Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:02):
Let's get job.
Speaker 2 (00:16):
Oh I ad Nancy. Hello, Gavin, how are you?
Speaker 3 (00:22):
Oh fine, just trying to keep destroying California before I leave?
You know, I want to be present here in twenty
twenty eight.
Speaker 2 (00:33):
Oh, yes, that is the plan, Gavin. We know that
it could come true.
Speaker 3 (00:40):
Yeah, I know, Aunt, Nancy, dreams come true.
Speaker 4 (00:43):
I know.
Speaker 3 (00:45):
But I'm going to really just destroy California before I leave.
Speaker 2 (00:52):
Oh well, that is also the plan. You are a
monster and I love it. Oh. Here you go ahead, Nancy.
Here's some of my wine. Oh tasty, very good. Cavin,
(01:13):
we talked you, well, you should name this wine Gruesome
Newsome coming to you live from a pre recorded studio
(01:43):
somewhere deep in Fresno, California. It's let's get jacked up,
Sinners Saved by Grace.
Speaker 4 (01:52):
Now Here are the hosts of this episode, Tim, maybe, Jack.
Speaker 2 (01:57):
Bobby and Karen.
Speaker 4 (01:58):
We just never know any more.
Speaker 2 (02:07):
Oh bye, Yes, indeed, welcome to Let's get Jae.
Speaker 4 (02:17):
Dum.
Speaker 2 (02:21):
Hey, everybody, my name is Tim Parrish. Hello, and welcome
to Jack Blankinship's world. Wow. Hey, everybody, let's get checked up.
We haven't done one of these in a while, and
so we want to say hello. To everybody in Illinois
listening in. We want to say hello to everybody out
there listening in from the Fringe Radio Network. We thank
(02:44):
the Fringe Radio Network for having us on the network.
And Jack, how are you today?
Speaker 4 (02:51):
Great? I did my chores for the day. Excuse me.
I took my ninety two year old mother in law
to the doctors. Off her doctor appointments again. It's been
three days this week, so they when they get older,
(03:12):
they need more, you know.
Speaker 2 (03:15):
So when you come back from Illinois, are you just
like the travel agent for your mother in law and
all your wife and whoever else your grand grandkids?
Speaker 4 (03:26):
You mean taxi taxi? Yeah, that's me. Yeah, my name
is Jack, the taxi and the handyman. And I wasn't
back a few days and a pipe broke at my
grandkid's house. I had to go fix the water pipe.
Speaker 2 (03:44):
So you probably got more done for yourself over there
in Illinois.
Speaker 4 (03:52):
Well, let's just say this. I've worked harder physically since
I've been home than I did for two months of
any time over there.
Speaker 2 (04:00):
Yeah, well seven months, but who's counting.
Speaker 4 (04:03):
Well, I'm saying two months any two months over there?
I worked hard here this week?
Speaker 2 (04:10):
Well, it's good to have you back, and here we go.
All right. So I sent something to you last night
and I said, you know, we could do this on
Jackup Daily, which, by the way, Jacked Up Daily is
our daily show Monday through Friday over here on French
radionetwork dot com at seven am, no matter where you
are in the world pretty much, because I tell you what, Jack,
(04:35):
this is more of a local situation. So we wanted
to put on Jacked Up Daily. But it isn't really
a local situation because what if he becomes our next president. Now,
if that happens, then it becomes a nationwide problem, right,
not just a local problem exactly.
Speaker 4 (04:54):
Well, it becomes a worldwide problem. You know, this is
a global issue here because every look at President Trump
and President Obama, they and and and Biden, they all
had influences over in other countries around the world. I
mean through Biden. Look what we got into between Russia
and Ukraine. Okay, Obama we had the whole Middle East thing.
(05:18):
Biden we had the Middle East thing. We had uh,
you know, this is wide reaching. Anytime you're a president
in the United States, you you it's you're on the
global scene. You know, I mean, and and they're speaking
to U N and they're there in the G twenty
and things like that. So this thing, if Gavin actually
(05:40):
became president, it would be a A yes, a a
not just a California thing, but a national thing. But
then it would become an international thing. Yeah, by just
by product by the fact that it's the position of
the president of the United States being the most powerful
seat in the world. You know, that's quite a statement,
(06:02):
isn't it. I mean, I'm sure that China doesn't like that,
Russia doesn't like that. But when when Trump sits up
the U in and reads everybody the Riot Act and
they can't do anything about it, or he puts tariffs
on stuff and they can't do anything about it, it
kind of sets your sets the tone for what your
position is in the world, isn't it.
Speaker 2 (06:24):
Yes? And it seems like Gavin gruesome did something here
that's going to start January first, twenty twenty six. And
I found this on the neighborhood app. You know, you've
you've you have that app next Door, next Door, next Door.
Speaker 4 (06:40):
I don't know. I used to have it, don't I
used to have it. I don't I don't I don't
partake anymore. You don't know, no, because it's basically it's
a glorified Facebook, and you know, and.
Speaker 2 (06:53):
Well that's what that's what it's become. You know, it
used to be well deserved for what it was meant
to be, and then somehow it got to be like Facebook, right.
Speaker 4 (07:04):
And well Facebook, body, I think, yeah, Well, the thing
with Gavin Newsom is that, you know, he was considered
the most one of the most radical, if not the radical,
one of the most radical governors in the United States,
far left, and he is a big supporter of socialism
(07:28):
and some might even say communism right and Marxism and
and I mean.
Speaker 2 (07:36):
That are not good for America, right.
Speaker 4 (07:39):
And look what he's allowed in California just to flourish,
you know, Antifa, n S thirteen, all these things. And
it's like, Okay, California used to be the farming the
farm provider, goods provider all over the world. California used
(08:03):
to used to be the farming capital of the world.
And we used to prove that's why. Then, that's why
the National ag Expo is in is in here in
the Central Valley in Hilarry Is. People come from all
over the world to be at this National ag Expo.
And it was there because this was the greatest farming
(08:26):
area on the you know, basically on the planet, and uh,
if not the plant America and so. But now because
he's decided to manage the water and redistrict the water
and redirect the water and away from farming and into
(08:47):
the ocean a lot for many, many years, we're now
having massive forest fires, massive every year, massive. We never
had this many forest fire before. And they want to
blame him environ you know, man the impact on the environment,
you know, for that happening. But no, if you're dropping
massive amount of the rainfall that hits California every year
(09:09):
into the ocean, you're causing something.
Speaker 2 (09:14):
Shouldn't have that be in itself a criminal act.
Speaker 5 (09:17):
I mean, come on, it should it should, But it's
and what it's done is it's it's it's they've starved
farmers out of water, so they can't grow as much,
they can't pay their bills.
Speaker 4 (09:28):
Everything's increased in cost and the taxation is increasing costs
and the water cost is increased in costs. So it's
been putting farmers out of business. They're selling off their
land and foreign countries like China and Japan and others
are coming in and buying the farmland and they're getting
their water reserves. Okay and uh. And they're at the
(09:50):
same time, he's turned in the Central Valley into a
desert and we're getting we're getting the science of it
where we got high winds now every day. It's just
it's getting crazy. But we don't have the water that
we used to have. And this was and everybody says, oh,
it's climate. No it's not. It's mismanagement of water.
Speaker 2 (10:12):
And that's exactly what it is. You know, there's people
out there that are from outside of California that thinks
that California has a water problem. No, we have a
water management problem. That's the problem we have.
Speaker 4 (10:24):
Right And and so he's he's he's basically and so
what this, what this did was this allowed cheap land.
It's almost like a if you watch the sequence of events,
it's like they starved the water. They starved out the
water for the farming, thereby requiring us to get more good,
(10:47):
more farmed uh, stuff like tomatoes and everything else from overseas.
They starved out the water so people couldn't raise cattle.
They couldn't raise poultry, so all the dairy products have
to come from overseas. They basically because they starved off
the livelihood of the growers and raizors of livestock and
(11:10):
farming because without water, neither one grow. Okay, and you
got to most most ranchers grow plants to feed their
to feed their animals. Okay. They that cuts down the
cost of raising cattle. That cuts down on the cross
of raising pigs and goats and sheep and everything else.
(11:30):
And so by cutting the water out, you end up
cutting all of these industries, plus the egg industries, the
people that process eggs, the chicken industries like foster farms,
poultry processing companies, they have to lay people off, trucking industry.
It's a full bang hit for just by shutting the
(11:53):
spickot off, okay, and planning that environmental thing. But when
your fire department doesn't have enough water to put out fires,
when they don't have enough water in your systems to
fight fires, and you have only so much water, so
your trees are getting sick because they can't drink enough water.
