Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Trump administration inherited that they had to clean up again.
I'll give it to the analogy of hey, go down
there in the basement and clean out that basement. It's
been flooded with eight feet of water. There's eight alligators,
and here's a roll of paper towels. Go get them.
The House Committee on Homeland Security held a hearing talking
about how the NGOs. You hear that word, non governmental organizations,
(00:26):
they said. They testified about the unaccompanied children being handed
over to these non governmental organizations right even down at
the border. The House Committee on Homeland Security said they
would pass these kids off to poorly vetted sponsors. That's
how we have three hundred thousand children unaccounted for. They
(00:49):
spoke about a specific organization funded ninety seven percent by
the federal government. In the year twenty twenty, they made
fifty two million dollars in the government. In twenty twenty one,
that went up to six hundred million dollars. For fifty
two million to six hundred million. He ain't seen none yet.
(01:13):
Twenty twenty two, they reported one point one eight billion billion,
but ninety seven percent of that coming from the federal
government and Congress and Michael guests Republican of Mississippi, and
the CEO salary has doubled, has it not oughta? Has
(01:34):
it not? Yes? Congress Center has. So we got all
that money being used by the federal government. Again, they
don't create it, they take it from us. Well, I'm
sure it was to protect those three hundred thousand kids, right.
They asked one of the non governmental organization's representatives, her
(01:56):
name was Miss Hopper. Congress and Eli Crane from Arizona
said what safeguards are put in place to protect these
these children? The NNGL, Lady Hopper responded that there were
post placement welfare checks, and they asked, okay, what were
the post placement before we put these kids there? What
were these welfare checks that y'all did? It was two
(02:20):
phone calls and if the sponsor didn't answer, the case
was no longer followed up on ring ring, We're calling
and see how the kids are doing, ring ring, nothing,
call back, ring ring ring. They didn't answer, Well, don't
follow up on it. Let's all per testified about a
notice of concern hotline. Okay, good, so here, kids, you're
(02:42):
gonna go with your is it uncle a stepma, uncle,
a friend? Of family. Oh you called him uncle? Okay, well,
well here you go, and here's a note, here's a note,
here's a package. And if anything happens, you call this
hotline if you're concerned about anything. Sweetie, Okay, she doesn't
understand me. Are there any translators? There's not audios? Bye bye.
(03:05):
So these kids, I'm assuming they were given the number.
I don't know if they were or not. From August
to twenty twenty three to January of twenty twenty five,
how many phone calls came in at the Notice of
Concern hotline that went unanswered? This came out at the
House Committee on Homeland Security hearing just held a few
(03:27):
days ago. Sixty five thousand calls went un answered. I'll
tell you the one that got me was when the
Congressman Crane of Arizona asked about the or from Mississippi.
He said, what kind of ease could people sponsor a child?
(03:50):
And Miss Hopper, with a non governmental organization, stated that
it was actually harder to adopt a dog. It required
more paperwork from her pet shelter than was required a
sponsor a child. So that's shocker. What number two here
on this story? Are you ready for socker number three.
Congress and Crate asked how many staffers were signed by
(04:10):
the Biden administration. The answer the cause of the hotline.
Misshopper responded one. So we had a non governmental organization
get one point whatever what eight one point three billion
dollars and we had one phone operator. Maybe that's why
(04:32):
my sixty five thousand calls went unanswered. We're talking about
three hundred thousand kids. You know, we do amber alerts
when they're lost. On Walmart, there's signs up there missing kids.
They used to be on milk cartons. You know, we
see it on social media, missing when a kid's missing.
But I guess now I can say, well, these are
(04:55):
the Republicans holding these committee meetings. It was a Biden
administration that allowed this to happen, so I can I guess.
I'm going to assume that the majority of Democrats, just
based on lack of reaction, don't care about missing kids.
If the skin pigmentation is different, or their country of
origins different, you don't care. You don't care where they are,
you don't care if they're being traffic, you don't care.
(05:15):
If they're working on a weed farm over on the coast.
That's not happening. I know, I'm just making up examples.
