Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Like to welcome the man to the show. Simon and
David Tangapa, thank you for joining us. I know you
got to get to vote and all that. We'll get
in on this welcome.
Speaker 2 (00:09):
Well, it's always good to join in. I can tell
you this. I never thought i'd have to tell that
story because I never thought child sex trafficking was going to.
Speaker 1 (00:16):
Be debatable right the things that you should be focused
on right now, and it's just all to create chaos
and confusion. Simonon and Tangapa quickly go back lay the
timeline starting last year before you arrived with State Senator
Shannon Grove and what started this effort. Let's do a
quick recap on that for everybuddy.
Speaker 3 (00:36):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (00:37):
So, Senator Grove actually two years ago, in twenty twenty three,
passed the bill called the SB fourteen, which made child
sex trafficking, I mean just a felony in California because
before that, child sex traffick king was actually less punishable
than arson, robbery and burglary. And unfortunately that bill was
killed in the California Public Safety Committee by the Assembly
(01:00):
side after passing Unanisley in the Senate side. Then some
public pressure and I actually got to help Senator Grove
on that quite a built quite a bit and build
that public pressure. We were able to force it through
the Assembly. We got it done seventy nine to zero.
One person was missing, so nobody voted against it. And
then the next year she brought SB fourteen fourteen to
(01:21):
make soliciting a child and with the intent to purchase
a child for sex. Tony that had some issues. Again
astonishing had some issues that Senator Scott Wiener and a
couple others didn't want this, and they created these weird arguments,
We'll say this, I don't think it helps anybody, and
(01:44):
basically said that this disproportionately hurts black and brown people,
and you know, disproportionately hurts LGBTQ people on all this
to make solicitation of a minor for sex.
Speaker 1 (01:58):
If I were a person of or gay, I'd be
upset at him for saying that, because what's he insinuating
by that?
Speaker 2 (02:05):
That you're exactly right. And that's exactly why Assembly Member
Carl Demayo, who is a gay Republican and ours, stood
up and said I don't agree with that, and I
say that as a gay Republican. He was like, I
don't have any issues because I don't e solicit miners
for sex. I don't know how hard that is for
a concept to put out, So you know that that's
(02:26):
kind of the process. And then now that I got
elected recently and we just got here in January, I
was proud to see that it was backed on the floor.
We actually assembly Woman Krell, who's also a freshman member,
and she's a Democrat. She is an amazing individual regardless
of party affiliation. She was the prosecutor who took down
(02:49):
a social media page called back Page, which a family
member of mine was trafficked on by a former teammate
of mine when we were in high school, pretty much
when she was in an abusive relation relationship where we've
all heard the stories of them weaponizing, Hey, if you
love me, you'll take care of this, and that's kind
of the reality of growing up in an impoverised community.
(03:10):
That had happened in Maggie Croll's the hero that actually
took down the largest social media page in the entire
world for human trafficking, and she had the bill. They
stripped it from her because she was not willing to
do the negotiations to remove the automatic felony on sixteen
and seventeen year olds. But this is where I think,
(03:33):
coming on your show a couple of times we told
you we were going to go fight. I just thought
our fight was going to be on the budget and
fiscal responsibility and not felonies for pedophiles.
Speaker 1 (03:44):
Right, and your pick up pimp story about your friend
from high school at McDonald's when you were working there,
that that had to hit home. Were you was it
a full full assembly in there when you were speaking,
or they were they all got to hear they were
they were there, Yes, they got to hear your stories, right,
(04:04):
they did.
Speaker 2 (04:05):
You know, And that was something that I mean, it
was a very important day because we had a lot
of bills to vote on. But the you know, again,
the the amount of hurdles that they put in place,
they called we didn't even start for an hour and
a half because the Democrat Assembly leadership did not want
(04:25):
us to what they're trying to say, take advantage, But
for me, I say, do the right thing and prioritize
protecting children. And there's not many instances where the governor
and even Nancy Pelosi's daughter is like, how can people
trust the Democratic Party if we can't make an easy
decision when it comes to protecting children. And you know,
(04:47):
this was a point where finally the governor and finally
some of these members joined us the Republicans, in demanding
that we prioritized children first. And you know they right
every single year and it was one of the most
astonishing things to watch in person.
