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September 25, 2025 35 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
President Trump calling out the I guess we can say
do nothing in the United Nations right to their faces.
And you know what, that's what I voted for. How
about you, President Trump. He's talking about the escalator and
if you didn't see it, he was, you know, the
group of people walking and he let the first lady

(00:21):
go on, and then he gets on and they probably go, like,
I don't know, four feet up and then comes to
a stop. And while he's talking about if they weren't athletic,
you can knock you over with the balance there getting
on and off those things, especially the ones that don't
have stairs, you know, the moving ones that at airports
and kind of throw your equilibrium off a little bit.

(00:42):
And remember, Trump is what seventy eight years old, still amazing.
I even gave Joe Biden credit for traveling around the
world at his agent, coming back and doing an Easter
egg roll and being confused by the bunny. But President Trump,
the speed of Trump, how does he do it? Are
we gonna hear in the future and that he had

(01:05):
a JFK doctor or something?

Speaker 2 (01:07):
How does he do it?

Speaker 1 (01:09):
I don't know. Now, I know he has Air Force
one and it's easier and you lie on a bed
and have you know almonds and you know mocha ice
cream and a fresca brought to you. It's a little
easier travel, but it's still travel. And when I traveled
to Tennessee, and I'm worn out, and Trump's got quite
a few couple decades on me there, and I don't

(01:32):
know how he does it. I do have to say
at the RFK Junior at that release about autism, he
looked really tired, and how could you not be? But
he's now saying that he demanded an investigation into three
very sinister events that took place. You had Press Secretary
Levitt talking about how a reporter got to hold her

(01:55):
and said the volume for President Trump was way lower
at the United Nations. For the other speakers, teleprompter goes out,
escalator goes out, volume down. Are you starting to pick
up on what I'm throwing down, mister President?

Speaker 3 (02:12):
All I got from the United Nations was an escalator
that on the way up, stopped right in the middle.
If the first lady wasn't in great shape, she would
have fallen. But she's in great shape. We're both in
good shape. We both stood. And then a teleprompter that
didn't work. This is These are the two things I

(02:34):
got from the United Nations. A bad escalator and a
bad teleprompter.

Speaker 1 (02:39):
And he didn't know it too much. Yeah, he didn't
know at the time. Maybe his volume was lower than
eighty means, or somebody's up they're shouting. Press Secretary Levitt said,
if somebody did this intentionally, they need to be fired
and investigated immediately. The United Nations is saying that it
was a Trump videographer running up the escalator and then

(03:00):
running back down shut made an emergency shut off? When
does that ever happen? Never heard of that in my life.
I mean times as a kid, did your mom and
dad say stop running up and down? Get down here?
You know, an empty your place, a mall? You know
you run up the escalator and down the escalator. I've
done that. It never automatically shuts off. Maybe the I

(03:21):
don't know. The United Nations has a different protocol. But
only President Trump could have all that go wrong and
still make people laugh from around the world had.

Speaker 3 (03:32):
To do these things instead of the United Nations doing them,
And sadly, in all cases, the United Nations did not
even try to help.

Speaker 1 (03:44):
In any of them.

Speaker 3 (03:46):
I ended seven wars, dealt with the leaders of each
and every one of these countries, and never even received
a phone call from the United Nations offering to help
in finalizing the deal. For all I got from the
United Nations was an escalator that on the way up
stopped right in the middle.

Speaker 1 (04:05):
He kept talking about it. I loved the fact he
drilled on it. Let's go listen here to her.

Speaker 4 (04:11):
Well, there were some concerning reporting over the weekend from
the London Times that UN globalist staffers were basically plotting
to set up the President of the United States. And
first it was the escalator, then it was the teleprompter.
And then Katie Pavlich from town Hall, who we offered
a seat in the presspool to cover the president's historic

(04:32):
speech today, noticed that the audio inside of the room
was much lower and different for the President of the
United States than the previous speakers.

