1 00:00:00,160 --> 00:00:06,440 Speaker 1: Listen and I'll illustrate how you listening. Uh, yeah, I've 2 00:00:06,440 --> 00:00:10,440 Speaker 1: never done that. That's apple. Yeah, it's a good Macintosh. 3 00:00:10,480 --> 00:00:11,760 Speaker 1: I got it at the airport the other day. I 4 00:00:11,800 --> 00:00:14,159 Speaker 1: forgot I had it now. I could never figure out 5 00:00:14,240 --> 00:00:16,880 Speaker 1: how to do it. It's really not hard, John, I 6 00:00:17,000 --> 00:00:19,599 Speaker 1: turned the apple kind of sideways. I figured I'd break 7 00:00:19,680 --> 00:00:24,079 Speaker 1: my teeth. Wow, it just seemed too complicated. It's not 8 00:00:24,280 --> 00:00:27,720 Speaker 1: that harder apple tissue. Wasn't that difficult to pack out it? 9 00:00:29,480 --> 00:00:32,919 Speaker 1: That's national I'm sorry, Worldwide Vegan Day. So we're celebrating 10 00:00:32,960 --> 00:00:36,040 Speaker 1: here with an apple. Yeah, Denver Mark sent out a 11 00:00:36,040 --> 00:00:40,400 Speaker 1: photo of that is a funny photo. It is you. Look, 12 00:00:40,600 --> 00:00:44,120 Speaker 1: you look thrilled, look like you're worshiping the apple. Listener 13 00:00:44,159 --> 00:00:51,839 Speaker 1: said John, it's an apple, not a grenade. All right, 14 00:00:51,840 --> 00:00:55,080 Speaker 1: your chance for some money is less than fifteen minutes away. 15 00:00:55,120 --> 00:00:57,960 Speaker 1: We got that keyword for you, So you listen up 16 00:00:57,960 --> 00:00:59,680 Speaker 1: for what the word is, and then John will tell 17 00:00:59,720 --> 00:01:02,320 Speaker 1: you how you enter coming up around for I'll just 18 00:01:02,320 --> 00:01:04,800 Speaker 1: tell you what to do with it. We are now 19 00:01:04,840 --> 00:01:08,000 Speaker 1: going to talk to Greg Totton. He is the chief 20 00:01:08,040 --> 00:01:13,039 Speaker 1: executive officer for the California District Attorneys Association. There's a 21 00:01:13,080 --> 00:01:15,360 Speaker 1: lot of insanity going on. It's hard to keep up 22 00:01:15,400 --> 00:01:20,480 Speaker 1: with it. But the California District Attorney's Association wants to 23 00:01:20,520 --> 00:01:24,240 Speaker 1: know why the state prison system is releasing violent prisoners 24 00:01:24,560 --> 00:01:29,320 Speaker 1: who haven't who have not even earned enough rehabilitation credit 25 00:01:29,840 --> 00:01:33,840 Speaker 1: to get out of prison early. And yeah, they've reoffended 26 00:01:33,880 --> 00:01:37,880 Speaker 1: and committed even more serious crimes. In some cases, prisoners 27 00:01:37,880 --> 00:01:41,039 Speaker 1: are supposed to earn credits for good behavior under Proposition 28 00:01:41,120 --> 00:01:44,479 Speaker 1: fifty seven, but that does not appear to be the case. 29 00:01:45,360 --> 00:01:48,160 Speaker 1: In a series of reports, Junie Watts of CBS News 30 00:01:48,200 --> 00:01:51,320 Speaker 1: revealed the process by which the Corrections Department is releasing 31 00:01:51,320 --> 00:01:55,440 Speaker 1: prisoners appears to be hidden from the public, arbitrary and dangerous. 32 00:01:55,440 --> 00:01:59,520 Speaker 1: And one of the cases that cited is Smiley mart 33 00:01:59,600 --> 00:02:03,040 Speaker 1: Remember that name. He's the shooting suspect from up in Sacramento, 34 00:02:03,040 --> 00:02:05,960 Speaker 1: the mass shooting from earlier. Yeah, yeah, bunny, how that 35 00:02:06,040 --> 00:02:08,600 Speaker 1: coverage just died down. He got enough good credits even 36 00:02:08,639 --> 00:02:11,480 Speaker 1: though apparently he was fighting all the time with inmates. Yeah, 37 00:02:11,480 --> 00:02:13,120 Speaker 1: they're fake credits. That's something We've got to talk to 38 00:02:13,160 --> 00:02:16,520 Speaker 1: Greg Totton here, because that Smiley Martin case made it 39 00:02:16,560 --> 00:02:19,680 Speaker 1: obvious that they're just making up this credit nonsense because 40 00:02:19,720 --> 00:02:23,680 Speaker 1: that guy was in ten different fights. Greggy, there, I 41 00:02:23,760 --> 00:02:27,120 Speaker 1: am here, happy to be with you today. Yeah, what 42 00:02:27,160 --> 00:02:33,240 Speaker 1: we've got. What we've got is a group of bureaucrats 43 00:02:33,320 --> 00:02:38,040 Speaker 1: who are unaccountable, who are making decisions behind closed doors 44 00:02:38,120 --> 00:02:44,080 Speaker 1: with virtually zero transparency, to release very dangerous offenders like 45 00:02:44,280 --> 00:02:47,680 Speaker 1: Smiley Martin back into our streets. And we should not 46 00:02:47,720 --> 00:02:51,239 Speaker 1: be surprised that violent crime is increasing, that our homicide 47 00:02:51,280 --> 00:02:55,480 Speaker 1: rate has been escalating really for the last three years. 48 00:02:55,919 --> 00:03:00,959 Speaker 1: These early releases seem more focused on reduced state prison 49 00:03:01,040 --> 00:03:05,400 Speaker 1: population than they do protecting the public. And we as 50 00:03:05,440 --> 00:03:10,120 Speaker 1: an association, we represent about thirty five hundred prossecutors, all 51 00:03:10,160 --> 00:03:14,320 Speaker 1: but one elected district attorney, and we're calling attention to 52 00:03:14,360 --> 00:03:19,280 Speaker 1: this issue. We want to both demand from CDCR an 53 00:03:19,280 --> 00:03:23,400 Speaker 1: explanation for what, frankly is inexplicable in terms of the 54 00:03:23,680 --> 00:03:26,840 Speaker 1: dangerous decisions they're making, and we also want to educate 55 00:03:26,880 --> 00:03:32,480 Speaker 1: the public to understand what these bureaucrats are doing and 56 00:03:32,600 --> 00:03:36,600 Speaker 1: demand a stop to it. Talk about the Smiley Martin case. 57 00:03:37,200 --> 00:03:38,920 Speaker 1: What did he do to end up in prison? To 58 00:03:39,000 --> 00:03:43,840 Speaker 1: begin with, he committed a very aggravated act of domestic violence, 59 00:03:43,920 --> 00:03:48,400 Speaker 1: and while he was in prison he assaulted another inmate. 60 00:03:48,960 --> 00:03:54,240 Speaker 1: He had been The analysis on him had been, don't 61 00:03:54,320 --> 00:03:57,480 Speaker 1: release this guy, he's too dangerous. The district attorney and 62 00:03:57,520 --> 00:04:03,200 Speaker 1: Sacramento had urged that he be released. He gets again 63 00:04:03,480 --> 00:04:07,560 Speaker 1: for reasons that are hard to understand. He gets credits 64 00:04:07,600 --> 00:04:12,800 Speaker 1: for programs that he wasn't fully engaged in, he wasn't 65 00:04:12,840 --> 00:04:18,640 Speaker 1: committed to participating in, and he's suddenly out. And read 66 00:04:18,800 --> 00:04:20,880 Speaker 1: one news story that he was in a number of 67 00:04:20,880 --> 00:04:24,960 Speaker 1: fights and disputes in prison, that he was always in trouble. Yes, 68 00:04:25,160 --> 00:04:28,880 Speaker 1: that has been in the reports. This guy was not 69 00:04:29,080 --> 00:04:33,120 Speaker 1: somebody you would consider a high performing state prison in 70 00:04:33,200 --> 00:04:36,520 Speaker 1: that he was he was a problem. Is there just 71 00:04:36,640 --> 00:04:39,640 Speaker 1: one explanation that they just want to dump all the 72 00:04:39,680 --> 00:04:44,240 Speaker 1: bodies out of prison and all the formulas and the 73 00:04:44,320 --> 00:04:48,600 Speaker 1: good credit rehabilitation scenarios. It's just eyewash. It's just a 74 00:04:48,680 --> 00:04:51,240 Speaker 1: cover story. They want to get rid of everybody. No 75 00:04:51,320 --> 00:04:55,040 Speaker 1: more prisons. They're slowly abolishing the prison from the inside. 