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June 23, 2025 32 mins
BREAKING: President Trump says Israel and Iran have agreed to a "complete and total ceasefire" in the coming hours. // Mixed messages about ceasefire. Teran Times says Trump is lying. Trump pursuing peace // Michael Monks, Pasadena lawmakers introduce legislation to require federal agents to better identify themselves // Reports Iran has accepted Trump’s proposal for ceasefire. How do Bomb busters work? Assessing the damage to Iran nuclear facilities. 
#IsraelIranCeasefire #Ceasefire #Trump #TeranTimes #WhiteIran # 
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
It's KFI AM six forty and you're listening to The
Conway Show on demand on the iHeartRadio app.

Speaker 2 (00:10):
K IF I Am six.

Speaker 1 (00:12):
It is the Conway Show and Luka's back crosure.

Speaker 2 (00:17):
Thing's wrong with you, buddy? You leave, the whole world
falls apart. Believable.

Speaker 3 (00:22):
Me and I should leave more often.

Speaker 2 (00:23):
Nah, I think we'd love to have you around.

Speaker 4 (00:27):
It looks like there's a truce, a truce between the
Indiana Fever and the Chicago.

Speaker 1 (00:35):
Sky no between Iran or Iran whatever you however you
pronounce it. I'm with Jimmy Carter. I go with Iran,
you know, I'm one of those cats and the USA
us A. So that's gonna be happening anytime. I'm not
sure the logistics or if anything's gonna be legally signed

(00:56):
or anything, but it looks like we have a truce
and this is not going to expand, which is great, great,
great news, but not the predicted news.

Speaker 4 (01:08):
The predicted news was the market. Stock Market's going to
go in the toilet. Iran's going to commit terrorist attacks here,
the United States is going to be bombed in Libya
and Iraq, and the United States will be brought into
a prolonged war. You know, Russia is going to sell
Iran nuclear weapons. All those predictions came to you this

(01:31):
weekend on Los Angeles television newscasts.

Speaker 1 (01:35):
Man, I love local news. I love it, but I
can't watch it anymore. On weekends when the cats away,
the mice will play. And I will tell you if
you shut your eyes, if you closed your eyes, Crosier, right,
you got eyes. If you closed your eyes over the
weekend and you watched television, if you watch local TV news,

(01:59):
you'd be very hard pressed to tell you to tell
me whether that's local TV news or news coming out
of Tehran, very very similar, almost exact.

Speaker 4 (02:09):
As a matter of fact, some of the local news
is even harsher than the stuff they're saying in Tehran.
So I don't I don't know what the audience for
that is, but I know it's small. It's a little
tiny one. And if you're looking to grab that little,
tiny audience, keep it up, because that's what you'll get.

(02:29):
And that's why you know these local TV jobs. You
know the anchors, you know Mark Brown, Colleen Williams, they've
been around forever. Pat over there at the CBS, Sophie
slay over the weekend on Channel seven. Those anchor jobs
in LA used to pay million, million and a half
bucks and up until recently seven hundred and fifty eight

(02:52):
hundred thousand a year.

Speaker 2 (02:54):
Now right now maybe one hundred grand.

Speaker 4 (02:58):
Come on, maybe because nobody's watching because it all sounds
like it's coming out of Tehran. It's all coming out
of Iran or or you know, whoever, whatever country the
United States is fighting. It is unwatchable and they got
to do something about that. You cannot let that continue.

(03:21):
You let that continue, and everybody is going away. Everybody
will be leaving the building. You know, there's a term
in local news and TV news for they call it
twenty twenty Are you familiar with that term? Crozier twenty
twenty twenties. You hire a twenty year old and pay
him twenty grand a year. Yeah, and that's what's going

(03:43):
on in local news. That makes total sense, it does.
It used to be the case in the smaller markets, now,
is that's right? It's definitely the big market's starting out
that way.

Speaker 2 (03:51):
Yeah, and now we're here.

Speaker 1 (03:53):
But look, I'm I'm a huge fan of local TV news.
I go back to Fritz Coleman, and Fred Rogan. I
go way back to Tom Brokaw being a local guy
here in LA. I go, I go far back, I do.
I go back to what's his name, who's the guy? Uh,
Harold Green? Remember Harold Green?

