Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Time is here. No time to fear.
Speaker 2 (00:02):
Corilla is so near because show time is here.
Speaker 1 (00:06):
So on with the show. Let's give it a go.
Corilla is the one that you need to know.
Speaker 3 (00:15):
Now it's show side.
Speaker 4 (00:29):
Well, there appears to be only one thing you have
to worry about in your old age, and it ain't
you Hell. We're gonna talk about that. James Comey was
in court? Why and Will it's Dick. We'll talk about
that and so much more on today's show. Don't go anywhere,
stay right here, Stay.
Speaker 5 (00:43):
Here, uncensored, unfiltered, un hinged.
Speaker 1 (00:49):
It's the Corall Cast.
Speaker 6 (00:51):
Listen daily on your favorite streaming service.
Speaker 4 (00:59):
The biggest threat to your longevity. I know what it is,
and I'm going to tell you. We got a lot
to talk about on today's one hour Coroll Cast. So
very glad you are joining me. Okay, I just finished exercising.
You know what. I'm gonna take a moment here. How
many of you are creatures of habit like sort of
OCD creatures of habit. So every morning, Ember and I
(01:22):
wake up between four thirty and five, we have breakfast
between five thirty and six, and then at about six
thirty six, forty five, I do my X thirty minutes
of exercise while she plays with a treat and gets
other kibble and all that. And then by seven thirty
I'm at the park doing a mile I'm sorry, two
and a half miles running up the hills. Home by
nine o'clock or nine fifteen to be on air at ten. Well,
(01:46):
this morning, Ember had to have a major lab work done,
like the three hundred dollar labs, and so she had
to be fasting. So of course I didn't eat my
breakfast because I'm not going to sit there at the
table and she sits right next to me in a chair.
I'm not gonna sit there at the table and eat
breakfast with her looking at me. So I fasted with her.
(02:10):
So I tried to stay in the bed as long
as we could, but at six thirty she wasn't hearing
of it. She was up. She's like, where's my breakfast?
And so we lollygagged and I got her to the
vet at eight o'clock and he drew her blood and
then we go back tomorrow morning for X rays and such.
Looking at her heart and her lung. She's been breathing
a little heavy at night, and you just want to
make sure that it's just that she's tuckered out and
(02:30):
not that it's anything else. So so then we came home.
Then we did the breakfast with the tea set and
the whole thing, and then the thirty minutes of exercise,
which I just finished like literally four minutes ago, which
is why I'm fetzing, because I was lifting weights and
doing forty pushups and now I'm doing the show, and
(02:52):
then we're going to go to the park after the
show and do the two and a half miles, then
come home very quickly, feed her lunch, and then I
have one to clock down to appointment. So yeah, what
a day, right? Oh? They but I'm such a creature
of habit. I couldn't And I'm sorry, I got to
wipe myself, like Whitney Houston. I'm such a creature of
habit that I couldn't, you know, alter, because dogs are
(03:15):
creatures of habit. I'm a creature of habit, and I
just couldn't alter. You know, what we were doing, And
I don't know if any of you were like me,
where once you get in a routine, if anything happens
to break your routine, you're like, oh no, oh, no, uh,
and that's me. And by the way, I am not alone.
It is a human trait what I'm doing, being a
(03:35):
creature of habit. Humans like habits. We don't like a
lot of choices. We like to that made my glasses worse.
We like to have, you know, continuity. We like to
know what's going on. We don't like surprises as a
species in that interesting. Okay, So let's start with Toby,
since I really want the senior topic to be a
(03:57):
big topic because I'm aging and this article is just frightening.
But James Comey was in court today and the judge
isn't really having it. Now, let me tell you how
a grand jury works. The prosecutor in a grand jury
can present evidence to get an indictment. The prosecutor in
a grand jury does not have to present evidence that
(04:22):
may point to the defendant's innocence. They leave that for trial.
So all the grand jury heard was what the prosecutor
thinks James Comy did. They did not hear any evidence
to contradict that prior to the indictment. The defense there
(04:43):
is no defense at a grand jury. It is a
prosecutor going in asking twelve people, do you think there's
enough evidence here, but they don't have to present all
the evidence, and they don't have to present any evidence
that might might say the is innocent. However, at trial
they do, and this morning the prosecutors acknowledged that the
(05:07):
key witness in the case is going to be problematic
because the key witness said James Comy didn't do it.
In fact, everybody involved in the case has said James
Comey didn't do it. He is also claiming political persecution,
a prosecution based on political persecution. Those are usually very
(05:28):
very hard to prove, except when you have a seated
president tweeting constantly about how you should be prosecuted and
your guilt. Also, the attorney that he appointed Trump to
file this case may have been illegitimately appointed, so the
(05:48):
judge may just throw the whole face. So that's what's
going on with the James Combe game. You pled not guilty.
The trial is January fifth, but it probably will not
make it to trial.
Speaker 6 (05:58):
If you're not visiting really true dot com daily, you're
missing out. Get the podcast videos and the blug including
recipes at really correll dot com. That's really ka r
e l dot com.
Speaker 2 (06:13):
Show Time is here. No time to fear. Corell is
so near because show time is here. So on with
the show.
Speaker 1 (06:22):
Let's give it a go. Correll is the one that
you need to know.
