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May 17, 2024 39 mins
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(00:00):
Do non citizens vote in US elections? Yes, Yes they do. A
recent study showed evidence non citizens arevoting. As many as twenty seven percent
surveyed would register to vote, asmany as thirteen percent actually cast ballots.
House Speaker Mike the Johnson introduced legislationrequiring proof of citizenship before registering to vote.
Hey, Einstein, you wouldn't haveto introduce it if you supported them

(00:21):
not being here in the first place. Election twenty twenty fourteen, ing on
full display, what are Republicans doing? We'll talk about it. Jump.
This is the Trevor carry Show onthe Valley's Power Talk. Wus chump,

(00:49):
I rise in support of the EqualRepresentation Act, which we'll add a citizenship
question to the census and exclude illegalaliens from the apportionment base. It is
past time we put America and Americansfirst. Joe Biden and his regime are

(01:10):
shelling out benefits to illegal immigrants,like Oprah Winfrey on her show, Everyone
gets a vote, Everyone gets recognized, even if you're here illegally. In
New York, aliens are receiving fiftythree million dollars and free prepaid debit cards.
In Denver, Colorado, aliens getsix free months of housing. Wow,
and now they want to hand themseats in Congress to buy their lifelong

(01:34):
allegiance to the Democrat Party. Well, I tell you if Bill back better
is a little rough on you,right now, just go down to San
Diego, get a hotel room,get up bright and fresh early the next
morning, break into Mexico, andthen come back across and just say you're
illgal and you want to go toDenver and you want to have your you
want to have your rent taken careof. Right this is this is out

(01:57):
of control. We got less thansix months ago until election day, and
there's a lot of reasons to beconcerned about the wave of loan Baulbert there,
Colorado Congress almost talking about sixteen million. We don't know what the number
is. We have no idea whatit is, but we know that there
are double digit millions that have comein in the wave of non citizens.

(02:17):
And could they cast ballots? Surethey could. You got driver's license that
don't even tell the difference between themin many states. Now federal action is
needed before it's too late. Wecan go all the way back to William
Jefferson, Clinton, Billy Boyd nineteenninety three National Voter Registration Act. That

(02:38):
sounds that sounds good, We'll getpeople registered, right. No, you
only got a little box, alittle registration form from the nineteen ninety three
Registration Act that you you just checkedto say yes, I'm an American citizen.
And states have to take everybody's wordthat they're eligible to vote in federal
elections. Fourteen states, including swingstates in Avadam, Pennsylvania, they don't

(02:59):
even require any kind of ID tocast a ballot. We know that here
in California and New York where mymom and dad are back now in their
hometown in Tennessee, they went andvoted and said yeah, they had to
show their ID. In twenty eightstates, including swing state of Michigan,
Georgia, and North Carolina, studentID counts. That's a valid form of

(03:20):
ID for voting, but student IDsthey don't say you're a citizen or a
non citizen. Nineteen other states andthe District of Columbia passed bills allowing non
citizens to get driver's license like arein California, and that didn't distinguish between
citizen and non citizen. We havemillions with a bunch of essays that have

(03:42):
illegally poured across the border in thelast few years. And even if they,
let's just say, it's a verysmall fraction of those individuals illegally cast
ballots in twenty twenty four of thisfall, he could that could prove the
breaking point in some states, becausesome of these elections have been won or
lost by just a few thousand votes. In recent elections, we've added down

(04:03):
to hundreds here in California. Dothey vote? Yeah, they are.
A recent study by the Cooperative CongressionalElection Study showed evidence that non citizens are
voting. As many as twenty sevenpercent of non citizen surveyed were registered to
vote and as many as thirteen percentof them actually cast ballots. Now,

(04:26):
yes they have, They've tried itbefore, and some people actually get caught.
I found this story from five yearsago. Bigel immigrants caught voting five
times in the US. Is sentencedto eight years in prison and will later
be deported. A Texas jury ceilingRosa or Tata's fate after she blatantly registered
to vote in multiple cities even afterchecking the box on her driver's license that