And then the bugs that are that feed off of
(12:15):
sick trees, like the bark beetle start consuming trees and
eating force away good wood that we could have milled
or anything if we'd been managing forces. But they set
that off years ago. But what it did was it
was as the farms lose the ground, the land loses
value and it allows foreign solar companies to come in
(12:38):
and buy up whole acreages and create solar farms. Wow
and pg AND announced what six years seven years ago
that they were fifty percent renewable energy now, and so
that means that pg AND is not having to do hydro,
they're not having to use fuel fuels, they're not having
(13:01):
to produce the electricity. So now it's renewable and it's
on everyone's homes, and the homes that you have the
solar on that whatever they don't use, they don't unless
it's unless they purchased before a certain time or they're
registered farmers, certified farmers of solar. They don't get paid
(13:24):
for the solar that goes back in the system. So
PGNE consumes all this energy created, our extra energy created
on every home. And that's why they didn't want batteries.
They didn't want batteries on people's homes because then the
energy would go to charge those batteries, you know what
I'm saying, instead of going back in the grid. So
they hoodwinked the entire society and so that they could
(13:51):
basically get land cheap for their solar projects okay, and
their wind mint windmill projects. And now they're turned to farming.
Is now no longer food farm and it's solar farming. Jim,
Why can't they build the solar panels up on these
rolling mountains between the Central Valley and the and the
central coast. There's there's thousands of miles of of bald
(14:15):
mountains and bald hills that they could cover with solar farms. Okay, right,
Why why do they have to use nicely uh cultivated
and matured and cleaned and cleared and flat lands that
they can grow grow food on. Why do they got
(14:39):
to use that land instead of the rolling hills and
the deserts m to generate power? It's not it doesn't
add up. If you want to generate power, you have somebody.
It's like Death Valley. Wow, yeah, okay, you got you
(14:59):
got all of Palm Springs area, you got all of
of the High Valley, you got all all the way
up to Bishop area. This is all open deserty land,
thousands of miles of it, and yet you're going to
take the fertile farmland from the central Valley. And it
(15:23):
makes sense anyway. So he's being considered kind of a
super left, but now he's running for president and he
wants to get the presidency. Well, one of his longtime friends,
they have documentation of their family, of them going to
the same camps and things like that. From my understanding,
and I could be totally wrong, don't believe me. Check
(15:44):
it out for yourself, do your own research. But the
governor of Illinois has overnight come out to be the
craziest governor on the planet. Okay, I mean he's he's
doing his names. I never heard of him until until
President Trump won, Okay, but now his name's on the
(16:07):
news every day. He's becoming the most radical anti Trump
governor out there. And they're saying that's because he wants
to run for president. Well, wait a minute. Him and
Gavin are good friends, their families or friends. They take
vacations together, they went to can summer camp together, all
these things as kids, and so wait a minute, could
(16:29):
one be running as vice president and one be running
as president. Yes, and if this guy, if this guy
becomes so super far left, then Gavin can say, hey,
I'm more of a centralist.
Speaker 2 (16:43):
I see, I see where you're going with that.
Speaker 4 (16:46):
I'm more of a centralist. So he can pull the
Republican vote too.
Speaker 2 (16:50):
See, well, what a centralist do this? So this is
what I saw yesterday. It's this big news alert alert,
big news for California homeowners and investors. Governor Gavin Newsom
has officially signed AB one one five four and SB
five four three, ushering in one of the most transformative
(17:12):
housing law updates in California history. Well, let's see what
that means. Starting January first, twenty twenty six, Jack, every
single family property in California can now host up two
three ADUs, which means additional dwelling units okay, one detached
(17:35):
ADU up to twelve hundred square feet, one interior conversion ADU, garage,
basement or existing space. Okay. Well why does this matter?
As it creates new pathways for generalizational wealth and passive
income expands affordable housing supply in a state facing historic
(17:59):
shortage is level was the playing field for homeowners by
removing outdated restrictions This is a game changer for California
real estate, whether you're a homeowner looking to maximize your
properties potential or an investor seeking scalable opportunities in the
(18:20):
housing market and match and turning a single family property
into a four door income property legally, sustainably and with
state support, Well, doesn't that sound wonderful?
Speaker 4 (18:35):
Jack? I have a couple of questions, Yes, why didn't
he Why didn't they if this was such a good thing,
why didn't they do it before? All all the conservatives
that owned rental properties moved out of state? Okay, why
did Why are they doing it after the evacuation? I
(18:58):
mean in other states? When when I go to Illinois,
I'm considered a California refugee. Okay. And Illinois is just
as liberal as California for the for the in Chicago anyway,
the rest of the unless you're in a major in
a metro type situation, it's all. It's all fair. They
still might vote Democrat, but they're old style Democrat, not
(19:22):
super liberal okay, not not the super environmentalists and all
that stuff, and communist style. They're old Jeffersonian type Democrats. Okay,
But why didn't he do it before all these people
moved to Tennessee and Georgia and Florida and Texas and Oklahoma.
(19:48):
Why didn't this happen like seven years ago. Okay, there's
got to be a reason. Well, one is that he's
trying to do some major changes to become president. So
he has something to claim because he's been a total failure. Okay,
everything he's done is fail Well, here's the problem with
this one, and let me cover it a little bit.
(20:10):
Dem Do you remember when he made it to where
somebody could if you're not home and somebody invade your
home and they move into your house, it takes almost
an act of God to get them out.
Speaker 2 (20:22):
Yes, yeah, I forget what they call.
Speaker 4 (20:24):
But they're like, they can homestead your house.
Speaker 2 (20:27):
Yeah, they basically can ransack it, and you can't kick
him out.
Speaker 4 (20:31):
Right, And so there's a whole nother profession started with
people that are that you hire to live in the house,
to coexist with them and make them so miserable that
they move that they leave. Okay, they start a whole
new career for some people. Okay, And so here's the problem.
If you allow and then if and the other one
(20:53):
is renters in California. This is a renter friendly state.
So if you evict them by what did he make law? Well,
you have to give them a good reference for the
next place that they tried to rent. And I don't
know if it passed or not, but he was even
trying at one time to get it to where you
had to pay their first last and deposits their first
(21:16):
month's rent or their first and their deposits for the
new place. Okay, And it takes six months to a
year to get anyone out of your rental here. So
nobody wants to rent to anybody here. So now you
have you divide your house up, you make it into
these small little rentals, and then all of a sudden,
they just they have a they have a house wide
(21:39):
communal meeting, and they all decide that they're just going
to quit pay. And now it takes you a year
to get four families out of your house instead of one.
Speaker 2 (21:50):
What a headache?
Speaker 4 (21:51):
What a headache? Right, you have to now file four
lass case because.
Speaker 2 (21:57):
Each room is an individual rents right exactly. Okay, So
you have you have four rendable units, that's to say,
your garage, you know, a couple of bedrooms, maybe your
living room, I don't know.
Speaker 4 (22:11):
And one in an outbuilding. Should it allows one out building,
it allows you to do your garage. I have a
three car garage, so that's three apartments.
Speaker 2 (22:19):
Let's see right, it says, let me see this again.
It says one detached ADU up to twelve hundred square feet,
one interior one interior conversion ADU, garage, basement or existing
space so it could be a living room, one junior
ADU under five hundred square feet. So that's four rendable
units total on a single family lot. The main house
(22:42):
plus three ADUs no owner occupancy requirement, meaning you can
rent out all four units to tenants.
Speaker 4 (22:51):
Okay, so yeah, so let me let me hear so
you so you got you got three in the main house, yes, right,
you got one in a building like a shed or
a detached garage or something that you turned into a
living dwelling space. And in saying that that's on the
land on the property, then you have a fix if
(23:12):
you like me, and you have a fixed garage. I
have all three of these. I have a shed in
the back that I could put a bed in. Okay,
because the bathrooms and the living room and the kitchen
are all communal, so as long as a guy that
lived in the shed had a key, so you go
to the bathroom, it's it's legal, right okay. So so
(23:34):
it have to be jurisdictional local, because some local jurisdictions
would require a bathroom in that facility. Okay, So there's
there's some permitting stuff that would be need to be changed.
But if if they don't require.
Speaker 2 (23:49):
Wait a minute, hang on here, jacket for that particular thing,
it says, Jadu's I guess, I mean's joint no longer
require the owner to live on site unless they share
sanitation with the main home. Okay.
Speaker 4 (24:08):
So so that means if they share sanitation the main home,
they have to the owner has to live there. So
they put a little caveat in there too, So that
means that you would have to put a bathroom out
there of some sort. Okay, but they sell, they sell well,
they're not just porta potties there. There are compost bathrooms
(24:28):
that you poop in them and it turns it into composts.
It doesn't go in the sewer, So you that would
qualify it's a bathroom, right, yes, So so you know
if you're going if you're hardcore into this stuff, you know,
you got three in the house, you got one in
your storage yet, and I have a three car garage.
So if I divide took all three of those those
(24:51):
garages and turn them into living spaces, bedrooms, basically, that's
three six seven places. And I have four rooms in
my house. That's not including the master bedroom. That's just
the standard living I could make a mint here. Okay,
well yeah, I mean, here's the deal.
