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April 22, 2025 31 mins
(April 22,2025)
Amy King and Neil Saavedra join Bill for Handel on the News. Mayor Bass’ proposed budget includes 1,600 layoffs amid deficits. Harvard sues Trump administration to stop the freeze of more than $2BIL in grants. US student loans in default to be referred to debt collection. Google: DOJ throwing ‘caution to wind’ as breakup trial begins. Earth Day 2025: Why we celebrate the planet that keeps us grounded & how to get involved.  
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
You're listening to Bill Handle on demand from KFI AM
six forty.

Speaker 2 (00:10):
They used to be the cardinal and there was a
Cardinal Cicola that was elected pope, and when it turned
out that he was going to be known as Pope Sicola,
it just didn't work out.

Speaker 3 (00:23):
That's actually funny. And now Handle on the news, ladies
and gentlemen. Here's Bill Handle. Good morning everybody. It is
a Tuesday morning, April twenty two, and a lot going
on today. We've got Pope news, Pope Sicola news. We

(00:45):
have a couple other things I want to share with you.
First to quick Hello, Will Coleschreiber, Good morning Will, Good
morning Bill. Are you munching on a slice of pizza?
How did you know that? Because it looked like a
slice of pizza? Are you aware that it's six o'clock
in the morning. It's is good anytime of day. That's true. Actually,
actually that's true. Pizza's pizza? Now? Is that cold pizza?

(01:06):
Or is that heat it up? See? I never understood
cold pizza. People love cold pizza. I don't get it.
Pizza chicken. I like cold fried. Cold fried chicken is great.
I just don't get cold pizza. I don't. But then again,
different strokes for different people. All right, So good morning

(01:26):
to Will and good morning. Oh AND's looking there? You
look bored as hell? Why could you look because you
look bored? Okay, good, I feel better, Neil, good morning whatever.
Yeah exactly, I know you are. How did I start?
When we went on? Said hello to each other before

(01:49):
the show? What? What did I ask? What did I
tell you? So?

Speaker 1 (01:52):
Is the show over yet? Or you said the show
is almost over?

Speaker 3 (01:56):
Yeah, that's exactly what I said. Coda, good morning, Yeah exactly.
And Amy, there you are, Hi, feel good morning, good morning.
There you go. All right, before we get started, Oh
just a quick let me tell you what happened to
me yesterday. I was taking my walk and I walked

(02:17):
past sort of an open field, that kind of thing.
And as I'm walking and I'm on the sidewalk and
there's the fields to my left or am I right?
In that case, I was going the other way, and
there is a bobcat maybe twenty feet away. As I'm walking.
The bobcat is walking parallel to me, and we're looking

(02:38):
at each other, and he did not move a muscle
other than following me as I was walking I looked
at him, he looked at me. He went hmm, okay,
and then he sauntered off. Now, bobcats are about the
size of a medium sized dog. Lions, I wouldn't be

(03:01):
here to talk about this if I ran into a
mountain lion. Who is it? P one? P. Twenty two.
That's way down the list. Yeah, that's what P. Twenty
two is, way down on the list of people who
listening to KFI. Uh. P one and two was pretty good,

(03:21):
but when you start going that low, miserable. Okay. The
other thing is Pope Francis is lying in state there.
He is parked in the box uh for everybody to see.
He is going to be buried on Saturday, which is
kind of interesting. And he's not going to get buried
in the crypt under the church under Saint in the Basilica,

(03:46):
which normally most popes are. You go down there and
then they are, you know, lined up underneath, you know,
in the crypt. No, he's going to get buried in
a local church that used to go to pray in
all the time, and no ornate caskets at all for him.
A pine box, a pine box, I think. Yeah, he's
a very humble man. He really really was, and that

