Woke White Liberal Ladies’ War on Joy

Woke White Liberal Ladies’ War on Joy

June 26, 2025 • 36 min

Episode Description

Episode Transcript

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

Speaker 1 (00:00):
It's their face, man, and it's those liberal faces. It's
zero joy zero, especially the females. They got that that
look that the wife has on the couch and come
in the front door and she said, they're like, we
need to talk. It's that that look. But it's all

(00:22):
the time, ladies. I know there's times men need to
be given that look. I get that, but you don't
live that way all the time. Zero joy man zero
ability to literally listen to people that might be a
little smarter and wiser regarding why they're there than yourselves.
Act like these health and human services scientists were the

(00:45):
smartest ever and how dare RFK Junior go after them?
What you're a smart scientist? What do you think? Oh wait,
you weren't a scientist. That doesn't matter what I think
or not think. Oh okay, but I remember how they lied,
how they locked us down, how they ruin lives and businesses,
in kids' education. Why did you do it?

Speaker 2 (01:07):
Man?

Speaker 1 (01:07):
No, that's a really good point.

Speaker 3 (01:09):
I don't have a really firm answer few on that.

Speaker 1 (01:12):
Yeah, they're saying now that this is a doctor mahatra
as Sin Mahaltra saying that hearing the experimental Mr NA
injections might be soon pulled from the US market. They
should be. I think if RFK Junior has anything to
do what he did, he fired the entire CDC Vaccine

(01:32):
Advisory Panel. We call that a clean sweep right across
the board. He dismissed seventeen members. All seventeen members. This
is the body that does our vaccine policies. So I
think there's a little bit more to come. He said,

(01:53):
they played with persistent conflict of interest, meaning I don't
know pharmaceutical industry dinners envelopes being passed under the bathroom stall.
We don't know how it all goes down. I bet
you anything. He's found out so much more that he

(02:14):
had no idea. Listen, COVID ended up with kids zero
to nineteen with an infection survival rate of ninety nine
point ninety nine seven. We normally stop at ninety nine
point nine, but we go ninety nine point nine nine.
No threat to young kids or older teens, and we

(02:35):
know that it doesn't keep you from from getting it.
And we do know that some people have died, but
you still had some of them in there pushing this
and they still are. R K Junior reportedly moving towards
restricting pharmaceutical companies from running TV commercials. Oh good, no

(02:59):
more seven year old guys playing the bass guitar at
the gazebo at the park. I don't know who does
all these commercials, but it's the same company. It's the
same four people with the same ideas. Let's get a overweight,
Hispanic or black woman to bounce around in bright colored
clothes with all the town around her at the gazebo
with flowers, and let's get a catchy jingle. You always

(03:23):
got the middle aged guy playing in the band, throw
in some bike riding. It's all with the same thing.
And here's the thing about it. I don't even know
what the disease that they're advertising for is. To even know,
Yeah I might, I might have that, Yeah right, It
kind of like undercover. Maybe they got to do that.

(03:43):
I don't know. But wouldn't it be great if we
didn't have to do the pharmaceutical ads anymore. If you
have a problem, go talk to your doctor and he'll
let him show you a video or something on it.
Let him send you a link. It's depressing. And you
know how notice this because I'm now a fan of
YouTube of going back and watching Game four of the

(04:06):
seventy eight World Series with all the commercials in it,
And I can tell on YouTube if they're like three
hours in something, it's with commercials. If they're an hour
and fifty nine minutes, they've edited the commercials out. I
like to watch it with the commercials. It was about cereal,
it was about batteries for the car. It was about shaving.

(04:26):
It was about pantyhose. Joe Namath would be in a pair.
It was relaxing. It wasn't stressed out. Taste great, let's filling.
Taste great, Let's filling. It wasn't side effects could include
recto bleeding. I've had enough. Quit stop it. It would

(04:47):
make viewing good again. Now everybody has a right to advertise,
but a lot of these things have not been passed accredited.
And I'm glad he's getting in there out here that
is happening because they don't do this in all the
other countries. They don't have to watch people walking barefoot
on the beach while a voiceover list all these horrible

(05:11):
side effects. He also got down with Congress just here
kind of set the place on fire. I don't think
they were ready for this. No talking about how much
money we spend four point five trillion dollars annually on healthcare,
two to three times more per capita than other nations

(05:33):
that are like us in the United States remains the
sickest developed nation that there is. Let's go listen to
this Democrat congresswoman trying to Are you gonna come on
and you're going to do retaliation? Are you going to
go after these people? You know? I guess like I
don't know the Fauci types and all of this.