They could happen. This is one of the greatest failures
in American history. Three thousand missing kids, thirty missing kids,
three missing kids. We're talking three hundred thousand missing kids.
(05:39):
What's news I'm talking about, hey man, we get a
lot of illegal alien tax collection eight point five billion
here in the state, at least that's what they estimate.
Only time I know somebody that hadn't lied Federation American
Immigration Reform that you know, they estimated it's three billion.
But let's go ahead and take your eight billion. As
Ira Melman when he was on from Fair he said,
(06:00):
let's go ahead and take his eight billion. It costs
thirty two billion dollars a year for illegals in the
state of California. That's kind of a deficit fixture real quick,
isn't it.
Speaker 2 (06:12):
Yeah, I mean there are all these mixed status families
eight nine billion dollars in tax collection in California every
year from undoucs eight and a half billion that we
received just at the state level of taxes. That was
the last Pew estimate. So not insignificant backbone, im it's
half of our agriculture work. You'd care about farmers and ranchers,
you know that's what you're like, your number one go
(06:34):
to commitment, and you sure as hell care should care
about their workers.
Speaker 1 (06:38):
That's true, because it's true. I've heard numbers of twenty
six percent. Newsom the governor Dippy Doo says forty one
percent of construction work in the state of California. Maybe
he meant La. Maybe that's the twenty six percent might
have been across the state. Maybe Newsom here quoting forty
one percent construction workers our illegal aliens.
Speaker 2 (07:02):
For our construction workers. Texas and California have a highest
percentage of their construction workers that would fill into that category.
How the hell do we rebuild Alta, Dina and Palisades.
We're gonna need a peak next year. We asked me
about seventy thousand workers.
Speaker 1 (07:16):
I don't know how the Romans build the colle seven
eight years, Gavin, go watch a documentary. Maybe I don't
know what.
Speaker 2 (07:22):
The work force ain't gonna happen. You're struggling yere. You
imagine it peak there. So I think there's to be
a pathway for those folks as we secure the border,
and we own that issue. Do you feel that they're
taking American jobs? Not? Not in Tillaria County, not when
on a Ventura County.
Speaker 1 (07:39):
They don't look like you, do they.
Speaker 2 (07:40):
I don't know many people that want a job out
there in those packing facilities. I don't see many people
look like me. I've been at those jobs. I just don't.
Speaker 1 (07:49):
You just don't. You don't see somebody walk in to
get a packing facility job that has on nice slacks
and a cool shirt and a chain, and his hair's
all done nice, and he smells good and he got
out of a Bentley. No, you don't normally see that.
You're right, Gavin, You are right.
Speaker 2 (08:03):
I guess maybe there's some exceptions. I haven't seen the
evidence of that.
Speaker 3 (08:07):
No.
Speaker 1 (08:07):
But when it comes down to the border, I haven't
been there in a long time, long time, nineteen hundreds,
basically hadn't been there that one, So I'm not an
expert on it.
Speaker 2 (08:19):
Now.
Speaker 1 (08:20):
There are two people I think that are highly experts
on the border. One of those is doctor Victor Davis Hansen,
and the other is Hunter.
Speaker 4 (08:27):
Biden said about illegal immigration, you, how do you think
your hotel room gets cleaned? How do you think you
got food on your table? Who do you think washes
your dishes?
Speaker 1 (08:37):
Easy, easy, base head, They'll peak, They'll peak. Tom the
hammer Homan responded to the base head, I don't.
Speaker 5 (08:49):
Really care what the former first drug addic thinks. I
just thank God every morning I wake up. We got
President Trump in the Oval office. And because of President Trump,
in seven weeks were we got the most secure board
in this nation's history. And now we're arresting public safety
trusts and national security trusts every day across this country.
We've already wrestled three times a number of criminals that
(09:09):
Biden did do the same time frame. And President Trump
has committed Touisco to prioritize sanctuary cities.
Speaker 1 (09:16):
Yeah. I don't know if you heard about more judicial
coups here, But a judge ordered the release of the
MS thirteen gang member that was trafficking humans to Tennessee.