Speaker 1 (04:42):
Wow, okay, up to something, aren't they? President Trump said
right there at the UN that London wants to establish
sharia law, called out the Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan. Yeah,
they're talking about setting up sharia courts, not a state
court of law, but a court of faith. You just wait,
you just wait. You and Secretary General Antonio Guteris opened

(05:07):
the Assembly with a speech and he said, over and
over and over, the appreciation to the administration of President
Trump for stopping these conflicts around the world. This is
what the UN does. It's called a high level debate.
The world leaders get there and they're all given a voluntary,
you know, fifteen minute segment. You can get up there
and talk on the topic of your choosing. Imagine if

(05:29):
Kamala Kamala Harris had been up there. Oh boy, I
I'm gonna buy her book. And let me tell you
when I'm going to buy her book. In March of
next year, when it's a dollar in the Hillary Clinton
beIN just to have it around to give. You know, Oh,
I forgot their birthday. Oh this is a good joke, gift.

Speaker 2 (05:51):
Right.

Speaker 1 (05:52):
I find this book to her amusing how clueless they
are how to get Americans back. She was talking about
the answer she gave on the view during the campaign,
Why you know what would she do differently than Joe Biden.
She called it the pulling the pin on the hand
grenade moment, and it was imagine her on the world stage,

(06:14):
up there she had no idea. She pulled the pin
on a hand grenade. Then that that's what she's writing
in her book, and she's under she's under it because
she said, well, I couldn't. We couldn't run a black
woman and a gay man, homophobe, homophobe. She's talking about
Pete booda judge. Yeah, I wanted him, not Tim Walls.

(06:37):
She didn't even know it was a landslide. Does she
hear she is talking about.

Speaker 5 (06:41):
Sitting Vice president Enters. The race against a former president
of the United States has been running for ten years,
with one hundred and seven days to go, and it
ended up being the closest presidential election in the twenty
first century.

Speaker 1 (06:58):
Listener, she's still doing it, calling Trump communist dictator. Listen,
a tyrant.

Speaker 5 (07:03):
We used to compare the strength of our democracy to
communist dictators. That's what we're dealing with right now. Donald
Trump and these titans of industry are not speaking up.

Speaker 1 (07:16):
Yeah, Trump's a communist dictator. After she just said, here,
listen about that sort of domine the Democratic Party.

Speaker 6 (07:23):
What do you think of him and his candidacy and
what do you think of mainline democratic shyness and agitation?

Speaker 7 (07:30):
About the prospect that he's gonna win.

Speaker 5 (07:32):
Look, as far as I'm concerned, he's the Democratic nominee
and he should be supported.

Speaker 1 (07:35):
Ah wow, Kamala calls Donald Trump a communist dictator and
then turns around and endorses zoron mom DOMI a communist.
Ten minutes later that, my friends, is today's Democrat Party.

Speaker 6 (07:51):
This is the Trevor carry Show on the Valley's Power Talk.

Speaker 1 (07:57):
Post read I'm really good at predating things. During the campaign,
they had a hat, a best selling hat. Newsom was
right about everything. And I don't say that in a
bragg and docious way, but it's true. I've been right
about everything. Spencer Pratt, he's a TV star and he's
the guy that lived in the Palisades that had his
house burned down. He's been all over Newsome with it.

(08:19):
He replied back to Governor Bails above. So you're saying
you meant to burn twelve senior citizens alive with their
criminal negligence. Whoh, he hadn't been right about anything? Was
he right about the water supply or the or the
California budget or that we had money for illegal alien

(08:40):
healthcare or closing down the refineries or the nuclear power plants,
or heigh speed rail or his man made lockdown. The
list goes on. No no, no, no, no, no no no, making
up his own rules, keeping people out of school longer
than anybody else did. He is just a disgrace to

(09:04):
a llegal aliens detention center in Dallas. Ice killed. The
bullets were anti Ice on the casings inscripted. Huh where
were we heard of that? I wonder how they may
could have gotten that idea. Why wouldnybody be really mad
at Ice? I'm trying to black and brown community.

Speaker 8 (09:22):
It's here in this country, and so I'm deeply proud
that I had the privilege of signing the nation's first
bill to address the issue of masking, also to require
you have simple identification.

Speaker 7 (09:36):
To your point, I mean, if some guy jumped out
of an unmarked car in a van with a mask on,
tried to grab me, shoot him, I mean, by definition,
you're going to push back. And so these these are
not just authoritarian tendencies. These are authoritarian actions by an
authoritarian government.

Speaker 1 (09:53):
You saw what Stephen Miller said last week.