Speaker 4 (05:53):
So here's my question. Will you commit today that neither
you or anyone else at HHS will take any retaliatory
action against the brave scientists that work at NIH. Any
answer it's illegal.

Speaker 5 (06:08):
I can commit that we are absolutely deep politicizing science.

Speaker 4 (06:13):
Will you commit you will not take any.

Speaker 5 (06:16):
Administration as chairman miss Missus chairwoman Biden administration politicize the science,
and I just.

Speaker 1 (06:24):
Okay, hate you. I just gave you three.

Speaker 4 (06:29):
Excuse me, sir. Let me ask you a simple question.
Will you commit?

Speaker 1 (06:33):
Will you be quiet and lett him talk that is disrespectful,
don't do that, don't do that, stop it, stop it.
There's too many of you.

Speaker 4 (06:41):
To not taking retaliatory action against the nai H scientists
that signed the letter about the research dollarship.

Speaker 5 (06:50):
I don't know anything about that letter.

Speaker 1 (06:51):
You don't know about the letter.

Speaker 5 (06:53):
I don't know anything about that letter.

Speaker 1 (06:54):
Okay, put that.

Speaker 4 (06:56):
We already put that our question in the record. I
don't like a response.

Speaker 1 (07:01):
CATA did in that decade. Here's what Secretary Kennedy said,
if she'd given him a chance to talk. He wants
to tackle mental health and addiction head on. Number two,
prioritize nutrition and healthy lifestyles. You've had a lot of
the companies crap. They've all come out said they're going
to take these these dyes out. You know what's gonna

(07:23):
happen to all of us who have been the lab
rats for this for decades now. We're gonna be like, wait,
that's a different color. That's what we're gonna start seeing. Wait,
that blueberry pop tart doesn't quite look blueberry like it
used to. I wonder if tang will still be orange?
All right? Number three, clean up the US food system.

(07:45):
Number four, refocus NIH and CDC research priorities.

Speaker 6 (07:48):
Good.

Speaker 1 (07:48):
He's doing that. He's cleaning house, Eliminate DEI funding. Look
at that look at that modernized cybersecurity and health it
number seven. Rebuild public trust. Move to a new town.
Call around, need a doctor, you know, doctor Ferguson's office. Yeah,
which way did the doc vote last election? It's really

(08:11):
where we got to get on in this. Here's Congressman
Frank Polone. He jumped in, Yeah, you've set out the
public Senator Kennedy, you made a number of decisions about vaccine,
no public comment, no account of accountability. What are you
afraid of? It's either just so.

Speaker 7 (08:28):
Well, thank you, Lynn snarky is you have made a
number of major decisions about vaccines, and I you know
again there's been no public comment process or public accountability
on that.

Speaker 6 (08:39):
Either.

Speaker 7 (08:40):
What are you afraid of? I mean with regard to vaccines.
Are you just afraid of receiving public comments on proposals?
Or you just think these are fringe views that are
contrary to the views of most scientists, and you're and
that the public comments will reflect us. You say you
want transparency, but there's been no public process for any

(09:00):
of this.

Speaker 5 (09:00):
We have a public process for regulating vaccines. It's called
the a ZEP Committee and it's a public meeting. They
will be fired the commit meeting. You fired THEA. I
fired people who had conflicts with the pharmaceutical industry.

Speaker 7 (09:14):
Oh, I mean that's right, that industry.

Speaker 5 (09:16):
That committee has been numb plate for medical malpractice.

Speaker 1 (09:21):
I look eighty years I look, I I I Hey, Frankie,
you're dealing with the Kennedy when they're like six years old.
They're doing debate practice in the basement. He was sitting there.
RFK Junior was sitting there in his mind going, you

(09:41):
know what, I'm gonna flash it. I'm gonna I'm gonna
flash him back fifteen years ago when this same guy
Congress from Polone, Kennedy said he was one of the
most outspoken advocates in Congress for families impacted by vaccine injury. Now,
why would he change? Follow the money like anything else.

(10:05):
Follow the money and listen. Listen to how Kennedy exposes this,
and listen to how out of sorts Congress skits. This
is what they're like. This is perfect example.