Speaker 4 (06:28):
By the way, James Comy is no real friend to
the Democrats. So I don't know what you know. He
handed Trump the election in twenty sixteen with the whole
Hillary's emails things. Okay, so James Comy Trump should be
congratulating him. Instead he's going after him. So I am
no fan of James Comy. I don't I believe he
(06:49):
handed Trump the election gift, drapped it for him, as
James Stable said, uh, and so I am no fan
of his. However, uh, he did not commit a crime
and he should not be being prospers So even though
I'm not a fan, I do not wish for his
malicious prosecution. Good morning, Sandy and James and Maxwell and
Phineas and everyone in the chatroom at YouTube dot com.
(07:10):
Forward slash really Correl. Hello to left blank and to
all of my friends over at patreon dot com. Forward
slash really Correl. You guys have really come through. It
is now at one thousand dollars and that's that's my limit.
That's all I can make under disability rules, So thank you.
I'm so grateful for you. Unless we get it up
to ten thousand dollars a month and then I could
get off disability. But anyway, that leads right into this
(07:35):
topic you know, about seniors and poverty and how it
kills you know, And but I'm being how do I
say this? Sometimes you have a topic on your mind
as a talk show host that you can't really do
on air because it's not as relevant. Now, if I
were on KFI or KGO, I would do what's on
(07:57):
my mind right now as a topic, lickety split it.
But on a podcast without callers, I don't know how
it would go over. And there's nothing like me out there,
meaning Stephanie Miller, you know, David Packman, the little cutie
that he is, Tom Hartman. They would never do something
from their very personal life. They keep their show politics entertainment.
(08:20):
They don't ever really talk about. But see, I find
that the issues that affect my personal life are the
ones that you guys connect with the most because in
your personal lives you are going through some similar situation.
And I think it's the personal things we go through
that reminds us. We are all connected, and I wish
(08:43):
that more host and more people talked about their personal
lives and not just their you know, the politics or whatever,
because I'd like to hear like if David, you know
Howard Stern made a fortune off of his marriage, and
we all knew about his wife and his divorce and
the whole thing. To me, a host becomes more human
(09:05):
if they talk about what's going on personally, but so
few of them do because they don't think it's entertaining
for you, and the powers that be don't think it's
entertaining for you. I have found the converse of that
to be true, that more than politics, when I talk
about something that's really bothering me on my mind, you
guys actually respond to that more and you know it's
(09:30):
on my mind. I have lost two close friends in
the last month, and I don't know why. I haven't
behaved any differently with one of them. All I did
was show concern. I didn't call the police and have
them do a wellness check. I didn't pound down their
door or create a scene. I sent text messages, you know,
(09:52):
and I don't know how to handle it. I am
at a loss because I am a communicator, and so
someone that I communicate with every day, like all day,
every day, every couple of hours, a text here, a
text there, a phone call at night while walking the dog,
that person has suddenly gone radio silent. And they've gone
(10:15):
radio silent because of Saturday. When I spoke to them
at ten thirty in the morning, they were supposed to
call me back about planned Saturday night. They didn't answer
any of my text or call me or answer any
of my calls all day the rest of the day Saturday.
That's abnormal for them, That's abnormal for any friend. You know.
(10:37):
I saw a meme today that said, no I text
when people text me back because I care, and to
me is some I don't know about you. What is
a good length of time for someone to respond to
a text? In your eyes? Since we all know everyone
has their phone with them all the time, what is
a good A close friend, not a stranger, not a
(10:58):
work person, but a good best friend. You have a
best friend that you text every single day, and then
one day you text them and you don't get a
response back. How long before you would think something was
wrong with a person not answering your text? How long?
(11:20):
Fifteen minutes an hour a day. This is a person
that always answers your text within an hour, always, like always,
and then suddenly they don't you text nothing, you text,
are you okay? That's a very pointed question. They send
nothing back. You call, they don't answer. This is your
(11:42):
best friend, This is a person that you talk to
all day every day. What would you do? You would assume,
like me, I think that something was wrong, because how
long for you out there? And I'd love to see
your comments down below. How long if it's someone that
you regularly communicate with, how long before they should text back? Minutes? Hours?
(12:10):
How long in the chat room? Ten to fifteen minutes? Okay,
I think that too, thank you, Phineas. That's what I think.
Fifteen to thirty minutes. And if they're at work, then
of course, you know, a couple hours, you know, because
they're at work. They can't, you know, constantly be on
the phone at work. If they're at work and you
text them during between eight and twelve, they should at
(12:32):
least text you on their lunch or whatever. But the
person I'm talking about text me from work all the time,
like during the day all the time, sends me stories,
send me songs, nothing, nothing since Saturday. And why Because
when I didn't hear from them by seven o'clock at
night after supposedly having plans with them, and then radio
(12:55):
silent all day long, I got really concerned and I
sent three text three are you okay? Is something wrong?
Please answer me? Three text and two phone calls. When
they did answer, they said that I was unhinged, that
I was being unhinged, and that I was being And
(13:20):
I said, look, you've had things happen to you before,
You've fallen downstairs, before you have you know, this is
Vegas where carrecks happened like everywhere. You know, you weren't
answering all day from eleven thirty or eleven in the
morning until seven at night, eight hours and you haven't answered,
which is not like you and is rude. If something
(13:43):
didn't happen, it's rude. So they said they don't need
my negative energy worst case scenario, oh you've been in
a car wrecker, fallen down the stairs energy in their life,
and to stop texting them. This is a best friend.