Speaker 7 (09:55):
This should put chills up. Find called the Democratic Party
an extremist organization, basically a terrorist organization saying he's going
after his enemies. You saw the tweet that Donald Trump
sent out True Social basically telling Pam BONDI I want
these three people taken out.

Speaker 1 (10:11):
Take it out. What is he? Trump's taking people out,
and he's rigging the election and we're not even going
to have an election in twenty twenty eight. He can
feel it in the core of his deep, dark devil soul.

Speaker 7 (10:23):
Raising money but also raising awareness around how Donald Trump
is trying to rig the midterm elections and how I
fear that we will not have an election in twenty
twenty eight. I really mean that and the core of
my soul unless we wake up to the code red
what's happening in this country, and we wake up soberly

(10:43):
to how serious this moment is.

Speaker 6 (10:48):
This is the Trebortary Show on The Valley's Power Talk.

Speaker 1 (10:53):
Republican gubernatorial candidate for the state of California, Steve Hilton,
I appreciate you stopping buying your busy day conference you
just held at the courthouse, bringing it up. Tell them
why you were here again.

Speaker 9 (11:06):
We've got to stop Gavin Youwson wasting two hundred and
fifty million dollars of our money on an election that
nobody asks for, nobody wants, and that will cheat and
rig the elections, disenfranchising millions of voters in California by
stealing House seats. I mean, it's just completely outrageous. It's illegal,
it's unconstitutional. Of course, if we get to the point

(11:26):
where it's really going to happen, we have to say no.

Speaker 2 (11:30):
One to fifty. We have to beat this thing. But
wouldn't it be great.

Speaker 9 (11:32):
If we could just stop it even happening so we
don't waste the money. That's why I was here to
announce that I'm filing a preliminary injunction to stop it
happening because it violates the Federal Constitution, the California Constitution,
the Equal Protection Clause, which is very straightforward. It's based
includes the principle of one person, one vote. In the courts,
that's been defined as meaning every vote should have equal value.

(11:58):
That in turn has been defined as requiring that electoral
districts should have this roughly the same population. How can
they do that if you don't have a census. That
is why drawing of the maps is connected to the
census in our constitution. That's what prop fifty undoes. There's
a reason that it's connected to the census, so you

(12:20):
can have up to date population estimates, so you can
make the districts roughly equal in size. If you don't
have the census, how can you make sure it's fair.
Especially now in California. Since the last time they did this,
millions of people have fled our state, driven out by
the high taxes, the insane regulations, the crime, the school standards, disaster,

(12:40):
all these things, and so millions of people have left.
You've had whole neighborhoods burned to the ground. They haven't
done a census, They've drawn up these maps in secret,
totally political. It's illegal and unconstitutional, and I'm trying to
stop it in the courts.

Speaker 1 (12:55):
I get to know you, it's voters get to know you.
A lot of interviews I do, or interviews as an
interview that's actually an interview for a job exactly. That's
what every thing you do is an interview for a job.
The voters are out there, and uh, they're listening. And
I've had Congress and Tom McClintock, Congress and David Valadale.
We've had some heated conversations where we disagreed. Congressman McClintock,

(13:18):
he's he welcomes it, he loves it. We come back in.
We're respectful to each other, and as Republicans we disagree,
but we agree with the right to life, liberty, and
the pursuit of happiness. Yeah, you would agree with that,
correct one. By the way, Tom mclintock's a great guy.
He endorsed me, big supporter.

Speaker 9 (13:33):
I heard that along with Kevin Kylie didn't Charlie Kirk
Charlie Cook on day one of my campaign. Actually, Charlie's
a good friend. Look, I still use the present tense.
I that's actually how I feel. I don't want to
get too sentimental about it, but you know, I was
there at the memorial on Sunday, and I feel that
Charlie's with me. I really do. Yeah, he's he's a force.

(13:54):
I feel his force. I feel a renewed force in
this campaign. Obviously devastated by the loss of so many
people are And I don't want to claim any special
connection there. There's many, many people much closer to Charlie
than I was, but we all felt it.

Speaker 2 (14:08):
Millions of people have.

Speaker 1 (14:08):
Felt we didn't even know Jay was something.