Speaker 4 (04:15):
And Dumpy. I go back to way back Jerry, Yeah exactly.
And you know, I go back also to uh, you know,
weather guys, sports guys that were.

Speaker 2 (04:27):
Here many many moons ago.

Speaker 4 (04:29):
I remember when Victor Brick was the new guy in town,
you know, going on Channel thirteen.

Speaker 2 (04:34):
I'm like, Wow, this guy's great, Victor Brick.

Speaker 3 (04:37):
Wow.

Speaker 4 (04:37):
I remember his first like broadcast throwing a brick at
the at the TV you know that the camera was Yeah,
that's how he got Yeah it was Victor Brink and
take a break and throw it at the camera. But yeah,
I go way back in TV news and I love it.
I think it brings a lot of people together. But
some news directors have got to start watching weekend news
around here because this is not the a majority. I

(05:00):
don't know what the audience for that is, but it
ain't here in LA and it's not in the surrounding area.
And you know, during the week they do do a
pretty good job of policing it because the news directors
are sitting there and keeping an eye on everybody. But
on weekends, God almighty, it is just it's like communism.

(05:21):
It's it's like old school. It's like Fidel Castro is
the h is the.

Speaker 3 (05:28):
Right, the same vehicles for the last sixty years.

Speaker 2 (05:30):
That's right. Yeah, I'll be surprised. I'd be shocked. As
a matter of fact. I think you're right, Croch.

Speaker 4 (05:35):
If you go to any of these channels, you know, two, four, five, seven, nine, eleven, thirteen, whatever,
and you go to the parking lots over the weekend,
they're nineteen fifty sixty chevies.

Speaker 2 (05:43):
You know, it's it's Cuba. God, I don't know what
the audience for that is.

Speaker 4 (05:49):
All right, but there might be a truce everybody, Israel
and Iran. Israel and Iran looking at a truce.

Speaker 5 (05:57):
Off to twelve days of uncertainty in the Middle East,
which is a fuel fizz of a widening conflict. Tonight,
Donald Trump has posted that Israel and Iran have agreed
to a cease fun.

Speaker 2 (06:06):
Wow, it doesn't sound like it. It was cease fun.
It doesn't sound like this does not sound like.

Speaker 6 (06:18):
Sounds like a Yeah, they're just getting their last couple
of shots in before everything becomes official.

Speaker 3 (06:23):
I guess.

Speaker 7 (06:24):
So you ever seen that the video online of the
old audio from when I think it was World War
two and or World War One ended. No, No, there's
somehow audio how the final shot. Yeah, so you hear
the firing and then you see it's here. It just
Peter Att and it's just nothing, and that was literally
the moment.

Speaker 3 (06:40):
Wow.

Speaker 2 (06:40):
I would like to see that. Yeah.

Speaker 4 (06:42):
Can you remember back in speaking of World War One,
everybody there was a tradition, you know, because they were
like gentlemen back then, you know, people you wore uniforms
and you know, they they tried to kill you. But
they had rules and one of them was on Christmas
Day there was to be no fighting. And so Christmas
Eve came around and at midnight, no shots were heard

(07:03):
until midnight the next night, and people were out of
the bunkers, you know, not shaking hands with each other,
but out of the bunkers, you know, enjoying themselves, having
a Christmas meal, and no shots were to be fired
on Christmas Day and they and they all stood by
and agreed to it and adhered to it, and it
was you know right back then now this is now
sounds fantastic. War was fantastic. Now this is the current seasfire,

(07:29):
not so cc It was.

Speaker 5 (07:30):
Just hours ago that Iran struck back, just forty eight
hours after the United States launched a barrage of bunker
busting bombs at several Iranian nuclear facilities.

Speaker 2 (07:43):
This is what retaliation looks like.

Speaker 5 (07:47):
The largest US base in the region targeted with what
appears to be fourteen short and medium range missiles. President
Trump tonight called it very weak, but even thanked Iran
in a post online for giving the US early note,
which made it possible for no lives to be lost
and nobody to be injured.

Speaker 4 (08:04):
I told you there's gentlemen. Still in this world, there's gentlemen,
and even in war there's gentlemen.

