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September 4, 2025 30 mins
ICYMI: Hour Three of ‘Later, with Mo’Kelly’ Presents – In-depth analysis of the most viral stories of the week in ‘The Viral Load’ with regular guest contributor Tiffany Hobbs weighing in on everything from the real estate agent using a horse to sell houses, to the Shein seller using images of accused killer, Luigi Mangione, to sell apparel and MORE - on KFI AM 640…Live everywhere on the iHeartRadio app & YouTube @MrMoKelly
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
You're listening to Later with Moe Kelly on demand from
KFI a M six forty.

Speaker 2 (00:12):
Now Kelly Show.

Speaker 3 (00:15):
It's social media, Facebook gets to extract the viral kidney.

Speaker 2 (00:26):
Off, viral load, Viral load, the.

Speaker 4 (00:29):
Viral load, Lady Kfi Later with mo Kelly Live Everywhere
on YouTube and the iHeartRadio app.

Speaker 2 (00:39):
And let's turn it over to Tiffty Hobbs for the
viral load.

Speaker 5 (00:41):
The gang is all back together, minus stuff, but it's
really good to be back. It's been a couple of
weeks and there have been there's been no shortage of
viral stories. And this week's roundup goes from pretty kooky
to downright disgusting, and so I'll get into its, starting
with the Kookie. The world of viral stories. Selling a

(01:02):
house in southern California, maybe anywhere, is proving to be
very difficult and people are resorting to different strategies to
list a house garner interest, and in one such case,
a horse was utilized to sell a house.

Speaker 2 (01:19):
Excuse me.

Speaker 6 (01:21):
For the past several.

Speaker 5 (01:22):
Months, there's a real estate broker, her name is Lucy Olivieria,
and she's been trying to drum up interest about a
house that she's had on the market. This house has
been on the market four months, and unfortunately she hasn't
had a lot of interest, and no one's really made
good on wanting to buy this home, and so she
started to get a little desperate, and instead of lowering

(01:42):
the price or taking it off of the market, she
decided to come up with another sort of avant garde
idea that she says may very well take off in
the future. She went to one of her friends, a
friend named Zara dragu who's a license speech and language
patholists who uses a horse, a little miniature horse named Lemen,

(02:05):
as part of a therapy program for children and her
clients at large. So Zara her friend and uh, this
is just real estate broker Lucy came up with this
idea to take Lemon, this miniature horse, and put Lemen
in the photographs of the listing.

Speaker 2 (02:25):
Does Lemon take a crap all over the floor?

Speaker 5 (02:27):
I don't know, And if he did, they photoshopped that
out very well. Okay, so can't confirm or deny, and
don't even know if Leomen consented to this. But what
they did was they took Lemon and they put women
in this house it's a two bedroom, one and a
half bath in it right now, in an up and
coming neighborhood, of course. And they put women at the

(02:48):
front door as if he's greeting you when you come in.
These are the listing photos. They put them, you know,
in another room looking through a window. They put him
near a bathroom and countertops. They put him investigating a fireplace,
and of course finally exploring the backyard.

Speaker 6 (03:06):
They uploaded these photos.

Speaker 5 (03:08):
And one account, Zillow Gone Wild, got wind of the listing.
That's where I saw it. It went completely viral after
that because people shared it all over the place because
oh my god, there's a horse in the listing, and
of course the interested and prospective buyers just ramped up.

(03:31):
And now Lucy Olivieria, the real estate broker, says that
she is basically beating off these perspective buyers with a stick.

Speaker 6 (03:41):
Beating them off with a stick, Oh relax.

Speaker 4 (03:43):
I was curious, though, did the horse actually increase the
interest in the house or just was a way for
it to go viral and then more people knew about
the house.

Speaker 5 (03:57):
The answer to that is yes, Okay, things are true.
You know, putting a horse in a in a mundane
living room, kind of run of the mill stock photo type.
Real estate photography does add an element that is unusual,
and people started looking more closely at the actual house,
going to the house's open house listings. Yeah, and then

(04:19):
of course the more people who see it, the more
more people it reaches, and the more people who were
close enough to go by went by. And so now
they haven't locked down an actual buyer yet because they
have so many but they are saying that this could
lead to using Limen and further listings. And if you
want to see lemen on Instagram, you can follow at

(04:41):
Lemon the Tiny Horse.

Speaker 2 (04:44):
Leomon has own ig.

Speaker 5 (04:45):
Lemon has his own ig, which I misread as Lamont
the Tiny Horse, which I thought was a lot cooler
name than Lemon.