Speaker 2 (25:11):
But it sounds here's another thing, Jack, It sounds maybe
you're thinking those are listening to this, maybe you're thinking,
what doesn't sound too bad. It sounds like maybe the
renters will you know, we'll get a good deal, you know,
maybe a low cost or something. But if you're a
family trying to move into there, I mean you could,
like Jack, you could raise the rent however you want,
(25:34):
right right.
Speaker 4 (25:36):
And there was a lady when I had my handymade
cup of tim there's a lady here who had renters.
She said they were all her kids, but you know,
each room had its own combination lock on each bedroom,
so that meant that she was their being being them
out or something. Well, when they would for what she
wanted was for me to fix all the doors because
(25:58):
as people couldn't remember the codes or the locks didn't
work real well, they just busted in because I was
over their bed. They just broke the door, Okay. So
so she she had like five doors that needed repaired,
and somebody got mad at her and busted the door
on her bed, on her on her master bedroom. And
(26:19):
so I had five doors in the house that she
wanted me to fix. And I'm like, no, I'm called
door guy, okay. But what I'm saying is that these
that this is already going on, and it's and it's
and it's been going on somewhere illegally. When I when
(26:40):
I was living in San Luis Obispo, there was a
lady caught in Santa Barbara. Don't you can search it up, folks,
don't take my word for it. There's a lady caught
in Santa Barbara and she had been renting out all
the rooms in her house. She she did exactly this.
She parted up the garage, she rented out all the
(27:01):
garage spaces as as rooms, and then but she went
she got greedy. She went one step further. She then
rented out the closets within the bedrooms to homeless people,
and so you could. So this college girl wakes up
all night and this and this guy's groping her and
(27:22):
trying to.
Speaker 2 (27:23):
Keep you know, yes, we get it right.
Speaker 4 (27:27):
And because she didn't know that the landlord had rented
out the closet, the closet, the closet floor in a room.
And so this ladys busted. Santa bar didn't mean anything
after her. I don't know. But when I was young
and I was in San Jose, as a young man,
(27:50):
i could, I went to a plok at a place
to rent, and it was it was in a very
wealthy neighborhood and and a little town called Campbell, and
there was a house and every the central area was
common area, and the kitchen was common area. But you
(28:11):
rented your room, and everyone rented a room. The landlord
didn't live on site. Now they were doing it illegally,
but if they don't get busted, they don't get busted. Yeah, okay.
And then and then a friend of mine, when I
was living in Santa Maria, California on the central coast,
he was him and he was renting a room in
(28:32):
the same scenario. All in a house and all of
them rented in an individual room. And I said, how
can you do that? It's not legal to do that,
and they said, well, they're doing it. And so they've
been doing this for quite some time. It's just that
he's addressing it is something legal. But here's the way
the problem comes in this. Doesn't this kind of get
everybody used to renting a standard small little bedroom to
(28:56):
live in? Yeah, Agenda twenty thirty. Yes, they want each
one of us to have one hundred and twenty square
feet per person. That's according to agenda. It's like nothing,
that's like, you're that's like a ten by twelve bedroom?
Speaker 2 (29:14):
What what is you? You would know this, Jack? What
is what does a jail cell consist? Of? The measurements?
Speaker 4 (29:21):
Oh, I think it's probably I don't know the top
of my head, but I probably imagine it's like nine
by nine foot long by.
Speaker 2 (29:31):
Uh is it more than twenty square feet?
Speaker 4 (29:36):
No?
Speaker 2 (29:37):
Okay?
Speaker 4 (29:38):
And see and that's what this is like, Jim, Yeah, okay.
So there's there's there's shared commonary, so there's shared living
area where there's a TV in this in the in
the jails. Jails, now there's a share a bath, a toilet,
there's a shower that everybody shares. But then they have
(30:00):
living they're sleeping cells which house like four people on
two bunk beds on your side of the wall, and
in the middle of it is a toilet that for
all four of these individuals that are locked in this
cell at night. And so they basically they're doing a similar,
very similar thing. They're maximizing the space and of the
(30:21):
house and your sleeping area becomes one thing. Now, this
is this is very reminiscent of Japan, yeah, okay, and
China and Hong Kong, okay, because they don't have any
room there. They're just skyscrapers and so people pay for
(30:41):
like upper lofts and above doorways.
Speaker 2 (30:45):
And you know, maybe this will work in like a
place like San Francisco or something, but you know, I just.
Speaker 4 (30:52):
Well, this is this is the belief. This is the
This is also supporting the New Age environmentals that they've
been preaching in schools for thirty years now that maybe
forty that that we're over the planet is overpopulated.
Speaker 2 (31:11):
Right, Okay, it's not.
Speaker 4 (31:12):
So. It's so tim once you drive out, once you
drive twenty miles outside of most metros, you hit open lands.
Speaker 2 (31:20):
You and I know this for a fact because we
traveled the United States and you have exasly right. So
I mean, look at the places in Illinois that you
could homestead. That is just I mean nobody has them.
No and acres and acres of nothing right.
Speaker 4 (31:38):
Right, And even in Illinois you can buy Yeah, you
got to fix them up, you got to put money
into them, but you can buy houses. You can buy
old nineteen hundred and nine, built in nineteen hundreds, early
nineteen hundreds. You can buy old homes there in certain
villages for you know, it's like twelve grand, you know.
(31:59):
And yes, yes, people I said that, look on redfin.
I know, look on red Fin and you'll see and
just look up homes in every state under fifty thousand dollars.
And yes, they might need total rebuilds inside, the roof
might need to be done, but you can buy a
property for nothing. In compared to California.
Speaker 2 (32:22):
California, I mean, it's it's incredible. California still has a
lot of space everybody. It's just the metros like San
Francisco in LA I guess I guess Frezo's getting to
that point, but not yet. But it's it's the metros
are crowded, not the whole land, not the whole state.
Speaker 4 (32:43):
Right, And where do liberals dominate? Liberals dominated in metros,
they don't. They don't in the in the rural areas,
they don't have much power. If you look at the map,
the voting map, it's red in most of the farming
communities across the day in the desert's Las Vegas, you
know that kind of place. They these huge metros, they
(33:08):
vote a lot of times, they vote liberal, but because
the most population is there and so but as f
you go outside those metros, it's pretty much rad across America, Okay,
And that's really something.
Speaker 2 (33:26):
You know, what if what if you jack as a
homeowner and a rental space owner, Now, if you hike
up the price to be like, I don't know, let's
say twelve hundred dollars per room or something like that.
I mean, who could afford that by themselves? You'd have
(33:49):
to have like separate families.
Speaker 4 (33:52):
Well, there was a there, you know, there is a
when you go to places like Santas where you have
universities like cal Poling and and those universities, there's a
lot of wealthy people that go there. You know, when
you talk about the Pacific call it university. There's a
lot of people, the wealthy people that go there. And
(34:14):
so what these families do that are wealthy is they'll
buy a house like mine, and then they'll put their
kid in it. That's the owner residing there, that meets
the lawn, and then they'll rent out all the other rooms.
They'll sublet all the other rooms, and that pays them
the whole time their kids in college are going to
(34:35):
university for four or six years. That pays for their
living costs and they're not having to pay the school
an outrageous amount of money. Nobody wants to live on
campus anyway, and in a dorm room when they can
live in their own private home okay, and have a
garage or whatever they want, and do whatever they want
(34:55):
because it's their own private home. They don't got to
worry about curfews and somebody inspect in your dorm room
and all this other stuff. And so they end up
getting these spices. But what happens is all these kids,
because they need this housing, end up paying for this
this residence. And so at the end of when their
(35:17):
kids graduate, they can either keep the renting it or
they can put it up for sale. Well before they
had to put it up for sale because they couldn't
legally do it without a family member living there. Well
now they can keep it going, they can keep it renting.
And these you know, and these kids at cal Poly,
their their families. Some of them are wealthy, and they're
(35:38):
ready to pay fifteen hundred dollars a month for a
room for their kid, you know. And the Bay in
the Bay Area, three thousand dollars for a studio is
not unheard of. And Santa Barbara, it's not unheard of.
You know, maybe two grand for a studio. You know.
But hey, I was when we were in Florida. We
(36:00):
lived in Orlando, Florida. We had there was a guy
there from a family from Germany and they were just
loved our prices for everything. They says, so she isn't
expensive to live in America. They were just tickled to death, man,
And I said, what do you mean? They said, Well,
the apartment that we live in is massive compared to
(36:21):
what we live in our country. And it's all modern,
it's new, and it's fresh. It's got the swimming pools
and it's like a resort and compared to where we live. Wow.
And I go and they go, and where we live
for half the size of the place we're in now
for twelve hundred dollars a month, that's what they were paying.
(36:42):
Back then it was six thousand. It was equal to
six thousand dollars a month.
Speaker 1 (36:49):
Wow.
Speaker 4 (36:51):
So some of these countries, European countries, they're used to
paying three grand, five grand, six grand, seven grand for
a place to live apartments.
Speaker 2 (37:02):
Well, I mean, I guess then maybe they would like it,
but I don't know. To me, I just wouldn't want
to do that. But you know, some comments I saw was, well,
this is going to make people leave California even more.