Speaker 1 (05:04):
Well, let me ask you this a similar min Tongua pop.
While we're talking about protecting kids, that means protecting families.
And I've been saying so many politicians, I don't care
what side of the all you're on the campaign about family, family, family,
Now that you got the ball rolling on this one here,
and have you know, painted the picture of the Democratic
Party as being anti child safety AB nineteen fifty five,
(05:25):
where Tony goes to school and he's Tanya and you're
told not to tell the parents. I mean that that's
as deviant as what we're discussing.
Speaker 2 (05:33):
Also as well, I agree, uh, and I think it
does really expose a broader criminal first agenda. I mean,
there are a lot of these individuals that were working
against Prop thirty six, which passed in every single county,
that made additional felonies for repeat offenders made fetanyl more
(05:54):
punishable than or made fentanyl, took it all the way
up to the same level as metha, setamine, and heroin,
because before that it was actually less punishable than weed
in a lot of cases.
Speaker 1 (06:06):
So you know, and there are a lot of groups,
But what I'm talking about is maybe nineteen fifty five
where they're hiding it from parents that they can trans
your kids at school. He can go as Tony to school,
but they call him Tanya in the classroom. That's the
point I'm making about protecting kids. I can't believe in
the new school superintendent said it wouldn't be fruitful to
(06:27):
have the conversation they're hiding it from parents. If somebody
did that in your neighborhood on the block, we would
call nine to one one. But the schools are allowed
to do it. And there's not one elected official in
this valley other than the Portoville mayor and vice mayor
that have made an issue of this. And I am
just stunned by the fact that it can be hidden
(06:47):
from moms and dads.
Speaker 2 (06:49):
No, I agree wholeheartedly with you, and that's actually something
that I had worked on before getting here. There is
a legal court case kind of going through that. I
believe that Liberty Justice Group is pushing through. I think
it made it through one of the first hurdles already
and is going to be heard because I do not
believe the government should be able to keep secrets with
(07:11):
children away from parents. You're telling me that I have
that you have to call me to get an aspirin
for my son, but you can call my son aspen
without even letting me know. That's the I mean, that's
what it is. It's they are keeping secrets with children
in the government, and they try to put it in
this sense of you know, we don't you shouldn't out
(07:32):
our children. Well, right now, the average sixth grade reads
at a third grade reading level. I don't want you
the government worker, which is a teacher talking to my
kid about sex when my kid doesn't even know how
to read yet. So your focus shouldn't be on outing
my children when they read at a third grade reading level.
When our test scores are worse than the state of Louisiana.
(07:53):
And no hate the Louisiana, but we are now worse
on literacy literusy grades. We are fifty fifty and you're
telling me The most important thing you can do right
now is not out my kid. First off, my kid
legally shouldn't be talking to you about who they like
to hang out with. That is not your job.
Speaker 1 (08:11):
What is it with all these grown ups wanting to
know about kid getting involved with kids in sex. I
just don't understand it. And it's how it's allowed. The
last few minutes so simle've been talking about, thank you
for your time. I know you got to get back
out and do some voting here. But President Trump saying
no money for you for high speed rail, and they
were saying if it goes private it might be done
by twenty forty five.
Speaker 2 (08:34):
Well, the CEO of high speed Rail came out and
said that they are hopeful that it could be done
by twenty forty five. I don't know if that was
the private sector. But I actually went to go meet
with the White House Policy Advisors last Wednesday, and I
got to talk to them a lot about, you know,
the concerns here in California, and this is the thing
that a lot of people got to realize, and we
need more people to be involved in the government process,
(08:56):
not only that run for local offices, because this all
plays into it is. Is it reasonable that fifteen point
seven billion dollars has been spent on high speed rail
and we have concrete and rebar. I was I could
tell everybody this, I did not vote for high speed
rail in two thousand and eight. Why I was twelve
years old, and now I'm in the legislature and you're
(09:17):
telling me when I'm fifty years old, is it going
to be somewhat done?