76 00:04:56,279 --> 00:04:59,560 Speaker 1: I think if there was a degree of intellectual honesty 77 00:04:59,640 --> 00:05:05,600 Speaker 1: on the they would admit that. But obviously they to 78 00:05:05,839 --> 00:05:09,720 Speaker 1: smoke in mirrors, try to say there's other purposes rehabilitation, 79 00:05:09,960 --> 00:05:12,520 Speaker 1: and these people were sentenced to too long of sentences. 80 00:05:12,560 --> 00:05:15,919 Speaker 1: We have other examples. Well, did they get this power 81 00:05:15,960 --> 00:05:18,200 Speaker 1: from Prop. Fifty seven, which the voters passed a few 82 00:05:18,279 --> 00:05:22,240 Speaker 1: years ago that gave him carte blanche to completely eviscerate 83 00:05:23,800 --> 00:05:29,680 Speaker 1: the prisons. It's certainly broadened the power of CDCR bureaucrats 84 00:05:29,720 --> 00:05:34,520 Speaker 1: to grant early releases for credits and other considerations. But 85 00:05:35,440 --> 00:05:39,239 Speaker 1: we think, we think they're helped in ongoing beyond even 86 00:05:39,320 --> 00:05:44,719 Speaker 1: what Prop. Fifty seven authorized in terms of credits for 87 00:05:45,320 --> 00:05:49,840 Speaker 1: programming and things of that sort. You know, to rehabilitate somebody, 88 00:05:49,880 --> 00:05:51,880 Speaker 1: they have to they have to serve their sentence. They 89 00:05:51,920 --> 00:05:55,760 Speaker 1: have to during that time participate in programs that can 90 00:05:55,760 --> 00:05:59,200 Speaker 1: often last a year to eighteen months. Do they actually 91 00:06:00,080 --> 00:06:03,520 Speaker 1: ask you two questions here they're connected. Do they really 92 00:06:03,560 --> 00:06:07,360 Speaker 1: attend these programs? And do these programs actually work? Do 93 00:06:07,440 --> 00:06:10,000 Speaker 1: they really do any good? Or again, this is all 94 00:06:10,080 --> 00:06:14,400 Speaker 1: just for our press release to pretend to the public 95 00:06:14,600 --> 00:06:17,520 Speaker 1: that they're making the world safe. I don't. I don't 96 00:06:17,560 --> 00:06:19,680 Speaker 1: think these programs really work, and I don't think these 97 00:06:19,760 --> 00:06:24,119 Speaker 1: guys even go very much. I think it's all a hoax. Well, 98 00:06:25,560 --> 00:06:28,840 Speaker 1: the statistics seem to bear out what you're saying. I mean, 99 00:06:29,520 --> 00:06:32,880 Speaker 1: in many of these cases, we're seeing people who have 100 00:06:33,000 --> 00:06:37,960 Speaker 1: allegedly participated in programs commit more serious crime when they 101 00:06:38,000 --> 00:06:41,919 Speaker 1: get out. We've you know, we've got a career arsonists 102 00:06:41,920 --> 00:06:46,320 Speaker 1: who committed I think close to eighteen arsons in Yolo 103 00:06:46,400 --> 00:06:49,480 Speaker 1: County who was sentenced to forty years. He's winding up 104 00:06:49,560 --> 00:06:53,040 Speaker 1: getting out after a little less than fourteen years and 105 00:06:53,480 --> 00:06:57,040 Speaker 1: at great risk to the public. We've got another guy 106 00:06:57,120 --> 00:07:02,479 Speaker 1: in El Dorado County who committed bolt multiple residential burglaries, 107 00:07:02,600 --> 00:07:05,240 Speaker 1: was sentenced to thirty years. This was a career criminal 108 00:07:05,279 --> 00:07:08,040 Speaker 1: who had been in our prison for more than two 109 00:07:08,120 --> 00:07:13,280 Speaker 1: decades on gradually escalating crime. He gets at thirty year 110 00:07:13,360 --> 00:07:17,280 Speaker 1: sentence and is being released after five. For somebody with 111 00:07:17,360 --> 00:07:21,520 Speaker 1: the magnitude of those problems to expect that after serving 112 00:07:21,560 --> 00:07:26,920 Speaker 1: a very markedly reduced sentence they're going to suddenly be rehabilitated, 113 00:07:27,000 --> 00:07:31,640 Speaker 1: I think is simply a false premise, and it's something 114 00:07:31,640 --> 00:07:34,240 Speaker 1: that the public has to rise up and say we've 115 00:07:34,280 --> 00:07:38,200 Speaker 1: had enough, Greg, and talk about Another doozy of a 116 00:07:38,240 --> 00:07:42,080 Speaker 1: piece of legislation sent upill thirteen ninety one deals with 117 00:07:42,200 --> 00:07:45,640 Speaker 1: juveniles convicted of crimes as adults. And there's a report 118 00:07:45,720 --> 00:07:48,920 Speaker 1: here that a convicted murderer by the name of Daniel Marsh, 119 00:07:49,040 --> 00:07:52,640 Speaker 1: who apparently was just days short of his sixteenth birthday 120 00:07:52,640 --> 00:07:56,960 Speaker 1: and committed a terrible double homicide, could actually be getting 121 00:07:57,000 --> 00:08:02,280 Speaker 1: out early. Explain this story. Yeah, this legislation essentially allowed 122 00:08:02,360 --> 00:08:09,120 Speaker 1: the early parole of individuals who as juveniles committed crimes 123 00:08:09,160 --> 00:08:12,880 Speaker 1: that were very aggravated and for which they were prosecuted 124 00:08:12,920 --> 00:08:18,000 Speaker 1: as adults under then existing law here in California, and 125 00:08:18,200 --> 00:08:20,800 Speaker 1: this allows for the early release. The issue that is 126 00:08:20,840 --> 00:08:25,560 Speaker 1: being litigated now is the retroactivity of thirteen ninety one, 127 00:08:25,760 --> 00:08:28,679 Speaker 1: and that's being heard in the Third District Court of Appeal. 128 00:08:29,640 --> 00:08:34,319 Speaker 1: If it is deemed fully retroactive, David Marsh will be released. 129 00:08:34,400 --> 00:08:37,120 Speaker 1: And well, he got sent of months. He killed an 130 00:08:37,160 --> 00:08:40,120 Speaker 1: elderly couple. He did was he stabbed him one hundred 131 00:08:40,120 --> 00:08:43,400 Speaker 1: and twenty times, and he got fifty two years to life. 132 00:08:43,400 --> 00:08:46,200 Speaker 1: But he could be out after only ten years and 133 00:08:46,200 --> 00:08:49,240 Speaker 1: correct one more thing. He said he got an exhilarating 134 00:08:49,360 --> 00:08:53,560 Speaker 1: feeling after he stabbed them one hundred and twenty times. Now, 135 00:08:54,000 --> 00:08:58,040 Speaker 1: this guy is the worst of the worst. He admitted 136 00:08:58,080 --> 00:09:04,120 Speaker 1: he enjoyed killing this poor couple. I because he was 137 00:09:04,200 --> 00:09:06,160 Speaker 1: under eighteen, Johnny didn't know what he was doing. This 138 00:09:06,320 --> 00:09:08,760 Speaker 1: guy's up for early release after ten years, when he 139 00:09:08,800 --> 00:09:12,160 Speaker 1: should be there until he dies. It's it's gotten this bad. 140 00:09:12,480 --> 00:09:14,520 Speaker 1: This is as bad as it can get. Why why 141 00:09:14,559 --> 00:09:17,320 Speaker 1: not let out just all the convicted murders. If you're 142 00:09:17,320 --> 00:09:20,840 Speaker 1: gonna let this guy out, let them all out. They 143 00:09:20,880 --> 00:09:25,520 Speaker 1: have changed our law of murder so that unless you're 144 00:09:25,559 --> 00:09:29,640 Speaker 1: the actual killer, it's hard to hold these individuals are accountable. 