Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Trump has taken a pledge that he's going to take
a chainsaw to how the government operates. He's pointed a
lot Musk and the vek Ramaswami to lead the Department
of Government Efficiency. And he's going to slash all the regulations,
and I'm glad he is. He's going to cut the
wasteful expenditures and restruct the federal agencies. And if there's
(00:23):
anybody out there that says this is a bad idea,
I really don't understand why you would think it is
a bad idea to save money. It's our money. And
these figures I'm about to give you right here are
going to probably blow your mind. Or maybe it's not.
Maybe you're a government worker. And listen, I don't wish
unemployment on anybody. And yes, we have to have government workers.
(00:45):
We have to have federal workers. I understand that. But
the government waste. Man. We need the government to be efficient,
just like we demand a private businesses out there, right,
slash excess regulations and cut the wasteful expenditures, and restructure
the federal agencies out there. Right, Hey, federal government hasn't
(01:10):
estimated three million workers as of October. That's the latest
from the Federal Reserve Bank of Saint Louis. Musk and
Ramaswami considered the large scale firings, the relocation of federal
agencies outside of Washington, DC, and at the end of
doing all the remote work, letting people to stay home,
(01:32):
we you know, come back to work the man made lockdown.
There's still it's amazing with the federal government because hey,
even the Kamala Harris campaign mandated that everybody have an
experimental mRNA injection to work on her campaign. You still
have a lot of that taking advantage and acting like
it's fear. I don't know what they call it. I'm
(01:53):
sure there are jobs that can be done from home.
We had it here at iHeart. There's people that I
see once or twice a month. I'm like, hey, what's up.
Speaker 2 (02:01):
Roy?
Speaker 1 (02:02):
Hadn't seen Roy in a while? Right? He gets his
job done because there's a lot of behind the scenes
work that people don't think about with radio, and a
lot of them been able to do it from there.
At the end of February of this year, there were
about one hundred and sixty two thousand federal employees in
the District of Columbia. One hundred and forty three thousand
(02:24):
in Maryland, one hundred and forty four thousand in Virginia.
See that's that tri state area right there where there's
a lot of wealth, a lot of private schools, a
lot of beautiful neighborhoods. I mean, they've kept them so
nice from the seventeen hundreds right up to one hundred thousand.
Government positions could be moved out of Washington at least,
(02:47):
that's what Trump was saying on his campaign. Here's vi
Vek Ramaswami, who along with Alam Musk with doze Man Doggy,
had such a better ring to it. Here he is
talking about who actually runs the government.
Speaker 3 (03:02):
We want to go right in through executive action to
do the failures of the executive branch that need to
be addressed. Because the dirty little secret right now, Maria
is the people we elect to run the government, they're
not the ones who actually run the government. It's the
unelected bureaucrats in the administrative state that was created through
executive action. It's going to be fixed through executive actions.
We're going to be cutting costs. Over half a trillion
(03:23):
dollars that spent every year right now was not even
authorized by Congress in the first place.
Speaker 1 (03:29):
That's our money, guys, over half a trillion dollars that
our representatives had zero say on it. Zero. That's this
has to change. Okay, let's get to some of the
big agencies here if you want, if you want to
see this just how big is the federal government? Anyway,
it's on Newsweek you can find it. Thank you Director
Ryan Nigel for posting this form of here. US Postal
(03:51):
Service the Department of Veterans Affairs are the two two
largest agencies by by headcount. The VA employees more than
four hundred and sixty eight thousand people. Guys, I didn't
know that. And actually, if we hear any kind of
failure from our VA, and we have four hundred and
(04:15):
sixty eight thousand people working there, right, that includes people
in DC, but it also includes it's not four hundred
and sixty eight thousand people working in an office at
the VA. It includes the healthcare workers, all the people
that you know administer the benefits of veterans across the country.
The United States Postal Service, they're the next year they
(04:37):
have employees more than five hundred and twenty five thousand people,
more than seven hundred and fifty thousand work for the
Department of Defense that includes DoD civilian workforce but not
active military. DD has seven hundred and fifty thousand employees.