Speaker 1 (09:21):
Hey, that's a good line. That's a good line to
say up there at the podium.
Speaker 2 (09:26):
Well, I am the youngest member in the legislature, so
it makes it a little easy.
Speaker 1 (09:30):
Well, get let me tell you my high speed rail
age joke. I know I said, at some point, hey,
I'll probably be in my eighties when I take high
speed rail to go see the Dodgers play, and if
you do it out to twenty forty five, I'll be
seventy nine. So I was correct. It wasn't a joke,
and it was not a joke.
Speaker 2 (09:47):
Fortunate is you know that it's unacceptable for us to
like it. But that's the part too. California is getting
everything at voted for, and we've got to realize that
we've got to vote a different direction. If you want
a different a different position, and that's what you know.
We're looking for people to get involved and say I
(10:07):
demand better. I demand that my kids read at a
sixth grade reading level when they're in the sixth grade.
I demand that my finances give me the train that
the California voters voted for, or get the heck out
of the way, and let's get this done. Because there
will be high speed rail in California, it's just going
to be the private one that connects Brancho Cucamonga to
Las Vegas. Guarantee that one finishes in about a year
(10:28):
and a half and two years that one will be
done because it's one hundred percent privately funded. And yet
we're still going to have the modern Stonehenge right off
of Herndon in ninety nine that we're going to stare
at for a long time. It's going to be the
largest art graffiti building in the world. And yet where
is the demand of Californians to step up and to
ask for better. We need that, We need everybody to
(10:50):
get involved that they want better for California.
Speaker 1 (10:52):
Amen, thank you, Simon, David Tangapan, and tell everybody up
there High fives from the Central Valley for stopping these
dims on that crazy kid law. I'll let you get
back to doing your biz man. Thanks.
Speaker 2 (11:04):
I appreciate you you calling me anytime you need me,
and you couldn't be more grateful to represent the amazing
people of the Central Valley.
Speaker 1 (11:11):
Keep up the great work, sir, Thank you very much.
David Tonga, Pa.
Speaker 4 (11:15):
Ladies and gentlemen, should be a felony every time and
any time somebody wants to purchase a child. Colleagues, I
rise with a broken heart that this is debatable today
and the assembly woman from Sacramento is a hero and
should be trusted with the original version of this bill
(11:35):
because she saved my family member's life. She ended a
social media page called backpage.
Speaker 1 (11:43):
I was so glad to hear some of them in
Togapas say that the Democrats were all there. I didn't
know how many might have been on the floor right
there in the Assembly when that was happening, but it
was good to hear that, and you know that it's
kind of hit home you. Normally you don't hear the
local news affiliates on TV do a story income out
with a real opinion at the end there. That's not there.
(12:04):
Their presenters, they're not opinion. You have your opinion shows
on the weekends. They'll do all that. But after this
story ran on CACRA and Sacramento, listen to these female
news anchors here talk back and forth. I just found
this not normal for you.
Speaker 5 (12:19):
And we really should point out the urgency with this
that children sixteen and seventeen years old are being victimized
every day, that that is happening right here and right
here in Sacramento.
Speaker 6 (12:31):
This is the Trevor carry Show on the Valley's Power
Talk Illinois.
Speaker 7 (12:36):
I don't know how it continues. You have this guy Kritzker,
I don't know. He's too busy eating. He wants to
eat all the time. Would you like a hamburger? How
many do you want five? I'll have five burgers please.
You go to his office. Would you like a hamburger? Okay,
I'll have five burgers please? Who the hell out of
his five burgers?
Speaker 1 (12:56):
Well, yeah, that's a good question.
Speaker 2 (12:57):
Why are you ordering five burgers?
Speaker 1 (12:59):
I had to have some comedy after all that talk
about kids being treated poorly, sexualization of kids. That's you,
the Democrat Party, You Democrat voters, You know what they
would have done this had Republicans and a few Democrats
not made us stink about it. When somebody shows you
(13:20):
who they are, believe them, Believe them. Semi Woman ezrael
is sory a believer her. Yeah, not a fellon et
to turn a sixteen year old into a prostitute. And
as Assimi Woman Krell, the Democrats stated, it's the rape
of a child.