145 00:09:29,720 --> 00:09:33,760 Speaker 1: Let me ask you something. This movement and infects newsome 146 00:09:33,840 --> 00:09:37,760 Speaker 1: the Democratic legislature. There's some das like George Gascone, like 147 00:09:37,840 --> 00:09:40,320 Speaker 1: that nut in San Francisco got kicked out of office. 148 00:09:40,559 --> 00:09:43,760 Speaker 1: What do they want to happen to us? Do they 149 00:09:43,800 --> 00:09:47,240 Speaker 1: want us all to die some horrible death with some 150 00:09:47,320 --> 00:09:50,679 Speaker 1: crazy psycho stabbing us a hundred times? That's what this 151 00:09:50,760 --> 00:09:52,800 Speaker 1: is gonna is gonna lead to just more and more 152 00:09:52,840 --> 00:09:56,400 Speaker 1: of this. Why do they want this? It's hard for 153 00:09:56,440 --> 00:09:59,000 Speaker 1: me to speculate as to what their state of mind is. 154 00:09:59,120 --> 00:10:03,240 Speaker 1: But the legisla nature dozen deeds seem held bent on 155 00:10:03,360 --> 00:10:06,960 Speaker 1: reforming our criminal justice system in a way that benefits 156 00:10:07,040 --> 00:10:12,839 Speaker 1: criminals and endangers the publics. Is this the legislature in 157 00:10:12,840 --> 00:10:16,000 Speaker 1: the governor? Are they part of a death cult against us? Well, 158 00:10:16,240 --> 00:10:17,839 Speaker 1: I mean, what else is going to happen if you 159 00:10:17,920 --> 00:10:22,240 Speaker 1: let this guy Marsh out? You know, trying to try 160 00:10:22,320 --> 00:10:24,400 Speaker 1: to look into their minds, I think I think they 161 00:10:24,440 --> 00:10:28,199 Speaker 1: think the criminal justice system is too harsh. The reality is, 162 00:10:28,960 --> 00:10:32,520 Speaker 1: the vast majority of people who are serving state prison 163 00:10:32,600 --> 00:10:37,360 Speaker 1: sentences are exceedingly violent and exceedingly dangerous in there. There 164 00:10:37,400 --> 00:10:40,320 Speaker 1: for a reason our state prison population at its high 165 00:10:40,360 --> 00:10:43,400 Speaker 1: watermark was one hundred and seventy five thousand. We are 166 00:10:43,480 --> 00:10:47,200 Speaker 1: now down to less than one hundred thousand. And those 167 00:10:47,280 --> 00:10:52,400 Speaker 1: people that are in prison need incapacitation through incarceration, many 168 00:10:52,440 --> 00:10:55,280 Speaker 1: of them if they're released. We've seen study after study 169 00:10:56,360 --> 00:11:00,280 Speaker 1: showing a regular recidivism rate of about seventy percent. So 170 00:11:00,280 --> 00:11:02,840 Speaker 1: if you take a guy like David Marsh and you 171 00:11:02,960 --> 00:11:07,760 Speaker 1: release him, do we realistically think he's gonna, you know, 172 00:11:07,960 --> 00:11:10,840 Speaker 1: behave himself. He's going to go for the murder high again. 173 00:11:11,559 --> 00:11:14,320 Speaker 1: He's gonna go for that exhilarating feeling that he got 174 00:11:14,400 --> 00:11:17,199 Speaker 1: stabbing the elderly couple one hundred and twenty times we 175 00:11:17,840 --> 00:11:20,240 Speaker 1: have to go. We're running behind. Greg. Thanks for coming 176 00:11:20,280 --> 00:11:22,839 Speaker 1: on with us. Yeah, we appreciate your organization calling this 177 00:11:22,960 --> 00:11:24,920 Speaker 1: out and bringing it to light. This is Greg Totten, 178 00:11:25,000 --> 00:11:28,920 Speaker 1: chief executive officer of the California District Attorney's Association. Thanks 179 00:11:28,960 --> 00:11:31,439 Speaker 1: for coming on, and we've got deb Mark Live in 180 00:11:31,559 --> 00:11:34,760 Speaker 1: twenty for our Calfeine newsroom. Looking at the Apple picture 181 00:11:34,800 --> 00:11:36,960 Speaker 1: again of you. You look like a priest at the 182 00:11:36,960 --> 00:11:40,599 Speaker 1: altar holding up the host. This is the body of 183 00:11:40,640 --> 00:11:44,319 Speaker 1: doesn't it look like that? Yeah, well some sort of 184 00:11:44,360 --> 00:11:48,280 Speaker 1: a ceremony. I wasn't real comfortable. You're right, you looked 185 00:11:48,280 --> 00:11:51,679 Speaker 1: at it as it was a foreign object. Yes, I know. 186 00:11:51,880 --> 00:11:54,920 Speaker 1: Well their face is saying get this away from me. 187 00:11:55,720 --> 00:11:58,080 Speaker 1: Rarely have I have I held an apple that long. 188 00:11:58,600 --> 00:12:02,240 Speaker 1: Happy World Vegan Day. It is World Vegan Day, so 189 00:12:02,280 --> 00:12:05,680 Speaker 1: I think in supportive World Vegan Day, everybody should have 190 00:12:05,720 --> 00:12:08,199 Speaker 1: a vegan meal, at least one vegan meal today. Eat 191 00:12:08,200 --> 00:12:11,880 Speaker 1: a vegan, not eat a vegan. You already failed at breakfast, 192 00:12:11,920 --> 00:12:15,200 Speaker 1: so let me see you have dinner. I still have 193 00:12:15,280 --> 00:12:17,480 Speaker 1: dinner to come, right, Yeah, so why don't you go 194 00:12:17,600 --> 00:12:23,920 Speaker 1: vegan tonight? Go vegan? Can I'm like cheese? No? You can't. Well, 195 00:12:23,920 --> 00:12:26,840 Speaker 1: there you can buy vegan cheese. I don't eat that. Oh, 196 00:12:27,520 --> 00:12:30,319 Speaker 1: don't call it that. It's not cheese. Then okay, then 197 00:12:30,320 --> 00:12:33,840 Speaker 1: what do you call it? Vegan mush rubber vegan, rubber 198 00:12:36,320 --> 00:12:39,720 Speaker 1: vegan crap. I've seen it. It looks like died rubber. Okay, 199 00:12:39,720 --> 00:12:42,199 Speaker 1: then forget. You don't need to even have any kind 200 00:12:42,240 --> 00:12:46,200 Speaker 1: of fake cheese. Ken. You like keen wa, you like hale, 201 00:12:46,720 --> 00:12:49,920 Speaker 1: you like avocado diner. That's what do you think I 202 00:12:49,960 --> 00:12:53,280 Speaker 1: have every night? Well, look at you, yes, look at me. 203 00:12:53,520 --> 00:12:57,280 Speaker 1: Look what it's done to your brain. Eric you, mister Q. 204 00:12:57,800 --> 00:13:03,199 Speaker 1: That's a that's a hearty meal. Huh kale. And yeah 205 00:13:03,240 --> 00:13:06,240 Speaker 1: it's great. Ye. Now, our last guest was important, And 206 00:13:06,400 --> 00:13:08,240 Speaker 1: what I wanted to say about it is this, And 207 00:13:08,280 --> 00:13:10,640 Speaker 1: we saw this with Terry Brown in prop fifty seven 208 00:13:11,400 --> 00:13:13,960 Speaker 1: years back when he was governor. What they do is 209 00:13:14,000 --> 00:13:17,400 Speaker 1: they sell the voters a bill of goods with these propositions. Oh, 210 00:13:17,440 --> 00:13:20,440 Speaker 1: don't worry, it's gonna be the non serious, non violent 211 00:13:20,480 --> 00:13:24,640 Speaker 1: offenders who really got overcharged and over sentenced. We're just 212 00:13:24,720 --> 00:13:27,400 Speaker 1: trying to right the wrong and so