(04:59):
And we're to talking about how we're out of some
kind of munitions and guys, that's where you have too
many people behind the desk. Come on, No, the Department
of Justice, which, by the way, Director Ryan Nigel just
handed me Trump to fire the entire Jacksmith team. Good good,
(05:21):
But Department of Justice counts more than one hundred and
sixteen thousand people on staff at DOJ. Walmart they have
how many employees? Do you think they're the highest number
of workers in America? They're the highest employer at note
two point one million. I mean you think Amazon got
(05:44):
their second they got one and a half. FedEx has
about five hundred and twenty nine thousand, about as much
as the USPS. Right. I still can't believe how much
is the stamp now? Is it like sixty seventy cents
or something like that in that ballpark? But I remember
as a kid it was ten cents. The fact that
(06:06):
the United States Postal Service is always gone about being bankrupt, well,
no kidding, who in the right, mind for seventy cents.
Would take something from my house in Fresno to Long Island,
New York for seventy cents, that's what the post office does.
They used to do it for thirty five or fifty
cents or whatever used to be. I thought that is
(06:27):
so cheap. That is now. I mean, I didn't complain.
It's not like I wanted it to be three dollars
or something. But literally, I mean, imagine a business today
that still sold Hey, Triple Dick or ice cream fifteen cents, right,
you go out of business. And I always wondering when
every time I'd hear about him going out of business,
(06:49):
we got to keep them afloat. It's just like Amtrak.
We subsidized that, right, and I never understood why it's
not successful on its own. Probably because they got, you know,
seventy nine thousand people sitting behind a desk when they
need an additional twelve thousand conductors or something. Right, So
I hope they get in there, and I hope they
take care of some business. Right Ramaswami saying they're going
(07:11):
to shine sunlight on all the wasted.
Speaker 3 (07:13):
Part of this is exposing for the public the extent
of that rot and waste, but then to take steps
first through executive action and then laying the groundwork for
broader chains through legislation as well to rein in that deficit.
To rein in that budget, we expect mass reductions. We
expect certain agencies to be deleted outright. We expect mass
reductions in force in areas of the federal government that
(07:34):
are bloated. We expect massive cuts of on federal contractors
and others who are overbilling the federal governments.
Speaker 1 (07:40):
And they should get in there and cut the waste.
We don't need the waste, and you just take how
much waste is inside the pentagon. Let's get to some
average salaries. Remember I told you medium salary fifty thousand,
Fresno County. Let's see here. The Security and Exchange Commission
they have the highest average salary at two hundred and
(08:00):
thirteen thousand, and they employ about five thousand people. The
Federal Reserve has seventeen hundred employees. They rank second with
the average salary of one hundred and eighty four thousand dollars.
The FCC they have fifteen hundred employees and they make
an average of one hundred and sixty five thousand dollars.
Who there's a bunch of different rankings here, but who's
(08:22):
the lowest paid of the major federal agencies? Who does
Newsome ignore you say the valley right, and he ignores
the water and ignores AG. Well, it looks like DC
as well. The Department of Ag lowest paid. They have
ninety two thousand employees make an average of eighty six
thousand dollars a year. I would go up to the
(08:45):
Security Exchange Commission and make THEIRS eighty six thousand, and
then just work your way down to the federals and
just keep dropping them, and you'll see who wants to
who's committed to serve a lot of these individuals have
degrees and contacts where they could probably make like Security
Change Commission. Maybe attorney could make more money somewhere else
working in a private law firm. But we would really
(09:05):
see who's committed to serving a wild force right in DC. Right,
if you're on the Federal Reserve or you're the Department
of AG, why can't it be you're going to go
serve your country for five years, then maybe you can
go make more money elsewhere. Well, we'll leave it up
to one of the richest men in the world, Elon Musk,
(09:25):
to go in there and may make some cuts for
vic Ramaswami as well. But hey, we got to be
honest about this. Our national debt, would you say unpayable?
It seems like that, But we come at it from
the concept of that we're going to keep spending like
(09:46):
we have. This is the first time in my lifetime
I've seen a step to cut back spending like this,
first time ever ever because both parties and I say
this all the time, but it's true. Republicans and Democrats
from from President Reagan to Bush one to Bush two
to Trump one, they all jumped into the dead orgy.
(10:09):
Now Trump two is going to reverse the spending, and
that's a good first step. If you're against cutching government,
then I don't think you give a rats crack about
the future of this nation. Other than that, have a
good Friday.
Speaker 4 (10:26):
This is the Trevor Cherry Show on the Valley's Power Talk.
