Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Old time is here.
Speaker 2 (00:01):
No time to fear, Corrall is so near because.
Speaker 1 (00:05):
Show time is here. So on with the show. Let's
give it a go. Correll is the one that you
need to know. Now.
Speaker 3 (00:16):
It's show side.
Speaker 4 (00:29):
Hello, Hello, Hello, and happy Monday of the Crew Cast.
Speaker 5 (00:33):
I am Correll, and today it is the thing that.
Speaker 4 (00:35):
Is breaking America moth and there appears to be no
end in sight. I'm gonna tell you what that is
and so much more on today's fabulous Corral Cast.
Speaker 6 (00:44):
Oh, come on, censors, Unfiltered, fun hinged, It's the Corral Cast.
Speaker 7 (00:51):
Listen daily on your favorite streaming service.
Speaker 5 (00:59):
It is the crowd, Oh Cast.
Speaker 4 (01:00):
I am Correl, So very glad you are joining me
on this fabulous, fabulous Monday where I'm trying to use
these new Costco wipes that I bought thinking, oh, they'll
really help me keep my glasses clean for the show.
Speaker 5 (01:15):
No, actually they're making it.
Speaker 4 (01:17):
Worse, So I don't I don't know why I just
paid eight dollars over the weekend for these Costco wipes.
But yeah, no, Costco, you need to seriously up your
wipes game. Seriously all right, although what a place that is,
right Costco? Oh my god, Oh my god, I am
(01:38):
my girl. Okay, now they're good. Now they're good. Now
I can see you all, and you're all here with me,
and I'm so happy to.
Speaker 5 (01:44):
Be here with you.
Speaker 4 (01:45):
I am using this microphone today because I actually like
the sound. I was going over some of the shows.
I like the boom. I like not having a mic
in front of me. But I will tell you this,
the sound quality from this microphone versus the boom. It's just,
you know, you gotta have the sound. We've got the sound.
Sound sound, all right, So what.
Speaker 5 (02:08):
Have we got?
Speaker 4 (02:08):
We got a lot to talk about today. What a weekend,
oh e what a weekend. I have to share with you.
Share I have to share with you because it really
you know, here on the show, I happen upon something
in life and then it becomes a topic because it
becomes relatable. So this was a weekend of grief for me.
(02:32):
And I'm gonna tell you Friday morning, Whenember and I
were walking at Desert Breeze Park on our normal walk.
We were walking on the top part of the park
where it's there's a fence and then dirt and then
the road, and we were the fences because they're greening
up this lawn area that we normally walk across, and
(02:54):
there's always this homeless guy there in the dirt, just
with his sleeping bag, and you know, I always see him.
I don't know his name because he's grumpy, you know.
I used to call him grumpy because he was like
And so Friday morning, we're doing our walk and a
woman is coming towards me that is there for to
(03:14):
do community service and pick up trash and she's on
the phone I didn't know with another park employee. Uh,
and she we both approach the homeless guy and he's
laying face down, you know, you know, there in his
bag and well he's uncovered, but he's on his cloth,
sleeping back. And she comes up to him right before
(03:37):
I do, and she's all, sir, sir. And then behind
her is coming a park employee I see. So I
stop and I look down at him and I gasped,
and I'm all, he's dead. And she's like, what, I go,
He's dead. And the car the park employee then is
there and he's like what he goes, sir, sir, I go,
(03:59):
do look at him. He's dead. His eyes are open
and there's a fly on his eye, I'm oh, he's dead,
but they weren't convinced. So I took the back of
the palm of my hand and put it to his
forehead and immediately recoiled.
Speaker 5 (04:15):
He was so.
Speaker 4 (04:16):
Stiff and so cold. I'm oh, no, no, no, he's dead.
Get on the phone, call nine one one, he's gone.
And then I looked at him lying there, face down
in the dirt, eyes opened dead, and I said, with
the park employee there and this woman, I said out loud,
(04:40):
I am so sorry you died this way alone in
the night, in the cold, face down in the dirt.
Speaker 5 (04:48):
I'm just so sorry.
Speaker 4 (04:52):
And then I said, I'm even more sorry that you're
about to get more attention now from police and fire
and people than you ever got when you were alive.
And now you're going to get more help than when
you were alive. The park employee and the woman left.
Another person was out of the street waiting for the
(05:14):
paramedics we had called to wave them over. So I
stayed with him. I stayed with the dead guy. I
had seen him at the park many times, so I
stayed with him and stood there over him, just trying
to give him a little dignity and not let people
walk by and not you know. And then the paramedics
(05:36):
came and I told them he's very, very dead, and
you could tell because the bottom part of him was purple.
He was already leaving Ricka Mortis, so he had been
there at least eight to twelve hours. And I was sad.
I was sad. It truly affected me finding him like that.
Speaker 6 (05:58):
If you're not visiting coll dot com daily, you're missing out.
Get the podcast videos and the blug including recipes at
really Correll dot com.
Speaker 7 (06:09):
That's really KA R e l dot com.
Speaker 1 (06:13):
Show Time is here. No time to fear.
Speaker 2 (06:17):
Corrill is so near because show time is here.
Speaker 1 (06:20):
So on with the show. Let's give it a go.
Correll is the one that you need to know.
Speaker 4 (06:29):
So there, Ember and I are walking through the park
and we find a dead guy.
Speaker 5 (06:35):
And it made me.
Speaker 4 (06:36):
Sad because he literally died, you know, face down in
the dirt by himself. And I didn't know if he
had any family or if they were had any way
to notify them or anything. So paramedics arrive. I look
at the paramedics and say, he is obviously dead. But
(06:57):
they had to hook up the KG machine just it's
a matter of law, I guess, And of course he's
a sisterly he's flatline. And they take off the things
and they say, unless you want to talk to Metro,
you're welcome to go. And so I looked over at
him and set out loud again, you know, rest in peace, sir,
and left and I was, and I am. I was,
(07:22):
and I am shaken by that. Now I've found dead
bodies before. It's not the first dead body that I've seen.
