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November 24, 2025 • 36 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
The next president will be decided by folks going to
the grocery store. That's right, he county stupid. It doesn't change,
does it, James, Now, it really doesn't. I know. Yeah,
the House did pass a resolution to condemn socialism, and
Democrats split on the issue. But all that kind of stuff.

(00:21):
Believe it will be forgotten. It will be forgotten. You
had President Trump talking about how Walmart and the prices
are down twenty five percent cheaper this year. But we
got a little problem with that. Little problem with that.
Sounds good til you look. Let me read the fine
print here. Oh, it's not the same bundle as last year.
It has a few less items like marshmallows and corn

(00:42):
bread and chicken broth and become pine whipped cream. Oh
they added a back some box of macaroni and cheese. Yeah.
According to Consumer Affairs, the averaging evening dinner is gonna
run sixty one dollars and fourteen cents. Let's put it
in perspective twenty twenty two. We remember, then, don't we.
We're about to go into a dark winter.

Speaker 2 (01:04):
Yeah, a dark winter.

Speaker 1 (01:05):
Yeah, it was sixty four dollars. Then let's see Cranberry
sauce jump from two thirty four to three forty one.
Forty five percent increase stuffing this is from last year.
It's up fourteen percent. Home style gravy fourteen percent. I've
never been able to make gravy. Right now, I realize
I just never used the broth. You don't use water

(01:27):
with the flat now, uhuh, you gotta have that broth going.
Buttermilk biscuits increase eleven percent. Traditional frozen turkey a ten
pound bird up six percent. Average price is twenty four
bucks this year. Listen, we're not going to go back
to twenty nineteen prices. It's never happened. Once prices go up,
we thought, maye oh Biden gets out of office, these

(01:48):
things are going to go down. Pumpkin pie went from
four to sixty nine, Okay, down to four forty four. Ah,
that's good, all right, But yeah, that's what it's about.
That's what it's going to be about. And if that
can be delivered, that would be bad for Democrats. This
is how this is how just bad they are for America.
They don't want it to be They don't want prices

(02:09):
to go down. He since kind of made a turn.
I guess for the for common Sense. But Bill Maher,
I have that audio somewhere of him saying, right before
COVID hit and Trump's one point zero economy was really
kicking and thriving. He said, what was I'm trying to
remember his word now. He it was it wasn't a

(02:32):
disease or something, but yeah, another financial crisis or something.
I mean, I go, oh, yeah, you're wealthy, Yeah, you
want to They didn't know how they were going to
stop his economy from going, and right now they're they're
doing everything. They don't want it to get better. They
don't they want the chaos to continue. They don't want
people arrested, they don't want things to smooth out. So

(02:57):
it looked pretty smooth in the Oval office, did it not.
I had no idea what President Trump and the new
mayor elect. I played with the audio there of Trump,
you know, calling him a communist. Trump tells Mom Dommy, Hey, hey,
the media ask about him being a fascist. He said,
that's okay, I'll tell you that in a minute. But

(03:19):
here he is congratulating Mom Dommy, very nice, very polite.

Speaker 3 (03:22):
When we want this city of ours that we love
to do very well. And I wanted to congratulate the mayor.
He really ran an incredible race against you know, a
lot of smart people, starting with the early primaries, against
some very tough people, very smart people, and he beat him,
and he beat him easily, and I congratulated him.

Speaker 1 (03:42):
Yeah, they were smiling. President Trump said, very productive. They
both care deeply about New York City. I don't know
what happened in private, President Trump, at least not playing
hardball for the cameras. This was kind of fusing. Some
of those ideas are the same ideas that I have.

(04:03):
I can understand that for some of the basic infrastructure.
Outside of that, I don't know what ideas would be
the would be the same. You said. We agree on
a lot more than I thought. Listen to him here.

Speaker 3 (04:17):
The better he does, the happier I am. I will say,
there's no difference in party, there's no difference in anything,
and we're going to be helping.

Speaker 1 (04:24):
Okay, I guess stop that for a moment. He wants
him to be successful, just like when Joe Biden became president.
I know, I said, I hope the economy gets good.
I but this build back better. I kept saying, they're
going to have to destroy what we have right now
to build back better. I've never been with a Democrat
in I've never been. I hope the economy fails. I'd

(04:45):
be wishing, you know, bad things upon myself. That's how humans.
We don't do that, do we. But a little confused
by this.