(04:10):
was his will. They talked about his will, and I
guess it doesn't even a lot. They don't leave a lot,
do they. Pope's. Do popes even get a salary? I
don't think they do. I don't think pope get a paycheck,
but they get housing in three meals a day. Yeah. Well,
in his case, obviously a lot more than that. He's
a pretty good sized guy, but still very very simple guy. Okay,

(04:34):
all right, quick factoid? How much does the president make
president of United States? Do do do? Do? Do? Do do? Yeah?
Two fifty four hundred really four hundred thousand dollars a year?
When Abraham Lincoln was president, how much did he get paid?
Twenty five thousand dollars in those days, equivalent over five

(04:55):
hundred thousand dollars today. So the president actually is receiving
less money than Lincoln did relative to buying power. Although
Mary Todd Lincoln just pissed away every dime that they eat,
either of them had, I mean, he completely broke and
what else. Other factoids. It used to be two hundred

(05:16):
thousand dollars a year until George W got to raise
to four hundred thousand dollars a year. He doubled his salary. Wow, yeah,
president doubled his salary. Yeah, I mean the president's salary
is like relative to right. Can you imagine running a
a four or six trillion dollar bureaucracy and getting four
hundred grand a year? Yeah? I don't think that's why
they do it. You know how much JFK got? No,

(05:39):
one hundred thousand dollars. Do you know how much he
actually kept? Would he actually charged the government? None of it?
One dollar? Trump did that his first term. Don't they
a free room and board and all that, and food? Yeah?
Uh huh, But they buy their own food and toothpastees.
You know that they buy their own food unless it's
the state dinner. But unless it's a formal dinner, but

(06:01):
the stuff upstairs the family has. Yeah, they buy their
own food. Government does not pay for their food.

Speaker 4 (06:08):
So Kono says that the pope does get or can
get a stipend each month.

Speaker 3 (06:14):
They CONO just looked it up. Do we know how
much that is? Thirty two thousand a month? Come on
what it says? Oh? Come on? Both Francis deferred it
though he either give it to two grand a month.
According Holy moly, Hey Siri, Oh boy, we had to

(06:35):
fling this out. Hey Siri, series just does the same
thing I do. Does the pope receive a monthly salary
or stipend? Uh? The pope receives a monthly God, I
didn't know that. I would thought I would think that
they don't. Wow. His estimated net worth is two point

(06:57):
five million dollars.

Speaker 1 (06:59):
Holy that's just the shoes.

Speaker 3 (07:03):
So much for that pledge of poverty. Yeah, I don't think.
I don't think he pays for his own shoes. You know,
he Isn't he wearing different shoes than other popes too?
I think he's wearing I think he's wearing Converse, He's
wearing something. It's uh.

Speaker 4 (07:21):
It seemed like a pretty humble guy in that sense.
I don't think he wore.

Speaker 5 (07:24):
The big well they when they lay in state, they
have those big red, weird shoes.

Speaker 3 (07:30):
Sorry, I don't mean to offend any Catholics. It's just
strange to me. I mean, and he pays for nothing.
I'm looking at this. What that's basically.

Speaker 4 (07:39):
You you make a lot of money and you pay
for nothing.

Speaker 3 (07:42):
Yeah, but that's the whole point though, that's the whole
He's in the same position. If you're in radio. If
you're in radio, if you don't get it free, you
don't need it. If you're a pope and you don't
get it free, you don't need it. Although the Pope
doesn't have two daughters that have credit cards, either in
your name, or maybe he does and we don't know

(08:03):
about it, that's a rumor I don't want to start.
I have no problem starting the rumor that JD. Vans
killed the Pope, which, by the way, did you see
the memes yesterday? They went berserk on social media, So
I don't mind that rumor. But I'm not going to
argue that Pope Francis was anything other than a good guy,
good pope.

Speaker 5 (08:23):
I mean, I think it's interesting too that he wants
He specifically said he wanted to not be up on
like a pedestal like other popes have been as they
lie in state.