Speaker 1 (10:31):
Pam Bondi the blondie from Florida, Right. I did a
little looking into miss Bondy. I knew the name sounded familiar,
and you know where it's gonna take us back to
Trayvon Martin, George Zimmerman. But before, let's hear what Scott
Jennings was talking about on CNN.
Speaker 4 (10:52):
Here, this is a massive upgrade. I've talked to a
couple people up on the hill already. There's a sigh
of relief that now we have somebody here term ag
strong record on drug enforcement and opioid issues, a total
hawk on immigration, politically supportive of Trump obviously. I don't
know a Republican in the country who doesn't love Pam Bondy.
So you were starting with Gates, a nominee who was
(11:13):
underwater significantly to start, and what was gonna always be
hard to get to the surface. With Bondy, I do
think you're starting above water. And as long as she
performs in her hearings. And look, this is somebody who's
been through two elections in a really big state, and
so a lot of public vetting of her has gone
on already. So I think this is a great move
by Trump to be pragmatic and tell Gates to get out,
and a really good move to go with BONDI this
(11:35):
is not a shaky lamb, This is a sturdy branch.
He's going with for ag here.
Speaker 1 (11:38):
All right, Scott Jennings, let me talk about some you're
not talking about there, fine, sir. Pamelaed Jo Bondi Florida
Attorney General from twenty eleven to twenty nineteen, first woman
elected to the office in Florida. I still haven't been
able to confirm her association with scientology. I'm going to
need three on that. I found two so far. But
(11:59):
of course, yeah, she had a lot of people. Remember
she defended Trump at the Sham impeachment trial, very well spoken,
you know, talking about Hunter and Joe taking bribes. I
was like, yeah, that's right, go get him. I remember
seeing her on there. But we got to go back
to that time in Florida. Man, she put an innocent
(12:20):
man in prison, and the thing was she knew he
was innocent. I'm talking about George Zimmerman. Pam Bondi. She
was there with the Jacksonville District Attorney, Angela Corey, who
ended up being Bondi's campaign manager. But hey, I support Trump,
but I don't know he wants Pam Bondi to be
(12:41):
a g to in political corruption. He has to be
aware of what she did in Florida during her time
in office. She was governor at the time Rick. She
was a g at the time that Rick Scott was
governor in Florida. And the Trayvon Martin shooting and the
George Zimmerman and I'll take you back. It was two
thousand twelve Sandford, Florida. Zimmerman fired a shot and do
(13:04):
seventeen year old Trayvon Martin fatally killing him, and detectives
question investigated Zimmerman and they gave it. Justification for the
shooting was self defense. It went to trial. Self defense
was used in court. There were two eyewitnesses to the shooting.
One woman in an apartment saw the initial encounter between
Trayvon and George Zimmerman, and another eyewitness, a man in
(13:26):
an apartment right next door, saw it and partially recorded it.
And the entire thing happened on a sidewalk about twenty
feet from this second eyewitness. He called nine one one
described in real time what he was seeing. Trayvon was
standing straddling George Zimmerman, he said, in an Mma style position,
(13:48):
and slamming Zimmerman's head into the sidewalk. And during the
nine one one recording, you can hear Zimmerman calling out
hel May, somebody help may and everything. George Zimmerman said
that who eye witnesses backed up what he said. There
was forensic evidence, there was an audio recording, all the
physical evidence found at the scene. The detective gave his investigation,
(14:10):
all his reports to the police chief and they recommended
Zimmerman's claim of self defense was valid and justified. And
Trayvon Martin's father, Tracy Martin, he was put in contact
with a Florida civil rights attorney named Benjamin Crump. Crump
went out and said, I got a wrongful death case
(14:31):
against the family, against George Zimmerman, the city of Sanford,
and the Sanford Police department. They hired a pr firm,
They got supporters into town. Yeah, Al Sharpton was there.