Speaker 5 (08:09):
But even thanked Iran in a post online for giving
the US early notice, which made it possible for no
lives to be lost and nobody to be injured. Watch
as they're intercepted by American and catgery forces above Goha.
According to US officials, some of those missiles were headed
for how You Daid Airbase. De Pentagon says thirteen of
the fourteen were intercepted with no damage or casualties.

Speaker 4 (08:31):
You know, what's amazing is how little footage is coming
out of Iran. And then I found out it's because
they shut the internet off in Iran. You can't have
the Internet now. They just shut it off. There's a switch,
there's a big there's a big comedy switch like Gallagher
would have. And they get three guys at a ladder
and they pull it down and it's off.

Speaker 2 (08:54):
It's off right now.

Speaker 3 (08:55):
Look like they're about to get power to Frankenstein with
the switch.

Speaker 1 (08:58):
Yeah, it's the guys on the trapez you know, it's
three or four on a teeter totter and they jump
up on the switch and it's.

Speaker 4 (09:05):
So Internet Internet, no Internet, it's off. So there's no
pictures coming out of very few out of Iran. I
like that term Iran. I'm gonna go with the Iraq,
the Iraq and Iran.

Speaker 2 (09:17):
All right, welcome back.

Speaker 4 (09:17):
We have a lot more for you on what's going
on in the Middle East. What's happening here with immigration
is a lot going on, a lot.

Speaker 8 (09:25):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
AM six forty.

Speaker 4 (09:32):
All right, back to the truce we're hearing mixed messages.
Now Bellio, who has her ear to the ground in Tehran.
Her mom and dad are both from northern Tehran, and Belly,
you're hearing that everybody is in on the truce except
Tehran hasn't heard about it.

Speaker 2 (09:50):
Is that right?

Speaker 6 (09:50):
There are some reports that Tehran time says that Trump
is lying. Oh no, so we're we're looking into that
right now.

Speaker 4 (09:58):
Okay, all right, let's put that the lies aside and
and and go with there is a truth now, But
if there's not, then we'll come back and tell you
as well. Things are moving pretty rapidly around here, very fat.

Speaker 2 (10:11):
How you date.

Speaker 5 (10:11):
It is home to the headquarters of Central Command and
Air Force Central Command, and it's likely where that US
raid on Iranian nuclear facilities would have been coordinated. Trump
was there just over a month ago. The President urged
peace after green lighting that stunning operation dubbed Midnight Hammer.
New video shows about nine B two bombers taking off
from Missouri early Saturday morning.

Speaker 4 (10:33):
Ten The decoys were all sent to Guam, and they
were they were very obvious about flying five or six
of these big, you know, big ass planes to Hawaii
refilling them refueling them and then send them to Guam.
And that was all a misdirection, and they even they're
very good at that because as those planes took off,
those those bombs that they drop weigh thirty thousand pounds each.

(10:56):
They hold two of them, so that's you know, sixty
thousand pounds. So that plane, if it was filled with fuel,
would not be able to take off, it'd be too heavy.
So they put in about a tenth of a tank.
They take off, and then they immediately refill those planes.
Immediately there's planes flying above the airport and they immediately
refuel them so they can stay in the air into Hawaii,

(11:18):
and then from Hawaii they get refueled until Guam. And
so the misdirection worked because people thought that those bombs
were on those planes, but they weren't. They were on
seven different planes that were going east. Very complicated. Try
to stay with it, Ah, it's very tough, very tough.

Speaker 5 (11:34):
Too, with decoys the other seven flying quietly to Iran.
A senior US defense official tells ABC News the administration
believes Iran's attacks will be quote Regional Hip Holt in
Iran cool today's attack. The annunciation of victory Revolutionary God
claims to have fid the same number of missiles that

(11:55):
the US used in their weekend strike the Supreme Leada,
vowing Iran will not surrender. The US has been making
adjustments to protect the more than forty thousand US troops
spread from Iraq, bah Rain, Katar, and Syria in the
hours before a shelter and place order went out the
US Embassy in Katar and mitigation plans have been in
the works for some time. These satellite images show more

(12:17):
than two dozen US military aircraft had left Aldiu Daide Airbase.
This photo was taken on June tenth and shows more
than thirty military planes. Eight days later, a nearly empty
base with only three planes still visible.

