Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
When the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence Chairman Devin
Nunez asked then President Trump to declassify what became known
as the Nonz Memo, and President Trump then did not
do it. And this is a difference I hope we'll
have in Trump two point zero because he knows the
(00:21):
layout right. Sometime I think it was twenty eighteen or
twenty nineteen, Trump made a statement to the effect that
if we really knew how the government worked, we'd never
trust it again. I remember when he said that. I'm like, Wow,
that really says a lot, doesn't it. And he's going
to do what he can do to clean up government.
(00:43):
Let's admit a little. I mean, you can't drain that
swamp in three years, in eleven months, and you know
what I'm saying, you can't clean up over one hundred
years of swamp making in one term. So building the bench,
the staff, and keeping this continuing. What a consultant he
would be for president? Well, we'll see if Jade Vance
(01:05):
steps up and is going to be the man that
he seems to be. Right. You know, they got to
get in there and they got to get it done right.
But I go back and I think about Dwight D.
Eisenhower when he was leaving office warning of the military
industrial complex. Right, and then the sudden ending of Kennedy.
I'm pretty sure that's maybe around that time periods when
(01:27):
the deep state decided to overthrow the government. Then they
had the CLOWD. Pivens Plan and the all the immigration
plan that Senator Kennedy brought in, and Johnson's Great Society
to get people depended on. It was a long term plan.
In each administration, each senator of that serves twenty years.
Each Congress from the serves ten. They do their part,
(01:48):
their little part. Kamala was one to do a big
part to unburden what has been undone right, undo what well,
I don't can't remember what her joy campaign was even about, right,
but what all's come out since then, it's a miracle,
well even at this point that Trump is still standing
with the deep state, it's a miracle from God above,
(02:10):
Thank you Lord. And back in twenty seventeen, when Chairman
Devin Nunas of the House Intelligence Committee asked the White House,
specifically President Trump to declassified the nun As memo. Trump
did d not classified. He didn't do it. He was
told by his lawyers in the office. I guessaid he
shouldn't do it, and he didn't do it, and we
(02:32):
did kind to see the memo. It was redactions only Nuonas. No,
it's in the Nunas memo and only a few other
people know what was in that. Right. They negotiated the
reaction because Nunas and the name here Cash Ptel involved
with this, they had to come to some kind of
agreement to but it was all the redactions. And in
(02:53):
January of twenty twenty, as Trump was leaving the White House,
he decided to I guess, play by the rules. He
asked for the Russia Gate documents to be made public,
but they never were. Never were He followed the DC
rules of the intelligence community that Chuck Schumer warned. He
warned Trump, Oh, they can get you right, Hope, this
time it's going to be different. And I'm bringing all
(03:15):
this up to say what we need to have change,
what needs to be different. Full transparency. Here's newness talking
about Russia probe.
Speaker 2 (03:23):
It's in the best interest of the of of our
intelligence agencies to have full transparency on this because you're
you're really dealing with many Americans who are living in
an alternative universe who have drank this Russia kool aid.
Speaker 1 (03:38):
Now I would have to ask I guess a new
nes or a doctor Victor Davis Hanson, or somebody that
really understands how it could happen. Maybe this is too simple.
But hearing all the power that presidents have, you know,
Joe Biden, Pardoner, and Hunter, I played you, Gerald, Ford,
Pardon and Nixon, Right, why couldn't Trump take the information
that you know guarantee to release it to the public.
(03:59):
You know, take the filebox is personally in right there
in the Brady Room, uses full power and authority, give
them to the media. Say something like I designate under
my power official act of power of this information as
to the people of America, hand it to the media.
That's not what happened in the first term. It never
(04:22):
reached sunlight. Everything that happened in that darkens the country. Man.
We demand and we deserve, we deserve to have the truth.
And I don't know why the president can't take any
document right walking in that room, handed to journalists and
it's automatically declassified. He don't need to put a stamp
on it. He done need by his approval. He the
president can say I'm doing this, this is an interest
(04:45):
to the American public. That's his power. And the circles
around the president, I guess stopped them from doing a
lot of that, but it can be done this way
and Cash Betell and Devin Nunez and they could answer
these questions you had. Nuna's I'll play it again here.
Speaker 2 (05:02):
Just for the sake of full transparency, because there's so
much that's out there that's misinformation or disinformation on this
Russia Gate fiasco that we needed this information out before
the election. And that's why we've been asking the President
of the United States to declassify many more documents as
it relates to not only Bruce or but also with
(05:23):
the Carter Page Faiza.
