Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
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Speaker 2 (00:38):
This is the Jody Jones Show on fourtong ninety six seven.
And Hey, I'm fourteen hundred.
Speaker 3 (00:45):
Welcome to the Jody Jones Show. I am Jody Jones
in studio Frank Van Lanningham.
Speaker 4 (00:51):
Good to be back from Mexico.
Speaker 3 (00:53):
The American people just aren't a priority of the Democrats,
are they. You know, it's crazy what what's going on
right now? You realize how good we have it right now.
Trump has basically canceled World War three while trying to
reset the global trade and make America first, and get
rid of income tax for all of Americans. Think think
(01:15):
about all that, Okay, RFK his administration, RFK Junior is
taking basically taking the chemicals out of the food and
fighting big pharma. At the same time, heg Seth. He's
basically reinstating service members who refuse COVID shots. He's what
(01:37):
all the while taking the wokeness out of our military.
Everybody's been wanting that, well pretty much everybody. You got cash,
matel you got bonding. They're rounding up all the violent criminals,
gang members and putting them in jail and hold them accountable.
This is the kind of stuff we've been wanting for years,
(01:57):
right and this is going on right now. Elon Muhu
is almost finished building Doge think about this. They're exposed.
They've they've exposed hundreds of billions of government waste. And
I'm gonna tell you guys something, government waste means your
tax money being wasted. Your money. They are reaching in
(02:19):
your pockets, taking it out and wasting it. And Elon
Musk and Doge and Trump's administration is exposing this. So
anyone saying that nothing is happening right now. Couldn't be
furthest It could be furthest from the truth. It's wrong.
Trump in Trump is implementing his agenda exactly what the
(02:41):
American people wanted, and that's exactly why they voted him in.
He's keeping his promises. And I'm telling you, and it's
only been a few months and he's keeping his promises.
And look what's happened so far. So I'm telling you
right now, just because certain things aren't happening now, don't
mean they're not happening behind the scenes. Trust in the process.
(03:05):
Trust in Trump. I guarantee you it will happen.
Speaker 5 (03:08):
What do you think, Frank, Well, I think it's about
damn time.
Speaker 4 (03:13):
This is the first thing I'll say.
Speaker 5 (03:15):
We have allowed ourselves to slide to a place that
we never should have gotten to. To get back from
that place means a lot of heavy lifting. It means
a little bit of pain, a little bit of sacrifice.
It's kind of like if you've gained one hundred pounds,
you spend a bunch of money, maxed out your credit card,
(03:36):
quit your job, let your grass grow three feet tall,
in order to get back from that place to the
good place. There's going to be a lot of work.
And Trump unlike the Democrats. The Democrats wanted the house.
Trump wanted to fix the house. There's a big difference.
And here comes a guy wants to fix the house
(03:58):
and hand it back to you.
Speaker 4 (04:00):
And all they do is fight him. Right. I find
it troubling, don't you.
Speaker 6 (04:04):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (04:05):
Absolutely, you know, I can't believe the Democrats and are
dying on this hill, especially with you know, it seems
like they're wanting to protect these gang members and illegal aliens.
You know, really their agenda is to try to destroy Trump.
They don't care about the American people. They don't care
about the illegal aliens, they don't care about these gang
(04:27):
they don't care. What they care about is power. You know,
they're they're they're displaying and sticking their chest out and
you know, saying, oh my gosh, they don't these people
deserve due process. No, they don't. I want to ask
you this, everyone out there, think about this. I'm gonna
give you something to think about. Guys. If Ice catches
(04:49):
or if our border patrol catches somebody at the border
and they deport them, right then, what's the difference if
they catch them eight months later within the United States,
and they're deporting.
Speaker 5 (05:04):
Them because they're all alioxen free, free, free, so you
have to let them go, right.
Speaker 3 (05:09):
There's no difference. Think about that. This is the argument
that they're making, there's no due process. Well, they circumvented
all the laws they be in the illegal alien when
they got in here. They circumvented our laws by coming
in illegally, by not going through the proper channels. So
when they get here, but if they're caught at that time,
they don't get a due process. They get I mean
(05:29):
the leading boarded back. There's absolutely zero difference other than
time has elapsed that they've came in and now they
got caught.
Speaker 5 (05:38):
Without a doubt. And from what I've read, in order
to afford due process to all these undocumented people, newcomers,
they were saying that it would take up to twenty
eight years given the sheer magnitude of that which they've
let through the fence. So we're talking fifteen to twenty million,
and we don't even know the number.