Speaker 9 (12:31):
This is the fast moving situation we have yet to
hear officially from either party. But not long ago, President
Trump announced a ceasefi deal between Israel and Iran, set
to begin in just a few hours time. The other
times this deal, oh Yah would initially the twelve.

Speaker 2 (12:46):
Hours from Wendy. Hey, buddy, I'd love to have yon,
but the whole world's blowing up. I know what do
you got? Bringing you some food?

Speaker 7 (12:55):
Here?

Speaker 2 (12:55):
Bringing you some food.

Speaker 10 (12:56):
We can do this another day. Huh, yeah, I figured
you know what it is. That's a taki fry. Got
some talkie seasoning on there.

Speaker 2 (13:06):
Oh it's pretty good. Yeah, it's not bad, not bad.
I think this whole Iranian think. Hold on, this is
pretty good.

Speaker 10 (13:12):
Well, you know, I called ahead and they said something
about the seasfire, so I thought i'd jump in.

Speaker 2 (13:17):
You know what, I think the reason why they did
these fire is to get this.

Speaker 4 (13:20):
That's great, buddy, thanks for stopping by on a different day.
We'd love to have you on for a half hour.
But taki fries are great. Talky fries aren't bad, alright, from.

Speaker 3 (13:31):
Taking chicken sandwich too, that's great, that's good.

Speaker 2 (13:33):
The talking chicken sandwich.

Speaker 3 (13:35):
Yeah, all right.

Speaker 4 (13:36):
That's that's why we're celebrating a truce. It's to get
more talkie seasoning in US.

Speaker 8 (13:43):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
Am sixty.

Speaker 4 (13:49):
Well, we are getting mixed signals whether there's a truth
or not, but we will find out for you and
give you the proper and correct information at some point.

Speaker 2 (13:58):
All right, Michael Monks is with It's how you, Bob.

Speaker 1 (14:01):
I believe you and I have a truce buddy, you
work seven days a week. Yeah, it's a lot. I
heard you all with Garrett. I need to cease fire
between KFI and me.

Speaker 2 (14:10):
Is that right?

Speaker 1 (14:11):
Was it quieter for you this week? It was a
little bit quieter. I did go out Sunday, did some reporting.
There was some anti war protests that we got word of,
and some other demonstrations, but they were not as big
as what we have been seeing. So we want to
stay on top of it just in case things go awry.
But fortunately things stayed relatively peaceful on Sunday.

Speaker 2 (14:30):
Is it the same crew, Yeah?

Speaker 5 (14:32):
I think so.

Speaker 1 (14:32):
You know the crew that was out in front of
City Hall yesterday afternoon for a couple of hours also
were part of the No Kings a couple of weeks ago.
Have also protested against immigration enforcement. They've protested against various issues.
So some of the speakers talked about Palestine, some of
the folks talked about healthcare, various things.

Speaker 2 (14:50):
You've seen folks in the streets over the.

Speaker 4 (14:53):
Years, Right, So you ran into obviously run into all
these you know, people of the weekend. But I heard
you ran into a flag sales. Oh you know, it
was interesting. This protest was about a couple hours long.
About an hour into it, this guy rolls up with
his car. You know the street vendors in LA They
are entrepreneurial, sure, but they are also opportunists. They know

(15:16):
where the action is right and so this guy rolls
up with a cart full of flags. And I'm thinking,
as I'm looking at his inventory that this guy really
knows what to order, because week to week it's been
something to and I mean in the past few weeks,
let's talk about what we've got going on. We've had
It's Pride month. So the rainbow flag is a hot

(15:37):
cellar right now. That was available in the cart.

Speaker 1 (15:39):
We've got the anti immigration enforcement and the waving of
both a Mexican and other Latin American nation flags. Had
them all okay, including the dual American Mexican flag, which
is a hot item right now, right, and the American
Argentina flag. I saw, yeah, yeah, they're out there. And
you've got the Palestine flag, which is still in vogue
for a lot of fun.