Speaker 8 (13:43):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (13:45):
Newsome, they're saying is lost control of California Democrats. They're
even calling now sitting duck governor. Oh, we're gonna have
some comedy at the bottom of the hour next break.
I'm gonna I'm go please President Trump talking about High
Street Rail and some maybe even a little Jerry Brown
in there. We'll go back in the day because we've
(14:07):
been talking about this for a long long time. As
to some of them in Tagapa said he was twelve
years old when it was voted in. Now he's in
the state Assembly and we haven't even laid the track.
I was yesterday reading the quotes from the High Speed
Rail about, well, we're going to have to scale down
the resident station a little bit, and we're gonna have
to redesign elevators and We've been looking at this for
(14:30):
six months, man, I could we could have hired a
few Mike Brady architects right, and he could have gotten
this done real quick. I'm sure as some of them
in Talkaba was talking about the one to Vegas. Oh yeah,
that'll be done. Are you kidding me? Twenty forty five,
(14:53):
This one's gonna have troubles again here it's just what
he sees in front of him are dark clock. He's going,
Oh no, I went the way of Germany. I went
the way of Spain and Portugal with our energy. I
have told powerful CEOs that I don't care if you
(15:14):
make money or not. I'm actually set out to make
you lose money. And then they move elsewhere. And now
he realizes, oh the green thing didn't take off. Oh no,
we're not going to be all you know, no more
gas cars by twenty thirty five. That he knows all
this is not going to happen. And I think what
(15:37):
was the deal? Because they can look at the same
science that we can. We can look at and do
they really think that we humans sacrificing all that they
ask us to with the carbon tax and the extra
gas prices and all of this that they really do.
They think they control the outdoor temperature. I saw something
(15:58):
where ice up in the art now is is thickening? Yeah?
Did you see that too? Yeah, we got thicker ice
now inconvenient facts there al Gore. Governor Jerry Brown said,
uh when when he was in he did some you know,
moonbean kind of stuff. But he's not as ultra crazy
(16:21):
as as Newsom is gone. At least Jerry Brown would
veto some of that crazy Democrat stuff that would come out.
Speaker 9 (16:28):
Then.
Speaker 1 (16:29):
Newsom last year did the special session, get all the
lugs to say, remember that right before about the high
gas prices, and he scolded the petroleum Ministry. He made
them pass a refinery storage bill that would lead to
even higher gas prices. He had power then he did,
even just at the end of last year. But I
(16:50):
don't think the Democrats are afraid of him anymore, and
I don't think they're loyal to him. I don't think
they're gonna be his water boy anymore. He's not gonna
He's gonna go through little period here probably not having
a whole lot of support around him in that. Am
I crying about it? Absolutely not. Even Newsom knew that
he wanted to be on the ninety five to five issue. Yeah,
(17:12):
he wanted to be on the ninety five percent side,
not the five percent with you know, selling sixteen and
seventeen year olds. He knew it. And I guess if
he goes to the middle, it could do nothing but
help us here in California. A little bit, right, a
little bit, here's a Vince Fong, congressman about Newsom here.
Speaker 10 (17:40):
And this is something that is not created by the market.
This is something that is directly caused by Gavin Newsom's
poor energy policy. Now only did I warn the governor,
but the governor of Arizona and the governor of Nevada.
Speaker 1 (17:55):
Arizona, Nevada.
Speaker 10 (17:56):
They both warned the governor bipartisan concern that this was
going to lead to shortages and this was going to
cause refinery closures.
Speaker 1 (18:05):
Yeah, and the refineries are leaving. And if you don't
know what that means, the bubbling crude has to go
through a refinery before it ends up where you buy
your your pepsi and your tiquitos and get some gas.
It doesn't show up his gas. It has to be refined.