Speaker 3 (08:33):
He wanted to be in the coffin. That was his instruction. Yes,
I think that's interesting too. Well, yeah, I mean you
know the other ones, those pedestal business. You know, they
put him up in there, and well I told you yesterday,
Pope John Paul the second was he was up on
a pedestal and if you remember he died in July

(08:54):
I think it was. And man, they kept him up
there for a while and it was not pleasant, it
really wasn't. I mean, he was falling apart. Now, it
was very, very difficult.

Speaker 5 (09:07):
Is that just so people can go and their respects?

Speaker 3 (09:11):
Is that what they do? Yeah? I've never understood to
pay the respects. It's you know, it's a thing there,
you know, I mean, your soul, if you have one,
is gone. That spark of life is not there. Basically
you're a piece of meat. And yeah, and they should have
a price per pound at the bottom of the casket.

(09:32):
All right, let's take a break. We're coming up. Okay,
Catholics you can reach. Why don't you send all your
emails to Neil on that one.

Speaker 4 (09:43):
Okay, Catholics are smart enough to know not to give
a rat's ass about anything that comes out of your
pie hole, sir, excellent.

Speaker 3 (09:51):
All right, let's do it. Handle on the news with
Amy Neil and me lead story La Mayor Karen will
never be elected mayor again. Bess proposed her budget. It's
a billion dollar shortfall, it's a deficit in the twenty

(10:12):
twenty five twenty six fiscal year. She said, we're in
good shape. The city is doing well except for the
sixteen hundred employees that are going to be fired. Then
the city is not doing so well and various programs
and departments will be cut like crazy. There's just no money.

Speaker 4 (10:33):
What's that about four of the workforce for the city.

Speaker 3 (10:38):
I don't know. Maybe if we were rent, what do we.

Speaker 4 (10:41):
Have about the fifty sixty thousand people working for Yeah,
it's just it's so.

Speaker 3 (10:47):
I mean, it is bloated. The fire department is expected
to go up thirteen percent. You bet, you're a sweet ass. Yeah,
that's fine. That you know what's nuts?

Speaker 4 (10:58):
She stated, Turmoil and uncertainty from Washington and a slowing
economy are causing lower revenue projections to the tune of
hundreds of millions of dollars. Okay, okay, what about the
fact that the vast majority of this is going down
in tax collection the city revenue that sales tax have

(11:21):
slowed and city business taxes slowed well, city business taxes
slowed because you can't do business in Los Angeles.

Speaker 3 (11:28):
It is I mean, the bureaucracy is is very crazy,
but a lot of it if not her fault. She
can't control the big guy, the big economy of this
country that he takes a fount of political leaders.

Speaker 1 (11:39):
Then you know what the fires and dealing with them.

Speaker 3 (11:43):
Yeah, you can't. She's not blamed for starting the fires.
And I don't think anybody's arguing, do we hold anybody accountable? Well,
you do, because the buck stops here, right the bucks.
It's the buck stops here at Harry Truman on his desk. Uh.
And that is she's not being blamed for starting the fires,
or even she's not being blamed for somehow getting in

(12:03):
the way of the fires or they're putting out of
the fires or dealing with them. She's blamed for going
to be in Ghana where that's going to cost her
her job. I think that one alone, and also mismanagement.
You know what pisses me off about this? You got Caruso, right,
Rick Caruso, who spent one hundred million dollars of his

(12:24):
own money, eminently qualified. They both campaign basically on the
same issues, homelessness. She wins the mayor's race because of
her political connections, because she's tied into the democratic machinery.
We don't elect officials because of competence. That just doesn't
happen anywhere anymore. This was just a political election because

(12:47):
she knew everybody. The machinery came out, and you had
a season business person who said, I'm going to help
run this city because the bureaucracy needs some kind of
legitimate leadership. Nope, let's elect a liberal who has never
run anything business wise in her life. All right, moving on.

