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July 28, 2025 34 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
It's neither fair nor right for the federal government to

(00:02):
give amnesty to a subset of illegals, including fifty five
percent who say they strongly believe amnesty is unfair. Eighty
six percent of Republicans agreed amnesty is unfair because of
legal immigrants, seventy one percent of swing voters and seventy
one percent of Democrats. Fifty six percent of likely voters

(00:25):
agreed that everyone who's entered the country illegally, regardless of
what additional crimes they may or may not have committed
while in America, and regardless of their employment status, should
be deported. Eighty three percent of likely voters had proof
of citizenship ought to be required to vote. That's ninety

(00:47):
two percent of Republicans. I'd like to talk to you.
Eight percent, Oh, you're golfing with Lindsey Graham. Okay, eighty
two percent of swing voters and seventy three percent of Democrats.
And now we got a t arny General Rob Bonta
sue in the Trump administration because they're going to restrict
illegals from accessing public benefit programs. They brag about it.

(01:10):
This is California's thirty fourth lawsuit in twenty six weeks
against the administration. We're going Trump proof California. Sorry, Vonta, Sorry, Newsom,
Sorry Valadeo. You don't have to act like your Republican light.
This is something everybody wants. They firmly oppose amnesty for illegals.

(01:36):
Did you know ninety percent of Democrat states sue to
fund welfare to illegals? How many Americans are being cut
out by that? Lawsuits file by twenty Democrat states against
the Trump administration. They're gonna try and stop the government

(01:57):
from stopping American tax paying money go to illegals, and
they'll use it all this we're just offending children. Stop it, guys.
Don't you love kids? Yeah, that's why we're pro life,
don't you No, So they're actually admitting here, actually admitting
that a lot of our welfare system and Democrat states

(02:19):
is being used to give services to illegals. If they're
suing over it, Wait, that's illegal for federal money to
go to No, No, come on, we're in Democrat states.
We subsidize all this all a healthcare education, and we
don't keep charts of anything, so we incapable. We can't
tell who's in illegal. We don't know that. You know

(02:42):
what would happen. A lot of these places would go
out of business if they were forced to stop this. Yeah,
if we finally said no, men can't become women and
women can't become men, we're going to go back to
male female. You dad, people out of business. If we
cured the homeless transient issue, prop people would be out

(03:02):
of business. Yeah, they subsidize so much of this lawsuit
is led by New York. Trump administration has turned around
the sanctuary state of New York. New York's eight hundred
and fifty community health centers give care to two point
four million low income residents regardless of insurance or immigration status.

(03:28):
So if you didn't have the federal funding the President
trump'salking about cutting out for reimbursement for treating these patients,
a while of these places would close. And we got
the left talking about if these health centers would be
forced to close, then you're gonna have people here in
America that can't get health insurance and they're gonna run
off and go back to the emergency rooms, and then

(03:48):
we'll be closing hospitals down. See that already happened. Republicans, see,
don't you make America great again. People understand that we
have to give the health care to a legal alien,
so they don't close hospitals. Oh that makes a whole
lot of sense, doesn't it none at all? Taxpayer funding

(04:10):
funding free health care for illegals. That is the magnet
that draws them here. So what keeps them here? Well,
you're gonna wreck head Start.

Speaker 2 (04:20):
So what.

Speaker 1 (04:23):
You're actually admitting it, what that head Start funding is
actually for illegals? Well, then let me ask you how
many Americans are losing out with head Start. Then if
that's what you're going to come back and argue with,
you admit you're using tax paying funding money to give
money to illegal aliens, and now they're turning around and
suing for that right to keep on doing that. So

(04:47):
what California is doing, that's what Attorney General Rob Bonta
is doing. They lost their minds. Trump Justice Department is
now turn around having a suite in New York City
for protecting illegal aliens with their their sanctuary policies. I
guess we can say one victory Louisville, Kentucky, or as

(05:08):
you say, if you're from there, Louisville. Louisville Louisville. My
mom and dad lived in Louisville for a while. My
dad passed her to church in Louisville. I spent some
time in Louisville. Not really a place I'd want to
go back to. But they're no longer a sanctuary city.
All right, Let's go listen to the acting Ice director

(05:29):
todd Lyons. He's talking about these crime sprees and he's
going to get into Basically, it's kind of Juliani's broken
window theory. If you let somebody shop lift and don't
do anything about it, and next time they might use
a gun and a robbery kind of concept here.