Speaker 5 (10:16):
Of if I don't know what, but listen, if I
can take a minute just to respond to something that
Congressman Belone said, and I'll address you. Congressman Beloone, fifteen
years ago you and I met. You were at that
time a champion or people who had suffered injuries from vaccines.

(10:38):
You are very adamant about it. You were the leading
member of Congress on that issue since and you've accepted
two million dollars from pharmaceutical companies and contribution more than
any other member of this committee. And your enthusiasm for
supporting the old ASIP Committee, which was completely rife and

(10:58):
pervasive with pharmaceutical conflicts, seems to be an outcome of
those contributions.

Speaker 4 (11:06):
Mister chairman, quint of order, point of order, Chair recognized, gentleman,
is impugning the reputation of a member of Congress.

Speaker 8 (11:17):
That is disrespectful.

Speaker 5 (11:19):
Don't do that.

Speaker 1 (11:20):
Don't do that, man, stay out of Congress. Stop.

Speaker 4 (11:24):
Can you stay stopping the cloud?

Speaker 5 (11:26):
Four second?

Speaker 4 (11:27):
Can you can you stay the point of order?

Speaker 7 (11:30):
Yeah, it was impugning, mister, mister Chairman, I did hear it,
did the Joe? You aren't paying attention. That's why, well,
you know, it's hard to pay attention here when we're
not getting any response.

Speaker 1 (11:41):
Okay.

Speaker 7 (11:41):
My understanding now is that the secretary said something about
me taking money from pharmaceuticals.

Speaker 1 (11:47):
Is that what he says exactly what he said.

Speaker 4 (11:49):
You heard the Secretary implied that mister Polone would not
fight for vaccine victims because he took money from the
pharmaceutical And yeah, that's what you know.

Speaker 1 (12:01):
Again, needs to take back those works, you know. Okay, okay,
here we go, here we go, here we go.

Speaker 5 (12:05):
The adult this, miss secretary, this is a valid point
of water, I'm told so i'd ask you if you
would please take back those words.

Speaker 1 (12:15):
I retracted.

Speaker 5 (12:17):
Thank you, miss secretary.

Speaker 1 (12:19):
Impact made impact made Yillory partner. He'll run out or
she'll run out and go find that out. Well, let
me tell you again two words. Keep this. Keep this
in your mind. Kind of like when I moved to
Western New York. They said, early in the morning, when
you'll be driving in, keep in your mind. Hit the deer.

(12:39):
Hit the deer, don't swerve, you'll die. Hit the deer
that run out. Keep in your mind again, never again,
never again.

Speaker 3 (12:49):
There is nothing wrong with people wearing two masks. I
often myself wear two masks. Can we make a general
recommendation that doesn't have scientific basis yet? No, But when
the science comes along and tells us that it is
better or not, then you will see a recommendation being

(13:09):
made by the CDC.

Speaker 1 (13:11):
Shut up. I mean I will never be locked down again.
May be arrested and locked up, but never again locked down.
Pray for RFK Junior. This is the Trebor Chary Show
on the Valley's Power Talk. National Dead hit thirty seven

(13:31):
trillion dollars. We did it. Congratulations, Congress, way to go. Woooo.
Somehow we elected people to handle our money who actually
mismanaged it so bad on a greater scale than anybody

(13:51):
in world history. We're number one, thirty seven trillion. In
twenty twenty three, the clock showed thirty three trillion dollars.
We managed somehow to add in just a year and
a half later, four trillion more in debt. How did

(14:14):
this happen? I'll never forget. I was watching a King
of Queens and they went out for a day and
they were having ice cream and walking along, and they
showed a shot of the US debt clock. I think,
I don't know, six six trillion or something like that,
thirty seven trillion. I'm sitting there looking at the US

(14:37):
national debt right now. If you've never just go to
usdet Clock dot Org. I can't even use the word fascinating, sickening,
that's the word. It has so many. It shows our
unfunded debt, our national debt, federal tax revenue, revenue per citizen. Okay,

(14:58):
here's the debt per citizen. That per taxpayer right now
is at three hundred and twenty three thousand dollars per
US taxpayer. That's what we owe. I'm looking at the
national debt right now, thirty seven trillion, twenty eight billion,
eight hundred and two million, seven hundred and eight hundred thousand,

(15:19):
nine hundred thousand. Now we're at eight hundred and three.
This is how fast it's going. Let me show you
how quick a hundred thousand dollars go. Okay, wait, I
gotta go now done. One hundred thousand dollars spent debt
right there, US national debt. That was one hundred thousand
dollars that quick, bye, golly. That is just unsustainable. Has

(15:46):
to be onto it. There's no way we can sustain that.
There's not a lot of people that I don't question
in the world when they tell me something, and Kirk
Cameron is one of those. Listen to him talk about
what a trillion dollars is like and remember just times
this by thirty seven, thirty seven trillion dollars in debt.