Speaker 1 (05:25):
Yeah, declassify. He wanted them to be classified, then declassifying
something that the intelligence community don't like you to do.
That was very brave of Congressman nunas well. It looks
like Trump rewarded him. Bird's bravery, right, But it's one
of the White House Council is so important and Trump's
(05:45):
first term obviously not surrounded by the right people, and
that's why that Nuna's Minmo was never declassified, and hopefully
Trump two point zero will be a different script and
a different outcome, and people will be held accountable. And
I'm pretty sure Trump is a highly intelligent individual. He
plays I think chess. It's like you might think he's
(06:05):
just fortunate or he got lucky with some of his
but when he does it all the time, out maneuvers people.
That's some smart thinking up there. Point to your noggin
and go, yep, right up there in that noggin right there.
I bet he's got a war plan and he's not
going to disclose it. Only a few tight people in
a circle, Paul, you even know about it, to fight
back against his enemy within, and we'll see what happens.
(06:29):
I didn't like the Piza spying. I didn't like the
way Cash Betel Fiza supported that, but I can't you know,
I'm not going to agree with everybody that he's putting
in there, but not to be taking out of context.
People don't do that, do they. I'll take Cash Betel
any day over Christopher Ray at the FBI. But yeah,
it would be a beautiful day, wolf Blitzer interrupting, We're
(06:51):
gonna live to the White House. President Trump staying in
correspondent live at the White House. Well, thank you. Well,
the President is bringing out looks like Rudy Giuliliani and overalls,
he's bringing out these fileboxes. All right, imagine the President
walking in. You's in his full power, given the official
proclamation of I designate on this day in the year
(07:14):
of Our Lord, that this is to the American people,
and you know, show us everything that the deep State
has been hiding. I would immediately go to the K
file and the U file K for Kennedy, U for
UFOs those are and B for Butler. It's not funny.
They're still going to be coming after him. Man, bring
(07:35):
out the fileboxes. President Trump, get inaugurated, Go ahead, attend
the fancy balls. I know, you got to keep the
first lady happy and let her do her dresses and
all that kind of stuff. Then on day one, I know, yeah,
Tom home is your first meeting. But after he's out
the door going okay, take care of it. So does
he leaves drop the files? Yeah before at nine am.
(08:00):
Meet with Home at about seven point thirty, and then
blast them out the deep deep State. Man is we
always kind of knew something about it, right, but it's
not really hidden anymore. You know, even in the eighties,
I watched the nineteen seventy things on JFK, and you
(08:24):
know it'd have been on a VHS, a three part series.
You know, now they're everywhere. We know so much more
now about our government, and you know, there's been good
people in the government. Not everybody in the government's corrupt.
But I tell you there's a lot of the power
players over the years. I really don't know. And I
don't want to say this and make Reagan look bad
(08:44):
or Trump look bad. Not a fan of the bush Boys,
but that does anybody rise to that power without having
that meeting? And by that meeting, I mean I don't
know the people that run the world. There's people over
the presidents, prime ministers, and the even the dictators. There's
somebody out there. We can go with the World Economic
(09:06):
Forum and Claus Schwab and Bill Gates. We can name
all these big names, right, but people, it's people we
do not know. It's people's whose great great great granddaddy's
were on Jucko Island, you know, writing up the Federal Reserve.
It's that kind of that kind of lineage. Man. It's
an unknown world to a lot of us. And I'm
(09:27):
going to say that whoever those people are, boy, they
had their fingers in Butler, Pennsylvania on July thirteenth. I
still believe that. And that's one thing I hope Trump
comes out in a big way, right. I mean the
fact that the shooter had all those messaging systems, the
fact he had accounts in other foreign countries, a young
(09:48):
American male, not from a Yale or Harvard family. He
wasn't skull and bones. He had the pipe bomb, and
the fact that, Yeah, I'm gonna keep reminding you about this.
I know Trump thinks about it multiple times a day.
He knows the Secret Service didn't try and take him
(10:10):
off the stage or not even let him walk on
the stage. With all the multiple warnings, this is not
a conspiracy. The things that have come out in committee hearings.
There's so much more that we do not know. But
what we do know, the Secret Service made sure that
there was a line of fire in Butler. They made
sure of that. Secret Service refused to release their records.