Speaker 5 (13:10):
Moving on, Yes, I need to go back to the beginning.
So sorry lost my place. It's Harvard versus the White House.
Harvard University has filed the lawsuit to stop the Trump
administration from freezing two billion dollars in federal grants two
point two billion in grants, and of course, the administration

(13:31):
announced that they were holding up that funding because Harvard said, nah,
we're not going to go along with your demands to
limit activism. The administration wanted Harvard to change its admissions policies,
remove DEI programs, crackdown on anti Semitism, and also crackdown
on pro Palestinian protesters. The Harvard president, Alan Garber, said

(13:55):
the university would not bend to demands, and just hours later,
the government froze billions of dollars in funding.

Speaker 3 (14:03):
Yeah, And the argument is what is the funding for
research for medical technological technological research have to do with this?
And again in goes the argument in front of the courts.
Does the government have a right to say to a
private institution you must do a B, C, D and E.
Now it does have a right to say you can't

(14:24):
discriminate under Title seven for example. But we'll see what
the courts have to say. Again, the fight is how
much power does the administration have. Oh, here's the story Washington.

Speaker 4 (14:40):
The Education Department will begin collecting collections next month on
student loans that are in default. So this includes the
you know, all the basics, garnishing of wages. This is
potentially millions of borrowers. Currently, roughly five point three million
ball borrowers are in default on their federal student loans.

(15:05):
If you remember, back in March of twenty twenty, when
COVID hit, there was a massive amount of leniency about.

Speaker 3 (15:14):
Paying Yeah moratorium. Yeah, moratorium is still in place, and
the Trump administration is saying that's enough, guys. You know,
how about paying back your bills? How about paying back
the amount of money that you owe. I'm going to
do more about that at eight fifty and here in Well,
it's a little more complicated. It's it's always more than
just a yes or no. But I'm going to dive

(15:36):
into a little deeper. And this one, I'm going to
take the side of the Trump administration. That's coming up
at eight fifty.

Speaker 5 (15:42):
Wait, you're going to take the side of the Trump administration.
Mark that down?

Speaker 3 (15:45):
Everybody? Yeah, nobody, you know I yeah, Okay, mark that down.
I'm taking the side of the Trump administration. This just
in snowballs in hell. Okay, let's do one more. The
ABC's of breaking up Google.

Speaker 5 (16:00):
Problems continue for Alphabet, It's back in court trying to
prevent the breakup of its Google search empire.

Speaker 3 (16:08):
The fate of Google's search.

Speaker 5 (16:10):
Engine is in the hands of federal Judge Amit Meta,
who ruled in August that Google illegally monopolized online markets
for general search and general search text. The Justice Department
is now asking the judge to break up Google by
forcing it to sell off Chrome and maybe it's Android
operating system.

Speaker 3 (16:32):
More on that one when we talked to ABC News
technology reporter Mike Dubuski, And that's coming up at eight o'clock.
This morning. All right, happierday everybody.

Speaker 4 (16:45):
For the fifty to fifth year, the world is using
the data celebrate mother Nature, how you mom, your mom nature,
and this wonderful planet we live on, so symbol of
the environmental movement, all of that stuff.

Speaker 1 (17:02):
Go to earthday dot org if you want to know more.

Speaker 4 (17:06):
And it's been a day and is a day that
acknowledges our planet, Yes, provides for us.

Speaker 3 (17:13):
That's true. And by the way they're going, it's gonna
be celebrated by those twelve people who have died in
the last couple of days because of the storms. Accidentally,
I'm gonna do a story about this coming up at
where is it seven twenty about Earth Day. You know,
it was created by Richard Nixon, came under his tutelage.

(17:35):
He signed onto it, and that's Richard Nixon. The on
Earth Day, he signed public the first time the US
government actually proclaimed that the Earth was round. We were
a little bit backward until then. I'm going to talk
more about this.