Speaker 6 (16:09):
If you earn one dollar every second, you'd become a
billionaire in thirty two years. But it would take more
than another thirty one thousand years for you to make
one trillion dollars. One trillion dollars stacked on top of
each other would reach nearly sixty thousand miles into space.
It would take more than forty four thousand, eighteen wheel

(16:29):
trucks carrying a load of twenty five tons each to
transport a trillion one dollar bills. Then again, it may
be more convenient to simply use one of these.

Speaker 1 (16:42):
He had a trillion dollar bill, all right, Kirk Cameron,
Ladies and gentlemen. If you stack one trillion and one
hundred dollar bills one hundred dollar bill on sixty seven,
eight hundred and sixty six miles tall, staggering, it would

(17:04):
take a military jet flying at the speed of sound,
reeling out a roll of dollar bills behind it, again
at the speed of sound, fourteen years before it reeled
out one trillion dollar bills multipply that by thirty seven,

(17:24):
you might say we're at a do overtime, do over.
There's no way to get do over. And we haven't
even factored in the unfunded liability all the pension plans
the government has provided social Security into the future. Of
every dollar that you pay in taxes, twenty five cents

(17:47):
goes to paying the interest on our loans. We now
spend more on loan interest than we do on our
entire military. Now, if you are well off financially enough
to need to hire financial advisor for your riches and
they behave like this, would you stick with them for

(18:10):
a long time over your lifespan. Guys, if this were
financial advisors, they'd probably be in the Bernie Madoff cell.
This is like a pyramid scheme, and the victims are
the people in the future. We are right now. But

(18:31):
there's no way that this can be sustained. So when
you hear rational Republicans, rational like Senator Ram Paul saying,
we do not need to add five trillion dollars onto
this debt, somebody has to stop the madness. President Trump,

(18:51):
campaigning years ago, said we're about to as soon as
we hit twenty seven trillion, it's done. Say hello to Greece.
That was his words years ago. I think in twenty
eighteen maybe it was twenty six I don't know. Sometimes
I had the audio I played it last week. But yeah,
he was worried about it at twenty seven trillion, saying
we turn into the financial ruins of like Greece was

(19:15):
in that mess. But thirty seven trillion dollars? All right,
how does that make you feel? Make you feel pretty good?

Speaker 5 (19:23):
The assistant tremor Jerry Show, London, Vally's power Dog.

Speaker 1 (19:28):
Nothing wrong with being a Muslim politician as long as you,
I don't know, like, love America and the constitution and
capitalism and whatnot and believe in law enforcement. Now this
guy is a socialist comedie Zorn mom Donne. Yeah, good
campaign man.

Speaker 9 (19:49):
I would like to thank all the terrorists for voter
for me. I couldn't have done this without you, guys.
I promise to defund the police so you can keep
planning a taxi. Also, thank you to all of my
publack people who just to be able to look and
to work on top of police cause and hit white
women in the faith for no reason.

Speaker 1 (20:04):
You can keep doing all that, there would be no
police you want on the subway And how nice people?
Well you voted for the right guy. Let's make New
York hey third one full again. Thank you. Of course
not real, but the real mom Donnie is scary. And
at least here he was on the Breakfast Club with
Charlem Magne.

Speaker 8 (20:25):
Corporations that are making millions of dollars, not in revenue
but in profit. And the second is taxing the top
one percent of New Yorkers. We're talking about people who
make a million dollars a year more, taxing them just
by flat two percent tax increase. And I know a
fifty cent is listening. He's not gonna be happy about this.
Intense and not like this tax policy. But I want
to be very clear. This is about twenty thousand dollars
a year. It's a rounding era, and all of these

(20:45):
things together they make every New Yorker's life better, including
those who are actually getting taxed.