Speaker 4 (37:18):
Well, you know, and all it is is a hell
Mary move. Newsom knows is times up here in California.
You can't be governor again, and so and he wants
to go to president. So now he's got to make
some kind of good thing that makes him popular that
he can call say, look what I did, Look what
(37:39):
I did for California. I can do this for you.
And so they're going to probably do this, and they
probably already have a whole list of rich, wealthy liberals
that own all the properties that the Conservatives basically evacuated
and left California behind. And now they have all these
(38:00):
liberal landlords and they're probably going to say, yes, this
is a this is this was so lucrative for us,
and it fixed up and and and and it allowed
so many more open houses for the youth and everything.
Because think about it, if this doesn't really break open
until middle next year, then by the time Trump gets
(38:22):
ready to leave office or the campaign starts, because last
year Trump's in time in office is a campaign here.
So so in a couple of years, there'll be avid
there'll be preliminary evidence that this created more low income
housing for the soo struggling in California.
Speaker 2 (38:45):
Hmmm. I want to read a couple of comments. I
found some comments about this story here. This is from
Eric z. This will help greedy property owners only. This
will turn the flip market into a real problem. This
will destroy neighborhoods as they are and once it's done,
there's no going back.
Speaker 4 (39:07):
That's right. Wow, that's right, And that's what I was
telling my wife. We we took an assessment of what
houses on our street could possibly do this. Yeah, you know,
we looked at our neighbor. We thought about our neighbors, Oh,
they wouldn't do it. And this other neighbor, they wouldn't
do it. This other neighbor, they wouldn't do it. But
then there's a couple of neighbors that in every on
(39:28):
every block, there's a couple of neighbors that would okay,
and and so yeah, it's going to push a lot
of people out, and it may push me out. I
mean seriously, because I can live in Illinois and rent
my house out to five different people, six different people.
Speaker 2 (39:51):
And there's another one by Michelle Caesar's says, waiting to
see the additional taxes and fees for new codes and regulations,
right safety requirements, and then squatters, that's what they'll call it. Squatters.
Right rights and increased insurance liability. Costs nothing this governor does,
(40:12):
excuse me, cost nothing this governor does is for the
benefit of his constituents. California is broke, that's right, Well,
because a newsome.
Speaker 4 (40:25):
California's not broke. Broken, tim broke is when you look
at your checking account.
Speaker 2 (40:32):
Well, yeah, and.
Speaker 4 (40:34):
It broke is when you look at your checking account
and you go, you know what, Oh, I just we
can't spend any more money because we don't have enough
money in the When I get paid next week, we'll
have enough money to pay the bills for the next
month and buy food. That's broke, but we're gonna have
to really shop. Well, that's broke. No, what California is
(40:56):
is worth thirty, like thirty thirty bills or something in
debt okay, and our debt is held by primarily by China. Okay,
So people need to start looking at who's loaning all
this money to California for a high speed rail? Okay,
who's funding these grant initiatives, who's actually doing the loans
(41:18):
that are supplying the immediate cash flow to get these
things done that Newsom's trying to do, okay or has
been working on. And it'll blow your mind how much
money that Californias borrow from overseas enemies or adversaries.
Speaker 2 (41:36):
Okay, Oh yeah, China probably right right.
Speaker 4 (41:39):
And look, Newsom practically put the cost of water and
everything on the Central Coast so high that the farmers
just got out of business. And what happened. Japanese farmers
came in and purchased all the strawberries. So when you
guys are eating strawberries out there from the Central coast.
(42:00):
As who they were made by? They were made they
were grown in America, but they were owned by Japan.
Here's one for you, Tim. This is on the same
concept of the way gathers do some things. See, they
want all the countries interdependent. They want us all dependent
on everybody else or something and so so think about
(42:25):
this one. Most of the diamonds are owned by one family.
I think it's in Africa or India, and they own
the rights to ninety percent of the diamonds. So therefore
they can control the price of the diamonds, right, They
can release so much and not release so much. They
have control over the diamond market basically. At the same time,
(42:49):
did you know that the still the metal markets are
pretty much controlled by Japan. Wow, But Japan does not
does not have it, not one mine, They don't have
one mind or one still fat mill factory. They don't
have any any any of this in their country. But
(43:11):
they're the broker for uh hard metals all over the world.
And so what are what are your what are your
robots made up? What are your androids made out of?
What are these armored drones made out of They're set
for life, right because because in order to to to
(43:34):
it's in their favor. War is in their favor because
everything's made out of metal. Okay, So every bomb that's
been dropped anywhere, Japan got a portion of it, made
profit on it. So and so what I'm saying is
(43:57):
that that this is the mentality of the left. Trump is.
Trump is more of a nationalist and he's he's for less,
build it here, let's grow in here, Let's just do
it here, here, here, supply jobs here. Okay, he's not
a globalist at this point moment. Who knows. He may
(44:17):
flip later, but right now he's not a globalist. Maybe
he wake up one day and go, oh, I made
a mistake. We should be globalist. Okay. I don't know.
I don't know. I can't read the future. Okay, but
but this or maybe he's such a winner that he
believes that America should stay on as the rule, as
(44:39):
the top country in the world, yet be globalist. You
see what I'm saying. Right. In other words, if there's
going to be a global economy, then America should be
the crown jewel that they should sit on the top okay,
And as the leaders of the world, like a kingdom leader,
they should be paid hominges, they should be paid you know,
(45:01):
they should be tariffs. What is a tariff? A tariff
is paying you for the right to do something. Okay,
well this is this is you know, back in the
day we had kings and stuff. The great whatever was
the emperor, the largest king. All the other lower kings
paid tribute to them. Well, what is the tariff when
(45:25):
we came when we became America, we bought tea from
Boston from.
Speaker 2 (45:32):
Uh from Europe, Europe, yes, thank you.
Speaker 4 (45:36):
Right, and that's what caused and that we were being
over taxed. So that's what caused the tea Party, right.
Speaker 2 (45:41):
Yes, I got confused, lost the tea Party, yes, right.
Speaker 4 (45:45):
And so so what I'm saying is that that there's
there's two ways of looking at there's the country. There's
going to be a country that rules on top. And
if you go biblically on this tim there's been hundreds,
if not thousands of people that have stated, if you
compare Rome to America, they're identical.
Speaker 2 (46:10):
Oh yeah, that ok. At Washington, DC alone, the capital,
I mean yeah.
Speaker 4 (46:16):
Right, we are the new Rome, right, and then they
said that, and then there's the and then there's the
mentioned in the Bible of the New Babylon. Okay, and
so when you start reading in the last Days, there
has to be a power that is basically where the
(46:38):
overlords reside. And what's the most most weather friendly country
on the planet.
Speaker 2 (46:50):
I guess country.
Speaker 4 (46:52):
Yeah, Americas have the most what they call it ambient
temperature ranges and bases in the world. We have all
we we have the various uh you know, were the
mountains of oceans. We have different climates in different areas.
But but as far as the weather conditions, it's not
freezing like Alaska, Okay, right, it's not you know there,
(47:18):
there's it's not the Sahara Desert. It's not Africa, it's
not there. We're not. We have the most neutral or
ambient temperature and weather patterns of all the rest of
the countries. But as one person said, everyone would like
to be America, you know, because we just happened to
(47:39):
got the premium land here. Yeah, okay, premium property, and
so everybody wants a piece of it.
Speaker 2 (47:47):
Jack, I want to read one word to you because
this sounds this was some up. Gavin Newsom in California
right here, with everything that he's done.
Speaker 4 (47:55):
Right, Okay, Okay, I'm a supporter of Gavin Newsom. You are,
I don't. I don't. I don't appreciate you putting them
down all the time.
Speaker 2 (48:04):
Okay, well, I'm not gonna put them down.
Speaker 4 (48:05):
But and I everybody listens to this show knows that
I'm a hardcore communist socialist.
Speaker 2 (48:12):
Okay.
Speaker 4 (48:12):
Well, and I don't understand why you have to be
a hater.
Speaker 2 (48:17):
Okay, Well, this is from a guy's name, Guy I Dias,
And it sounds like maybe Jack was writing this too,
I don't know. It says this is disaster to people
that worked hard to provide a home and safety for
their children, just like Newsom's drug policies creates more drug addicts,
(48:39):
not less. Newsome soft on crime, closes shops and makes
prices for goods higher because that is the only way
to stay afloat from all the left in their stores.
Newsom closing and destroying dams and reservoirs played no small
part in the last of water to fight the Palisades fire.
(49:03):
And why hasn't there been an explosion of building in
the Palisades. Newsom and his cronies are letting the owners
go broke so they could buy their land cheap. Wow.
Speaker 4 (49:17):
Sounds very familiar.
Speaker 2 (49:19):
Ideas you are the winner of the comments today. I
like that one.