I watched my mother die, my father, a generation of
my friends to aid. Certainly, Andrew, I kissed him at
the funeral home when after the autopsy and I was
able to go see him, I kissed his forehead. So
(07:44):
I've certainly touched a dead body before. But it was
moving to me. And when I told the lady Monique
that lives on the other side of the park, she's
been there for over a year on a bench by
the bathroom. I told her in case she knew the guy,
I'm like, I don't know if you know him or not,
but you know he I just found him dead. She
(08:07):
didn't believe me. She's like, why are you saying this.
I go cause I thought you might want to know
you live here. She's all, you're threatening me, and I go,
I'm what, like your elevator doesn't stop at the ground floor, Honey,
You're something's wrong here. And I came home and I
was so sick of that park, the drama from it,
(08:29):
a dog being killed there two weeks ago by a
cane corso, the homeless population increasing. We're going to talk
about that later. Nevada is number ten in the country
for homeless people. Hawaii's number one. We're going to talk
about how many are in your state. But I just
was like, I don't want to walk where I can
find a dead guy. I don't just I'm I'm done.
(08:52):
I'm so done. And then Saturday morning, I get a
text from John Reinerson, my friend Oscar, that I talked
to you guys about my ninety five year old friend
in Long Beach. Remember I told you he is now
living in assisted living and in twenty grand a month
and it's a fabulous place. And I went down and
had lunch with him and everything. John text me and
(09:16):
said that Friday morning, at nine point fifteen, when I
was finding the dead body, Oscar died. My ninety five
year old friend. Good life ninety five years, but still
he was a joy and a light and I was
going to go see him for my birthday weekend November seventh,
(09:38):
and I found it odd that right as I was
finding a dead body in the park that there was
Oscar dying as well. So grief, grief, and no, I'm
not okay, Kennedy, And thank you for asking Kennedy Christopher
in the chat room. I'm not okay.
Speaker 5 (09:56):
I'm not.
Speaker 4 (09:57):
I'd be lying to you if I said I came
away from that psychologically.
Speaker 5 (10:02):
Okay, I'm not. I'm not.
Speaker 4 (10:04):
You're just walking in the park with your dog and
there's a dead guy with and I took a photo.
I have been watching so much like Silent Witness and
Bones and Doctor Jim. I thought this could be a
crime scene, and no one's taking a picture, and people
are all walking around and and you know this, we
need to preserve the scene, so I took a photo.
(10:25):
I have deleted the photo. I don't want a photo
of a dead guy on my phone, but I just thought,
you know, maybe the police will need a picture of
how he was found. But I thought they can handle that,
so I deleted it. But no, I'm not okay. I'm
not because this plays into a bigger thing. And by
the way, this weekend, I have started to empty out
(10:46):
the house of stuff that I just don't need. I
have three sets of dishes, now I have two. I
had fours tea for one sets, now I have one
because I have other t sets as well. I have
five boxes of books and tea sets and bric a
brac from around the house. Because in my brain, I'm
starting to downsize to get to get into that moving
(11:09):
spirit because I can't. I can't take it anymore people,
because grief was overwhelming to me this weekend, and it
made me worry more about Ember and her and does
she have a condition and you know, blah blah blah,
which I think she has atypical adrenal hypoplasia, which mimics cushions.
But to find out, is fifteen hundred dollars and even
(11:30):
if she does, the treatment is iffy. So the Vet's like,
let's not pursue that until, like we absolutely have to.
So I thought about grief. My sister called me Sunday.
Now I've told you forever that my sister is poor
and grew up poor, you know, and was a housewife
(11:52):
and a mother and so doesn't get Social Security except
from her dead husband, which isn't very much. She had
a lot of medical problems. She's on state aid for that.
And she got a letter that her SNAP isn't coming,
just isn't coming period. So of course I told her
to go. I let her have a credit card that,
(12:14):
you know, I told her in case of emergencies, use
the credit card if you ever need one, and we'll
just work out, you know, whatever later. So I told her,
use the credit card for how much is your SNAP benefit?
She said three hundred and twenty a month. I said,
put three hundred and twenty on the credit card. We'll
worry about it later. Don't worry about it, you know,
don't don't go without food. And millions of Americans are
(12:40):
going to not get their SNAP benefits because the Republicans.
They're blaming the Democrats. The USDA actually sent out a letter.
My sister got a letter from the USDA saying she's
not getting her SNAP and saying it's because of the Democrats.
That's illegal. The government can't do that, but they are
(13:02):
because illegality doesn't matter anymore, and so she's not getting
her SNAP. Millions of Americans are on Thanksgiving months and there,
while they play the blame game. Oh, it's the Democrat's fault.
Oh it's the Republican's fault. While they play the blame game,
real Americans are getting caught in the middle. My friend Joshua,
(13:24):
who is a prison guard, we're friends. We haven't even
met yet, but we're friends. And he hasn't gotten a
paycheck now in three weeks. He's got kids and a wife,
and yes he has savings, but it's running out, real people,
and this causes grief, you know it does. And so
(13:44):
the grief of finding this homeless guy dead in the dirt,
you know, face down in the dirt, just dead, no
one caring people while we me and this lady could
not have been the only people to have walked by
him that morning, but no one notices. You don't notice
the homeless, just look right over them.
Speaker 5 (14:06):
So people saw.