Speaker 9 (14:11):
You don't even know Charlie, and yet they feel something
strong has happened in our country, to them, to their communities,
to their faith, whatever it may be. I feel it too,
and I think it's it's gonna you know. Really, I
think that that vision, especially that Erica laid out, especially
in her Friday speech, they have no idea what's coming.

Speaker 2 (14:31):
They have no idea what they've unleashed with this.

Speaker 9 (14:33):
I often say, since then, one of the first pieces
of evidence of that will be when we flip California,
turn it red, make our steak golden again.

Speaker 1 (14:41):
Well, that that brings me talking about life and Charlie's
life to something important to me. I'm pro life, always
have been. I do have a few quotes, and that's
why I'm glad you're sitting across from me. One, you said,
the rest of US fifty seven percent legal abortion with
some restrictions. Republicans are a head of Democrats on every
issue except one. Abortion. You mentioned Governor Yankin made it

(15:03):
the focus predictable results. When will the GOP wake up
campaign on your strengths not weakness? Uh, I'll just ask you,
what what's your definition of life?

Speaker 9 (15:12):
Look, I think that my well, my first point is
that we got to win elections, and we've got to
be practical people. So my entire campaign is about what
we can actually do.

Speaker 1 (15:21):
But what's your defintion of life? I want to get
to know you right now. Unless voters that anyone.

Speaker 9 (15:29):
It's very clear that life begins at conception. I don't
think there's any real dispute about that. I mean, I
know some people might challenge that, but.

Speaker 1 (15:36):
So you believe in God and a soul and all
of all of that's involved with it.

Speaker 9 (15:40):
I don't think I do. But I don't think you
need to. I think it's a matter of fact. You
can just I mean, that's when life begins.

Speaker 1 (15:47):
Well, you hear people saying six weeks, fifteen weeks, ridiculous.

Speaker 2 (15:50):
I mean, I've got to be honest. That's ridiculous, isn't it?

Speaker 1 (15:53):
But do you do you agree with your comment that
I did? Did you post that that's a political Yeah?
You do want lee legal abortion with some restrictions. So
if life is that conception, you want legal abortions with
what are those restrictions in?

Speaker 9 (16:07):
I guess, well, I'm looking at what's what I can
affect in California. So Here's what I think about this
whole issue, that it should always have been decided not
by the judges as it was before, but by the people.

Speaker 2 (16:21):
And that's what President Trump enabled. That's what happened.

Speaker 9 (16:25):
And so in different states that's being taken forward in
different ways. Here in California, they had a referendum. It's
now in the state constitution, so nobody can do anything
about that unless you overturn the constitutional rule that's there.

Speaker 1 (16:41):
So your definition of life is that conception once you're pregnant.
So are you saying personally you don't think it's right
to take a to have an abortion, or as governor you.

Speaker 9 (16:53):
Well, there's nothing that Here's what I would do as governor.
I will be very clear about what I can do.

Speaker 2 (16:59):
What I will do.

Speaker 9 (17:00):
I want to move us in California within using the
power that I would have as governor. I want to
move us towards life. What does that actually mean in practice?
I can't change the Constitution with a stroke of my pen,
neither could any candidate who sits it's impossible, but.

Speaker 1 (17:16):
It acts a movement and a major statement.

Speaker 2 (17:19):
Hang on.

Speaker 9 (17:19):
What I want to do is move us towards life.
So what I can practically do about that is a
number of things, like real things. First of all, to
make this a state where people want to have children,
where they want to have more beautiful babies, where they
don't think I can't have children. If I get pregnant,
I got to terminate the pregnancy because I can't afford

(17:40):
to raise a child here. I don't want it. It doesn't work.
That's how people are thinking today in California. That's the
practical reality of what's going on. Because everything's so expensive.
The idea of owning a home to raise your family
is out of reach for so many people. We can
change that so we once again become a state where
people want to have more children and raise them here.

(18:02):
That's number one. Hang on a second, no hold on.

Speaker 1 (18:05):
When I feel confused, I always feel somebody is really
good at what they're saying, and I'm confused by it.
As governor, would would you be a pro life governor?
Yes or no?

Speaker 2 (18:16):
Yes? But what does that mean?

Speaker 1 (18:17):
It means standing up and saying it's like, I agree
with you that if it's a conception, I don't want to.
God's hold on for a moment. God decides when he's
going to send a soul. I believe that, So we
agree that it's at the moment of conception. So if
we're sending that soul back, what are we doing?