Speaker 2 (16:00):
He had that too. I saw him making sales.

Speaker 1 (16:03):
This was not a big protest, only about forty fifty
people were there, but he made a few bucks.

Speaker 2 (16:09):
That's that guy.

Speaker 4 (16:10):
Is going to clean up because you know, when you
go to a protest and you see somebody with a flag,
you're like, dad, can I get one? You know, it's
like going to Disneyland or Not'sbury Farm and somebody's got
a balloon.

Speaker 2 (16:22):
Well, it's like when you were a.

Speaker 1 (16:23):
Kid McDonald's the toys, they wouldn't all be available at once,
or you'd have to go back through and collect them all.
Now the hot item is the Iran flag, and he
was selling a few of those yesterday.

Speaker 4 (16:34):
I do see the same guys and gals showing up
at a lot of these events.

Speaker 2 (16:38):
You know, they just really like to stir it up.

Speaker 1 (16:40):
It's well, I don't want to say that they don't
believe what they're saying, you know, but but there's a
lot of issues. I even asked one of the guys
who organized this, like, how do you keep the energy up?

Speaker 2 (16:50):
Because you are protest?

Speaker 1 (16:51):
The stakes are high for all of these things, whether
it's Ukraine or Palestine, all these I mean, they're serious issues,
But how do you keep people engaged enough to come
down in March for every single one of them? Especially
when you find something like this sure be an Iranian
thing it's you know, it's like this, this particular one
is just getting started, you know, so they're building saying

(17:12):
that's why there was a smaller group there. But also
when you start getting into Iran, this doesn't have universal
support one way or the other. Whichever side of the
political spectrum you're on, you might be for it or
against it. You might have Democrats and Republicans on each
side of that. So it's not as cut and dry
to bring people out the way that your typical coalition
would be in support of these other issues.

Speaker 4 (17:34):
I still think the winner of all of them so
far is the immigration one. I think I brought out
the biggest crew, the most passionate.

Speaker 2 (17:41):
Certainly here.

Speaker 1 (17:41):
I mean, yeah, look, you've got a million people potentially
illegally living in Los Angeles County.

Speaker 2 (17:47):
But you know, you know a lot of people.

Speaker 1 (17:50):
You know these people in a lot of ways, whether
you know their immigration status or not. You might, you know,
you might patronize their store, they might work for you, you
might work for them. There's a it's just a different
experience for illegal immigrants in Los Angeles compared to really
anywhere else in the country.

Speaker 4 (18:06):
Yeah, No, I think you're right, Okay, let's talk about
what you came in here for. A vigilanteism and the
cops and the craziness.

Speaker 1 (18:15):
Well, look, I mean speaking of the immigration enforcement, we
see all of the images on the TV screen, We've
seen it in Jerson.

Speaker 2 (18:21):
Social media videos is full of this.

Speaker 1 (18:24):
Regardless of I guess your position on the enforcement efforts.
These guys, these agents, men and women who are showing
up are not easy to identify, and that has their
car right, I mean some of them, they're they're unmarked vehicles,
they're wearing masks. Now you hear from the federal government,
including Vice President of VANCE who's here on Friday, that

(18:45):
we have to protect their identities so that these activists
online and in the field don't track these folks down
and cause them harm. So totally understand the environment we
live in. But at the same time, on the other
side of that coin are the people that are being
targeted by those agents who often aren't certain that these
people are who they.

Speaker 2 (19:04):
Claim to be.

Speaker 4 (19:05):
Right, Is there a lot of that going on out there?
It seems to be making to be I have a
National Guard or there are strong beliefs that it's happening,
that there are but not much evidence exactly.

Speaker 1 (19:18):
But you know, if you're showing up busting down a door,
or showing up in somebody's workplace and your clothes aren't marked,
and you're not showing ID, you don't have a badge,
you don't have a warrant, and your face is covered,
then you can understand why people would be afraid. So
State Senators Sasha Renee Perez, she's out of Pasadena, used
to be mayor of Alhambra. She has presented a new

(19:39):
piece of legislation that she's calling the No Vigilantes Act.
She wants to make it easier for folks to identify
these officers. It's not the same that you've heard about
from State Senator Scott Wiener up in San Francisco that
no mask, no mask can be warned by these asures.
That's a different piece. This is just to make it
easier to identify who these folks are and would also

(20:00):
allow local police to request identification from those federal agents.