And I haven't heard from them since since. They said
I don't need negative energy and I don't need worst
(14:04):
case scenario, stop texting me a best friend and then
nothing Sunday, nothing, Monday, nothing, nothing Tuesday at all, nothing
normally in the morning's back and forth before we're nothing.
So what do I do. Do I reach out and say, hey,
you know, we should mend this whatever is going on,
(14:25):
let's talk about it, fix it and move on with
our friendship. Or should I just wait to hear from
them Because the longer the time goes, the more hurt
I'm getting and the less I want to be their
best friend because a best friend wouldn't do this to
a best friend in my view. But what if they
just need some time? You know what if they just
(14:46):
need some time? So I'm torn. Do I text or
do I not text? That's what's on my mind all
day today. Do I send a text and say, hey,
can we get back to where we were on Friday?
Because I'm not ready to to lose a best friend
over nothing. But it's not nothing. They've been hurting my
feelings every single day by not texting me. Why would
(15:09):
a best friend willfully hurt my feelings every day? So
that's what I'm torn about, you know, That's what I'm
torn about. That's my day Yeah, it's everyone's saying in
the chat room. That's on them, not their problem, not
your problem. I agree. I agree. Yeah, So every time
(15:31):
I go to text, I stop because I think they
don't want to hear from you. If they wanted to
hear from you, they'd text you. They don't want to
hear from you. They don't care about what's going on
in your life. They don't want to hear from you.
Why would you text them? When they want to hear
from you, they'll text you, and then I'll have a
decision to make about whether or not to text back,
(15:53):
because this is the world we live in. Because you
can't pick up the fucking phone anymore and just solve
this shit right away. Nobody calls anybody, you know. So
that's what's on my mind. I'm sorry to start the
show with that, but it's on my mind. They're the
ones who didn't respond on Saturday. It was out of character.
I got very concerned because it was out of character.
(16:16):
My concern was misinterpreted, I guess as unhinged, because heaven forbid,
someone should care enough about this person to actually be
upset if something were to happen to them. And now
they've cut me out completely radio silence, and they know that.
I hate that more than anything. When Andrew used to
want to really get under my skin, he'd stop talking
(16:37):
because to me, I have to communicate. I have to
and when you stop communicating with me, you can't go
anywhere with that. There's nowhere to go with that. There's
no resolution. So every day that they don't talk to me,
it hurts. I've cried, I've lost sleep, I've been upset
(16:59):
about Ember because and beloves this person. You know. I've
been beside myself every day. It's all I think about,
should I text? Are they going to text today? But
each day it gets less and less, and if they
don't text me by the weekend, I may not want
to hear from them. And I don't think they realize
the damage they're doing to our friendship. But oh well,
(17:21):
you know what, what can you do? Yes, they could
have just said, yeah, I'm okay, just busy, but or
I need some time exactly. They didn't have to be
first of all, calling me unhinged and deranged because I
sent three text messages and called twice when someone hadn't
reached out to me. I'm tired of being called names
by people. THEA called me low frequency because I talk
(17:44):
about current events that are negative, so I'm on a
low frequency. Fuck her. I'm tired of this. I'm tired
of people saying, Oh, you're low frequency because you talk
about current events, or oh, your response was unhinged. You
freaking don't email or text me for eight hours, which
is abnormal. I get concerned, and that's unhinged. No, you're unhinged.
(18:06):
It seems like they're projecting their stuff on me, and
I don't like it. I don't like it. But what
do you do? You want the friend? I don't want
to lose this friend. I don't want to lose him.
He's a good person. I don't want to lose him.
But I already have obviously, So see see how the
schizophrenia is. I don't want to lose them, but you
already have. Should I text them? No, they don't want
(18:28):
to hear from you. That's what's going on in my brain.
And I'm trying to sit here and talk about topics
that are relevant and seniors in the economy and James Comy,
And in my brain it's like should I text them?
Should I not text them? Obviously? They don't want to
hear from you. Well what if they don't know? What
if they're too afraid to text me because they think
I'm mad? Talk about racketing and the brain and ratcheting.
(18:49):
Oh my god. Anyway, now we are going to talk
about seniors because it's a really alarming article and I'm
getting older and I don't want to die early. Do
you know there's one thing that could make you die
nine years and that's a long time. Nine years sooner
(19:10):
nine that is almost a decade. So the difference between
eighty and ninety, or the difference between seventy five and
eighty five, that's a big chunk of life. And do
you know what the one thing is that could make
you die nine years earlier? Nine years And I'm not
(19:33):
talking about in a third world country. I'm talking about
in the United States of America and in the UK
nine years earlier. That's a lot. That's to a senior.
Nine years is a lifetime. I mean that really is
the difference between seventy and seventy nine or seventy five
(19:53):
and eighty four. And do you know what it is?
It is, yeah, therapy with Corell exactly. It's not Donald
Trump but well, in a way, in a way, Donald
Trump plays into it. But it's not Donald Trump, but
he does play into it in a way. Yes, we
(20:14):
should do a therapy hour with Corell where we tell
me your problems and I try to help you solve them.
We used to do that on KGO. People used to
call in and ask me advice, and I'd give it
to them. See, I don't know what if if I
were giving radio advice and I had just called myself
and told myself that story, I would say, well, why
do you want to call this person anyway? They have
(20:36):
made it clear they didn't want to hear from you.
