front
of him because the police came and told him to move,
and they moved two hundred feet two hundred yards down
to my house. And now I have I have the issue.
(13:28):
Let me tell you what he called on these ordinances
that of course the public camping that went to the
Supreme Court. We actually had some laws passed. Didn't work,
did it. I mean, what you're asking is for a
police officer to go up and go, okay, let me see, Oh,
(13:49):
you don't have any ID all right, let me just
take a picture of you and try to remember where
I was tomorrow. If I accidentally come by here or
see you over here, they get another warning. I think
there's been two hundred and something arrests with this. The
first one that went through was what was the guy's name.
They gave him like an endearing like two hands Johnny
or so it was something something like that. But these
(14:12):
ordinances that they put through here, they want them to
adopt this camping ordinance. Or last year he threatened to
withhold funding from governments and didn't do enough to remove it.
The three point three billion that he's now going to
divvy up comes from Prop one that was a bond
that voters approved last year to pay for treatment beds
(14:34):
in permanent housing, and they said they should cities that
they should not prohibit camping at all times across the
city if no beds are available. Now we're right back
around where we were. Hey, I got an idea. Well,
I'm gonna get some of these old hotels and you know,
spend eighty thousand dollars per room and revamp them. He
(14:55):
said cities should store belongings confiscated during the encampments and
give their owners a chance to claim them. He suggested
city's given campment residents a forty eight hour warning before sweep. Boy,
that's tough, isn't it. That's not even new ideas. He
went into his file can and pulled out something that
somebody said a few years ago. His new ordnance would
(15:19):
be in all camping, including sleeping with a sleeping bag
or blanket, in one place for three days or nights
in a row, unless he said he has enough shelter
beds to offer the entire homeless population, which is almost
never the case unless you do a sheriff show or pile.
Even if you had canvas tents with fans blowing something
or heaters on when it's cold. That's a step up
(15:41):
from we're taking them out of where they were. That's
my opinion on it, and that is not being mean
or cold blooded whatsoever. So people be forced to pack
up their belongings. No, it's not two hundred yards, it's
two hundred feet. Excuse me, two hundred feet every three days.
(16:03):
Brilliant problem, problem solved. Now it's just gonna be somebody
else's problem, they said. The people that got all upset
about the encase, you know, the the rights activists. What's
the downtown lady that always does it at the city
council meetings, the homeless advocate down there. I can't Des
(16:25):
Martinez look at Director Ryan Nudgell going through that card
system in his brain. But you know, going to a shelter,
you might have to give up your your your pet,
or some of your belongings, or maybe you have a
significant other out there, maybe it is your spouse or whatever.
You got to separate. Hey, we all, I mean, why
(16:50):
does nobody, because nobody wants to be this heartless to
go well, they have nothing, We're gonna go ahead and
take that dog away from them. You know, they can't
feed themselves properly. How are those animals being and nobody
ever wants to talk about that. We just drive by
an ignart AS's just a dog. Now, you know, there
has to be mistreatment. They're mentally impaired, many of them.
(17:11):
They're on drugs, they're drinking. There's a probably a lot
of kicking, and we don't care. Nobody brings that up.
I've hardly even heard that brought up standing on a
street corner and the heat out there for hours on end.
Are they being given enough water? I mean, nobody cares.
Nobody ask about that. Do they have their shots? No?
(17:34):
I wonder if Animal Control ever pulls up and ask
any of these questions. Come on, man, at least we
can get to water. That's gonna be my new movement.
Get the elephants out of the zoo and get these
animals taken care of that are with the transients that
are out there. Sound like you're sleeping in your station
(17:57):
wagon and your dog's in there and you got a
big old pile from Costco of dog food in the back.
When the cops do the flashlight, you're probably taking care
of your dog. But man, we see the conditions that
a lot of these people are in you know, they're
not taking care of those animals, So go into a shelter.
Whe would require the people to abandon their pets. Good,
Maybe they can get better care. And I'm not saying
(18:20):
that the transient maybe or even if they're not on
drugs or alcohol, they're probably taking a little bit better
care of it. But we know, I'm not going to
say every single person you see on the street is
drunk or high on something, but I'd say, yeah, the majority,
and the majority of them have animals, and many of
them I think even trade them off for the next beggar.
