California’s Dirty Scheme:  Hiding Kids’ Secrets From Parents

California’s Dirty Scheme: Hiding Kids’ Secrets From Parents

June 20, 2025 • 36 min

Episode Description

Episode Transcript

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

Speaker 1 (00:00):
But yeah, that's when it all started. Man, it's sorry
to become accepted. And now we argue whether parents should
know about something that can't even be real to begin with,
completely made up the only individuals in this valley. Politically,
we've had we've had we had a press conference out
in Clovis, see I have track meets. A lot of

(00:20):
politicians got together to talk about what maybe your kid
could become. Trends running around the track with a boy
that's running with girls. Know it's unfair in sports, but
it's really unfair to do that to small children in
kindergarten through twelfth grade in public school and education in California,
it's really really unfair to further along that lie to them.

(00:42):
And then to have a law now AB nineteen fifty
five that stopped you from knowing that they're being that
unfair to your child at school. Well, it wouldn't happen
to your kid, would it. It did, you wouldn't know
about it. Probably two months ago, a month and a
half ago. I came, how long ago? But we had

(01:03):
the mayor Porterville Mayor Greg Meiser, We had the vice
mayor Ed mccirvey on the show. They took a stand
out there. We had Josh Flowers Blessings of liberty. He's
taking a stand in Portville against what's going on here.
He said, It's going to run Saturday locally. Josh wrote,
when discrimination as a VIRTUEI Porterville is rising, not falling.

(01:27):
There's a growing movement of activists, the Party of the Anti,
who masquerade as defenders of civic engagement while opposing anything
rooted in faith, family, tradition, or truth. They don't stand
for anything. They stand against everything, against parental rights, against
moral clarity, against God, against the idea that some things
are simply better than others. They're taking a stand out there.

(01:52):
We need to take a stand. Mayor, Dire, you needed
affirmation from God? Where are you on this one?

Speaker 2 (02:00):
One thing is that I make certain that before I
run for mayor, that I'm the right fit for this city,
that the timing is right right, that I am the
affirmation from.

Speaker 1 (02:11):
God all right. Josh Flowers rights a culture that refuses
to discriminate between good and evils, the culture without direction.
One generation calls truth hate and the next forgets truth
even existed. That's not tolerance, that's moral suicide. So true,
he said, do you want to know why they fear churches,

(02:32):
churches hosting civic events, because the walls still echo with truth.
Truth that says the family matters, that children are not
wards of the state, that men and women are different,
that freedom is in a blank slate. It's a reward
of a righteous people. Remember when Adventure Church downtown at
the Tower Theater. Remember how the gay transgroup just went

(02:54):
after them, yelling obscenities. It was all allowed to happen,
not then, nothing wrong. Imagine being out yelling. Well today
anti Semitism can get away with it. But I'm not
yelling at Muslims or something out outside of No that
ain't happening. Well, Josh writes, Porterville is waking up, He says,

(03:16):
so let the Party of the Anti clutch their pearls
will cope bidding a city where children are protecting truth
is honored. Freedom still means something Porterville is choosing to
see clearly again, we need more of this society is silent.
I got a guy here that wants the waxy shiny
apple shine taken out of schools because it's not good

(03:36):
for students' health. Assimbly member Jesse Gabriel, Director Ryan Nigel
looked up some of his views here. He was posting,
as other states continue to push anti trans legislation and
bill's targeting trans youth, it's more important than ever now
to celebrate and advocate for a transgender, non binary, engender,
nor non conforming people. I'm committed to continue to work

(03:59):
to eliminate barriers and discrimination against the trans community. Yeah,
but I guess he's all for the pumping in of
everything that you got to do to turn a boy
into a girl and a girl into a boy in
your scientific psycho Nazi Frankenstein operating rooms. Yeah, probably a

(04:21):
lot of money in that in there, Jesse, the transgender
industrial complex eradicating dangling unmentionalls all around the state. The
Supreme Court just upheld Tennessee's band on sex changes, puberty blockers,
and hormones for kids. Ravo Tennessee. Looks like Senator Marshall

(04:43):
Blackburn might run as for governor of the state. Hopefully
they get another Marsha in there in the Senate and
everything will be fine and dandy. But it's now legal
to medically go in there and do Nazi Third Reich
stuff to kids in Tennessee and now other States Supreme
Court up held it ban these practices. I would love