That guy Obrego Garcia the only illegal alien to get
a US congressman to come down and have a margarita
with him. Well, a second judge appointed by Obama immediately
(09:40):
blocked Ice from detaining him. So it's the two judge combo.
I'm releasing him. Another judge, you can't arrest him, since
win can judges tell law enforcement, Hey, you can't arrest
this person. Nah, guys, they're coming in. As Homan said,
they're gonna flood this, flood the zone.
Speaker 5 (10:01):
In California, Illinois and New York. I said that during
a press commerce the other day. We're going to flood
the zone. We're going to send hundreds of additional ice
agency these cities. If they don't want to help us
and get the bad guy in the county jail, then
we're gonna flood the neighborhoods until we find that guy.
We're gonna flood work sites until we find that guy.
Because we're going to make this country safe again. President
(10:21):
Trump was elected for that purpose and we're going to
keep that promise from President Trump.
Speaker 1 (10:25):
That's right. We voted for this. America voted for this.
There's even Democrats now in all the major polling across
this country that did not vote for Trump but are
down with what's happening with deportations. Yes they are. We
go back to the awful days of President Auto pen
and man, if they've just done the existing laws from
(10:48):
the start, had no surge, and that's intentional we know
that one hundred percent intentional, so that you know, you
could then have you know, politicians like President County Supervisor
Leugie Chavez say we need a secure party. Are we
need it because tens of million serves, and then we
need to make a yellow big road to citizenship. At
least Democrats are honest about their endgame, unlike Congress and
(11:10):
Valadeo with his Dignity Act hiding behind it. Yeah, at
least the Democrats are saying, yes, we want to get
a yellow big road to citizenship. You know, you got
those Republicans that come out like like Valadeo did with
the Florida Congresswoman Salas are with the Dignity Act. It's
the same thing former Congressman John Duarte was behind.
Speaker 2 (11:35):
No.
Speaker 1 (11:35):
But yeah, we'll always have the Chamber of Commerce type Republicans.
That Dignity Act asylum, that's what it is. The Dreamers
also a seven year earned legal Status program allows the
legals to living worker legally. They promised that, and I'm
going to read from this Dignity Act they said, most
(11:57):
undocumented individuals are not seeking citizensh at all costs. You
know what, well, we don't need people here that don't
want to be in the melting pot. So they admitted
the problem right there in the first line. They're not
smart people. They're really not come in the proper way.
It's not difficult. We can even go down to simplifying
(12:18):
it as have manners, have manners.
Speaker 5 (12:23):
You have you and ped an ice officer, you're going
to be prosecuted. You throw a stone and an ice vehicle,
they're gonna get out of the car, they're going to
chase you down, they're going to arrest you. They can
be prosecuted. President Trump signed out a truth post and
an actually the other day, zero tolerance. You step over
the line, you be prosecuted. And Pam Bindy has already
(12:43):
talked to you. Every US attorney across this country. They're
not going to decline that prosecution. So you step over
the line, you're going to jail.
Speaker 1 (12:50):
You're going in jail, and you might go to Alligator
Altatraz on the way home before you get to your
home country. Again, really, you're gonna complain that your sandwich
isn't toasted at Alligator Alley.
Speaker 6 (13:03):
So they're making these claims and they're saying, oh, they're
not they're not fed. Well, well, First of all, they're
fed the same that the staff is fed. You know,
you go to like a and it's not a deportation
processing center, so it is different. But like in Florida,
think the prisoners get the same meals as the guards. No,
of course not, it's different. This is everyone's the same there.
(13:24):
And they were mad that the ham sandwiches weren't toasted.
Excuse me, I mean, give me a break.
Speaker 1 (13:32):
Excuse me. Wow, it's going to Ron de Santus of Florida.
Hey listen, here's a message. Citizenship something to be earned.
That's not a right.
Speaker 7 (13:43):
This is the Trevor carry Show on the Valley's Power Talk.
Speaker 1 (13:47):
AI bracelet that records everything you say. Interesting, Right, I
decide to go on a date again or get involved
with a woman. I it's going to be on a
cruise ship in my eighties. You'll have to be in
her sixties. But I'm gonna wear a body Cam's right,
at least the first year. I don't trust a female
(14:08):
clam man, Not all of you, just most of you.