Speaker 4 (05:59):
They don't even know the number.
Speaker 5 (06:00):
And can you imagine each one of these getting individually adjudicated,
each one gets a public defender, each one gets it's
not day in court, it's month in court. Discoveries, depositions, interrogatories,
all this stuff, back and forth, all the litigation. And
we're going to do that one by one and slow
drip them out. When we let them bum rush the
gate coming in, we're probably talking fifty to one hundred
(06:25):
thousand dollars per individual plus twenty eight years. By then,
these people have had children, grandchildren. Now the argument's going
to be made that they've been here so long you
have to let them. The argument will morph, and it
always does. We do not need to listen to these people,
and you're right, Jody, they don't give a rip about
(06:45):
these illegal aliens, these criminals. You start thinking if if
you listen to MS thirteen NBC, remember we give them
that new name. They're going to act like this is
a civil liberties issue, This is a due process, This
is a procedural issue.
Speaker 4 (06:59):
It is not.
Speaker 5 (07:01):
They don't care about these people. They don't care about
them anymore than they care about you. They are simply
using these people to a political end, and they see
these people as a tool, as something they can use
to affect what it is they want, which is power
for them.
Speaker 3 (07:18):
You know, here's the thing that I look at. You
have US representatives going to other countries El Salvador meeting
with a gang member, setting down with them, and acting
like they care that he was deported. I want to
let you guys understand. I want you guys to understand something.
You know, they're saying Garcia was not afforded to do
(07:40):
process or anything like that. I want you to remember this, okay,
And this is a fact. I'm not making this up.
I'm not pulling it out of a tree somewhere. This
is a fact. Two separate fellow federal judges at two
separate times said he was a confirmed he was an
(08:01):
MS thirteen gang member, and he had removal papers from
the court. From the court. He so what due process
are they talking about?
Speaker 4 (08:12):
The process?
Speaker 3 (08:13):
He got double I don't get it, you know what
I mean. It's it's it's like they picked somebody they
be in the Democrats, picked somebody out of all the
violent people that they were deporting, and said, hey, we're
gonna use this guy right here. This is the guy
we're gonna you know, make look like what do they
call him? A Maryland man.
Speaker 4 (08:31):
Maryland family man. Father.
Speaker 5 (08:33):
Yeah, it was almost like that ivory snow baby. Yeah,
the gerber baby they turned this guy into and he
has tattoos all over himself. And I'm gonna tell you something, Guys,
you're gonna hear from the media about, you know, the
the tattoos on his fingers. That's absolutely I was a
law enforcement officer. That is absolutely identifying a gang member.
That is just one of the ways that a law
(08:57):
enforcement officer and the judicial system identifies gang members. There's
many more, but that is absolutely one that you can
actually use in court to identify a gang member. They
can say I'm not a gang member, but they have
those tattoos. The court's gonna say, sorry, man, yes you are. Yeah,
and he's hanging out we'reing Chicago Bulls gear, which is
(09:18):
that is their trademark. Just like if you're looking at
Southern gang bangers out of LA they're all about the raiders.
Niners means your northern structure. We're not stupid about this.
I'm sorry that they think you're stupid about this, But
here's this guy sporting gang gear, hanging out with gang members,
getting rolled up in a human trafficking operation to boot
(09:40):
with validated other members.
Speaker 4 (09:42):
And yet we're told kind of like with Biden, don't.
Speaker 5 (09:45):
Believe what you see. It's not really this. Yeah, you're
jumping to conclusions. It's like no, and the sheer arrogance. Yes,
that pardon me, we're going to go down to El
Salvador and we're going to dictate terms to the president.
That guy is hilarious and he's like, what do you
want me to do? Smuggle this guy back into your country?
That was that was pretty funny. I'm like, this guy,
(10:08):
this you could tell the president of El Salvaore. He
was very annoyed by these Democrats coming down there, and
and I know the same thing.
Speaker 3 (10:17):
Arrogance. You know, they think they could come down dictate
what you know, they what they don't understand, they being
the Democrats, and is not everybody, not everyone has their
agenda and they it's like they can't believe that they
can't talk to this guy or you know. Now more
(10:38):
Democrats are wanting to go over there, and I think
they're denying them because it's on the taxpayer's money. Did
you guys know that the flights that they're flying to
El Salvador is on your money, your money out of
your pocket that you're paying for you're paying for these
guys to go talk to these gang members in El
Salvador in other countries.
