Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
First resident to do it all. I'm done their tariffs
against Obama did it with tires the uh oh, and
you can't uh walk up to Walmart make an appointment
to get tires anymore in person has to be online.
Thank you discount tires there for being friendly to me. Yes,
real people, boy, I tell you this trade war or
(00:20):
tire's going to be more exensive, or TV's going to
be Listen, they're gonna come to the negotiating table. They
they have to. They don't want this kind of crushing
that's going on. Imagine if you work at a company,
does the the biggest client that you have by far?
Do they get the attention when they call? Yeah, sure
(00:41):
they do. I'm sure President Trump's Phone's been ringing off
the hook. Hey get you just hear President Trump shouting
into the next room. Hey, I tell Matta Gascar, I
got a bigger name on the other line. Then go
back talking to Costa Rica.
Speaker 2 (00:56):
You know what I mean.
Speaker 1 (00:57):
His phone's ringing. He has the world's attention, and in
the right way, because this is unfair. Terms that have
been going on for a very very long time on
we the people of the United States of America, and
they kind of bribed us, and we thought, well that's
the only way we get cheap things at Walmart and Kmart.
(01:18):
Well they're not around anymore targeted Walmart in other places.
Speaker 2 (01:23):
Correct.
Speaker 1 (01:25):
We kind of did the old Delleo thinking that's just
the way it is, because you know, Daddy Bush did
the whole New World Order and globalism was the way
that we were all going to go. But it's harmed
American's our industrial base. How many times did you hear
Rush Lombaugh talking about if we had to get into
(01:46):
some kind of war, our industrial base is decimated. You know,
he was on the air broadcasting as that Russ belt
was really doing some of the final tarnishing or brusting
on there. But it can't be resolved in a few days.
Trump just raised terrace on China to one hundred and
four percent. White House Press secretary said one hundred four
(02:12):
percent tariffs on imports to the United States from China
go into effect tonight because China's not removed the thirty
four percent retaliation tariff. The one hundred four percent tarf
will be collected starting on April ninth, which will be tomorrow.
Speaker 2 (02:30):
I don't know they're gonna go in to Taiwan.
Speaker 1 (02:34):
Now it'd be a time to do it during a
disrupting would it not? All right, I won't rush to war.
I'll keep it in the trade war that President Trump
is trying to end, not start. That's the big message
out there. He's not starting a trade war, He's ending one.
A trade war that was unfair to the United States.
(02:56):
It's if we were really in a battle. They were
coming at us with a ten war hogs and we
had right brother airplane, hittie. Howk you know? In a
real war. That's if you want to look at it
that way. Now, could be this be the end? I
don't know, momentarily, temporarily a year, three years, I don't
(03:19):
know how long to the end of US China trade entirely.
That's a full third of the global GDP out there. Now,
follow me down this patch just for a moment, the
yellow brick road. Yes, some people are going to go
with some fantasy. What if we Is there anything that
China makes that other than medicines that keep us alive?
(03:42):
But ignore that for a moment. Is there anything that
they make that we could not make?
Speaker 3 (03:47):
Here?
Speaker 1 (03:50):
I come on, maybe there's some spices and some kind
of flavored beer. Yeah, they outdo us on so many things.
You want to know how how far behind we are
in certain categories. And since we're talking trade, how does
product get moved from the United States to say, China
(04:10):
and China to the United States. Yeah, some of it's flown,
but I'm gonna guess the majority majority is in ships,
big ones, cargo ships, commercial shipping. We call it, right,
Buddha judge, that's right. Remember how they were all backed
up out there in the Pacific. Now to just show
you how far we're behind, and what I'm yellow brick
(04:32):
roading here is what we would have to do is
imagine the revival in Oakland if we had shipbuilding of
the ports. Okay, just think of that before I start
reading this here. In twenty twenty four, a loan a
single Chinese from the China State Shipbuilding Corporation built more
commercial ships by tonnage than the entire US shipbuilding industry
(04:53):
has been built since the end of World War Two.
