Businesses Sweat as Immigration Clampdown Threatens Their Bottom Line

Businesses Sweat as Immigration Clampdown Threatens Their Bottom Line

June 27, 2025 • 34 min

Episode Description

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.

Speaker 1 (00:00):
Well, if it's a California study, let's go look into it,
they said. Researchers interview businesses up and down California, and
they say the San Jaquin Valley and Bay area, along
with La the Inland Empire are going to see the
greatest impacts from the deportations. All right, they quoted them,

(00:22):
or said business owner here and Ngela Aguilera, she said,
businesses have been going not so well ever since the
ice rates started less unless people have been coming. They're
scared to come out of their homes again. Not a
good way to live. My recommendation is, get that monkey
off your back self, deport get in line quick. Now,

(00:42):
get in line, you'll probably be treated better. Get in line,
do it right, and then come here and immerse yourself,
learn English, become part of America. We allow that if
you do it legally. We embrace that. We understand that
is at the the root of i identity as a nation,
that we're an experiment of a bunch of people from

(01:04):
all around the world that look different, act different, and
have some different religions. But we allow it here. But
we have that thing called the melting pot our culture.
You go to any other country, and they embrace their culture.
You need to have twenty roosters in the backyard because

(01:25):
it's your culture. Nothing wrong with that. This assistant professor
Youusiemer said. This ABC thirty article said mass deportation could
cost a state two hundred and seventy five billion in
lost gross domestic product. These are from the same people
that said stand six feed apart. They said this is

(01:47):
because undocumented immigrants are really intricately tied to our communities
in the economy of this state. Well, yeah, they've been
allowed to live here so long. You can get home loans,
you can get car loans, you get a driver's license,
your kids can go to school. How do you not
think that's gonna intricately tie them to our community? And again,
there are decent, really good, good hearted working people that

(02:11):
live correctly, except for that thing. You broke our immigration
law and you're costing twenty thousand dollars per kid to
have your kid and our skulls. That's not fair to do.
And it's defended, and it's backed up, and it's supported.
To me Democrats in California and across America, it would

(02:32):
be no different than it'd be like you supporting three
guys that broke into the homeless shelter. The homeless shelter
opens at five pm, and it gives the homeless a
meal and a place to sleep that night. And at
five o'clock that's when the doors open. But at three
point thirty two thirty a line starts. And imagine at noon,

(02:56):
somebody broke into the skylight, went down, ate all the
good food, dude, skip the line, broke in illegally, got
the best cots by the heater or the air conditioner.
And when found out, people were like, no, that's hateful
to go after those people. No, that's exactly the same thing.
You're breaking in line. You're cutting in First of all,

(03:20):
let's just start with the word not fair. Number two
bad manners. Don't behave that way. We don't say those
kind of things, do we. They said, forty percent of
small businesses in California or immigrant owned. Ten percent of
those are owned by undocumented immigrants. How do you own
a business? Well, I guess that's where we are right now.

(03:43):
Defortations would actually help American workers. President Trump did a
kind of a flipped de doo there. He posts it up.
He said, because they said, you know, We're coming after
the criminals. We're looking after the murderers and child rapists,
the sex traffickers, the the identity fraud people. Were going
after all these kind of people, right, and President Trump

(04:05):
posted our great farmers and people in the hotel and
leisure business. I've been stating with our very aggressive policy
on immigration, it's taking very good, longtime workers away from them,
with those jobs being almost impossible to replace, he said,
changes are coming. TikTok, TikTok. Hours later, we had a reversal,
President Trump said, I campaigned on received a historic mandate

(04:26):
for the largest mass deportation program in American history. Polling
shows overwhelming public support for getting the illegals out, and
that's exactly what we're going to do, so he changed
it up. I don't know if some may handing him
will poll, but it's true. Polling does show that just
since January when Trump took off, as blue collar workers

(04:46):
have had the fastest wage growth in more than half
a century. You're not going to hear that on MSNBC.
Are You're not go hear that on CNN. You're not
going to hear that on the or see that on
the front page of the well, there's no more front
page of the president. You can't even kill a fly
with it anymore. But you get where I'm going. They
don't want you to know this, but they will broadcast that. Well, look,