Attorney General Eric Calder got in on it. Barack Obama's
president got in on it. Right. Remember all this, So
(14:54):
this civil rights lawyer called the Florida Attorney General bondi
for and the detectives and the police chief and everybody
sided with George Zimmerman. The police chief he agreed with
the evidence. The Sanford prosecutor refused to even bring a
case based on the evidence. Drum roll Florida A. G. Pambondi,
(15:19):
the police chief was removed from authority, the local prosecutor
was removed, eventually the lead detective was removed. And you
can go back investigate this case, look at it, look
at it yourself. There was no prosecutor in Florida that
wanted to touch the case because the evidence against Jordan
Zimmerman did not exist. But Florida Attorney General Bondi replaced
(15:40):
all those officials. She brought in a new special prosecutor,
Angela Corey, out of Jacksonville, who again Angela became Pambondi's
campaign manager, and they started this case to sell to
the media. And there's many that will state a fabricated case. Oh,
this was a big ill then, and it should be
(16:01):
kind of a big deal now, right, because if Pam
Bondy was fraudulent in that, no other prosecutor would take it.
So without her, that statecase against Zimmerman was non existent,
and that created so much racial strife. That was one
of the kicker offers. And she knew, she knew her
(16:22):
special prosecutor and her friend had manufactured and because he
should have never he should have ever been locked in
jail Zimmerman was locked in jail, and that's because Attorney
General Pam Bondy was willing to put an innocent man
in prison. And this is the person that we're going
to clean out the corrupt DC justice system. Right. Maybe
(16:45):
she looks back at this and totally regrets it. Right,
but she was also a foreign lobbyist on behalf of Katar.
She received one hundred and fifteen thousand dollars a month
for her lobbying services. So I don't know, man, I
don't want somebody that the intelligence community's got a file on,
(17:07):
and if you're down here in Florida doing those shenanigans.
With all of that, Now, she sounds good today. I'll
give you that she has made the proper stands. Today.
I would love for her to say, hey, I made
a mistake. Back then, I was young, I was power hungry,
and I was on cocaine. Give some excuse or something.
But here she is talking about Ukraine, and this is
(17:28):
when I first noticed her talking about Now we all
remember back in the day with the Zimmerman trial, but
we don't remember things from that far back, and who
was involved in all of this?
Speaker 2 (17:37):
Right, Senators, you heard our answer regarding that yesterday, But
it is very interesting that he said he never spoke
to his son about overseas dealings. His son said different things.
Joe Biden was the point man for Ukraine investigating at
the time. Ukrainians were a corrupt company, Barisma and Zolchewsky
its owner Oligarch, who by all media accounts we've discussed,
(18:01):
was extremely corrupt. Hunter Biden has paid eighty three thousand
dollars a month a month to sit on that board
with no experience and energy, no experience in the Ukraine,
doesn't speak the language, and we clearly know that he
had a very fancy job description and he did none
of those things. He attended one or two board meetings,
(18:23):
one in Monaco, and then he went on a fishing
trip with Joe Biden's family in Norway. The entire time.
Joe Biden knows that Joe Biden knows that this Oligart
is corrupt. Everyone knows that there are news reports everywhere.
No one will dispute that. In fact, it raised eyebrows worldwide.
But the vice president, by his account, never once asked
(18:47):
his son to leave the board. We wouldn't be sitting
here if he did.
Speaker 1 (18:51):
Okay, Jesus tiger, show go get him, Joe, you got anythings, saying.
Speaker 2 (18:56):
He never asked his son to leave the board. Instead,
he started investigating the prosecutor who was going after Barisma
and this corrupt oligarch who they say was corrupt even
by oligarch standards, who had fled the country, fled the
country living in Monaco. He does not ask him to
(19:21):
leave the board. He does the opposite. In twenty fifteen,
what does he do? We know my reports. He has
close contact with President Poroshenko, He travels to Ukraine twice.
He links it to the fire. He links the aid
to the firing. Same thing in twenty sixteen at a
White House meeting, links the aid to the firing of
the prosecutor.
Speaker 1 (19:41):
All Right, I don't know if I would hire as
a general, I would hire as an attorney. I wouldn't
hire afire George Zimmerman though. But right, I mean, you
can hear she can she can hold she can hold
herself there, right, can't she?
Speaker 4 (19:55):
Worth?
Speaker 3 (19:55):
Little?
Speaker 1 (19:55):
I know, Joe.
Speaker 2 (19:56):
She calls him four times in the eight days up
to lead to the prosecutor, the prosecutor investigating Hunter Biden.
Yet he never says that all cases closed. Days before
Biden leaves office, he jokes to Poorishenko that he may
have to call him every couple weeks to check in Hunter.
Biden stays on that board for three years. Three years.