Speaker 5 (10:55):
And this guy is president of a sovereign country. The
sheer arrogant that we're going to roll in there and
tell the president how he's gonna run his country.
Speaker 4 (11:05):
Who order you? The overlords? This is ridiculous. Just who
the hell do you think you are? People?
Speaker 3 (11:11):
I think it's comical. You know, I'm watching this stuff
play out.
Speaker 5 (11:14):
Go back to your crappy little district and watch your
homeless people poop in the park.
Speaker 4 (11:19):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (11:19):
No, you're gonna go to l Salvador and tell Bouquele
how to run his country. Yeah, you're gonna release this
guy to us right now.
Speaker 3 (11:25):
We demand or they're saying, we're not leaving the country
until he gets released. Uh, okay, then stay there. I'll
tell you what. All the Democrats that went over there
and not coming back, good, stay there, run you know,
I bet you. I guess Hey, you know what, Frank,
I bet you. They can't vote in their elections.
Speaker 5 (11:44):
No, they probably can't or run for an office there.
But you know, these people know nothing about El Salvador.
I've in a former life, coming from Los Angeles. I
can tell you a lot about MS thirteen. I can
tell you I've worked with more. They call him one
the people from El salvad Or. If you're from Guatemala,
you're a Champaine. If you're you can be a pinolero
(12:04):
at Catracho. It all depends on what part of Central
America you're from. I can tell you about Chelatnago, about
Santa Anna. I can tell you about a lot of
the different provinces and regions down there. Those people down
there do not fashion MS thirteen people. They have been
rounding them up systematically, incarce rate in mass And one
(12:25):
of his arguments, strangely enough, was because I'm a validated
gang member, they'll kill me if they put me back there.
He as much as admitted to being a gang member.
Oh so therefore he becomes our dirty diaper that we
need to wear. I don't think so, dude, you have
no right here.
Speaker 3 (12:41):
Yep, very well said, you know, with him saying that,
that's just saying, hey, you know they're gonna kill me
because I'm going back here, and just it's the whole thing,
the whole argument they have. It's just ridiculous. Hey, we're
going to take a break right now. When we come back,
we have a special guest.
Speaker 2 (12:56):
The Jody Shoon Show on Powerton ninety six to seven,
and I'm fourteen hundred.
Speaker 5 (13:02):
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Speaker 2 (15:04):
Hundred The Jody Jones Show on Power Talk ninety six
seven and AM fourteen hundred.
Speaker 3 (15:11):
We have a special guest and studio.
Speaker 5 (15:14):
Well, I'm real happy to introduce friend of mine, friend
of Jody's, friend of yours now, Gregory as Thompson. He's
the guy that runs the beef Jerky right across the
street from Rhymers up in Three Rivers. Have you ever
been there. This guy's got four flavors that they actually
do themselves in house. And then they've also got all
the crazy stuff yack and bear and alligator and you
(15:37):
name it. He's probably killed it and made jerky out
of it. The guy's awesome, and he's here to talk
to us about something that probably not a lot of
people know about. Are you a Calvett? Are you wanting
to get in business? Do you have a license from
the state of California? If so, you need to hear
what this guy has to say. What's going on?
Speaker 4 (15:56):
Gregory?
Speaker 6 (15:57):
Hey, thanks for having me here, buddy, veteran, I learned
some things being.
Speaker 3 (16:02):
A street thank you for your thank you for your service.
Speaker 6 (16:05):
Well, thank you, And that's kind of part of where
I'm coming from. When you get that kind of backtok
or that appreciation. I always tell everybody I didn't join
for them. I swore an oath, right, and that's the
honor that I think we all need to think about.
Speaker 3 (16:23):
Absolutely so.
Speaker 6 (16:25):
Anyway, the subject that I found years ago, when it's
starting to sell roadside hockey, my wares or my goods
or whatever, is a I learned about a veteran over
in Carpentria, California named Bill Connell. And he was a
hot dog vendor by Rincon the serf spot there.
Speaker 4 (16:44):
I know it well.
Speaker 6 (16:45):
And he was either selling hot dogs or he's in Sacramento,
you know, lobbying for US veteran that's right. And he
was a hardcore. He was a Vietnam vet in Germany
and he was a heavyweight boxer, so he didn't and
he was from new attitude, you know what I'm saying.