They have called you unbalanced and unhinged. When you weren't
unbalanced would have been you know, sending the police or
pounding on the door or whatever. So they've called you unbalanced,
you're not. They've frozen you out of communication, which they
know you hate. Why would you want to make an
effort for this person anyway? Maybe they're not the person
(20:58):
that you think they are. How many other long term
relationships do they have? How many long term friendships do
they have? Not many? Well, maybe there's a reason why.
That's what I would say to someone on air, And
now I realize how stupid this stuff. When we come
back the things that will kill you nine years early,
(21:20):
that's how long time? Nine years and it's preventable. Half
why on we could fix it?
Speaker 6 (21:43):
Now?
Speaker 1 (21:44):
Is show.
Speaker 4 (22:00):
All right? Nine years early? Senior citizens are dying nine years?
Can you imagine? And what is it? What is the
thing in the chat room you're saying lack of mobility?
I would I would say that contributes, but is not
(22:20):
the thing. So let me tell you what it is.
Low income people over the age of sixty die an
average of nine years earlier than high income older Americans,
according to a study from the National Council on Aging
and the University of Massachusetts Boston Leading Age Center. Generally,
(22:43):
middle income older Americans die younger than wealthier people. About
fifteen percent of seniors with an annual household income of
roughly sixty grand that's me, died during the four year
study period, compared with only eleven percent within comes over
one hundred and twenty thousand dollars, So four percent more
(23:06):
died at the sixty thousand dollars level, and a much
larger portion died if they're under sixty thousand dollars So
here's the income of the quantification, one hundred and twenty
(23:27):
thousand dollars. The mortality rate is eleven percent, and their
average death age is eighty five. If you make one
hundred and twenty thousand dollars, eighty thousand dollars the thirteen
percent mortality rate and the average age is eighty three
years old, sixty thousand dollars, fifteen percent mortality rate. Their
(23:52):
average is eighty two years old. Okay, so three years
less from those making forty six thousand dollars. You die
around eighty one thirty thousand dollars. You die at seventy
nine and twenty thousand dollars are below, which by the way,
(24:14):
is what Social Security pays about twenty grand a year
the average, so twenty grand a year. If you just
live on Social Security, your average mortality age is seventy
six years old, so twenty grand and below. You die
around seventy six one hundred and twenty grand are above,
(24:35):
you'll live to be eighty five or longer, sixty grand
eighty two. Money in America is now directly tied to longevity,
and of course they bring several factors to that. Hello,
(24:55):
Babetta and several factors that are when you have money.
Number one, what do you have less of? If you
make one hundred and twenty K a year, what do
you have less of? Come on, everybody, come on. Stress.
You have less stress in your life because you're not
(25:19):
worried about money. So that's the first thing stress. Number two,
if you make one hundred and twenty or more a year,
you are more apt to have a larger social circle.
You travel more, you see family more, you go out
to dinner more, you do more social things. You go
(25:40):
to plays, you go to concerts, you go to symphonies.
Why because you can afford it. If you're sixty K,
you're just making it. If you're twenty K, you're in
abject poverty. And of course number three is healthcare copase.
(26:02):
Many people making twenty K or even up to sixty
K a year they don't get certain treatments or certain
drugs because they can't afford them. Also, if you make
over one hundred and twenty K a year, you have
access to home health care. You can augment any insurance
(26:24):
program to pay for home health care and keep you
in your home longer. So what we're saying is people
over sixty should all make one hundred and twenty k
a year or more if they want to live the
longest lives. And as America, why wouldn't we want that?
(26:44):
Why wouldn't we want Americans to live the longest life
they can? I mean, Republicans could think of a lot
of reasons, but why wouldn't we? And that's why I
really believe in universal augmented income. And what that means
is we know now the level for financial happiness in America.
(27:08):
We know it's now up to eighty It used to
be seventy. Now it's up to eighty five thousand dollars
a year. That's how much you have to make if
you want to pay your bills, have a little money
left over to do some you know, a little bit
of recreating, not have medical expenses cripple you eighty five
K a year. Social Security should make up the gap.
(27:32):
If you have a pension that gives you thirty six
thousand dollars a year, then social Security should kick in
fifty grand a year. We should have a certain number,
which is eighty five thousand. And according to that mortality chart,
if you make eighty five thousand, you only live a
year less than the people that make one hundred and
twenty thousand. But we don't. We let money dictate everything
(27:58):
in our country, including our lifespans, you know. And isn't
that just sad? You have people that are resigned that
they're going to die early because they simply don't have
the money to live. That's a great country, you know.
They don't feel this way in Switzerland. They know if
(28:19):
they get older they're gonna have care. They don't feel
this way in the UK. They know if they get
older they're going to live in a care home. It
may not be the best place, but they're going to
have a place, they're going to have food, and they're
going to have socialization. On Silent Witness, I've seen many
nice care homes. I don't know if they're paying for them,
but they're very nice out in the countryside, you know,
(28:42):
fifty seventy people. I'm want to grow old like in
that Netflix movie with Pierce Brosnan and Helen Mirren, The
Thursday Murder Club, I think it was called I want
to live in a place like they lived. It's like
an old country mansion. They all had lovely sweeps, you know,
they had their bed and they had little dining, little
living rooms, and you know, because an old, old mansion.