Speaker 2 (18:33):
Yes?

Speaker 9 (18:33):
But what can I do as governor? I'm not a pastor.
I'm running as a candidate for governor.

Speaker 1 (18:37):
Well, if you can't determine what life is, since you
have authority if life lives or dies, if you can't
define it.

Speaker 10 (18:44):
What would you like me to say? That's practically no,
it's not much I want. You're talking to the to
the people.

Speaker 2 (18:50):
The question. I've been very I don't understand.

Speaker 9 (18:52):
Actually, I truly don't understand the part of this that
you don't understand, which is that as governor, what can
I do to move a towards life? I can't undo
what's in the constitution.

Speaker 1 (19:03):
As governor. Newsom has us as an abortion sanctuary state.

Speaker 9 (19:08):
Okay, that's a good example of what I wouldn't Yes,
And I was just going through the list and you
interrupted me. So if you let me finish the list,
I can tell you the specific things which and that
would have been one of them, that I can do
to move us towards life in a practical way. That's
actually achievable. Number One, make it a state where people

(19:29):
want to have children. I've talked about that. Number Two,
if prevent unwanted pregnancy, and we can do a lot
more there. Right, you can do a lot more in
terms of bringing in the faith community, churches. I've had
I'm having active conversations with pastors and churches about how
we can work together to stop unwanted pregnancy as far
as we can. That is something you can do, that's practical,

(19:51):
that's real within the constitution. Number Three, you can remove
the barriers that are there right now to alternatives, for example, adoption.
Right now, we make it ridiculously complicated, way too complicated
for people to use that option. And so I would
want to have adoption as something that you would proactively

(20:13):
advocate for and use. And then, of course that point
that you just raised, which is we don't want to
be promoting it. We don't want to be positively promoting something.
And that's so of course all of that stuff that
Newsom is doing would end. So these are always that
you can actually do things in the real world that

(20:33):
move us towards life. If I stood here and said yes,
I'm going to be pro life and end abortion in California.
That would be a lie because it's not deliverable by
the governor, because it's in the constitution. And all throughout
my campaign, I never want to say anything or promise
anything that can't be delivered.

Speaker 1 (20:54):
They used to say that about Roe v. Wade as well.
I heard Republicans tell me that to my face, that
that would never change, and it did. So I have
you saying you're a pro life, he'd be a pro
life governor.

Speaker 2 (21:05):
No, I'd move us towards life. I don't want to
accept the framing.

Speaker 1 (21:09):
All right with I didn't want legal abortion with some restrictions.
That's what you wrote on Twitter X. So we have
I don't know. I'm trying to figure out which what
kind of governor you would be. That's it. That's why
I'm asking you this. Well like and I made the
mistake in the past and assuming Republicans are a certain way,
so I said, all these next elections, I'm going to
ask these hard questions that you know, I'll softball it away.

Speaker 2 (21:33):
But I think I'm.

Speaker 1 (21:34):
Getting to know you and the voters are getting to know.

Speaker 2 (21:36):
What I think it's interesting is that you want me
to It's.

Speaker 1 (21:39):
Not me wanting you to do anything. I'm asking you.

Speaker 9 (21:42):
Yes, and I've given you what I would do because
I'm a practical person. So it's not about are you
this label or that label? It's about what would you do?
What could you do, and what would you do? And
so that question of are you pro life or pro
choice actually doesn't really it's not to what you could
do as governor.

Speaker 1 (22:02):
Because it is in the circles that I run, and
maybe we are in different.

Speaker 9 (22:06):
Circles, but there's no point someone sitting here and saying
that they're going to bound abortion in California?

Speaker 1 (22:12):
Is that?

Speaker 2 (22:12):
Do you think that's the SENSI.

Speaker 1 (22:14):
I would okay, okay, since you're asking me all the
questions in this interview here a lot of them, and
I'm glad I'll answer. I'll answer you back. I'll answer
you back. I'll never do it because too many skeletons
in my closet. But if I were running for governor,
I would be Hi, I'm Trevor. I'm running for governor,
and I want to end abortion in the state because
I'm sorry, I think it's the extinguishing of a soul

(22:34):
that God sends down. Because I believe life happens at creation.
We agree with that. Yeah, that's what I would say,
thank you for asking, and how.