Speaker 4 (49:26):
Yeah, yeah, no, yeah, And that's okay. So he did
it with the farmers. And did you you heard about
the shell oil spill in Avelo? Right? Okay? So years
ago there was an offshore a rig that sprung a
(49:48):
leak in a tanker right off shore. Okay. I don't
know that I'd ever seen a tanker that close to
Ala before, right, okay, But it was by Shell oil.
And the problem is is Avolt was a secluded area.
There was a basically golf course there. There was no interest.
(50:10):
That hadn't really changed in a lot of years. It's
it's dead center on and prime property in on the
central coast. And so they have a little oil spill,
and so they get to spend all this money on
this emergency doing cleanup and using it for environmental damages
(50:34):
and animal and the animal activists got in there and
all this stuff, and so they got to send all
this grant money in there, and shell oil got to
come in and you know what, it was so.
Speaker 1 (50:44):
Bad tim.
Speaker 4 (50:48):
Shell oil felt really bad. So I think it was Shell.
I could be wrong. Check it out yourself. But they
got They ended up having to buy all this land
for pennies on the dollar, and they built a ton
of resort. They built resorts over there, and they reconditioned
the whole thing and made it into just this beautiful
(51:10):
recruit recreation spot, the travel spot. Okay, and now multimillion
dollar homes will be built all through the mountain valley
that that it's part of, and a golf course and
it's just it's turned into this elite area, okay, with
(51:33):
a timeshare that they own, oil company owned because they
owned all the land, right, Okay, So this has happened.
This is a business profile. This is a business This
is an easy way to take it. I mean, if
the land's contaminated and you can't grow anything on it,
(51:56):
then it lowers its value. It can't produce a crop.
So therefore you can buy that land for nothing as
long as you can soil the ground. So in Santa Barbara,
Santa barb Roofing whole company I used to work for.
It had been there for fifty years. They came in,
the environmentals come in, they checked the ground. The ground
(52:17):
was contaminated, and so they had basically when the roofing
company shut down and that location, the government came in
and told them that they had to clean the ground
before they could sell it, otherwise they couldn't change hands.
So the owner of it tried to sell it, couldn't
(52:38):
sell the land because it was it had the soil
was contaminated, so they made the They few years went by,
they sold it. Finally got a way to sell it
to somebody, I believe, and that person that got it
couldn't build on it because guess what, the ground was contaminated.
(52:59):
So so, but there was a grant and the only
person that could get this grant to clean the soil,
which was like one hundred grand a year from the
state of California.
Speaker 2 (53:09):
Wow.
Speaker 4 (53:10):
Yeah. The only person that could get this grant was
one of the original owners. So guess what, the property
reverted back to him. He turned it into a storage
shed facility and brought in this company. They put this
little drill auger thing in the ground and it sits
there and turns the ground and it qualifies them to
get this check every year. So he makes eighty thousands,
(53:35):
so he did back. This was you know, this was
thirty years ago. And so he basically turned a profit
of eighty grand a year on his storage sheds. With
how happened to have any roofing crews? He ended up
opening Ace Hardware, getting a franchise on that.
Speaker 2 (53:53):
Oh wow.
Speaker 4 (53:53):
And yeah, and now he owns a roofing He brought
his roofing company back again. So they basically a catapult
in his business by having contaminated land.
Speaker 2 (54:03):
Wow. Well, that's what way to do.
Speaker 4 (54:06):
It in Santa Barbara where a half acre land is
like three million dollars.
Speaker 2 (54:14):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (54:15):
So he's also got this credit where this is a
liberal gold mine. Okay, And that's what I'm trying to
say here, Tim. What this does that Gaven Newsom has
done is taking all of his cronies, the rich cronies
that he knows that own lots and lots of rental houses.
It's now put a ton of money in their pockets
(54:37):
because all the many of the Conservatives already left the state. Okay.
And that's why I said, why didn't he do this
before the big evacuation refugee situation out of California what
(54:57):
they call it exodus, Before the before the exitus started.
Speaker 2 (55:02):
Okay, and now look what happened. You weren't even telling
me that houses even in Illinois have gone up because
of the mass exodus from California.
Speaker 4 (55:10):
Right, Oh, yeah, Tennessee, the houses have gone up. And
if you go up to Montana, which used to be
in an expensive place to live in Wyoming, properties of
skyrocketed there too because there's just so many people leaving California.
And you know, since Newsom took office, something happened that's
(55:32):
never happened. You can check it out. People don't take
my word for it. In California under Newsom's watch a California,
we I forget how many years ago, Tim, I was
still working with you in traffee Control. We for the
first time ever, thin was like eight years ago, for
(55:52):
the first time ever, mayor California actually had more people
move out than move in. And it never happened. And
in the history of California. Wow, and now it's been
every year and every year more people move out. You know,
when we went to my son moved to Illinois, and
we went they started looking at RVs and I mean
(56:16):
at moving trucks to get them stuff to Illinois. And
what they found was it costs three times to four
times the amount of money to get a truck to
take out of California then it did to bring one
in because they can't get any in. Oh okay, so
everybody wants to move out. So the money is supplying
(56:37):
trucks to move out of California, and they're getting premium
dollar for it because then they have to have somebody
go to these other states and drive them back. And
so you want to drive If you want to bring
a truck into California, it's like one half to one
quarter of the price to rent it there and bring
(56:57):
it in that it is for you to rent it
here and take it out.
Speaker 2 (57:01):
I'll tell you what, if you're moving into California, you
must be getting a very good paying job to move
into California.
Speaker 4 (57:10):
Or you're you're looking for something. I mean, if I
were you know, if I was any older, Tim, I'm
sixty five now, I'm still a young spring chicken. You know.
Speaker 2 (57:23):
Did I laughed? Sorry?
Speaker 4 (57:25):
Yeah, that was really rude.
Speaker 2 (57:27):
Okay, I did mean to snort. I must be having
a call right.
Speaker 4 (57:33):
Right, Yeah, I understand. You just spit my spit my
So let's let's look at this So I'm I'm I'm
a baby boomer. Okay, I'm at the end of the
baby boomers. But the baby boomers above me, a lot
of them are liberal.
Speaker 2 (57:49):
Okay.
Speaker 4 (57:50):
So now if I'm a liberal baby boomer, I come
to California and I get the best medical care, the
best housing assistance, the best the best that if I
can't pay my bills, well they can just take over
my house and I can live here for free until
I die. Okay, there's all kinds of opportunities for seniors here.
(58:12):
I get the best I care, the best hearing care.
There's programs for me to get all this socialist stuff, medical, dental, vision, food.
If I don't make enough money, I get food. Well,
they call EBT. There's all this stuff available to me,
and their senior programs throughout this entire state that even
(58:35):
give you more. At the same time, I can go
down to you know, any churches that are giving out food.
I can do so. And in California, the temperature is
so ambient that I don't have to worry about high
heating costs and high cooling costs. And I'm not going
to die freeze to death like I could in Chicago, Okay,
(58:57):
or Boston, and so here I can get as a
senior citizen, I can get all kinds of programs, man programs,
big time. You want to know, think about this. Go online.
My wife showed this to me yesterday. There's a video
on YouTube and it's about perks that if you're over
sixty five that you don't even know are available to
(59:19):
you at the airlines because the airlines don't want to
know that. It's they don't want to advertise it because
it costs them more money. But there's like a ton
of freebies that you can get from the airlines, or
discounts on flights, all kinds of stuff that you did
preferred seating, all kinds of things because you're over sixty five.
(59:40):
So what I'm saying is to catering to the seniors
who are into free stuff. This is a state to
be in. In New York maybe, but like Florida, it's
just got low tax taxes. So if you're a business
owner and or you've always been self Floyd, or you
(01:00:01):
are retiring engineer or something and you have a good retirement,
in California's where you want to be because they have
the biggest you know it's a Republican control state with
tons of tax incentives to be there as a senior.
But if you want handouts as a senior citizen, California's
the place to be. Man. You can go to Denise
(01:00:23):
and you can go dozens and doesn't places and get
discounts because you're a senior.
Speaker 2 (01:00:28):
But what if I'm young. Let's say I'm twenty five,
twenty six out of college, have a young family. Should
I move to California? The only way you really would
want to move to California is if you have a
good paying job. Maybe you got a job over there
in the Silicon Valley. That okay, well then maybe so.
But if you're a twenty five twenty six year old
young lad and you're just starting a family, you're out
(01:00:50):
of college, does California have stuff for you?
Speaker 4 (01:00:55):
I don't know. I would say no. But if but
if you want free housing, if you want and they're
the housing here is like awesome, tim. I mean they
got marble pillars and granite countertops and long income housing
and swimming pools and I mean jacuzzis and and I
(01:01:18):
mean they're they're long come housing here is really really nice.
The new stuff they're building, and so I mean, it's
nicer and most of the places I've lived, okay, And
we were working on one. I forgo a town we
were in. We're working on one of them, and I
was like, wow, these places are going to go for
a lot of money, big time. And they're all marble.
Speaker 2 (01:01:39):
Right, I remember that tile roofs and they look really nice.
They're like, well, who's going to move in here?