(29:05):
And then they had the common rooms and they had
the big gardens. I want to live there. They even
had a hospice there, so you could live there from
the time you were sixty all the way till you
were dead. Who wouldn't want that, you know? I always
thought that the sag Aftra should start many retirement homes
for old actors and performers they used to. I always
thought we should have lots of them, like out in
(29:26):
the country, all over, you know, all over, not just one,
but have like five in every state for courd dot. Yes,
you need to be too fis de kay to be
middle class? You're right? Yep, you're absolutely life uh so yeah.
Speaker 7 (29:44):
Positive broadcasting from a completely different point of view yours.
Speaker 1 (29:49):
Listen daily to the.
Speaker 7 (29:51):
Correll Cast on your favorite streaming service.
Speaker 2 (29:59):
Showed time is here. No time to fear. Corilla is
so near because.
Speaker 1 (30:05):
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 8 (30:15):
Now. It's show side.
Speaker 4 (30:29):
All right, Stay tune for part two of the Fabulous
Carell Cast. We have so much more to talk about
in Part two. Poverty is killing us. Trump's trying to
kill it? What's going on in Gaza? Is it ever
gonna be elva? We got so much to talk about,
So don't.
Speaker 5 (30:43):
Go anywhere uncensored, unfiltered, fun hinged.
Speaker 1 (30:49):
It's the corall Cast.
Speaker 6 (30:51):
Listen daily on your favorite streaming service.
Speaker 4 (30:59):
All right, it is the crowd Cast. I am Correl.
My YouTube is not cooperating here to give me my
chat room again. I don't know why. I didn't want
didn't want me to have my chat room, but I
got gods to have it, so I'm looking all right.
The Supreme Court is poised to rule on conversion therapy.
And I know we talked a little bit about this yesterday,
(31:22):
but this is so dear and near to me, conversion
therapy because it's torture. Okay, it's it's torture, you know.
And met someone in the chat room over at Instagram said,
is it alcohol that kills these people sooner? No? No,
(31:44):
it's not alcohol. It's poverty. Poverty kills you probably because
you drink. Yeah. So the Supreme Court has a case
in front of it now I believe it's Colorado. They
ban therapists from talking about conversion therapy with their patients
(32:05):
because they've outlawed conversion therapy, and a therapist has gone
to the Supreme Court and say they're infringing on my
First Amendment right as a healthcare giver by not letting
me talk about conversion therapy. And I'm like, okay, and
let's be real about what conversion therapy is. It is
(32:28):
taking a perfectly beautiful, perfectly wonderful, perfectly nothing wrong with
them person and telling them they need to lie to
themselves and change who they are. And if they can't
do it on their own, they will torture them using drugs.
They used to give people ivs and make them watch
(32:51):
straight porn. They used to put gay people gay men
in a room, give them an IV of drugs and
make them watch straight I'm not making that up. That
is some of what conversion therapy used to be, and
even now it is torture. They will send kids away
to camps where they are literally tortured into fessing up
(33:15):
that they're really heterosexual or that they're not trans. It
does not work because it is a lie. But more importantly,
what is so offensive to me is the inference or
the idea that being gay, lesbian, by or trans is
(33:37):
so terrible you have to be converted out of it.
That's like saying we're going to convert heterosexuals to gay people.
I want you to think about that. Is there any
kind Well, the difference between a gay marine and a
straight marine is a twelve pack of beer and a
shot of Jack Daniels. But is there any therapy out
(33:58):
there for you heterosexuals that you could go through that
would suddenly make you say you're gay? And I'm being serious,
can you think of anything that would make you believe
and say you were gay? No, because it doesn't work.
(34:18):
And yet this body of white assholes the Supreme Court.
I know a few are of color, but most of
them are white male assholes, and one Amy Conan Barrett,
whatever she is, they're going to sit in judgment of
whether people in our country can torture either verbally torture
(34:40):
or physically torture children and adults into being something they're not,
so they'll fit into their vision of society. When the
history books are written and they look back on conversion therapy,
they are going to look on it like we now,
I'll look back on the rack and on medieval torture devices.
(35:04):
We are going to look at conversion therapy like or
future generations like we now look at the rack bamboo
under the you know, waterboarding, because it's the same thing.
It's offensive to the core that the Supreme Court would
even entertain reinstating conversion therapy. So many other countries have
(35:28):
already outlawed it, Ireland, France, you know, civilized countries. But
leave it to the United States to ponder whether or
not you should be tortured into not being gay, lesbian
buyer trainers. What a country? What a country? Fifty percent
(35:50):
of college graduates are doing this. We'll talk about it
when we come back. What are they doing? Don't go anywhere.
Speaker 6 (35:58):
If you're not visiting really true dot com daily, you're
missing out. Get the podcast videos and the blug including
recipes at really correll dot com. 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):
All right, Sorry I got so worked up there, but
it's it's so demeaning and so degrading. You know that
we would even talk about this, you know, it just is,
and you know there's so much more that we could
be doing to help society. You know who we should
(36:49):
be converting People who think being LGBTQ is wrong. That's
who we should be converting. They're the ones that need
conversion therapy. To be a human. Maga needs conversion therapy.