Speaker 2 (22:41):
Would you make that happen as government?

Speaker 1 (22:43):
Maybe I'd lose, but I would at the end of
at the end of time when I'm reviewed, I stood
up and said, God, I didn't send a soul back.
Will you send what sixty million souls? I've done colorings
with color pencils, and if somebody runs it, I get upset.
I created that and we're breaking his heart. Steve. That's
that's how I feel. That's how I feel.

Speaker 9 (23:06):
And how I feel is I don't want to lose.
I want to win so I can actually make life
better for millions of Californias who being crushed by this regime.
And I don't want to lose. I don't want to
lose and fight a valiant fight and say things that
people want to hear, but lose. I think that is
not how I'm approaching this. I'm approaching this.

Speaker 1 (23:25):
And I appreciate you being honest about it, with with
tough questions, and we don't talk about it enough. I
feel so I'm glad we had this conversation.

Speaker 2 (23:32):
I don't see it.

Speaker 9 (23:33):
I think it's an interesting and important converse. I don't
even see it as a tough question. I think it's
an important conversation, and I think that the importance of
it for me, it's not just the detail of that
particular issue, but my whole attitude to this, which is
that I'm doing it as I just said, because I
don't think we can just stand by as whether that's

(23:53):
individuals or as a party, and continue to take positions
and say things were and divorce that from the reality
of trying to actually.

Speaker 2 (24:05):
Make change happen in California.

Speaker 9 (24:07):
On the particular issue, there are a lot of changes
I can make in California, as I said, to move
us towards life, a lot that will be really positive.

Speaker 2 (24:16):
And so that's what I want to focus on.

Speaker 9 (24:18):
And that's what I mean when I say move us
towards life. That is a real statement of things that
you can do to preserve and protect life in California,
real things, whereas just saying your pro life that actually
doesn't mean anything in terms of what you can deliver,

(24:40):
in terms of what you can deliver as the governor
of California, given that it's in the constitution.

Speaker 1 (24:48):
Well, listen, you gave me eight minutes past the time
that I requested on a man's busy day, soay, and
having the conversation.

Speaker 2 (24:56):
It's an important conversation, you'd in terms.

Speaker 10 (24:59):
But I'm I'd like to ask you seriously because I
feel serious right now time.

Speaker 9 (25:04):
No, exactly, And it feels to me that you're resisting
that approach because you want to express the value that
so you hold so deeply to the exclusion of every
other consideration. That's feels to me like where you are
on this. Is that a fair assessment?

Speaker 1 (25:23):
Yeah, I'm not great on life and death. That's how
I look at it.

Speaker 9 (25:26):
But the so the question of how you could do
anything about it.

Speaker 10 (25:32):
Doesn't concern you. How I or the guy as governor.
As governor, you're saying you can't do anything about it.

Speaker 1 (25:38):
How can you not? What the influence that you have.
How you could lead society in a movement. You could
go to rallies, You could hold let's end abortion rallies.
You could educate people on what actually but if it happens,
you could defund it. You could sign get bills going
and Sacramento. I know it comes to the legislature and
all of that, but you could be the leader of that.
If I believed it was at creation, I would have

(26:00):
to do that.

Speaker 9 (26:01):
Yeah, but if you look at the if you look
at the actual numbers in California in terms of what
you can do for.

Speaker 10 (26:08):
Real, right the number you hadn't tried it yet. If
you look at the number already saying that it couldn't work.

Speaker 9 (26:14):
Well, it's a much heavier lift, I know than winning
the U.

Speaker 2 (26:19):
To win any.

Speaker 1 (26:20):
Democrat, Hispanics or Catholics, and if they really were aware
of what was going on, it could be a movement. Man,
we saw a movement on Sunday. God can do anything,
and I think I don't want to send souls back
to him. That's if you really want to just that's
the reason I'm against it. I don't know. I'm not
a scientist, and no scientists or doctor can tell us
when the soul is sent. I'm going to err on

(26:41):
the side of safety. Like you and I agree that
it's at the moment of conception.

Speaker 9 (26:45):
So I agree with that, but I've always believed that
I don't. I think it's hard to imagine someone not
thinking of it in that way.