Speaker 1 (20:50):
It's gonna make you better. It's gonna make your life
better to get taxed. Well, he mentioned rapper fifty cent
in there. He fired back. He's like, now, uh uh,
he said, uh, fifty cents, I goo be happy about this.
Fifty cent said where did he come from? Whose friend
is this? I'm not feeling this plan. No, I'll give
him two hundred and fifty eight thousand, seven and fifty

(21:11):
dollars in a first class one way take it away
from New York. And here's the Kickerty sent said, I'm
telling Trump what he said too. Now that's funny. Uh,
this is I guess something good to look at here.
Senator John Fetterman reacted to the communist madman. Mom Donnie's

(21:32):
went in New York City. He said, quote, I'll describe
it as Christmas in July for the GOP. Yeah, let's
get Curtisilla in there. Let's get him to be mayor.
I'd rather have Mayor Eric Adams any day over this
cat Adams might run as an independent? What's on your mind?
Anything that you want to talk about? Five point five

(21:52):
nine two thirty forty two forty two, two thirty forty
two forty two. Let's go to Devin, Devin, welcome to
the show. Was this Devon and Arnold by chance, Trevor,
we gotta we gotta say it up here in Arnold
it is Hello, Devin.

Speaker 2 (22:08):
It's the first you do succeed. Uh, you got it,
Fry trying to fill me again. Yeah, that's it.

Speaker 1 (22:17):
George w He was a classic I remember when he
told the reporter, hey, what do you think you're all
cool with your sunglasses out here? And the guy was blind.
Do you remember that one? I mean he wasn't he
wasn't a Biden gaff machine, but he was the second
best gaff machine out there. But George was funny with him.
I'll never forget when he Remember when he did uh

(22:39):
he was over I in Uh, I ran somewhere a
press conference and that guy threw his shoes at him.
Do you remember that? In the Secret Service? They Yeah,
he was lean into the side out there.

Speaker 2 (22:52):
Yeah, no, hey, I was. I was just telling uh.
I think he's the agent Squires who asks the that
I'm proud man, I'm in a good mood today, the
Bomby and the suff and you know, the good news
that they think it did what it was supposed to do,
and I don't know, just feel proud.

Speaker 1 (23:11):
Well, you know, Devin is gonna be a liberal out
there that heard them and go listen to them. Look
at them glorifying. We know people had their skin burned
off their back. We know they killed all these generals
who were grandfathers and fathers and husbands and you have
all that and I know you well enough from calling
and communicating with you, Devon, that we're not glorifying the

(23:32):
fact that people got killed. We're glorifying the fact that
people who are standing outside of our house saying we're
going to kill you and your family. You're the Satan,
You're the devil. That they got cut back way low.
They got they got knocked back right down because you
got to keep in mind they were screaming murder people.
That's like a self defense move. What happened it is

(23:53):
And now let me ask you.

Speaker 2 (23:55):
Alma, was under the impression that our bones, uh did
they not? Did they not kill anybody?

Speaker 3 (24:02):
Did?

Speaker 1 (24:03):
Hey, here's the thing about it. There had to be
people still left around those mountains or had to with
that kind of devastation. With the Tomahawks that we're sending
with Israel. Yes, now, we hit military targets and there's
always collateral damage. There's there's always and we know that
they hide behind, especially in Gaza, a lot of the
citizenry out there. But we did notice that Iran shot

(24:25):
their missiles at civilian populations in Israel. Oh yeah, that's
a big difference. So yeah, now one more question, trev.

Speaker 2 (24:34):
Was I don't know. You probably can't say anything, but
did your boys? Did your boy participate in the refueling?
I don't even know.

Speaker 1 (24:43):
Yeah, you do not know. And uh if I if
I did, I yeah, probably wouldn't be talking about it
that much until after the fact. Then I'll be bragging,
right right. Yeah? Hey, well they Hey, and thank you
for letting me know, Devin. I don't know if you
heard yesterday because Devin emailed me I was talking about
Fellowship of Crison athletes. How I was here nineteen eighty two.
Did you hear me say yesterday when you emailed me

(25:03):
that you said your daughter's involved with it up there in.

Speaker 2 (25:06):
Arnold Proud Number. Yeah, absolutely, I'm.