They literally need to be taken and rebrainwashed because they're demented,
(37:11):
they have a mental illness. So there's a lot of
candidates that I would line up for conversion therapy. Gay
is not one of them. Anyone who thinks that being
gay is bad, yeah, they probably need conversion therapy. Anyone
that thinks Donald Trump is good probably needs some sort
of conversion therapy. But someone that just likes to have
(37:34):
sex with someone of the same gender, or someone that
thinks that are not thinks someone that knows that they
are the wrong gender at birth, they don't need conversion.
They need understanding, empathy, love, compassion. The last thing they
need is to be told that what they're doing is
(37:57):
so aberrant they need to be converted. It's fucking medieval,
It's Torquemada, and I don't care if it's just talking,
I don't care. If it's just the therapist in there
going well, why do you want to be gay? You
should be heterosexual? Here's why are you you know? No, no,
just flat out fucking no. But that's not the world
(38:20):
we live in. We live in the United States in
a terribly backwards world. Look at the topics just today,
just today, look what we've talked about. A former FBI
director being maliciously prosecuted by a would be fascist president,
indicted on flimsy evidence in a case that will ultimately
(38:43):
be thrown out just out of political vengeance. I have
a neighbor who lived under Pinochet and he said, this
is exactly what happened. So that story. Then we moved
on to the fact that if you're a senior over
sixty five and you don't make one hundred and twenty
(39:03):
thousand dollars a year or more, you are going to
live anywhere from three to nine less years of life
actual life. Why because we'd rather spend money on war.
We are in a government shutdown right now, But somehow
he's got the fucking money to send National Guard wherever
(39:25):
he wants to. And today that asshole in chief said
that he wanted to put the governor and the mayor
of I think Chicago or bulk of somewhere, the governor
of the mayor in jail. He's he wants to jail opponents,
Blue opponents. He wants to jail every blue governor and
(39:47):
mayor of every blue city that there is to remove opposition,
because it's what fucking fascist do. And I'm tired of
us not using the right term. America isn't slipping into fascism.
We are in fascion. This is what it looks like.
A president ordering the prosecution of a former government official fascism.
(40:13):
A government sending troops into cities that oppose him fascism.
A government that wants to cut down and eliminate dissenters
who have every right to dissent fascism. A government that
calls people like me and you the enemy from within fascism.
(40:35):
We're not moving towards fascism, We're in it. This is
what it looks like today. His big post on True
Social was how he wants to put a governor and
a mayor in jail. He should be impeached for that alone,
just that post. This is fascism. Modern day fascism, it's
(41:03):
what it looks like by definition. And meanwhile, what's going
on behind the scenes. Will the government shut down? Well,
we got enough money for the troops. Will the government
shut down? Billionaires are still making a profit, They're still
getting their tax breaks, They're still going on with their lives. Meanwhile,
millions of Americans are saying, I don't even know how
I'm gonna feed my kids. And they announced that when
(41:25):
the government reopens, any furloughed workers will not be getting
back pay. Burbank Airport had to close yesterday because they
had no air traffic controllers and they had to bring
some up from San Diego to reopen Burbank Airport. The
skies are no longer safe to fly in. And now
(41:47):
that you tell these people they're not going to be
getting back pay, they're not going to do their job.
And meanwhile, he's outlauding his great work in the Middle East.
I deserve a nobell. I stopped a war. The fucking
war is still going on. The hostages have not been released,
Israel is still bombing Gaza Gazins are still dying. And
(42:10):
have we forgotten about Ukraine altogether? Has he given up
on that because Putin won't be his bitch? Is that
what's happened? We just forgot about Ukraine? Ukraine? What's that?
Is it a new form of bird? Oh it's the Ukraine?
Look no, I mean really, have we just forgotten people
are dying in the Ukraine? All in that on day one?
(42:32):
Well you haven't just bloated fuck? So what? But what's
on his agenda? What is his things to do today?
Jailing a mayor, jailing a governor, threatening more cities with
National Guards, only blue cities. They're not marching into Atlanta.
(42:56):
They're not marching. Oh and today the city of Miami
lost their appeal. They were trying to save their rainbow sidewalks.
They're lost. So today they're being sand blasted in South Beach. Yep,
there goes that. The Epstein files still not released. But
meanwhile James Comy has to be prosecuted. Where do you
(43:22):
all see this ending? Let's just cut through all the bullshit.
Where do you all see this ending? How do you
see the Trump presidency ending? I'm serious, I want to
because I know, but I want to see what you think.
We're only in month like ten, We've got three years
(43:42):
and two months to go where? How do you see
this playing out over the next twenty four months, or
let's just say between now and the midterms. How do
you see his presidency playing out between now and the midterms?
Where is this going to end? Because we are from history,
(44:03):
we know it always ends. Whether it's in one year,
ten years, twenty years, it always ends, fifty years, it
doesn't matter. It always ends. French Revolution put an end
to the blouurgeoisie. It always ends. It may take decades,
but it always ends. So how do you see this ending?
(44:25):
You know, a civil war is already going on. We're
not heading towards civil war. There are troops on the
ground to fire on anyone that descends. That's a civil war.
He is at war with the Blue States. He is
deploying troops to the Blue States. That's a war. You
only deploy troops in war. That's when you deploy troops
(44:48):
in a war. So we're in a civil war. Where
do you see it ending? Do you see the civil
war escalating over the next three years? And states like
California and Washington and Oregon, do you see them banding
with Massachusetts and Vermont and breaking away from the Union.