(05:08):
here's a CEO of a retirement community. He's gonna lose
forty workers. We're hearing all these stories now. Well, imagine
if in America you are a I hate to use
the word low skilled. It's kind of a your skill
pays a low wage. How about that. It's a skill,

(05:32):
but you're not making a lot of money at your skill,
so low skill worker. Well, the illegals that are coming here,
the illegals, some of them the same that generate more
income from some at the top. That hurts you economically,
Your options shrink. This is why labor unions used to

(05:52):
once opposed illegal immigration. CAESARSAVZ being one of those that
was always my beef with Congress and John Darte from
the North Valley Republican part of the ag mafia. Though
he knew, he admitted that it hurts truckers, the trucking industry,
construction industry, for a lot of people that don't make

(06:13):
a lot of money that are US citizens. The message
of the legal immigration is that really, hey, you're not needed, man.
We got people that will work for a lot less
and we've seen the labor force replace it. And it
shouldn't be like this. If you really want to help democrats,
as you say in the Inner City or some low

(06:35):
income Americans, get rid of the illegals, deport them because
it undercuts the wages. And we always here, well, it's
the illegal label that's what keeps the valley going right
with ag and all of that. Yes, I will say
that that would be an issue. And I am not
for going out and running up and down the fields

(06:56):
of the Central Valley chasing people and put them on
in vans. At this point, now, if they're out there
looking for somebody that has committed a crime or a heinus,
well they all have, but a heinous crime than those
that are around. They are obligated to arrest you. That's
immigration and custom in format, that's border patrol. They take

(07:18):
there to honor, to protect and serve seriously that oath.
They would it would violate their oath to not arrest
those that are around if they knew they were here illegally.
And Tom Holman has warned about that. I was watching
a video of this guy. He owns a roofing business
in Florida, and he was all complaining about how they're

(07:39):
coming in and taking away his employees. They're, you know,
on there forgetting Colorado Springs. I was asking these guys
on the roof who had their trucks and an apartment complex. Hey,
I said, okay, if I park right here, are you
going to need to move? And they stared at me.
I said, oh, is I talk louder?

Speaker 2 (07:56):
Is it okay?

Speaker 1 (07:56):
If I leave my car right here? Are you gonna okay?
And I went, oh, my word. The fifteen guys on
that roof, and I thought, none of them know what
I'm saying. It happened right out back here in the
radio station. They were cutting the trees up there, and
I walked up to the other tree guy and I said, man,
I love to watch this. I feel like a ten
year old kid. He said, no, knowing. These are jobs

(08:21):
that used to pay well enough for people to be
able to afford to live, even landscaping companies or carpentry,
or your aunt had a cleaning business. A lot of
jobs that teenagers would do over the summer. Mass immigration
into the state from South America, Mexico, legal and illegal

(08:43):
change California. And we've all heard recently with the Mexican
flag riots in California was stolen from Mexico.

Speaker 2 (08:50):
Not true.

Speaker 1 (08:52):
There was actually a war and we paid for it
the waving of the flag, burning vehicles. How much California
has changed with the mass immigration since the nineteen sixties.
It was called the heart Seller Act, Thank you Senator
Ted Kennedy, Thank you LBJ in nineteen sixty five. And

(09:16):
what we used to California nineteen sixty two, ninety percent white.
Hispanic population was about seven percent. Can we even talk
about this race? No, I can talk. I can give
you facts. Today California's thirty four percent white and forty
percent Hispanic. Now, California, even back in the nineteen sixties

(09:41):
was more racially diverse than most places across America, but
it was overwhelmingly white and like many other places, overwhelmingly Christian.
You don't say that anymore in California, do they? Now?
We had one generation it turned into a left liberal
one party date and what they changed up in nineteen

(10:03):
sixty five there was a quota based immigration system. Quota
based go Ahead al it's yeah, it prioritized immigration from
European countries. And what was the reasoning behind that, Well,
they look like us, they're white. Well they said they
match us closer with cultural, religious ethnic ties. But when

(10:27):
they changed it up in nineteen sixty five, they based
it on family reunification, the need for workers, and it's
unfair to base our immigration system. I guess they were
saying on skin pigmentation. There are a lot of changes
with race going on. I think here's what it should
be for people coming into America. Let's do once a year,