(05:05):
to go on Newsom's podcast and say and will out
one of those nineteen nineteen eighty nineteen ninety school VHS
sings of the TV and a VHS and pop a
tape in, and he'd be like, what are you doing.
I'm like, hold on, I want to show you something.
He's saying, Oh, he's got some old tape of me
or something. Pop it in and the first thing that
after the wavy lines go away real quick, it's a

(05:27):
gender mutilation surgery. Yes, Governor Newson, you see that's that's
the young boys, Jenna tailor right there, see what they're Ah,
he would have to turn Aha, No, that's what you're for. Man,
right there. Let's watch it. Let's watch it, Gavin. Look
how they're sculpting that into it in that just beautiful artwork.

(05:50):
Applaud it, Gavin, applaud it. Tennessee said no more, Thank you, Tennessee,
and congratulations everybody involved there. Supreme Court world six three
that it does not violate the Fourteenth Amendment Equal protection
clause of your testicles. Tennessee Attorney General defended the law
before the High Court said it was a matter of
protecting kids from the consequences of decisions they cannot fully understand.

(06:13):
That's why we don't even let them behind the wheel
before sixteen with a can't buy the beer at the store.
You're twenty one. We got a cigarette, We got all that, piercings, tattoos,
all these things that are all on the outside of
the body. Yes, some of it affect the insight over time.
But this is kind of hard to come back from

(06:35):
the American Psychological Association and the American Academy of Pediatricians.
Did they applaud the Supreme Court? Now they condemned the
Supreme Court, trust the experts, trust the science. The American
Psychological Association denounces today's decision by the Supreme Court upholding

(06:55):
state level band the gender affirming like here, let me
give you a hug. Guys, it's bloody. It's bloody eunuchs.
Way to go, Supreme Court on this guys chopping off
healthy body parts, can't we I mean, that's what we're

(07:17):
having a conversation about. Yes, that's what we're having a
conversation about. That's what politicians like this guy jesse garse
or what's his name getting sold. What's his name, Jesse Gabriel,
California Democrat. This is what they're talking about. This is
what they're for. So what Newsom's for. Did you see

(07:38):
the Oregon House or Representatives. This happened on Wednesday. I
didn't see a video. I just saw some still pictures
and really all I needed to see there. Yeah, in
the House, you're going, what is so bad that happened
in the House of Representatives. Well, they had trans black

(07:58):
drag queens perform because the House passed the resolution honoring
black drag queens. Oh yes, very flambuoyant yellow dresses, and
they choreographed and did a lip sync, did a Milli
Vanilli to Aretha Franklin's A Deeper Love in front of
the House members. If this is not the joke of

(08:22):
the nation, my word, the depravity trying to normalize this
that it shows how far it's gone. Now, for those
of you that don't want to be brought down any
further by this conversation, I'm just telling you leave the
show right now, come back and like I don't know,
five six minutes or whatever, come back after the next

(08:43):
commercial break, because this is bad. I mean, this is
as bad as bad in my opinion. This is a
United Methodist church led by transgender pass and they have

(09:03):
a new worship song. Now I saw this video. If
you took off the rainbow gay color scarf kind of
thing off of the pastor up front, it would have
looked like any Middle America traditional Sunday service. There were
children present in the congregation. This is in Milwaukee, Wisconsin

(09:29):
Sunday service. Worship team leading them in a queerness song.
You're going, no, that isn't that? No, hold on, it
gets worse. The leadership team is Cameron and Jonah. These
are two guys. No, they're not. They're women that made
themself look like a gay male couple. So it does.

(09:50):
In the video it looks like two guys up there,
and you hear some younger girls. I don't they're probably
teens or maybe I don't know, nineteen early twenties, maybe
very young. Here we go, I'm gonna I'm gonna play
the whole thing here. I want to.

Speaker 3 (10:06):
Warn the parents in the audience that there might be
a swear word, and so we're gonna sing that together
this morning. Would you stand with us in body or
in spirit?

Speaker 1 (10:16):
I want to warn.

Speaker 3 (10:17):
The parents and the audience that there might be a
swear word, but we will only do it one time,
and we actually bleep it out the other times, but
we are gonna sing it one time for emphasis about
how gay we are.

Speaker 4 (10:35):
Here we go, I'm really gay, Thank God for that.

Speaker 5 (10:54):
Christians cast me out with Jesus has my bad, really gay?