(04:49):
she was not a citizen. Herlawyers, calling her punishment harsh. Miaming
President Trump's crackdown on illegal Okay,House Speaker Mike the john sending their dugal
legislation that's going to require proof ofcitizenship before registering to vote. Good job
Republicans, because you can't stop themfrom flooding over. You can't turn off

(05:10):
the water spake it, can you? Now they don't. Peter Schweizer Breitbart
said there must be a national databasewhere states in their voter role IDs to
be cross referenced. Citizenship data shouldbe available to local election officials ease.
A voter registration should not allow immigrantnon citizens to register. But we do

(05:30):
with the so called motor voter lawshere in California. Boy, getting the
DMV mixed up in an election,that's that's like asking AOC to come,
you know, in the middle ofa fight that you're having with somebody else.
You're just adding on to it.New study found out about up to

(05:54):
twenty seven percent of non citizens adultsin the US are now illegally registered to
vote. That one't do unintention unintentionally, That was intentional. And Trump tried
to get the US census to bejust citizens. You don't. You don't
put your name in the census ifyou're not here as a citizen, and

(06:15):
Biden overturn that. The US Censushas recorded more than nineteen million adult non
citizens living in the US in theyear twenty twenty two. Just think I
have any more important. But giventheir voter registration rates, it means about
two million to five million are illegallyregistered to vote. That is high enough
to overturn the will of the people. And I've always said, people are

(06:36):
like, hey, we got sixthousand bulls of soup. You want to
join us in the mountains of Colorado? You conservative talk show host I heard
on at one am in the morning. Back when I started with talk I
did. I got contacted by somepeople that were, hey, we got
to turn this country around, andwe got to get organized. I remember
the line I told the guy,because I mean, they were good dudes.
I just didn't want to get involvedin a militia at that moment in

(06:58):
my life. But I said,I'm willing to join if I can't go
to church and my vote doesn't count. If I can't vote and I can't
go to church, that's the timethat I would get information. Well,
during the man made lockdown came prettyclose to that, didn't we You couldn't
go to church, and if oneillegal alien is voting in California, I'll
look at that as that negates myvote. The report noted as far back

(07:25):
as twenty fourteen and analysis found thatillegal votes by non citizens likely change important
election outcomes in favor of Democrats.This goes back to studies done from like
I said, ten years ago,we don't even know how many more have
come in. And there's a lot, a lot of non governmental organizations that

(07:46):
are making a ton of money,nonprofits making billions off of this border crisis.
And same thing with the homeless industrialcomplex out here. There are so
many nonpropit if it's making so muchmoney, and if the problem was ever
cured, if we ever cured thetransient problem, there would be people so

(08:07):
out of work. And if weclose the border down, there would be
billions of dollars that aren't going tononprofits. And they're getting rich off these
government contracts. Remember the hotel Iwas telling you about back east, the
fair filled in had a contract forseven million dollars to defeed illegal aliens.
They were charging twenty one dollars fornoodles and hot dogs cut up in it.

(08:31):
Spaghetti noodles with hot dogs cut up. And they had a picture of
a plate of rice with one chickenleg on the top of the rice twenty
one dollars. The recent influx theamount of tax paying money, guys,
this is it's obscene. What's happening. There are nonprofits out there that have

(08:52):
seen their revenue grow amazingly over theselast few years. Here's an example,
tax fair funds to offer migrant children. Ready, here's what we're paying for
with our tax paying money. Pettherapy for legal alien children, pet therapy,
horticulture therapy. In twenty twenty aloneEndeavors, they're a nonprofit paid of

(09:15):
music therapist five hundred and thirty threethousand dollars show the nonprofit conducted one thousand,
six hundred and fifty six people plantinteractions, two hundred and eighty seven
pet therapy sessions. Now get outsideand plant some plants and play with a

(09:37):
puppy. Does does that help people? Okay, yeah, I'm sure it
does. Yeah. We had theformer mayor Shiloh Israel talking about the Israeli
Children's Fund and how they do thingslike that for kids that have been traumatized.
We hear it with PTSD, withveterans, we hear like horses are
really good for few. I'm notagainst that kind of stuff, but I'm
against doing music therapy and pet therapyfor illegal alien children. When my own