Speaker 4 (04:51):
Well, Lemon is it's a you know, it's like a
white horse.

Speaker 2 (04:55):
LaMonte would have been a black horse.

Speaker 6 (04:58):
I see what you did there either.

Speaker 5 (05:00):
Our next story, before we go to the break, there's
a doctor who's going viral after sharing a patient review.

Speaker 6 (05:08):
In which the patient says, because it's.

Speaker 5 (05:10):
Like a Yelp review where you can review the doctors
and leave your star rating right, you want to get
the maximum mon of stars. Well, this patient said the
doctor saved my life, but instead of giving the maximum
five stars, the patient gave four stars, and the doctor
shared that to social media saying, I guess saving a

(05:31):
life isn't enough. So of course people are surmising perhaps
it was your sheets, perhaps it was your bedside manner.
And the doctor has gone on to say, you know,
we are located across the street from a costco. Perhaps
I'll start including samples in my consultations and visits to
drum up our stars to five. So just a funny, cute,

(05:51):
little viral story about how a doctor was rated four
stars out of five even after saving a patient's life.

Speaker 4 (05:57):
I didn't yelp my doctor, but I did my dentist,
in other words, provide a review.

Speaker 2 (06:04):
It just seemed like to be weird for a doctor.

Speaker 5 (06:05):
But it's a little strange and even stranger not to
give the best possible review if your life was saved
by this doctor.

Speaker 4 (06:12):
Or it's a little strange for the doctor to say,
see I didn't get the five star review.

Speaker 5 (06:17):
You're saying, don't complain about it. Yeah, yeah, be above
that phrame. Now me, I'm petty this difference. Oh never
you never, Never, always me. On the other side of
the break, we're going to talk about nurses gone rogue
and what they did on social media that has a
lot of them now suspend it from their jobs. We're
also going to talk about a very popular figure who

(06:40):
is being used in a fashion spread.

Speaker 6 (06:43):
He probably doesn't know it though.

Speaker 5 (06:45):
And then lastly, a new TikTok trend that's stupid. There's
always a new stupid TikTok trend and I'm here to
share it with you.

Speaker 2 (06:52):
It's Later with mo Kelly more the Viral Load in
just a moment.

Speaker 1 (06:56):
You're listening to Later with Moe Kelly on demand from KF.

Speaker 3 (07:05):
Now instid for them, My Real Mode with Tiffany Live
on Camp. Later in mo O'Kelly, she'll talk about the toughs.

Speaker 4 (07:16):
On social media.

Speaker 2 (07:19):
Relde with Tiffany Hubbs kmfm' kelly.

Speaker 4 (07:24):
Later with mo Kelly Now for part two of the
Viralo with Tiffany Hobbs.

Speaker 5 (07:28):
This next story is what comprises the really icky, disgusting
portion of our show. And it's not because of the
victims in this case, but instead because of who victimized
the people. I'm gonna speak about the last thing you
want when you go to the doctor is for someone

(07:48):
to whip out a camera and take video or pictures
of your visit. Can you imagine if someone decided to
do that while you're there at the doctor, at the dentist,
and of course you're held captive in that moment. And
in this case, that's what happened. There were women, multiple women,
at an urgent care facility and they this facility is

(08:13):
called uh the Pasita's Urgent Cares in Santa Barbara. They
went for pap smears, which is a procedure for women.
It's to check the health of your hu haa, your
secret guard, make sure your flowers are.

Speaker 6 (08:28):
Booming correctly right, not overwatered, so and so on.

Speaker 5 (08:32):
So these women went in for their for their checkups
and while they were there during the pap smear, there
are things that make the pap smear easier because there's
all these tools that got to go into the garden.

Speaker 2 (08:45):
Okay, all right, there was a joke in there and
we're just going to let it go. A garden what go.

Speaker 5 (08:51):
Ahead, garden tool there go the bigger the tool to
also anyway moving. So, after the procedure was done and
the women left because of the things that are used
to make this procedure easier. Okay, there was residue left
behind on the chair or the beds in which these

(09:13):
women were positioned. There were nurses, a group of nurses
and several other staff members at this Pacita's Urgent Care
in Santa Barbara who took pictures of what the women
left behind.

Speaker 2 (09:30):
Oh gosh.

Speaker 6 (09:30):
And they didn't take.

Speaker 5 (09:31):
Pictures to analyze in a meeting or to talk about privately. No,
because this is twenty twenty five. They uploaded them to
social media, of course, TikTok, specifically a series of photos
and videos that show all of this pap smear discharge

(09:53):
left behind by papers.