Speaker 1 (11:02):
Thank God for that.

Speaker 5 (11:05):
Christians passed me out, but Jesus has my bad.

Speaker 1 (11:10):
If you guys can see the look on director Ryan
Nigel's face right now, sign know.

Speaker 5 (11:14):
But people can be so awful, so rightious and so critical.

Speaker 1 (11:20):
Remind me where that's family.

Speaker 6 (11:22):
Old.

Speaker 5 (11:22):
I have no fear and have some hope for the
one who made He loves you the most. Every bone
in you is the heavenly host. Praise the father Son,
and the only go I'm really gay, Thank God for that.
Christians cast me out. The Jesus says.

Speaker 6 (11:43):
My bad, and we say, han, we're all freaking weird,
and there's a place for you at the table mine.

Speaker 5 (11:56):
And we say, ha, yeah, we're all freaking weird, and
there's a place for you at the table because I'm
freaking guy.

Speaker 7 (12:10):
They got to that.

Speaker 5 (12:14):
Christians has to be out, but Jesus has my bad.
I'm freaking guy.

Speaker 1 (12:22):
They got to that.

Speaker 5 (12:25):
Christians has to be out, but Jesus has my bad.

Speaker 4 (12:30):
We're God.

Speaker 1 (12:33):
They got to that this is the trebor Chary show.
On the Valley's Our Talk. Jesus said no man shall
know the day nor the hour. But he didn't say

(12:53):
he couldn't pick the weekend. Look up this weekend. After
you're hearing that man, that's a falling away, I think
even he might agree with that's true. I see, I
know he should. I knew he would. What Okay, I
know we've heard some of the crazy things from politicians,

(13:15):
like in Boston, the city council member, they got his
pronouns wrong, so he couldn't even the way.

Speaker 8 (13:19):
He uses the pronouns. They them and says it's not
safe to show up to meetings in person.

Speaker 7 (13:24):
I really really wished I felt safe enough to show
up on the council floor.

Speaker 9 (13:30):
But I don't.

Speaker 8 (13:31):
Oh that city councilor filing a complaint with Wooster's Office
of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion, and they're taking a month
long break. They say it's for emotional and mental safety,
all right.

Speaker 1 (13:47):
Director ryan Nie till I got the highlight of during
that last break there going in his studio and watching
what I just saw is a picture come to life
in vivid video, Black queer trans day in the Oregon
represented there in the chamber to Rue paulish looking men

(14:07):
dancing around all pagan lip sinking better than Milli Vanilli
to Aretha Franklin, have you what's happened?

Speaker 10 (14:16):
Man?

Speaker 1 (14:16):
It's like it's beyond like have we lost our minds?
That No, we've lost our souls. Some people have lost
their souls in it. It is a spiritual battle that
has been unleashed. That is we used to kind of,
let's say, make fun of it, like nineteen seventy nine,
like money, Python were.

Speaker 9 (14:36):
Always on about women's stan I want to be one
what I want to be a woman from now on.
I want you all to call me Loretta what it's
my right as a man.

Speaker 6 (14:53):
Oh, why George be the rettister.

Speaker 9 (14:56):
I want to have babies.

Speaker 1 (14:58):
You want to have baby?

Speaker 9 (15:00):
Babies? Every man's right to have babies if he wants them.
But you can't have babies. Don't you oppress me. I'm
not oppressing you standing.

Speaker 10 (15:08):
I'm got a womb.

Speaker 9 (15:09):
Where's the fetus gonna just take? You're gonna keep it
in a box.

Speaker 8 (15:13):
Yeah, I've got an idea.

Speaker 9 (15:14):
Suppose you agree that he can't actually have babies, not
having a womb, which is nobody's fault, not even the Romans,
but that he can have the right to have babies.
Good idea, Judith, which will fight the oppressors for your
right to have babies. Brother sister, Sorry, what's the point?
What's the point of fighting tries right to have babies

(15:35):
when you can't have babies? It is symbolic of our
struggle against.

Speaker 1 (15:41):
Oppression nineteen seventy.

Speaker 9 (15:43):
Nine, symbolic of his struggle against reality.

Speaker 1 (15:46):
Yes, against reality. Now we're now, we're training the little kiddies.