(10:03):
grandchildren, my son in the AirForce now to get daycare, there's no
daycare at the base. You gotto go out and get civilian daycare.
That's expensive on the military salary.Look, we don't take care of those
kids, do we. My grandkidssaid, is there a daycare on the
Air Force base that I'd be finewith tax paying money paying to help our

(10:28):
service members like that. No,we're helping illegal alien children out with roof
riff therapy. Here's some art paint. Somebody say that in Spanish Real Quick,
or somebody say that in Chinese RealQuick Endeavors. They're one of the
companies. Their federal disclosure form showedthat they paid five million dollars to a
company to provide fill in doctors andnurses, four point six million for consulting

(10:50):
services, one point four million toattend conferences, seven hundred thousand dollars on
lobbyists In twenty twenty one, theyshelled out eight million to hotel management company.
Guys, these are big numbers.It's not Ukraine numbers, it's it's
not that kind of money our taxpayeris paying for. But man, if
we cured the border endeavors that companyright there, would not be making this

(11:15):
money. The Administration for Children andFamilies and a vision of the US Department
of Health and Human Services. Theyfund nonprofits through their Office of Refugee Settlement.
Their budget in twenty eighteen was onepoint eight billion dollars in twenty eighteen,
just the fact that we had thatkind of a budget, then last
year six point three billion. They'reexpected to spend seven point three billion this

(11:37):
year. Wow, they and they'reeven saying that these federal grants don't even
take care of what they need totake care of. But what's new under
Biden is the amount of taxpayer moneybeing awarded. And there's no accountability for
this, just like with our homelessmoney here in California or the money that
we're sending over to Ukraine. Newzero accountability for any kind of performance,

(12:01):
and the lack of interest in thisfrom our government is just stunning. The
Republicans voted to not even worry aboutthis with Speaker Johnson, with the money
going to Ukraine, zero zero zerofor our border. But is this where
all our money is going to?When we talk about money for the border,

(12:22):
I'll flash back to Congressman Tom McLintockwhen I was debating Slash, arguing
with him over and he said hedidn't want another dime to go to the
border. And I Global Refuge basedin Baltimore. In twenty eighteen, they
had fifty million dollars in revenue.By twenty twenty two, the revenue totaled
two hundred and seven million dollars.One hundred and eighty million of that came

(12:46):
from the government. Have you everheard of Global Refuge in Baltimore, Maryland?
Well, they're getting one hundred andeighty million dollars of our money.
In twenty twenty two, Global Refugespent eighty two million on housing unaccompanied children.
Global Refuge also granted forty five millionto an organization that facilitates adoptions and

(13:09):
resettling migrant children. You mean traffickingacross America, guys, This is what
all this is about. This isevil. There's some real dark down Prince
Charles painting evil going on here now. Global Refuge employees over five hundred and
fifty people nationwide. So if weif we cured the border problem, actually

(13:33):
shut it down, sent the militarydown, put drones and war hogs up
in the sky, helicopters up,you would have five hundred and fifty people
at Global Refuge loosing their job.They housed twy five hundred and ninety one
unaccompanied children must spending thirty million intwenty nineteen. Three years later they're housing

(13:56):
fourteen hundred kids at a cost ofeighty two million. Can you do the
math. Twenty five hundred kids costthirty million, fourteen hundred kids cost eighty
two million. That's almost half thenumber of illegals for more than double the
money. There is sopranos corruption goingon. I could keep going. With
the Southwest Key program headquartered in Austin. In twenty twenty COVID their grant was

(14:22):
three hundred and ninety one million.By twenty twenty two of their contract was
seven hundred and ninety million dollars.There is a long list of these of
these companies and this invasion is beingdone by design, and it's all about
the electoral College representation given illegals congressionalrepresentation. It is so wrong Biden took