Speaker 4 (14:07):
Him lying in that sleeping bag, and they or on
top of the sleeping bag, and they just looked right
past him. They didn't realize he was dead. And grief,
the national emotion of the United States is grief. You
wake up in the morning, you see these horrible things
that Donald Trump is doing, and you think to yourself,
(14:31):
how you know grief? He's giving forty billion dollars to Argentina,
but the USDA won't release the emergency funds to play
the snap that Congress already gave them six billion dollars
in case of emergency, and they're saying, oh, that means
natural disaster or something. That doesn't mean you know, something
(14:54):
that we could foresee. Well, that's illegal, that's not The
Congress gave them the money for an emergency and they're
not using it. And people are sad. They're having grief.
And I thought about America and I thought, that's all
America brings nowadays, is grief. There's no joy in our country. Oh,
(15:17):
the Maga idiots are happy, but that'll soon dry up
when they don't have any food, when they're being evicted
because their benefits have been cut off, they're Section eight.
You know, all of that grief, that's all this country
is good for now, grief. And that made me sad
because I don't want my life filled with sadness anymore.
Speaker 5 (15:41):
I don't.
Speaker 4 (15:42):
I will be sixty three a week from Friday. I'm
fucking done with grief. I'm done. Ember's gonna be ten.
We don't have much longer left. And all this country
has to offer is pain, suffering, division, grief, struggling, hardship
(16:04):
unless you are wealthy and oblivious. Because even if I
were wealthy right now, sure my life would be easier,
but I'd still be sad about what's going on. I mean,
Streisand's sad about it. She's worth four hundred million dollars,
you know. I mean, even if I had cash, I
would still be upset. And that's all this country has
(16:27):
to offer, you know. So I look at the country
and I think we can't keep living this way.
Speaker 5 (16:38):
We can't.
Speaker 4 (16:40):
We can't have three years of the national emotion being grief, sadness, anger, upset.
Speaker 5 (16:48):
We just can't.
Speaker 4 (16:50):
And I know we don't want to play the fiddle
while Rome burns. I get it, But at this point,
what options do we have? You know, Halloween is Friday.
I don't have a costume. I haven't decorated my birthdays
a week from Friday. I haven't made any plans. Sherry
from the Park has offered to go to tea and
take me out to tea, and I'm sure Steve would
(17:12):
do something that weekend. I've made no plans. It just
seems futile to plan any fun.
Speaker 5 (17:20):
You know.
Speaker 4 (17:20):
I'm watching Ozark Law on Hulu, really really fun show,
reality show, said Lake of the Ozarks, And I see
all the people on it having fun. And boy is
alcohol if you know, if alcohol was illegal, we wouldn't
need half the police that we need that we have.
It really is the source of a lot of police calls.
(17:42):
But I think I don't want to go do that.
That doesn't look fun. Boating, fishing, getting drunk with friends.
It just doesn't look fun, you know. And I thought
to myself, well, what does sound fun to you these days?
Speaker 5 (17:56):
Chuck?
Speaker 4 (17:56):
I mean, you don't seem to have much fun anymore.
And I thought, is it just me? Or is are
less people having fun in America nowadays?
Speaker 5 (18:12):
And I think the.
Speaker 4 (18:12):
Answer is yes, And I think that's why tourism is down.
Restaurants are just oh my god. This weekend I went
to a few restaurants and asked him how business were,
and they're all worried about shutting down. There's not a
restaurant that's in existence right now that isn't worried about clothing.
Speaker 5 (18:29):
People aren't going out to eat. People aren't.
Speaker 4 (18:31):
I mean, we're just not having much fun, are you.
I know you're gonna say, oh, I find time for
I'm being serious overall. Are you having fun living in America?
Because I'm not, you know, finding dead people? And why
(18:53):
why was he even there? Why don't we have the
resources to help him? You know, why is this person
and able to be found face down dead in a park?
You know, why why would he even end up face
down in a park? And you look at the statistics
for homelessness. Oh my god, So there's a map we're
(19:17):
going to talk about it. Homeless rates in the United
States States per one thousand residents. Oh my god. Number
one is Hawaii. I'll just I'll take that suspense away
from you right away. It's per it's the number of people,
you know, homeless per one hundred thousand, and in Hawaii
(19:40):
there is eight hundred and five homeless people for everye
hundred thousand residents.
Speaker 5 (19:46):
Wow. Wow, that's a lot. That's a lot.
Speaker 4 (19:54):
That brings their total number of homeless and it's very
hard to you know, to get an exact figure to
eleven thousand, six hundred people homeless in the Hawaiian Islands.
Imagine that the Little Hawaiian Islands, eleven thousand homeless people.
That's remarkable. In DC eight hundred per hundred thousand for
(20:19):
a total of five point six thousand homeless people New York.
One hundred and fifty eight thousand homeless people in New York.
Can you imagine one hundred and fifty eight thousand wow? Oregon, Oregon,
of all places, twenty two thousand people, five hundred and
thirty five per hundred thousand in Oregon.
Speaker 5 (20:43):
Who knew?
Speaker 4 (20:43):
I guess Portland. I guess that's where they would be Portland.
And then under that you've got let's see Hawaii, DC,
New York, Oregon, Vermont. They only have three point five
thousand homeless, but that equates to five hundred and thirty
three per hundred thousand. California one hundred and eighty seven
(21:06):
thousand homeless, almost two hundred thousand homeless people in California.
That's the population of a pretty decent sized city. And
that's fast to see what I mean about reef That
statistics is bad?
Speaker 1 (21:44):
Now is show side?
Speaker 4 (21:59):
You know in the movie Airplane, there's that character that
I picked a bad week to quit Heroin, I picked
a bad week to quit this, or to quit that,
or to quit smoking, or to quit if you're an American,
you picked a bad week to quit drinking, You picked
a bad week to quit smoking.
Speaker 5 (22:14):
You pick a bad week to quit drugs.
Speaker 4 (22:16):
I've picked a bad decade to pick to quit opiates.
So grief, And in the chat room people are saying,
you know, yes, you know, I feel grief almost every day.
It's not just you. I feel mentally paralyzed half the time.