Speaker 7 (15:51):
You are going to sing and dance it out, So
get your singing voices ready, and we're going to start
with our hips. The hips on the dragon Swish swish, swish, Swish, Swish, Swish, Swish, swish, swish,
the hips drag swish, swish, swish all through the town.

Speaker 1 (16:18):
You are nothing but a big groomer. Big groomer should
be kicked out of town. Ab nineteen fifty five. Not stopping.
When Misty Hurr was the contender for her superintendent job,
we contacted Rosie and fight school district and said, hey,
this AB nineteen fifty five, where you're being forced to

(16:39):
light appearance, when teachers are being forced to light appearance.
Where do you stand on that? And we would like
to invite you on to talk about it. We heard
fact that it would not be fruitful, would not be fruitful.
We need more elected officials. Listen, we people can be
upset by this. We elect you to represent US Republicans

(17:00):
all over across this valley. Hold some press conferences about this. Mayor,
City Council, Board of Supervisors, elected officials in Sacramento, elected
officials in Congress. This is what's happening back in your
home district. Lying to parents. And if you don't know
what I'm talking about and you don't grasp it, your

(17:21):
son is Tony. You call him Tony. He goes to school,
they call him Tanya. He wears girl clothes, they call
him she her. Those are the pronouns. When Tanya goes
back home, he's Tony. You don't know about it. When
you come on the parent teacher conference, they by law
got a calling Tony and not tell you that they
call him Tanya. There it is remember about a month
ago when President Trump said no more low flow shower heads,

(17:47):
we all applauded. Yeah, all right. That got the attention
of an owner inventor who had one of the top
sixteen coolest inventions in California, and I happened to endorse
him on this shows. Sent a letter to the Secretary
of Energy when I was told this story, I said, David,
David Malcolm, if heigh seer shower head, you need to
come on and share, and he will next. This is

(18:10):
the Trevor Jerry Show on the Valley's Power Talk.

Speaker 11 (18:15):
You too. These showers are horrible. There's no pressure. I
can't get the shampoo out of my me either. If
I don't have a good shower, I am not myself.
I feel weak and ineffectual. I'm not Kramer.

Speaker 1 (18:29):
You what about me?

Speaker 7 (18:30):
I got the tonight show.

Speaker 9 (18:31):
Tonight, I'm gonna have to shower in the dressing room.

Speaker 1 (18:35):
Where are you going? I gotta find another shower.

Speaker 7 (18:44):
They got you too.

Speaker 1 (18:45):
This is awful. I'm not mooming the low flow shower
been real negative. President Trump coming out and he's getting
rid of this. The man's going to come on and
explain how it all happened. Back in nineteen ninety two.
He's an inventor. He's also the owner one of the

(19:07):
sixteen coolest in ventionents in California last year, David Heisier
shower heads. Mister Malcolm, thanks for joining.

Speaker 12 (19:13):
Us, all right, Trevor, Well, thanks for inviting me.

Speaker 1 (19:16):
Yeah, we all know how Kramer felt, and Seinfeld felt,
and Newman even felt. Take us back before you went
to the Secretary US Department of Energy with your letter,
I want to talk about that. But tell us how
all this started back in ninety two.

Speaker 12 (19:33):
Well, it started with a mandate by the government to
restrict maximum flow of showerheads to two and a half
gallons a minute. And before that, prior to that, there
were no restrictions at all. So the response by the
manufacturers at the time, Kohler, Delta Standard, all the others,

(19:56):
their response was to add a restrict into the showerheads.
They would not allow them to deliver more than two
and a half gallons a minute at adypsi. So that
was the maximum pressure and the maximum flow ADPs I
two and a half gallons a minute, and the result

(20:18):
was a very weak shower because most people don't have ADPSI.

Speaker 1 (20:22):
You know, is that should we look at that as
a speed limit that it's coming out of the shower head.

Speaker 12 (20:26):
At something like that. The speed of the water is
the velocity, but it's directly related to the pressure, you know.
And and most people don't have ADPSI at my house
and present, I've got fifty two.

Speaker 1 (20:44):
How do you measure that? How do you measure that?
If you're not your kind of skill, Like, how's the
average person measured?

Speaker 12 (20:50):
It's so easy. I bought a pressure gauge on Amazon
that comes with a garden post thread, and you screw
it right onto your faucet that's connected to the house.
Make sure nothing's running inside the house, no water's flowing anywhere,
and then open that valve up and that will tell

(21:11):
you what the static pressure is inside your home.