they'll be eligible 213 00:13:27,400 --> 00:13:30,760 Speaker 1: for early release and good time credits. Then the prison 214 00:13:30,880 --> 00:13:33,480 Speaker 1: system looks around and says, not the thugs. We got 215 00:13:33,480 --> 00:13:36,319 Speaker 1: in here, so we have to rig this. So it 216 00:13:36,360 --> 00:13:38,360 Speaker 1: looks like, you know, they're getting good time credits and 217 00:13:38,360 --> 00:13:41,440 Speaker 1: they're not serious violent felones, but a lot of mark well, 218 00:13:41,480 --> 00:13:44,120 Speaker 1: you know, because what's left in the prisons now, especially 219 00:13:44,200 --> 00:13:46,760 Speaker 1: as the really worst of the worst, because they've released 220 00:13:46,760 --> 00:13:49,520 Speaker 1: so many people already who could be left, it's got 221 00:13:49,520 --> 00:13:52,400 Speaker 1: to be the really bad ones. I don't I don't know. 222 00:13:52,520 --> 00:13:55,520 Speaker 1: I don't know anybody wants these guys out, Like if 223 00:13:55,559 --> 00:13:58,760 Speaker 1: you told a hundred people on the show, they vote 224 00:13:58,760 --> 00:14:01,160 Speaker 1: for these ballot measures because they think it's all it's 225 00:14:01,160 --> 00:14:04,319 Speaker 1: a poor guy that god, a victim of the injustice 226 00:14:04,320 --> 00:14:07,360 Speaker 1: of our system. Why after all this time on the planet, 227 00:14:07,760 --> 00:14:11,840 Speaker 1: do people trust anything that a government official says, that 228 00:14:11,960 --> 00:14:15,920 Speaker 1: any candidate says. Now during election season and this goes 229 00:14:15,920 --> 00:14:19,840 Speaker 1: for both sides, and I see candidates holding rallies and 230 00:14:19,920 --> 00:14:23,160 Speaker 1: I see people showing up sometimes by the thousands, and 231 00:14:23,240 --> 00:14:27,040 Speaker 1: I'm thinking, what's wrong with you? You actually believe in 232 00:14:27,080 --> 00:14:29,600 Speaker 1: this person to the point where you got in the 233 00:14:29,640 --> 00:14:31,960 Speaker 1: car and you drove over there, and you stood in line, 234 00:14:31,960 --> 00:14:34,800 Speaker 1: and you're gonna spend an hour listening to prattle, these 235 00:14:34,840 --> 00:14:39,880 Speaker 1: prepackaged lines that have already been tested to elicit applause 236 00:14:40,040 --> 00:14:42,840 Speaker 1: or laughter. You're really doing that with your day? You 237 00:14:42,960 --> 00:14:46,000 Speaker 1: really think this man of this woman selling you the truth? 238 00:14:46,840 --> 00:14:49,440 Speaker 1: What is that about human nature? Like? How many times 239 00:14:49,440 --> 00:14:51,640 Speaker 1: do you have to get hit in the head? I 240 00:14:52,560 --> 00:14:54,800 Speaker 1: don't get it. I mean, you find me if you 241 00:14:54,880 --> 00:14:57,200 Speaker 1: go out a hundred people on the street, you can 242 00:14:57,240 --> 00:14:59,800 Speaker 1: even go up to the homeless people. The Daniel marsh 243 00:14:59,800 --> 00:15:03,120 Speaker 1: thing stabbed that couple in Davis one hundred and twenty times, 244 00:15:03,120 --> 00:15:05,280 Speaker 1: one hundred and twenty times. He might get out in 245 00:15:05,320 --> 00:15:09,000 Speaker 1: ten years. Who says that's a good idea, Show me 246 00:15:09,080 --> 00:15:12,600 Speaker 1: that person and he felt exhilaration when he stabbed them 247 00:15:12,640 --> 00:15:14,800 Speaker 1: to death. Yes, tell them that part of the story. 248 00:15:14,960 --> 00:15:18,760 Speaker 1: They felt he felt exhilaration. Now, well, but you gotta 249 00:15:18,760 --> 00:15:20,560 Speaker 1: make sure you tell me he goesn't quite sixteen years 250 00:15:20,560 --> 00:15:23,720 Speaker 1: old yet, because that does touch some people who show 251 00:15:23,760 --> 00:15:25,880 Speaker 1: me the person they got to be out there because 252 00:15:26,600 --> 00:15:32,320 Speaker 1: but presumably there's a majority in favor of this. Presumably. Yes, 253 00:15:32,840 --> 00:15:35,080 Speaker 1: we know that George Gaston feels this way. But that's 254 00:15:35,080 --> 00:15:38,360 Speaker 1: about all I know. Because they lie with these proposition 255 00:15:38,440 --> 00:15:43,240 Speaker 1: campaigns and the lives work. People don't read anything beyond 256 00:15:43,600 --> 00:15:46,240 Speaker 1: the top line. They don't even see the top line 257 00:15:46,280 --> 00:15:49,040 Speaker 1: until the day they vote. They see something like the 258 00:15:49,240 --> 00:15:53,560 Speaker 1: Safe the Safe Neighborhoods and Schools Act. Any inside of 259 00:15:53,560 --> 00:15:57,880 Speaker 1: that is some cancerous piece of garbage which actually lets 260 00:15:57,880 --> 00:16:01,960 Speaker 1: out Daniel Marsh forty years early after CAB. I mean, 261 00:16:02,280 --> 00:16:05,800 Speaker 1: I cannot believe how ignorant people are, and how manipulous, 262 00:16:05,800 --> 00:16:09,840 Speaker 1: how easily manipulated they are, how credulous and gullible they are, 263 00:16:09,920 --> 00:16:12,960 Speaker 1: how stupid they are. Really that we have a law 264 00:16:13,000 --> 00:16:17,480 Speaker 1: that lets out Daniel Marsh is beyond comprehension. Well, when 265 00:16:17,560 --> 00:16:22,720 Speaker 1: we come back COVID the flu. Now the big panic 266 00:16:22,800 --> 00:16:27,160 Speaker 1: is over something called r s V. We'll explain what 267 00:16:27,200 --> 00:16:29,800 Speaker 1: it is and why everybody's pretty worked up on it. 268 00:16:30,040 --> 00:16:32,640 Speaker 1: Coming up after the news. Johnny Ken caf I AM 269 00:16:32,680 --> 00:16:35,880 Speaker 1: six forty live everywhere on the iHeartRadio app. An early 270 00:16:35,960 --> 00:16:38,720 Speaker 1: reminder that we've got the moist line coming back around 271 00:16:38,760 --> 00:16:41,600 Speaker 1: on Friday, three days away. You have time to leave 272 00:16:41,640 --> 00:16:43,280 Speaker 1: your messages. But if you've got something right now you 273 00:16:43,360 --> 00:16:45,840 Speaker 1: want to say, you can use the iHeartRadio app, but 274 00:16:45,920 --> 00:16:48,560 Speaker 1: the microphone icon to leave the message recall the toll 275 00:16:48,600 --> 00:16:52,720 Speaker 1: free number one eight seven seven moist eighty six one 276 00:16:52,840 --> 00:16:56,560 Speaker 1: eight seven seven six six four seven eight eight six, 277 00:16:57,040 --> 00:17:00,320 Speaker 1: and a reminder that next Monday, the five o'clock hour 278 00:17:00,640 --> 00:17:03,840 Speaker 1: is the hour of candidates. If you're running for anything, 279 00:17:04,240 --> 00:17:06,520 Speaker 1: or you know somebody that is passing on the message, 280 00:17:06,920 --> 00:17:08,600 Speaker 1: they can get through if they can get through on 281 00:17:08,600 --> 00:17:11,080 Speaker 1: the phone lines. Yeah, you can't use the back lines, 282 00:17:11,520 --> 00:17:14,359 Speaker 1: and you get thirty seconds to make your pitch for office. 