Speaker 4 (01:01:44):
Right? Like it's a resort. Yeah, I had a had
an exercise place, the whole work had gym, a TV,
movie theater, everything. I was like, wow, this is a
really nice place. They said, yeah, it's long come housing.
Speaker 2 (01:02:01):
We couldn't believe it, right, We're like what right?
Speaker 4 (01:02:04):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (01:02:05):
And I'm like, so if besoves you to be poor,
you know that's right.
Speaker 4 (01:02:12):
So if I'm a senior citizen I'm on a fixed income,
this is a nice place to be.
Speaker 2 (01:02:20):
But it sounds good, especially.
Speaker 4 (01:02:23):
If I don't have to drive anywhere. I mean because
the new uh mile tax. You know you heard about.
Speaker 2 (01:02:30):
That, right, Yeah? Wow, that's another that's another thing coming.
Speaker 4 (01:02:34):
Okay. So so they hid the mile tax in the
new budget bill and and people authorized it, but they
kept the lid on it because they didn't really look
at you. They're monitoring your mile aage and instead and
if you own property, So here's another thing. It's for
people to own property right and right. And so if
(01:02:57):
if Tim drives a thousand miles ten thousand miles a
year and it's they don't know what the rate is yet.
I don't think they finalize the rate, but it got authorized.
So at say it's only six percent, Well, that means
you're tenspans six hundred dollars additional a year to California
for the privilege of driving here. And it's tacked onto
(01:03:19):
your homeowner's tax bill.
Speaker 2 (01:03:22):
So they're penalizing you because you own a house, or
you own a land or property or whatever, right right.
Speaker 4 (01:03:29):
And now they're saying that it will that this is
going to trickle down, and this is going to hit
renters really really hard because the landlords are going to
have to increase rates to cover this because their tenants
are going to be driving to work and everything. So
think about this, Tim, You're a construction worker and your
boss to and the union tells you, Tien, you don't
(01:03:53):
get paid for this travel time, but we need you
to be on a job site and stocked in two
and a half hours away at seven tomorrow, and you're
going to be there for ten days. So you can
you decide to stay there and rent yourself a place
to stay, or you can just pay the gas and
run back and forth. So Tim, being smart, he grabs
(01:04:15):
a buddy of his and they commute up every day,
back and forth. Well you want to do it in
each other's cars off and on, or each other or
company vehicle, because if you do it in personal vehicles
and have control over the thing, well, now you've got
to pay tax on that mileage. This is going to
kill jobs too, This is what I'm.
Speaker 2 (01:04:35):
Saying, Yeah, because who wants to go without some drive time?
Speaker 4 (01:04:39):
Drive time, and especially if the drive time is going
to cost you six cents a mile or six and
a half cents a mile or nine and a half
cents a mile.
Speaker 2 (01:04:48):
Okay, So if I go places three hours away from me,
I don't get the three hours is not going to
be paid to me.
Speaker 4 (01:04:56):
And you're going to be billed in your homeowers tax
if you drive your personal vehicle. So this is going
to stop construction workers from wanting to commute to job
sites to work that are thirty minutes away. Yeah, this
is a big environmental hit, by the way, because now
(01:05:18):
people are not going to be willing to commute because
they're adding mileage on Now this alshow should open up
the door for people like Tim and others that their
boss says, hey, you need to drive here to your
personal car here, and Tim should be able to say, Okay,
so you're going to write me a check because it's
going to cost me fuel. It's going to cost me
(01:05:40):
mileage on my taxes for every mile I drive. So
this is something. This is another legal battle, but this
won't hit until Newsom is leaving office, so it won't
be a big thing for him. It'll be a big
thing for the next governor, Okay. And so that's what
I'm saying right now. It's a show me thing. It's
(01:06:00):
a it's it's it's a stage. And he has to
create something that makes him look like he's done something
wonderful here in the land because he's destroyed everything else.
And it'll look good in the interim because it's already
been set up to look good, okay, so that he
can run for president, so he has something to tell
(01:06:21):
the world, Hey, I did this, and he's such a
wonderful guy.
Speaker 2 (01:06:28):
I don't know. I just think somebody.
Speaker 4 (01:06:30):
I mean during I mean during COVID, his restaurants stayed open,
his winery stayed open, the bars that he went to
stayed open, the places that he wanted to go to
and not wear a mask he could, okay, but but
you know the rest of us, you know, we need
to shut down the rules, right, that's right. It's pretty
(01:06:54):
bad when the restaurants.
Speaker 2 (01:06:55):
I remember during that time, I was working out of
town Jack and I went I was after work, it
was already dark, and I went to Uh. I wanted
to go to get somebody eat, like a burger or something,
you know, And I could you believe it, they already closed.
It was like six o'clock and they've already closed like
what it was because of COVID, And I couldn't even get.
Speaker 4 (01:07:19):
Dinner, right and and and but here's the deal. The
bars and the liquor stores could stay open.
Speaker 2 (01:07:30):
I was, yeah, And in Presento it wasn't like that.
But out of town it was like I forgot where
I was. But it was one of the Bay Area
places and they've they closed really early, like one of
the coastal liberal places.
Speaker 4 (01:07:46):
Yeah, and it's in Sonoma County. It's already starting again.
Speaker 2 (01:07:50):
Yeah. So so you know, so buckle up.
Speaker 4 (01:07:55):
We're getting ready for the roller coaster, guys. So you know,
basically you can say that this is the beginning of
the election campaign yep, for Gavin Newsom. That's basically what
you're saying. What you can say about this is this
is something to prove that he's presidential material. Okay, he
(01:08:19):
needs a success stories to talk about. And until you tim,
if I tell you, okay, this is going to happen
in twenty twenty six, and I know that I'm running
for president twenty twenty eight, that means it's got two
years to prove that it's bad or otherwise it's all good.
(01:08:39):
It can be spun to be good because none of
the bad is going to show up until way after
I'm in the office already, right. And if you have
thousands and thousands of people creating and channel is CNNBC
and CNN and NBC and all these places, if you
have them all saying oh, look what he did here,
(01:09:01):
Look what he did here, and the talking points are, oh,
it's been wonderful, and you got people that are interviewed, Now,
I can finally afford a place in my own blah
blah blah blah. You know, because everybody saying in California, everybody,
everybody is saying, well, what are the young people that
to do about a place to live? You know, if
(01:09:22):
you work at McDonald's, or you work shining shoes, or
you work at a golf course, or you work at
even a construction company, and you're making twenty five dollars
or less an hour, right, you can't afford to live
on your own. But here's the deal. In nineteen seventy,
they're not that far back, guys. In nineteen seventy a
(01:09:46):
family of five, three kids, a wife and a husband.
A wife could stay home and be a homemaker, and
the husband worked and in his less than ten dollars
an hour or less, yes, job, could pay all the
bills in the family and them take a vacation.
Speaker 2 (01:10:06):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (01:10:10):
So what's happened from nineteen seventy to twenty twenty seventy six?
Might as well say that twenty five that's made it
so bad?
Speaker 2 (01:10:25):
Inflation?
Speaker 4 (01:10:25):
For one, Well, there's how many of those years have
been Have we had liberal leadership.
Speaker 2 (01:10:32):
And that's the that's the key, right there. I mean,
I'm sorry, guys, but that's true.
Speaker 4 (01:10:38):
You know, yeah, I mean Clinton, Obama.
Speaker 2 (01:10:42):
That's right. You know I was there and I did
some of those things. And you know, my brother, my
buddy Obama here or Obama, I did that too. That's right,
that's right, you did.
Speaker 4 (01:10:58):
That's why Reagan was hated so much because he was
like when here's what I saw a meme that it
really made me laugh. Pelosi and what's his name that's
head of the that's blocking the budget Schumer. Oh yeah, okay.
(01:11:18):
They were in office screaming that Ronald Reagan was the
problem with the economy when Ronald Reagan was there and president.
And now they're still there and screaming Trump is responsible
for everything.
Speaker 2 (01:11:39):
What a show, huhy.
Speaker 4 (01:11:43):
And that's why we need term limits, guys, We really
do need terminine. Right.
Speaker 2 (01:11:48):
So what is that vote? Fifty?
Speaker 4 (01:11:51):
No, fifty is totally different. Fifty is allowing them to
read district, for Gavin Newsom to read district everything on
his own. There's a committee that there was a committee
established to do this for the people and by the
people just a few years ago. And but they the
(01:12:12):
Gavin Newsom wants to take it away from this committee
that we voted to have do this, and he wants
to take the power back as an executive power so
that he can redistrict at any way he once, so.
Speaker 2 (01:12:27):
Yeah, don't want that.
Speaker 4 (01:12:28):
So well no, But what I'm saying is, isn't this
a Marxist type move?
Speaker 2 (01:12:34):
Definitely?
Speaker 4 (01:12:36):
Okay, isn't this like a Hitler thing? Okay? You have
the you have a state that's that from there. From
what the elections they say is been mostly Democrat for
how many years? I think it was rayed. You couldn't
actually call an unsports nigga republican. Okay. He was married
(01:12:56):
to a Schriber and Kennedy family, and you're gonna tell
me they had no influence on his political leaning. I
know my wife has stuff interferes with my life all
the time.