(20:21):
Then we hear the video of Joe Biden bragging about
firing the prosecutor, linking it to AID. Then we have
the six minute phone call order in.
Speaker 1 (20:29):
The car order, in the car order in the court.
She was out on the campaign trail with Trump as well.
And remember when Mark Cuban made his whole Trump's not
surrounded by she real strong women and all that.
Speaker 2 (20:42):
Well, I was a prosecutor, I was a homicide prosecutor
for eighteen years. I was flying George Zimmerman, remember Attorney
General George Jennerman. Remember, and I was special advisor to
Donald Trump office of White House Counsel. But must importantly,
I'm his friend. And I was in that White House.
(21:07):
And we all know he surrounded himself with a lot
of brilliant women. How many women here tonight support Donald Trump?
And backstage, look at these beautiful women sitting behind me,
sorry with Flora Donald Trump. That was the greatest gift
(21:31):
Mark Cuban could give Donald Trump, I think by saying
something so ignorant, it's.
Speaker 5 (21:35):
The Trevor Terry Show on the Valley's Power Talk.
Speaker 1 (21:40):
Congress elect Tim McBride, there's some that called Tim sarah.
He appeared on MSNBC to actually smear RFK Junior and
Republicans of not thinking right right because we don't want
to chemically castrate children. He accused Conservatives of housing an
obsession with trannyism. Yeah, we're the ones obsessed with trannyism,
(22:04):
while you're going on the media NonStop, dressed up as
a woman to tell everybody else they're obsessed with trannyism.
I really hope Trump goes mad Max on him as
soon as he gets into gets into office. A Ninth
Circuit judge said restricting female SPA only women only at
(22:25):
the spot a biological women is the same as putting
up a sign that reads white people only. Themninally insane
have affected our judicial system. We have insane judges, right.
It's not a good way to be governed, not what
not at all. Here's what the judge said. And you
can't have white people only come into my restaurant? Did
(22:46):
you say, well, no, we have a religious, spiritual nature
to our restaurant and when you get there, we serve
you special food. This seems quite different. In quote from
a psycho judge, what does that even mean? You can't
have a white people only come into my restaurant and
then you say, well, no, we have a religious, spiritual
nature to our restaurant and when you get there, we
serve you special food. This seems quite different. I'm the judge.
(23:10):
I'm up here just rambling. This has to go to
Supreme Court, but I I'm not rest assured that the
Supreme Court justice would would stand up for women. Isn't
that crazy? Well, I guess it doesn't shock anybody anymore, right.
Megan Kelly put out a post she said, did you
(23:32):
see her doing Mika Brazinski posts? You know that one
from like twenty twelve of Joe Scarborough all kicking back
and she's up on the desk with her leg up
in the air like she's a ballerina that just fell
on fell down or something. Right, Megan Kelly got up
during the podcast because people have talked about that, Oh
look at the feminists showing her whole leg just trying
to be all right. So Megan Kelly got up and
(23:55):
mocked her on the desk today. It was funny, but
she posted up Megan Kelly did and a alarming percentage
of men pretending to be women are in fact auto genophiles.
A U t O G y n E p h
I L E S. I guess that's an actual word.
It means they have a sexual fetish that makes them
(24:15):
arouse when they just like women. I just love the
feel of the pane. She writes. No woman should be
forced to participate in a man's sexual fetish delusion, and
certainly not while she is vulnerable in a bathroom. Right,
I mean, stop it, guys. Quit this. Senator Mike Lee,
(24:39):
he's a Republican of Utah. He said that the party
at Diddy wants to force women to share locker rooms
with biological men. I think we need to take the
term biological out. No, with men, there's no do we
have to say the difference. Why don't we have to
put biological and no man, woman, not biological man biological
(25:02):
By saying that you're playing along with it, like there's
another category that you have to set aside. Right you know,
the people standing up right now, it's not elected officials
in this valley or this town against AB nineteen fifty
five that this president Unifed School District Interim Superintendent Misty
Hurr has stated it would be unfruitful to have a
(25:23):
conversation about the fact that we're going to hide that
we have your kids in transvestite clausets and when you
come in, we're going to all lie and fake it
to you. And AB nineteen fifty five tells President Unified
School District that the teachers have to lie to the
to the parents. Some teachers have stood up and said no,
and one in court. So teachers, I know you're going, well,
(25:45):
the union and all of that and my job and
all of that. All right, Hey, we need elected officials
to stand up for these teachers. Would you like to
be put in that situation? Right?
