54 - Stay and Fight with US Senatorial Candidate for California Denice Gary Pandol hero artwork

54 - Stay and Fight with US Senatorial Candidate for California Denice Gary Pandol

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SPEAKER_00
00:00:00
All right, what's going on? It's time for another episode of Too Hard for the Radio, transmitting from the future free state of greater Idaho. I am the one-armed madman. And with us today, we have got senatorial candidate from the great state of California, Miss Denise Gary-Pandle. How are you today?
SPEAKER_01
00:00:16
Oh, I've just I've worked night and day. So it's, it's really quite the schedule these days.
SPEAKER_00
00:00:23
I can't imagine. So why don't you tell us a little bit about yourself and and what made you decide to run for Senate here in California? It's a big decision.
SPEAKER_01
00:00:33
It is it is and I really I prayed about it quite a bit. I had been engaged to gentlemen who like myself had had top secret clearances. His name was Philip Paney.
SPEAKER_01
00:00:46
He was found killed on the side of the road. He was a founding member of the Department of Homeland Security and as a founding member of the Department of Homeland Security, the mission after 9-11, which was the purpose of creating DHS, the purpose of DHS was to secure the country and to prevent prevent nefarious individuals from coming into America, coming into California. And and of course, that includes Islamic terrorists. It includes any organization, any saboteur, anybody that would be involved in sabotage against the United States of America. And when Biden was when Obama and Biden were elected, they literally changed the mission. And so of DHS, and so it became a very politically correct organization where you no longer were involved in going after some, you know, individuals that were tied to terrorist groups or criminal networks like it was meant to do. So Philip knew a tremendous amount of information. I had had top secret clearances, so I always had to work my way through school. And I just while I was working my way through graduate school, it just happened that I was recognized by the chair of the School of International Relations and, you know, political science is an academic discipline and international relations is part of that academic discipline. And they were impressed by me. So I was recommended to work for a think tank called Amnesty for the Deaf and the Blind. And I worked for the analytical assessments corporation. And it was a fabulous thing because it helped me get through graduate school, right?
SPEAKER_01
00:02:41
I still had to get student loans, but I was able to get through school. And I worked for, you know, organizations like the Department of, well, our work for the DOT, the CIA, President Reagan, when he was in office, after, you know, our marines were blown up in Beirut, Lebanon, if you recall, there was tremendous concern about terrorism. And the party of God has been in South America, Central America, Mexico, and of course, it's throughout the United States. And this is a serious issue. And when you couple groups like Hezbollah, the party of God, with drug cartels that are involved in human trafficking, it becomes extremely more dangerous to the United States. So anyway, after I worked for that think tank and finished up grad school and worked a little bit longer there, I was recommended to go work for multinational corporation called Eaton, Information Management Systems Division. And we worked on workstations that helped our agents, our military intelligence, our CIA intelligence that are out there around the globe trying to keep us safe. Right? So they're monitoring nefarious individuals and criminal networks. And so you have to, I had to work with a scientist to provide what's called white papers. And this was all incredibly important work. And I continued that.
SPEAKER_01
00:04:31
And then I went into education and did consulting work. And when I saw what Biden did with respect to the energy industry and firing all those individuals that were working to build that Keystone XL pipeline from Canada to Mexico, which would destroy the United States ability to be energy independent and not be dependent from a country like Saudi Arabia. California receives most of its energy from Saudi Arabia and Iraq today. So the state of California, you know, your audience is probably saying, why is that dangerous? Why is that dangerous to the United States of America? And all you have to do is turn the pages of history and go back and look at, for example, World War I, the Great War to end all wars. We provided the resources to win the Great War to our allies. In fact, the British government said we rose to victory on a wave of oil and the United States of America provided 80% of that oil that won the war. World War II was the United States of America that was able to provide our allies with all of the petroleum needs that our allies and we needed to defeat Imperial Japan and Nazi Germany. And without it, the next war, we will be imperiled if we do not have energy independence. And I want your audience to know that China has now found trillions of cubic feet of natural gas in the South China Sea. They have found billions of barrels of untapped oil in the South China Sea. Russia is a gas station.
SPEAKER_01
00:06:39
There wouldn't even be a war in Ukraine right now. If we had had a president that was, instead of taxing the oil and gas and coal industry into extinction, if we had had a president that was making sure that we had what it took, we could have said to England and France and Germany and every other ally around the globe, we could have said to them, we will provide you all of your oil and gas needs so you don't have to buy from a Middle Eastern country or from Russia. That's extremely important to being able for a nation state to defend itself. That's one of the reasons why Japan declared war on the United States because one of the reasons was because they wanted our oil and we were telling Japan, if you're going to keep fighting Russia, we're not going to give you any oil. The fossil fuel industry is used as leverage when you're negotiating with other countries. It's incredibly important. Also, it's a humanitarian issue. Our farmers here in California and across this great country need what's called synthetic fertilizers. They should call it organic fertilizers because oil and this is a natural
SPEAKER_00
00:08:17
reason that they
SPEAKER_01
00:08:18
need. It's organic.