The coming holiday season lacks joy, you know, yeah, I mean,
(22:36):
you know, and how I mean, what is he doing
to us as a nation?
Speaker 5 (22:42):
Really? I mean what the Trump presidency? What is it
doing to us?
Speaker 4 (22:48):
It's not just destroying the institutions that we love. Tearing
down the West Wing and seeing it just in rubble,
that truly made me sad, like sad as in I cried.
And you're like, Corell, why would you cry over the
White House? Because of what that symbolizes? Him reckon that
(23:09):
place like that. You know who was he? Miley Cyrus?
He came in like a recking ball. I mean really
he went on Miley Cyrus on it. And he's going
to build a structure that's going to dwarf the White
house dwarf. It a ninety thousand square footballroom. This has
let them eat cake stuff. They'll be in there dining
(23:32):
on the finest food. And meanwhile, DC is the second
largest homeless population in the country, number two only following Hawaii.
And meanwhile, in DC, what's their big project built in
a fucking ballroom? Hawaii number one, DC number two, New
(23:57):
York number three, Oregon number four, Vermont number five, California
number six with one hundred and eighty seven thousand homeless.
It's number six, but that's because it's got forty million people.
Massachusetts twenty nine thousand homeless. This is the order in
which they go. Washington the state thirty one thousand homeless,
(24:17):
Alaska eight thousand homeless, but that puts them at three
hundred and sixty three per hundred thousand, Colorado eighteen thousand homeless,
Nevada ten thousand, one hundred, Well ten thousand, nine hundred
and ninety nine. Now you know three hundred and nine
for every hundred thousand people. Rhode Island, you know two
(24:38):
point four thousand homeless. New Mexico four point six thousand,
Illinois twenty five point five thousand, Arizona fourteen point seven thousand,
Main twenty seven hundred, Montana twenty six hundred, New Hampshire
twenty two hundred, Minnesota ninety two hundred, South Dakota thirteen hundred,
(24:59):
Idaho twenty six hundred, Nebraska twenty seven hundred, New Jersey
thirteen thousand, Florida thirty two thousand, Oklahoma sixty five hundred,
Delaware fourteen hundred, Missouri seventy three hundred, Tennessee eighty three hundred, Kentucky, Utah, Georgia,
North Dakota, Pennsylvania, North Carolina. For the total number of
(25:21):
homeless in the United States, seven hundred and eighty thousand,
that's almost a million. I think that's probably more than
there are trans people. I mean, And what is Trump
concerning himself with building a ballroom, building a ballroom, touting
(25:47):
a Cambodia Thailand peace deal that isn't Both the president
of Cambodia and the President of Thailand has said it's
a peace agreement, you know, a path to peace, but
it's not a it's not a treaty. They're still firing
going on, you know, they're both saying Trump is over here,
and he demanded a ceremony as they put on the BBC.
(26:08):
He demanded that the head of Taiwan and Cambodia come
to a ceremony to announce a peace deal that isn't
even really a peace deal, and they capitulated to him
because at least the United States being involved has sped
along the process. It's sad. The state of the world
(26:29):
today is sad. At least the United States. Our homeless
problem is out of control. I found a dead one Friday.
The news is depressing, and so we have to make
some decisions.
Speaker 5 (26:45):
And I think one of.
Speaker 4 (26:46):
The ways we stay positive is put everything into the fight.
You got to We have got to win the midterms.
We have to Prop fifty in California has to pass
and just a few weeks and we have got to
win the midterms.
Speaker 5 (27:03):
We have to.
Speaker 4 (27:05):
We we need Congress because we must stop Donald Trump.
He must be stopped and if we get a large
enough majority, hopefully he must be impeached and removed. This
this cannot go on. We must turn our sadness into resolve.
We must turn our sadness and bitterness into action, because
(27:29):
this that we can't just keep abiding this it's it's
it's not healthy, it's not healthy. And we need to
rediscover some of the stuff that we liked about our life.
We do because with all this negativity coming at us,
we need to rediscover some of the joys of life.
(27:53):
That's why I'm not turning down any invitations period. If
someone invites me to something, I'm going because, guests, it's
time to just get back to life. He has robbed
us of all of our oxygen and we really need
to get back to life because this is no way
to live in grief and sadness. And there are stages
(28:16):
of grief and anger is one of them. And I
am mad. I'm mad at the Democrats for not doing anything.
I'm mad at the people that put Donald Trump in power.
I'm mad at the people that still support him. Yes,
I mean the Republicans that still report him or support him.
I'm mad. I'm through denial. I think we all went
(28:38):
and denial, like, how could this be happening? This can't
be happening. So we're through denial, We're through anger, and
I'll never accept it. That stage of this grief will
never happen. I will never accept this. So I'm going
to be in the anger phase for a while and
use that anger to reinvigorate my passion, my passion for
(29:01):
what's right, my passion for what's good. People are gonna
need our help over the holidays. SNAP is being cut,
federal benefits are being cut. This holiday season season, it
should be about helping those, helping people that need it,
because there's so many by presents for people you don't know.
(29:24):
Help a family member that's having trouble with food. Let's
let's turn the holidays into the help of day. Let's
help as many people as we've seen, because they're gonna
need it. Let's be there for them if we can,
even just in little ways. A can of food.
Speaker 8 (29:44):
Is broadcasting from a completely different point of view yours.
Listen daily to the Corell cast on your favorite streaming service.
Speaker 2 (30:00):
Old Time is here, No time to fear.
Speaker 1 (30:03):
Corralla is so near because show time is here. So
on with the show. Let's give it a go. Corilla
is the one that you need to know.
Speaker 9 (30:15):
Now it's show tide.
Speaker 4 (30:36):
All right, we're coming back Apart two of the Corral Cast.
Don't go anywhere. What did I learn from watching Oh
Dark Law? I will tell.