(10:52):
one thousand around the world lottery with the balls ping
around and song ching from India. You're going, buddy, they're
fully only a that's it, only one thousand. But yet
if we need a scientist for here, or somebody for that,
or somebody that can help us with our space force,
we allow them to come in and work for eighteen months,

(11:12):
but they don't bring their kids, and they don't go
to school and all of that. No, we don't do
that anymore. The long term effects of what they've allowed
to happen cannot be overstated. The transformation of America in
just decades nineteen sixty five eighty four percent of all
immigrants came from Europe, ten percent from Mexico and Latin America. Today,

(11:35):
Mexico Latin America are half thirty percent from South South
and East Asia. The rest from Europe and some even
from Canada. Come down, that's about twelve percent. The shift
really started to be noticed in the nineteen nineties, and
go back to President Reagan's nineteen eighty six amnesty. That

(11:58):
was three million that were allowed citizenship then. But when
Democrats were taking control of California, they weren't like the
ones today. They weren't talking about open borders and mass
flooding in like they did and all the services. Actually,
to remind you, in nineteen ninety four, the voters of
California passed Prop One eighty seven at tonight state beneficial legals,

(12:21):
and I think a judge ended up overturning that. Then
you had Old Gray Davis who took over after Pete Wilson. No,
it's xenophobic and racist to do that. And then we
took away the word illegal and became undocumented. Now we've
morphed all the way into the newcomers. That's right, the newcomers.

(12:42):
I got an idea if you want to reject assimilation
and you love your country of birth and origin, there's
no reason not to go back. And if you want
to stay here, do it the right way, and we
are welcoming. We'll give you a hug. Actually, people, all
Americans that were born here. I'll speak for those that

(13:02):
might feel like me. But I love to see them
taking the pledge to become a new citizen with the
hand in the air, and maybe they even force them
to see League Greenwood or something like that. But we
can't survive under these conditions. Now, any nation that continues
like this on this path, it eventually falls apart.

Speaker 2 (13:25):
Everybody's making immigration proposals these days. Let me add mine
to the mix. Call it the Limbaugh Laws. First, you
immigrate to our country, you have to speak the native language.
You have to be a professional or an investor. No
unskilled workers allowed. Also, there'll be no special bilingual programs
in the schools with the Limbaugh Laws, no special ballots
for elections, No government business will be conducted in your language.

(13:48):
Foreigners will not have the right to vote or hold
political office. If you're in our country, you cannot be
a burden to taxpayers. You are not entitled to welfare
or food stamps or other government goodies. You can come
if you invest here an amount equal to forty thousand
times a daily minimum wage. If not, stay home. But
if you want to buy land, it'll be restricted. No waterfront,

(14:09):
for instance. And as a foreigner, you have to relinquish
individual rights to the property. And another thing. You don't
have the right to protest. You're allowed no demonstrations, no
foreign flag waving, no political organizing, no bad mouthing our
president or his policies. You're a foreigner, shut your mouth
or get out. And if you come here illegally, you're

(14:29):
going to jail. You think the Limball laws are harsh, well,
every one of the laws I just mentioned are actual
laws of Mexico today. That's how the Mexican government handles
immigrants to their country. Yet Mexicans come here illegally and
protest in our streets. How do you say double standard
in Spanish? How about no moss?

Speaker 3 (14:52):
This is the Trevor Carry Show on the Valley's Power Talk.

Speaker 1 (15:00):
I think we need to get this attention to Secretary Hegseth. Now,
I don't want women to be drafted, nor do I
want women fighting in foxholes. If they're trained exactly and
have to pass everything just like a man. Can they
be a helicopter pilot, a jet fighter pilot. Yeah, yeah,

(15:22):
they can operate. But if you need somebody that can
drag a soldier on their back out of the battlefield. Now,
if you are a brute of a woman that can
put a guy on your back and run through and
fire and shoot, I guess maybe you can prove it.
I don't know what that does to the dynamic of
having the two genders, even though we have one hundred now,

(15:43):
but I'm talking about the main two there. That dynamic,
you know, just ask about Navy submarines that go out
and how many people come back Moms, it happens.

Speaker 4 (15:56):
Now.

Speaker 1 (15:57):
I'm not saying that we do not need women serving
in the military. Many of them have proudly served on
our own forces. Many of them have sacrificed their lives.
I'm not saying that. But I think this girl right
here's got some reasons why maybe we shouldn't consider them
for the draft. Type.