SPEAKER_01
00:08:21
We should have that available to us. Our farmers, and I come from Kern County. Kern County and California helps feed the world. California provides 400 commodities globally and we provide over two-thirds of all the fruit and nuts that this country eats, two-thirds of all the fruit and nuts right out of California that our country eats and the world. We provide over a third of all the vegetables from our beautiful state. When you charge the money you charge for diesel fuel and gasoline to truck it or to move it across borders and across national borders, the price goes way up and people can't afford it. There are emerging food shortages in America today and globally. Part of that is due to the cost of energy. Now, this is the message we have to get out to our adversaries, to the Democrats. So here in California and across our great country, we have the cleanest energy in the world. We have cleaner fossil fuel energy that we produce and sell than Canada or Mexico or any other country. Another reason why we need to be energy independent. Also, our scientists have found a way to capture the carbon emissions off of an oil rig or an oil refinery. It's called CCUS,
SPEAKER_00
00:10:10
Carbon Capture Utilization
SPEAKER_01
00:10:11
and Sequestration. We could do that but when you're taxing companies to death so they'll be destroyed and we'll no longer be able to employ people to do carbon capture, it puts us at risk and we need to get the message out to Democrats that if they care about the environment, why wouldn't we be providing all of our own oil and gas for our own people? It would bring the price of gasoline down so people could afford to eat in California and afford medicine and afford the things to make life affordable here in California and the United States. But when we're not energy independent, when we don't have an abundance of fuel, and the thing is Saudi Arabia and Iraq turn petroleum on and off, we're at their mercy. And Iran's been attacking oil tankers. In fact, all of the dirty oil tankers that come to California have to flow through the Strait of Hormuz. So when Iran decides to shut down the Strait of Hormuz or attack an oil tanker before that dirty filthy thing gets to California ports, I mean, it's just we're really at the mercy of people that are not necessarily friends of the United States.
SPEAKER_00
00:11:41
Yeah, it's, you know, in the last 30 years, the greatest thing on in human history has happened and that is we've brought in millions and billions of people out of extreme poverty and we've done that through free market capitalism and access to fossil fuels.
SPEAKER_00
00:12:00
There's a lot that you went through there to respond to. But yeah, I mean, the Keystone thing was infuriating to me when they and the minimization of it. Oh, it's, you know, all it's going to give us is 30 permanent jobs and it's just going to leak and, you know, it's just this it's just this
SPEAKER_01
00:12:21
stupid people were out of
SPEAKER_00
00:12:23
work. And it's amazing that they can minimize it to the point where people will just look at it and go, Oh, yeah, it's just some thing that we don't really need. Energy is the lifeblood of civilization. When I hear that China and Russia are finding more energy, I'm thinking this is good. This is a good thing. There are 2 billion people on this planet that use less energy than a refrigerator right now. And that's their life. The most precious resource in the universe is the human mind. And the only way we're going to be able to utilize those minds is if they have the ability to study and read and learn and you cannot do that when you're walking back and forth to a river to get water every day. Right. The best thing we can do for everybody else in the world is to make sure that they have access to fossil fuels. And we don't even know how much natural gas is in on in the planet. We are not even completely sure how it's made. There are different theories at this point. There could be unlimited natural gas on this planet. And like you said, carbon capture, that's something we can do. I'm all for carbon capture when it comes to industry. There's a material called graphene that can be produced through carbon capture.
SPEAKER_00
00:13:49
I don't think it's as necessary as a lot of people deem it to be. I don't think that CO2 is as big a problem as it's made out to be in the media. The earth is greening at the rate of two times the continental United States in the past 50 years. So that's two times the United States worth of greening. We are meant to think that the deserts are just expanding and taking over everything, which is not how not even if the worst of the worst of what they say is going to happen in climate change, it is going to mean that the colder areas on the planet get a little bit warmer and the temperate areas on the planet are going to stay about the same. And if anything, this is a good thing. This is a good thing.