Speaker 1 (25:09):
I'm glad it's still going. Well. Thank you for letting
me know that. Man. Okay, see Devin, Devin and Arnold
ladies and gentlemen. Yes, we are proud of America and
rightfully so. There were many many other presidents again, let
me play you, let me play this. Let's go back.
This could have been done, should have been done, but no,

(25:32):
we had some presidents that sent them pallets of cash. Obama.
Then we had a president Joe Biden that unfroze sixteen
billion in funds. Here, guys, here, I'm sure you can
create some drones or some IDs or this money here.

Speaker 5 (25:48):
We worked to counter Iran's efforts to develop nuclear weapons
and missile technology.

Speaker 8 (25:52):
That Iran should not have a nuclear weapon period.

Speaker 10 (25:56):
I have stated that Iran will never be allowed to
obtain a nuclear weapon.

Speaker 1 (26:00):
We will not allow a Ran to acquire her nuclear weapon.

Speaker 8 (26:05):
Iran's key nuclear and Richmond facilities have been completely and
totally obliterated.

Speaker 1 (26:10):
Yeah, I think we call that promises kept President near
a Tendon. That's what the documentary probably eighteen months. Well,
I'll see it on PBS documentary. He's President near a Tendon.
She's the former White House Staff secretary who had the autopin.

(26:31):
Can you imagine that? Honey, honey, get mommy's purse. No, no, no, no,
play with the autopin.

Speaker 7 (26:36):
Don't know.

Speaker 1 (26:37):
From October twenty twenty one through May of twenty twenty three,
she was promoted to White House Domestic Policy Council. Closed
door testimony under oath testified she was authorized to direct
the autopen, but denied manipulating or abusing that authority. Hold up,
wait a minute, detail has come out. She would utilize

(26:58):
an autopen without actually verifying from Joe himself. You know,
maybe a FaceTime under the beach chair up in Delaware
out by the beach. Yeah, go go ahead and Nara
or what you're tandem guard sign it. Yeah. Nothing, nothing
even like that happened, actually used it. Did not verify

(27:20):
from Joe Biden, the president himself, that this was an
authorized action. Man. We've heard of the power of the pen.
But my word said she would direct decision memos to
Biden's inner circle crackhead hunter, no visibility of approval before

(27:41):
sending the memo and receiving him back. She confirmed that
she affixed Biden's signature under presidential documents without direct knowledge
that Biden authorized the given action. So during all that time,
when we would see him like huh looking at the
wrong paratrooper, we'd be like, who's really running in the country?
You know, everybody said that, didn't we who's running the country?

(28:06):
Now we know there were two types of people running
the country. We had the Pilot Bureau where decisions were made,
and the White House staff where decisions were implemented. You
don't believe me. I heard it on Fox.

Speaker 10 (28:18):
I think we're going to come to learn there are
two types of people who are controlling the White House.
The first is the Polita Borough, the people making the
decisions that may not have been formal government employees. Think
of the Biden family, his handlers, the people who have
been with him for decades. And then you have the
implementation arm, which is the White House staff, whether that's
the chief of staff, the staff secretary, the person who

(28:38):
controls all the paper, the people who actually push the
go button on the auto pen. And so we're going
to learn. I think it's a basically white House run
by committee. It's the exact opposite of what the Constitution
calls from me.

Speaker 1 (28:50):
This is the Trevor carry Show on the valleys Power Talk,
Make Power Talk your number one pre set. They even
got the dial on their look like the old radio dial.
You can even listen to the music stations and have
the lyrics on there. And if you don't like it,
we don't have to give you your money back because
it's free. Here you go. You can listen that way.

(29:12):
People say, well, I sat in my car and I
just kept listening to that interview that you were doing.
I'm like, well, you do know you can take that
with you now and go in there and start cutting
out some carrots or whatever you're going to do to
get ready for them. And keep listening.

Speaker 2 (29:24):
All right.

Speaker 1 (29:24):
You heard me say that if you're thinking of going
somewhere else to retire in California, US News World Report,
that was always in dentist office and things laying around.
You don't see magazines laying around too much anymore. I'm
sure they're all online. But uh named Presno one of
the top ten places, actually number four in California. Affordable housing, jobs,

(29:47):
access to quality healthcare, and other factors. Why would they
put jobs in a retirement thing? We are the California's
the second most expensive state for retirees. Presnel the number four. Good.
That's good, they say. Convenient access to Yosemite, Sequoia, Kings Canyon,
the National Park, got lakes around, ideal retirement spots. Spot