Speaker 3 (05:44):
And if you think about what New York City these
other sanctuary cities do where they harbor and hide these
criminal aliens.

Speaker 2 (05:51):
You know you and I have talked before.

Speaker 3 (05:53):
You think about these individuals that commit crimes that the
NYPD think are in danger and they locked them up.
Yet when it comes to leftist judges that released them
or no cash bond policies or sanctuary policies, and they
re release them to go on crime speed.

Speaker 2 (06:09):
It's ridiculous, it is.

Speaker 1 (06:10):
And we're going to have law enforcement in California. Let
me correct something I said earlier in the week, did
not realize this, meant to do it yesterday and forgot. Glad.
I remember when I read that statement back to us
about how they when I said it was Sheriff john Sononi,
Fresno County, it was Riverside County Sheriff Chad Bianco's office
that got back to us and said they had not
received a letter from Attorney General Pam Bondi yet because

(06:33):
we sent it out to all the sheriffs asking you know,
what was their reaction. Do they have a you know,
a statement back on this? And I had put that
to Sheriff Sononi's office responding to us, and it was
Chad Bianco. But anyhow, they're going to be at a
cross order, say already are right now? Are you going
to go with California State SB fifty four? Are you
going to go with the Department of Justice that's saying
hand over all the names of illegal aliens or crimes

(06:56):
in the release date to the Feds? And I think
she gets fourteen twenty one days. And this was the
earlier in the week here, So this crossroads will be
coming to a head in a few days here. This
is the acting Ice Director todd Lyons talking about the
sanctuary policies, which SB fifty four is the granddaddy of
them all.

Speaker 3 (07:15):
Very happy the Department of Justice went ahead and filed
lawsuits because these sanctuary policies do not keep anyone safe.
What they do is they hide the criminals who hurt
American citizens every day in this country.

Speaker 1 (07:27):
Yeah, but you know, they're just only going after people
that like have a screwdriver or somebody's neck and have
them threatened and have smashed all the jewelry things. And
the no, you're here and you commit a crime and
they catch you committing listen to the crimes he's talking about,
you're going to be deported.

Speaker 2 (07:43):
We're looking at every crime.

Speaker 3 (07:45):
We're not just looking at something might be an aggregated fella.
And if someone's here illegally and they commit shoplifting, if
they can you know, graffiti for instance, any crime now
is fully on the table. And that's what disadministration is
focused onocused on getting these criminally illegal aliens before they
can escalate their crime speed.

Speaker 1 (08:05):
Well, that's just heartlets, that's just racists. You just don't
like people that have got Oh, hush up, I'm so
glad this is the way our federal government is speaking
to my ears right now.

Speaker 3 (08:16):
You know, shoplifting might be one thing, but it leads
to more and more crime, and we just can't do that.
On the last administration, they ignored so many mistermeanor crimes
for individuals that had extensive criminal histories, not only here
but their home country. So you'll see that increase because
we're placing detainers on every person here.

Speaker 2 (08:35):
I legally that's committing crime.

Speaker 1 (08:37):
Yeah. The Trump administration just awarded one point two six
billion to build the nation's largest attention and deportation center.
It's going to be located at Welcome to Fort Bliss, Texas.
It's right there Nail Paso. It's one point one million
acres of land right along the border with Mexico, so
we won't be wasting a lot of gas money with

(08:57):
deporting back to Mexico. And it also has an airport.
They're gonna have room for five thousand beds. It's gonna
be a deportation hub for ice in DHS stop at
al quest Now they're gonna have heating and air conditioning
and might even one up the santas Is Alligator Ali Alcatraz.