I gave you the stats few weeks ago. I don't
remember them right now, but I think it was ninety
two percent of the world. We were like zero points
something of ship building. So I mean, people do we
have in America that if a war did break out,
we had to build some ships? Would even know how
(05:14):
to build a ship? I guess that's commercial our military.
We know we build our own I would think, what
do we get the holes? The you know, it shows
up like the houses do, and then you kind of
add some stuff to it. I assume we build our
own military shipping. I know that. But Trump's not playing
(05:36):
games with the communist Chinese anymore. They're one hundred and
four percent tariff, twelve o'clock deadline tonight, uncharted waters. I
think that it's an understatement. What's it going to mean?
In the valley ran across this little almond reports.
Speaker 3 (05:56):
Consumers of California grown almonds or the European Union, in
the United Arab Emirates, China, and Japan. Almonds have already
been a part of the trade war with China when
the communist nation leveled tariffs against the nuts in twenty eighteen.
Here's Jenny Holterman, an almond grower and fourth generation farmer.
Speaker 4 (06:13):
The last go around with tariffs in this situation, we
were targeted pretty heavily and it did impact us.
Speaker 1 (06:20):
So it is a little scary that that could come
back again.
Speaker 3 (06:23):
This time around. California Governor Gavin Newsom is trying to
get other countries to exclude California products from their retaliatory tariffs,
though critics point out that international trade is a federal issue.
Speaker 4 (06:34):
That's true.
Speaker 1 (06:35):
Yes, because it's true, and you violated the Logan the
Logan Act. You can't act on your own, governor, King,
Dippy deal, You're not the king.
Speaker 2 (06:48):
Oh my word.
Speaker 1 (06:50):
Let's go back to see where President Trump as civilian citizen,
famous guy, rich guy, your fire guy. Two thousand and twelve,
Donald Trump, he was up at a podium talking about
China China.
Speaker 2 (07:06):
I said, somebody said, well, what would you do? What
can you do?
Speaker 4 (07:09):
So easy?
Speaker 2 (07:11):
I drop a twenty five percent tax on China?
Speaker 5 (07:16):
And you know, I said to somebody, that is really
the messenger.
Speaker 4 (07:20):
The messenger is important.
Speaker 2 (07:22):
I could have one man.
Speaker 5 (07:24):
Say we're going to text you twenty five percent, and
I could say another listeners, we're going to text you
twenty five percent.
Speaker 6 (07:34):
Please clap.
Speaker 2 (07:37):
Yes, that was twenty twelve.
Speaker 1 (07:42):
Now we can even go further back than that, shall
we Let's go back in the Trump time machine again,
or the Super Tuesday traveror time machine.
Speaker 2 (07:50):
Again.
Speaker 1 (07:52):
Here's again citizen Donald J. Trump in nineteen ninety eight.
I guess there was some deal Clint administration done with Japan,
some auto trade deal with cars and all of that.
You know, when they really started in a dating in
big ways.
Speaker 5 (08:08):
I couldn't believe this last auto deal. As an example,
here we are, We're sitting there. It's restricted in Japan.
Everything's restricted, restricted, restricted. We're sitting they can't come in,
and all of a sudden, this country falls. We do
the old fall, though I've never seen it. That is
the way the press reported it. Well, the press reported
it that we had a deal, and then all of
a sudden it turned out that the deal turned out
that it was not a good deal for US, and
(08:29):
we had all the cards. I mean, it's not like
we didn't have the car. It's like, keep your cars
out of here until you open up. That's all keep
your cause at and then you the first hour was like, oh,
we made this wonderful deal. After about fifteen seconds after that,
people realized we got dooped.
Speaker 4 (08:44):
I just don't understand it. That's wrong with us. I mean,
I guess they said, well, this would hurt American car dealers.
You know what's wrong with us? I don't know.
Speaker 5 (08:52):
They're afraid politically to make a little bit of a
tough stand that wasn't even a tough one, that was
a no.
Speaker 1 (08:56):
Brainer free politically, to make a tough stand. That's what
he he's doing right now. Politically, he's taking a tough stand.