(10:35):
They erased all their radio conversations. What more do you
need to get Oliver Stone getting the cameramen ready to roll,
Man and then FBI make it a big deal about
arresting some Iranian they claim was this is one of
those ploting to kill Trump. Hey, look over there, look
over there, look over there. Right, Nobody wants to dig
(10:56):
into this. Nobody wants to explain how the SEA is
still able to continue covering up the records related to
the jfk assassination. There's actually a law that makes the
release happen, but I guess Congress just carries on like
everything's just all hunky dory.
Speaker 3 (11:14):
Right.
Speaker 1 (11:14):
They thought they could take Trump out. You know why
they thought that because they've always gotten away with it
in the past. The deep state is real, but they failed.
God's handstepped in.
Speaker 3 (11:28):
Its Super Tuesday with Trevor Carey on The Valley's Power
Talk Death.
Speaker 1 (11:33):
Let's talk about death. I think I got three death
stories in a row here as the UK is getting
ready to vote on the Terminally Ill Adults end of
Life bill. We used to have these stories that would
pop up here and there, somebody that climbs into doctor
Deak's thing and assisted suicide. It's now thirty thousand people
(11:55):
a year are doing this in countries where it's legal. Right,
It's staggering that we now say it's okay to do
that while we run all these PSAs about suicide prevention.
You know, any show now that has a suicide and
if they run something at the end, if you're feeling this,
call one eight hundred or go to this website or
operators are standing by to make sure you don't kill yourself. Right,
(12:18):
But then yet we okay it to kill yourself. These
guys didn't want to die. Three men died after Google
Maps led them across a collapsed bridge. This was in
northern India. They trusted Google Maps. I think we can
say a little too much, right. They were traveling and
(12:39):
you seeing their GPS and Google Maps and the info
on the map system one up to date, and they
drove off the end of a collapse bridge. That's one
good thing about why people want to break into America
is that we don't allow stuff like that. They didn't
have a sign up. There was no posted signage. Part
of the bridge collapse because of floods, and all the
locals knew this and knew not to take the bridge.
(13:01):
These guys were from obviously outside the area India. Time
said no barricades or signboards indicating the bridge was unfinished.
The bridge was out, no indication whatsoever that if you
get on this bridge you're about to drive off into
the water. Authorities in India of named four engineers from
the state's road department charges of homicide. Well, yeah, I would,
(13:23):
I would think so, right, travel over there. YouTube knows
me again? Better named by the side of the Mississippi.
They know. I love these dangerous road shows. You ever
watch those where the world's most dangerous roads. Yeah, and
they're in these trucks in the lot of them are
in South America, A lot of them are in India
or big mountain areas. Right, I'm amazed that the people
(13:45):
got the gusts to do that. But what I want
to see is the bulldozer guy who made those roads.
How they're scarier than when I lived in Colorado Springs.
We were like, Hey, you want to go up Pike's Peak.
I'd always have some Now, no, no doctor's coming over
to do a colonoscar. Be at home. I can't make
it right. I'd always come up with a reason why
(14:06):
I didn't want to go up to that. Those roads
Pikes Peak Highway, there's corners where there's no guardrails. They
do a race every year down that thing. It's crazy, man,
You wouldn't give me up a butt Anyhow, those crazy
roads that are up there and the people that die
on them were fortunate here in America, even with our
potholes and every people running red lights that Lisa, if
(14:29):
a bridge goes out, we have a sign that's say yeah, yeah,
you couldn't. You couldn't get away with this, Okay, Next
story about death. This guy's a psycho, a Wisconsin man.
Maybe some of you saw this. I think it was
running around social media. But he faked his death, faked it,
got away with it for a long time. A band
and his family went to Europe. They found out that
(14:51):
he's alive. Yeah, his father, husband faked his death. His
name is Ryan Vorgwatt, forty five year old man from Watertown, Wisconsin.
I wonder when the thought process started with these kind
of crazy people that pull off these kind of stunts. Right.
They had search and rescue out there for fifty four days.
They spent forty thousand dollars looking for him because they
thought that he dropped out of a kayak and was
(15:13):
at the bottom of a lake. Where he's really out
in the Eastern European live it out some I don't know,
some spy thriller, fantasy and in Europe. When did that
hit that? Man? I wonder driving to work one day,
it gets a text, I need you to pick up
bread and ham and mayonnaise. And he's like, you know what,
I just can't do this anymore. I'm I'm going to
(15:34):
divorce my wife. I'm going to get hair plugs, I'm
going to get in shape, I'm going to move to
Malibu and I'm going to work at a surf shop. Now,
he didn't make that kind of a drastic crazy move
like that like normal people do. Right. He faked his
death and then vanished, and they found out that he
was alive. See, he was out back in October and
(15:55):
he staged or excuse me, in August, that is Kayak flipped.