Speaker 4 (16:12):
Here's a few reasons why I shouldn't be drafted. Number One,
I like to gossip ill will and we go to
the other side and gossip about you, including your personal secrets,
just to get them to like me. I've never known
how to be quiet about anything a day in my life,
so your secrets they're not safe with me. Number two,
I've always wanted to have an enemy celever as romance,

(16:34):
so being drafted would kind of feel like my opportunity.
Number three. If you yell at me, I'll cry associate.
If you're a male authority figure, I will crumble. Number four.
I actually can't wear camo because I'm a cool summer
and also if I look back in my costume, I'm not.

Speaker 5 (16:52):
Going to go.

Speaker 1 (16:53):
Number five.

Speaker 4 (16:53):
I'm a picky eater, and the option is to eat
m res or nothing. I will choose nothing, and then
I won't shut up about how I'm being skinny. That
as a bonus, I was an RTC already and I
quit after a three weeks.

Speaker 1 (17:06):
I don't think that was fake, the look on her face,
whether she's a really good Republican actor chick. That really
seemed like a young woman that was just really being
honest about it. Again, not against women in the armed forces.
I honor their service, just like Secretary Eggset.

Speaker 4 (17:26):
Did I know.

Speaker 6 (17:27):
Acknowledge the female pilots that also participated in this mission.

Speaker 5 (17:31):
The early messages that you sent out only congratulated the boys.

Speaker 7 (17:35):
So when I say something like our boys and bombers,
see this is the kind of thing the press does.
Right of course, the chairman mentioned a female bomber pilot.
That's fantastic. She's fantastic, she's a hero. I want more
female bomber pilots. I hope that men and women of
our country sign up to do such brave and audacious things.
But when you spin it as because I say our
boys and bombers as a common phrase, I'll keep saying

(17:55):
things like that, whether there are men or women. Very
proud of that female pilot, just like I'm very proud
of those male pilots. And I don't care if it's
a male or a female in that cockpit, and the
American people don't care. But it's the obsession with race
and gender in this department that's changed priorities where we
don't do that anymore.

Speaker 5 (18:13):
We don't play your little games.

Speaker 1 (18:15):
Way to go, not playing the games, man, not playing
the games. I'm going to come back and let you
hear more from that press conference and his really drawing
the attention to the fact that the American fake news
media did not give them their due honor for putting
their lives online and executing flawlessly and doing something that

(18:38):
presidents back to Bill Clinton have talked about doing. Nobody's done.
So you would think maybe the supporters of the Democrats
would come around and go, hey, way to go. Good job.
Sometimes we need really strong men to stand up. There
was a church in Minnesota last Sunday. I don't know

(18:59):
if you saw the video. Look like a lady leading
something about kids and they were talking about the kids,
just your average mainstream town America church service going on,
and you hear the rat tat tat tat tat from
out and you see everybody running. But I noticed it
was about thirty seconds into the shooting. Man, I want
to give this guy crazy. He was just strolling at

(19:21):
the front like the depth, like all right, everybody's cleared out. Well,
he stayed calm in there. But this is the security guy.
And I know somebody in my life and when it
is I don't say what church or anything like that,
but I know somebody that he goes to church with
his family. But since he's security, they because you could
be worried about your own kids or looking somewhere else.

(19:42):
And then he goes back and does another service where
he's stationed right where they come into, like Sunday school
and nursery. He's just stationed there. And I know a
lot of churches don't broadcast what they do, and rightfully
so I always think ahead. This is just me, man,
I'm always far right up. I'm always buying ex I
always think that way. Now that that doesn't mean during

(20:04):
the service, I might looking behind me to see is
there a shooter coming in? But anytime I'm in public
and any kind of thing, if I can, if it's
not an assigned seat, I will choose to be near
an exit door. Here's the man though. That was security
outside the church in Minnesota, And listen to the story.

Speaker 8 (20:23):
Standing in the hallway between our sanctuary and cry room,
heard a noise, thought it was mechanical at first, turned
to see people running, asked them through a door, what
had happened? I thought it was in the cry room,
and a young woman said, AR fifteen, And I said

(20:43):
where she pointed, and I headed in that direction out
into the lobby. Got into the lobby, realized there was
a commotion outside the front lobby doors, got close, started
evaluating the situation, trying to make sense of a person
on the ground. A pickup truck there looked like it

(21:07):
had some damage. Had heard several bursts of sounded like
automatic rifle fire.