Speaker 2 (09:54):
Are these Are these employees doing this?

Speaker 4 (09:56):
These are employees, almost former employees at this.

Speaker 5 (09:59):
Point, any of them now occurring to the Pacita's Urgent
Care are on leave, penning the results of an investigation.
They're doing an internal investigation.

Speaker 4 (10:09):
Well, they posted all the damn evidence with them smiling
in the photo.

Speaker 6 (10:13):
That is the thing.

Speaker 5 (10:14):
Their faces are right there for everyone to see. And
if you're looking at YouTube, as you should be right now,
you'll see the photos pictured or that we're posted and
have gone viral. Of these staff members, posing, suggestively, posing, pointing,
mocking what these women left behind and their most vulnerable

(10:34):
states and trusted states at the doctor.

Speaker 4 (10:37):
I got a question because I would think that men
would do that out of ignorance, not necessarily knowing or understanding.

Speaker 2 (10:44):
And this is rhetorical.

Speaker 4 (10:45):
Why would women, especially employees of the clinic do something
like this?

Speaker 2 (10:52):
What's unusual about this?

Speaker 5 (10:54):
I was talking off air, and the main thing is
this want to go viral, suspend shame, They suspend reason
and logic in an effort to just capture something that
they think will circulate quickly and garner them whatever it is.
They want that quick dopamine hit, that quick satisfaction of

(11:15):
being popular, and these women did that at the expense
of all of these unsuspecting women.

Speaker 6 (11:20):
There are no patients pictured.

Speaker 5 (11:22):
You don't see patients faces, but that doesn't make it
any better. This is a clinic that people know they visited,
so again these likely for the last time, hopefully for
the last time. And I imagine there are copious lawsuits
that are being drawn up about patient private This is
a direct violation and in so many ways. For our

(11:45):
last two stories, they are a quick roundup because we
got to clear our palette with that one. You ever
heard of the website Sheen or she In Shine she
shi In. It's a fast fashion website. You can get
pretty much anything at a low cost. Well, apparently there
are independent sellers who can put their goods and wears

(12:08):
on this website. I didn't know that that was a surprise.
But even more surprisingly is that one of these sellers
has used photoshopped photos of accused killer Luigi Mangioni, remember him,
the accused killer of the insurance head. Yeah, a year

(12:28):
plus ago. Yeah, the healthcare the healthcare company. They're using
photoshopped photos of Luigi Mangioni to sell their apparel. They
have put these photoshopped pictures of Luigi in their shirts,
in their goods, and they have uploaded it to Sheen,
And of course that's going viral for many different reasons.

Speaker 2 (12:48):
What were you saying about, suspension of shame.

Speaker 5 (12:52):
Bring back shame our last story? Stupid TikTok trend alert,
don't do this. You know those big five gallon jugs
of water that you can get, you know, your sparklet's water.

Speaker 6 (13:04):
When they're filled up, they're pretty heavy, really heavy.

Speaker 5 (13:08):
And there's a trend where fitness influencers are people who
purport to be such because you can label yourself anything nowadays.
Are taking these five gallon jugs. They're extending one arm outward.
They're holding the jug filled with water to the top
with one hand, turning the jug over so that the

(13:29):
water empties out, pours out in an effort to show
how strong they are. Not only is this stupid and
wasteful of the water, but it's incredibly dangerous because of
what could potentially happen if you are not able to
carry this sort of weight. But people are doing this
all over social media. The challenge has I haven't seen

(13:51):
a name for the challenge yet, but they certainly will
name it. I think it should be called the stupid
a challenge at this point. But you'll see it now
more than ever because people are trying to get their
notoriety by showing that they can hold this jug and
empty the water. On YouTube right now, we do see
people drinking the water, but what comes next is the

(14:11):
pouring out of the five gallons.

Speaker 4 (14:13):
Well, at least it's not physically dangerous like ding Dong
ditch these days.

Speaker 5 (14:18):
This could be dangerous, of course, not nearly as dangerous
as ding Dong Ditch, and I don't know if you're
going to get into that story.

Speaker 4 (14:26):
No, there's not too much to say other than I
used to play ding Dong Ditch, but it was a
different day, it was a different world. Yes, Now I
used to toilet paper people's houses. I wouldn't dare think
of having anyone do that these days because it's just dangerous. Unfortunately,
if you don't know the story, there was a eleven
year old boy who was shot in the back by
a homeowner after playing ding Dong Ditch.