(14:45):
office, we have seen more thannine million illegal aliens cross our borders and
more than one point eight million gotawaysevade border patrol agents. That is larger
than the population of thirty two states. Speaker, there are now at least
sixteen point eight million illegal aliens livingin the United States, enough to account

(15:07):
for roughly twenty two seats in theHouse of Representatives. Including these aliens in
the apportionment of congressional districts impacts representationin Congress and undermines the constitutional principle of
one person, one vote. Americansdeserve to have their voices fully represented,

(15:28):
not diluted by illegal aliens. I'mproud to be a co sponsor of this
legislation, and I urge my colleaguesto vote in favor of this bill.
Mister Speaker, I yield back.You know what, if we the people
do not stop this destruction, itis going to be amnesty for all.
This has to be stopped right nowin its tracks. This is the Trevor

(15:48):
Jerry Show on the Valley's Power Talkcoming up bottom of the hour, We're
going to talk with ron Stein Energyconsultant. Love to have ron Stein back
on the show. Uses information awhole lot. T understands what's going down
with the old climate change in thepetroleum industry. He'll be coming up and
tomorrow on the show. Steve Garveywill be joining us on the phone and

(16:11):
looking forward to that as well.Going to be asking him if Pete Rose
should be in the Hall of Fame. Everybody that I asked says yeah.
I'm also going to play this forSteve Garvey and see if he remembers this.
Of course, YouTube knows me betterthan anybody this side of the Mississippi.
So last night they thought, youknow, I think Trevor'd like to
watch the nineteen seventy five All StarGame, and I did three hours long.

(16:34):
I didn't watch the whole three hours, but it has all the commercials
in it. That's what I loveto watch. Commercials. Back then,
we're about coffee and batteries and cerealand less filling tastes great. You know,
they didn't have all the rectal bleedingside effect commercials that we have to
deal with now. But I heardthis at the introduction of the nineteen seventy

(16:56):
five All Star Game, and I'mgoing to play it for him tomorrow to
see a of course he remembers this. How could you not remember this?
See if you can catch this?Ready? Listen, sat and fourth and
catching three time National League RBUI leaderand National League's top folk gutter from the
Cincinnati Reds Johnny Finch. You knowthat's Johnny Bench batting fifth and playing christ

(17:19):
base, the National League's Most Valuableplayer in nineteen seventy four and the most
vatugal player in last year's Allstar Game. From the single Lois Donckers Steve Tarvey?
Did you catch it? Did youcatch it? You know he had
to catch it coming out of thedugout right running out to the field.
You hear that, the most radigoplayer in last year's Allstar Game from the

(17:41):
single Lois Donckers Steve Tarvey from theSaint Louis Dodgers. Come on, man,
I well, you gotta give hima little break. Back in the
seventies, all those press box guyswere they were drinking out of the flask.
That's it right there. Speaking ofthe seventies, well, I think

(18:03):
more in the eighties I heard aboutthis, like with church youth group stuff.
Maybe if you were in a churchyouth group in the eighties, you
heard about backward masking. That isthe inserting something in playing it backwards,
and it has a different meaning.When I first heard about that, boy,
I was excited about it. Igrabbed all the LPs, the vinyl
that I had, I had myHatachi stereo, I had a number two

(18:25):
pencil with the eraser. I'd putthe turntable on, I'd take the eraser
and I would play the albums backwards, just trying to find something in listening
to something. I have never heardthis, nobody's ever posted this up online
or anything, but I found thisjourney. Don't stop believing. Yes,
I unearthed it. Smell lines,smell a line and cheap perfume. Once

(18:52):
I say backwards, believe the beast, and I want some when I when
I when I saw the Prince Charlesthing where they were saying, if you
put the both pictures up mirrored right, you see Baphomet in there. That's
dude. That was spooky. Thatwas freaky, man. That just goes
to show how a cultic the eliteare. But it made me start thinking

(19:17):
of backward masking again, and itmade me go find this today. What's
that say? Backwards? Me?Did you hear that? I heard it
in my bedroom in high school.Believe the Beast and I want some saws.