Speaker 5 (21:14):
Stepped out the door, evaluated.

Speaker 8 (21:16):
The situation somewhat, realized who the pickup belonged to, that
it was somebody from our church. Then realized that the
threat was still a threat. Retreated. He fired some more
into our building. By the grace of God, he missed me.
He hit another person on the in the calf. After that,

(21:37):
I engaged him and took care of the threat to
the to the church.

Speaker 4 (21:44):
So and then.

Speaker 8 (21:48):
Stood back, cleared the scene or cleared him from any
weapons that he could not proceed to hurt anybody else
as he was still moving some.

Speaker 1 (22:00):
Wow, quite a story. That's a strong American right there.
Strong Americans did a great job, and Iran as well.
I'm going to come back and play you a secretary.
Pete Hegseth talking about those strong men, And you know,
I was just center thinking about church security. A few
years ago. I came up with the idea. I haven't
talked about it in a while, but I think churches

(22:23):
need to have an emblem out front, big old sign
maybe across and a gun across and a gun, and
it says we are a you will meet your Maker congregation.
We're a meet your Maker congregation. You come in here
with a gun, we guarantee you you will meet your maker.

(22:45):
That's saying we are armed and we are defended. We
are a meet your Maker congregation.

Speaker 3 (22:51):
This is the Trevor Cherry Show on the Valley's Power Talk.

Speaker 1 (22:57):
Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth General raising cane here.

Speaker 9 (23:01):
Crews want to work on Friday that kiss their loved
ones goodbye, not knowing when or if they'd be home.
Late on Saturday night, their families became aware of what
was happening. And on Sunday when those jets return from
white men, their families were there, flags flying and tears flowing.

(23:22):
I have chills literally talking about this.

Speaker 1 (23:24):
See real people, We're dealing with real people now, with
real human emotions. Let's go on with it. The families
don't get enough mention a lot of the time. And
I still say, I think of the moms, you know
they Yeah, the dads go through it too, But I
always go back to World War Two in Vietnam, where

(23:48):
the lady would be doing the dishes and here would
come the dressed up, you know, fancy military guys and
walking and they knew what it was about. They were
just hoping and praying as a pow situation or something, right,
But the not knowing today a little easier with communication
than it was back in the day. But when they're

(24:10):
out in combat, in battle, there's no communication. Now, families
go through a lot. Here, let's go back to general
raising gain.

Speaker 9 (24:16):
Here the jets rejoined into a formation of four airplanes,
followed by a formation of three, and came up overhead,
white men proudly in the traffic pattern, pitching out to
land right over the base and landing to the incredible
cheers of their families who sacrifice and serve right alongside

(24:36):
their family members. Aman said, there were a lot of
flags and a lot of tears.

Speaker 1 (24:41):
Yeah, that kind of gives me the chills right now.
Don't you love that? But yeah, when's the last time
you had good American chills. That's a good feel when
you get that, isn't it.

Speaker 9 (24:49):
One commander told me, this is a moment in the
lives of our families that they will never forget. That,
my friends, is what America's Joint force does. We think,
We develop, we train, we rehearse, we test, we evaluate
every single day, and when the call comes to deliver,
we do so. I could not be more proud standing

(25:11):
up here today of our joint force.

Speaker 1 (25:14):
Guys. The people that are in control should make you
sleep lots smoother in America.

Speaker 9 (25:21):
Filled with gratitude that I get to tell their story.
And as we stand here right now, our forces remain
on a high state of readiness in the region, prepared
to defend themselves. And one last thing, our adversaries around
the world should know that there are other DITRI Team

(25:42):
members out there studying targets for the same amount of
time and we'll continue to do so.

Speaker 6 (25:49):
Yep.

Speaker 1 (25:50):
Secretary heg Saith, Pete, Hegseath. He's new to his.

Speaker 2 (25:55):
Career.

Speaker 1 (25:56):
What he's doing right now, I'm sure he called the
president up, Miss President. I got a press conference tomorrow morning.
Got any advice some guys, Pete, talk about you know
why shake news? Yeah, talk about that, talk about the
fake news.