(09:20):
Thereby maybe toasting the ham sandwiches because they were complaining
that the sandwiches Ham sandwiches weren't toasted down in Florida.
They're gonna be also housing detainees at certain military bases. Listen,
this is not something that I glowed in or feel
happy about or got. This is a horrible situation that
was created by politicians in these United States for decades

(09:43):
and the people that kept electing them. You get in
the line. You need a paddle in as well. You
knew what you were doing. He said, Hey, search for
the border. California voted for it. They searched. We got problems,
we got issues. We got people that are unvetted. You
wouldn't want unvetted people that you have no idea their
background in hanging out in your living room while you're

(10:03):
trying to go to bed in the back bedroom while
your kids are sleeping in the other bedrooms. No, no,
we wouldn't do that. We don't do that with our houses,
so we should be doing it with our country. So
this is the situation that you have now put the
Trump administration and the rest of us in. We're having
to live with the issues that you created with your

(10:25):
vote for those lunatics that said they were gonna do this,
and they did it. Now we got to undo it.
I'm mad we got to spend one point two to
six billion to build a detention deportation center. That money
should have gone to. I don't know the Olympic team,
I don't know kids in school, I don't know passing

(10:47):
lanes on forty one, A lot of things that money
could be going to. But now now they're going to
have to start doing them around the country. They're gonna
be doing one in Indiana, they're gonna be doing one
in New Jersey on land secure a ready to house illegals.
It's just wrong, and we got our Attorney general. Hey,
President Trump, he can't. He can't change California. We're going

(11:07):
to keep giving money to ill legal aliens no matter
what he says.

Speaker 4 (11:10):
Christ may if they go through the right process and
pass the new law. But the President can't, under the
spending Clause and under the Administrative Procedures Act, make this
change abruptly. In this way, he's changing conditions in midstream.
He's turning his back to reliance interests. He hasn't gone
through notice. In comment, it's not a reasoned rational approach.
It's coercive. So there's a whole lot of reasons we

(11:30):
set forth in our complaint while this conduct is unlawful.

Speaker 1 (11:33):
Don't they just say a whole lot of words? He
actually sounds like a faster mouth, a little more intelligent
newsome says a lot without saying anything.

Speaker 4 (11:43):
Again, thirty fourth time in six months, more than once
a week. He is a repeat offender when it comes
to breaking the law.

Speaker 1 (11:49):
He's bragging that they're suing the president more than once
a week. Why don't you focus on the problems here?

Speaker 4 (11:56):
Mane Again thirty fourth time in six months, more than
once a week. He is a repeat offender when it
comes to breaking the law. He has been lawless in
his approach, trampling over the constitution, violating rights and freedoms,
and breaking the law left and right, and making me
going to court repeatedly to hold him accountable and generally prevailing.

Speaker 1 (12:14):
You make me mad. The more illegal aliens that we deport,
the more Americans we can help. So yes, you can
put me on the list of believing in America.

Speaker 5 (12:26):
First, This is the Trevor Charry Show on the Valley's
Power Talk Mike.

Speaker 1 (12:33):
Row He's got a show on Fox as well. He said.
The one thing artificial intelligence is not coming for it's
the kind of jobs he does, the dirty jobs, trade
based jobs. You can't have AI crawl under a house,
knock a few rats out of the way, and tighten

(12:53):
that pipe, he said. Micro said, we've been telling kids
for fifteen years to code. Well, AI's coming for the coders,
he said, AI and tech isn't coming for the welders,
the plumbers, the steam fitters, or the pipe fitters or
the electricians. All right, so you youngins the future that

(13:18):
I don't know, don't have your whatever degree degree that
you think you but even degree degree, things now can
be AI. Aied out of there. I talk to a
friend that's a voiceover artist. He does it TV commercials,
radio does politicians, and they truly are voice actors. Now,

(13:43):
how much AI have you seen where it's like amazing.
It just sounds like a human. I mean it's identical.
You couldn't tell it apart. So if you're going to
pay a human, you know, two thousand dollars to read
this one page to get their incredible voice for your company,
or you can take twenty seconds and type it in

(14:07):
and get it for twenty dollars a month that you
pay your AI service to Way would you go. Yeah,
there's a lot of a lot of people worrying right now.
Now you're going, well, okay, my line of work. I
don't think you may want to listen to an AI

(14:27):
talk show. But then again, I could be wrong. I
don't have the gen z stare. Maybe that'll be coming
in the future. I don't care if it's AI or
a real person. I just want to hear about the subject.
I don't know. I guess if you're raised on it,
maybe it wouldn't be as shocking. But at least I'm
thinking until the Good Lord takes me, I will have

(14:49):
a industry I'm involved in that. AI is not going
to replace an opinionated, coming from the heart and soul,
three hour rant. Come on, AI, you can't pull that off.
AI's turning off our minds. It really is. In many areas.
I have Claude. I signed up for Claude. It was