Speaker 4 (09:05):
Now.
Speaker 1 (09:05):
He was talking Japan back in nineteen ninety eight. Did
they fix that?
Speaker 7 (09:10):
Here?
Speaker 1 (09:10):
On my reciprocals tear offf chart that I printed out
Japan they charged forty six percent to the United States.
The discounted rate that Trump offered them was twenty four percent.
So yeah, we're still really upside down. Let's go back
to Trump in nineteen ninety eight on how to win.
Speaker 5 (09:29):
You would have had the Japanese cars out for nineteen
and a half seconds and you would have won every
single point. It's the most incredible failure and negotiation that
I've seen.
Speaker 4 (09:39):
But it happens all the time. I just don't understand it.
Speaker 5 (09:41):
So I would take a much harder stand and take
a much more difficult stand. I would say, make a
couple of enemies. I think I'd make a lot of friends.
Speaker 4 (09:49):
Ultimately, Yeah, make some enemies.
Speaker 1 (09:51):
Make friends ultimately in that man, it's uh, his mind
has already been here for decad on this. And you
want a quarterback that knows how to score touchdowns, You
want one facet of the United States president to be
understands business and Trump it sells. And what's a businessman?
(10:16):
Number one thing? Like a quarterback wants to score touchdowns.
A businessman wants to make money. But boy, they sure
don't want to lose money, right.
Speaker 5 (10:24):
I mean, look at dealing with Japan. I mean, just
take a look at what's going on. I mean, they
make hundreds of billions of dollars a year and we
lose money and deficits and nothing happens, and they say, no,
the Japanese are learning and they're starting to open up.
Speaker 4 (10:37):
In the meantime, every second goes by, we're losing.
Speaker 5 (10:40):
I just think that people would have far greater respect
for this country if we took a much tougher stand.
Speaker 4 (10:45):
It's really quite pathetic.
Speaker 1 (10:48):
Nineteen ninety eight, there was candidate Trump. Now let's go
to twenty twenty five, not candidate civilian Trump. Let's go
to twenty twenty five. Bill Maher about how effective Trump is.
This is after he went to the White House and
met the man.
Speaker 6 (11:06):
I mean Trump really interested, is one of the most
effective politicians, whatever you think of the policy and him
as a person, just as a politician, just understanding that
always lean in to being more who you are. The
people are not savvy about issues, but they smell a
(11:27):
phony a mile away.
Speaker 1 (11:28):
Yes, Tim Maul's jazz hands. Hey, do you remember the
show director Ryan Nigel. We were looking up at the screen.
We weren't caring it. I was just talking about it
a little and I said, Kamala is speaking right now,
and look at he's all so theatrical on the side.
I hadn't heard him speak yet, and I thought, this
(11:49):
dude's weird. Look at him jumping and waving his arms
around like he's a Florida gator male cheerleader. Dude, like
he's an alligator, like in his hands out there like that. Like, no,
we don't like that, we don't want soy boys. And
listen to why Bill Maher said what he likes about Trump.
(12:12):
This is why so many men came over of red, brown, yellow,
black and white, and so many women were attracted as well.
Speaker 2 (12:22):
Yes, he's tough.
Speaker 6 (12:24):
You know. There's a couple of times when I mean,
I've been his biggest critic for good reason. And when
he got reelected, I said, I'm not going to pre
hate anything. And then the first week I said, well,
there's lots of things I hate because I do. Okay,
there's some things I don't hate also, but the way
(12:45):
he can do that and sometimes kind of make me go, oh, man,
I got to give it up. Like when he did
that thing where the guy came in from the Taliban
and he said, this in air picture of your house
if during our withdrawal when American is hurt, just know
(13:06):
I know where you live. I was like, oh, can
we just play the music now because I don't care
it's not on Trump and he's the worst person ever.
Blah blah blah. I love that.
Speaker 2 (13:18):
Yes, we can play the music now. Oh don't they
wish they had somebody like Trump? Don't they?