(18:42):
Hey here, I'm out here from three to six, you
take it from seven to nine tonight, before the sun
goes down. Lead the dog, Yeah, lead the dog. They
probably just call it dog or cash money. Yeah, you
know it brings us money. So now gonna make homeless
encampments illegal. Well, he's he's just on top. He's got
(19:06):
he's got the pulse of this of this state going,
doesn't he.
Speaker 3 (19:10):
This is the Trevor carry Show on the Valley's Power Talk.
Speaker 1 (19:14):
And my heart and soul be praying for them, and
at the same time, I have an anger, and it's
a like I say, internal battle. Is it a justifiable
anger that they have a problem with authority. That's how
I see it. They just decide they're not going to
play by the same rules as society. It's almost an arrogance.
(19:41):
I don't have to do. Anybody tells me, I'm gonna
just build this four walled wood container. I saw the
guy I mean rolling around like is in a circus
in the eighteen hundreds on the corner, and I thought, well,
he's blocking the sidewalk. W'ere they're two overwhelmed. They can't
They're overwhelming us. The transients are, and I feel for
(20:02):
those that are truly homeless. There's a difference. There are
people that actually go and want to have help. We
should support that, But supporting and continuing and putting billions
in dollars into people that have obvious mental issues, if
you cared and loved about them, you would take them
(20:24):
off the street immediately and put them in somewhere somewhere
would be better than they are right now. Five five nine,
two thirty forty two forty two. Number you to me
two thirty forty two forty two. Let's go to I Sellia, Beth, Welcome,
to the show.
Speaker 5 (20:39):
Hi there, Hey Trevor, Hey, I wanted to call. I
heard you say that Govin is making encampments illegal, and
I get it. However, I feel it's a crime for
the state to ignore what you were just talking about
mental illness, which is a huge issue. Let me give
you a quick example. I met a woman last minu
(21:00):
at a woman's retreat, and I could tell there was
something just a little unique about her. But as I
got to know her, I thought, gosh, this, you know,
this gal needs help. And I happen to know her
family and I just talked to them and it was
something that had been neglected for you. She's almost middle aged.
I have been tirelessly working with so Security Mental Disability
(21:21):
since last May to help this woman. Because now the
mother she's always lived with is now in a home
and she has no form of income. Nobody will hire her.
She's very scared, and hopefully I'll be able to, you know,
get her to the point that she does get help.
But that's why we have such a terrible problem, is
(21:42):
because the state makes it impossible. There's no way she
could have filled out that paperwork. She won't use a
computer out of you know, paranoia, so they just do
what they can to survive. And I know that there's
a lot of drugs and there's no excuse for that,
but we do have a problem with not helping the
most vulnerable in our society.
Speaker 1 (22:03):
Definitely, there we have it that you just said, the
word paranoia. I'm not going to tell the long story.
I'm just going to give the quick recap here. I
was in front of a homeless woman that was in
front of a place that was going to help her,
a women's shelter, a women's shelter, and the paranoia and
the fear, and she started crying and shaking, And I asked,
(22:25):
is it somebody that just scared you that you just
saw in there? That's what I thought happened there, But no,
it was a change of life. Yes, she didn't want
to do it. That overwhelmed her. And to me, I'm like, wait,
why aren't you just like, Wow, this is awesome. I
get a door that I can close and a roof
over my head tonight. But no, that was scary for her.
Speaker 5 (22:48):
Yes, and you know, you're around strangers, and I mean,
there's a lot of work and different things that we
can do, But I mean, who knows what that answer is,
but there's a lot of work to do in it.
It does have to do with the state recordizing where
they fall short for society. Why are we building a
freaking train to nowhere when we could have used all
those billions of dollars on helping people in the community
(23:11):
that are our most vulnerable.