283 00:17:14,920 --> 00:17:19,640 Speaker 1: That's Monday, five o'clock hour here on the Johnny Ken Show. Well, 284 00:17:19,720 --> 00:17:24,160 Speaker 1: what are they calling it this year? The tri deemic, covid, 285 00:17:25,000 --> 00:17:31,119 Speaker 1: the flu, and now we have r s V which 286 00:17:31,160 --> 00:17:34,920 Speaker 1: stands for respiratory. I don't know what would you go with? 287 00:17:35,040 --> 00:17:43,000 Speaker 1: Sincial virus, sink sinkill. That's what the s is, sink cicchel, 288 00:17:43,800 --> 00:17:49,000 Speaker 1: sink schel. It is a an infection that impedes the airwaves. 289 00:17:49,800 --> 00:17:53,720 Speaker 1: It can particularly affect very young children because they have 290 00:17:53,880 --> 00:17:59,159 Speaker 1: tiny airways. That's why you're seeing the stories about pediatric 291 00:17:59,240 --> 00:18:03,600 Speaker 1: units at hospitals being overwhelmed. Right now. You heard on 292 00:18:03,680 --> 00:18:06,359 Speaker 1: the news with Deborah Mark that down in Orange County 293 00:18:06,440 --> 00:18:11,600 Speaker 1: they're already claiming that they're getting pretty full. The pediatrition 294 00:18:11,640 --> 00:18:14,440 Speaker 1: in chief of Children's Hospital of Orange County. That's three 295 00:18:14,800 --> 00:18:17,919 Speaker 1: and thirty four beds, so filled. Children of being treated 296 00:18:18,000 --> 00:18:21,480 Speaker 1: right in the emergency room as they wait for impatient beds, 297 00:18:21,520 --> 00:18:24,480 Speaker 1: sometimes for more than twenty four hours. Now, rs V 298 00:18:24,720 --> 00:18:29,000 Speaker 1: is not new. It is a common seasonal infection. You 299 00:18:29,160 --> 00:18:31,399 Speaker 1: kind of ask yourself, then, how come were I just 300 00:18:31,920 --> 00:18:33,760 Speaker 1: have you ever heard of this stim before this round 301 00:18:33,760 --> 00:18:37,119 Speaker 1: of news stories, I've not seen You've had small children, 302 00:18:37,160 --> 00:18:40,359 Speaker 1: so maybe you heard of it. I have heard of 303 00:18:40,400 --> 00:18:43,359 Speaker 1: it vaguely. I've heard of RSV. I didn't really know 304 00:18:43,400 --> 00:18:46,080 Speaker 1: what it was, though, and it didn't come up with 305 00:18:46,119 --> 00:18:49,800 Speaker 1: my kids or anybody else's kids that I know. And 306 00:18:49,960 --> 00:18:52,480 Speaker 1: most of the time it's very mild. It is very 307 00:18:52,560 --> 00:18:56,240 Speaker 1: much it's just another cold so all, but you could have, 308 00:18:56,560 --> 00:18:58,680 Speaker 1: like you did with COVID, a small percentage of people 309 00:18:58,720 --> 00:19:01,760 Speaker 1: that fall sicker. But that's why they sometimes have to 310 00:19:01,760 --> 00:19:03,800 Speaker 1: go to the emergency room with it. What they think 311 00:19:03,920 --> 00:19:09,439 Speaker 1: happened here is is all the parrots who isolated their 312 00:19:09,520 --> 00:19:12,840 Speaker 1: kids for over two years. Well sometimes they had to 313 00:19:12,960 --> 00:19:16,520 Speaker 1: because the schools were closed, the daycares were closed. And yeah, 314 00:19:16,560 --> 00:19:21,200 Speaker 1: it was a bad idea because because their immune systems 315 00:19:21,200 --> 00:19:25,040 Speaker 1: didn't get exposed to a lot, and so now the 316 00:19:25,080 --> 00:19:29,040 Speaker 1: immune system is not prepared to deal with an RSV infection, 317 00:19:29,760 --> 00:19:33,760 Speaker 1: and now the symptoms are are really strong because the 318 00:19:33,760 --> 00:19:36,600 Speaker 1: immune system didn't develop. When you get colds as a 319 00:19:36,600 --> 00:19:39,600 Speaker 1: little kid, or you get exposed to pathogens as a 320 00:19:39,600 --> 00:19:43,320 Speaker 1: little kid, even if you don't get sick, it stimulates 321 00:19:43,359 --> 00:19:48,240 Speaker 1: the immune system everyone to recognize the invasion next time. Yeah, 322 00:19:48,320 --> 00:19:52,080 Speaker 1: most of the time you don't get sick, but every 323 00:19:52,119 --> 00:19:54,760 Speaker 1: time it strengthens your system a little more and a 324 00:19:54,760 --> 00:19:57,960 Speaker 1: little more, and you go two years without encountering the 325 00:19:57,960 --> 00:20:00,879 Speaker 1: outside world. Yeah, you got a pretty a naked immune 326 00:20:00,880 --> 00:20:06,800 Speaker 1: system there. Here's an explanation. RSV predominantly affects the small 327 00:20:06,920 --> 00:20:11,760 Speaker 1: airwaves called bronchioles that branch off from your bronchi and 328 00:20:11,840 --> 00:20:17,320 Speaker 1: the lungs. They're tiny straw like tubules can become blocked 329 00:20:17,840 --> 00:20:21,359 Speaker 1: by even minuscule amounts of mucus, particularly in infants and 330 00:20:21,440 --> 00:20:25,280 Speaker 1: young children. The smaller you are, the smaller airways are, 331 00:20:25,359 --> 00:20:30,000 Speaker 1: says one doctor. High risk baby sometimes get a monoclonal anybody. 332 00:20:30,000 --> 00:20:33,680 Speaker 1: They can prevent infection a drug that is so expensive, 333 00:20:33,720 --> 00:20:37,479 Speaker 1: though it's rarely offered, and yes, nobody disagrees with what 334 00:20:37,600 --> 00:20:40,760 Speaker 1: John said. The fact that the kids were not exposed 335 00:20:40,800 --> 00:20:42,960 Speaker 1: to RSV the last couple of years because they did 336 00:20:43,000 --> 00:20:46,240 Speaker 1: not have much interaction with other people, is one of 337 00:20:46,240 --> 00:20:49,320 Speaker 1: the reasons that we're seeing a spike in cases this year. 338 00:20:49,400 --> 00:20:52,240 Speaker 1: And that's why you shouldn't be a dopey parent and 339 00:20:52,320 --> 00:20:55,080 Speaker 1: walk your kid around with a mask on. I mean, 340 00:20:55,080 --> 00:20:57,880 Speaker 1: we all saw two year olds and babies with masks. 341 00:20:58,840 --> 00:21:00,480 Speaker 1: But don't you think they're going to do now that 342 00:21:00,520 --> 00:21:02,520 Speaker 1: they're scared of RSV and they don't want their child, 343 00:21:02,720 --> 00:21:04,280 Speaker 1: they're going to keep the mask on there for a 344 00:21:04,280 --> 00:21:07,680 Speaker 1: few months here, Well, you're just gonna perpetuate this, this problem. 