(30:08):
to launch outdoor activities. Sixty two mile blooming spectacle of
fruit and nut trees along the Blossom Trail each spring.
Do a little drone overhead shot to some music. Slow
it down in slow motion, make it look beautiful. You
know what it really is. If we could get rid
of some problems, if the people that loved it, care

(30:32):
about it, that are here. If we could just clean
it up, man, clean it up, that's what needs to happen. Yes,
much more affordable, and that's a lot to do with.
We're right next to postcard places. Remember that we rank
ourselves acting like you know, we're a woman. We put
our makeup and put on our nicest dress and then

(30:54):
go to the Miss Miss World beauty pageant. We're ranking
ourselves against some of the most beautiful place in the
world that people come to to vacation. And we live
right here. Smack dab in it. I've always said to
anybody that always puts down the valley, I've lived all
over and believe me, eighty percent of the people would
love to live right here. And what we have going on.

(31:16):
I saw another article about how big is Tresno. I
had no idea. Now this is not counting the metro area.
Of course, Miami Metro is a lot huger Tampa. But
we have more people than Miami and a larger land
area than Tampa. Now by people, we mean city limits.
Presno is ranked larger than Sacramento. But Sacramento feels way bigger,

(31:41):
doesn't it, because it is it's got a huge metro.
We have an estimated city limit population of five hundred
and fifty thousands of July vers last year. That's an
increase of one point five from April to twenty twenty.
And you're going, well, that's not a one point five. Well,
a lot of other areas are drinking, people are leaving.

(32:01):
That's growth. I wonder how much of that is illegal immigration,
because now they're counting in the census. See none of
this we can even count to know what's actually the
real deal. Holy Field. Let's see Miami esimated population four
hundred and eighty seven thousand people. Even Atlanta has five
hundred and twenty thousand. So Fresno has a larger city
limit population than those two. This said, we're ranked thirty

(32:23):
fifth city council in Mike Carbasi and yesterday said thirty fourth.
I'd heard thirty fourth. We're one of the five largest
though here La three point eight million, San Diego one
point four. Again city limits, San Jose has nine hundred
and seventy seven thousand, San Francisco eight hundred and twenty
seven thousand. We outpaced Sacramento. They have five hundred and

(32:45):
thirty five thousand, Fresno City one hundred and fifteen one
hundred and fifteen square miles. Now compare that down to Smela,
they're four hundred and sixty nine. San Diego's three hundred
and twenty five. San Jose's one hundred and seventy eight.
Sacremento's only ninety eight miles, Modesto forty three miles. US

(33:05):
News and World Report. I got a question they're reporting
investigative skills here because they did say factors that attract
people to Fresno include its top tier schools. Yeah get that. Yeah,

(33:29):
now there are good schools, but they're not part of
the Fresilian flighted school district. Now, inside the school district,
I'm not gonna say, and believe me, teachers, I'm not
putting you down. I'm not your desire to get up
and put your feet in your shoes and go deal
with twenty twenty five thirty kids that you can't control
like your own kids. That's a gift from God that

(33:52):
you want. That's a desire to do that. Now you
can tell the ones that don't really have to desire,
and they're probably not the teachers that are good for kids.
But yes, I always applaud people that have decided to
do that with your degree. You've gone out and you've
done that. You want to give back. Yes, you're you're
molding the future for what seven eight hours a day.

(34:13):
But for US News or report to say top tier schools,
President Unified, we're the worst. The site of the Mississippi.
We beat Detroit. That's it. They listed quality healthcare and
low cost of living. We ranked number six on a
lists the most affordable places to live in California. They
always say cheap homes, right, everybody's going wow, man. I

(34:33):
remember back in nineteen ninety one, I bought my first
home for one hundred and seventy thousand dollars and I
hadn't pulled them back. Average home now valued, this is
average median three hundred ninety two thousand. Now, if you're
down in smel A and average is nine hundred and
seventy thousand. There's even some counties where it's in the
millions average but median price. But you see a nice
place for I can get six hundred thousand dollars for that.

Speaker 4 (34:56):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (34:58):
San Francisco median is one point two.

Speaker 3 (35:02):
Now.

Speaker 1 (35:03):
I would say that the factor in the area here
you know the highest you gotta go with Clovis Man.
They were named one of the fifty safest and most
affordable cities in the entire United States to live. So
there you go, one of the best places to retire,
gives you that warm one. Fresno feel right to insist

(35:25):
that Trevor carry show Mondo Valley's Power Talk