Speaker 6 (13:25):
One time they were doing something, something was going on,
and he said, you know what, when you come after
New York, you gotta go through me. It's like, oh,
hometown boyant. You know, he has those moments that no
other politician has. And the Democrats have to find that guy.
Speaker 3 (13:43):
That's true because it's true and it's not you.
Speaker 7 (13:46):
This is the Trevor Kerry Show on Up Valley's Power Talk.
Speaker 1 (13:51):
Johnny's coming his party, full blown tempered tanserum. They're going
to fight to the end. Ultimatum, retrack your outrageous tallow
Tory tariff. By April eighth, President Trump told him or
phase a fifty percent tariff on top of that, and
on top of what was already there that Biden kept
in place from Trump one point, Oh, let's total that
(14:12):
up one hundred and four percent tariff. Man, that's a
that's the kind of leadership that you know, the uh,
the Richmond North or Richmond song, remember that, the forgotten workers.
That's what they've been crying out for leadership, just like
(14:33):
this slap it on them. We can learn to make
things here. Well, it's gonna be tough for well, we'll
see who blinks. Well this is economic chicken. We'll see
who swerves. Instead of negotiating, they resorted to warfare. And
(14:59):
you know they got a lot of slave labor. Can
we throw that in as well? Can we throw in
how they manipulate the currency? Can we throw all that
in as well? What about the wigers up there? Yeah,
probably building our plastic clothes baskets that we buy.
Speaker 2 (15:16):
It's my one example. I'll just stick with that one.
Speaker 1 (15:20):
Cheap things we get from China, and I know they're
messing with us psychologically. How many shoes you buy on
Amazon where the shoelaces come up like mid thigh you
can pull them up. They're intentionally doing that. I also
think they're leaving the cotton off the end of Q
tips in like three in the whole package and you
do it real quick.
Speaker 6 (15:37):
Ah.
Speaker 1 (15:38):
I think they're doing that as well. I think they're
leaving out steps and directions. I've had too many like that.
I think they're intentionally not putting enough belt loops around
their pants too. They're a lot skinnier guys we need.
I have older pants, and when I put the belt around,
I'm like, well one, two, three, four, five, Like it's
(15:59):
a lot of belt loops. And then recent Amazon pants
that come from over there, over there, And when I
ripped the plastic cut it open, I go, I'm breathing, Chinese?
Are Chinese there? The last air that was sucked into
that was in China. And that's funny. The last time
I brought that up, Director Ryan Nigel said, he thinks
(16:21):
the exact same thing. I wonder if they think that
when they opened something from America. No, we don't send
anything out. We don't build stuff anymore. In Western New York,
there's I interviewed the guy when I lived and worked
back there, and he had the Maiden America Shop. Actually,
i've had him on this show since I've been in Fresno.
(16:42):
That'd be a good guy to get back on the
show if I could think of the name. But it's
the Maid in America Shop, Western New York. And I
remember right. He might have opened up another one somewhere else.
But you know, China saying no winners in the trade war,
no out of no way out here. Ending the trade war.
Speaker 2 (16:59):
We're ending.
Speaker 1 (17:00):
That's what we launched. That's what President Trump launched to
end the trade war, the trade war against our workers.
You know how China another flex that they did. Oh yeah,
they're uh. I remember in the Olympics, man, there's there's
some there's some muscular Chinese athletes there. So they're flexing. Man,
(17:25):
they're gonna ban American films. Was that Lebron James screaming?
You do know that they have to cut They cut
things out of our films that don't go along with
their propaganda or might make America look better or something
or derogatory. They censor a lot, yes, saying this move
(17:49):
could cost Hollywood about a half a billion in box
office revenue. Well that's not as bad as Uh. They're
actors actors.
Speaker 2 (17:59):
You know that.
Speaker 1 (18:00):
We don't say actors and actresses anymore. They're just all actors, right.