That's dirty e, that's oil ew E. Yiky oil at
(18:28):
bubbling crude. That makes my protest signs. That makes my
cell phone, which then allows me to go to social
media to send everybody where I'm going to be protesting
at lawn musk and drill, Baby drill, I'm going to
go out to one of those and be an anti driller. Well,
the car you drive in the house, you just left
(18:49):
in your clothes. If you got hit by a falling
crane out there protesting, the the medical equipment that would
keep you alive, all petroleum based. Our whole entire world
is petroleum based. And again, just like we should have
gotten our hands around Bruce Caitlyn Jenner and said nope,
(19:10):
man can't become a woman, we should have said early,
early on, this is ridiculous unless you want to be
Fred Vhnstone. We should have just shown, side by side,
here's what they want, here's what we want. You're not
gonna have Starbucks either. No, those machines that gohh Stephane
(19:35):
order for dad, that all that's made from petroleum. Everything
in our world is the petroleum industry has extended our
lifespan again, given us our medical space, satellite communication, everything
you see around you, right, now even if you're going nope,
(19:57):
I got a little hemp bag here, that's right from
some machine or something probably made that unless you did
it yourself. Yeah, your your wood bench that you carved yourself.
You carved it, what you carve it with? Well, I
had a metal blaye. Okay, there we go right back
to it. All the money. Think of all the money
(20:19):
that they have wasted. I just in my hands, like
President Trump, did you see that. I felt like it
when I all the money I done on sideways that
they've been wasted over all of this. And actually CO
two is not a bad word. Actually helps crops. Well,
all jobs depend on ag. Yeah, So we need to
(20:42):
get rid of this these CO two carbon gas, to
all these taxes, all all all this game. It's a game.
It science needs to be dozed, all the waste that
they put into And I always go back to the
(21:03):
fact of all, right, when did official computerized temperature taking start?
Government in the sixties, the private world more in the eighties.
I've asked some experts on this, that's when it kind
of started. So how do we know in eighteen sixty
four or nineteen twenty four or nineteen fifty four that Carl. Carl,
(21:26):
the government guide in North Dakota who had to I
gotta go take my hourly. It's probably about the same
as it was. I'm gonna say it's negative thirty two.
It was negative twenty nine an hour ago, you know,
leaving it up to humans to keep our records. And
now we want to base our entire society on junk junk,
(21:54):
and so what if the temperature goes up a little bit?
Do we really control that? And the scientists that you
say that you believe in the ones that tell us that, yeah,
we came from it. That cute little baby monkey. Oh
look he's growing up and he's becoming Carl. You know
those scientists, they will tell you seven point nine million
(22:16):
years ago the Earth went through a cooling stare. You know,
they all come up. You hear those all over the place,
the ice age, the warming time. And here we are
in California now being brought into I mean, they were
on a big rum where they were gonna be getting
(22:36):
rid of and they still are about gas stoves and
all the leaf blowers and lawnmowers. I'm sure that's still
going into effect. I haven't heard any changes of that
of California having to go to electric with all of that,
but knew some He looks ahead and he sees those
dark storm clouds. Everything that he thought is falling apart,
(22:57):
And I for one got a little grin on.
Speaker 6 (22:59):
My This is the Trevor Jerry Show on the Valley's
Power Talk.
Speaker 1 (23:06):
My guess is May thirtieth, that will hit triple digits.
I think Director Rand Nigel, you were the twenty fifth.
Agent Squire's was the twenty fourth. What are we gonna
do though? If it hits one hundred this weekend, We'll
just ignore it and start our game after that. Yeah,
that's what we do. He's back the BBC. Joe Biden
sat down with the BBC. Let's listen to Joe before
(23:28):
we hear President Trump rip on Governor dipty do. Yeah,
did you leave.
Speaker 3 (23:33):
It too late?
Speaker 8 (23:34):
Should you have withdrawn earlier given someone else a big
a job?
Speaker 11 (23:38):
I don't.
Speaker 8 (23:39):
I don't think it would have.
Speaker 4 (23:42):
Mattered.
Speaker 8 (23:44):
We left at a time when we had our good candidate,
she was fully funded. And what happened was I have
become what we had set out to do no one
thought we could do, and become so successful or in
(24:06):
our agenda. It was hard to say. Now, I'm gonna
stop now. I remem when I said when I started that,
I think it's I I I'm preparing to hand this
to the next generation, the transition government. But it thanks
moved so quickly that it made it difficult to walk away.