Speaker 5 (14:48):
Yeah, killed, killed for an innocent game that we all
likely grew up playing or knew someone who played. But
these trends on TikTok that you see are often dangerous.
Just the person who's doing that trend, like this particular one,
we're opted in on their own, opted in on their own,
you know, the ramifications are unto them only. But when

(15:10):
the trend branches out and involves others who aren't interested
in participation, then you could have people who react violently. Unfortunately,
in the case of killing not eleven year old boy
playing ding Gong Ditch. But that is today's end of
the viral load. I'll see you Saturday right here from
five to seven on Saturdays with Tiffany and I'll be
back here next Wednesday or the next viral load.

Speaker 1 (15:32):
You're listening to later with Moe Kelly on demand from
KFI AM six forty.

Speaker 4 (15:53):
Can't Kelly Live everywhere in the iHeartRadio app and YouTube.
And as we were finishing out the viral load with
Tiffany Hobbs and we kind of touched upon the story
of the the young boy who was killed after playing
Ding Dong ditch. It's another constant and unfortunate reminder of

(16:17):
how the world has changed. By kids, and also four kids.
There was a lot of things that I would do,
and I'm quite sure Mark would do, and Twala has
told me that he's done that were mischievous that we
wouldn't even consider recommending for a kid today to do.
Because the world is, especially the United States, is far

(16:39):
more dangerous, it's far more uncertain. You don't get that
free pass of just doing something like toilet paper in
someone's house. That's something that we did, I don't know,
five six times a year.

Speaker 7 (16:51):
Yeah, we did all that stuff when we were kids,
knocked and ran whatever you call it, and the ditch,
the penalty was never execution back then.

Speaker 2 (16:59):
No, it was.

Speaker 4 (17:00):
Maybe going to be a loud, angry, yelling parent get
off my lawn. That was about it, and that was
the whole point. What are you suppose has changed?

Speaker 2 (17:09):
Mom?

Speaker 4 (17:12):
It's not one thing, I would say, it's ten things.
I think that we're a coarser nation. I don't think
that we respect one another on any level. There's just
anger about anything and everything. Kids are more a holes
than ever before. Also really think that I think there's

(17:32):
a lesser degree of tolerance for certain behavior from kids.
I know that I have less of a tolerance from
the kids who are acting up in stores or talking
back to their parents, or acting in a way that
I know that our generation Gen X would not have
been allowed to act.

Speaker 7 (17:50):
Maybe, but there's still just kids. Nobody deserves to be
backshot for a party. No, no, no, no, no, no, let's be clear, don't.

Speaker 4 (17:56):
I'm not saying that the response is in any way warranted, legal,
or even acceptable. I'm just saying that, in the way
that adults are different, kids are different as well. I
just remember a time in which we were trying to
get into trouble, but we weren't as much looking for

(18:16):
things that may put someone in the hospital or someone
may end up dead. It was just a different approach,
I believe. And what about the guns, Well, of course,
but there are two things in that. Yes, there are
more guns, and there's more of a gun culture, which
I believe contributes to why young people would even consider

(18:38):
having a gun or or seek out a gun.

Speaker 7 (18:41):
Yeah, call me some kind of out of control flower child,
but I think it should be taboo in our society
to shoot children.

Speaker 2 (18:48):
You talk about two different things.

Speaker 4 (18:51):
What the guy did is criminal and that would have
been condemned at any time in history. Today, the perception
of kids is very different. When I say we adults
look at kids as possible a felon, a felony waiting
to happen. There's much more of an adversarial relationship. In

(19:12):
other words, like you used to be and genuinely used
to be, where other parents in your neighborhood would watch
over you, verbally discipline you, and you knew that there
was a community which was going to be responsible for you.
Now I don't know if people know their neighbors right
or left. You can't really talk to anyone's kids. It's

(19:34):
just it's much more adversarial it may be, but whipping
out the piece is a little bit too much tough love.

Speaker 2 (19:41):
I think.

Speaker 4 (19:42):
No, but that's not Again, we're talking about completely different things.
We're not talking about someone with a rational response. You're
talking about someone who committed murder. And I think they
charged him with first degree murder because he went after
the kid and shot him in the back, as opposed
to just respect to the kid.

Speaker 7 (20:01):
Yeah, it all happens in a context, though, And I
just I did plenty when I was a kid. The
statute of limited, statute of limitations has expired on everything.
But I'm sure that I did stuff that made this
poor kid, you know, look completely like a saint. And
nobody ever drew down on me. No, not at all.
I got chased. I got chased a lot. I got

(20:22):
chased both on foot and in the car. I've done
ding dong ditch.