Speaker 5 (25:54):
Huh?
Speaker 1 (25:55):
Imagine that? And I know teachers don't want to have to.
It's a an environment where they will be mocked, ridiculed,
maybe even you know, calls for their termination if they
if they say something. Right, this interim superintendent needs to
talk about this because Huntington Beach, there's other school districts
that are fighting back against this. A pair of teenage girls,
(26:18):
let's see, they down on Riverside they go to Martin
Luther King High School. They're accusing officials in the athletic
department of comparing their They wore their save girls T shirts.
Save Girls, That's what it said on their T shirts.
Save Girls Sports. That's what it said on their T shirts.
And you had the athletic department tell these young girls
(26:39):
that they compared it to wearing a swastika. Yeah, they
wore it in response to a player I don't even
want to use the word transgender anymore, a boy that
thinks he's a girl, who they said barely went to
practice and not a qualified. He was placed on the
varsity team. They're suing this. They said, this boy can
(27:02):
be on the team and I'm getting displaced. I've worked
so hard, gone to all the practice and he only
tends a few. They're doing a lawsuit said school officials
made them remove their their T shirts and they were
told they were creating a hostile environment and told they
were wearing it's the same as wearing a swastika. These
two young brave girls, Caitlin and Taylor, said, we're just
(27:23):
wearing a shirt that it trust is what we believe in,
trying to raise awareness for a situation. They shouldn't even
have to do this. They shouldn't even gotten past the
parents should have been the parents in there standing up
for their kids over this. The girls and their lawyer
said that the boy that thinks he's a girl has
been allowed to wear trans pride items. There's a big
LGBTQIA plus pride flag in the classroom, but they can't
(27:46):
wear something that says save girls' sports. Right. Hey, if
you get treated this way, suit you win. I haven't.
I haven't heard anybody that's that's the loss. Right. This
guy had recently transferred from another local high schoo will
be after breaking the schools all time cross country record
for the girls cross country team. You run like a girl,
(28:09):
anyone breaking records? Imagine that? Imagine that right. This young girl, Taylor,
says that being thrown off the team could harm her
future education by preventing her from winning scholarships. Good stand
up for it, stand up for it. We're seeing more
and more women and young girls speak up about this,
and they should. This is wrong. Men need to stand up.
(28:31):
Men in charge of universities at high school athletic department
stand up. We got teams suing the Mountain West here
over this over San Jose State because they got a
guy playing there. Fresno went ahead and played them and
beat them. Got to feel a little bit better about that. Right,
A not fair battle and you win. NCAA's also being
(28:51):
sued allowing men, So maybe we'll see the courts make
a decision on this. They're all losing their mind. I
bet you we would have even more move out of
the country. Good. Let's ban men from the girls' games,
and maybe we can get some more of them to lead.
Doctor Drew Drew Pinsk he was on Hannity, and we're all.
Speaker 5 (29:12):
We're all fine. And the fact that a few celebrities
sell their ninety million dollar mansion and move to another
country is not going to move us in any way.
After them having gotten so much from this country, they're
done with it.
Speaker 1 (29:26):
Wow ingray bye bye see yah. Oh, I've heard it's
ellen degenerous move. We'll see if the long list of
people that claim they were were gonna move. But doctor
Drew made a good point here. They already were Illuminati
globalist New World Order citizens, right. He didn't say that,
he said this.
Speaker 5 (29:45):
You know, those of us said are stuck in places
like California would love to leave, but we can't all
move so freely because we don't have those sorts of
economic advantages. The reality is most of these guys were
already already had ownership of places throughout the world. There
were sort of citizens of the world, and now they're
going to make a great grand stand and in doing so.
(30:07):
This is the main thing, Sean, this is the question
you're asking me. There is an hysteria at the core
of this behavior that started all probably maybe before trump
de arrangement.
Speaker 1 (30:18):
Yeah, a hysteria even before it did, it really got
bubbling up. Doctor Drew's right about that. I was surprised
they put up like a five minute little section of it,
and I thought i'd kind of heard everything that maybe
he had to say about it. But I went in
and listened to the end, and I'm glad I did.