(24:26):
And it was a uh it was a hard decision.
But uh regrets to then. No, I I think it
was the right decision. I think that uh the uh, well,
it was just a difficult decision.
Speaker 3 (24:48):
But you shouldn't have taken it at it.
Speaker 1 (24:49):
I have to stop it. Well, I don't.
Speaker 8 (24:51):
I don't think. I don't think so. I mean, I
don't know how that would have made much difference.
Speaker 1 (24:56):
Thank you, Thank you. Jab President Trump. In the oval office,
he had the Prime Minister of Canada in there. We'll
play some more of that audio here in a little bit.
But what we had going on was he started talking
about high speed rail right in the smack dab middle
(25:17):
of it. Brought up Newsom, brought up the little train
going from San fran to la that's being run by
Governor Newscombe. He needs a governor dipty doing, Governor dipty do.
He's talking about the worst cost overrun. He's ever seen,
totally out of control. Trump has had building projects where
(25:39):
he just couldn't believe the overrun. And he's saying, this
is the worst ever ever seen.
Speaker 9 (25:45):
In California, a little train going from San Francisco to
Los Angeles that's being run by Gavin Newscombe, the governor
of California. Did you ever hear of Gavin Newscombe? He
has got that train is the worst cost over and
I've ever seen. It's like totally out of control. So
then they said, all right, we will go into San Francisco,
(26:07):
we'll stop twenty five miles short, and we will go
into Los Angeles, will stop twenty five miles short. It's
hundreds of billions of dollars for this stupid project that
should have never been built.
Speaker 1 (26:21):
Let's go back. I found this little audio in my
hoarding today to twenty eighteen. What were we talking about
even back then? About this seven years ago.
Speaker 12 (26:29):
Stually, the budget for the segment was seven point eight billion,
but new estimates put it at ten point six billion,
a two point eight billion dollar increase. According to documents
presented at today's meeting in the High Speed Rail Authority,
the biggest drivers of the budget bust are getting legal
permission to put the tracks and stations on land that
is not owned by the state costing seven hundred and
(26:50):
twenty five million dollars. Barriers to protect the high speed
rail trains from freight trains are costing an extra four
hundred and fifty million dollars, and finally relocating you utilities
is costing an additional three hundred and fifty million dollars.
Speaker 1 (27:04):
Guys, I was seven years ago. That was ten years
after it went into effect in two thousand and eight.
It still didn't have it together. But at least we
know Trump he liked or liked still likes Newsome. I
think it's true. He said that it's true.
Speaker 9 (27:20):
He and Gavinfore, you know, I always liked Caavin, had
a good relationship with him. I just got him a
lot of water, you know. I senten people to open
up that water because he refused to do it, and
we just got him a lot of What if they
would have had that water, and if they would have
done what I said to do, they wouldn't add the
fires in Los Angeles. Those fires would have been put
out very quickly. But if you think about it, and
(27:43):
you got to take a look at this product. It's
the worst cost over and I've ever seen. I've watched
a lot of stupid people build a lot of stupid things,
but that's the worst cost over and I've ever seen.
Speaker 1 (27:53):
Yeah, there he was talking about the water when he
did come out here, and speaking of the water, the
developer Rick Caruso that ran for may or, was talking
about today he could be like thirty nine building permits
of that's all that's been released. You know this is
going to Well, they just probably want California to die.
I mean, why should we be thinking, why aren't they
(28:14):
more focused on they want this? We can tell by
every vote that they've done. They want chaos and they
want decay, and they want the Cloward Pivens plan to
bankrupt the fourth largest economy in the world. Why else
would you hire this woman to be your director of
water and power at seven hundred thousand dollars a year.
The lady from Brazil member that knew that the reservoirs
(28:37):
were empty up in the Palisades, Well, it's all about equity.
Equitable Listen to her again. I've played this before, but
now that I'm talking about I want to go back
and here's the focus down there and again, has anybody
been held accountable? Remember Newsom said it was there a Hey,
it's y'all's problem that it's a local thing, right.