Speaker 1 (21:16):
Now when you're saying outside the fossil like on that
I would hook those two yeah.

Speaker 12 (21:22):
Okay, yeah, you could even connect it to the to
the hose if you wanted to. Just make sure no
water is flowing.

Speaker 1 (21:27):
Right right, And that gives you, like your temperature when
you put up themometer in your mouth or under your
arm or now.

Speaker 12 (21:33):
Something like that. Yeah, and that's your static pressure. That's
the pressure of maximum pressure that you could possibly have
in that home is going to be whatever that reading
is that my home in Fresno is fifty two. Got
a house up in course gold and I have the
pump set at thirty five to fifty five, So it
goes on at thirty five and off of fifty five.

Speaker 1 (21:53):
Who regulates that, David and Fresno, like you're fifty two,
that you have who regulates that?

Speaker 12 (21:58):
Well, it's the city. So the city has to keep
their mainline pressure very high in order for them to
be able to deliver water, deliver water to all, you know,
to all the homes and businesses in different areas. And
you know, as water is flowing through pipes, it loses pressure.
So it's going to start off with really high pressure,

(22:19):
maybe one hundred and fifty pounds at the pump, and
then it's going through all the pies it's delivered. Well,
the homes closest to the homes closest to that pump
station has to be regulated because there's nothing in your
home that's going to stand one hundred and fifty pounds
of pressure. So out in front of your house in

(22:39):
the you know, in a box in the ground, is
going to be a pressure regulator, And so when they've
built your home, they probably set the pressure at I'm
going to get fifty to sixty psi somewhere in there.
And and of course the further you get away from
the pump, the lower the pressure is going to be.

(23:00):
And so maybe they don't even use pressure regulators in
those areas. But the closer you are to a pump station,
you're going to have a pressure regulator. And it's whoever
built the house is the one wo's gonna set it.

Speaker 1 (23:14):
So can I go out there and try that thing
up and crank up my psi?

Speaker 12 (23:17):
Huh? You could? You could, but I wouldn't even recommend it,
because there's nothing in your home inside or outside that
really needs more than fifty psi. That's a good water pressure,
So fifty to sixty right in there.

Speaker 1 (23:31):
Hey, well, I'm thinking of this. David ex sees me
for interrupting you, But I would forget it. I guess
I could write it down. But when I'm I'm out
there watering my front grass. I got a little grass area,
and now that it's hot, I do it when it's
not as hot, But when it was cooler, I would
do it at different times of the day, and I
would not notice how the it fluctuates the pressure in
my hose. How's that happen?

Speaker 12 (23:53):
Well? And then that means that the pressure is being
delivered by the city is fluctuating. And I guess that
can happen. I've never seeing that happen at my house
of presno, okay, but I guess it could. You know,
if a lot of people are using water, and of
course you're right next to that lake over there, and
so maybe you know they have to dump a lot
of water into it once in a while, and I

(24:14):
could see the you know, the if it's the city
water and it's not on it so well, I could
see the water pressure in the city dropping in that area.

Speaker 1 (24:24):
Yeah. Well, why David knows where I live, as he
came over there and installed iicier shower head there, I David, I,
my mom and dad are visiting in July, and I
can't wait for them the experience when I get to
experience how do you make it powerful? And how can
it be low flow? Though?

Speaker 12 (24:41):
Yeah, so we have to use restrictors. Everybody does because
the mandate is ADPSI. And so if you make a
shower head it's going to put out a certain flow
rate at eightpsi. Well, most people don't have eighty, Like
I was saying before, most people are forty to sixty.

(25:02):
So it's gonna if you don't have a way to
regulate the flow going into the shower head, it's gonna
at forty to sixty, it's gonna have a lot less
water than at eighty. So you have to build a
flexible device that that regulates the flow depending on water pressure,
so it actually opens up at lower water pressure, so

(25:24):
you'll get the same flow at maybe forty psi as
you do at eighty psi. And and so we have
to we have to build booth into our showerheads because
of that reason alone. You know, nobody knows what their
water pressure is, and so we just have to self
adjust for that. Well, and then we well, we came

(25:46):
up with a few years ago a way to you know,
collide a couple of streams together from a single mozzle
and create this really nice spray of heavy it's not
even a spray. I call it a cascade of heavy
droplets that feel like more water than it really is.
And so it comes out of there with some pretty

(26:06):
good velocity, but it doesn't hurt. And so that's that
totally separates us from the other shower heads that are
weak because we can put the water out faster without pain,
while there's a conventional shower head that's that little paint streams.
If the water comes up too fast, it hurts, it's stingy.