SPEAKER_01
00:14:36
We need to remind the audience that from the 1940s to the 1970s, people thought that the earth was freezing. And so and the temperatures were being lowered. And now they say the temperatures are warming and that's fine. But it's like point one point. It's not even one point one percent
SPEAKER_00
00:14:58
warmer is
SPEAKER_01
00:14:59
good point. It's point. I think it's zero one percent. And actually, there's close to eight billion people on the planet today. And it's we could through carbon capture, we can process. We could process those emissions and we could sell them to a third world country so they could have electricity, because that is the one thing that can ramp up and down and electric grid. So so you can have on a planet with close to eight billion people, you can have all the wind farms here in the United States with three hundred and thirty million. You can have all the wind farms, all the solar panel farms and some hydroelectric dams. But you're never going to be able to sustain an industrialized country and promote economic growth and prosperity for the American people without fossil fuels. And I just like to say I thought it was fascinating. The vice president of the United States, Kamala Harris, just said in front of the country that we needed to have less people in America.
SPEAKER_00
00:16:14
Yeah, that was beautiful. That was beautiful.
SPEAKER_01
00:16:17
That's shocking.
SPEAKER_00
00:16:18
Oh, you know,
SPEAKER_01
00:16:19
not only are they.
SPEAKER_00
00:16:21
Yes, somebody I think it might have been Thomas Massie was grilling the deputy secretary of the Department of Energy last week and he was oh no, it was Kennedy. It was Kennedy. And he was asking him if the United States went net zero today, how much would that affect the planet? Give me a number. The guy couldn't do it. He goes, well, we're 13 percent of emissions. So if we stopped, that would be 13 percent of temperature. And it's like, hold on a minute. If we drop the temperature on this planet, 13 percent, we're all freezing to death. We are in an ice age. And that's what we really need to worry about is an ice age. Heat is a good thing. Heat can be controlled. We can cool the planet down a little bit if we need to. But if we need the heat, we need to have the ability to crank it up. If it gets cold here, the best times in human history have been in the warmest periods. That is an easy, easy deal to check out throughout history of time. The the what would they call it? The Little Ice Age. Things civilization went to a crawl for a couple hundred. And this was just a few hundred years ago. This is not something that happened in the distant past where it was cavemen going, oh, it's a little bit colder. No, this affected actual people. This affected civilization. And it can do it again.
SPEAKER_00
00:17:48
There's no way. And, you know, the overpopulation thing is. Well,
SPEAKER_01
00:17:55
it's
SPEAKER_00
00:17:56
just not overpopulated. It is not overpopulated. I've read books and estimates where they think with a decent space infrastructure, if we can build up in outer space, this planet can support a trillion people, which sounds crazy. But if you can build and grow all your food out in space, you can have as many people living on this planet as as we want to.
SPEAKER_01
00:18:21
Well, we can grow plenty of food here. The problem that we're having here in California and across the nation is we're having water turned off.
SPEAKER_00
00:18:33
Yes,
SPEAKER_01
00:18:33
here in California, because of the regulatory environment that's been created by some federal legislation that was passed, I'd like to call your audience attention to NEPA. So NEPA is an act that has to do with the National Environmental Protection Act. And what this has done is it's created bureaucracies where you have unelected bureaucrats that are creating more bureaucracies that are regulating our lives. So I'd like you to consider that we're paying now fifteen thousand dollars per household, not just in California, sir, but also across the country. And it's winding up being about a trillion that the American people are spending on regulation. So let's talk about that for a moment.
SPEAKER_00
00:19:35
Yeah, absolutely.
SPEAKER_01
00:19:36
So there's not only an abundance of regulations on the fossil fuel industry. So as the United States Senator for this country and as the United States Senator for California, one of the first things I want to do is work with other conservative Republican Senators like Ted Cruz and Tom Pontin and Marsha Blackburn and others to get legislation passed so that we will protect and expand the fossil fuel industry. But then we know that because the NEPA has created bureaucracies like here in California, we have a bureaucracy called CARB.
SPEAKER_00
00:20:17
I just wrote that down on my notepad.
SPEAKER_00
00:20:20
That's where I was going.
SPEAKER_01
00:20:23
California Air Resources Board. Why do we have that bureaucracy? Because they told our farmers, you need to get rid of your tractors and go buy an electric tractor. Well, if you're out there work piling your field, you're not going to be able to get an electric charging unit out in the middle of your crops to charge your tractor. That's insane. They're telling truck drivers here in California, the truck across the country, you're going to have to get rid of your diesel fuel trucks. I mean, people can't afford that. We have farmers in our state and in other states across our country that are plowing under food crops and are slaughtering their cattle or selling their cattle. That's the food we eat. That's our food supply. Even Biden stood up in front of the country and said we have emerging food shortages. Why are we allowing Democrats to keep being elected to the United States Senate? By the way, I have to say this because Adam Schiff, who I'm running to defeat, has just raised $8 million. I want to ask people to go to my website, Denise, and I guess you have my name on the screen, yes?