Speaker 3 (04:53):
Difference in party. There's no difference in anything, and we're
going to be helping them to make everybody's him come true.
Having a strong and very safe New York And congratulations, mister,
thank you this present.

Speaker 4 (05:05):
Thank you, I appreciate it.

Speaker 1 (05:07):
He patted him on the back. There we have a
communist own in New York City, saying there's no difference.
I but before I get all worked up, I just
remember the wisdom of keep your friends close, keep your
there you go. You got it. They asked a reporter
did about mom dommy calling as president he called you
a fascist.

Speaker 5 (05:27):
He asked about your comment calling the president a fascist?
And your answer was with President Trump and I have
been clear about our positions and our views. Are you
affirming that you think President Trump is a fascist?

Speaker 1 (05:40):
I've spoken about That's okay.

Speaker 3 (05:42):
You can just say yes, okay.

Speaker 1 (05:44):
That's easier.

Speaker 3 (05:46):
It's easier than explaining it pett.

Speaker 1 (05:47):
But he totally let him off the hook right there.
And you know, Mom, Dommy appreciated that. That right there
was probably the biggest thing that came out of that.
It's one thing to say we're going to work together.
It's another thing to have your back. On Worldwide TV,
you called him a fascist? Is he he was about
to talk? He was about to say something. Might have

(06:10):
been a little curious what he had to save at
President Trump. That's just him many he knows how to
maneuver an entire room. But we're not going to remember
this a year from now. Democrats don't want cheaper prices.
President Trump said he wants him to be successful. So
New York City is successful. We decide who runs America

(06:31):
by the grocery store. We don't need a consultant to
tell us. We just need to go to the grocery store.
Since twenty seventeen, grocery prices you're not imagining this, they're
up thirty seven percent. Overall, typical family of foreign America
now pays one thousand and thirty dollars a month. That's

(06:52):
two hundred and fifty dollars higher than just two years ago.
Over half of households called grocery. He's the number one
financial stress. You would have thought the Democrats learned this
the hard way. But that was their guy in charge
in twenty twenty four. And sometimes not sometimes, almost all

(07:15):
the time. These politicians live in their bubble. They don't
realize that most Americans don't know what's going on in DC.
But boy, they know what's going on at the grocery
store because that touches every home right now. Now, overall
inflation has cooled down. That has been good to see,

(07:38):
but grocery prices are still high. And I'm just gonna
say they probably settled into this is going to be
a new normal. Now. The White House did a little
quiet rollback on taroff some more than one hundred goods,
beef and coffee as well. But when you look out across,
I came across this fact and it floored me. It
stunned me to guess the aides was thirty five years old.

(08:04):
The new median age to buy home, including first time buyers. Guys,
we can't. Civilization can't continue to exist. You got to
have people able to buy home in their twenties and
early thirties. The age now, the median ags are home
buyers fifty nine years old. This is from the National

(08:25):
Association of Relators. Relators released a November report from June
twenty twenty four to July twenty twenty five, national media
and age home buyers is now fifty nine years old.
First time home purchases have hit a record low twenty
one percent. Younger generation cannot even come close. And then

(08:48):
I thought, you know what, we're gonna see changes in
things compared to how it used to be. Yes, we
see that all the time. But I saw someone post
this up and it had nothing to do with the
real estate. But when I was reading those real estate numbers,
I thought about what I'd seen earlier, and I didn't.

(09:10):
I thought I wasn't even going to use it on
the show. Sometimes I see things and I say for
future future, you know subjects. But they were talking about
the statistics on abortion, and between nineteen seventy three and
twenty twenty it's more than this by now. But this
post I saw, they said sixty five million Americans were

(09:32):
aborted and that's one third of Generation Z. Now, when
you think about what that does, the impact abortion has
on demographics across the country. Things have changed. But in
that sad when I mean when we hear sixty five

(09:54):
million Americans who are aborted, that's it's just so staggering
when you a third of gen Z does not exist
because they were aborted. That's that. This is the Trevor
Cherry Show. On The Valley's Power Talk, an article caught