Speaker 1 (23:14):
You know, I don't know if you saw this documentary
bed then it just popped in my head when you
were saying that, I don't agree with letting anybody that's
just on the street sleep in any building. But these
guys from Africa, did you ever? I don't even remember
the name of it. It was like a bunch of
literally brothers related and they came over and they they
stayed in America. They lived way like out almost in
(23:35):
the sub Tahara out there. They didn't have microwaves or
light bulbs, none of that stuffy but they were amazed
walking around. Maybe it was I don't remember what big
US city, but they're like, wait, these people have nowhere
to sleep, and yet you have all these buildings that
are like nobody was in open. Yeah. They couldn't compute that.
That was how did they have nowhere to sleep? Look
(23:57):
all around all these huge buildings. They couldn't that in
fact or in their brain like that. And so and
I've always said, if somebody's having a heart attack or
an epileptic seizure, something inside the body going wrong, we
don't step around them. We call nine one one and
a crowd forms and the ambulance comes, and it's obviously something.
(24:18):
And now whether it's drug induced or whether they hit
the streets because they were mentally unstable. But I mean Matthews.
I talked with Flann Anderson parents and addicts in need.
What Matthews does to the brain, It does make you psychotic.
Speaker 5 (24:33):
Absolutely absolutely. I just we have a lot of praying
to do, and hopefully when any of us come in
contact with someone who hasn't gone that far, who hasn't
gotten that desolate, that we would at least try to
give a helping hand. Because I would love to help
more people, but at least, you know, maybe I can
just help this one person.
Speaker 1 (24:55):
Well, I've always said the city sho just do call
it one at a time. Spend Monday getting one person
off the street, Tuesday, go get another one Thursday, you know,
down the line. But you know what, I also get
back to the no panhandling ordinance and all those arguments
we had. And I'll see many times, and I know
it comes from a good place in the heart. I'm
not upset at the person, but I don't think they
(25:17):
realize that they're contributing to that next hit. I had
Scott Dixon in here, a man that now Madero Rescue Mission,
doing great work, a Christian man, and he had twenty
plus years though out on the street, and I was
asking him when he would bet he would beg down
here at in and out Burger, and he said he'd
make sixty bucks, like in an hour or so. And
I'd be like, so, what'd you make the second, third hour?
(25:40):
And he's like, no, you just you got your money.
You go you get your fix. And I said to him,
I said, what would you have to go somewhere and
get He goes, no, you just call the guy. He
come down to the encampment and bring the drugs down.
So see, that's what that begging. A lot of that is,
so people please stop handing it out the window to him.
Speaker 5 (25:59):
Well, when we have a society like the state of
California and other you know, especially left wing state or cities,
they foster enabling, They foster enabling, and my family is
growing up super poor on the north side of Asilia.
You know, I have seen some of my own family
(26:21):
members literally live off the government when the truth is
is they could have had a job.
Speaker 1 (26:25):
Oh you started out on third base, Beth. Come on, hey,
in enabling, you said enabling Presno county gives up free needles.
Speaker 5 (26:38):
My netflix is disgusting. Oh my gosh, we're insane.
Speaker 1 (26:42):
That's like hanging outside an AA meeting, outside of Catholic
church and giving out free drinks, you know, the little
little ones from the hotel bar or something. Those Hey
on a free bottle right here? Yeah, like, come on?
Speaker 5 (26:53):
Or how about leaving open the you know, local liquor
store and shutting the churches. Hey, COVID it is. It's
literally fascinine.
Speaker 1 (27:05):
But we're still here, aren't we. Yep?
Speaker 5 (27:08):
And you know what, we'll still press on and work
hard and help and love and pray and hope God
just comes in and rescues every one of us, especially
those who are most vulnerable in our communities.
Speaker 1 (27:22):
Yes, amen, on that bed, do you keep those prayers going.
We'll make We'll make California at least decent again, I'm
going to talk about Pete Rose and shoe Let's Joe
Jackson next. Great call there, Beth appreciate that.
Speaker 3 (27:39):
This is the Trevor Carry Show on the Valley's Power.
Speaker 1 (27:43):
Talk twelve years old in Memphis and from the big
furniture color TV of the time period there, and I
watched this happen.
Speaker 6 (27:54):
Leveling the bat Roger cites a sign from cart of
the one all Fitch slung when they ben't rebub and
a pager Lake career at the lines the single it
out the teammates down of the dugout Dady concept beyond Pollin,
buy Putcher, dug capillage.