Speaker 3 (17:02):
You know, for everyone out there that don't know, the
way I met Greg was a It was at a
Republican meeting and he was speaking, and I heard him
speak on this and I thought, Wow, this is some
important stuff that people need to know about. And you know,
it was it was. It touched me when he was speaking.
(17:23):
I could tell he was very vetted in it and
it meant something to him. And we've always said, Frank
and I, if something means something to you, it seems
like you always do a better job at it. And
you know, Greg, it was good stuff man, what you
were saying. And thank you, by the way for being
on here. And you know we're limited, though, so I'm
(17:43):
going to be quiet here and let you speak and
tell everybody what you're here to tell them, you know,
I mean, well.
Speaker 6 (17:49):
The frustration comes when there's a benefit in state of California.
It came from like eighteen seventy two post Civil War
Act type of thing that allowed veterans to hawk their
wares or goods without having being taxed, licensed or any fees.
So when I learned about this, I'd go travel selling
(18:10):
jerky around the state or rodeos or wherever, surf contests, whatever,
and I'd go have to get a permit a license
of some sort, and I would tell him about this
and they would the bureaucrats would say, oh.
Speaker 3 (18:25):
Well they'd be in the city, like the city or
the county or right. They don't even know it, right,
they don't know.
Speaker 6 (18:30):
Well they shouldn't, probably because they're just bureaucrafts working as
a job. Right. But when I went to like veteran
service officers throughout the county assembly, people sent state senators
and these types, and like where we met candidate that
choosing to run he's an Air Force vet. None of
(18:50):
those people knew that night. They didn't know I should it, right,
they didn't know. That's the problem. Why don't you know?
You say thank you for your service. But then when
I say, oh, I have an exemption here.
Speaker 3 (19:04):
For you, tell everybody what it is.
Speaker 6 (19:06):
Well, it's a it's a business uh exemption for business license,
COMMA tax, comma fee waiver for veterans. If you're on
blely discharge and you live in California. That's not a
nationwise calvet.
Speaker 4 (19:21):
So any kind of business license, right.
Speaker 6 (19:25):
Any kind of business license, but you have to be
the sole proprietor, no LLC or S corp or anything
like that.
Speaker 3 (19:33):
Hey, if we have any veterans out there that wants
to contact you, Greg, do you have a number that
they can contact.
Speaker 6 (19:38):
The contact you, and then you tell me so that
we'll know.
Speaker 3 (19:42):
Well, I want them to contact you personally, you know,
I want them to either text you or if you
don't want to give your number out. That's okay, I understand,
But is there a website they can go to or
anything like that.
Speaker 6 (19:54):
Actually I could probably just give an email address.
Speaker 3 (19:57):
Yeah, that's that's perfect. Yeah, yeah, give them then.
Speaker 6 (19:59):
It's Gregory Thompson seventy nine to two at gmail dot com.
Speaker 5 (20:04):
Gregory Thompson seven two at gmail dot com.
Speaker 3 (20:09):
Okay, go ahead.
Speaker 6 (20:10):
But so anyway, it's just frustrating when you go to
these different cities or municipalities and you're looking to get
your benefit and you have to fight through the individual
on the other side of the counter. I mean I
had one I'm allowed to mention towns or cities. Sure
(20:30):
years ago. This was years ago, by sell you. I
went to the city to do some things. I was
going to sell jerky to the auto dealerships and all
that kind of thing, and the lady behind the counter
just said, oh no, we're not honoring that. In fact,
if you have any problems to go to the city council.
Speaker 3 (20:46):
Interesting.
Speaker 6 (20:47):
So I mean and I and I thought about it,
and I said, you know what, I'm not going anywhere.
I'll let them catch me and then let them deal
with me. You know, that's probably the best way to
get it, probably pro so, you know, and today with
California's new laws, and I'm saying the last four or
five years with street vending and these problems that some
(21:08):
of these street vendors have with brick and mortar. I mean,
Fresno's now having something up here in the north part
of town with the Asian vendors and things like that.
It's nonsense. It's it's crony capitalism. If you tell me
I can't go and sell you know, cotton candy on
the side of the road or whatever, but you can
(21:29):
sell something because you have brick and mortar doesn't work.
So I'm kind of after what bills passed away in
twenty sixteen, this veteran and so because of that, I
think I'm gonna I've been taking up the champion of
this cause and trying to get this out to more counties.