You notice that that it used to be actress female. Yeah,
they attacked their own movies, probably harder than anything the
Chinese could do damage. But there is a market over there,
of course there is. I saw and I should have
(18:22):
written it down. It's a place in China I want
to go to. It was the most incredible tonight. During
this next break, I'm gonna set my alarm to remind
myself to go back and look at previously viewed or
something there or typing in. It was the most beautiful city.
And they built it up on these mountain sides. It's
in like a valley, a canyon, and they're built up.
(18:43):
Have you seen that, They're built up on the walls
and at night they lighted up. I mean, it is
the most beautiful city I've ever seen on planet Earth,
and so much of it was built a long long
back in some dynasty. I'm like they were up there,
Chislin that away up there on aside the steps that
go up, and it's not like scary. Yeah, some of
(19:04):
the houses that are actually built on the side of
the mountains, that's a little scary. I live a little
closer to the valley, but and it's not huge, it's
not humongous, but it's a brilliant. I'm gonna say, if
I had to guess, ten thousand people are less lived
there and it's just beautiful. Maybe somebody's going I know
exactly what you're talking about, but yeah, that was something
(19:27):
to see. But I guess I won't be going to
visit there because the only time I've ever left America
was as a kid going across down in Matta Morris
and Brownsville, Texas. Then as an adult down San Diego
across the Tijuana a few hours each time, then stayed
the night but came back. So I really never I mean,
(19:49):
living in La I got a hole. That's like living
at the United Nations. So many people from so many
different places. But my neighbor they just took off to
Australia and one of the islands that out there, and
I was like, he's like, yeah, we're gonna be out
of town for a few his wife whose sales or something,
got some bone. It was a cool thing. And I'm like,
(20:11):
I thought, he's gonna be visiting his uh, his parents
in Florida and.
Speaker 2 (20:16):
He's like he told me Australia.
Speaker 1 (20:18):
I'm like, man, that is so cool, because you should
try it sometime because they've traveled around.
Speaker 2 (20:23):
And I just don't know why I never have just
done it.
Speaker 1 (20:28):
Do a little saving up so you can really enjoy
yourself and just go somewhere. I guess I always put
it off because I thought, oh, yeah, I'm gonna do
that someday. Well that some days getting a lot, you
know that biological time is ticking. To go over there
and see Greece and some of those ancient ruins. I
think that's one place I would love to go to.
(20:50):
I really don't have a desire to go to a
tropical island place kind of hot and mosquitoeed nye. I
want to stay more up where it's good to ye joh,
I don't you know to I wouldn't want to. I
would love to see the Pyramids, but I wouldn't love
the ride to get there.
Speaker 2 (21:07):
No, uh huh.
Speaker 1 (21:08):
Now, if I'm going to take time off like that,
I'm gonna have air conditioning to all all that all
that stuff. Yeah, so okay, you got a good city
for a country for me to go to, Italy. Yeah,
that would be that would be fascinating as well. I
went there with the uh everybody loves Raymond though. When
they went there the barons, yes closes says, I've come
(21:30):
here on this Super Tuesday. Well, uh, here in California.
Now we got equity cameras. Yeah, they're going live here
in California. I mentioned it a few days ago, but
now I got some more figures on what the charges
to do. So if if you're not low income, get
ready to pay. And if you are low income, I
guess you can keep speeding because the tickets are so low.
(21:54):
Why not just you know it's worth it to take
the risk. You know it all makes sense as we
mc doublem mcmm, not maga mcmm make California more miserable.
Every stoplight I'm at now, somebody runs it with the
lights turn green. Somebody's always going through it, but now
(22:14):
we're gonna have equity cameras. We'll talk about it next.
Speaker 7 (22:18):
This is the Trevor carry Show on The Valley's Power Talk.
Speaker 1 (22:23):
In the light of day, I wouldn't go up those
stairs in that city in China that I was talking about.
Here here's how it's pronounced.
Speaker 5 (22:29):
The cliff houses on Gwenkson Cliff in Shang Grause City,
East China's Junkshi Province.
Speaker 1 (22:35):
Okay, you got that, didn't you. You understood all that
that the AI lady just told you. But yeah you
can just what you Oh, beautiful Chinese homes on mountain.