SPEAKER_00
00:21:48
Oh, yeah. Yep. Yep. We'll have it.
SPEAKER_01
00:21:49
D-E-N-I-C-E Gary G-A-R-Y-Pandle, P-A-N-D-O-L, there's no hyphen for my website, .com. I hope people will go to my website and make whatever contribution they can. I have to win this. I have to win this because not only is the energy issue putting us in danger, but these unelected bureaucracies that are being created by Democrats that are controlling our lives like CARB, we have to push back. We need to defund, defund. As a United States Senator and working with the House, we can defund federal agencies that are hurting us, that are creating a situation in which our cost of living is going up by $15,000 a year, plus here in California, I don't know about your state, sir, but here in California, I mean, our taxes just went up for gasoline on July 1st. Those taxes need to be eliminated.
SPEAKER_00
00:23:02
Yeah.
SPEAKER_01
00:23:03
Our veterans, our veterans here in California, veterans in California are charged 100% on every check they receive, their military pension, their retirement pay. I mean, they were willing to fight and die for UNI. They made it through. They're a veteran, they're alive. They're maybe in their 70s and 80s now, but here in our state, we're taxing them 100% of their military pension. I want to get elected also to end the taxation. Again, I'm not sure, sir, about your state or what your people
SPEAKER_00
00:23:48
are doing.
SPEAKER_00
00:23:49
Oh yeah, they're doing everything they can. They like to raise our property taxes.
SPEAKER_01
00:23:53
Well, I want to get legislation passed so that no veteran has to pay a tax on their military pension while they were doing their duty and supporting America. They were taxed. I don't know if people realize that, but if you're in the military, you
SPEAKER_00
00:24:13
shouldn't
SPEAKER_01
00:24:13
be taxed. Your paycheck is taxed just like anybody else's paycheck is taxed. So they've already been taxed,
SPEAKER_00
00:24:20
but- I'm being taxed. I was taxed on my workers' comp. They don't put it on the paycheck, but it's adjusted for taxes.
SPEAKER_01
00:24:29
I didn't realize that.
SPEAKER_00
00:24:31
Yeah, they try and hide it, but what they do is they give you like, this is what you made average. We'll add some overtime and then factor in taxes and this is how much you get. So it's kind of rolled up into the whole deal and you don't have like an itemized section on it. But yeah, they adjust it for
SPEAKER_01
00:24:50
taxes. Is that nationwide? Do you know?
SPEAKER_00
00:24:52
I don't know.
SPEAKER_00
00:24:53
I think every workers' comp is a different state program, so I would imagine it's different state by state. But back to CARB real quick. This is a big deal. Like these are bad, bad people. CARB is actually like a nemesis of this podcast. I grew up racing dirt bikes. I got my first dirt bike when I was four years old and within a few years they had rangers out in the middle of the- you were out in the middle of nowhere riding nobody around you all day and all of a sudden a ranger comes up to you and has to check what sticker you have on your fork tube. Do you have a green sticker or a red sticker? Because if you have a red sticker, that means you're not allowed to be out here right now. And also we're going to take a stick and shove it into your muffler and make sure that you have a spark arrestor because a two-stroke engine, they have a little bit of oil that drains out of the pipe and we don't want fires being started even though there's never been a fire started by a two-stroke engine in the history of dirt bikes. So it gets worse. The dirt bike industry did not stand up to these people. They said, okay, here's what we're going to do. They have a hard on for two strokes. They really want us to get rid of these two-stroke engines. So what we're going to do is we're going to allow Yamaha to make this badass four-stroke engine and we're going to let it race. We're going to suspend every rule in the book, throw them all out and let this company do whatever they want because we've got to get CARB off our backs. So they do it.
SPEAKER_00
00:26:21
And what happens? CARB did not get off their backs. Right away they started going after the four strokes. So now you can't write a four stroke out in the middle of nowhere either because they get a red sticker. So by acquiescing to these people, now when I was a kid you could buy a two-stroke 125, 80, 250 from every dirt bike manufacturer in the world. Now only a few of them make them and they're doing the same thing with four strokes. If you let these people, they will just keep taking and taking and taking until you are in a horse and buggy. That is where they want you.
SPEAKER_01
00:26:55
Right.
SPEAKER_01
00:26:55
Or mass transit. That way
SPEAKER_00
00:26:57
they control your schedule. Yes.
SPEAKER_01
00:26:59
You know, they control...
SPEAKER_00
00:27:00
As long as they can demoralize you in the process.