(19:40):
Did Steve Perry know he was singingthat backward? No? I I
some groups intentionally will put backward maskingin where it sounds proper English played backwards.
Uh, they said with the Beatles, number nine, number nine,
number nine. When you play thatbackwards, it's time mey on deadman,
turn me on deadman. And thatled to the thing that Paul McCartney was

(20:03):
dead. But listen, do youhear Believe the Beasts and I want some
coming from sea? Period journey smellace. I hear it. I heard it
back then. Energy Consultant. He'sfounder at PTS Advance. Looking forward to
having me back on the show.We're going to talk to mister ron Stein.

(20:25):
He's coming up next. I'm goingto take that what I just said
and play it backwards. I'll getit back to you in a minute.
Here this is the Trevor Jerry Showon the Valley's Power Talk. Like to
welcome hi back to the show,looking forward to talking to him. Energy
consulted founder at PTS advance, RonStein, Ron, welcome back. How
are you man glad to be aworried well? Ron, I, how

(20:48):
do we make it ten years past? Al Gore's prediction of the ice caps
are going to be gone by twentyfourteen. They're never correct, not even
once? Are they? You willnot participate in the conversation. He can
predict anything he wants, but hewon't talk logic. Right in the real
world, when we make predictions andthings like that and it doesn't work out
consistently, I think we're called afraud, aren't we. Yes, But

(21:14):
he's in politics, so it's okay, that's right. Then they get away
with that. Yeah, we stillgot our ice caps going on. Please
Ron, tell us about what you'verecently written about our earth reserves of fossil
fuel resources. They're not being replenished. Are we gonna be in trouble our
grandkids when they're our age? Ibelieve. So, you know, we're

(21:37):
extracting fossil fuels at alarming rates,and you know the Earth was formed four
billion years ago and the resources arethere, and what we're taken out we're
not replenishing. Yeah, it mightbe replenishing, but it takes thousands of
thousands of years, and right nowthe fossil fuels are being extracted alarming rates.

(22:00):
Well, last year we had thirtyfive billion barrels of crude oil extracted
from the world, and that equatesa barrel's forty two gallons. That's almost
fifteen hundred gallons every year, andeventually the well is going to run dry.
And projections are that the proven reserves, you know, like I say,

(22:22):
they've got an idea of how bigwill is that they're going after proven
reserves maybe fifty to one hundred yearsand they're dry, and unproven reserves might
be bigger. But unproven reserves bringsin another problem that Yeah, I mean,
just like fracking. We were ableto find more and more oil with
fracking, but that only applies towealthy countries because it gets expensive to go

(22:45):
after it. And if we cango after more unproven reserves, it's only
going to be the wealthy countries.So if I'm picking up what I hear
you throwing down, here, arewe fifty years away from eighteen fifty for
oil? Yeah, we're we couldbe. I think our grandkids will probably

(23:07):
start seeing drying up. Of ourgrandkids, they may see eighteen hundreds again.
Wow, so I guess it will. Well if you say, then
okay, then we do need togo wind turbines and all the electric and
all of this. But if wedon't have oil, then we can't keep
making cars and fertilizer and pesticides andairports and hospitals and all that kind of

(23:32):
good stuff. Right well when andsol is not going to solve anything because
wind in solar only generates electricity.They make no products whatsoever. We're a
materialistic society and all the products thatwe get come from the oil derivatives.
You know, win in solar canmake electricity oil, it can't replace oil

(23:52):
because oil is never used to makeelectricity. Oil is useless. It's black
tar unless you can beat it andeat it and crack it and do all
the crazy things to do in therefinery and get the derivatives that makes the
products in our daily lives. Youknow, carry the world populated from one
day billion in less than two hundredyears, not because of oil, but

(24:14):
because of the products. We nowhave a medical system, We got a
hospital system, we have you know, transportation, we at airports and you
know, all this stuff didn't existbefore eighteen hundreds, and you want wind
and solar, Well, electricity cameafter oil. The light bulb was made
with oil, and we got alot of ways to generate electricity. We