Speaker 5 (26:09):
Fake news stuff.

Speaker 1 (26:11):
Yeah, that's what you shouldn't happen. That's what you should
tell them Pete.

Speaker 7 (26:15):
Fake news, CNN, MSNBC or The New York Times. There's
been fawning coverage of a preliminary assessment. I've had a
chance to read it all. Every outlet has breathlessly reported
on a preliminary assessment from d i A. I'm looking
at it right now again. It was preliminary a day
and a half after the actual strike. When it admits

(26:38):
itself in writing that it requires weeks to accumulate the
necessary data to make such an assessment, it's preliminary, it
points out that it's not been coordinated with the intelligence
community at all. There's low confidence in this particular reports,
it says in the report.

Speaker 5 (26:53):
There are gaps in the information. It says in the report.

Speaker 7 (26:56):
Multiple lynchpin assumptions are what this assessment a lynchpin assumption.

Speaker 5 (27:01):
You know what that is.

Speaker 7 (27:02):
I means your entire premise is predicated on a lynch pin.
If you're wrong, everything.

Speaker 5 (27:06):
Else is wrong.

Speaker 1 (27:06):
Yeah, and they're right. So a lot is right. And
I guess they had some kind of leak that showed
some little section of it and CNN ran with it. Oh,
brit Hume, he won't go put up with that. Get
them near a Fox guy.

Speaker 10 (27:21):
But we have reporters working on this story. One in
particular who works for CNN, who is a person who
fell for the steel Dosier hook line. And sinker who
thought that who wrote that the Hunter Biden laptop brought
into the story that that was Russian disinformation and so
someone she wasn't working for CNN at the time. It's
not clear to me how she ever got a job there,
but CNN took her anyway, and now she's doing this

(27:43):
kind of stuff. So, you know, I think that the
subsequent intelligence reports we've heard about are more reliable.

Speaker 1 (27:48):
Yeah, brit Hume making some sense every now and then.
Harry was talking about an attitude that is taken hold lately,
and it's a wrong added food that's taken hold.

Speaker 10 (28:01):
You know, there's a sort of an attitude of view
that took hold in recent years to the effect that,
you know, the United States really hasn't won a war
since World War Two. Well, that's nonsense. People cite, you know,
the outcome in a rock, and they cite the you know,
the first Gulf War and the fact that Saddam state
and the fact is our military did not lose those
wars in fact, the first Gulf War was a walkover,

(28:24):
and the Second Gulf War where we took down Saddam Hussein,
was pretty much of a walk over.

Speaker 3 (28:28):
To Now you can make an.

Speaker 10 (28:29):
Argument that, yeah, we won the war, we lost the peace,
and maybe we did, but none of that is to
take away from the extraordinary proficiency of our military forces
and of the equipment that they used, the B two
bomber being the most recent and most conspicuous example.

Speaker 1 (28:44):
Yeah, this morning at the press conference with Secretary of
Defense Pete Hegseth, you know, you had everybody out there saying, Oh,
we didn't really do the damage. Oh, they really haven't
been set back. Iran has and here's he saith Let.
Everybody's saying, bringing the goods the quote how about the
Israeli Atomic Energy Commission. The devastating US strikes on Fourdeaux
destroyed the site's critical infrastructure and rendered the enrichment facility inoperable.

Speaker 7 (29:10):
Have any of these quotes made their way into The
New York Times or the Washington Post? Nope, MSNBC, CNN
any of these quotes.

Speaker 5 (29:18):
How about this one?

Speaker 7 (29:18):
This is a new one from the UN, The United Nations,
bring it no friend in the United States or certainly Israel.

Speaker 5 (29:24):
Often.

Speaker 7 (29:25):
Here's the head of the UN Atomic Energy Agency this morning,
Raphael Grossi, US and Israeli strikes caused enormous damage to
Iran's nuclear sites.

Speaker 5 (29:37):
Don't take my word for it. How about the IDF's
chief of staff.

Speaker 7 (29:41):
I can say here that the assessment is that we
significantly damaged the nuclear program, setting it back by years.

Speaker 5 (29:47):
I repeat years.

Speaker 1 (29:49):
No, I don't take your word on it. I need
more proof.