(45:11):
Do you see secession and if the Congress won't let
the states seed, do you see those states launching a
real millet like in the movie Civil War? Is that
where we're headed to? That movie? By the way, in
that movie, the Trump like president gets shot in the
oval office and dies. So is that where you see
(45:33):
Hiss heading to an armed conflict between blue states and
red states? Is that really where you see it heading?
Do you see him dying in office of some health issue?
He's not healthy? Do you see him, you know, croaking
in office and then us dealing with JD. Vans. Do
you see someone killing him because their family can't afford food,
(45:57):
or they lost their farm or what whoever it might be.
How do you see it ending? I want your thoughts.
You always hear my thoughts on how I see it ending.
I see it ending one of four ways Civil War.
He dies in office, someone takes him out, could be
another country, another country pays for his you know, the cartels.
(46:23):
They're getting tired of him. So you know, somebody takes
him out, or he doesn't leave office, and we end
up with a real fascist regime that just holds on
to the Congress and to the executive and to the
you know, and to the judicial and completely ruins the
country and leaves us in ruins, literally ruins, where our
(46:47):
national parks are in ruins, and our highways are in ruins,
and our banks are empty, and our accounts are empty,
and no countries want to deal with us. We have
no money, so there's no trade anymore, you know, complete
devastation of the country. Where do you see it? I'd
love to hear your comments. Let's check the chat room.
(47:08):
Severe depression and civil war. Yes that happened you know before? Yes, Corell,
we are in very deep crap. Yes, we are White
house down. Yes? Yeah. Are you buying gold? Are you
buying precious metals? Because the American dollar will be worth nothing?
(47:33):
I mean, are you setting yourself up? I want to
ask you where you think it's going, because the next
question is what are you doing to prepare for where
you think it's going to end up. If you really
think there's going to be a civil war, are you
staying for it? Or are you going to flee to
Mexico or Canada or wherever. If you think he's going
(47:53):
to stay in power for five years, ten years, are
you staying for that? Are you ensconcing yourself in a
blue state. What are you doing to prepare for what
you think is going to happen financially, It's going to
be the rich and the very very poor. There's not
(48:14):
going to be a middle. So what what are you doing?
You know another story I want to talk about today,
other than seniors dying of an early age because of money,
fifty percent of college graduates now move home. Fifty percent.
Half of everybody that graduates college is moving home. Why
(48:40):
student debt? Student loans no jobs right when they get
out of college, so they have to move home to
less and expenses. Now, in Japan they do something really interesting.
They match college students who on lower incomes with seniors
who have room in their house and who live alone,
(49:02):
and the college student lives with the senior for a
small fee, which gives the senior more money and gives
the senior company because in Japan they're young people honor
their old people, and the senior then usually cooks for
the person, is more socially engaged, has a much better life,
and the student ends up saving a shit ton of money.
(49:25):
They don't have to rent a dorm all of that.
Why don't we have a program that does that here.
Why don't we have a program where we match college
students with seniors who are alone and have a bigger
house and might need some help around the house, and
then they let the college student live there for dirt cheap, like,
you know, two hundred bucks a month or whatever. We
don't do that because we don't care. They care in Japan,
(49:48):
we don't care. Here. Fifty percent of college graduates end
up back at home. Why don't we have free education,
free college for all that want it. Why do we
make it so financially taxing for a person to go
(50:09):
to college that when they get out, they have to
move back home instead of into their own place and
into the job market. Why isn't college subsidized by a
tax on all businesses that will benefit from college graduates?
Wall Street, medicine, lawyers, All of the professions that will
(50:30):
benefit from college graduates should pay taxes to pay for
the colleges. Why does a student have to pay to
go learn how to get a job, to be a
wage slave for a company. Why isn't the company paying
for that greed? That's one reason we put our young
(50:53):
people in poverty before they're twenty two. Years old, so
much so that they got to move back home. And
we call ourselves a great nation. We think we're just
the best nation ever, and yet we have seniors dying
because they don't have enough money. We have students moving
back home because they don't have enough money. If we
(51:15):
match the seniors that need more money to live longest
with the students that need more money, we'd have a
win win situation. But we don't because we don't say.
Speaker 8 (51:43):
No show.
Speaker 4 (51:59):
Right. She says, you should arrange a meeting with your
friend and do this in person in four or five days.
When you cool down in four or five days, I
won't want to meet the person. You can only ignore
me and snub me for so long before I say,
you know what, I'm worth more than this. They should
call and arrange a meeting with me. They're the one
freezing me out. They're the one who behaved inappropriately on
(52:20):
Saturday by not contacting me, not texting me that they
were okay. I asked very pointed questions, are you all right?
And they never answered the text until finally they did
with a snotty text. So you know what, it's not
me that owes anybody in an apology, and it's not me,
that's them, And if they want to meet with me,
(52:43):
I'll meet. And if they text me and say let's
work this out, I'll work it out because I like
them and I think they're a wonderful person. But my
viewpoint of them is changing rapidly, so in four or
five days, I won't care anymore. I'm an asset. I'm
worth something. If you treat me like I'm not worth something,
(53:04):
I am not going to forgive you for that period.
And right now I'm being treated like I'm not worth something.
So anyway, what a show, What a day? I'm setsing.