Speaker 2 (26:53):
I really really believe.

Speaker 1 (26:54):
Sorry, I'm not trying to interrupt, so if you believe
it and in that way you believe the souls being
sent back to have it as as like death when
death happens, like Charlie so Boom, I think that.

Speaker 9 (27:05):
Again, I'm not a pastor and that's not my role.
My role is to run. I'm running for governor because
this state is in a mess millions of people.

Speaker 1 (27:14):
Really, you can't answer it does the soul go back
in an abortion? Because you doesn't go back. It didn't
take a pastor. If you believe the soul sin, it
has to go back, right, yes, but yes.

Speaker 9 (27:27):
But the reason that I'm resisting.

Speaker 10 (27:32):
Getting how does the soul go there? And I'm running
for governor? Figure this out.

Speaker 9 (27:40):
I know I'm running for governor, right and I have
a responsibility to do that in a way correct that
that we address the things there's governor that I could do.

Speaker 1 (27:51):
Who are ultimately responsible to.

Speaker 2 (27:53):
If I'm elected.

Speaker 9 (27:54):
I'm responsible to the citizens of California to do a
good job for them on the and and to move
forward the things that I said I would do that
are deliverable. I mean, I can't just sit here. There's
a whole lot of things that I would love to
do as governor. On many not just this, on many issues.
And I'm very clear I don't make those kind of

(28:15):
promises because I know what.

Speaker 1 (28:17):
I want you to if you didn't believe in it.

Speaker 9 (28:20):
Exactly, And it's not just whether you believe in it,
it's whether you.

Speaker 1 (28:23):
Can do it real well, no, no, no, See that's
where you and I disagree. Okay, you know it doesn't
matter if you believe in it's whether you can do it.
How many people have done things that at first they
didn't believe they could do, right, I mean, look at
Charlie starting at eighteen going around handing out business cards.
He had no idea he was going to grow into that.
So yeah, I think differently now there are Can I

(28:45):
dunk a basketball? Can you? No, we can't. As much
as I believe it, it cannot happen. So to say
that we could eradicate abortion in our lifetime, that could happen.
It could. I can't dunk a basketball. That's not going
to happen, but that could happen. And it's going to
take strong leaders that believe that creation happens at the

(29:07):
moment of conception.

Speaker 9 (29:10):
I think we're just having the same we're repeating ourselves
I've said very clearly that I want to move us
to do the thing I want to win the election,
become the governor, and amongst the other things that I
want to get done, and there's a long list, because
there's a lot wrong with the state, as we've discussed
earlier today, for millions of people, and millions of people

(29:32):
have different because it's a big state, the biggest in
the country.

Speaker 2 (29:35):
People have different views that different priorities. There's a lot
we need to fix.

Speaker 9 (29:39):
Do you look at prime homelessness, the cost for everything
that is impossible. There's so many things that need to
be fixed. People have different priorities. There's a lot to
get done. Included in the things that I want to
get done, as I've said to you today, is to
move us towards life in practical, real ways that I
know that I can deliver within the first term of

(30:01):
administration that I would lead for real. Whereas what you're
discussing there is a long term change that would require
a constitutional amendment that would need to be passed if
it's not through the legislature, which it won't be two
thirds of the electorate. I'm not disagreeing with you that
it's completely impossible. I'm just asking you to think about

(30:22):
the reality of the first four years of an administration
that I lead. Do you really believe that that is
something that I could get done in the first four.

Speaker 1 (30:32):
Years you're asking me that question. I would vote for
somebody that said they could, they would attempt to get
that done.

Speaker 9 (30:40):
I honestly believe, well, I think that they would be
I don't think that would be an honest response to
your question.

Speaker 2 (30:45):
I'm trying to be honest with you.

Speaker 1 (30:47):
Well, I appreciate that, and you know, most interviews I've
had like this that are kind of back and forth,
and I have this feeling inside me of angst. And
I've actually been comfortable talking to you here, So I
hope you feel the same mind very.