345 00:21:08,080 --> 00:21:11,400 Speaker 1: Your kid has to experience life, they have to experience 346 00:21:11,440 --> 00:21:15,879 Speaker 1: all the germs out there, and there's no way the 347 00:21:15,960 --> 00:21:18,480 Speaker 1: schools never should have closed for these little kids because 348 00:21:18,480 --> 00:21:20,639 Speaker 1: the kids weren't affected by COVID. Same thing at the 349 00:21:20,720 --> 00:21:24,400 Speaker 1: daycare centers, and and same thing not having friends coming 350 00:21:24,400 --> 00:21:26,840 Speaker 1: over in play. I mean, all that stuff was just 351 00:21:27,480 --> 00:21:30,600 Speaker 1: ridiculous because there was no threat. And because you do 352 00:21:30,680 --> 00:21:35,280 Speaker 1: something ridiculous, now there's a counter consequence. It's like, now 353 00:21:35,320 --> 00:21:38,720 Speaker 1: you're gonna you're gonna get very ill from viruses that 354 00:21:38,720 --> 00:21:42,920 Speaker 1: you should have immunity to. Right, whenever you do something 355 00:21:42,960 --> 00:21:46,879 Speaker 1: that's outside the normal evolution of how a life progresses, 356 00:21:47,080 --> 00:21:50,920 Speaker 1: you pay for it somewhere down the line. Now, RSV 357 00:21:51,680 --> 00:21:56,000 Speaker 1: in a typical year does actually kill fourteen thousand adults 358 00:21:56,040 --> 00:21:59,639 Speaker 1: sixty five and older about three hundred children under the 359 00:21:59,680 --> 00:22:02,719 Speaker 1: age of five. That's just weird that never heard much 360 00:22:02,760 --> 00:22:04,640 Speaker 1: about it. You know, you would think the way people 361 00:22:04,640 --> 00:22:07,840 Speaker 1: panicked over COVID, they panick over fourteen thousand people dying 362 00:22:07,840 --> 00:22:11,199 Speaker 1: a year from RSV. Because nobody publicized it as RSV. 363 00:22:11,800 --> 00:22:17,320 Speaker 1: It was probably just considered a cold, the pneumonia. Right now, 364 00:22:17,960 --> 00:22:21,240 Speaker 1: what what the media does and the medical establishment does 365 00:22:21,600 --> 00:22:25,119 Speaker 1: is they give you a catchy name for the stuff. 366 00:22:25,200 --> 00:22:27,919 Speaker 1: What that we just called colds and flu So we 367 00:22:28,000 --> 00:22:31,879 Speaker 1: went from COVID, now we've got RSV, and you know, 368 00:22:31,920 --> 00:22:37,760 Speaker 1: they started naming the flus every year after different geographical regions. Now, 369 00:22:37,920 --> 00:22:42,160 Speaker 1: Fiser announced that it does have an RSV vaccine that 370 00:22:42,200 --> 00:22:45,040 Speaker 1: they can give to women during pregnancy. They can protect 371 00:22:45,040 --> 00:22:49,080 Speaker 1: infants from developing severe symptoms during the first six months 372 00:22:49,119 --> 00:22:54,080 Speaker 1: after birth. So that's news that came out today. Actually, 373 00:22:54,920 --> 00:22:58,119 Speaker 1: because this story in The New York Times about RSV 374 00:22:58,240 --> 00:23:01,160 Speaker 1: talks about how we don't tend to have vaccines here, 375 00:23:01,200 --> 00:23:03,879 Speaker 1: but they do have them in Europe, and they're going 376 00:23:03,960 --> 00:23:07,160 Speaker 1: to start moving them quicker to this country to deal 377 00:23:07,200 --> 00:23:14,159 Speaker 1: with this situation. According to their vaccine research department at Fiser, 378 00:23:14,200 --> 00:23:16,639 Speaker 1: we're very hopeful everything can be done in time to 379 00:23:16,720 --> 00:23:22,800 Speaker 1: vaccinate mothers before the next RSV season. But I don't 380 00:23:22,800 --> 00:23:24,480 Speaker 1: know if you're going to vaccinate a two year old 381 00:23:24,600 --> 00:23:28,480 Speaker 1: right now necessarily. But you know what, take your kid 382 00:23:28,520 --> 00:23:32,520 Speaker 1: out into the world. Do it from as soon as 383 00:23:32,520 --> 00:23:35,760 Speaker 1: they're they're born. Let them, you know, playing the playgrounds, 384 00:23:35,760 --> 00:23:39,120 Speaker 1: playing the dirt, play with other kids, go over people's homes, 385 00:23:38,880 --> 00:23:41,840 Speaker 1: Let let people cough and sneeze on them, and then 386 00:23:41,880 --> 00:23:44,720 Speaker 1: they'll be much much healthier in the long run. Yeah. 387 00:23:44,760 --> 00:23:46,639 Speaker 1: In fact, there's no way you can't build an immune 388 00:23:46,680 --> 00:23:49,840 Speaker 1: system unless you expose yourself to pathogens. There's a doctor 389 00:23:49,880 --> 00:23:51,360 Speaker 1: in this story that says, I don't want to say 390 00:23:51,359 --> 00:23:53,920 Speaker 1: to parents, be scared or hide away because RSV is 391 00:23:53,960 --> 00:23:56,640 Speaker 1: not new, and I think stoking that pandemic air anxiety 392 00:23:56,720 --> 00:24:00,320 Speaker 1: is damaging. Get your shots and if your kid if bikes, 393 00:24:00,320 --> 00:24:01,960 Speaker 1: put a helmet on him. So it's not the time 394 00:24:01,960 --> 00:24:04,520 Speaker 1: to go wild at the trampoline bark. But people see 395 00:24:04,720 --> 00:24:08,399 Speaker 1: people's nature now is to be self righteous about it. 396 00:24:08,440 --> 00:24:11,120 Speaker 1: They think they're on a moral high ground by protecting 397 00:24:11,160 --> 00:24:14,879 Speaker 1: their child, by masking them up or keeping them indoors 398 00:24:14,920 --> 00:24:20,520 Speaker 1: and keeping them away. It's become like a whole societal neurosis. 399 00:24:20,840 --> 00:24:24,320 Speaker 1: That's true, you know. And none of this existed when 400 00:24:24,400 --> 00:24:27,200 Speaker 1: I was a kid, none of it, and we all 401 00:24:27,240 --> 00:24:31,119 Speaker 1: got called and we all survived. And I just can't 402 00:24:31,160 --> 00:24:35,000 Speaker 1: believe the level of hysteria that parents have over children now. 403 00:24:35,680 --> 00:24:38,560 Speaker 1: It's just shocking. All Right, we're coming up, John and 404 00:24:38,640 --> 00:24:41,040 Speaker 1: Ken KF I am six forty. At the same time, 405 00:24:41,160 --> 00:24:43,119 Speaker 1: they allowed tens of thousands of homeless people to be 406 00:24:43,200 --> 00:24:48,120 Speaker 1: camped in the streets, giving children a trauma. Yeah right, PTSD, 407 00:24:49,280 --> 00:24:51,320 Speaker 1: All right, we're coming up. Oh, we're gonna welcome Joe 408 00:24:51,359 --> 00:24:54,280 Speaker 1: Franitch back to the John and Ken Show. Used to 409 00:24:54,280 --> 00:24:57,439 Speaker 1: live in California, now lives in Pennsylvania. But he has 410 00:24:57,480 --> 00:25:01,960 Speaker 1: the latest on a report out of Hoover Institution about 411 00:25:01,960 --> 00:25:04,560 Speaker 1: the companies leading California. We'd like to cover this from 412 00:25:04,560 --> 00:25:07,960 Speaker 1: time to time as companies decide that things are better 413 00:25:08,000 --> 00:25:11,600 Speaker 1: in other states tax wise, regulation wise, this is a 414 00:25:11,680 --> 00:25:16,160 Speaker 1: staggering number. Three hundred and fifty two companies moved their 415 00:25:16,160 --> 00:25:20,320 Speaker 1: headquarters from California in three years from twenty eighteen to 416 00:25:20,320 --> 00:25:24,560 Speaker 1: twenty twenty one. Three hundred and fifty two. And we 417 00:25:24,680 --> 00:25:26,840 Speaker 1: report on them from time to time. But these guys 418 00:25:26,960 --> 00:25:30,160 Speaker 1: take a look at the real total numbers and get 419 00:25:30,200 --> 00:25:34,199 Speaker 1: us a bigger picture of this migration. We'll talk to 420 00:25:34,280 --> 00:25:38,920 Speaker 1: Joe right after the news at five o'clock. Oh, time 421 00:25:38,920 --> 00:25:41,320 Speaker 1: for a little Biden. You know what's going to be 422 00:25:41,359 --> 00:25:43,240 Speaker 1: the theme in the next hour. And it's kind of 423 00:25:43,640 --> 00:25:46,200 Speaker 1: grit my teeth when I say it looks like some 424 00:25:46,800 --> 00:25:51,680 Speaker 1: politicians outside of California are borrowing from Gavin Newsom's playbook. 