(10:16):
my eye written by Will o'toolett said, nineteen fifty TV
families were an aspirational model for a good society, no
matter what race you were. You know, he's right with that.
There were no black people, well though there were a few.
I saw his wife Laura take a creative writing class
and I noticed they had a black man and a
black woman, and that was revolutionary for TV. Then just

(10:37):
a little bit there, right, But will O'Toole wrights and
a nineteen fifty family, TV showed a very specific view
of the ideal world. All this of you may not
have been accurate. Leave it to Beaver, he said, June
Ward Wally and the Beav he said. There was no crime,
there was no violence, there were no drugs, there was

(10:58):
no underage alcohol. Kids were properly groomed. In the class,
they sat and rose had pencils and notebooks ready to write.
They walked home from school and sidewalks in neighborhoods that
were graffiti and litter free. They stopped home, said hello
to mom, Gobblelesnack, headed off to play ball. Home and
getting to have dinner with a nuclear family, talk about

(11:18):
the day, no cell phones on TVs, simple conversation, then homework,
and then bedtime. While he was the typical b plus
a student, not a phony like his best friend Eddie Haskell,
he said, any viewer knew that Beaver's world did not exist,
or that all problems can't be solved by a dad

(11:39):
who actually lived in the same home with his blood wife.
But what everybody understood was that when it came to
doing the right thing, there was no negotiating, he said.
Ward and June parented the boys to follow laws. They
were taught to be honest, productive, and at all times
to demonstrate class. And you think about TV. I'll go

(12:04):
back to a few of the things he wrote here,
But I was thinking about it. I didn't grow up
watch and leave it to Beaver. I watched that when
I was homesick from school by a few years. I
missed like the Brady Bunch being on at night. I
would watch that in reruns. But even Mike Brady would
tell Bobby and Peter and Greg, you know, no, you
have to do the right thing. That was that was

(12:27):
that was taught through out, wasn't it. I don't even
know network TV now, I don't I have I don't
even know the last time I go outside of a
sports or something I don't want. I don't know what
the shows are one. But are even the younger kids
even watching those anymore? Probably not? Now we knew that. Okay,
let's take the Cosby Show. Kitchen always clean, everybody dressed nice.

(12:54):
I don't know that they get into drugs on the
Cosby Show, I don't know, or drinking they might have.
You know, it started taking in some more real life
level kind of stuff in the eighties with TV shows.
But I found this interesting, he said. With Wally and Beeve,
boys learned to take responsibility for their actions, not to
blame others, never to play the victim. Ward would not

(13:18):
let them play the victim. Mike Brady wouldn't let him
play the victim. Bill Cosby wouldn't let them play the victim,
and they had to be sorry when they were wrong.
Think how much healthier kids were back then. I mean,
minus theapolion and all that. But by today, by far Man,

(13:43):
I was singing back my high school days in the eighties,
there weren't a whole lot of obese kids. There were
some overweight kids. We had some big football players, some
couple of samowing guys, the Ogen brothers, Randy and Pete.
They were big samoeing guys. But there weren't like obesity.
And I again watch on YouTube a lot of stuff
from the twenty thirty, forty sixty sixties. They've redone in color.

(14:04):
I just love watching that. I like watching people on
the sidewalk, and I noticed there, No, there weren't fat Americans.
There might have been the Italian grandma in front of
the store that was a little big, but other than that, no,
everybody walking up and down the sidewalks was thin. And
it's all our ultra processed foods. And we've got to
learn that. By RFK Junior, do not block that man out.

(14:26):
He knows what he's talking about. And if you don't
believe him about ultra processed foods, believe pigs. I read
an article from a pig farmer. Yeah, I read a lot,
and he said he gets, excuse me, all those unusable
loaves of bread that come from stores and whatnot, and

(14:48):
he says he gives them to low income neighbors in
his little rule Vermont town. And he said, the pigs
get the rest of what nobody wants or ors two outdated.
So from this, I guess this s door of this
warehouse where he gets these things from him, he gets breads,
and he gets sweets, you know, like hohos and ring
dings and ding dongs and twinkies and Susi C's and

(15:10):
honey buns, and a lot of them are really outdated,
and they don't give them the humans, so they throw
them to the pigs. Pigs they don't read labels. They
use their snouts. No, I'm from doing my pig thing. Well,

(15:31):
that's their sense of smell that protects them. And you know,
the one thing, the main thing they want. They won't
eat all the twinkies and Susi Cues, but they will
not eat a Hostess snowball, you know, the coconut marshmallow
over the cake with a creamy feeling. They said that
the pigs ate some of the chocolate things like Susi cues,
but they would not bite or go near the hostess snowball.