But yeah, I guess I wouldn't need my bodycam if
I had the AI bracelet. Less conspicuous than a body cam, right,
Google glasses, and I don't only leave those on all
the time. But yeah, I guess I could see this
the Ai Bracelet. No, I did not say that. You're
not telling the truth? Are you calling me a liar?
(14:30):
You said it? I didn't say that. All right, let's review.
Let's rewind back to July seventeenth at eleven am when
you stated I said that. Ready, listen, huh he told you. See,
I tell you that could cure a lot of problems
in life, can't it, Ai Bracelet? Recording everything in public,
(14:54):
you don't have to, I know, from certain states to
certain states. It depends on what state you are. Like
if I were in Indiana and director Ryan Nigel was
in California and I from I'm just picking states here.
If the law in Indiana was that you don't have
to tell Ryan you're recording, I could record anything he
says legally. But there's some states where you cannot do that.
(15:19):
So I wonder what in public though? You can record
anything in public? A lot of people find that out.
This guy's out here on the sidewalk filming our business
and the police pull up. Well, he's on the sidewalk.
Can he can film whatever he wants to film. So, yeah,
that's I don't know. I wouldn't want to be around somebody.
If I knew, I mean everything, it'd be kind of weird,
(15:41):
wouldn't it. Yeah, But if they didn't know it, then
I'd go back and all right, thanks, Yeah, oh listen anytime,
feel free to call. I'm a listening here. Yeah, oh
you're I know you're going through a whole lot. Yes,
I'm glad I could be here. Then you go and
type in the five incriminating things they confess to you.
(16:05):
You could become epstein man start blackmailing people. This is
good news. Now, that's good news. A case out of
the UK. It's one of the deadliest forms of brain
cancer blibo blibo op LUs toma g l I O
(16:29):
B l A S T O M A. I'm gonna
try to pronounce it again. It's a bad kind of
brain cancer. And they had a story out of the
UK about this dude named Ben back in twenty twenty two.
He was forty years old, he was healthy, living fine,
then found out he just had a few months to
live and they said, do you want to try an
experimental new treatment blibol los toma. That's how I just
(16:53):
looked at it again. Then it jumped out at me.
That sounds like the proper way to pronunciate that. But
he got his true even at the National Hospital for
Neurology and Neurosurgery in London, and they did a targeted
immunotherapy and it helped boost his immune system to fight
the cancer. And what these doctors are saying that it
worked by preventing the cancer cells from suppressing the immune system.
(17:17):
It allowed the body to use its own defenses to
attack and destroy the tumor. The doctor explained the unusual
nature of this remarkable recovery. He said, very unusual to
have a clear scam with lyle blastoma, especially when this
patient been forty years old in twenty twenty two, didn't
(17:37):
have any of the follow up surgery they had planned
to remove all the tumor. So give people with this,
if you're diagnosed with this, it's some hope. Interesting. I
wonder how they can maybe apply that to other cancers.
I know they were talking about with the mr NA injection,
how it can suppress the immune system. Her doctors say
(17:58):
that as well. But good news right there. Maybe one
day imagine if we had a well I hope it's not.
During Trump, Well, I do hope it is. But you know,
because Democrats would say, you know, he hates oncology departments. Yeah,
they couldn't, would they. Do you think if Trump said
(18:18):
I was sitting down with Eric and Don Junior and
RFK Junior and we came up with this new thing
and we cure cancer. Man Elon Musk was in there
as well via video. We didn't want him in the
room and they cure cancer. Do you think they would
congratulate him or say thank you? Probably not.
Speaker 7 (18:38):
This is the Trevor Kerry Show on the Valley's Power Talk.
Speaker 1 (18:43):
I mean, I was ten, eleven years old when I
got my my Sears Roebuck and Company black skates, my
own skates, didn't have to rent them anymore. Even then,
I knew that the you know, the fifteen year olds
that didn't have the driver's license out there so or
even older sometimes you know, the guys with the goodie
(19:05):
cones feather in their hair, the old guys at the
skating rink. That's the only place they were cool at.