And I was surprised that doctor Drew brought this up.
Speaker 5 (30:38):
Here as it pertains to the abortion pills. Again, that
is a hysteria. Right in the states that have restrictive
access to abortion, one hundred percent of them provide for
abortion when the mother's life is in danger one hundred percent.
Yet what these same individuals are doing, are whipping themselves
into an emotional state that is disconnected from reality and delusional.
Speaker 1 (31:02):
Yeah, you know what else is delusional and disconnected from reality.
One thing I learned again, Our California voting system stinks
to hog Heaven. We'll talk about that next.
Speaker 2 (31:14):
This is the Trebor Chary Show, Condom Valley's power talk.
Speaker 1 (31:20):
Our election system stinks. Man, It's unfair. It's so unfair,
and you know they feel that way maybe unless you're
a Democrat and you want to use it as a
way to mail up ballast to everybody. And this has
to change, man, somebody needs to step up and say
what we're all saying that this ain't right? Sure enough,
(31:41):
ain't City of Huntington Beach their mayor? They got a
superior court decision states a lawsuit that challenge their city
voter ID law. Why can't the city of Fresno have
a city voter ID law? Right? Do they not think
it's important enough to well, it's racist, right? Yeah, they
don't want to invite to label them, so they'll just
(32:03):
go right along with everything. Don't want to don't want
to rock the boat the way the City of Huntington
Beach did it's a great day, said the mayor. We
succeeded defending our city's voter ID law, but also the
rights of our residents from attacks by governor knew some
of the state. See, that's what local government is set
up for, to help us, to make sure we get
what we want here, and you fight the state for it.
(32:25):
You just don't roll over and get steamrolled by the state.
Yes we do. We need the funds. Yeah, and you
need the press conferences and the phone calls that make
you feel good and get invited to the to the
mayor's things and all of this. You got to be
on the end crowd, right, you work for us, they
work for us. We need to tell them they work
for us, and we want voter ID. You need it everywhere.
(32:49):
It's ridiculous to say. And if you're going to say, well, no,
we don't, because that's disenfranchises voters of color, that's a
put down. That's a put down to people that don't
look like you. If you happen to be a white
politician saying that, you're saying that what they don't they
don't have their life together enough to have it out.
You're just assuming that right. So Okay, anything that the
(33:13):
state mail's out, whether it's to help people out, whatever
it might be out there, you don't need an ID.
We're just gonna willy nilly hand it to whoever shows up. Right,
We'll mail it to whatever address you give it. We
we don't need anything like that. Right. The city attorney
of Huntington Beach, he fought for it, right, great job.
We need a city attorney that would fight for us. Right. Well,
(33:38):
the fight's not over, you know. Newsom would be coming back, right,
be fighting back hard against this. A. Yeah. If I
if I were a really rich, wealthy person like I
don't know Patrick Mahomes or Travis Kelcey or any NFL
people like that, I wouldn't be going on social media,
out on my boat even holding my hand up with
(34:00):
a drink. Hey, we're just having fun. Look at the
diamonds on that they think, right, and what they're talking about.
Because both of those Kansas City chiefs that their houses
got burglaries hours apart before a Monday night game against
the Saints back in October. They took an estimated one
hundred thousand dollars in jewelry, and now they believe they
know who's behind it? Search the Border serves the border
(34:22):
South American gangs responsible for targeting high profile homes. They said,
it's a sophisticated operation. Right, I've always said that, Man,
if you're gonna use a gun and go and rob somebody,
why aren't you running into a seven to eleven. I
mean you're gonna go to use a gun, You're gonna
go to jail, right, make it worse something Travis Kelsey's jewelry. Right,
(34:43):
and see that's what these criminals do. Now you think
about it, Well, they don't, you know, they got so much. No,
it's not the fact that the money that somebody was
in your house. Right, just because you're rich and famous
didn't mean that you wouldn't be just as disturbed by
somebody invading your house. Right. I would think they would
have like great Danes in German shepherds roaming around like
(35:06):
that's the last thing I would do. Do do do?
Speaker 2 (35:08):
Do?
Speaker 1 (35:09):
Set the alarm? Right, all right, come on, let them out.
They run around, right, that's what I had, Like a
junkyard dog that's not gonna let anybody on the property. Uh,
we got to get the psychopaths out of our country.