Speaker 1 (26:25):
It's annoying, I believe me. I hate any kind of spray,
even at a swimming pool. I hate the water spray
thet miss I I'd rather have a big bucket dunked
over me. I can handle that more than that. It's annoying.

Speaker 12 (26:37):
Ours is, yeah, ours are not like a bucket, but
it's more like.

Speaker 1 (26:41):
A downpour, a cascade, that's how you just described it.
I enjoy it once sometimes twice a day.

Speaker 6 (26:48):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (26:48):
And I still don't know how you do that. And
I love the handheld as well. Neither of them lose
any velocity you turn. If you turn one off, you
thought the other one might get faster and done. And
they're they're balanced properly now.

Speaker 12 (27:00):
And that's because there are they are low flow. Each
one of those low flow. Now, we do make a
high flow version of that for people out of the
state of California. It's two and a half gallons a
minute per shower head, so a total of five. It's
a lot of water. And I was testing it this
morning at our place in Presno, and uh and it's incredible.

(27:23):
Uh it the field. But you know something, if I
was to use just our one on one point twenty
five gallon a minute shower head for the handheld and
to the fixed it's it's not going to feel the same,
but the ability for that water to rinse the champoo

(27:44):
out of your hair and give you a decent effective
shower is going to be just as good as the
two and a half twice the flow.

Speaker 1 (27:52):
So well, when you wrote to the secretary, uh secretary
right at US Department of Energy, I did, They say, hey,
send us one and we'll try it out and maybe
we'll retrack.

Speaker 12 (28:05):
Now what happened, Well, unfortunately they replied and said they
can't accept the free samples.

Speaker 1 (28:12):
Oh give I get it. US aid, yeah, we had
to run it through USA, didn't they they could take it,
And I.

Speaker 12 (28:18):
Said, well, I didn't really intend it to be a gift.

Speaker 1 (28:22):
A demonstration as well.

Speaker 12 (28:23):
Very you know, we're small manufacturer and and we're not
in stores we get around. We saw a lot of
our showerheads and we have a great we have great
listings on Amazon, and we get a fantastic uh, you know,
reviews from customers. In fact, here's one there's a brand

(28:48):
new review on Amazon of our one point two five
gallon a minute shower head that's half the national standard.
And the guy says, life has long, thick hair. She
gave it a five at a five. Shampoo conditioned, shaved

(29:08):
pressure was awesome, install it as simple as any other showerhead,
and wrench included. So and that's the one point you
find the and the family loved it, and they liked
it so much they left the review. And we don't
pay people for reviews. We don't even ask them to review.

Speaker 1 (29:27):
But that's good. But let me did President Trump when
he said no more, Look, does that mean that California
restrictor is going to have to come out? Can he
regulate what California does? Or is that a state? There?

Speaker 12 (29:39):
No, that's a state.

Speaker 1 (29:41):
So that was more show.

Speaker 12 (29:42):
I guess, well, it's there's a lot of states in
this country that don't that follow the national mandate and
so it would apply to them.

Speaker 1 (29:51):
Okay, So you know the.

Speaker 12 (29:54):
Few states and I and I actually I don't believe
there should be a national mandate. I believe that it
should be left up to the states. And it's totally
regional and even areas in a state where you know,
I can totally see uh, you know, a a large city,

(30:16):
even if it's on the Great Lakes. It costs a
lot of money to clean the water and to deliver
it to the customers, and so it's in you know,
fresh clean water is a limited supply, even in places
where there's a lot of water. But let's say you're
just an individual, you got your own well, and you're
on the banks of the Mississippi River. Why should you
have to be living in how much water?

Speaker 1 (30:37):
You yeah, yeah, well that would be too much rights.
That would be down to individual rights. David Well, listen man,
one of the coolest sixteen inventions in California. It won here,
and I gotta say it is sturdy, sturdy stuff. It's
not it's not cheap Chinese stuff here, David uh pulling
him in the right direction, Sir.

Speaker 12 (30:58):
Made him metal and in Corsico, California. And we're you know,
most of our sales are through our website High Sierra
Showerheads dot com and the Trevor UH fifteen discount code
is still active.