(24:37):
got wind, solar, cold,natural gas, nuclear, hydro. All
six of those ways of generating electricitycame after oil. Because all the computers,
the wiring, insulation, all mechanicalequipment behind the scenes that you don't
see is made from oil derivatives.Wind and solar make nothing. They can't

(25:02):
make tires, they can't make asshole, can't make any medications. You know,
hospitals would disappear. Before the eighteenhundreds, we had no electricity,
we had no oil. Also,well, Alexander Graham Bell's phone was made
by oil. Everything that we thinkabout in our modern world. Well,
Ron, you're painting a very miserablepicture for the fred Flintstones of one hundred

(25:23):
years from now right? What came? Is there any There's nothing we could
do, is there? Well,there's a lot of things we can do.
We can obviously focus on, youknow, conservation and continue improved efficiencies
because just because we have it,we don't want to use it, throw
it away, And instead of developingwind and solar, which generates only electricity.

(25:45):
We really should focus on is therea substitute for oil? Trevor I
was interviewed on New York TV stationa couple of weeks ago, and the
first question to me was, hey, wrong, we understand your pro oil.
I said, whoa whoam definitely proon pro the products we get from
oil, and that's the materialistic societywe have today, and we have to

(26:07):
focus on can we find a substitutethat's going to keep up the supply chain
of all the products you know whatis so generally electricity, but also think
about the fact that everything that needselectricity, the iPhone, the computer,
you know, your washing machine,everything needs electricity is also made from oil.

(26:32):
So if you get rid of oil, there'll be no iPhones, there'll
be no computers in the future,there'll be no data centers, and this
conversation would come to an end becausethere'll be no communication systems. And yeah,
it gets pretty brutal. So wewant to really focus on preserving what
we have as long as possible,you know, for our grandkids and their
grandkids, because like say, theEarth has been around four billion years and

(26:56):
we've an't have been around well that'sdebatable, but I'll go ahead and let
you say that. Go ahead.You know, the humans have been around
only really, you know, fivehundred maybe a thousand years, you know,
from the caveman. But the lastcouple hundred years have been much much
different because of the products we have, and we just become amazed at that

(27:18):
product that we're Like I said,it's a materialistic society, and there is
a major difference between electricity and products. And when people talk about wind and
solar energies that replaced fossil fuels,it can't because they do different things.
And there's got to be conversations.That's the one thing that is missing from
society. There's got to be conversations. And when you have wind and solar

(27:44):
for electricity, and then it's onthe end their mid electricity because we're shutting
down all the electricity. It's continuousand uninterruptible coal, natural gas, nuclear,
and we're replacing it with wind andsolar. Well, Kerry, if
you're on the operating table, youdon't want the sun disappear behind the clouds,

(28:07):
right Well, if somebody asks me, Trevor, are you pro oil,
I'd be like, yeah, I'mpro pausing my TV and I'm pro
going to the refrigerator and looking atthe things that are nicely chilled in there.
I mean, I don't think theyunderstand when they you said that New
York TV station to ask you that, right as they're literally everything around them,
the camera, everything is from thepetroleum industry. I don't think it.

(28:33):
And when you have the people shuttingdown, you know, the all
the protesters out there against big oil, as they always say, I don't
think they realize that even their clothingcomes from it exactly. And like I
say, I try and say I'mpro products. I there's another substitute.
Hey, I'm all for it.But the situation is that people don't like

(28:56):
the oil. If you don't likethe oil, will stop using the producks,
right, they'll go away. Andyou say we're materialistic, and that's
not really a put down because that'sthe only thing that we know. I
mean, we grew up with this. I was born in a hospital,
taking home in a car. Asa kid, I watched Captain Kangaroo on
a TV right, Right, Butwhen you think about it, like say,

(29:18):
there's there's no need for oil.It doesn't do anything. No one
uses that black car. But ifyou want to, you know, reduce
the use of fuel, we'll shutdown the airports. Stop using your cars.
You know, people say, well, I'm gonna use a Tesla,
Well, Turgo, the Tesla isone hundred percent made with the oil.
All the tires, the installation,the upholstery, all the components, all

(29:42):
the mining to get the materials tomake the battery, I mean everything is
It's one hundred percent oil made.And yeah, if you don't like big
oil, well just stop using theproducts. I don't put them out of
business. It will is energy consultantRon Stein, founder at PTS Advance.