Speaker 4 (20:04):
Okay, all right, I you know I'm watching TV over
the weekend, Alex Padia. You know the guy that stormed
in on the at the press conference of I think
it was I know the Secretary of Homeland Security and
and he got handcuffed, thrown on the floor, and you know,

(20:25):
taken down the hall. He was very emotional about it afterwards.
And then he was on the Senate floor still like
three days later, very emotional about it, like crying, right,
And I thought to myself, I grew up with a
lot of Mexican guys in Portola Junior High and then
Birmingham High School, and those were always the toughest guys

(20:47):
on campus.

Speaker 2 (20:48):
What happened. I can't speak to his emotional state.

Speaker 1 (20:52):
I know that there are ways to score political points
in the Twitter sphere, you know, online, and this seemed
to resonate with Democrats in a way when jd Vance,
the Vice President, mistakenly referred to Senator Alex Padiaz Jose,
did you see Mayor Bass speak on Friday after the
Vice president kiss She was mad about a lot of things.
Keep in mind, the Vice President accused her and Governor

(21:15):
Knewsom of basically sending all of the rioters out personally.
I mean, he basically said that they are encouraging it
and they are riling these folks up. But what was
she most mad about? Jose Jose, Yeah, I mean you
could see it in her face. You could hear it
in her tone that it was the misnaming of Senator
Padilla as Jose that really stuck in her crawl the hardest.

Speaker 4 (21:38):
In the three years I was at Portola Junior High
then three years at Birmingham High School, I never saw
a Hispanic kid cry in my life. And that's those
are the years, you know, in school, you get your
ass kicked, you fail, your mom's pissed. There's a lot
of emotions going on in junior high, in high school,
those are the toughest guys around. Something's happened over the

(21:59):
last thirty years. Well he's from Pacoimo, right, is he?

Speaker 2 (22:01):
I think?

Speaker 1 (22:02):
So?

Speaker 2 (22:02):
I don't know, how did you only do three years
of high school? Ours was only ten eleven twelve? Really?

Speaker 4 (22:08):
Yeah, you know that's a Midwestern thing, whereas you know,
and I think some schools out here are nine ten
eleven twelve? Is that how it works? But out here
back when I went to high school, it's just ten
eleven twelve.

Speaker 3 (22:18):
Wow.

Speaker 4 (22:18):
But you know what, And I like that because if
you're in ninth grade, you could be thirteen, and if
you're a senior, you could be eighteen. And I don
only eighteen year olds being in the same school as
twelve or thirteen year olds.

Speaker 2 (22:31):
I used to be the way.

Speaker 3 (22:32):
It always was.

Speaker 2 (22:33):
What different three years?

Speaker 7 (22:33):
Basically difference between middle school and what do they call
it the junior high? Yeah, junior high. Yeah, where junior
high was three years? It was seven eight nine.

Speaker 1 (22:41):
I went to a junior high that was only seven
and eight. Oh really, yeah, but the middle schools were six,
seven and eight.

Speaker 4 (22:47):
Well, you know my daughter's school in Burbank, her elementary
school only went to fifth grade and then sixth, seventh,
and eighth were junior high.

Speaker 2 (22:55):
Then nine, ten, eleven, twelve, you.

Speaker 7 (22:56):
Know, six seven, eight seven, it's seven eight nine, And
like you said, monks, some just did seven and eight.

Speaker 1 (23:01):
Now I'm unique. I'm from Kentucky and all the school
stop at ninth grade. Classic buddy, Thanks for coming in
Saturday seven and nine. You got it, Michael Months probably
Sunday as well. Never know, it's all over the place.

Speaker 8 (23:16):
You're listening to Tim conwayjun you're on demand from KF
I am six forty.

Speaker 1 (23:23):
We've opened up our Iran Iran Iran desk and I
can't see from here, but I think Bellio is at
the Iran desk, Belly, are you there? Yes, I'm here, Yes,
And what's the latest? We're just why are you the
Iranian span?