Speaker 4 (17:51):
Have you seen the all the You go back and
you watch the original Earth Day and the things they said,
We're going to happen to the planet in ten years,
fifty five years, ago.

Speaker 3 (18:03):
Yeah, the only state with the s. Yeah. The only
thing the scientists were wrong about was the speed at
which climate change was going to wipe out everything.

Speaker 4 (18:12):
I'm still looking for those bastards that created the first
ice age, in the melting of the first ice age
with all those factories people.

Speaker 3 (18:24):
Yeah, yeah, I got it. It's just fine. We're just
moving on. That's not worth commenting on.

Speaker 5 (18:30):
Okay, thirty minutes till the next shooting. Every thirty minutes,
an emergency department treats another weapons injury. That's according to
a new analysis from researchers at the Center for Disease
Control and Prevention. They looked at ten different jurisdictions, including
the District of Columbia. The report shows that there were

(18:53):
more firearm injuries presented at night, on the weekends, and
on holidays, especially Independence Day and New Year's Day.

Speaker 3 (19:04):
It's going to get much much better because there will
be no researchers next year at the CDC. As a
matter of fact, there will be no CDC that can
issue these reports to us, So kickback. We're gonna be
fine starting next year. It's crazy the amount of gun
violence we have in this country. It's like beyond comprehension
traveling in Europe. They just don't understand how we work.

(19:29):
They don't get it. It's not even a moral judgment
as to the weapons that we have in this country.
And they don't understand the Second Amendment. They just don't
get it. They just sit there and just shake their
heads perplexed.

Speaker 4 (19:43):
Yeah, it is interesting talking to people in Europe, like
are there guns everywhere?

Speaker 3 (19:48):
I'm like yeah, and you go, yes, yes, there are
guns everywhere. You consider weird if you don't have one.
I don't. Okay, how about this? So are we going
to go rocking and walking around? I don't know if
you feel like saying I don't have a weapon, Neil,
do you have a weapon on me right now? Well?
Now I'm not talking about you know, I'm not talking
about going down and saying that's my weapon. This is
my weapon, this is my gun. Uh No, we're not

(20:11):
not that kind of weapon. Do not have one on
my person? Current? Oh? Thank you? That answers Amy, Do
you have a weapon at home? I do not have
a concealed carry permit. Wo see how everybody is dancing
around this one? Wow? Cono gun at home? Had a boy?
Oh good, God, thank everybody. Need to say anything, buddy,

(20:35):
I understand that. So here I am okay, I'm by myself.
Thank you will yes or no? Um? Okay, you've answered
that question, boy, and answer and you're my last hope.
Yes or no? How would you say? Don't come to
my house? One of us? One of us? Thank you?

(20:57):
Kamala okay. For those people that are thinking of breaking
into my house, I just want to point something out.
I may not have a weapon, but I have four
German shepherds that are trained to eat you and weener dogs.
And I have Lindsay, who you do not want to
get into a fight, all five foot three, one hundred
and ten pounds of her. You do not want to
deal with it. He will throw her at you, right

(21:18):
in your face. Yes, it's true. Actually she'll throw me
at you, push.

Speaker 1 (21:22):
Her wheelchair right into your shins.

Speaker 3 (21:24):
Moving on, all right.

Speaker 4 (21:27):
Scott Peterson did he didn't he? After investigating the case
for more than a year, the Los Angeles Innocence Project
has filed voluminous evidence it says that show Scott Peterson
did not murder his wife an unborn son in twenty
twenty two. They say they've got four hundred pages, a
four hundred page petition to the California Court of Appeals.

(21:50):
They filed it just this Friday, so they're they're really
pushing on this. He's now fifty two years old. He
was a rested and charged with first degree murder and
the death of his wife and second degree murder in
the death of his unborn son, and a jury found
him guilty following a six month trial in twenty two

(22:13):
thousand and four.