He paddled to the shore and what was described as
a child size inflatable boat. He hiked onto an e
bike to a bus station. He went from Detroit to Canada,
got on a plane bound for Europe, and all of
this while sinking his laptop to the cloud. He replaced
his hard drive, He scrubbed his search history and he
(16:17):
took out a three hundred and seventy five thousand dollar
life insurance policy. In January, he took out a foreign
bank account. He took out airline cards and probably part
of the reasoning, you know, I will say, what was
in this guy's life? Was he driving to work and
just decided one day he's going to fake his death. Now,
the sheriff's department when they found out and tracked him,
(16:38):
and imagine all those guys out there searching that lake,
you know, divers down there, the wife crying, haven't explained
to the kids, the whole family, neighbors that knew him,
bringing food over, you know, can't find his body. How
do you have a funeral? Ah, he met a mysterious
woman in Uzbekistan there it is always comes right back
(17:01):
to that, and affair of the heart made this man
fake his whole death. What should the punishment be for
somebody like that? What do you think the punishment should be?
Is that it's obviously financial restitution to pay back the
search and rescue. Right. I don't know if did he
commit crimes with forging things, so there'll be a penalty
(17:24):
for that. But this one seems like it needs to
be a little bit something above and beyond that. Right
maybe up there in Wisconsin. Every weekend for an entire year,
he's in a stockade with a plastic protective pope bubble
around him, and people get to come by and just
yell insults of what they think about it. He has
to be in the stockade for We'll give him a
bathroom break once an hour, but three hours front of
(17:46):
a Walmart out there. People get to come by and
just tell this man what they eight hours, eight hours, okay,
eight hours a Saturday. We'll give him the Sabbath off. Yeah,
every weekend for a year. That's his punishment. They get
to come out there and just tell him what they think.
Speaker 3 (18:02):
The assist the Trevor Cherry Show, Mondo Sally's Power Dog.
Speaker 1 (18:07):
Hang it Up. December twenty first, that'll be the quickest
shortest day of the year. I was just walking in
last night, flipping lights on at home, going, man, see,
we're never content as humans, aren't we. I'm like, oh,
it's so hot, I can't wait for it to get cooler.
And now that it's cooler, and I'm like, I can't
wait for it to be light when I come home. Right,
you know, and it stays light till nine oh three. Eh.
(18:32):
It just we always want the opposite, don't we. I
had my buddy back in western New York. He was
part of that lake effect snow. If you watch the
Bills and forty nine Ers game, you heard the Chris
Collins right there talking about they're staying in downtown Buffalo
and there was no snow, and then they went to
Orchard Park. Was just I don't know, what is it?
Ten twelve miles south and those South counties get that
(18:54):
lake effect snow so many times, and I go back
to it's not always the South counties. They called it
Snovember of twenty thirteen, twenty fourteen, Yeah, Snovember November seventeenth
to the twenty first. I can't remember what I talked
about on the show yesterday, but you can I remember
(19:14):
being snowed in with seven feet of snow and ten
miles to the north of the airport. Was it was
just a dusting. That's what that lake effect can do.
That was the most scariest feeling of nature of a disaster,
of knowing you can't get out, you have a heart attack.
(19:35):
You better look up on YouTube how to take care
of that because and that is if you have power.
We had power the entire time. But when they were
talking about that lake effect, I'm like, ah, that's nothing, man,
seven feet or it even drifted higher when you rate in.
We raised a garage door. I got video of this
garage door going up and it's just a white wall
of snow right there. You can kind of see the sky,
(19:57):
you know, over the seven feet there. But when the
would happen, all right, That's why I told God, if
he gets me out of this cold weather, I will
never complain about heat again. And you have not heard me.
I'll talk about it's hot, and I'll say I don't
know how those people outside can work in it, but
they're like, huh, you gotta get me out of this.
(20:18):
I'd be hit by lightning both if I said that,
because he did get me out of that. And back
to the California weather. Now, people are moving out of California.