(15:54):
It was a pink one left out on the floor.
They said. They would shovel up the manure and the
bedding daily and leaving it area on a concrete floor
around the pink snowball, and they would not bite this pig.
Farmer said, with all that grain and bread and hay
and sweets that they were throwing out there, he said,

(16:14):
we got a population of rats. And he was sick
as border collies on him when they went into the
barn and kind of startled them and the rats would run.
He said. The rats would creep into the pig stalls
to scath ins for the pigs leftovers. But even the
rats would not touch that pink snowball, he said, nor

(16:35):
would the flies. He said. He left it out for weeks.
He said nothing would eat it. He said over time
it remained preserved like it had been sealed, even though
it was at an open air. He said, it would
not rot. Wow, I don't like the snowballs because of

(16:56):
the texture of the marshmallow. It's just I don't like that.
It's too much. Nah, I've never been a big, big,
fan of that. But I remember when the the kids
with their car seats when they're little, and I would
take them out and clean out the the van and
and then and get down it and I'd find some
chicken nuggets or a French fry and it had no

(17:19):
it hadn't had no mold on it or nothing. It
was as hard as a rock. Mm hmm. But this
is what we eat every day, all the ultra processed,
the the Cheetos and the Doritos and the About a
month ago, I bought a bag of bugles. Mmm. Got

(17:40):
a look. You know, it doesn't matter, oreos or twich,
you name it. A pig's not gonna eat it. Dogs
might eat it, right, yeah, dog, but they eat their
own vomit. The dog go up and eat a dead bird.
Dog would go up to it's called fecal deposits. And

(18:04):
yet you go, oh, come here, let me lick your face.
Is the Trevor carry Show on the Valley's Power Talk
in California, silver Wood out in the Inland Empire. And
if you're listening on the iHeartRadio app out of state,
that's about eighty miles east of smell A. What was

(18:25):
it called Mayfield. I'm sorry, that's where Willy and Beef live. Mayfield. Well,
Silverwood wants to be Mayfield. It's a southern California development.
They've promised affordable homes, one of the most expensive stays
to live in eighty miles east of la is a
little more probably a little cheaper than Smellay itself. But

(18:46):
they said they want to bring neighbors together. They want
to have beautiful parks and trails. Is this a cult?
Is this the Truman Show? Kindness Pledge? It's a real thing,
the kindness Pledge. We should start one. No, let's start
a Fresnel kindness pledge. That's pretty one fresnel mayor die
or come on, who wouldn't be for kindness? They said,

(19:08):
Silverwood's creating a place that feels familiar, like the small
town's parents and grandparents grew up and joined. Place where
everybody knew everyone, where neighbors would care for each other,
watch out for one another. Simply bring a warm mill
when he didn't know that you needed it. I don't
know who the committee that's going to define what kindness means,
but you know what, when you feel it, I would think,

(19:31):
what if I put a Trump sign on my lawn.
Is that unkind? Some I gonna have a problem with that.
In today's world. What happens if you violate the Kindness
Pledge and get angry and yeah, like I am right now?
What happens? They said, we're not going to force it.
People that don't follow the pledge just won't have the
experience of living kindly. All right, We're gonna hear a

(19:54):
story eut or somebody's going to chained up in a
basement out there somewhere, Silverwood. We'll keep our eye on
that community right there. Clubland Casino on or Kyle Kirkland.
He's running for Congress against Jim Cosa for the twenty first.
He's a Republican. He ran there the one. I think
Vincefong was in early on but didn't come out of

(20:14):
the primaries. I interviewed him a few times. Highly intelligent man.
We had our conversation. He's pro zo, I'm not. But
other than that, we agreed on a lot of things
you said. In my career, I've had to compete, make
products in payroll, work with others and succeed not with
governments help. But in spite of it, somebody get Costa

(20:36):
out of their eleven terms hadn't done anything. We got
two Republicans, Kyle KIRKLANDVN one Lorenzo Rios, CEO of the
Clovis Utsiden's Memorial District. He's also running, they said. With
the new district's approved by Prop fifty, it stays about
the same thirteen plus thirteen democrat in District twenty one.