Speaker 2 (23:39):
I have you said I was?

Speaker 6 (23:41):
And so that's all there is, no just different any
history of I do.

Speaker 1 (23:45):
Not know your parents from Tyranne Tyroane. Oh that somebody
said they were. No, they're not your grandparents. No, you've
been there, I have not. If youre when's the last
time you were in an Iranian restaurant?

Speaker 6 (24:01):
I don't remember.

Speaker 2 (24:02):
You're radically unqualified to be doing this. You're right, I
should go, I should leave there. She goes, all right,
So what do you hear? What do you say? I'm
just monitoring different things.

Speaker 6 (24:14):
One story, and this was according to Reuter's, that Iranian
officials confirm Iran has accepted the Trump proposed cease fire.
And then another story coming out d C. Nearby buildings
have been reportedly evacuated after a bomb threat near the
White House.

Speaker 2 (24:31):
That sounds serious.

Speaker 1 (24:32):
We're looking into those, okay, at the Iran desk, Sharon Bellio,
all right, the bunker buster, that's what they're calling that
thirty thousand pound bomb that United States dropped on what
I think is the nuclear facilities of Iran. But I
don't know. I mean, I don't know. You never know

(24:52):
who's telling the truth about what. But here's why I
think it's odd. If we drop these big bombs on
what they already have made, and they're trying to put
together a nuclear weapon.

Speaker 2 (25:03):
I guess that's the uproar.

Speaker 4 (25:05):
Then wouldn't that take all of that, you know, the
the poison and the nuclear waste. Wouldn't that disperse it
amongst that whole area and make it unlivable for I
don't know, ten thousand years.

Speaker 2 (25:21):
I don't know.

Speaker 4 (25:22):
I mean, it seems odd. But here's how the bunker
buster does work for you bomb nuts out there. Oh,
by the way, I was told this, there's a lot
of people now going online and typing in Google how
do you make a nuclear bomb?

Speaker 1 (25:43):
I wouldn't do that. If I were you, I wouldn't
do that. That raises a lot of suspicion. I know
you might be doing it for a project, or get
more knowledge, or maybe work for the news. I would
let somebody else do that on somebody else's computer, not
on your own. That could lead to a bunch of
crap later on in your life, all Right, let's find

(26:04):
out how these things work here, these bunker busters.

Speaker 11 (26:07):
These bunker busting bombs, and how it sort of like
burrows into the ground, these thirty thousand pounds explosive devices.
Can you talk more about how that would work in
this sort of situation and what it specifically needs to
get to in the ground.

Speaker 2 (26:23):
Okay?

Speaker 4 (26:23):
And once these things do explode, wouldn't the radiation from
all the nuclear, you know, fusion stuff they've all put together,
wouldn't that spread throughout the country or at least in
that facility. And if there's no sign of it, then
what did we blow up?

Speaker 2 (26:39):
I don't know.

Speaker 12 (26:40):
You know, some people may say, well, wait a minute.
The V two is a stealth bomber. It it goes
in where you have very heavy air defenses, where enemy
radars would be able to see it. And so why
is it being used in Iran when we know that
the Israelis have taken down all of the air defense systems.

Speaker 2 (26:57):
Good question.

Speaker 12 (26:58):
That's because this mop, this hardened penetrator that can go
up to two hundred feet below the ground, can only
be carried by the B two. So the B fifty
two has carried it before, but the weapon system itself
is only certified to fly on the B two So
this is why the B twos had to go in
to use these bunker busting bombs. So the whole idea

(27:19):
is that of the thirty thousand pounds, only five thousand
pounds are explosives. Most of it is a very hardened
case because it has to punch through rock and dirt,
and it has to push all that force down many layers.
It actually has a fuse that can sense going through
various layers, and so the idea here is that they've
got to collapse those big massive holes that we've actually

(27:41):
seen pictures with because the IEA has been in there,
collapse these halls and collapse dirt on top of the
centrifuges that were enriching uranium to a weapons quality capability.

Speaker 2 (27:53):
So, okay, that's my question.

Speaker 4 (27:55):
If they're enriching uranium and there's a lot of radiation
attached to that, we blow that up. Isn't that like,
you know, three quarters of a nuclear bomb going off
in that area.