Speaker 2 (01:13:10):
Right, don't go there, don't go there, Jack.
Speaker 4 (01:13:15):
And I got to sleep with her, so na'tsally. Her
voice is gonna be ringing in my ear? Right, So,
oh boy? Yeah, And so you can't tell me that
Arnold was a Republican. Okay.
Speaker 6 (01:13:28):
He was famous, that's what he was, Okay, And he
won because of his fame and popularity, and but other
than that, how long Reagan was he the last conservative
And because we had Brown, we had all these super
liberals running California.
Speaker 4 (01:13:47):
So it's been They've been in control a long time.
And California is in massive debt. We're not broke, we're
getting handouts from other countries to stay afloat. Basically okay,
but if those countries that were called California's note in
(01:14:10):
other words, like you the bank calls your loan says
pay it now, pay it all immediately, they can just
walk in and take California. So the other option is
to hand it over to them without them having to
do that. And Newsom just got Knewsom went over there
before he decided to run for president. He went to
(01:14:31):
China for two weeks. Nobody talks about what he talked about.
And then he comes back and he's got money to
run for president. He's got the power to run for president. Yeah.
And you know, I don't know if anybody remembers it,
but when when President Obama first ran for office, he
(01:14:52):
wasn't running for office. Hillary Clinton was, and it was
and it was speculated Obama might be her vice president.
Then they went into a meeting, very public meeting with
those Illuminati groups, and they said that this is very
rare because you never see these groups public like that.
(01:15:15):
And they went into this building and was heavily guarded.
And when they came out, guess what she was going
to be secret? They didn't know what she's going to
be yet, but he was going to be the one
running for president and she was and she ended up
being secretary of State. Okay, so somebody's giving authorization to
(01:15:36):
these people to run for their offices.
Speaker 2 (01:15:41):
Well, we never know who it is. But follow the money, I.
Speaker 4 (01:15:44):
Guess, right, And the follow the money is the secret,
that's right. And so you have to vote for somebody
doesn't need the.
Speaker 2 (01:15:51):
Money, right, which is where Trump came in.
Speaker 4 (01:15:56):
That's right. And he threw a wrench and everything.
Speaker 2 (01:16:00):
He was mad.
Speaker 4 (01:16:02):
Yeah, and what did she say? Hillary said something that
was very profound. She yelled at her base and she said,
you failed me. You promenade promises to me and you
failed to deliver. Well wait a minute, I don't think
that was her scolding the voters. That was her scolding
(01:16:26):
the powers that be that told her that she would
be president.
Speaker 2 (01:16:30):
Oh yeah, exactly.
Speaker 4 (01:16:32):
See. So she was mad at Trump because he won,
but she was.
Speaker 2 (01:16:39):
Probably more mad at her people.
Speaker 4 (01:16:42):
Yeah, the Illuminati or whoever it is, the Builderberger's and
all these that told her you're going to be the
next president. Yeah, because they started telling us that she
won before three percent.
Speaker 2 (01:16:52):
Of that was supposed to happen, right, They.
Speaker 4 (01:16:57):
Told before the election even took place, Trump was down
like thirty five percent, Okay, she was ahead like eighty twenty.
And they kept running that scenario until they couldn't do
it anymore. Until it started the facts start coming out.
Speaker 2 (01:17:12):
They probably told the newscasters, Oh, yeah, she won, you know, Oh,
let's record it.
Speaker 4 (01:17:17):
Yeah. There were people announcing that she won before the
vote even got counted. Before the vote and they're saying,
with three percent of the vote, we're calling this for Hillary.
Speaker 2 (01:17:27):
Yeah what Yeah?
Speaker 4 (01:17:32):
And it always bothers me when I see that in
places like California and New York, Oregon, Washington and where
they have elections and with two percent of the vote
or three percent of the vote they call it for
this person or that person. I'm like, what, right, Like,
(01:17:56):
how could you do that? Right? Well, not of that,
but every one of the goals that we see has
a has a three to five percent air margin. I mean,
I'm doing estimating a roofing, Tim, and the Eagle View
and all the soft the satellites that measure the properties
for us, no matter which service you hire, it has
(01:18:19):
in there that this has a three to five percent
margin of air. Well between you and me, Tim, that
means that it could be three to five percent below
my number the number they quote me, or it could
be three to five percent above the number they quote me.
So that's a ten percent margin of er. You see,
(01:18:42):
that's that's five and five five below, five above. That's
quite a realm of margin air. And that's the same.
And so they're calling it these political races at three
percent of the vote counting or even eleven percent, okay,
But when I do an estimate or any of them
(01:19:04):
because of the model. What people don't understand is what
technology is doing to the construction industry. The everybody's sour
about the fact that construction costs so much money. It
really does. It's very expensive. But everybody's screaming about how
wonderful technology is. But the drones that people are using
(01:19:26):
cost money. To learn to fly. You also have to
be licensed by the FFA or FA whatever it is,
the Federal Aviation FA. You have to be licensed by
them to fly drones in a commercial business. And so
when you see a roofer or a siding company or
somebody pull up on your job and they pop a
drone out, you know you're going to end up paying
(01:19:48):
more money because they got to They got to pay
for that license, and they got to pay for liability
on flying that drone. Everything. But here's another one. When
if they do, oh, I'm going to just check the
satellite on it, I'm going to do this on it.
I'm going to do this, use this company and this
or this company, and they're going to give me a
print out of your digital print out of your entire
(01:20:10):
house and stuff. When you do that, on that paperwork,
it says that there's a three to five percent margin.
So so the only option that any of us have
by using this paperwork is to add five percent onto
whatever our number is. So, Tim, you've got a house
that's fifty thousand dollars, ten percent would be five grand
(01:20:35):
five percent, twenty five hundred dollars if I don't add
twenty if I don't add that in there, and the
measurements are wrong, then I could lose my company. My
company go out of business. So to protect my company,
I have to add in that twenty five hundred dollars
(01:20:57):
additional that's for nothing, nothing. But here's the deal. What
if the drone is wrong the other way and it's
five percent error is below or above what the actual
measurements are. Now I'm a temper at ten percent, So
that means that ten percent of fifty thousand dollars five
(01:21:20):
grand is paid to my company or going to be
bid by every riffing company. You're doing this because guess
what they have to put it in. They're not going
to hand you back five grand because you already authorized it,
you already sign the paper. So five grand of this
is simply so that I can use a digital takeoff
(01:21:42):
from a satellite and cover myself on a margin to error.
And everyone's doing it. But it gets worse than that technology.
Everybody is hot calling. The worst thing you can do,
Tien is see a riffing company advertising through meta on
(01:22:03):
Facebook or any other social media and click on it
and say, yeah, they're going to tell you the skunt.
Oh do you want your roof for two thousand dollars
you can get You can get a roof for as
cheap as two thousand dollars. Yeah, you can get a
roof as cheap as two thousand dollars. If the roof
is one hundred square feed and small enough, and your
(01:22:26):
material cost is low enough, you can't get one. You
can get might get one for eighty five dollars. If
your roof is low small enough. You want a roof
a doghouse, Yeah, I roof your doghouse for one hundred
and fifty bucks. You know. But so the word is,
if the word is, is possible anything that's left to chance.
(01:22:48):
That's what they do. And they bait these people and
so they somebody's paying for this. But here's where I'm going, tim,
is these ads are extremely expensive for me to get
two leads a week. We're talking eight hundred dollars.
Speaker 7 (01:23:08):
So who if I get for eight hundred dollars, I
get two appointments a week, what if one of them
doesn't buy, Well, that means that one of those customers
is paying eight hundred bucks so that I can afford to.
Speaker 4 (01:23:21):
Do it the following week. Right, So it's eight hundred
bucks you're putting added onto the job cost. That didn't
need to be there all because you clicked on this
this cute little con job ad that was online. We're
back in the day we had a Yellow Pages, and
the Yellow Page charged you a monthly fee for an
(01:23:43):
entire year. So you knew in advance, as a contractor
or any company, what it was going to cost you
to advertise for an entire year in the Yellow Pages.