Speaker 1 (31:15):
Trevor fifteen.

Speaker 12 (31:16):
Yeah, Trevor fifteen.

Speaker 1 (31:18):
Trevor fifteen. That's t R E V O R fifteen
D A V I D have a great weekend. Thank you,
and I I think if you every day man, you
know I do? You know I do?

Speaker 12 (31:31):
Thank you, Sir a lot. I'll talk to you.

Speaker 1 (31:33):
So you bet you, David. Now come there, High Sier Showerheads.
This is the Trevor Cherry Show on the Valley's Power Talk.

Speaker 12 (31:41):
Well this is a good one.

Speaker 1 (31:42):
Is everybody listening, Well, I'd like to be presently okay, Yeah,
I ran. Missile strikes have hit a historic mosque and
Israel as well. They launched twenty thirty missiles in three waves.
Sirens are sounded in the north than throughout the entire country.
They had a place where Arabs and Jews love side

(32:04):
by side. Imagine that getting along in Israel. And within
the last twenty minutes more rockets have been fired into Israel.
Director Ryan Nigel saw it on the video screen over there,
saw the fire and all this is real life really
happened English like President Trump has kind of put a
two week I thought they were getting ready to put
those centrifuges in and get that ball and drop it

(32:25):
in and launch them. Well, uh, we're on the edge.
How would you feel if you had two daughters. I'm
talking to guys right now. How would you feel you
had two daughters and your wife has a podcast and
they said, oh, too bad he didn't have a boy. No,

(32:47):
I wouldn't want him to be a baby Barack. I
would feel for him. Ouch. That has to hurt Barack.
Your wife Michelle talking like this about you, and she
wouldn't have never wanted to have a male offspring because
it would have been, like you, guys, things are not

(33:11):
lovey dovey, and the Obama marriage probably never were. Yeah.
She she kept it shut because she had air Force one.
And yeah, now she she didn't have to keep it
shut anymore. Let's go hear in her mouth.

Speaker 10 (33:27):
It's about what he needs as a grown man in
the world.

Speaker 1 (33:30):
That would be you should have threw a boy in
the mix.

Speaker 10 (33:33):
I would I'm so glad I didn't have the boy.
He would have been a Barack Obama. No, I would
have felt for him.

Speaker 1 (33:47):
I would have felt for him somebody should have stopped
that woman. That is disrespectful.

Speaker 7 (33:54):
You don't do that. Don't do that. I don't do that.
I know.

Speaker 1 (33:58):
Thank you, Lenn Ashback. You're right. I agree with you
on that, Michelle. That was disrespectful to talk that bad
about your husband in public. How's Malania's husband doing.

Speaker 5 (34:11):
Well?

Speaker 1 (34:11):
According to Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney, Malania's husband doing
pretty good for his bold measures. He said, this is
the guy that said our relationship is over, so we're
gonna come back again. We're gonna take all the hockey
pucks away from a Maria. He did all that kind
of talking, but no different tune up at the G
seven and Alberta before President Trump had a scadad allowed

(34:32):
he got a call from Pete in the middle of it.
I wonder if he calls him PDA PD boy, Secretary
Defense headsec.

Speaker 6 (34:42):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (34:42):
Yeah, some call went to Trump and he had to
get out and get back and get a little meeting
going at the White House because again Iran again nuclear weapons.
But Carney referenced several gatherings over the last five decades.
He said, this one is a turning point in history.
He said that we're meeting one of those moments, and

(35:03):
he applauded President Trump. He said he's identifying the shifting
global dynamics and he's addressing them. He then called for cooperation.
Do you think this is because he really loves Trump? Now? No, No,
probably can't stand him, Probably got a dark board in
his bedroom at home. But he understands that he is

(35:26):
up against a leader of another nation that is dominant
over him, and he understands the power that's willed to
behind that. That doesn't mean you got to play a bully.
President Trump's asking for fair fairness for America to not
get the short end of the stick all the time.
Parney and all these other I don't care if you're

(35:48):
Brent British Prime Minister Starmer or Francis Macron, or a
prime minister of Japan or German and Chancellor Merz or
any of them. They understand what up against somebody that's
not going to mess around with the power that the
United States has.

Speaker 2 (36:05):
The Assistant Trevor carry Show on The Valley's Power Talk