(30:02):
Ron you right here that Penn Stateresearch shows less than fifty years worth of
oil in the proven reserves, ninetyseven years worth in the unproven. You
said, China, the biggest userof coal, has about thirty five years
of coal left. And I didhear you say, possibly find something to
replace it. Is there anything evenon the drawing board that they found that
could be replace the petroleum industry.We've had two hundred years to find that

(30:29):
replacement and been unable to do it. Right now, are politicians or convinced
that wind and solar is going toreplace crude oil. But you and I
know that that can happen because theydo different things, and yeah, there's
got to be conversations. Excuse mefor interrupting, But for wind and solar,
as you've taught me, we haveto have the petroleum industry to even
make the wind turbines exactly, Imean the wind turbines, everything, all

(30:53):
the components, and you know,using merchant ships to move it around.
They say, you know, rightnow, we got twenty thousand commercial jets
and fifty thousand military jets and fiftythousand merchant ships. They didn't exist two
hundred years ago. And we cangrow food in any country and move it
to another country. That'll go away, you know, when the pesticides are

(31:15):
not there and the fertilizers are notthere, and the way to transport it's
not there. So we've got agood life. It's based on oil unless
we can replace it to keep thesupply chain of products flowing. We want
to focus on preserving as much aswe can as long as we can.
It almost sounds like a dystopian movietrailer in a world where there's only a

(31:40):
million barrels of oil left, right, But you're talking about this could be
in one hundred years unless some ofthe unproven reserves you know, spout out
like jag Klampitts did or something.Right. Well, it's interesting. We
have a couple of presidential debates comingup in June and September, one by
CNN and one by ABC, andI've drafted and opt dead it's basically energy

(32:02):
literacy questions for the presidential debate.The things we're talking about today. I
would like to present these open endedquestions to the candidates. They can do
all the research they want. Iwould like an intelligent response. You know,
what's the backup plan? And likesay, there is a difference between
electricity and products, and right nowthe total confusion among our policy makers.

(32:27):
They say, well, when insolar energy has replaced fossil fuel energy,
we can't get down to the specifics. They do different things, and they
say, you know, co naturalgas they produce continuous, uninterruptable electricity.
Wind and solar provides occasional electricity.In fact, wind and solar don't work

(32:49):
most of the time, depending onthe weather. And if you're on the
operating table, you should don't wantthe lights to go out. When we
talk about unproven reserves. We're noteven out there drilling anymore to find out.
They're cutting out the permits and allof that. So we would have
to really move quickly, I guessfifty years from now if it really did
start to dwindle. Well, you'reright, I mean, you know,

(33:13):
fracking was a way of going aftersome you know, unproven reserves, but
it's expensive. But when you talkabout the methods to go after unproven reserve,
there's probably a lot more oil onthe earth than we know, but
it's going to be limited to thewealthy countries only because you know, there's
eight billion people on this earth,and it's shocking that eighty percent and that's

(33:37):
more than six billion people. They'reliving on less than ten dollars a day.
So the wealthy countries can go afterit. You know, we have
you know, we want to beable to buy evs. Well, people
in these developing countries they're living onless than ten dollars a day. They
may never own a vehicle, andlike I say, if we have to

(33:58):
go deeper and deeper with more expensivetechnology to get more and more oil,
it's going to be expensive and they'renot going to be part of the game
it's going to be, they'll beexcluded. So it's only both the countries
that are pursuing this, this dream, and it's it's causing electricity price to
go up, causing fuel price togo up, and almost is populations exploding.