That's what director Ryan Nigel taipans. So if you want
to go look at that there you go. Good place
to put on your bucket list. Once we get the
trade dowar over. Hey, look what's happening already. This is
(22:58):
a local story. Kmph dot com head said. Local Ford
dealers say, employee pricing now available to all. Now look
at that even playing field. Look what that allows them
to do. Yeah, they're gonna push back with some good news.
Employee pricing for most new Ford cars are every customer
in the United States in this article said the dealerships
(23:21):
in the Valley are all reped up. Under invoice, you
get a better price in a dealership, employee pays. So
you know what Ford has titled this America for America
they're in man, they said. The vehicles are built mainly
in the United States. And what Ford wants to do
is they want to pass us and send us on
to the customer. They want to make sure the consumers
in the US understands Fords backing what's going on. They
(23:44):
don't want there to be fear of you know, price
increases and all that stuff. Now it's not every single Ford,
not the Raptor or the specialty Ford Mustangs, or the Broncos,
or the Expeditions or the super Duties or the Lincoln Navigators,
but everything else is covered. I don't know what else
do they have. I guess I'll pick a F one,
fifties and all those kind of things. Explore scurs. Well, no,
(24:07):
I think excursion was on there. Yeah, no expedition. They
don't make the excursion anymore. I had I used to have.
I had a two thousand and Ford Excursion. Yeah, that
that thing was a tank. And they still man, I
still sometimes and I think they quit making them.
Speaker 2 (24:26):
A few years after that.
Speaker 1 (24:28):
It didn't go too many more years after two thousand,
but I still see them around every now and then.
They still look, that's a good ride, man. They should
bring that bad boy back. Speaking of cars and trucks
and things that go rum not electric, we spent Newsom
spent fifty million taxpayer dollars protecting, you know, from Trump's
(24:52):
gas prices and all that. But we are the highest
priced in America. I'm looking at a let's see Exaspace
two sixty seven, Arkansas two seventy seven, Ohio two seventy nine,
Let's see Georgia two ninety four, New Mexico two eighty eight,
(25:13):
Tennessee two seventy seven. Said right now, average California four
seventy nine. You'll see some a little arranging above five,
some around four seventy nine. In that range, they see,
it changes and fluctuates. I basically go a to B.
A tank of gas can last me a week and
(25:33):
probably three or four three days into the next week,
depending on how much weekend cruising around I do. So
it changes and fluctuates by the next time I'm looking
to go get gas. I told you last time I didn't.
I didn't could fill it all the way up because
it was like five twenty three or something. Yeah, all right,
(25:53):
if you're going to be driving around in San Francisco,
watch out there, mister Mercedes, mister high pay check guy,
Watch out there, Tesla EV that can go lightning speed. Boy,
I see him use it up there on the Fryant Freeway.
What I'll do if their windows aren't tended so much
(26:15):
that you can't see who they are. If it's me
at the start of the light in one lane and
I look over, like and there's a Tesla, I try
and tell by how they look if they're gonna gun it,
and some of them I can't tell who they are
because of the tent, but boy, they gun it off
the light, they go zero to the speed limit and like.
Speaker 2 (26:34):
That quick two seconds.
Speaker 1 (26:37):
Yeah, and I remember one this is a few years ago,
but a guy on an electric motorcycle. How fast I
saw him take off? I mean it looked like Tron,
the old video game I used to play. Remember those
things they would lean, you would lean. Yeah, that's man,
he took off so fast. So watch out in San Francisco.
If you got a little little chee chein in your
(26:59):
old pocket, there. They got these new cameras going up,
thirty three of them, and they're going to give out tickets,
but for the first two months or not, they're going
to just warn you. Ah, we took a picture of
you warning don't you'd be speeding. But after sixty days
go by, the income level of the speeder will determine
how much he or she's gonna pay it, and it's
(27:19):
based on poverty level. So if you're called between going
between eleven fifteen miles over the speed limit, that's ordinary
a fifty dollars fee, but if you're low income, you'll
pay twenty five. If you're on public assistance, you'll pay ten.