Speaker 5 (28:57):
You call it powered by equity, and I know that
it's been really important for the DWP to put an
equity lens on everything.
Speaker 13 (29:04):
Yes. Yeah, And that's the number one thing that attracted
me to this role, coming from the communities that I come,
seeing what I've seen through my career and utilities and
through the military. I've been in the costcar nineteen and
a half years now, so I got six more months
to qualify for my twenty years, which was my original goal.
Speaker 1 (29:23):
Wow, congratulation, Thank you for your service.
Speaker 13 (29:26):
Thank you, thank you. It's important to me that everything
we do it's with an equited lens and social justice
and making sure that we right the wrongs that we've
done in the past from an infrastructure perspective, and that
we involve the community in that process. And this utility
is serious about it, is authentic about it, and so
(29:49):
I'm just super excited to be part of that movement.
Speaker 1 (29:52):
I were going to look through everything through the lens
of race, equitable.
Speaker 6 (29:57):
And white as well.
Speaker 1 (29:59):
I know, calm down, here's what Newsom released, hard pass
on fiscal tips from the self described king of debt,
who run a state company, a casino, and a global
economy all into the ground. Is Newsome talking about Trump
with fifty major structures built walking away now as we
(30:20):
enter the track laying phase would be reckless, wasting billions
already invested and letting job killers seed a generational infrastructure
advantage to China. That's a Kamala Harris word slidified, continuing,
this is reckless. What did Valley Democrat Congressman Jim Costas costas?
(30:44):
That's his new his new Ninonamy like that. Cost Us
got Jim Costas Jim Costas too much? Yeah, I like that.
Here's what he said. Those project means jobs, cleaner air,
faster commutes from millions of Californians. We should be investing
in the future, not derailing progress. Are you high? Are
(31:09):
you high?
Speaker 9 (31:10):
We're not going to pay for that thing. They are
just it's out of control. This is something that you
don't have things like this. It's not even conceivable, like
thirty times over a budget thirty times. It's the craziest thing,
and now it's hundreds of It was supposed to be
a simple train, and I think the media should take
a look at it. And I'd love him to run
(31:32):
for president on the other side, you know, I'd love
to see that, but I don't think he's going to
be running because that one project alone, well, that and
the fires and a lot of other things. Yeah, pretty
much put him out of the race.
Speaker 1 (31:44):
I'm mister, pretty much put him out of the race. Damn.
There you go. Let's go back eight years, shall we.
Speaker 12 (31:52):
Flashman says that these new expenses should have been in
the original budget. For example, the need for intrusion barriers
was obvious.
Speaker 13 (32:00):
Two thousand and eight.
Speaker 4 (32:01):
We raised this issue about intrusion barriers and they ignored us.
Speaker 1 (32:05):
So that's ten years ago.
Speaker 12 (32:06):
After the Oreville Damn scare. Last year, I asked the
governor if money for high speed rail would be better
spent elsewhere. A number of California's express concern that we
were spending millions billions of dollars on high speed rail
as opposed to keeping up the infrastructure that should have
been maintaining. What do you say to that criticism, Well, I.
Speaker 3 (32:24):
Say that you have to be able to do more
than one thing at a time. A rail passenger rail
alternative is a very important compliment to the roads, the bridges,
and the airports. I think California can well afford it
and it'll make our state.
Speaker 6 (32:38):
I'm like, this is the Trevortary Show on the Valley.
He's powered talk.
Speaker 1 (32:44):
President Trump said this goes back centuries, and he's right,
he said, not a good thing, not good news. They
found out about it as he was just walking in
the Oval office and they asked him about it. World
War three to biggest nuclear power could be breaking out
their two of the world's biggest. I don't know if
you saw any of the video footage, but they launched
(33:06):
multiple missile strikes into Pakistan. Indian armed forces did India's
bombing Pakistan? Say they were terrorists hideouts there? Pakistan stating
that now these are where a lot of civilians were
Sounds like Gaza, sounds like Ukraine. India not holding back.
Pakistan got pretty pounded. The Indian government released the following statement.