I'll give you the numbers in a moment, and they're
going to weather that they're not used to. You take
the crappiest weather. I guess people would say here in
the valley that that's the crappiest weather in California because
(20:39):
it gets so hot the desert, of course, Palm Desert,
Palm Springs, Ridgecrest. It gets really hot down there as well.
But that's a desert, you expect that. That's cacti. And yeah,
that's a big, big windmills, and you know airplane graveyards.
Have you ever seen that out there? And is it
California City Orjave out there that all those airplanes. After
(21:03):
you see all those windmills, you're like, whoa. And then
you see all those those airplanes out there. But when
people in California, even what we might can say is
the worst weather, they get back to the Southern States,
and especially if well I've been to Georgia. I always
ask when did you go? They say November or October.
I'm like, okay, I bet you enjoyed it. They say
(21:23):
July August. I go, what was that like that? Did
you really want to go out to the cracker Barrel?
Speaker 2 (21:29):
No?
Speaker 1 (21:30):
It was too hot, wasn't it. You want to be
in the air conditioning, kind of like the opposite in
Buffalo with the you just stay in. That's why that's
why the Bills fans they call it the Bills mafia.
See those guys with their shirts off and they come out. Listen.
In cold weather, that's about all that you got to do.
In our hot weather, there's a lot we can still do, right,
(21:51):
But you know, that's it up there, That's why they're
so into it. But you get to those Southern states
and get that humidity going, that is the killer. I
the humidity. But hey, if you if you're going to
take your kids going into a transvestite closet over some humidity, Uh,
give me, give me the sweats, yeah, give me, give
(22:11):
me the gi give me that hot weather. New data
shows that people are moving to Southern states more than
anywhere else. And uh, relature dot com with their informations
at low regulation, low taxes and friendly people, and people
are saying they want to be around friendliness. Right, Please
don't take your uptightness. Like I said, there, don't take
(22:32):
your what's their problem? They waved? What do you mean,
what's their problem? I my mom and dad just relocated
back to their hometown of West Tennessee. I've been back
there a few times, and I haven't been back to
Tennessee in a while. And when I came back after
that first trip, I sat here on the air people
at convenience stores are friendlier in Tennessee than they are
(22:52):
at church out by the coffee. That's true. The top
six states that people are moving to are all in
the down in the Hart of Dixie. Let's see here,
Tennessee's at number six. Let me go backwards here, let
me start at ten. Ohio. That's the only Midwestern state
(23:12):
on the top ten. Then you got Oklahoma at nine,
Alabama eight, Arizona seven, Tennessee six, And that means seventy
six thousand people have moved in. Georgia at number five
with eighty eight thousand, South Carolina number four, ninety one thousand,
North Carolina number three with one hundred and twenty six thousand,
Texas three hundred and fifteen thousand people have moved in,
(23:35):
and now Monroe, who know Governor dipty do Yeah, Desanta State,
Florida three hundred and seventy two thousand, eight hundred and
seventy people have up and moved in. And I hope
that they left these other states because they hated the
liberalism of it. Right, it mixed in that you're going
to have some people that are just moving for economic reasons.
(23:56):
That will be the ones that are going what's their problem.
They weighed those people. There's a lot of friendly people
in California. California's so different, it's so huge that it
has so many different personalities. Most states have the kind
of same personality. In Tennessee, they got the eastern Mountains,
(24:17):
they got the Nashville in the middle, and you got
West Tennessee. That's more like Arkansas, Missouri. But there's still
kind of the same state, right in California or forty
sixty right now, forty percent Republican, sixty percent Democrat. And
with those beliefs come different cities and different views and
different regulations. Right, wouldn't it be weird in old town
(24:39):
Clovis if you had the parades with the men in
their dresses with their sex toys up on the floats, right,
see now that that wouldn't fly, But it happens in
San Francisco. So yeah, we're a lot different kind of
a state, but there it is. Tennessee, Georgia, South Carolina,
North Carolina, Texas, Florida. California was the biggest er U
(25:01):
seventy five thousand, four hundred and twenty three people left.
It's kind of with everything that's going on that's kind
of surprisingly low. I mean, we got forty million people.
That's really not that big of a of a dent
unless out of those seventy five thousand, four hundred and
twenty three thousand people, thirty three thousand, three hundred and
thirty three of them were multi multi, multi, multi, multi,
(25:21):
multi multi millionaires. And that's the problem. Yeah, Tennessee gained
about the same amount of people that California lost. Right,
don't tell me all those Californias moved to Tennessee. Don't
Illinois they lost thirty two thousand people. New York lost
one hundred and one thousand. They got a less population
(25:43):
than we have in more people. It's the cold weather
combined with that too. Has to be that, right, But
we're seeing a movement, and we're seeing a movement politically.