Speaker 6 (30:43):
You uncensored, unfiltered, fun hinged.
Speaker 7 (30:49):
It's a Corral cast. Listen daily on your favorite streaming service.
Speaker 5 (31:00):
It's part two of the Crole Cast. I am krall.
Speaker 4 (31:02):
Don't forget to like to subscribe to leave comments down below.
Do it, baby, do it?
Speaker 5 (31:07):
Do it? Do it?
Speaker 4 (31:08):
Okay, So y'all know that I love to watch this
reality TV shows about you know, crime and cops and
all that. And I started watching this thing called Ozark Law,
and I have to be honest, I started watching it
because sometimes rednecks are freaking cute.
Speaker 5 (31:23):
Okay, they just are. They're dumb, but they're cute.
Speaker 3 (31:27):
Uh.
Speaker 4 (31:27):
And so I started watching it and first of all,
I love how the cops on it police. I wish
all cops behaved like these cops at Osage Beach and
Lake of the Ozarks. They're really kind and caring and actually,
you know, bend the rules a little bit. Like instead
of citing someone for DUI, they let them sober up
(31:49):
at for twelve hours in the tank and then let
them go with a warning, you know, if they were
not driving, if they were you know, parked or you
know whatever. So anyway, so it's a good show. Actually,
and they're doing season two of Ozark Law. It's called
on Hulu and I was watching it, and the first
(32:10):
thought I had because it's in the middle of Missouri.
You know, it's in the middle of a red state
where only Columbia and Kansas City went blue. The rest
is solid red. And I saw these people that they're
talking to, or that they're arresting, or that they're just
interacting with, and I said, these are the people the
(32:30):
Democrats need to reach. These people And then a lot
of them are dumb, by the way, and I'm sorry
to buy into the stereotype, but I've watched eight episodes.
They're not the brightest bulbs, okay, but they are the people.
They are Middle America, and their issues at their monster
(32:55):
truck pulls or their big diesel boat races or you know, well,
their issues and their opinions and their views are what
made Trump win and their perspective is why the Democrats lose.
(33:17):
Now watching it, I thought, all of these people and
I all want the same thing. We all want joy
for our family, to provide for our families, and to
be there, to have a place to live, to go
have some fun, you know, to cut loose.
Speaker 5 (33:36):
And to be able to afford life.
Speaker 4 (33:40):
And I thought we have so much in common and
yet we're at opposite sides with the spectrum. You know,
one of the things they fight on the show is drugs,
and one of the cops made a comment drugs are
ripping apart our community, and out loud, I said, no,
they're not.
Speaker 5 (33:59):
They're not.
Speaker 4 (34:01):
The reason people use drugs are ripping apart the community. Poverty,
lack of access to education, lack of access to good employment,
lack of access to good healthcare, feeling that you're not enough,
that you're not an active member of the community, that
(34:21):
you're less than.
Speaker 5 (34:24):
There are many reasons.
Speaker 4 (34:25):
That drugs are so popular in the Midwest, and poverty
is the first one, followed by grief, the pain of
being an American. And so I was watching this Ozark
law and they're arresting people for drugs. I thought, you're
(34:47):
just arresting them for being poor, pulling them over for
no tail light or no light on their license plate
or whatever. And then they end up finding meth in
the car. It's like they're just poor. That's their crime, poverty,
because when you're poor, you want to feel good, and drugs, unfortunately,
(35:08):
are cheap way to feel good, be it alcohol or
myth or whatever.
Speaker 5 (35:12):
Their drug at fentanyl.
Speaker 4 (35:15):
And so as I watched it, I thought, this illustrates
that it is not a drug problem that we have
in the United States. We have a poverty problem. We
have an unhappiness problem, we have an inadequacy problem, we
have an inequality problem where there's too much space between
the classes.
Speaker 5 (35:38):
Watching Ozark Law.
Speaker 4 (35:40):
Really open my eyes to why Democrats lose, and it's
because they just don't resonate with those poor people. They're
seen as elite. They're not, but they're seen that way.
And these people they don't want elite, they want people
like that.
Speaker 7 (36:00):
Coll dot com daily you're missing out.
Speaker 6 (36:04):
Get the podcast videos and the blug including recipes at
really correl dot com.
Speaker 7 (36:09):
That's really k A R e l dot com.
Speaker 2 (36:13):
Show Time is here. No time to fear. Correll is
so near because show time is here. So on with
the show.
Speaker 1 (36:22):
Let's give it a go. Correll is the one that
you need to know.
Speaker 4 (36:29):
You know, I can't say what we should do about
the ice problem. Someone in the chatroom at YouTube dot
com forwards lash early Correll. Someone commented about ice. I
can no longer speak on what I think we should
do about ice because it could be it could get
me in trouble, and I don't want to be in
trouble over it. I see ICE as illegal invaders in
(36:51):
our community. They do not identify themselves so that we
don't even know that they're real law enforcement. They could
be people in freaking Halloween costumes. They they do not
identify themselves properly. They do not have warrants to arrest
these people. They are randomly just stopping and grabbing people.
To me, it is legal kidnapping. Well, it's illegal kidnapping.
(37:16):
I do not consider what ICE is doing legal. There
is no due process, you know. The Fourth Amendment of
the Constitution says that everybody has a right to not
have illegal search and seizure. That unless someone swears that
you have committed a crime, then law enforcement has no
(37:38):
reason to bother you. That's the Fourth Amendment, the ability
to be free from illegal search and seizure. Just looking
at someone who is brown and tackling them to the ground,
that's illegal search and seizure. This is unconstitutional, and ICE
(37:58):
is a criminal organization being run by a criminal president.
I can't say what I would do if I were
the mayor or governor of a state in regards to ICE.
Because it will get me in trouble. But let's just say,
if someone is committing a criminal act, you treat them
(38:23):
like a criminal.