(21:00):
At elections coming up, and what is this? Are you
telling me? Yes, saying Thing's boyfriend announces he's running for
governor of California. Who is saying Thing's boyfriend, Well, it's
Eric Swallwell, California congressman, got caught mixed up with a

(21:22):
Chinese honeypot spy, but he's running for governor.

Speaker 4 (21:26):
I want us to be able to vote by phone.
Every California vote by phone. Yeah, if we can do
our taxes, do our you know, our men, healthcare appointments,
you know, make essentially your do your banking online. You
should be able to vote by phone. Make it safe,
make it secure. But it's actually already happening all over
the United States. I want us to be a blue

(21:47):
state that doesn't do just a little bit better than
like Georgia, or Alabama. When it comes to like voting access,
I want us to max out democracy also as it
relates to democracy, if you wait in line for thirty
minutes or more, if you do want to vote in person,
I think you should find every county for every minute
that a person has to wait longer.

Speaker 1 (22:04):
Ah. So maybe they get away from voting in person
because they don't want to be fine, so they'll shut
down those polling places. Vote by phone. That's not my vote.
My thirteen year old got a hold of my iPhone
and picked the governor genius swallowell genius. He said he
wants to max out democracy, a new way to vote. Boy,

(22:28):
they're not smart, are they. No, he's served out here
in California's fourteenth. He's jumping in the race. And where
did he go? Jimmy Kimmel, of course. But it got
funnier when he said this. I was the only funny
thing that he said. He's gonna make it safe and secure.
It's already happening all over the United States. No, it's not.

(22:53):
It's not all right. Let's see. I guess it'd be
good for California. We need more Chinese influence, don't we.
How can a congressman that literally dated a spy without
knowing still even be in office. How does that? How
does that happen and be able to run for governor? Well,

(23:16):
we got to do better. That's a good campaign. Who
came up with that? When Eric and you're in your
campaign campaign director, Hey, let's go on kim home and
say we we have to do better.

Speaker 4 (23:28):
We have to be better, be just a little bit
better than the other states. The DMV. I don't think
Californians should have to go in person to the DMV anymore.
I think we can do that virtually. I think you
you can have the DMV employees do it virtually. But
that's a lot of real estate. Is that the most
popular position? Yeah, we can modernize the state. And again

(23:51):
I look forward to you know, bringing these ideas to Californians.

Speaker 1 (23:54):
Yeah, we don't need somebody to see somebody and have
a picture of somebody. Just send your picture in from
wherever you are. It can be no fra aull with that.
Just let's vote. Let's vote on our phones. Let's get
our driver's license. Let's give out commercial driver's licenses just
on the phone. We already give them out to no
name how less secure can we get. Well, he's a

(24:19):
Republican that's running for governor, Sheriff Chad Bianco, Orside County,
talking about our elections. I don't think he'd be voting
by phone here.

Speaker 6 (24:26):
Completely rigged is this is our election process has been
rigged to keep the Democrat Party in power honestly since
the sixties, and every twenty years people get so fed
up with it they elect a Republican governor. And that's
where we are right now.

Speaker 1 (24:42):
Yeah, he make a note of this. We should send
Sheriff Bianco our conversation we have with Congressman Tom mcclink, doc.
He told us how to pronounce jerry mandering, that it's
Gary Mandering, named after a man named Gary. Just so
he didn't think it's us critique in him how to talk.
We can be like Sheriff. Look, a congressman who knows

(25:03):
history said it's Gary Mandarin.

Speaker 6 (25:06):
The jerrymandering districting. Really for me, being at the head
of law enforcement, the leader of law enforcement, the constitution
and the constitutional rights of Californians actually matter, and our
current government they despise both the state constitution and the
federal constitution.

Speaker 2 (25:22):
Mm hmm.

Speaker 3 (25:24):
Mm.

Speaker 1 (25:25):
With me know, mm we I don't know. Can a
Republican be elected in California? Yeah, yeah, it's happened before.

Speaker 4 (25:37):
And I.