And it'd be go be cool around younger kids. I
could read through that at eleven. But yes, but you
wouldn't talk. The rest of the time. You'd hang out
with your friends, she'd be with her friends. You'd do
some waving. Gotta love the fifth grade dates. That's actually
(19:28):
still I still talk to her. She's happily married with
kids and all that in Texas. But we've stayed in touch,
stayed in touch over the years. We're going to tomorrow,
we're gonna be talking with the Blackshaw Merchant Association president
aj rass Omni and aj if I'm mispronouncing your name,
and he's like, you'll tell me tomorrow. He's going to
(19:49):
be on the air. He's running for city council as well.
He's he's tired of the homeless situation, as many are
your Central Valley dot comcept business owners along black Stuff
had enough with the vagrants at homeless causing problems. Now
they've taken it to the city of Fresno to force
officials to make a change. It's time to get the
(20:12):
torches and the pitchforks and carry around sticks with us
on our shoulders. Time for some medievil protesting in Sacramento.
Speaker 2 (20:21):
Maybe we've done good work to support our social service
safety net broadly, but not with a focus, not with
an intentional strategy, with a real, comprehensive plan that has
now changed. We have a plan, we're executing on that plan,
and we're supporting that pan, not with rhetoric, not with
(20:44):
press releases or press conferences, but with real money.
Speaker 1 (20:47):
Yeah, it didn't happen, and that real No, the money happened,
but fixing the problem didn't happen. Let's go back and
look at the records and see where we spent it,
to see where we spent wrong. Next time we have
an extra twenty three billion dollars, we spend correctly. Because
Newsom said we now have a plan, Well, they didn't
keep any records of that twenty three billion dollars. The
owner of Shobu Japanese cuisine, Jerry Yang, was quoted in
(21:10):
this article, and I read he said, I'm thinking about moving.
In fact, I'm thinking about sutting down my business because
there's only so much I can take. He said, this
is my patio right here. At night, after we close,
they'll come up. They'll camp there when I get here.
I got to chase them a way. Mister Yang said,
I came from a very poor background. I came out
as a refugee from Thailand. I know what it's like
(21:31):
to be poor, to be hungry, but our politicians need
to open their eyes and really address these issues. It's
just affecting the business owners on the street. Well, mister Yang,
six years ago, Mayor Dyer told us it's going to
look different in six months, might take a year.
Speaker 3 (21:48):
My truth is you can pick up trash all day,
but if there's somebody behind you throwing trash, we're going
to be spending on a wheel. So it's going to
be a big education component of volunteer effort. There'll be
an enforcement effort, and then certainly we're going to do
our part to collectively clean this city up and work
with other agencies. So I'm one hundred percent confident when
you look back at Fresno in six months to one year,
(22:12):
you're going to see a completely different city, a completely
different city.
Speaker 1 (22:17):
Well, let's go look and see what the city is
saying to the mayor now that we're six years in
the future. The Blacks Owned Merchant Association president aj Roussomny
said the City of Fresno is not helping business owners.
He said, and I read, he said, I read that
the city passed an ordinance called blighted buildings. That means
if you have a building it's all boarded up and
that's in that entire district, they're going to give a
(22:39):
notice of the property owner to fix it. He said.
Businesses are boarding up and moving out to avoid being
broken into. Mistersomny said the tenant there at Jebs Blueberry
has been broken in. The business was broken in on
a regular basis. So they moved to Clovis and they're
very happy in Clovis. He said. Enough victim that fell
(23:00):
victim to break ins is All Access out of Automotive
said eleven cars are vandalized. All the windows are broken.
The only thing he got out of them was whatever
was in the cup holders in the spare change. He said.
It costs about seven thousand dollars to replace and they
got spare change in some cup holders of cars. This
(23:22):
owner of All Access Automotive Jevon but BUZZNOONI, He said,
the homeless population needs real help, not handouts. Yeah, we
need to round them up, round them up, yes, I
use that word round them up. Put them in a pin. Yes,
I use that word round them up, put them in
a pin. That pen is a sheriff Joe R. Pyo
(23:44):
kind of Camp a Llah minus alligators, you know, alligator Alcatraz,
something like that. You're just obeying the law. We told you,
you're not doing it. You don't want to go along
with the rules of society like the rest of us do.