Speaker 4 (20:26):
I've done some vandalism that I'm not exactly proud of.
I've done some pretty ingenious things to piss off adults
that I didn't like. But never was I concerned, or
any of one of my friends concerned about physical violence
or lethal violence coming our way. We wouldn't have We

(20:49):
wouldn't have done that. We just wanted to make adults mad.
That was it.

Speaker 7 (20:53):
We can finally relate on one thing.

Speaker 4 (20:55):
Yeah, but I I I got the sense that you
were of the belief that I was somehow condoning or
I can understand what this murderer did.

Speaker 2 (21:06):
No, not at all.

Speaker 4 (21:07):
I just believe our society has changed so much where
we look at young people not in a way where okay,
they're just kids being kids, and more so it's like
they're a threat which needs to be put down.

Speaker 7 (21:20):
No, I wasn't putting that on you. But society's definitely changed.
I think we're definitely meaner, definitely coarser, and you cannot
ignore the prolific proliferation of guns. There's more guns than
citizens now in the United States, and it's all in
one big grotesque stew and that kid should be alive.

Speaker 4 (21:39):
But also adults, how we respond to each other has changed,
going back to the whole courser idea.

Speaker 2 (21:47):
Look, when we were coming along, Yeah, you were going to.

Speaker 4 (21:50):
Get flipped off on the freeway, and you would flip
someone all back in return, and you didn't necessarily have
to worry about someone pulling the gun and shooting you.
Now all those that's a through line if you want
to talk about guns where where anger is violence and
gun violence is also nearby.

Speaker 7 (22:09):
Well, they allow you to act on your impulses irrevocably
and quickly.

Speaker 2 (22:15):
And that's something which.

Speaker 4 (22:18):
Since I've done martial arts for so long, part of
the training has always been managing your emotions and also
acknowledging escalation versus de escalation. I don't know, because I
haven't been a kid, and I don't know thirty years
or so, whatever it is.

Speaker 2 (22:33):
It's thirty okay, how about forty okay.

Speaker 4 (22:37):
I don't know if kids learn any type of conflict resolution,
because it's just again, I came up in an age
where you didn't talk back to adults, you didn't try
to antagonize directly confront adults. You see videos on the
internet all the time where you have students getting in
physical fights with teachers. That's just didn't happen growing up. No,

(23:01):
I agree with that.

Speaker 7 (23:02):
Things have been taken up several notches and we just
never had to worry about that stuff. As much of
a troublemaker and a bruiser as I was, I would
never have raised a hand against a teacher. Never never now,
I was in fights constants. Did you want to Yeah,
it's the stuff that you mumble.

Speaker 4 (23:19):
Under your breath walking away, But you weren't ever going
to turn around a square up.

Speaker 7 (23:24):
I think we've released our IDs and we could probably
stand to tuck them back in a little bit.

Speaker 4 (23:29):
You got that right. We finally found something we agree upon.
Who knew when we come back? My final thought.

Speaker 1 (23:35):
You're listening to Later with Moe Kelly on demand from
KFI AM six forty.

Speaker 2 (23:41):
Here's my final thought.

Speaker 4 (23:43):
Maybe you haven't noticed, but America is in the midst
of a full on rebellion and rejection of education and science.
We've dismantled the Department of Education. We've called college a scam.
There are more flat earthers and moon landing deniers in
America right now than there are ice agents.

Speaker 2 (24:04):
And that's saying a lot.

Speaker 4 (24:06):
Today, it was announced by the Florida Surgeon General that
the state of Florida will be doing the way with
all state vaccine mandates. Not a COVID vaccine here or
tetanus vaccine there, but the whole shebang. That's any and
all vaccines for kids, adults, teachers, the whole nine yards

(24:27):
and since we're in this war against education and science,
far too many of us don't know that you can't
develop herd immunity to polio, and that measles used to
kill about five hundred kids per year.

Speaker 2 (24:43):
That was pre vaccine.

Speaker 4 (24:45):
See kids dying ended up with iron lungs. Those things
used to be considered really, really bad. But since we're
no longer valuing education in science, we're just going to
have to learn these lessons a second time all over again,
and they're going to be much more difficult. Let me
digress for a moment. America has a glorious history of

(25:08):
being very good at overcoming huge obstacles. But that's history,
and we're still arguing about what history is going to
be taught or how it should be taught. But that's
in the past. Building the atom and hydrogen bombs that
was hard. The bomb was the reason why we won
World War two. And we don't speak German or Japanese

(25:28):
is our national language right now. That's science. That's American exceptionalism.
Going to the moon that was hard, and yes we
really did go to the moon six times to be exact.
Science American exceptionalism. But let me get back to vaccines
in a state of Florida, unscientific, not really exceptional. Part

(25:52):
of the rather recent distrust of vaccines is tied to
our distrust of.