Speaker 7 (29:53):
Iranian Foreign minister, the spokesman, our nuclear instrations have been
badly damaged.

Speaker 5 (29:58):
That's for sure. I'm sure that's an understatement.

Speaker 7 (30:02):
John Radcliffe, the director of the CIA, putting out a
statement just last night. CIA can confirm that a body
of credible intelligence indicates Iran's nuclear program has been severely
damaged by recent targeted strikes. This includes new intelligence from
a historically reliable, very different than preliminary assessment with low confidence.

(30:24):
He's saying, historically reliable and accurate source of method that
several key Iranian nuclear facilities were destroyed and would have
to be rebuilt over the course of years.

Speaker 1 (30:37):
All right, there's a little bit of proof from around
the world. He also had a little message. I don't
know if this was in the seventies or eighties when
Bud what this Bud's for you. That's been around a
long time. Hey, Press, this message is for you. And
they're right there in front of him.

Speaker 7 (30:54):
You gotta love this because you and I mean specifically you,
the press, specifically you the press corps, because you cheer.

Speaker 5 (31:03):
Against Trump so hard.

Speaker 7 (31:05):
It's like in your DNA and in your blood to
cheer against Trump because you want him not to be
successful so bad. You have to cheer against the efficacy
of these strikes. You have to hope maybe they weren't effective.
Maybe the way the Trump administration is representative isn't true.
So let's take half truths.

Speaker 11 (31:25):
Spun information, leaked information, and then spin it, spin it
in every way we can to try to cause doubt
and manipulate the mind, the public mind over whether or
not are Brave pilots were successful?

Speaker 1 (31:40):
Yes, keep going, Secretary Tattoo.

Speaker 7 (31:43):
I like you, man, And what's really happening is you're
undermining the success of incredible B two pilots and incredible
F thirty five pilots, and incredible refuelers and incredible air
defenders who accomplish their mission set back a nuclear program
in ways that other presidents would have dreamed.

Speaker 5 (32:00):
How about we celebrate that.

Speaker 7 (32:03):
How about we talk about how special America is that
we only we have these capabilities.

Speaker 1 (32:07):
Yes, make an America great again, making America feel good again,
making America feel like we actually have grown men and
women in charge. I don't want to cut him off. Man,
you got anything else to ask? I think it's too
much to ask. Unfortunately for the fake news, so we're

(32:27):
used to that.

Speaker 7 (32:29):
But we also have an opportunity to stand at the
podium and read the truth of what's really happening.

Speaker 5 (32:34):
And the reality is.

Speaker 7 (32:34):
You want to call it destroyed, you want to call
it defeated, you want to call it obliterated.

Speaker 5 (32:39):
Choose your word.

Speaker 7 (32:41):
This was an historically successful attack and we should celebrate
it as Americans, and it gives us a chance to
have peace.

Speaker 1 (32:48):
This is the tremor carry show on the Valley's Power Talk.
It doesn't seem to be as in our face this
Pride month, does it?

Speaker 4 (32:58):
Oh? But no?

Speaker 1 (32:59):
This they're still going for the kiddos. Listen to this.

Speaker 5 (33:03):
Groomer, happy Pride.

Speaker 6 (33:04):
We celebrated pregnant in our kindergarten classroom by making our
very own Pride flags filled with attributes of things we
are proud of about ourselves. First, who read some stories
about the origin of the Prife flag. Then we watched
a video about what each of the colors of the
Pride flag means, like how red means life, orange means healing.
Then as a class we came together and we came
up with a list of things that we're proud of

(33:25):
about ourselves, like our names, our cultures and languages, things
that we're really good at. And they got to pick
six of their favorite attributes about themselves they added and
their own Pride flag. They picked colors that meant something
to them, and we wrapped up by talking about the
importance of celebrating all the things that make us who
we are and celebrating the diversity in our community.

Speaker 1 (33:46):
Police police all points bulletin for a groomer. She wanted
to talk about the origins of pride. Really, kindergarten teacher,
do you explained to him about the fall of loose
spher pride, the sin of pride? I know better than

(34:07):
the creator. I'm not a boy, I'm a girl. He
got it wrong.

Speaker 3 (34:11):
The assistant Trevor carry show Mond, the Valley's power Talk