I still I gotta go to the park right after
this and do two and a half miles because we
didn't do it before, because the whole day has been
caddiewampus because Ember had to go for blood work and tomorrow,
(53:25):
by the way, she has an eight o'clock vet appointment.
I am assuming that I will be back here in
time for ten o'clock for a show, but she is
getting X rays and heaven forbid they do find something.
I'm hoping, oh it's the vet. This morning, a woman
brought in her dog and had eaten thirty milligrams of maloxicam.
That is my biggest fear. That's why I keep hydrogen peroxide. Please,
(53:47):
if you have a dog, keep hydrogen peroxide in your
house if they are like that lady when her dog
ate that pill, if she'd have shoved a tablespoon of
hydrogen peroxide down its throat or looked online as to
how much to give it based on its weight, it
would have vomited right away. They vomited immediately. When you
squirt hydrogen peroxide down their throat, they vomit. She could
(54:09):
have gotten those pills up within two minutes. Instead, she
was at the vet at eight and the dog ate
the pills at seven. Now, the good news was that
meloxicam is actually given to dogs, but that sized dog
would only take three milligrams and at eight thirty milligrams.
My biggest fear, my biggest fear that I will drop
a prescription. That's why I had Ember trained that when
(54:30):
something dropped. I can drop a piece of steak right
in front of her on the floor and she will
not eat it because she has been trained you do
not go near it until I tell you to. And
it was for that reason when I got Ember. Remember
I was on seven medications. I was taking sixteen pills
a day. Well wait, I was taking ten oxy content
(54:52):
plus two blood. That was probably taking twenty pills a day.
So I was very worried. What if I drop a
soma and she eats it? What if I drop an
oxy and she eats it? So I had her train
to not do that. But the lady, I hope her
dog is okay. They said they'll know around ten am.
All right, So today's show, we learned that James Commei's
case will probably be thrown out. We learned that. We
(55:16):
learned and we learned how the grand jury works, so
they don't hear from the defense. They just hear from
the prosecutions. That's how they get indictments. They leave the
rest with the courts to work out. We learned that
if you're sixty five or older, your lifespan is tied
directly to your income. If you make one hundred and
twenty K or more, you tend to live to be
about eighty five. If you make below twenty K year,
(55:39):
you live to be seventy four or no seventy six,
nine years less. If you make sixty K, you live
to be about eighty one, so four years less. So
the key to longevity a healthy bank account, Isn't that sad?
We learned that fifty percent of college graduates now move
(56:02):
back home because they do not have the money to
live out in the world thanks to the enormous debt
they incur from being a student. And we learned that
I'm in a social dilemma. I do not know what
to do. I love I love this person. I wish
that they would talk to me. I wish they would
just apologize, say hey, I'm sorry, been going through some stuff.
(56:23):
With all that's going on in the world, I was overwhelmed.
Please forgive me. Let's be friends. That's all. I would
take a phone call, a text, whatever, I'm sorry, I
was going through some stuff. Please forgive me. Let's move on,
and that'd be it. Never spoken of again. Would move
right on. But until that happens, the distance grows. So
(56:47):
that's what we learned today. And oh, was there something
else I wanted to do. Let's let me check my notes.
The Supreme Court's next move conversion therapy. We move that
that the Supreme Court is probably going to allow conversion
therapy again in the United States because if this case
goes through, it will say that state bans on conversion
(57:08):
therapy violate First Amendment rights and therefore have to be repealed.
So they're probably in this term, going to overturn same
sex marriage and allow people to be tortured out of
being gay or by or trance. I've met a few
(57:29):
straight men I'd like to convert. I'll tell you that,
but it doesn't work. I dated a straight guy. It
doesn't work. You can't convert someone that's straight to gay.
He's by obviously if we dated, but he identifies as heterosexual,
and he still comes to Vegas and sees me and
we're still great friends. But he's only ever dated one man,
(57:50):
me for like seven years. But you know, he does
not identify as gay because you are who you are.
So we learned that today too. Let's check the chat room.
Let's see agism. Yes, yeh. Try making more money as
(58:11):
a fifty year old person. Yeah, that's nearly impossible. So
on my retirement funds, I'm living to be seventy four
or seventy six. That's it. So I got fourteen more years. Shit,
I better get busy. I better. We all better get busy.
You know, we all. We all need to get busy, hoodie.
(58:34):
You know, someone in the chairman said, maybe your friend
is a mental health issue, don't we all? This Trump
presidency is affecting every part of our lives, including our relationships.
It is straining all of us and pushing us all
to the max of our borders. Groceries are out of control.
We feel powerless, and that's really what it is. We
(58:56):
all feel really powerless, and so we're trying to exert
control in the areas of power that we can because
we feel like we're out of control in every area
of our life. I don't know about you, but ever
since Trump has been president, my personal relationships have been strained.
(59:17):
They have not gotten stronger, They've gotten strained. I am Corel.
You'll be who you want to be, swamping hurt anybody.
We'll be back tomorrow at ten unless Ember's bed appointment
runs late, and then I'll be a little late. But
I think we'll be ten. I think we'll be good
until then. Today says leave comments. Thank you patrons, takes
me on dust coms forward. So for the carrel. Thanks
everybody for letting me every day. How about Wi billbo
(59:40):
I try to be stressed, stressful times child.
Speaker 7 (59:44):
It's broadcasting from a completely different point of view yours.
Listen daily to the Corral Cast on your favorite streaming service.