Somebody needed a dentist, they went to Yellow Pages. They
found two or three dentists. They checked them out. They
need a plumber, they found three a plumbers. They check
them out. They need a couple of roofers, they check
(01:24:03):
them out, and they look at their ad. By the
size of the ad, you could pretty much tell how
long a company had been in business. If they didn't
have an ad in the Yellow Pages, then you knew
that they were pretty much a new company. They didn't
get in before the deadline. Okay, so, but they had
a small little ad. They were either a commercial company
(01:24:23):
that didn't need advertising because they had sales people out
working for them, or they didn't need or they or
they were a small company because they only qualified for
a small ad. They could only afford, you know, three
hundred bucks a month, or four or five hundred bucks
a month. But the fad fit hot. What I'm saying
is the ad cost. You could tell if the company
(01:24:44):
had two full page ads, you knew that you were
going to pay more for your roofing job. But they'd
been in business for fifty years. Okay, you could almost
see that. But here's the deal. You take that ad
cost and you divide it through how many jobs you're
going to do that year, and so it ends up
costing you five percent over the entire on a job
(01:25:07):
for all your advertisements. We used to only add ten
percent for advertising, marketing and office overhead. Now it's up
to like twenty five percent is for advertising office overhead,
and the price is just keep skyrocketing, and people don't
(01:25:28):
understand why. It's because technology has made it toward. Yes,
it's easier to advertise, but it's more expensive and by
you clicking on one of these ads, it's it's more
expensive now in order to reach everybody. Instead of me
going to the local Yellow Pages and putting in one
(01:25:48):
ad in one city, now I have to do a
general area one hundred mile radius, so that means I
got to go on several different of these online companies
and pay them to advertise me in this shotgun effect,
in that called the algorithm. And that's where I'm going
(01:26:12):
with this, Tim is that's why most roofing companies, painting contractors, doctors,
attorneys should be advertising on our podcast because here they're
getting a direct bang for the buck. The audience that's
listening to this show is direct communication. And Tim, are
(01:26:35):
you going to put into three h nine roofing?
Speaker 2 (01:26:37):
D Wait, why did you talk about it? Now? Go ahead?
Speaker 4 (01:26:41):
Okay, Well, if you're in the Peoria area and you
need a roof anywhere in central Illinois, from from quad
Cities to Chicago to Bloomington, Lincoln, even Springfield, called three
or nine roofing, and whether you be a residence or
(01:27:01):
a commercial or an industrial project, call us. We'll take
care of you. We have an A plus rant, a
Better Business Bureau, and we can handle every type of
roof sold in America. Okay, we can troubleshoot your issues,
no matter what your problem is, no matter what your
size of building is, no matter what your entity is.
(01:27:23):
If you are in the military, we can troubleshoot that
building too. For you school district, that building two for you.
But if you're private homeowner and you got this little
bay leak in your corner, roofers don't want to come
out for that, but we will. We'll come out in
troubleshoot it for you, and then we're not going to
(01:27:44):
tell you. You know, Tim, a lot of roofing companies and
siting companies and stuff they get they're paid and trained
by manufacturers now to sell that single product or that
single system and why that system is so wonderful. Blah
blah blah blah blah. It's kind of like Tim, It's
kind of like pharmaceutical When we were young. If you
(01:28:09):
had something problem, you went to the doctor, the doctor
gave you a prescription. Then one day the pharmaceutical companies decided,
you know what, we're not selling. We want more profits.
So they started selling and advertising to the consumer. Now,
now I have you got art writers anything. You're going
to see an ad on there on TV for it, okay,
(01:28:31):
and you're going to go to your doctor and say, hey,
I'm thinking about trying this. They went around the doctor.
Well that's what some of the manufacturer's doing. They're going
around the local contractor and they're marketing straight to the
consumer and then they have contractors that are trained by
the factory and they go in and promote that product
(01:28:52):
in that service. Okay, so here's the deal. When you
call three on nine Roofing, we come out. We can
put on any type of roof out there, and we
will diagnose your situation, give you options, all your options. Say, okay,
there's this this that we're not dedicated to anyone manufacturing product,
(01:29:15):
anyone's system, and wept We'll tell you the pros and
we'll tell you the cons. Folks, if I only told
you what was good about something, I'm kind of controlling
the information, aren't I. Do you have all the information
to make a wise decision? Oh no, you don't have
all the information to make a decision the best decision
(01:29:37):
in your best interest. But if I give you all
the pros and all the cons of the different types
of materials, the different systems, and the different parts of
the systems, then you have the ability to go through
and make your own mind up and design your own roof.
Do you want to design the solution to your situation?
Maybe your situation is only a leak repair and you
(01:29:58):
don't want a whole roof, Then you should call three
O nine.
Speaker 2 (01:30:05):
There you go, that's the number three nine.
Speaker 4 (01:30:08):
Three O nine ninety nine five five six six. And
doctor Jack the riffer, that's moah. Okay, I'm old, yes,
but I have three generations of knowledge in this brain.
And I've been troubleshooting jobs from military bases to tollboo systems,
to school districts, to missile silos, to residential roofing, to
(01:30:32):
commercial cold storage units and factories and power companies, and
just I've been doing it my whole life. I've been
a roof for my whole life, folks, And this is
what I do. I help you design a system for
your need, and I tell you the pros and the cons,
and you make up your own mind. You don't ever
(01:30:54):
go to Walmart or any other store and go shopping
and have somebody run out and say you need this product.
The rest of them don't matter. This is the only one.
And here, let's go check out today. Grab you by
the arm, pull you the cash rest. Now. I want
you to read the labels. I want you to have
the information. I want you to make up your own
(01:31:15):
mind whether or not you want to use the chief detergent.
The next level detergent or the rich stuff like the tide,
the tim uses, you know, the expensive stuff. And you
know whether I want you want to do liquid or
you want to do pods. I want you to Roofing
is the same way. Let me ask you a question, folks.
Would you call up a car dealership and say send
(01:31:36):
me a car. No, you wouldn't. You'd want what you want.
You'd want to make sure. If you're tim, you want
to make sure it has the proper amount of cup holders. Okay.
And if you tim, if you order pizza, are you
just going to call up and say, hey, send me
a pizza to some pizza place or two or three pizzas,
or say hey, send me a pizza, your best pizza,
(01:31:58):
cheapest price.
Speaker 2 (01:32:01):
Because you don't know what you're going to get right right.
Speaker 4 (01:32:05):
And guess what if they only sell coke products, You're
going to get coke products whether you want it them
or not, because and they're going to tell you that
coke's the best thing on the on the on the
the the menu, because that's what they sell. Okay. If
all I sell is is one type of roofing material,
(01:32:25):
well that's the best roofing material since sliced bread. Okay, yeah,
because I want your business and that's what I sell
and to me, it is the best. So I'm not
lying in my opinion, is.
Speaker 2 (01:32:40):
In your opinion?
Speaker 4 (01:32:41):
Yeah, that's right. So folks, if you want, if you
want to design your own solution for your roof after
a troubleshooting situation with a qualified roofer called three or
nine roofing at three O nine nine eight nine five
five six six, and we'll come out and help you.
Speaker 2 (01:33:03):
Excellent. Well, thank you, brother Jack for helping us out here.
On let's get jacked up today, and folks, we are
currently I'm going to have let's see, in the next
couple of weeks, we're going to have a Halloween show
for you. So make sure you tell your friends. Okay,
that's right. So the Thursday of Halloween, we're going to
(01:33:25):
be having a good show for you guys.
Speaker 4 (01:33:27):
All right, So this nice Christian show is going to
have a Halloween show. You are so sad. We are
so sackriligious, you know. That's that's are we worshiping the devil?
Speaker 2 (01:33:39):
We come out to people, that's what we're doing.
Speaker 4 (01:33:42):
That's right. So anyway, oh, I want to have a
word of prayer to say goodbye until next time. So definitely, Father,
watch overs and guide us, and Lord, let this touch
the people that you want to touch. And we didn't
(01:34:03):
get much into the word today, and I apologize for that.
But there's somebody out there right now that needs you.
They need to talk to you. Their world isn't changing,
it's not getting any easier. In a lot of cases,
it's even getting harder. And they've been going alone and
they're lonely. They've been going alone and they're like, they're
(01:34:23):
crying out. Why is as happy to me? Doesn't get okay?
What's going on? Every time I think it's going to
get better, it falls apart, you know. And every time
I save one thousand dollars, something breaks and it costs
me a thousand dollars. It's almost better not to have
a savings okay kind of thing. And Lord, we know
(01:34:43):
that they're out there, We know that you are the
answer to their situation, and they'll never have to go
through these things alone again. It doesn't mean that these
hard times are going to stop, but you are the
great provider, and you always provide, not sometimes not maybe,
(01:35:04):
you always provide. And Lord, I thank you very much
for it, and I'm so glad that I've been a
part of that in serving you in Jo's name. Amen.
Speaker 2 (01:35:16):
Amen, all right, well as usual, be in this world
but not of this world. So long everybody, and vote
for Gavin Arson.
Speaker 4 (01:35:25):
Okay, don't don't don't don't vote me that. Okay, yeah, yeah,
take that back. Sim's a little It's okay. I am
now serv I'm a Christians.
Speaker 8 (01:35:47):
Thank you enough.
Speaker 1 (01:36:03):
Question because don't just s.
Speaker 9 (01:36:38):
S know, have most friends and most slightly where goods were.
Speaker 8 (01:36:55):
Just shout?
Speaker 9 (01:36:59):
I think still set a sleep side us us see us.
Speaker 1 (01:38:09):
Ju jus.
Speaker 9 (01:38:42):
Us sus.
Speaker 1 (01:38:55):
Sets it looks ass