Walmart announced they're gonna pull back from bitter the Duke
Dei diversity, equity and inclusion. They're going to remove their
sexual and trends under products they were marketing toward kids.
They're going to review their grants to LGBTQIA events to
(26:06):
avoid funding sexualized content targeting children. Well, Johnny come lately
to the party. We're talking about good old fashioned Walmart. Right,
they're gonna continue those supporting the pride parades. Right, God,
you got us wrong. We're proud of the fact that
we're smarter than you parades. Right, But they're no longer
going to participate in the Human Rights campaign Corporate Equality Index,
(26:31):
Well that that human rights campaign. Hillary Clinton's all into that, right.
They give these corporations their scores, and all these corporations
got into the game of well, we don't want to
be ostracized because we're not friendly to everybody, so yes,
we're part of the human rights campaign. So they got
all these corporations got involved in all this, and at
their board meetings, suddenly it would have to be you
(26:52):
need to have at least one panent sexual, You need
to have at least one two spirited person. Do not
look at at graduation, what colleges don't look at their resumes.
We need to check off these boxes. And then when
that happens, you got Dylan mulvaney's sipping a bud light
and panties destroying the brand. When that happens, you got
(27:15):
Jaguar putting out there. I don't know what that was.
It looked like the opening of the Olympics, or maybe
they unleashed the CERN portal and some people came out right.
And then the car that they put out that looks
like the pink Panther Mobile. I saw some people online
comparing this new Jaguar, and maybe this is why Jaguar
did all this, so that people like myself will talk
(27:35):
and say, Jaguar, Jaguar, Jaguar, Jaguar, Jaguar. But it's very
space ag, modern y looking, the new Jaguar that they
put out. I don't even if I saw even a
half smashed coke can in the street, I wouldn't roll
over it in that Jaget it's so close to the ground.
And they showed like four or five other cars from
(27:55):
like ten years, eight years ago, five years then it
looks almost identical too. I watched a and I can't
remember what it was on, because we don't know anymore
what we watch or what network or stream it's on.
But about car designing guys, and they went back to
the fifty sixty seven. They went through each decade and
showed the designs, and they had some older footage of them,
(28:16):
you know, before a lot of computerized and they still
do it today though, they do the clay formations, and
these guys are artists. Man, they chisel these cars and
then they paint them. They and make them look real,
but they're not. And it's just incredible artwork. And you
would see board meetings rooms with conference room meetings where
they're having a heated conversation over a slight slant of
(28:40):
the fender. I mean, they analyze everything about these cars.
But the Jaguar, somebody said, it looks like it's just
like a big air conditioning unit. It kind of, it
kind of did, kind of don't. It's so hard to describe.
Go look it up. Say I'm helping Jaguar right now.
But they came out with all of that, and of
(29:03):
course they're marketing and they're saying they want to get
rid of the old Jaguar with the you know, the guy,
the the James Bond kind of feel to it. They
want a newer, younger generation to come in. And I
would say that the newer, younger generation that could afford
that car would not be into what they're pushing now.
(29:26):
But you've seen a lot of companies Harley Davidson, Lowe's
four tractor supply, Jack Daniels. They've all left the Human
Rights Campaign Corporate Equality Index. They give you a rating,
a grade, a score. It's really a woke trans report card.
It's really what it is. Uh okay. I mentioned Walmart,
I mentioned Target. I haven't been in it. I used to.
(29:47):
It was like when I first moved here, I didn't
know streets or whatever. I learned the street, turn right,
turn there, turn there and Bay there's a Target right there,
and I would go there. I park on the side
every Saturday going just before I got into Amazon delivering
my pap her towels and razors and everything when I wanted.
When I used to go buy those kind of things.
But Target, I don't know what was it, five six seven,
(30:08):
I was a little while back. Did their Hey we're
going to put in bathrooms and we're going to have
men and women in the same bathroom. That was that
big thing that happened with them, and it I didn't
like join a boycott. I just said, I'm not gonna something.