Speaker 5 (38:25):
And that's as far as I'll go.
Speaker 4 (38:27):
I will say that I would treat ICE like criminals,
like they are kidnappers, like they are trying to take
a person against their will with no due process, no warrants,
no swearing by a judge. Nothing. To me, that's criminal.
And to me, ICE is a criminal organization being run
(38:52):
by a criminal administration. If I were in charge in
a city, I would tell my police force to treat
ICE like criminals. And if Ice fired upon my police force,
I would tell my police force to use whatever force
(39:12):
they need to defend themselves. And that's not an opinion
that you can share, you know, But they're criminals, and
they're behaving like criminals. If they came up, identified themselves,
showed a badge, showed a warrant and says are you
(39:32):
victor Hernandez, Yes I am, okay, I have a warrant
for your arrest. Please come with me. Okay, fine, you know,
but stopping cars, pulling people out of work sites, job sites, stores, restaurants,
with no warrants whatsoever, not even knowing the names of
(39:52):
the people you are tackling, Ignoring when law enforcement says,
stop ignoring, when someone says, this is my lawyer, and
the lawyer is saying, do not touch my client, and
they still do, attacking news media, attacking anyone that tries
to stop them or hinder them. They are criminals. ICE
(40:15):
is a criminal organization as it stands now. I don't
know why they're not being treated as criminals, but they are.
So I can't say what I would do to them
if I were in charge, because if I were in charge,
I would treat them as criminals, and you know what
that means. I'm not going to say that out loud.
(40:37):
If I were in charge, if I were a governor
or a mayor, I would be telling citizens to use
their Second Amendment rights to protect other citizens. That's not
something you can do nowadays. You can't tell people to
do that. So I have to leave the ICE topic alone,
because as far as I'm concerned, they're criminals. They're abducting
(41:00):
Americans or people who are here on green cards or
visas or whatever it might be.
Speaker 5 (41:08):
They don't know.
Speaker 4 (41:10):
That's the point, before they even know the person's status
they're tackling them and arresting them for profit to fill
up for profit detention centers, so billionaires that have invested
in these for profit centers can make money. This is
(41:30):
all a money group. Trump doesn't care about illegal immigration.
He cares about the grift of it. He cares about
his friends making money off of the institutions like these
thirteen donors to the ballroom. Tell me they're not going
to get political favor Now, tell me the.
Speaker 5 (41:49):
Person that gave one hundred and thirty million.
Speaker 4 (41:51):
Dollars to give the troops partial pay, tell me they're
not going to get political favors.
Speaker 5 (41:55):
Now.
Speaker 4 (41:56):
We are an oligarchy. It's happening right in front of us.
And so you know when it comes to ice, No,
they're they're criminals. They're behaving like criminals. You don't want
to be labeled a criminal organization. Stop behaving like a criminal.
It's just that simple, all right. So yes, oh oh,
(42:20):
I gotta tell you. You know, we're talking about the
Ozark Law Show. It's eight episodes long. If you watch it,
episode eight will gut you. It will gut you. I
have never watched a cop show ever. I've never watched
one where one of the officers that you learn to
grow in love dies and I'm not going to tell
(42:43):
you which one, but they have a fatality in the
eighth episode and it's just sad, very sad, but I'm
watching it.
Speaker 5 (42:53):
Sure did enlighten me.
Speaker 4 (42:54):
I was like, Wow, these people, these partiers, these people
that live in Missouri that come to the Lake of
the Ozarks there who voted for Trump and you and
you just you can't. Democrats have long ignored these people.
They really have. And see poop peep poot peepe Buddha,
(43:18):
Judge doesn't he speaks to those people. The next Democrat
to win is going to be one that had. That's
Obama spoke to those people. Bill Clinton spoke to those people.
He did. That's why he won. It's why Obama won twice.
It's why Clinton won. He speaks or they spoke to
(43:43):
Middle America. The one criticism of the Democratic Party that
I think is valid is that they lost touch. They
did they They became California and New York liberals. And
that's not the nation. California and New York is not
the world. It's not the United States. There's the coast
(44:08):
which has Massachusetts, and you know the blue states.
Speaker 5 (44:11):
Most blue states are.
Speaker 4 (44:13):
On the coast of both sides of the country the middle.
Democrats have ignored the middle. They shouldn't because those people
want a lot of the same things that Democrats want.
But the Republicans have done a very good job of
(44:35):
painting the Democrats as evil, as violent, as elitist, everything
that the Republicans are, they have painted the Democrats. It's
gonna take a Democrat coming along and showing enough of
these people in Middle America that no, we actually want
you to have health care. We actually want you to
(44:57):
have premiums that you can afford. Like right now, I
don't hear enough Democrats screaming that the government shut down
is solely because Republicans want you to pay more for
health care. Republicans have painted it that the Democrats want
to give health care to illegals.
Speaker 5 (45:15):
That's a lie.
Speaker 4 (45:17):
Republicans are doing this standoff with Democrats based on a lie,
and they're selling it to their people because they repeat
it enough times every Democrat. Everything they should say is
Republicans want to shut down the government or have shut
it down because they want you to not have health care,
(45:38):
not because they're afraid we're going to give it to illegals.
They don't want you to have health care because they're
billionaire friends aren't making enough money. But Democrats just aren't
driving that message home. It's not resonating, you know, and
they're trying, but it's just not it's not resonating that
(46:00):
this shutdown is happening because Republicans want to raise your
health rates. It's sad, all right. Newsom does not speak
to those people, and we know it. Yes he does,
he actually does.
Speaker 5 (46:15):
I see. That's the other thing.
Speaker 4 (46:16):
Republicans have painted Gavin Newsom as some left wing liberal
elitists because they're afraid of him, because they're afraid he
can win. The Republicans and MAGA are terrified of Gavin Newsom.