Speaker 1 (28:16):
No, myc like I was a fan. I was a
Dodger fan, so the Reds always seemed to not do
us right. Wait, but that was a big moment. That
was a big moment. I remember Pete Rose nineteen eighty
one when he was on the Phillies and they won
the World Series, and that's when he was doing a
little bit of betting back in the day. I mean,
(28:38):
he's all time leader in career hits. He had a
band back in nineteen eighty nine. He bet on the
Games when he came back and was manager of the
Cincinnati Redis. I think he was even player manager for
a little period there, but he always bet on his team.
I think that's what a lot of people were like,
all right, come on, but he's being reinstated by Major
League Baseball along with Shoeless Joe Jackson being removed from
(29:02):
the band list. Commissioner Manfred stated the punishment for banded
individuals ends upon their desks. Okay, sheless Joe. He's one
of the eight Chicago White Sox players banned from baseball
nineteen nineteen Black Sox scandal took a couple of years,
but into nineteen twenty one he was banned from baseball
(29:26):
along with others. The earliest either Pete or Sueless Joe
can make the Hall of Famous twenty twenty eight. I
I I probably tell the story a few times. But
when I lived in Connecticut, they had a little paper
in the community there, and the sky had for sale
old Kennedy papers and some old baseball pictures, and I
(29:48):
bought the whole lot for like twenty bucks. It couldn't
believe it. This is in the late nineties, but in
those black and white pictures there was one of Babe
Ruth as a pitcher for the Red Sox from the
Sporting News, and there was another guy. It had his
name downe there Oscar Felch. So I went and looked
him up and he was one of those eight guys out.
He was one of those that threw the black socks scandal.
(30:11):
So I keep that around with me. Always liked that one.
So anyhow, Pete Rose yes from Bravo on that. I
think the shoeless Joe thing was, he got some new
cleats and they were too tight on him, and he
took him off for a doubleheader or something and just
ran in his socks. And that's where the name. He
didn't like the name. You were at a bar. He
(30:34):
didn't walk up and be like, hey, shoeless Joe. No no, no, no, no,
you know those are tobacco chewing spit and hitting people
in the facetimes. He didn't like to be called shoeless Joe.
So the opposing team with rising rattling. I haven't spoken
to a current Major League Baseball player recently, but I
(30:56):
would think that the uh, the smack talking has really
diminished over the years, Like how they I don't know,
you see it on occasion, yeah, but as part of
the game, and it's accepted. It's kind of more one
offs now, the drawing rope back and forth. I wonder
now even if the little league, you know, you can't
(31:17):
like the shortstop going, hey, batter, battery, you couldn't hit
water if you fell out of a boat. Oh, because
we used to do stuff like that. You know, it
had the cutoff line there. I wonder what that is. Uh, well,
probably got a better chance of talking to a little
league manager than a major league baseball player. So I'd
like to find out if they have rules on that now.
(31:38):
Infield chatter, I wonder if they even still do infield chatter. Hey,
come on, you know you encourage that's part of baseball,
the chatter. I was a good infield chatter guy. I'd
always use their number. I wouldn't say their name. Come on, hey,
come on, you got it, you got it. That's just
a little lot you got it. Pull it in infield chatter.
But you don't always do it to the batter too.
(32:01):
And me being uh Freddie pottac baseball short at plate
home plate walking up, it would just double encourage me
go ahead, break it on some small way. I feel
like I know what Jackie Robinson went through, just because
I can't help the way I was born. Go ahead,
bring it on, yeah, and I'd lay that bunt down third, baseline,
run down, throw the first and be wild. I'd end
(32:23):
up on third, like all right, go ahead, yeah, D's
in the uniform on love those moments. That's what's good
about sports. A lot of times I got called out
on third strike, you know, dropped the helmet back run
out to the lot of that times as well. I
miss watching baseball. I thought last weekend, Uh, I think
(32:43):
I might have to reconnect to something here, you know,
Freddie's home run. I realize it's, you know, upper management
that makes a lot of these woke calls. It's not
the players
Speaker 3 (32:56):
Assisted Trevor Jerry Show, Mondo Valley's powers off