Speaker 3 (22:13):
Rather, yeah, they're claiming prosecutorial misconduct as well as certain
amount of evidence I should have been presented that was
not or newly discovered evidence when the Innocence Project jumps in,
You know what, they don't frivolously jump into these things.
I think that they are their success and overturning is astronomical.

(22:35):
All right, let's say break the Los Angeles group. Yeah,
but it's all part of the same larger group is
kind of stood away from this. Barry Shank matter of fact,
who started that and then he ended up on the
OJ defense, which I don't get.

Speaker 5 (22:47):
All right, the friendly Skuys are about to become the
safer Skuys. So there's this aviation safety system that has
failed twice in the last three years and cause the
only airspace shutdown since nine to eleven. It's going to
be replaced ahead of schedule. The NOOTAM system, it's a

(23:08):
notice to airmen system was supposed to be replaced by
twenty thirty, but now the FAA says the new moderate
modernized system will be online by September. The FAA says
it cut through red tape to get the critical work
done as fast as possible.

Speaker 3 (23:26):
That doesn't happen very often when they're ahead of schedule,
because the FAA, I mean, our flight control systems have
been just an utter disaster for years and years, all right,
new sum to the rescue.

Speaker 4 (23:41):
Of course, California residents are now eligible to buy what
basically is narcan and it's used to treat opioid over
doses for twenty four dollars through the state's prescription website
cal rx. This comes as gab Newsom office said that

(24:04):
this is important life saving medications shouldn't come with a
life altering price tag and cal r rex is about
making essential drugs like this afford a pole.

Speaker 3 (24:16):
Yeah, and who's going to argue with this? By way,
the twenty four dollars pay payment for two doses exactly
what the state pays. So they're passing it on at
dead costs and people's lives are saved big time with
this when you overdose on opiate's and it's magic. I mean,
it turns it around instantly as you're dying.

Speaker 5 (24:39):
Trump, well, his tweet or whatever you call it these days,
triggered a massive sell off on Wall Street. So yesterday
Trump tweets or posts on social says, with these costs
trending so nicely down, we're you talking about the economy,
He said, just what I predicted they would do. There
can be there's almost no inflation, but there will be

(25:00):
a slowing of the economy unless mister too Late, a
major loser, lowers interest rates. Now and he was talking
about Jerome Powell. Powell, and that's markets into it down.

Speaker 3 (25:12):
Yeah, market is up though right now, and it's just
opened up, you know, just a half an hour ago,
but it's up five hundred and thirty points, so it's
coming back. It's just bouncing all over the place. And uh,
the President wants to fire Powell. And if he does,
if he is successful in firing Powell, the whole world
market is going to reel on this. Uh. And by

(25:36):
the way, I don't even know whether Powell deserves to
be fired or not. That's a different issue. But just
the uncertainty of what's going on is killing. The IMF
just came out and the International Monetary Fund and just said, uh,
you know, the market, the world economy is slowing down
and will continue to do so because of this the
terra force.

Speaker 5 (25:57):
I wonder if there's anybody around Trump now who says,
you know, mister President, maybe don't send that tweet out, like.

Speaker 3 (26:03):
Uh, you don't know. And then the issue is, you know,
is the president now going to run the FED? Is
he going to make monetary policy in addition everything else,
because the FED has always been independent. The president chooses
the FED chair. As a matter of fact, Paul is
chosen by Trump. But I think it's a six year

(26:25):
term if I'm not mistaken, or an eight year term,
and you can't get fired unless it's for cause. Okay,
Moving on the White House.

Speaker 4 (26:36):
Just this past Friday morning launched a new website and
this kind of focuses deep dive on the theory that
the coronavirus that caused COVID nineteen was human made, that
leaked from an infectious disease laboratory in Wuhan, China. Now,
of course, at the beginning of this year, you have

(26:57):
the CIA issuing a report that concluded the lab leak
was likely, but with low confidence. If you remember, we
talked about that, and similar conclusions have been made from
the Energy and State departments as well. But this particular
website takes the lab leak theory even further than most
of those reports, saying that the virus possesses a biological

(27:21):
characteristic not found in nature.