SPEAKER_01
00:27:03
You know, to me it's not about demoralization, but it demoralizes
SPEAKER_00
00:27:09
us. They do. They like... They demoralize us. And one of the reasons I think they really hate dirt bikes is because it's an individualist sport. You are an individual. They love football. They love basketball because the coach is smarter than you. You need to listen to the coach. They'll tell you what to do. You do your job. That's it. Don't ask questions. Don't talk back. Just follow the play the way it was written by someone who was smarter than you. On a dirt bike, you are dependent on yourself.
SPEAKER_00
00:27:36
If you're out in the middle of nowhere and the bike breaks down, you better hope you've got a couple of tools underneath your seat because it's on you to fix it. And I think they really hate that. I think they hate anything that promotes individuals over the collective.
SPEAKER_01
00:27:50
I think they want control and we're moving closer towards socialism. Absolutely. So if you... So if your people are listening in your state to your podcast, I hope they'll call their friends and family here in California. I need their vote because CARB and their California Water Board. I mean...
SPEAKER_00
00:28:11
Yeah, there's many of these boards.
SPEAKER_01
00:28:13
Turned off the water to many of our farmers. In some cases, 97%. So why would you turn off the water to farmers that are growing food or providing water for their livestock?
SPEAKER_00
00:28:29
It's evil.
SPEAKER_01
00:28:30
Cattle, sheep, goats that provide beef or milk, our dairy cows. We have a lot of dairy farms in California. Why would you turn off the water when people need food to eat? And I think again, it goes back to what Kamala said. We need less people here in America. We need less people on the planet. We don't need less people, but we do need our water. And one of the things that is important that a lot of people don't know about our state is the Democrats made it illegal to have what's called rainwater capture system.
SPEAKER_00
00:29:11
Yes, I've heard of this. This is insane. So
SPEAKER_01
00:29:13
rainwater capture means that when the rain falls, they could capture the water and it would be free of charge. I have farmers here in California and ranchers and they say, you know what, Denise, I built a well on my property. I paid for it with my own money. So I built it with my own money on my property. And now the state of California is taxing me for every drop of water I pull out for my crops, for my lives, for my animals, whatever. He's having to pay a tax for every drop. This is wrong here in our state. So I want to, as a US Senator, to not just for the state of California, because again, this is happening in other states.
SPEAKER_00
00:30:11
It's happening here too.
SPEAKER_00
00:30:12
Oh, yes. Okay. We have an aquifer. We live on top of an aquifer here in the Treasure Valley that's the size of Lake Michigan. They will tell you in scientific papers that this is this aquifer is the size of Lake Michigan. We don't know exactly how big it is. We don't know exactly how it works, but we do know that a little bit less is draining out every year than the year before. So we're going to limit all of your water and call it a shortage and say that we're in drought. It's all based on conjecture from these people who will tell you that we don't really understand how these things work. We just know that it's going a little bit less. It makes no sense whatsoever.
SPEAKER_01
00:30:57
So here in California, we have the Sierra Nevada mountains, right? And when the snow melts, when the snow cap melts every year, all of it runs, well, not all of it, but you know, most
SPEAKER_00
00:31:14
of
SPEAKER_01
00:31:14
it runs into the ocean, right?
SPEAKER_00
00:31:16
Yeah.
SPEAKER_01
00:31:16
If we saved here in our state by 5% of that snow melt in dams, in off stream reservoirs, in rain capture systems, we would have so much water in our state. We would have enough that we would not need to have water regulations. Also, the Israelis have developed a system called fog capture. So
SPEAKER_00
00:31:50
again, this is on
SPEAKER_01
00:31:51
my website. People can read this and I have links to back up factually everything I'm saying here today and everything I've written. DeniseGarryPandle.com
SPEAKER_01
00:32:03
and Denise is spelled with a C. I need your help. I need contributions. I need help. So fog capture, what is that? So the Israelis have found a way where you can pull the moisture out of the air. And of course, we have the Pacific Ocean, literally, the California borders, the whole Pacific, right? California, the whole border is there on the Pacific Ocean. We could capture the moisture out of the air, process that a little bit, and we'd have pure clean drinking water for every beach community in California.
SPEAKER_00
00:32:41
But you need energy for that. You got to have energy. You got to have cheap and plentiful fossil fuels to do something like that. California, 100
SPEAKER_01
00:32:48
years ago, used to export to every state in the union all of our oil and gas needs. We have it. Alaska has it. Texas has it. North Dakota has it. States across our country have oil and gas. Just get it and use it. We also have, we should have desalination plants. You know, the environmentalists are, these liberal environmentalists say you can't have desalination plants.
SPEAKER_01
00:33:21
I'll tell you why you can't. They say it hurts the fish, it hurts fish eggs. Well, the Israelis have come up with a new, more sophisticated desalination.