Speaker 12 (28:06):
I don't know these centrifugias that were enriching uranium to
a weapons quality capability. So it's a bomb that was
developed originally most most of the of the impetus was
for the North Korean threat, because remember that the North
Koreans also have very deeply buried capabilities in their nuclear

(28:27):
in their nuclear sites. And so the US said, well,
we think that if we need to use this, that
North Korea may be the first place we need to
use it. We don't want the Kim regime to be
able to continue to develop more nuclear weapons. But then
they knew that.

Speaker 4 (28:41):
For by the way, how do how do countries sleep
where the United States makes bombs specifically for for that country?
I mean, we're making bombs specifically for North Korea.

Speaker 2 (28:56):
I don't know how you sleep at night.

Speaker 4 (28:58):
I mean, if they made bombs specifically for Claremont, would
you be up all night?

Speaker 3 (29:02):
Cruiser? I believe they already do.

Speaker 4 (29:06):
And yes, that's you think you think they got the
Claremont Busters out there?

Speaker 7 (29:09):
A man, it's it's a city of trees and PhDs.
We had a lot of higher education people are there.
That's active. I don't know something, but.

Speaker 4 (29:16):
Belly, how would you sleep at night if they were
if they had the you know, the Irvine Busters, you
wouldn't I.

Speaker 2 (29:22):
Would not at all. You'd be up all night or
you'd move, you know, you'd move.

Speaker 12 (29:26):
I probably out, But then they knew that Florida was
there as well. So really, the only two places in
the world where this weapon is appropriate and where the
US or any other country would need to use a
hardened penetrator would be in North Korea or Iran.

Speaker 2 (29:40):
All right, there you go. All right, let's find out
the damage.

Speaker 4 (29:44):
Assessing the damage with one of my favorites, Martha Radits,
who just turned a hundred last Thursday.

Speaker 2 (29:51):
So happy birthday to this centurion. Yes, Martha Raddits.

Speaker 13 (29:57):
Tonight, new video of the B two Stone bombers taking
off on that historic mission to Iran under the cover
of darkness, as satellite images show the breadth of the
destruction caused by the thirty thousand pound bunker buster bombs
dropped on Iran's nuclear facilities. Six gigantic craters, the biggest

(30:18):
nearly twenty feet wide, seen here at the four Doau
nuclear facility, buried deep beneath a mountain, leading experts conclude
the site was hit by twelve massive ordnance penetrators or mops,
each target hit twice. President Trump today saying on social media,
quote the sites that we hit in Iran were totally destroyed,

(30:40):
but questions remain about the fate of Iran's enriched uranium
processed at Fourdoh after the Iranians claimed they moved it
before the US attack. Satellite images from the day before
the US strike show unusual activity a line of trucks
seen on a service road.

Speaker 2 (30:58):
It's unclear if.

Speaker 13 (30:59):
I ran and dissipated the bombings and moved the nuclear material,
or if those trucks were used to hold dirt.

Speaker 4 (31:06):
Oh, that's your job, hey, you go to Floridoh and
remove some of that rich enriched uranium for us.

Speaker 2 (31:13):
What let mean what my guys to do?

Speaker 10 (31:16):
What?

Speaker 4 (31:17):
Yeah, go up to Floridoh and get some of that
really hot Bring gloves, but you're gonna have some really
hot rods and and a lot of enclosures, a lot
of trunks, and it's all enriched uranium. And we'd like
you to pick it up and move it. There'll be
a couple extra bucks there for you. Just put it
in trucks and move it.

Speaker 13 (31:38):
No to fortify it the underground facility. The International Atomic
Energy Agency now warning nearly nine hundred pounds of iranium
uranium enriched to sixty percent near weapons grade is unaccounted for,
and tonight we're learning more about that.

Speaker 4 (31:55):
Donny all Right will continue. The world gets crazier, man,
every single day. That's I gotta keep it right here
on KFI AM six forty.

Speaker 1 (32:03):
Conway Show on demand on the iHeartRadio app. Now you
can always hear us live on KFI AM six forty
four to seven pm Monday through Friday, and anytime on
demand on the iHeartRadio app

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