Speaker 2 (25:56):
Quote unquote big pharma.

Speaker 4 (25:59):
We've all heard the common refrain, when was the last
time big pharma cured any disease? They don't cure or
prevent COVID. They don't cure or prevent the flu. You've
said it, probably we've all heard it. Who said Procter
and Gamble or Pfizer or Maderna that they were in
the business of curing diseases. That's like asking when McDonald's

(26:20):
has ever made someone healthy or ended world hunger. McDonald
sells burgers, and they want you to keep on coming
back and buying more burgers and eating more burgers as
often as you can.

Speaker 2 (26:30):
They're not here for any other reason.

Speaker 4 (26:33):
Ray Kroc, he was a genius, but nobody said he
had some responsibility to make sure anyone's cholesterol issues were cured.
Big pharma is and never has been, in the business
of curing diseases. You're ascribing responsibilities which just aren't there.
People keep telling themselves that lie that just because their

(26:54):
products are used in a hospital, that somehow their business
should be curing diseases.

Speaker 2 (27:00):
Now, I get it.

Speaker 4 (27:01):
There's a new drug every week with forty five different
side effects including heart attack, stroke, and death. Trust me,
I get it. But this is conflating two different things.
This lack of understanding, I submit, is that the foundation
of the anti vax movement. And because we wrongly assume
that Big Farmer serves no purpose outside of enriching their shareholders,

(27:25):
we also disbelieve that vaccines serve any legitimate purpose. So
now the state of Florida is ending the Big Farmer
scam or something like that. And I've been talking about
how important it is for people like you and me
to travel. Depending on the continent, you may have to

(27:46):
get what say it with me vaccinated if you want
to travel there. There's a reason why America is not
presently overrun with yellow fever, not overrun with hepatitis, typhoid fever, meningitis,
Oh oh, Mark, my personal favorite rabies. Imagine that, and

(28:09):
that reason is a vaccine. Haven't you seen, Old Yeller?
Herd immunity has never saved anyone from rabies, not one person.
Vaccines have always had a role to play, except for
now in Florida. Yes, big pharma does like making money,
but you supposedly hate socialism and you hate communism, so

(28:32):
capitalism is going to do what capitalism does. You can't
have it both ways. Nobody's doing anything for free. Vaccines
aren't free either. They cost money. They cost billions of
dollars to research, billions of dollars to develop and test
and trials. But most of that research is done where
at our top colleges and universities, the same colleges in

(28:54):
universities we're now to funding for purely political reasons, really
stupid political reasons. I know, like I said before, college
is a scam. But vaccines are not free, and all
this is connected. We've forgotten that there are differences between
children living and dying before the age of five, as

(29:18):
they often did in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
I bet you didn't know that. Well, if you read
your history, you would know that vaccines have an outsized
role in preventing that and why overall life expectancy in
America is longer than ever before and we don't routinely
die at the age of thirty five.

Speaker 2 (29:35):
It's not magic. If I were to point out an
anti vaxxer. Maybe you're one of them.

Speaker 4 (29:41):
I would bet dollars to donuts that they would also
consider themselves pro life, And yet they're so pro life
that they're willing to let kids get polio, measles, whooping cough, mumps, rubella,
chicken box and also infect other children, maybe your child,
who may go to school with them. And that's assuming
that none of those same kids are murdered in a
mass shooting later on. In life pro life, no, you're

(30:06):
just pro zygo not the same. Here's the takeaway coming home.
There is an unavoidable cost to courting stupidity at the
expense of science. We have a health and human services
agency being led by a non physician who admittedly suffered
from a brain worm.

Speaker 2 (30:25):
There is a cost to that.

Speaker 4 (30:28):
Dismantling the vaccination infrastructure in one of the most populated
states in this nation of three hundred and forty million
people is going to come at a cost. Unfortunately, it
will be our children who will pay the most for
kf I am six forty, I'm mo Kelly.

Speaker 1 (30:47):
KS five and kost HD two Los Angeles, Orange County.

Speaker 2 (30:53):
More stimulating talk

Later, with Mo'Kelly News

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