SPEAKER_00
00:33:33
That's how they get most of their water, correct?
SPEAKER_01
00:33:35
Yes, sir. And through fog capture, desalination plants, they even have mobile, mobile, desalination and reclamation. So they can take, like let's say there's been rain and they've got a dirty muddy lake or river, they can pull water and they can clean it up. They call it a reclaimed reclamation and it can provide pure drinking water. It can provide water for a farm, for a ranch. So we have the technology.
SPEAKER_00
00:34:09
Yeah. And
SPEAKER_01
00:34:11
we have the innovation. We don't need to have drought conditions anywhere on the planet. And
SPEAKER_00
00:34:20
I
SPEAKER_01
00:34:20
mean, we just need to use what we have available. God given American ingenuity, Israeli ingenuity. Let's use it. Let's bless our people. Let's grow our economy and let's be a blessing to the rest of the world.
SPEAKER_00
00:34:34
And you can see it like California has been complaining about drought for, I don't even know how many years, and then you guys get torrential downpours for weeks.
SPEAKER_00
00:34:46
And what do they do? Complain that there's too much water and that we don't know what to do with it. But we do. Of course they do. They don't. This is why I call it a deindustrialization movement instead of a climate change movement, because every one of these problems can be solved with technology and energy and they don't want to do it. They don't want to do it.
SPEAKER_01
00:35:11
Right. Well, I do.
SPEAKER_01
00:35:12
Yeah, I do. And there's other Republicans here in our state that want to do that as well. You just have to get elected so I can get legislation passed that will mandate that every state in the union has to have water infrastructure built yearly. It needs to be mandated. It's not, well, we're not going to do that this year. It's mandated. You do it every year. We have to upgrade our infrastructure, but we need new infrastructure so that no state has the opportunity to say, we don't have enough water for our crops or for our livestock and we're not going to be able to feed our state or help feed our country or export around the globe because we didn't have enough water. You know what the Israelis are doing today because of de-sale fog capture reclamation plans, rainwater capture systems. They're exporting water to people that have wanted to destroy them for centuries.
SPEAKER_00
00:36:20
And they live in a desert.
SPEAKER_01
00:36:23
Well, you'll have to go to Israel. It's not, okay.
SPEAKER_00
00:36:27
I was under the impression that it was fairly dry in the most of, I mean, not like desert, desert, but I mean, they live in a very arid, dry climate. Like this is not a place that is getting rainstorms constantly or a lot of drought. Like this is a dry area and they're making water. They can't, and we can, and you can green the deserted areas in this, in the world fairly easily. You know, they want, they have such high ambitions when they want something done, but when we point out things that need to be done, they don't care. For instance, we've got about 650,000 miles of transmission lines in this country. They want to build another 420,000 miles of transmission lines by 2035. 420,000. When you start hearing numbers like that, you go, dang, we must be building a lot of miles of transmission line in this country. Wrong. We got like 400 miles built last year. And to top that off, about 60% of our grid needs to be replaced already. So we're living in a system where they don't want you to have energy. They're shutting down as many power plants as they possibly can.
SPEAKER_00
00:37:47
The transmission lines that are connecting you to those power plants are wearing out and need to be replaced. Then you've got some of the biggest villains in the world, high school guidance counselors telling every kid that comes into their office, don't do manual labor. That's first chump. Go to college. So we've got this grid that needs to be rebuilt. It's got to be expanded by 60%, they say, but we don't have anybody to do it. And we don't want you going into that job. That's what I was getting to, technical schools.
SPEAKER_01
00:38:23
Technical schools are extremely important. I want to emphasize technical schools and support more technical schools because we need to get people certified so they can do the kinds of manual labor. It's not, let's not call it manual labor. It is a
SPEAKER_00
00:38:41
skilled labor. Alignment. I mean, alignment is the most skilled construction job on the planet. You have to do things that you would never imagine you had to do for construction. Sure.
SPEAKER_01
00:38:52
That's right. They need to get, you need to take classes. You need to learn how to do it. You need on the job training. You need to be minored. You need to be certified. I mean, that's how we build and keep America modern and moving forward in the 21st century. We need these important people that have the skill set to do what needs to be done to modernize our electric grid. But I'll tell you what, there's nothing that's going to ramp up or down an electric grid like oil, gas, and coal. And we have the cleanest in the world. But let's talk about, since you brought up education and we're about ready to wrap things up, I understand.
SPEAKER_00
00:39:34
Oh, I thought we were doing an hour. If we're doing, oh, if you've got to go, that's fine. I'd like to ask a different question if you're ready to get out of here.
SPEAKER_01
00:39:43
Let me just, okay.