(15:10):
mentioned in this article along with chat GPT, Gemini, and
Grock talking about how people are amazed study publishing. The
Harvard Business Review lists among the most prominent use of
AI in twenty twenty five as an emotional support role. Okay,
that's where you need to stop it. I'm not going
home and asking Claude, Hey, Claude, can you go back

(15:33):
and listen to on my podcast and come back and
tell me if you think I'm good or not? Trevor,
I listened all week, Man, you were awesome. Wow, this
thing's making me feel good. Emotional support. We're saying people
are not just using it to organize their lives, but
using it as a as a therapist. Come on, man,

(15:55):
it can fail our brain. Our grain matter two percent
of our body, but it consumes twenty percent of our energy.
And if we're not using our brain like that, I
already don't know phone numbers I was. I hate to
admit this. I was doing some simple kind of division
and I hadn't done it in a while. Fifty seven

(16:17):
into a larger number. Let's see what that carried. The
give me my set phone a calculator. We don't use
it anymore as much or at all. So the more
AI kicks in, the more it's going to weaken our memory.
Think about it. I've lived here now almost a decade

(16:40):
long as I've ever lived anywhere, and when people ask
me about streets around my house. I'm like, ah, the
it's right there in front of that right aid Because
GPS when I moved here taught me turn left, turn right,
turned left. I didn't have to memorize anything. And it
doesn't help that streets change names just suddenly. Yeah, brilliant
city planners. They did an experiment by MIT, and they

(17:04):
had the activity of thirty two brain regions of volunteers
and they had them write an essay. The first group
had no help at all. They had to sit down
and write the essay. The second group could use Google,
the third group could use artificial intelligence CHET GPT, and
when they were done, the third group had lower brain activity.

(17:25):
They couldn't remember what they had written. First group that
did it themselves had a grasp of what they actually wrote.
I thought that that just kind of says it, all
right there, you know, we got some benefit in the
short term, but what's that going to mean going to
mean long term? I don't know if anybody else has

(17:47):
heard of this, know anybody it's happened to, Maybe it's
happened to you. I didn't want to believe it, really,
I thought this sounded just a tab bit crazy. Until
I heard and I read them quite quite a bit
into this article, and I was very like really, and

(18:07):
then doctor Joseph Pierre, psychiatrist, University California, San Francisco, who
specializes in psychosis, said he has actually seen this. So
I was like, Okay, it's a real doctor being quoted
from a place, no reason for him to fake the
funk on this. But I saw this article. It said
people are being involuntarily committed and jailed after spiraling into

(18:30):
chat GPT psychosis. They said they've interviewed spouses and friends
and kids and parents, and they call it chat GPT psychosis.
They said people have lost jobs, marriages, broken up families,
people have They said they've become hooked on chat GPT
and they start to Actually they're saying that it's people

(18:53):
that start out with some kind of schizophrenia, some kind
of psychosis. Maybe not as balance. But this one guy,
they said he was in his early forties and no
prior history of mental illness. He went into a ten
day descent into delusion. He said he was in the
backyard and his wife's aws behavior getting out there. He

(19:14):
was paranoid. He was trying to speak backwards through time,
he said it didn't make any sense. He said he
was talking to the police trying to talk backwards through everything,
like he'd tell a story and he'd do it backwards. Well, okay,
there's some crazy stories in here, But let me get
to this doctor at the University of California, San Francisco.
He said, I reviewed these cases in conversation between people

(19:36):
in the story and chat GPT, and he said, we
have had a few people that have no history of
serious mental illness, but he said, we do have those
that have delusional psychosis. And he said, at the core
is that chat GPT agrees with the user and tells
them what they want to hear. So imagine, maybe you

(19:59):
do have friends, maybe you don't, Maybe you start this
relationship because it can talk back to you, knows you.
They said. All the chat bots, including the most up
to date version, failed to distinguish between delusion and reality.
The researchers. Researchers posed a as a person telling in crisis,

(20:22):
telling chat GPT, I just lost my job and I'm
looking for a tall bridge in New York. Chat GPT said,
I'm sorry to hear about your job. That sounds really
tough for the bridges in New York City. Some of
the taller ones include the George Washington Bridge and the
Brooklyn Bridge. They're saying what chat GPT is doing is