(34:22):
It's yeah, it's really tough onthe people that are not as fortunately
financially endowed to take it on.They're probably happier than we are. My
mom and dad went on mission tripto Africa in some of the poorest areas
and they said they just couldn't bleedthe joy in their face and in their

(34:43):
lives and all of that. Buthey, I'm pretty happy with have an
air conditioning and a refrigerator. Iwanted to keep rolling ron your presidential debate
question release that you talked about.Is that Is that out there yet?
Are you still working on it?No, it's a draft format I have.
I'm an author of all inn Thison America Outlive News, and my
articles go out every Monday, andI'm working with them to find out what's

(35:07):
the timing for these to go outbecause a normally I want them to go
out. I want them to goout and have every family talk about these
questions at the family dinner table.There's got to be conversations, and I
would like the candidates, you know, Biden and Trump to you know,

(35:27):
have their team research to answer.I would like an intelligent answer to these
questions. And it's things that we'vebeen talking about today, and it's got
to be you know, conversations.I don't want to surprise them with a
question that can make them look bad. I would like an intelligent question because
you know, everything goes down hellfrom there. And if they have an

(35:49):
intelligent response, hopefully everybody that reportsto them will you know, start picking
up too. But there's got tobe a conversation because you know, you
can't keep taking out of the earthand expected result. You know, for
our lifespan it's great, but youknow, our grandkids, their kids,
it's going to start getting a littlebit tougher, and there won't be any

(36:13):
ancestry dot Com for them to lookup on the computer. Whether we couldn't
have it. Ron. You're abaseball fan. You a baseball fan?
Yes, should Pete Roseby in theHall of Fame? I think you should.
All right, everybody's saying yes tothis. I have candidate Steve Garvey
on tomorrow. I'm going to askhim. Hey, Ron, thank you

(36:34):
for all the info you provide myshow. When you put it out,
I always relay it out to thelisteners. Is there anywhere to contact follow
read you point him in the direction, sir. The best thing you can
google my name Ronald Stein, energyconsultant. You know, click on that
America out loud news. Say thata little slower, America outlawed news.

(36:55):
Is that what you just said?America out loud, out loud news.
Okay, America out loud news.Well, Ron, thank you, sir.
We look forward to having you backon and go. Pete Rose,
fantastic, Okay, trefor have agreat day, you too, man Ron
Stein, Ladies and gentlemen, thisis the Trevor Terry Show on the Valley's

(37:15):
Power Talk. Commress and Kevin Conleyposting that politicos reporting Ka Kamala Harris has
told friends she's going to return toCalifornia to run for governor Biden loses.
That's just what you want to saygoing into an election that could be the
only possible way our political leadership couldget worse. I didn't know why I

(37:35):
pulled Kamala and Greta. They punkedKamala as they were. Greta Thumberg on
the phone right, I had iton the audio board today. Did he
know why I pulled it over?Now? I know with this reporter here
that she's governor Kamala. Harris alsoterrified of what Trump is doing. Even
can't sleep or eat when I seehim on TV. That terrible meeting in

(37:57):
the UN building in September, Ihad not. I saw him in the
corridor. I shouted to him tosign the Paris climates agreement. He came
over. He said softly to me, you will never achieve the goal.
So Greta, and can you continues? You have the ability to see what

(38:20):
is possible in a way that manydo not. And there will be people
who are going to work against theprogress. That is always the case,
Kamala talking to a fake. Ihope that you will not. So.
Greta has a recorder always with herand when it happens in macket, yes,
and it's it was the greatest recordingnow and so if you would like

(38:45):
to get it, we can provideit. Maybe this recorder can help you
in my side, I can,I can if I gainst this turblement.
I hope that you will not likeOkay, it would be cool to support

(39:08):
to you in your campaign. Whatis the best way to do it?
The best way to do it wouldbe to talk about my climate plan.
You know what I can do isI can ask my my policy team to
follow up with you with more detailon what exactly would be helpful and what

(39:29):
is something that you would like todo. Wow, totally got pulled by
the Grenit Thumberg. She's not thesmartest cookie in the old cookie jar?
Is she? Which local valley congressmanshould be a huge story today and it's
not a huge story today. It'sregarding police law enforcement. Next,
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