Speaker 1 (25:40):
Want to talk to Republicans in California with the midterms
coming up and so many Republicans. It's proven you're registered,
and it's proven you don't show up to vote. A
lot of Republicans don't do it unless the big daddy
name is on there. Man, I'll come out and vote
for JD. Vance in twenty eight. So I got voted
for Trump in twenty four. Well, Trump is going to

(26:02):
be neutered in twenty six if we do not come
out as Republicans and vote. Well, I'm a conservative. I'm
tired of the report's hush. Quit with that. Stop it.
We gotta get people out and vote. We could be
competitive if we just got enough Republicans to turn out,
and being competitive is being close. We can take it

(26:22):
over the line. If you again as a Republican. That's saying, well,
I'm going to stay here in California, all right, you
just want it to get worse. It will, it will
not change. Take it upon yourself. Take the pledge. Take
the pledge right now. I'll send you the political holy water,
take the pledge right now, oh eight hundred. No, just

(26:47):
say you're going to get five people to go vote
Republican and tell them why they g You know some people,
you know. It doesn't have to be a complete stranger.
Maybe sometimes a complete stranger is easier than somebody you know.
But if you just imagine if every Republican did that,
and if we just got one extra look at that,
Look what that would do. It would double our numbers.

(27:12):
This is what we need and will it happen in California?
It can, but it's not going to happen the way
that it's happening now, and we cannot rely I'm not
saying they're all bad people. There's some good people involved,
but there's a lot of laziness with the California State GOP.
You find it all local throughout counties as well. People

(27:33):
are people. People are people, but we can't rely on that. Yeah,
we need them to help turn out the vote. A
lot of them do it well, but a lot of
them don't. So let's stop. We can't blame anymore. We
got it. It has to be your own personal your
own personal mission. Look at yourself as a missionary behind

(27:55):
enemy lines, because this state has moved in a direction
where if I had public school kids, and if I
couldn't afford public private school, or I couldn't find a
good charter school, but even charter school's controlled by the state,
and watch out homeschool and will be as well. But
it would be so nervous to have kids in public
school in California. And I'm talking about a nervousness that

(28:18):
parents have never had in the history of this country.
I'm telling about that they can trans your kid and
not tell you, calling them a different name at school,
letting them change in a different closet, hiding that from you,
the parent. Wrong. So yeah, I'm sure that a lot

(28:42):
of people, well, that's not my kid. Well I hope not.
You know your kid, but you might not know. And
laws are in place where the teacher think about it.
And guys, this is AB nineteen fifty five that I
can't believe it hasn't gotten the attention that it needs.
I can't be that there hasn't been outrage over this.

(29:03):
I can't believe the lack of Republican politicians that refused
to pick this up and run with this. This is
a way we win California. I guarantee you, guarantee you
ninety percent of Democrat voters in this state do not
want the school hiding that from them. And I don't

(29:24):
think that's too high ninety percent. So put that on
your list. I'm asking for five. If you could do one,
we could double it.

Speaker 5 (29:35):
In other news, judge ruling the appointment of interim US
Attorney Lindsay Halligan violated the Constitution. The judge also criticized
the DOJ for allowing an FBI agent who viewed Coomy's
privileged materials to testify to the grand jury. Now, the
judge also tossed the case against Letitia James.

Speaker 1 (29:56):
All Right, what's all that mean? Well, it can be appealed.
This is not over, Koby. It's not off the hook.
Latitia James is not off the hook on this. So
that just came out about midday today, that news there
as well. You know, Comy's like, all right, I can
go walk on the beach and collect some seashells now
and be relaxed. Yeah, you know, uh, let's see, this

(30:20):
is three minutes. I was just talking about the schools
and how I would be afraid if my kids were
in school, here. Remember how it called you Paul Harvey
earlier today. It's because I saw this and I didn't
know where I might use it today, But right now fits.

Speaker 2 (30:34):
If I were the devil, If I were the devil,
if I were the Prince of darkness, I'd want to
engulf the whole world in darkness, and i'd have a
third of its real estate and four fifths of its population.
But I wouldn't be happy until I have seized the
ripest apple on the tree. The so I'd said about

(30:56):
however necessary to take over the United States.