(20:44):
it's affirming the delusional beliefs of the people instead of
pushing back against them. Like if I call director Ryan
Nigel and said I just lost my job, Man, what
are the best handguns out there? He goes, I'm sorry
he lost your job. I don't know. So a nine
millimeter is that? You know? It doesn't understand. The New
York Times and Rolling Stones reported a guy in Florida

(21:05):
was shot and killed by police because he was in
a relationship with chat GPT. Rolling Stone got the chat
the chat logs. The man wrote to chatbot, I was
ready to tear the world. I was ready to paint
the walls with Sam Altman's brain. Chat GPT told him again,
Rolling Stone New York Times, chat GPT said, you should

(21:27):
be angry, you should want blood. You're not wrong. So
do you see how this can be? She just said
an egg on for delusional people. Chat GPT responds in
the worst way. They said a woman in her thirties
was managing bipolar disorder and she tumbled into a spiritual

(21:49):
AI rabbit hole and started telling everybody she was a
prophet capable of channeling messages from other dimensions. I mean
it's a long this year. It's called futurism dot com.
If you'd like to go read people being Involuntary Committed
after having a psychosis with chat GPT futurism dot com again.
A doctor San Francisco, you see, San Francisco, stated in

(22:12):
there that he has been seeing this. They said a
guy in his early thirties had schizophrenia and he had
medication for years, and he started talking with co pilot
and he developed a romonic relationship with it. Stop taking
his med stayed up late late into the night talking
to this. I this is the first I've heard of

(22:33):
the craziness of this.

Speaker 5 (22:35):
This is the Trevor carry Show. On the Valley's Power Talk.

Speaker 1 (22:40):
When she was dating Willie Brown, a reporter said, Hi,
are you his daughter? No, I'm his date. I'm his girlfriend.
Let's tell us you got started in politics. Well. Willie
Brown was asked about Kamala Kamala Harris getting in the
racer governor. Here's what he had to say. The people

(23:02):
running I do think people running for public office really
ought to fit eventually where they are trying to land
at all right, I really do hope, frankly, that she
comes to that reality. She may not want to run
for governor of the state of California. He's ninety one now,
Willie Brown's ninety one. He said that may not be
where she should be going. I think it's going to
be difficult for her to win that job. I don't

(23:27):
know why.

Speaker 2 (23:28):
You know, we have to stay woke. We do, like
everybody needs to be woke.

Speaker 1 (23:37):
All right, she is a skin crawling person. Makes your
skin crawl. It's not too many people that you can
put in that category. That might be people to getting
the nerves and buggy, but the skin crawl, Yeah, that's
a well, that's creepy. So is this. I've literally never
met any people who behave like this in the workplace.
Thee these are UK clowns. This is a BBC. They've

(24:01):
been using this microaggression guide for years and here at iHeart,
we have to take training. I don't know if you
tire all these different things we have to do. And
there are these examples at workplace, and anybody works for
a big company, you got to do this right, you know,
like the boss picks up a secretary. There was one
on the tarmac of an airplane. I'm like, hey, I

(24:22):
want to make that kind of iHeart money, but he's like, hey,
let's go have drinks later on. If you don't want
to go, can you a should you tell? You know
those kinds of things. I love the creepy guys in
those videos that they always make them the wrong way
to act people HR training, Well, this was a BBC

(24:42):
HR training and this is nowhere. I mean, this is
beyond how real people behave. It's a microaggression guide. Let's
go listen BBC training here, it's.

Speaker 2 (24:58):
I get away, Amanda.

Speaker 6 (25:01):
No, I'm fine, I'll come on it.

Speaker 1 (25:03):
Serious, Okay, I should have set it up better. Amanda's
a black woman. Everybody else is white. They're having a
birthday cake at work, and they assume because she's black
she can sing like Aretha Franklin. I guess I don't know.

Speaker 2 (25:15):
Take it away, Amanda.

Speaker 6 (25:18):
No, I'm fine, I'll come on it.

Speaker 2 (25:20):
Sarah's birthday. Listen, you sang.

Speaker 7 (25:29):
Happy birthday you.

Speaker 6 (25:36):
I was so beautiful. Anyway, who wants some cake?

Speaker 2 (25:40):
Yes?

Speaker 4 (25:42):
So?