I mean, veteran service officers don't know about this. Elected
(21:54):
officials don't know about this. So I think it's time
that they start learning about it. And development opportunity that
California has to put veterans in their own business is tremendous.
And there's a Humboldt State University now cal Poly up North.
They have a program that teaches veterans and their family
(22:17):
members how to get in business business plans online. They
have several several courses, all for free. So I'm trying
to connect the dots there with veterans that want to
get into business. And then with my background, since you
know nineteen ninety nine doing this street stuff, I can
show you a lot of shortcuts and help you get started.
(22:38):
That's a great point, you in the right direction.
Speaker 5 (22:40):
I'm going to guess that the original premise of this
law was because people were coming back from the war
and needed a way to feed themselves, and we were
looking at a way to help these people survive, correct
without a military pension. Just coming back from the war.
You kind of one minute you got three hots and
a cot in, you'rrel what to do. Next minute you're
(23:01):
kicked out the door and you're like a homeless kid,
What the heck do you do? This is very small
stuff to basically say we're not going to pick your
pocket now that you've served our country. And a lady
bureaucrat just says you and latterly that she's going to
override all that just because she said so.
Speaker 4 (23:22):
Unthinkable, isn't it.
Speaker 6 (23:23):
Now? I have to say that I've had other bureaucrats
that go, oh, Greg, we know who you are, we
know what you sell. You know, don't worry about it.
Speaker 3 (23:34):
We got you, we got you.
Speaker 6 (23:36):
I'm the one that does all the inspections. I know
who you are. Don't worry about it no more. So
there's that too, but I would say more of it
is people just don't know, and then they want the money.
See the city or the county, they want their health
department money, and that's what their jobs about, is facilitating
that process.
Speaker 3 (23:56):
Well, you know, Greg, when I talked to you that
night and we talk and I thought it was super
interesting that and I actually thought it was kind of
sad that that, you know, more people don't know about that.
And like you said, you know the politicians that were
there that basically city people that was there, they didn't
know about it either. So this is why I'm trying
(24:18):
to get it out there and educate people. You know.
I always say education's power, and it's education is power.
So the more you know, the better you're equipped to
deal with things that come your way. So but hey, Greg,
I want to thank you for coming on and and
mention all that.
Speaker 4 (24:36):
I do.
Speaker 3 (24:36):
Want to let everybody know too that Greg's gonna sponsor
our show now too. So we have a veteran that's
sponsoring our show. We have you know, and I don't
know if you guys ever tried his beef jerky, but
if you haven't, pleased make your way up to Three Rivers.
Not only is it is a good place to eat,
but it's a it's beautiful up in Three Rivers, especially
(24:57):
right now. And then don't you get some beef jerky
and go right across the street. Uh no, disclaimer with Rhymers,
I haven't you know, there's no spostering us. But that's
a good place to eat to men. They're their ice
cream and the chocolate they make is off the hook.
So you can go up there, go get some beef jerky,
and then go do uh you know, so.
Speaker 5 (25:18):
You can make an entire afternoon out Just go into
those two places.
Speaker 3 (25:21):
Let's give your email one more time before we close
out here, buddy.
Speaker 6 (25:24):
Gregory Thompson seven ninety two at gmail dot com, awesome
in the jerky stand Jerky dot com.
Speaker 3 (25:32):
Okay, okay, there.
Speaker 6 (25:33):
You know we'll talk for about more time.
Speaker 3 (25:35):
Yeah. Absolutely, yeah. Once we get you on.
Speaker 5 (25:37):
Make sure you go get some jerky in three rivers.
Speaker 4 (25:40):
That's the right thing to do.
Speaker 3 (25:41):
God bless you and God bless me her.
Speaker 5 (25:43):
Thanks folks, good things of God blessed me.
Speaker 2 (25:46):
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to my friend Al at Benoy Insurance Services. Al's been
helping local businesses find cost effective employee benefits solutions for
over two decade. Health insurance, dental, vision, life and more.
With the rising cost of doing business, now is a
very good time to explore your options and maybe even
improve on what you already have. You have a compliance question,
Al's your guy. Call Al at five five nine seven
(26:46):
three four or two eight eight, or you can visit
Benoy Insurance dot com. That's b E n o Y
Insurance dot com five five nine seven three four or
two eight eight.
Speaker 4 (26:57):
I'm also a client of his.