They're terrified of him. That's why they've made him public
Enemy number one to Republicans, because they're terrified of him.
(46:42):
Gavin Newsom has been a multi term governor of a
state known for Republican leadership, California. When I lived there,
Duke Majin was governor, Arnold Schwarzenegger was governor. There were
many many Republican governors when I live there and mayors.
Who was the one when I first Oh, what was
(47:03):
his name? He was governor forever. He dated Linda Ronstat.
Everybody loved him. Oh what was his name?
Speaker 5 (47:08):
Not Wilson, was it? What was his name? Oh? My god?
Speaker 4 (47:12):
Who was the governor of California in the seventies and
eighties and he dated Linda Ronstadt and everybody loved him?
Speaker 5 (47:18):
What was his name? Oh?
Speaker 4 (47:20):
I forget he'd be hated today because he's a threat.
He was very popular. I think he's still alive.
Speaker 5 (47:29):
Is he still alive?
Speaker 6 (47:31):
Oh?
Speaker 5 (47:31):
What is his name?
Speaker 6 (47:32):
Now?
Speaker 4 (47:32):
It's gonna bother me. Don't you hate that when something
gets on your mind and you don't know California governor
who dated Linda Ronstadt? Who dated Linda Rondstadt?
Speaker 5 (47:45):
Uh uh?
Speaker 4 (47:46):
Jerry Brown, thank you, thank you, Jerry Brown, thank you,
thank you, thank you. Everybody loved he was governor of
California when I moved there, Jerry Brown. So in the
seventies he was fabulous. I loved him.
Speaker 5 (48:00):
He was great.
Speaker 4 (48:01):
Then there was Duke Magen. Yeah, yeh, buth talk about that.
Arnold wasn't so bad. He wasn't He wasn't great, but
he wasn't so bad. He wasn't I wish he wasn't
against this redistricting. I know he's against it nationally. He
(48:22):
doesn't think Republicans should be doing it either, but they are,
so why should Democrats take the high ground. That's what
I never understand. Republicans do evil things, and then if
the Democrats do it, they say, oh, look how evil
the Democrats are. Look what they're doing. How horrible, how horrible. Well, bitches,
you're doing it first.
Speaker 5 (48:41):
You know, self defense is legal.
Speaker 4 (48:44):
Republicans are striking the first blow, so it's legal for
Democrats to strike back. And that's how we have to
look at it now, self defense, you know. I'm That's
why I say that the republiclks. They're terrified. They're terrified
of Gavin Newsom because he could win, and they're terrified
(49:06):
of that. He's younger, charismatic, handsome as hell, well spoken,
and he doesn't do everything the Democratic Party wants him
to do. He has vetoed many a bill in California
the Democrats wanted him to sign. So while he is,
you know, liberal and progressive, he also has done things
(49:30):
that liberals and progressives don't like. I mean, there couldn't
be a better advocate for the gay community. But he
has signed some bills or not signed bills that could
have helped the gay community, and the gays got mad
at him. He could win, and that's why they've made
him public Enemy number one. Anytime you see someone being
as picked on as Gavin Newsom by the Republicans, it's
(49:53):
because they're afraid of him. That's why Chucker Carlson and
others are picking on Pete Buda Judge. They're afraid of him.
Kamala Harris announced to the BBC that she possibly could
run for president again. I don't know if that would
be wise or not. I don't know that she'd well,
she could run. I'm not sure she'd make it through
a primary. I'm not sure.
Speaker 5 (50:13):
Maybe.
Speaker 4 (50:14):
I don't know. Maybe, but it'll be interesting to see
who they offer up in a primary. The Democrats, probably her,
Buddha Judge, maybe Hakeem Jeffries, Gavin Newsom. I'm not sure
who they're going to offer up in a primary. It's
too early to tell. Let's just hope they win the midterms.
(50:34):
Otherwise we're doomed. If they don't win the midterms, we
all should think about leaving. And I mean that if
they don't win the midterms. I mean even if you
just moved to Mexico, like just twenty feet over the border,
like go to San Diego and just live in Tijuana.
I mean, it might be if Democrats lose the midterms
or if there aren't midterms. Because today Trump announced he
(50:58):
would love a third term. He said it out loud.
Finally they asked him about running for a third term.
He goes, I would love that. So he has now
said the quiet part out loud. They plan on ignoring
the Constitution and having him run or doing some dirty
deed to try to get it so he can run.
So but you know, states control who they put on
(51:20):
their ballots by the day, so he could run and
states could say it's name. We're not putting him on
the ballotee.
Speaker 5 (51:27):
But we'll see.
Speaker 9 (51:28):
Well, now is shore side?
Speaker 4 (51:59):
I just a text message from Walgreens which pisses me off.
It says your risk of shingles sharply increases after the
age of fifty. The pain from shingles can disrupt your
life for weeks. Talk to a pharmacist in partnership with
Glaxo Smith Klein. We all know what that damn vaccine
did to me. And here they are texting people from
(52:21):
Walgreens trying to solicit them to come in for a
shot that you don't need. I'm just gonna say it
out loud, you don't need the shingles shot. Not to
go all RFK Junior on you, but only one in
three people will get shingles, one in three, one in three. Okay,
So you got a thirty three percent chance of getting shingles,
(52:44):
and they want one hundred percent of the people to
take a shot for something only thirty three percent of
people will get. And of the thirty three percent of
the people that will get shingles, only one in three
of those will end up in the hospital. So you
got a you know, fifteen and a half percent chance
(53:06):
of having shingles go badly for you. But the shot,
honey put me in the hospital, gave me meningitis. My
leg is still twitching. So yeah, no, as far as
I'm concerned, do not take the shingles vaccine. I'm not
a doctor. Don't listen to me. Listen to your doctor
or to yourself. But as far as I'm concerned, that's
(53:27):
one vaccine you don't need. You just too few people
get it. One in three. That's not two out of
three or four out of five. It's one in three,
thirty three percent. So and of the thirty three percent
to get it, only thirty three percent of them get
(53:48):
it bad enough to have to have medical care, go
to a hospital. But they want you to take a shot. No, no, nay.