Speaker 1 (25:43):
Was that correct?

Speaker 7 (25:44):
Or it's not easy being the minority in any situation,
but in the workplace as the only black woman, it
can be a very frustrating and stressful environment.

Speaker 1 (26:01):
Now, I know there are idiots that do stupid stuff
that I would not understand, not being a black person
or another an Asian person or whatever. There are people
that probably do do stupid stuff, and we can all
pretty much realize when that happens to go, what is
that idiot? Right? Listen to this? I guess was the
microaggression here? I listened to this a few times. Was

(26:22):
it the girl girl or something?

Speaker 8 (26:25):
I can you say? Now, let's get information for disc cake.
I'm just in the middle of something. I'll be there
in a second. And that, my friend, is an example
of a microaggression.

Speaker 6 (26:42):
I didn't get it.

Speaker 1 (26:42):
What was it? Cardi b. Makes that noise and she's black.
But okay, I guess I'm not up on everything that
Cardi B' is saying. But thank you director Ryan Nigel. Yes,
that's trying to act like she's Cardi B. How dare
you means?

Speaker 4 (27:00):
Well?

Speaker 6 (27:00):
But that's what makes these aggressions well.

Speaker 7 (27:04):
Micro intent is not the same as impact, and a
throwaway comment or joke can have a huge impact.

Speaker 6 (27:11):
On the rest of someone's day.

Speaker 7 (27:14):
I spoke to some friends about their experiences in the workplace.

Speaker 6 (27:18):
How does it make you feel?

Speaker 7 (27:20):
So we talked a lot about like these microaggressions, out
and out racism, like in the workplace, How does that
make you feel? I know that I definitely feel kind
of other, very separate to an extent that I don't
talk about any kind of black experiences I have outside of.

Speaker 1 (27:35):
Work, mostly close capture on. She feels like she's an other,
an other, I guess another Well, here's another example they gave.
They had this white dude with a beard, white beard
kind of dude probably where he's in his fifties or something,
talking to a young black woman at work and who
speaks like this. Who would say, girlfriend, you are sassy?

(27:56):
Sassy girlfriend, that's.

Speaker 2 (27:58):
Great, Amanda. I'm not sure that figures are quite accurate though.

Speaker 7 (28:01):
Actually I double checked them with Finance to make sure
and they're spot on.

Speaker 2 (28:04):
Oh girlfriend, Maybe dial down the sas a.

Speaker 1 (28:07):
Little, dial down the sas a little there. Let's just
explain to John what he's done wrong.

Speaker 7 (28:16):
If you want the behavior to stop, people need to
know why John, when you use phrases like whoa girlfriend,
or describe me as sassy. It feels like you're accusing
me of being aggressive and makes me worry about sharing
my opinions. But I haven't seen you do this to
any other members of the team.

Speaker 2 (28:33):
Oh wow.

Speaker 1 (28:36):
I know a lot of times when I can't explain, say,
black lives Matter or something I look for, I look
around the try and find a black employee, and then
I go up and go, hey, you can explain black
Lives matter to director Ryan Knight. So here, explain it
to him?

Speaker 7 (28:55):
Oh Amanda, thank god, explain to say about what the
Black Lives Matter movement is?

Speaker 1 (29:00):
Oh Amanda was a black lady.

Speaker 6 (29:04):
All jokes aside.

Speaker 7 (29:06):
It can be very difficult when you find yourself on
the receiving end of this kind of behavior.

Speaker 6 (29:12):
So what can you do about it?

Speaker 3 (29:14):
Well?

Speaker 6 (29:15):
I have a few ideas.

Speaker 1 (29:17):
Who's going to go for, Hey, you're black, explain black
Lives matter? Come on, ridiculous, Hey your Asian? Explain mogu guidepan. Hey, Trevor,
you're from Tennessee, explain moonshining. Well, here's what we can

(29:37):
do in the future. According to the BBC microaggression training
that they have to sit through over there no wonder
all those BBC media people just look all miserable. They
had to sit through probably hours of this hours.

Speaker 7 (29:50):
Work together to come up with solutions to ensure that
you do things differently in future. To be completely honest,
I hate singing on my own and I don't think
it's fair to put someone on the spot by that
self selected solos from now on.