We all have our issues, we all have our problems.
And the thing about it is there are some places
(24:04):
where they can get out of that and they don't.
It's a lifestyle. I know it. I it was pre covid. Yeah,
oh it was. I'm trying to think of the girl
that worked here. Yeah, it was way pre covid because
she found the lost dog in our back parking lot.
This is Mayo, Katie Mayo. When she worked here, she
(24:27):
found a dog back there and she didn't know what
to do with the puppy. So it took it down
the city, you know, to the to the pound, you know,
turn the dog in. Here's a loose dog we found
running around. Maybe the owner will come down here and
see if it's been found. And when this this transient guy,
I forgot his name. I know his dad worked on
race cars in Texas. I had a conversation with him once.
(24:51):
But now here it is Okay, so that was pre COVID. Yeah,
we're probably talking five six years. I still recognize him.
Speaker 2 (24:57):
He's back.
Speaker 1 (24:58):
We had to call security on a few times because
he brings a whole big old caravan of all his stuff,
campsit out. You've seen that guy. He hangs out with
the black hair lady that has the limp when she walks. See,
we know him like that. It's a lifestyle, So that's
they they don't want the help, they don't want to
(25:21):
have to well be responsible, let's be real. And then
it develops into a lifestyle that's even harder to keep
going than it is to like, you know, pay your
bills and you know, have a roof over your head
to work. I've seen more recently more able body white
males at here at Sewan forty one, Like young guys
(25:44):
that are twenty five could be working at auto parts
store or somewhere. Have a job somewhere. I just said
autoparts because my nephew Hayden back in Detroit just got
a job in an autoparts store. So there are jobs
out there, but there's no way in the condition that
they're in that they're ever gonna they can fill on
an application, their memory shot from all the drugs. We
(26:08):
see it. It's just the head nod at the corner
where the God bless you to help me, and their
heads nodding out. I even see them sometimes texting on
their phone. I'm thinking, well, they got it. They're keeping
something going. I guess to be able to do that.
So if they can, I got to pay your monthly bill.
Maybe no free free phones, so they just keep working. Okay,
(26:30):
Well we can't call them Obama phones anymore because he's
in prison. I mean, he's not the president anymore. Rossomni
ended here. He said, we need to have safety, and
safety's going to start by removing the homeless people from
the street. Yes, that's exactly that's exactly what we need
to do.
Speaker 2 (26:47):
At this We got to meet this moment. This issue
is a crisis. It's a state of emergency. People are
dying on the streets and sidewalks. There's no compassion stepping
over people on the streets and sidewalks. And we've got
on up to this in a way we have it
in the past. State of California with respect is nowhere
to be found on this issue.
Speaker 1 (27:06):
I well, thank you for your honesty. If the State
of California is nowhere to be found on this issue,
then I think what we need to do is go
knock on the door the person that runs the state. Oh,
that's right, Eason, he's in South He in South Carolina.
Speaker 2 (27:22):
You'll be the beneficiary here in Fresnewist city of County
eleven and a half million dollars of emergency grants that
are being distributed in real time, quite literally, in the
next few weeks, six hundred and fifty million dollars will
be distributed throughout the state of California.
Speaker 1 (27:37):
Community is going to work and small gonna work. We
could have take that, We could have taken that money
and paid the rent for a year. Here's what I
say we do with the strong out drug addicts that
are on our streets. You're going to say, well, it's
love and compassion to go kidnap them basically and put
(27:58):
them into a cell until they so over up to
save their lives. All right, that's probably the hard way
to do it. Here's the easy way. I don't know
if you've ever driven through Nevada and some of those
long stretches Nevada, Utah, way out there where there's nothing nothing.
We create Methville, coke Land, Heroine Heights, whatever you want
(28:21):
to call it. Government sponsored free drugs. We drive around
the streets. Let's just say Fresno, a big old city bus.