SPEAKER_00
00:39:45
Touch on schools and I've got one more for you if that's okay.
SPEAKER_01
00:39:48
Okay. So I have mothers and grandmothers come up to me a lot, you know, on because California, you know, I've been traveling up and down this state since July of 2021, trying to beat Adam. Well, first I was running against Diane Feinstein and you know, she's bowed out. She realizes she's no longer able to be a U.S. Senator. And so I'm running to defeat Adam Schiff. And you know, I'm sure that no one in your state, well, except for a Democrat, wants Adam Schiff to be our next, another, you know, another Democrat in the United States Senate. He's bad news for our country. He
SPEAKER_00
00:40:30
is.
SPEAKER_01
00:40:30
He's not just bad news for the state of California. He's
SPEAKER_00
00:40:33
an evil man.
SPEAKER_01
00:40:34
He's bad news for the country.
SPEAKER_00
00:40:35
He's an evil
SPEAKER_01
00:40:35
man. And Katie Porter is worse. So I'm running to defeat Adam Schiff, Katie Porter, and Barbara Lee. Barbara Lee is playing the race card everywhere. So go to Denise Gary Pandole, make that contribution. But anyway, school choice.
SPEAKER_00
00:40:52
There we go.
SPEAKER_01
00:40:53
So moms and grandmothers are telling me, my little kindergartner or first grader or second grader or third grade, K through 12, they're going to school and they're having these teachers stand up in front of their children or grandchildren or nieces or nephews and saying to them, you know, you might be a little boy or you might be a little girl or you might be a homosexual.
SPEAKER_01
00:41:17
You might be an animal. We have public school teachers, public school teachers in our classrooms putting kitty litter boxes in their classroom for that child who wants to be a cat that day to go poop.
SPEAKER_00
00:41:29
It's unbelievable.
SPEAKER_01
00:41:31
This is crazy. I mean, it is just ridiculous. I want to get legislation passed because we have, what is it, over 21 states now in America where they have Republican governors like Sarah Huckabee Sanders in Arkansas, Rhonda Santas in Florida and others. I mean, we've got over 20 states now that are providing school choice. So the parents' taxes, the taxes of that family follow that, those children or child in that family all the way through high school so that the parents or the caregiver can use those tax dollars to pay for a pro-field school, homeschool co-ops, you know, an excellent academic school, all kinds of other kinds of schools, maybe a special needs school. Maybe they have a special needs child and that child really should go to a very special needs school and for their best interests. They should be able to pay for it. They should be able to pay for tutoring if that child needs special tutoring. That money is those parents' money, that family's money. Why do they have to give it to a public school? Because, you know, when you increase competition with private and charter and homeschool co-ops and academic with a public school, what happens? There's competition and competition creates a situation everybody has to do better, has to perform better. I think this is important and I think that we need to get legislation passed that will end the Department of Education. The Department of Education is just another bureaucracy. Ronald Reagan, what Ronald Reagan wanted to get rid of the Department of Education, we're paying all these bureaucrats all this money for what? Let's put, let's put more control back into the hands of the parents and the local community so those parents can hold those local school boards accountable. I think that's critical.
SPEAKER_00
00:43:47
Yeah, I completely agree with you. I'm all for school choice. We're even having problems with our schools here in Idaho.
SPEAKER_00
00:43:53
My little brother's 10 and he's not going back to school this year, but, you know, he'll get a good education and he'll be ready to get into a job by the time he's 16. So, just
SPEAKER_01
00:44:03
get him in a homeschool co-op.
SPEAKER_00
00:44:05
Yep. All right, so last question for you. Like I said, I'm up here in Idaho. When I opened the show, I don't know if you caught it, but I say transmitting from the future free state of greater Idaho. So the greater Idaho movement, we're making steam up here. We've got 12 counties in Oregon that are ready to move into Idaho. Phase one is Oregon. Phase two is California. So if you're in offices, you're not going there.
SPEAKER_01
00:44:36
But I will tell you this. One other thing that's really critical. I don't know if your listeners are aware of this.