Speaker 9 (31:00):
Much, and I want to you know, it's a real
conversation and I really appreciate it. But I've just got
to be honest about how I feel about not just
the issues themselves, but again, coming back to it, I've
worked inside of a government. Maybe that's what's driving I'm
a practical person. I'm not a political you know, Like
as I said earlier, most of my career has been
in business getting things done. Can you build this building,

(31:22):
Can you deliver this contract, Can you open this restaurant
on time? Can you employ That's me. I'm very practical.
I've worked inside of a government, senior advisor to the
Prime Minister in the UK government. It's all about what
can you get done fighting the bureaucracy. I know what
it's like to be there every single day battling the bureaucracy.
It's an unbelievably heavy lift to do the things that

(31:44):
I want to get done. Three dollars gas, cut your
electricity bills in half. Make make the housing situation one
where you can actually afford to buy a home of
your own. Make this a place where people can start
and grow a business so we don't have the highest
unemployment in the country. Those things are incredibly difficult, time consuming.
Each one of them will involve a massive battle with

(32:05):
the bureaucracy. I'm just telling you I think about this
very deeply and very hard about what I can actually
deliver and get done and make life better in California.
That's why I take it very seriously, and I don't
want to sit here and pander to anyone and say
things that maybe others might say, but not me.

Speaker 2 (32:25):
I'm practical.

Speaker 1 (32:26):
We excuse me, website for the campaign. Give it out.
I know you've then given me. I mean I handed
it that. We were going to say bye a few times.
But thank you you camp it rolling, Steve. Thank you.

Speaker 9 (32:39):
Steve hiltonfo Governor dot com. Oh, Steve Hilton for Governor
dot com. Look, we've got to build an army of
volunteers because they've got a big machine, a lot of money,
the Union money, all the rest of it we got.
We've got to win this election. We've got to We've
got Look, we've got a lot to do. We've got
to stop Prop fifty. Then we've got to get vote
ID on the ballot, and then we've got to win
the election. All of this is going to take work, volunteers, money, need,

(33:02):
all of that, So please get involved.

Speaker 2 (33:03):
Steve Hilton for Governor dot com.

Speaker 1 (33:05):
Well we know you got to catch that four o'clock
high speed rail to bakershif well we'll let you get
out of here.

Speaker 2 (33:09):
Fantastic, See Philton, thank you.

Speaker 6 (33:11):
This is the Tremor Charry Show on the Valley's Power Talk.

Speaker 1 (33:16):
Yeah, let's hear it.

Speaker 11 (33:17):
Please huh your FBI's resources familiar tell MSNBC former FBI
Director James Comy is expected to be indicted in the
coming days.

Speaker 12 (33:32):
The full extent of the charge is being prepared against
Comy is unclear. Joining us now, MSNBC Justice and Intelligence
correspondent Kendelanian and MSNBC senior investigators.

Speaker 1 (33:43):
All Right, enough of your slew of people that you're
gonna throw out there for them to all say, well,
this is Joseph Trump and fashos and nonsense do to
their former FBI directe. Yeah, isn't there so much on
the tarmac waiting to take off?

Speaker 11 (33:59):
I bet you.

Speaker 1 (33:59):
Forgot that Obama got caught by Telsea Gabbard spye on Trump.
Bet you forgot about that. Bet you forgot about the
auto pen. I bet you forgot about Joe Biden's cancer.
You didn't forget about Kamalo's book. I know you're rushing
home right now. I'm gonna wit by and get it.
Maybe order it online. Spend this weekend. It's a Fresno state.
By weekend, there'll be no college football here for us

(34:21):
to get excited about unless you're a fan of some
other team. So yeah, it's a great weekend to curl
up with the Kamala book. I would rather curl up
with the back of my thighs being sliced with a
razor blade, dipped in orange juice, chewing on aluminum foil,
then then curl up with a Kamala Harris one hundred

(34:43):
and seven day book. All Right, they're gonna be going
after a former API director, James. I'm afraid they're gonna
kill me Comy. He's expected to be indicted in the
coming days. Well, we'll have more to talk about. As
we look out here across the airport and I'll look
at all these things waiting to wait to take off.
There's Antifa.

Speaker 13 (35:01):
They're being they're being called over, they're being searched, Federal marshall.
Air marshals are out there looking at them. That that
guy that shot up ABC up in Sacramento, uh, California. Yeah,
they arrested him and then released him on bail and
he got a knock

Speaker 6 (35:21):
The assist that Trevor Kerry show, Monda Valley's Power Talk
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