It felt good not to go there for some reason,
and that's that's what hurts these companies. Target fired a
(30:30):
team member that had an expression of her religious faith
on her name tag. Her name was Christina and she
worked in Fargo and a manager came up and said,
you can't write trust in Jesus on my Hello my
name tag on there, and she's like, well, people put
their rainbow and LG they put their own opinions on
like that, and they fired her. They said, if you
(30:53):
have any questions about the violation of dressco, call one
of these numbers and let her go. So I guess
the manager of Target thought Jesus was too offensive, but
you know, giving those little boys tuck swimsuits that that
that that's cool. But Target did respond. They're like, well
not again, we don't need this. They reverse the manager's decision,
(31:14):
hired back, made the made the manager go to some
kind of training, and her job has been reinstated there
as well. So see, man, if you fight back and
it's not fun to fight back, it's it's really truly
not I'm so tired of all this fighting back in this.
He didn't used to be where corporations we would think
of as as what's their moral view? Now they let
(31:37):
us know what their moral We want to let you
know what our moral view is, and then you decide
if you want to do business with us or not
I have. I have Geico insurance and I have not
communicated with them, and I don't know when because they
take it out. Every month. I get something in the
mail that has a card in it, I put it
in my car and I file the other thing in
a in a file cabinet. But now I'm thinking about
(31:59):
this because Ico is instructing all their employees how to
handle mis gendering people with the pronouns. Every employee now
has to go through training to instruct them about pronoun questions.
So Geico, you hear that, you know what that is?
(32:21):
That's your profits slipping away. They're just not smart anymore.
Do they ever learn? No, No, they don't.
Speaker 3 (32:28):
This is the Trevor carry Show on The Valley's Power Talk.
Speaker 1 (32:33):
Last night, I was going home like, oh am, I
gonna eat. I got all this stuff in there and
I gotta go wait leftovers? What are you thinking?
Speaker 3 (32:40):
Man?
Speaker 1 (32:41):
And it was better last night. I put it on
foil in the air fryer about eight nine minutes got
because mass potatoes take forever to heat up, and boy,
it was still just good again. It was better. It
was better. I was so full, fell asleep to everybody.
Loves Raymond woke up thought it was ten thirty or something.
It was seven forty nine. That is a good after Thanksgiving,
(33:05):
A leftover little go to sleepfield on the couchs boy.
I guess there is something of that Turkey that does
it to you. I was talking about that that Jaguar car.
This is some car news. Go green, new deal, build
black better, go broke. This is I mean, this is
kind of huge news. We're not talking about a car
lot on Blackstone. We're talking about Nissan on the verge
(33:27):
of collapse within the next twelve months. They've had heavy losses.
They're going have to cut cost. They're cutting nine thousand
job cuts. They lost sixty million lost quarter. And where
are they making some cuts in a three billion dollars
in cuts on EV development? Look at that. See Nissan
(33:49):
went full EV. Toyota did the whole hybrid kind of thing,
kind of you know, putting their toe in the water
before they did what Nissan did, doing the belly flop
in the in the deep end. Right, Nissan is saying
they got twelve months to try and survive. It's being
blamed on the lack of their lack of having the
hybrid tell you to. Honda have gone through some collapses
(34:11):
as well with their EV sales. You got all the
car rental companies just now going. You can get a
Tesla s I think for what was it a twenty
twenty twenty twenty one for under twenty thousand dollars now
because they realize these cars are getting close to the
end of their batteries and that's going to add well,
depending on the size of the vehicle, at minimum like
ten thousand dollars for a battery. I remember, I can't
(34:34):
remember his name if he's listening to the show God Bush.
He came in here and we talked because they had
such a problem with his with his use. I think
it was a prius. The back order to get the
battery was taking maybe I don't even know if he's
gotten it yet. It had taken him, like I think
it was about ten months of waiting when he came
in here and I interviewed him about the reality of VVS.
(34:56):
You've been in the sweet period the last ten years.
I would say that's had an EV here. But yeah,
their transition, they're so far off on what they think
is actually gonna gonna happen, and what happened the marketplace,
let them know what happened, and we have It was
(35:17):
easy to call, really easy to call, because a lot
of people in America still remember being able to get
in a car, drive across the country and stop at
gas stations and it takes ten minutes. Everybody, go to
the bathroom, get a snack, we've filled up, and go.
When you've grown up that way, it's very hard to
change people's people's mindsets. And also, I am never ever
(35:40):
giving up the wheel. I'm not gonna let go of
that wheel. I'm not I will not drive, I won't
be a passenger.
Speaker 3 (35:47):
The Assistant Trevor Cherry show London Valley's Powers Off