Speaker 3 (27:24):
And when you talk about a lab week, you know
where that lab was, Wuhan, China, And you know who
actually created who created this virus? Hillary Clinton when she
was visiting China.

Speaker 4 (27:40):
I think I think it's pronounced China, Yes, sir, I
don't mean to correct you.

Speaker 3 (27:45):
But anyway, so, I mean, no one knows at this point,
no one really knows it's you know, was it a
an animal? Was it a civic cat? Was it? You know,
did come out the local Kentucky Fried bat store? You
know when near Wuhan? Who who the hell knows?

Speaker 5 (28:02):
Khalil's kid has arrived without him. The Department of Homeland
Security denied Mahmoud Khalil's permission to be there for the
birth of his first child. Of course, he is the
guy who's a legal permanent resident, who is a prominent
figure in pro Palestinian administrations at Columbia University. He's been

(28:23):
detained in Louisiana for more than a month, and they
put in the request saying, hey, can he please go
and be there for the birth of his child?

Speaker 3 (28:31):
And they said no. You do want to get on
the wrong side of this administration. You get on their radar,
you're I think you're in a lot of trouble, especially
if you fall in the line of illegal immigrant, which
he is not, by the way, he is a I
think he's a Green card holder if I'm not mistaken
or yeah, I think a legal permanent resident, which the

(28:55):
government can take away. They can take away that status.
So of course that's going to court too. What isn't
going to court?

Speaker 4 (29:02):
Yeah, I would not want to be an illegal alien with.

Speaker 3 (29:07):
Yeah. The only thing that absolutely protects you is a
US passport. That is the last straw. Even though the
president has said he wants to deport US citizens to
l Salvador, which is kind of difficult to do. But
you don't want to be on the wrong end. And

(29:27):
the courts are upholding, especially under the alienis Edition Act,
and the governmental powers, the ability of the government to
go much further than any government ever has. One of
the things about this administration is test. It is testing
the powers of the presidency.

Speaker 1 (29:43):
There's not some US citizens you wouldn't want to deport.

Speaker 3 (29:47):
Oh yeah, there are plenty. But where you going to
deport them to? Well, you're a US citizen, Okay, you're
a me. You can deport me to Brazil because that's
where I come from. And I am a Brazilian citizen
just by virtue of being born there. I could be deported.
But the only way I could lose my citizenship is

(30:09):
because of fraud in obtaining my citizenship. That they can
take away your citizenship. But short of that, you were
born in this country. Where are we going to deport
you to? Even though you richly deserve to be deported,
Where are you going to put you? Well, there's a
lot of really nice places. Yeah. L Salvador who has
agreed to take anybody from the US as long as L.

(30:33):
Salvador gets paid, Well, I like Apoo says, there you
go all right, one, more magic.

Speaker 4 (30:41):
Rush rooms, unsuper unsupervised use of psilocybin, or what we
refer to as magic mushrooms. It's been accelerating, and especially
here in the United States among adolescents and people thirty
and older in this new study. So you're talking about that.
People talk about micro dosing and things like that, but

(31:04):
more and more people are calling for you know, poison
control and the like from overdosing or having issues with it.
You know, they sort of have been a little more
lax about it. But adults, you know, since twenty twenty three,
it's been higher estimates for co than cocaine or illicit

(31:27):
opioid use or methanphetamines.

Speaker 3 (31:31):
It's on the rise, all right, But I don't do
magic mushroom, so I don't care. Okay, guys, you can
magic mushroom. You're away through life if you want, all right,
KF I am six. You've been listening to the Bill
Handle Show. Catch My Show Monday through Friday, six am
to nine am, and anytime on demand on the iHeartRadio app.

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