425 00:25:52,600 --> 00:25:57,320 Speaker 1: Apparently Joe has got an energy advisor who's talking a 426 00:25:57,440 --> 00:26:05,600 Speaker 1: windfall profits tax on the oil companies. On Monday, Joe tweeted, 427 00:26:05,680 --> 00:26:08,000 Speaker 1: I'm sure he sits there and sends out tweets. The 428 00:26:08,040 --> 00:26:10,800 Speaker 1: oil industry has a choice. Either invest in America by 429 00:26:10,840 --> 00:26:14,400 Speaker 1: lowering prices for consumers at the pump and increasing production 430 00:26:14,440 --> 00:26:17,720 Speaker 1: refining capacity, or pay a higher tax on your excessive 431 00:26:17,720 --> 00:26:21,119 Speaker 1: profits and face other restrictions. Well, two things about that 432 00:26:21,800 --> 00:26:25,440 Speaker 1: he's virtue signaling because there are zero chance he's getting 433 00:26:25,440 --> 00:26:28,560 Speaker 1: it passed. Congress is not even in session and the 434 00:26:28,640 --> 00:26:30,720 Speaker 1: Republicans are going to win in a blowout in a week. 435 00:26:31,359 --> 00:26:35,879 Speaker 1: So he's just trying to make noise. And secondly, because 436 00:26:35,920 --> 00:26:38,440 Speaker 1: he wants people to vote Democrat, they try to winfall 437 00:26:38,520 --> 00:26:41,760 Speaker 1: profits tax under the last big loser of a president 438 00:26:41,800 --> 00:26:45,520 Speaker 1: we had, Jimmy Carter, and what the oil companies did 439 00:26:45,640 --> 00:26:49,200 Speaker 1: is they cut production and then there was a gas 440 00:26:49,280 --> 00:26:53,600 Speaker 1: shortage and that caused prices to go up, and eventually 441 00:26:53,640 --> 00:26:57,280 Speaker 1: Congress repealed it a few years later. So it's already 442 00:26:57,600 --> 00:27:01,480 Speaker 1: a failed idea idea, and he's not going to get 443 00:27:01,480 --> 00:27:04,200 Speaker 1: it past anyway. It's just a blustering old guy yelling 444 00:27:04,200 --> 00:27:09,200 Speaker 1: on his porch, on his Twitter porch. Yeah, that's really, 445 00:27:09,240 --> 00:27:12,199 Speaker 1: it's all it is. And either he in fact, he 446 00:27:12,320 --> 00:27:15,280 Speaker 1: was around when it failed. That's what's funny when he 447 00:27:15,359 --> 00:27:19,240 Speaker 1: when he pulls out these these old chestnuts of ideas 448 00:27:19,280 --> 00:27:21,399 Speaker 1: that sound really dramatic and cool, it's like, yeah, this 449 00:27:21,600 --> 00:27:24,640 Speaker 1: ducks the oil companies like a bozo. You were there 450 00:27:24,720 --> 00:27:27,000 Speaker 1: forty years ago when they did this, Remember it failed. 451 00:27:27,320 --> 00:27:32,040 Speaker 1: Oh we'll talk about the other person next hour that 452 00:27:32,200 --> 00:27:35,960 Speaker 1: borrowed from the Gavin Newsome playbook in putting out a 453 00:27:36,240 --> 00:27:41,280 Speaker 1: debunked scenario about crime in the United States that actually 454 00:27:41,280 --> 00:27:44,080 Speaker 1: there's more murders in crime and quote the Red States, 455 00:27:44,160 --> 00:27:47,040 Speaker 1: but that we already told you is bs because within 456 00:27:47,119 --> 00:27:50,400 Speaker 1: those Red States or Democrat led cities that have all 457 00:27:50,440 --> 00:27:55,359 Speaker 1: the crime for example, simple answer, Pennsylvania and Philadelphia, and 458 00:27:55,520 --> 00:27:59,760 Speaker 1: also in Louisiana cities like New Orleans, New Orland. Rouge. Yeah, 459 00:27:59,800 --> 00:28:03,040 Speaker 1: but uh yeah, that's an easy one to blow up. Yeah, 460 00:28:03,760 --> 00:28:07,520 Speaker 1: new what he doesn't know this because he's so lazy 461 00:28:07,880 --> 00:28:11,760 Speaker 1: or he thinks he can just by shouting it with 462 00:28:11,800 --> 00:28:14,840 Speaker 1: his phony bravado, he makes it true and people will 463 00:28:14,880 --> 00:28:17,800 Speaker 1: believe it. So we'll tell you who that politician is 464 00:28:17,800 --> 00:28:22,400 Speaker 1: and talk about them next hour. Here's some audio from 465 00:28:22,480 --> 00:28:27,000 Speaker 1: Joe Biden who seems to be confusing a couple of countries, 466 00:28:27,880 --> 00:28:31,320 Speaker 1: and then in talking about the son that passed away, 467 00:28:31,800 --> 00:28:36,080 Speaker 1: the good son bow, let's listen and they talk about inflation. 468 00:28:38,080 --> 00:28:40,240 Speaker 1: You know, we're dealing with it for a whole second. 469 00:28:40,760 --> 00:28:44,400 Speaker 1: Inflation is a worldwide problem right now because of a 470 00:28:44,440 --> 00:28:47,480 Speaker 1: war in Iraq, an impact on oil and what Russia's doing. 471 00:28:47,600 --> 00:28:52,560 Speaker 1: I mean excuse me, the war in Ukraine and uh, 472 00:28:52,880 --> 00:28:55,960 Speaker 1: thinking of Iraq, because that's when my son died. Yeah, 473 00:28:56,200 --> 00:28:59,800 Speaker 1: because he died because he um no, he messed every 474 00:29:00,120 --> 00:29:03,040 Speaker 1: did not die in a rack that his son died 475 00:29:03,200 --> 00:29:06,960 Speaker 1: in Washington, d c in a hospital of brain cancer. Yes, 476 00:29:07,080 --> 00:29:09,760 Speaker 1: but Joe likes to tell people that he was exposed 477 00:29:09,880 --> 00:29:12,160 Speaker 1: chemicals in a rack that gave him the cancer. Right, 478 00:29:12,360 --> 00:29:14,400 Speaker 1: he has no proof of that. He just says that. 479 00:29:14,600 --> 00:29:17,360 Speaker 1: He says that, Um, that's the way he remembers it. 480 00:29:17,560 --> 00:29:20,160 Speaker 1: He's also thinking that this is what year the war 481 00:29:20,240 --> 00:29:24,920 Speaker 1: in Iraq? Iraqi was two thousand. George Bush, Yeah, George W. 482 00:29:25,120 --> 00:29:31,120 Speaker 1: Bush was president. This is twenty four right. You notice 483 00:29:31,280 --> 00:29:35,520 Speaker 1: you notice the endless horse crap from these people. When 484 00:29:35,560 --> 00:29:38,880 Speaker 1: inflation started, you know, a year and a half ago. 485 00:29:39,320 --> 00:29:43,360 Speaker 1: Uh well it's transitory. Uh well yeah, I don't be overshoed. 486 00:29:43,360 --> 00:29:46,800 Speaker 1: Well it's not that bad now. It's like, well, it's everywhere. 487 00:29:47,240 --> 00:29:51,040 Speaker 1: I was caused by the Russians. Of course, he neglects 488 00:29:51,080 --> 00:29:54,320 Speaker 1: the five trillion fake dollars that he pumped into the 489 00:29:54,360 --> 00:29:59,000 Speaker 1: economy with all his stupid spending plans. Never mentions that 490 00:29:59,280 --> 00:30:04,959 Speaker 1: in the role all that fake money played, they were 491 00:30:04,960 --> 00:30:08,160 Speaker 1: aware that the Poles are telling them they're in trouble 492 00:30:08,240 --> 00:30:11,640 Speaker 1: because people are concerned about inflation of the economy. So 493 00:30:11,800 --> 00:30:14,160 Speaker 1: they're trying to come up with talking points, but nobody 494 00:30:14,200 --> 00:30:17,280 Speaker 1: dissuade people from blaming them. I heard a poll this morning, though, 495 00:30:17,920 --> 00:30:21,640 Speaker 1: then a huge percentage of people are blaming Pyden and 496 00:30:21,680 --> 00:30:25,240 Speaker 1: the Democrats because it is them, Because people aren't idiots. 