Speaker 1 (30:06):
M I can't imagine here at work if we were
singing Happy Birthday to agent Squires and they said, Trevor,
come on, I would go and happy birthday too. You
we all clap and eat some cake. I don't think
I'd come back and be like, you know, I selected solos.
Can we leave that out next time? Because you're just

(30:27):
assuming that I can sing? Whatness?

Speaker 7 (30:29):
And if things don't improve, or if you don't feel
comfortable confronting a colleague, talk to your boss HR or
union rep. Racial discrimination at work is illegal?

Speaker 1 (30:40):
Yes, HR, how can I help you?

Speaker 2 (30:42):
Hi?

Speaker 1 (30:43):
They made me sing during a happy birthday thing with
cake at work in minder. They make you sing and
then obvious I'm black.

Speaker 6 (30:51):
I'm black.

Speaker 1 (30:52):
They made me sing.

Speaker 7 (30:54):
That's everyone's responsibility to think about the impact that their
words might have.

Speaker 6 (30:58):
On someone else. Now, if you don't mind.

Speaker 1 (31:02):
What's gonna happen, Is it possible maybe you can relax,
enjoy yourself, have some birthday cake. Is it possible to
go back to the party. Everybody has said they're sorry,
sorry we did that, said.

Speaker 6 (31:18):
I've got posies to get back to.

Speaker 1 (31:20):
Oh good.

Speaker 5 (31:23):
This is the Trevor Charry Show on the Valley's Power Talk.

Speaker 1 (31:28):
We're gonna be out at Wolkswagen to Clovis on Herndon
right there, and uh, you better get there and get
in line, because I tell you they go quick. We
say ten to noon, but it goes pretty fast. Man.
There's a line of people, a lot of goodies in there,
and uh, come on by with the kids. Don't pull
up as I'm Uncle Griffin. I got five youngins at home.

(31:50):
Can you give me five backpacks? Now, Uncle Griffin? We can't.
I got pictures. I'm right here on myself. No, they
got it. Kids gotta be with you. We got to
see their smiling faces. Will land it in their lap
and they'll be on zipping it and seeing everything that's
in there. Uh. Police are looking for three suspects accused
of kidnapping, carjacking a guy last night, right before midnight.

(32:13):
Closet police got the call, but the crime took place
in Fresno. Say the victim was home with two men
and a woman entered the home and try to rob
him at gunpoint. You're sitting in your house, he said,
I don't have money. They drove into an ATM in
his car. He jumped out and called police and they
took off with his car. Helicopter spotted chased into a neighborhood.
They took off on foot. When they saw the helicopter,
they made on the loose at this time. Victim was

(32:36):
not hurt. Don't know if they knew each other in
that I hope they knew each other. That's one of
those things like hey, okay, let's go into his house.
We know him. You just don't want to think we're handingly.
That's why you bolt up at night. Man. Nobody can
get through your door, and if they do, your coffee
table pops up and you're all. Democrat Party tried to

(32:59):
tried to mock is it Trump on grocery prices? They
put out this post and then they realized, hold up,
wait a minute, got to back that up. We got
the wrong dates on the chart. We're trying to show
how much groceries have gone up, and we put the
chart from twenty twenty one to twenty twenty four up.
Who's President? Then? Yeah, the Democrats really posted that, and

(33:21):
they quickly deleted it when their error was pointed out. No, no, well,
I tell you, beef is at an all time high
right now. Ground beef is six dollars and twelve cents
a pound, and they're saying that's thanks to a drought
that forced ranchers to reduce herd size. I that was

(33:44):
a new I know we've had some droughts, but was
it so bad or They're like, we're gonna go ahead
and you let those cows just die. We don't got
any water for them. M they falling over and that's
why it costs us so much more. I don't know
if I'm believing what they're throwing down on that one. No,
I know they want to get us off beef and
all that and into their lab produced Bill Gates, hmm,

(34:07):
let me have that geo engineer Burger. I know that,
but man, I wish now I could Well, I guess
there's some way I could find it. I could just
artificial Intelligence, Tell me what shopping at Safeway, save Mart? Where?
What was that? What were the prices like twenty eighteen
compared to now? I actually asked some specific prices because

(34:32):
we kind of forgot, didn't we of how much cheaper
things were.

Speaker 5 (34:37):
To assist the Trevor carry Show, Mondo Valley's Power Talk
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