Then you get into the higher fees. If you're going
sixteen to twenty five miles an hour too fast, that's
normally going to cost you a hundred dollars, but low
(27:41):
income fifty public assistants twenty Going twenty six miles an
hour or more over the speed limit, that's two hundred
dollars if you got money, but it drops to one
hundred and then forty for public assistence. Anyone going more
than one hundred miles an hour can expect to be
fine five hundred dollars, and I would wish to hope
(28:03):
a judge would take their license away for a while.
Unless you're low income or on public assistance. That's two
hundred and fifty and one hundred dollars. That's what you
would pay on that. Speaking of Ford excursions, I just
thought of it, just gotten it. Left out grove, drove
down to Arizona, visit family. Left I don't know, mid afternoon.
(28:25):
It was late at night when I was driving. Kids asleep,
wife asleep, and I'm out there in Arizona this and
I only had it probably, I don't know, a week
or something. And I wasn't used to this. I was
in we were in a Nissan Quest before a minivan,
so I wasn't used to this. The power of that
and the feel of that, and the bigness of all that.
And I got reminded with the red and blue lights
(28:48):
out there in Arizona right behind me. Pulled me over
is after midnight and he asked me to get out,
and he had me at like ninety four and I
had no idea. You know, I was out there and
I'll never forget what he said. Do you remember back
then when Firestone tread was blowing up. The tires are
blowing up, and he said, if you were. I remember
(29:10):
he had the flashlight out there. He wrote me the
ticket and he goes, you got young's in there asleep,
and I'm like, I was like sorry, I didn't even
realize that I did the whole head.
Speaker 2 (29:18):
He knew I'm not used to those. I was driving
them INNIVD you know, you know all the stuff you say.
Speaker 1 (29:22):
And he looked at me and he goes, he did
the flashlight on the tires and he goes, and you're
going that fast on firestones.
Speaker 2 (29:28):
Boy, he shook his head. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (29:31):
I felt like it was like getting a dad spear.
And that's how law enforcement should be. He should have
done exactly the way he acted, like stop at you
young whipper snapper out here on these highways. He was
probably my age now and I was in my thirties then,
and uh yeah, I he said, oh, I remember.
Speaker 2 (29:50):
He said, if you.
Speaker 1 (29:51):
Were in that county over there, or that county over
there going ninety, you would have had to probably come
and seen it. I remember him saying the county I
was in, I was fortunate, but I wasn't going over
one hundred. And look at that I wasn't going over
one hundred on firestones at that shook his head. Yeah,
I actually had my driver's license taken away by a
(30:12):
judge the first months I had my driver's license at sixteen.
Speaker 2 (30:18):
Yeah, it was.
Speaker 1 (30:19):
It was a rough first year for Trevor behind the wheel.
And it all started with me not going to computer class,
ditching that my down. I passed my driver's task, got
my license, going down the insurance place, told everybody I
was going to be back at lunch. You can, I'm
taking you to lunch in my car. And he had
to go back home to get my birth certificate or
something for the insurance.
Speaker 2 (30:38):
I don't know, something like that.
Speaker 1 (30:39):
And while he was home, school called and told him
I'd been ditching school, so I didn't get my insurance
and couldn't drive for three months. I was my punishment,
and I got behind the wheel. And let's see, the
first ticket was the first day out of school, was
getting out. I told this story before, but my dad said,
slow down, they're looking for people kids out of school
driving fast because I was going to go pick my
(31:00):
brother up. Yeah, yeah, got a ticket, and I got
another one and the judge said, young man, you got
your license, Yes, sir, do you want to see it?
Speaker 3 (31:09):
No?
Speaker 2 (31:10):
I want it?
Speaker 1 (31:11):
So I got taken away for a while. So see, man,
I've already paid my time. I've done my dues. Man,
you get caught going over one hundred or out in
the desert going ninety four on firestones, should be some
should be some serious fines going on. I am a
bad man, correct, Director Ryan Nigel? Oh, I go speed limit?