497 00:30:25,280 --> 00:30:27,479 Speaker 1: We didn't have this two years ago. What changed from 498 00:30:27,520 --> 00:30:30,720 Speaker 1: two years ago? They took over and they started spending 499 00:30:30,840 --> 00:30:36,200 Speaker 1: trillions of dollars After the COVID crisis was over. Trump 500 00:30:36,240 --> 00:30:41,160 Speaker 1: spent extra trillions during the COVID prisis crisis. Then it 501 00:30:41,360 --> 00:30:45,520 Speaker 1: went away, people went back to work, businesses recovered, and 502 00:30:45,560 --> 00:30:49,400 Speaker 1: then they piled on with every progressive wet dream being 503 00:30:49,400 --> 00:30:52,880 Speaker 1: financed free checks. How many times did they give out 504 00:30:52,920 --> 00:30:55,520 Speaker 1: rounds of free checks? This is what they do in 505 00:30:55,640 --> 00:30:58,959 Speaker 1: Argentina and Venezuela. It's I've looked up a lot of 506 00:30:59,000 --> 00:31:02,920 Speaker 1: like historic and it's always the same thing. The government 507 00:31:03,000 --> 00:31:08,680 Speaker 1: prints too much money, that's what does it, So don't 508 00:31:08,720 --> 00:31:13,000 Speaker 1: do that. I saw a story today that they believe 509 00:31:13,120 --> 00:31:16,480 Speaker 1: that these rising interest rates can eventually combat inflation. But 510 00:31:16,560 --> 00:31:21,240 Speaker 1: apparently there is another eleven million job openings in the US, 511 00:31:22,680 --> 00:31:25,840 Speaker 1: leading us to believe that employers are still looking for 512 00:31:25,880 --> 00:31:28,360 Speaker 1: workers and not lay them off because there's still an 513 00:31:28,360 --> 00:31:31,520 Speaker 1: appetite to buy things and spend money by people. So 514 00:31:31,720 --> 00:31:35,520 Speaker 1: now I saw an article the other day, and I'm 515 00:31:35,520 --> 00:31:38,240 Speaker 1: gonna have to look for it. But it was why 516 00:31:38,520 --> 00:31:42,200 Speaker 1: one hundred million Americans are out of work? Here it is, 517 00:31:43,440 --> 00:31:47,360 Speaker 1: and it was an investing dot com and they broke 518 00:31:47,400 --> 00:31:53,920 Speaker 1: it down into categories. I have a minute here. More 519 00:31:53,960 --> 00:31:58,760 Speaker 1: than six million people aren't working because well more than 520 00:31:58,800 --> 00:32:01,600 Speaker 1: half are retired. Okay, you start there. Then there was 521 00:32:01,640 --> 00:32:03,840 Speaker 1: six million that don't have a job because they were 522 00:32:03,920 --> 00:32:07,440 Speaker 1: caring for a child or an elderly person. There's another 523 00:32:07,480 --> 00:32:12,000 Speaker 1: seven million who simply didn't want to work. About a 524 00:32:12,040 --> 00:32:16,240 Speaker 1: million people don't have transportation to get to work. Thirty 525 00:32:16,240 --> 00:32:19,360 Speaker 1: two million people who aren't working are living off savings. 526 00:32:19,800 --> 00:32:23,040 Speaker 1: They're withdrawing from retirement accounts or money from selling assets 527 00:32:23,320 --> 00:32:25,720 Speaker 1: never twenty six million, or living off credit cards or 528 00:32:25,800 --> 00:32:29,280 Speaker 1: loans twelve million. Twelve million pip up people are borrowing 529 00:32:29,360 --> 00:32:33,160 Speaker 1: from family or friends. Twenty million people are relying on 530 00:32:33,320 --> 00:32:38,520 Speaker 1: government checks, unemployment, foodstamps, rental assistance. So you add it 531 00:32:38,520 --> 00:32:41,200 Speaker 1: all up, you get one hundred million people who aren't working. 532 00:32:41,520 --> 00:32:44,000 Speaker 1: Where's the long term plan there? I don't get it. 533 00:32:44,360 --> 00:32:47,000 Speaker 1: Or they're waiting for something big to happen in the meantime, 534 00:32:47,000 --> 00:32:48,640 Speaker 1: they don't want to work because they want to focus 535 00:32:48,680 --> 00:32:51,640 Speaker 1: on that big thing. I don't Maybe they're just watching 536 00:32:51,680 --> 00:32:57,240 Speaker 1: television world we live in. Yeah, they're streaming all the 537 00:32:57,320 --> 00:32:59,680 Speaker 1: latest hits. Yeah. Well, who do you think is watched 538 00:33:00,680 --> 00:33:04,040 Speaker 1: all these streaming channels right, five hundred cable channels, all 539 00:33:04,080 --> 00:33:07,560 Speaker 1: these websites, all this social media, billions of people. When 540 00:33:07,560 --> 00:33:09,880 Speaker 1: do you think they're doing it? They're doing it all 541 00:33:09,960 --> 00:33:13,600 Speaker 1: day because they're not working. Hundred million people you just met. 542 00:33:13,800 --> 00:33:16,800 Speaker 1: That's almost a third of the country sitting home right now. 543 00:33:16,960 --> 00:33:20,240 Speaker 1: And these are the thing. These are not retired people. 544 00:33:20,320 --> 00:33:23,800 Speaker 1: These are people of working age. Half of them are retired. Okay, 545 00:33:23,880 --> 00:33:26,280 Speaker 1: well that makes some sense. I mean, retired people don't 546 00:33:26,320 --> 00:33:27,440 Speaker 1: need to work if they don't want to, if they 547 00:33:27,480 --> 00:33:29,400 Speaker 1: can manage it. But that's why there's a But if 548 00:33:29,400 --> 00:33:31,160 Speaker 1: you have one hundred million, but would you say retired 549 00:33:31,240 --> 00:33:33,920 Speaker 1: or some of them fifty or some people want Some 550 00:33:33,960 --> 00:33:36,800 Speaker 1: people like to retire at fifty, they do it may 551 00:33:36,840 --> 00:33:39,040 Speaker 1: be it may Bee. I read about a guy that 552 00:33:39,080 --> 00:33:42,280 Speaker 1: did retire at fifty and he's making it's now in 553 00:33:42,360 --> 00:33:44,240 Speaker 1: his sixties, and he retired at fifties. Where does he 554 00:33:44,280 --> 00:33:46,960 Speaker 1: do all day? That didn't come up in the start 555 00:33:47,120 --> 00:33:48,960 Speaker 1: that it was just about how he's been able to 556 00:33:49,000 --> 00:33:52,120 Speaker 1: keep his finances and keep this going. But numbers twenty 557 00:33:52,120 --> 00:33:56,360 Speaker 1: six million using credit cards or loans, twelve million barring 558 00:33:56,400 --> 00:34:03,040 Speaker 1: from their family and friends. That can't last. It can't. Yeah, 559 00:34:03,160 --> 00:34:04,960 Speaker 1: I know. It's like the guy that kites checks or 560 00:34:04,960 --> 00:34:07,960 Speaker 1: commits some sort of bank frauds. Sooner or later it 561 00:34:07,960 --> 00:34:10,920 Speaker 1: all falls apart, all right. Coming up next, we are 562 00:34:10,920 --> 00:34:13,520 Speaker 1: going to be talking to Joe Ranich again. He's put 563 00:34:13,520 --> 00:34:17,319 Speaker 1: out a report. He's with Spectrum Location Solutions. He's the 564 00:34:17,360 --> 00:34:20,960 Speaker 1: president along with a fellow at the Hoover Institution. On 565 00:34:21,000 --> 00:34:24,640 Speaker 1: the company's leaving California. The latest numbers. Johnny Ken caf 566 00:34:24,680 --> 00:34:27,680 Speaker 1: i Am six forty live everywhere on the iHeart Radio 567 00:34:27,680 --> 00:34:29,560 Speaker 1: app and Debra Mark Live in the twenty four Hour 568 00:34:29,640 --> 00:34:30,480 Speaker 1: Cafe Newsroom