All right, well it is Monday. We're gonna be here
through Thursday. Hope God willan and the creek don't rise.
We got a lot good stuff to talk about with
you this week. Don't forget to like and subscribe to
(54:08):
the YouTube a YouTube dot com Forward slash really Correll.
Thank you all the patrons at patreon dot com, forward
slash really Corell. If you're not a patron, please become
one for four to ninety nine a month or more.
It keeps the show on air, It truly does. There
would be no show without Patreon. I would have to
go do something else to earn the thousand dollars a
month that Patreon gives me. So thank you, Thank you
(54:31):
very much for each of you patrons, so you make
that thousand dollars a month possible, and I could not
do the show without it. I couldn't, so thank you. Yeah,
the Adobe today sent out a thing that they're gonna
go up to sixty nine dollars a month seventy bucks
a month for Adobe.
Speaker 5 (54:47):
You know, I don't like all this licensing of the software.
That way, you.
Speaker 4 (54:50):
Should be able to buy the fricking software. But no
cause I remember when it was like fifteen hundred bucks
to buy the Adobe Sweet Now they want you to
pay eight hundred dollars a year for it. After five years,
you've given them four thousand dollars for their software. What
a racket? Talk about racketeering. That's a racket. Software licensing
(55:14):
is a racket. You should be able to buy it.
And if you just want to use an old version
and not upgrade, that should be on you. Every time
they fart they raised their price. Oh you get a
new feature, we're raising a ten dollars sixty nine a min.
I'm going to cancel. I'll find other ways to do it.
(55:34):
I'm not going to pay that. Let's see what's been
going on in the chat room. Harris was an accomplished
prosecutor in Alameda County before she dated Brown, and he
helped her get a job. Kamala Harris dated Jerry Brown.
I didn't know that I don't believe that did she.
I don't believe that. Did Kamala Harris date Jerry Brown?
Speaker 5 (55:57):
Or was it?
Speaker 4 (55:57):
Is that who you're talking about? Kamala Harris Jerry Brown? No,
they never dated, so I don't know what that person's
talking about. Maybe she dated Willy Brown? Remember him winning
(56:20):
the Maris or of Yeah, San Francisco. I remember him.
He was a character. I think he was also a
crook or was it a drug addict? I forget which
was it? Wasn't he found with like cocaine up his
nose or something? I mean, who cares. I'm sure Jerry
Brown did his share. So anyway, thank you for joining
me today. Thank you, oh Willy Brown. Okay, when he
(56:43):
was younger, perhaps I could see them dating. Thank you
so much for joining me today. I am Corel.
Speaker 5 (56:47):
You'll be who you want to be. So going to
hurt your Boddy.
Speaker 4 (56:50):
I will be back tomorrow with bells on and nothing
else and have two bells dangling from my nipples.
Speaker 5 (56:55):
That's I'm kidding. I wouldn't do that to you.
Speaker 4 (56:59):
Also, going back to grief and yes, me finding that
dead person and it has changed me. It has changed
me and moved me. To where I'm now purging stuff
from my life. I took down my photos of THEA.
She and I aren't speaking right now, and they hurt
me to look at. So I took them down, packed
(57:19):
them away, go and send them off to her. She
can have them. Don't have things in your life that
make you sad. If someone in your life that's family
or friends now doesn't speak to you, or you're in
a fight or whatever, take their picture down. Don't look
at it. Don't feel sad. Every time I looked up
at this wall during the show and saw the picture
of THEA, it made me sad. She's behaving very poorly
(57:42):
and very surprising that she is, and it just made
me take it down. I'm like, no, you're purging. I'm
purging things from my life that make me unhappy. You
should do so too, and clutter things you don't need.
Books you're never going to read, or you've already read,
tradiious that you have that you're never going to use,
(58:04):
you know, get rid of it, let someone else have it,
let someone else use it. It's time to minimalize in
case we have to pick up and go. Keep things
to a minimum. In case you got to pack up
a bag and get up right miss them right gurly?
All I need to throw her into a bag and go.
That's all I need. All Right, who's in the chat
(58:25):
room today, John Slade, Raybernati? She did date Willy Brown?
Speaker 5 (58:31):
Well, how about that?
Speaker 4 (58:33):
My chatter's taught me something today. I didn't know Kamala
Harris dated Willy Brown. Well, no wonder she got the
job as the attorney nor you know, no wonder I'm
mad at that, all these people. Isn't that why we want? Look,
I want to start a gay social club here in
Las Vegas that costs three thousand dollars a year to join.
(58:54):
Find a venue, turn it into a gay like like
they have in England. You know a club where you
go and you have dinner or breakfast or lunch, and
you have a cocktail, you have whatever, but you it's civil,
maybe a little entertainer piano or something, and you pay
a fee to keep the riff raff out. Unfortunately, I'm
(59:16):
the riff raff. So the only way I could go
to a club like that is to start one, because
I I've been invited to join a straight one here
for three grand a year, But I'm gonna say, but
if I started a gay one, I could charge everybody
in See that's capital. Oh tomorrow, can you pass the
new test.
Speaker 5 (59:35):
To be a citizen. There's a new test. I'm gonna
give it to you.
Speaker 4 (59:39):
See if you can pass, study up tonight. That's right,
a new test, twenty questions.
Speaker 8 (59:44):
Broadcasting from a completely different point of view yours.
Speaker 7 (59:50):
Listen daily to the
Speaker 8 (59:51):
Corell cast on your favorite streaming service.