Get some of those EV buses that Biden got us
that don't work. We'll get them cranked up and get
them going with a loud speaker, free drugs. All you want,
(28:41):
board the bus and we take the bus up. They
get on the bus to their free drug place. It
is one of the highly guarded areas, big high changling
that you know, prison fences. It's all in. They got barracks,
sandwiches or air dropped with water once a day and
all the free drugs are dropped. Let them add let
(29:03):
them have it. You're going that's crazy, okay, But let's
just say that we did offer that and they accept
it and they're up there getting all their free drugs.
Think how suddenly, what would happen to our neighborhoods in
our streets. Think about it. I'm talking about overnight. It
would happen overnight. So it's either do that my plan,
(29:25):
or do the out of love. Yeah, a round them up.
I'm not gonna say arrest, round them up, sobered them
up against their will, Yes, against their will. We'll give
them one morning. If they're seen again on the streets,
police will bring them in and we sober them up.
(29:48):
And I'll bet you anything, we would have tears coming
down the face of hearing some of these people eight months,
a year and six months later telling their story of
how their life has changed. Thank you people of California
for saving me when I couldn't save myself. That's what
(30:09):
we need. So we'll talk to Minter Rassomny tomorrow. He's
running for city council, but before that, he's worried about
his business and his street here on Blackstone. So I
think we all need whether or not my neighborhood yet yet, yet, yet, yet,
yet they need our help and support. He joins us.
On the show. This time tomorrow around at four thirty.
(30:29):
He'll be here all right, this is the Trevor Cherry
Show on the Valley. He's our talk that what about
ol President Trump? And boy he had this comeback. He's like,
come on, man, I went to the White House. What
kind of question is that?
Speaker 8 (30:42):
I would frame the question like you got a chance
to go visit with the president. Man, what was that
experience like? It was amazing. It was awesome, And I
promise you I root for our president. You know, I
want our president to be successful, just like I want
I want my quarterback to be successful, and I want
my team to be successful.
Speaker 2 (30:59):
And it was.
Speaker 8 (31:00):
It was an amazing experience. You know, it's not often
you get invited and you get a chance to do
something like that. As a family, you know, we were there.
My daughter was there, Jim's daughters were there, My mom
and dad were there, my mom and President Trump. You know,
just seeing how he treated her was really meaningful.
Speaker 1 (31:17):
Money great when football coaches were asked questions and they
didn't have to say, why aren't you asking me that
about It was good to go see President Carter. It
was good to go see President Reagan. It was good
to go see President Bush. It was good to go
see President Clinton. You know, we didn't need to do that.
It's good to go see President Reagan. Was in a
controversy with the winner of the Super Bowl. We get
(31:37):
a phone call in the locker room from the President
of the United States. Today they're all asked, what was
that phone call? Like, how do you feel about your
fans thinking of you talking to the President of the
United States on the phone like that. Wait to set
them down, Harball, I got a one question quiz on
the Holocaust? Which of the two do you think describes
(32:02):
it most accurately? And again, this is from the National
Education Association. You think this one. The NEA will promote
the celebration of International Holocaust or Members Day by recognizing
more than twelve million victims of the Holocausts from different faith, ethnicities,
racist political beliefs, genders and gender identification, abilities, disabilities, and
(32:27):
other targeted characteristics. So the National Education Association said, you, moron,
that's how anti semitic they now are. Now, the Nazis
killed six million Jewish people. They did kill some Gypsies
and gays and religious leaders as well, but they persecuted
(32:48):
and killed millions of Jews. They're twenty twenty five handbook
for members forgot to mention that Hitler and the Nazis
had the actual thing a NEA. It's called the Final Solution.
It was to annihilate the Jews. This is the country's
largest teacher union. Omitting the mention of Jewish victims instead
(33:14):
refers to victims of the Holocaust from different faiths. Yeah,
you did have some Catholics killed, you did have some
Baptists and Lutherans. Yeah, but no, that wasn't the focus.
This is our nation's largest teacher union. And you wonder why,
you wonder why
Speaker 7 (33:35):
The assistant Trevor carry Show London Valley's Power Talk