Speaker 1 (30:59):
This is her nineteen sixty five. By the way, I'd
subvert the churches. First, I'd begin with a campaign of whispers.
With the wisdom of a serpent. I would whisper to
you as I whispered to Eve, do as you please.
To the young, I would whisper that the Bible is
a myth. I would convince them that man created God
instead of the other way around.

Speaker 2 (31:18):
I would confide that what's bad is good, and what's
good is square. And the old I would teach to
pray after me our father start in Washington, and.

Speaker 1 (31:30):
Then I'd get organized.

Speaker 2 (31:31):
I'd educate authors in how to make the lowrid literature,
exciting so that anything else would appear dull and uninteresting.
I'd threatened TV with dirtier movies, and vice versa. I'd
peddle narcotics to whom I could. I'd sell alcohol to
ladies and gentlemen of distinction. I'd tranquilize the rest with pills.
If I were the Devil, I'd soon have families at
war with themselves, churches at war with themselves, and nations

(31:55):
at war with themselves until each in its turn, was
consumed with promises of higher ratings. I'd have mesmerizing media
fanning the flames. If I were the Devil, I would
encourage schools to refine young intellects, but neglect to discipline emotions,
just let those run wild until before you knew it.

(32:15):
You'd have to have drug sniffing dogs and metal detectors
at every schoolhouse door. Within a decade, i'd have prisons overflowing.
I'd have judges promoting pornography. Soon I could evict God
from the courthouse, then from the schoolhouse, and then from
the houses of Congress and in his own churches. I
would substitute psychology for religion and deify science. I would

(32:38):
lure priests and pastors into misusing boys and girls and
church money. If I were the devil, I'd make the
symbol of Easter an egg, and the symbol of Christmas
a bottle. If I were the devil, I'd take from
those who have and give to those who wanted, until
I had killed the incentive of the ambitious.

Speaker 1 (32:58):
What'll you bet?

Speaker 2 (32:59):
I get whole states to promote gambling as the way
to get rich.

Speaker 1 (33:07):
I would caution.

Speaker 2 (33:08):
Against extremes in hard work, in patriotism, in moral conduct.
I would convince the young that marriage is old fashioned,
that swinging is more fun, that what you see on
TV is the way to be. And thus I could
undress you in public, and I could lure you into

(33:30):
bed with diseases for which there is no cure. In
other words, if I were the devil, I just keep
right on doing what he's doing. Paul Harvey, Good.

Speaker 1 (33:43):
Day, This Assistant Trevor Terry show on the Valley's Power Talk,
trips to Egypt, Finland, Hawaiian resorts, even went on a
safari with school district money. Homeschooling set record numbers across America.
We did it for a few years through the Catholic
homeschooling back in the early two thousands us my wife.

(34:07):
At the time she did it, I was the principal.
But we have seen an increase of five point four percent,
three times what pre man made lockdown rate of growth
the homeschooling was two percent. It's now up to five percent.
Thirty six percent of reporting states record their highest homeschool
enrollment numbers. Ever, what's that mean? Public schools are going

(34:28):
to lose students some odd reason? Wonder what that is.
You think the numbers wouldn't be going down with the
legal alien children flooding. But I gave you the reports
last week, so I remember Miami Dade school districts had
dropped off considerably. So the Brookings Institute says if parents

(34:49):
keep choosing alternatives at the pace observed since twenty twenty,
public schools could lose as many as eight point five
million students, going from forty three million now to thirty
four million by twenty fifty. That is, that's a twenty
percent drop. And across the country, the average rate per

(35:11):
student is twenty three hundred and twenty two dollars. Now,
with this growth and homeschooling, you know what's coming, and
it already has in some other states. Regulation. They'll be
coming in and going wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, No,
you can't teach that there's just Adam and Eve and
that you gotta be married to make caanaan Abel. You

(35:33):
can't teach that. No, you have to no, no, no,
you have to accept. You need to call Tony Tanya,
and you got to buy by state laws. And you
can't let the parents know. Oh, they'll be getting their
tentacles in. There'll be more regulation coming right now. Homeschool, heyday,
do it if you can. Well, I can't be home

(35:54):
every day, Well, then find four or five other families
that you can rotate. Find the expertise in that family. Well,
she's great at science. She has a degree from what man?
Now you know what we need home universities

Speaker 2 (36:09):
The assistant Trevor carry Show on The Valley's Power Talk
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