(33:28):
A little while ago, our forces launched Operation Sindoor, hitting
terrorist infrastructures in Pakistan and Pakistan occupied Kashmir from where
terroist attacks against India been planned and directed. These steps
come in the wake of the barbaric terrorist attack in
which twenty five Indians and when the Polis citizens were murdered,
India has demonstrated considerable restraint in selection of targets and
(33:52):
method of execution. There were nine targets hit that India
said were terror targets. They were hitting Pakistan and Pakistan
occupied Kashmir. Pakistani military spokesman said revenge. Pakistan will respond
to it at a time and place of its own.
Choosing this heinous provocation will not go unanswered. I haven't
(34:17):
looked into this. I know a Prime Minister Modi Modi
from India and Trump seem to have a very good
time in the White House together. I don't know if
we're more friendli or with one or the other. Probably
a little more with India trade agreement has supposedly been
worked out as well. But with President Trump's foreign policy,
(34:40):
we went and get involved with with that. Here's the
statement President Trump made. It's a shame they've been fighting
for a long time. They've been fighting for many decades.
I hope it ends very quickly. Wars and rumors of wars,
this is not a rumor. This is a real war.
Israeli's government has improved a plan to seize all the
Gaza st hold control of it. Prime Minister net Yaho's
(35:03):
cabinet minister ministers unanimously approved the plan for this new offensive.
What they want to do is move all the people
in Gaza, all the civilian population toward the south. They're
going to keep humanitarian aid going in trying to keep
it out of the hands of Hamas. But they're the
bad guys right now Columbia, New York City. They're arresting
(35:25):
all the protesters out there in their Palestinian garb. They're
pro Hamas, anti Israel, and Israel. Tens of thousands of
reserve soldiers are being called up.
Speaker 3 (35:38):
Now.
Speaker 1 (35:39):
President Trump's going to visit next week and they that Yahoo.
They were saying there that they'll probably do this after
he's out of the area. Maybe he's coming over there
to get peace man. They said, the Israeli Defense Forses
will take control of the territory and guys and move
the civilian population south, and they're going to find the hostages.
(36:01):
They said they're still being held by Hamas. Fifty nine
out of those fifty nine, they say about thirty five
have been confirmed dead. Aren't you glad? Right now we
got Secretary Defense Pete Headseth that we actually have a
battle warrior there, somebody that knows what they're doing. You know, somebody.
(36:23):
I had to pick somebody to head Nassa. I want
somebody that maybe he's been in a rocket ship, maybe
flew the Shuttle or something, did something like that. Don't
we like NFL coaches that played in college or maybe
played in the pros, or at least played in high
school and got into coaching. Hag Seth, He's been out
(36:46):
on the field. Eg Seth has the bruises and the
blood and has seen his former soldiers die. He knows
what it means to order somebody into combat. Secretary of
heagset ordered senior Pentagon leadership to cut the number of
four star generals and admirals by twenty percent across the military. Now,
(37:09):
I wonder if they're going to be picking which ones
they those are. I would assume so probably a lot
of your wosters, probably a lot of your maybe they
didn't agree with it, but they just went along to
get along, and let's go ahead and paint those marine
bullets the color of the rainbow. Maybe they didn't like
drag shows on military basis or kids, but yeah, they
(37:31):
went along with it because you know they're a four
star general. Eggset said, the cuts are critical steps toward
removing redundant force structure. We're going to streamline leadership. Good
Eset claimed, senior officers in the military are playing by
all the wrong rules to cater to idea logues in Washington,
(37:53):
d c. And so they'll do any social justice, gender,
climate extremism crap because it gets them check to the
next level. Well, those days have come to an end,
my friends.
Speaker 11 (38:06):
No more pronouns, no more climate change obsession, no more
emergency vaccine mandates, no more dudes in dresses.
Speaker 1 (38:17):
Yes, we're done with that. Good first hundred days been
historic for the president or over one hundred days now
and Secretary hedg Safe he got in their elimination of DEI,
the Defense Department down, they're protecting our southern border. Good
(38:38):
things have been happening. This is at the speed I
wanted Republicans to be at.
Speaker 6 (38:43):
The Assistant Trevor Jerry Show Mondo Valley's Power Talk