Speaker 6 (31:29):
Now.
Speaker 1 (31:30):
You know what makes me mad though, is when I'm
going Let's say I'm on the Eisenhower Freeway here, it's
the forty one and I'm doing seventy one and I
see either a Sheriff's car or a police department car
go buy in the fast lane at like eighty four
with no lights on or anything. They're they're just cruising
(31:51):
and they'll let's say they get off at Fry and
I eventually catch up to them and they're at the
light with their blinker on.
Speaker 2 (31:56):
Just they're not in a rush. They were just that's
can we do?
Speaker 1 (32:03):
I should have asked Chief Castle last time I was
in Can we do a citizen's arrest?
Speaker 2 (32:07):
Pullover?
Speaker 1 (32:08):
Yes, I'm giving you a ticket. What's your income? That
will determine the price that I give you their officer.
Ten reasons police gave for traffic stops in Fresnel and Clovis.
I saw this headline at the Fresne b Fresno's two
largest cities Forresno and Clovis. Top two violations for Fresne
police forty three and Clovis twenty two. It was for speeding,
(32:31):
that's obviously number one.
Speaker 2 (32:33):
Oh No.
Speaker 1 (32:34):
Number one by Clovis was lack of registration as well.
Then this article went on to talk about and police
pull over people of this color this many times, and
the population of this person of color is this, and
it's disproportionate, and we have to do reports and listen,
if I were a cop, I would the thrill of
(32:57):
my day would not be like pull over and give
somebody a ticket or a registration. It's like you just
wish people in speed you would and you wouldn't have
to work as much. Like it's the stupid stuff, the
immature things people do. So I really don't. I know,
you've got your heavy, heavy bags, and you got your
(33:18):
racist cops probably of all colors, let's be real about it,
but your average cop is not going okay today. I'm
gonna find me some black people and clothes to pull over. Nah,
we've moved on from that and these stupid reports here
as well. You know what, we haven't moved on from California.
(33:38):
We eat an alcohol. We need to make it easier.
I'll tell you California's plans next.
Speaker 7 (33:44):
This is the Trevor Chary Show on The Valley's Power Talk.
Speaker 1 (33:49):
Class call could be at a time that sometimes in
the year, I'm sometimes up that early on a Saturday morning,
you know, last call at three fifty five am. I've
had some times I've woken up to they couldn't go
back to sleep, and anyhow normally not up that early.
Speaker 2 (34:02):
But what do you think about that?
Speaker 1 (34:03):
AB three forty two extend last call hours until four
am for hospitality zones. O kay, Yeah, they tried this before.
They're really focused on the twenty twenty eight Summer Olympics
and special event hospitality zones that could be in place
for a maximum of one month for special music events
(34:24):
like like music festivals. And if a city does allow that,
it'd be allowed to serve alcohol till four am on
weekends and state holidays and special events. Now you've got
to consider public safety hotels, proximity to convention centers as
well as walkability. And they tried this. They were going
(34:46):
to do it for Palm Springs, so it was Hollywood
in San Francisco, but it didn't fly. You see MERCID
launching an online cannabis course so you can get into business.
Don't get into it in Fresno. I guess it was
supposed to bring in seven point one million, three point
one million, And it did this year after year for
the last two or three years. And they kept factoring
in the fat into the budget that hey, it's going
(35:08):
to be there. No for three years or was on
year two. You should have been a little hesitant by
year three. You should have never projected that much. Maybe
that's why we're twenty million budget deficit, because we don't
have good projectors. I'm just throwing it out there. If
you're that bad about legalized marijuana, what else are you
(35:29):
not projecting correctly? Look at me being all critical. Well, yeah,
when you're twenty million dollar deficit, what you think that
COVID money was going to keep running? You thought all
those those red states are going to keep funding states
like this, right?
Speaker 7 (35:43):
They Assistant Trevor Jerry show Mondo Valley's Power Talk