SPEAKER_01
00:44:46
They probably are. I mean, most audiences are pretty well informed across the country. You know, not only do we have these terror cells throughout California and across in Idaho and across the country, but many times they're working with these drug cartels out of Mexico. And I want to remind your audience, I don't know if they're undeclared. I don't know if they're independents, Democrats or Republicans, but I want to say this for the record. Back in 1854, Congress passed a piece of legislation that really triggered the northern half of the United States. What was that legislation? It was the Kansas-Nebraska Act. And the Kansas-Nebraska Act said that for every free state that came into our union, a slave state had to come in. And 10,000 Americans, think about this, Danny, before podcasts and radio and television and before all of that social media, 10,000 Americans knew, came together in a northern state. I think it was Michigan and said, we've got to do something about this slavery in America. And so they formed the Republican Party. The Republican Party decided to run a presidential candidate who ran on an anti-slavery platform. His name was Abraham Lincoln, which was a pretty gutsy thing to do because in 1860 to run on an anti-slavery platform here in our nation, it put a great big target on the Republican Party. It put a great big target on your back. Just like that target went on Philip Haney, my late fiance, who also took a stand against the corruption of Democrats in the DHS, put a target on his back. He was killed too. Abraham Lincoln wound up being murdered for taking a stand against slavery. But through his position as president and through Ulysses S. Grant, the 18th Republican, well, the 18th president of the United States who was also a Republican. The 13th amendment ended slavery in America.
SPEAKER_01
00:47:05
The 14th amendment provided equality and the 15th amendment provided the vote. Now the Democrats are back in power. They have opened up our borders, Canada border, border with Mexico. People are coming into the country through ports of entry like airports, ports of entry, through ships at ports of entry. They are not following the law. This administration is not following federal law.
SPEAKER_00
00:47:35
So that's what they do. Their job is to break the law. I mean, the Constitution is at this point to them, it's a set of loose instructions, not rules that need to be abided by. Right. And we need to
SPEAKER_01
00:47:50
make crime illegal again in America and we need to make crime illegal again in California.
SPEAKER_01
00:47:55
So let me just finish. So with open borders, they violated, which is an impeachable offense, they violated Title 8, Section 1182. So Title 8, Section 1182, there's a link on my website that you could just click on and read. It says anybody that comes into the United States is supposed to have documentation that shows that they have permission to enter, that they have no criminal ties, they've committed no crimes, they have a clean bill of health, they've been checked out by a physician and they have a clean bill of health, and that they're not going to become a ward of the state. In other words, we're not going to give them your tax dollars and my tax dollars. We're not going to provide them housing. We're not going to provide food. We're not going to provide clothing and we're not going to provide them a bus ticket or a plane ticket to go wherever here in the United States. That's not legal. That's a federal crime under Title 8, Section 1182. So people in DHS or the Department of Justice or the FBI that are allowing this to continue are violating federal law. We need to clean house. We need to clear out the leadership in these institutions because we need to get back to following U.S. law and the Constitution. And the Constitution says that the President is supposed to protect this country against foreign invasion. And I don't know about the city where you live, but the city where I live here in Kern County, there are, I mean, there's three million people, four million people that have come across our border since Biden.
SPEAKER_01
00:49:46
I mean, that's larger than I think most cities in America. That's called an invasion when you have that many people crossing a border. So these are basics. These are fundamentals. These are just, these are laws that we need to get back to enforcing. And I want you to know that as a U.S. Senator for our country and for the state of California, I am going to work overtime to hold these people accountable. I want them impeached or removed from office. And we need to get people in there that are actually going to obey the law. And there needs to be constant oversight to make sure they do. I just wanted to
SPEAKER_00
00:50:32
say that. Yeah. You know, and I applaud you to what you're doing. You know, my advice to my friends and family in California has been get out of there. You need to leave. But as I'm saying, when we have institutions like CARB who are setting policy that affects companies around the world, I mean, Suzuki, Yamaha, these are Japanese countries. We need, and I would argue that these institutions are not reformable.
SPEAKER_00
00:51:06
I would say that CARB. They can
SPEAKER_01
00:51:07
be defunded and eliminated.
SPEAKER_00
00:51:09
Yeah. I think they need to go. You know, just doing regulatory capture or taking away their money, that can be overdone by the next person that gets in. And, you know, hopefully they're not going to go back. Hopefully you get in and they don't go back crazy again for a long time. But at some point the tides tend to flip. And I think that we got to get rid of, you know, intelligence agencies, CARB, all of these. There's a lot of things that need to go. So I really hope that you get in there. I hope you make some noise. I know it's going to be hard. I've been
SPEAKER_01
00:51:44
making noise up and down this state, sir, and almost every county. We have 58 counties in
SPEAKER_00
00:51:50
California. Yeah. It's a huge state. It's massive.
SPEAKER_01
00:51:52
It's a huge state, but I've gotten to the most of them. I still have, I'm still looking at my map and I'm thinking I still have a few more counties to get to. I'm trying to get everywhere.
SPEAKER_00
00:52:03
Yeah. You got to get up north. Get up north of Sonoma County, north of Sonoma County, up in the triangle. Those are the areas that are going to be very receptible to your message, I think.
SPEAKER_01
00:52:13
What areas did she say?
SPEAKER_00
00:52:15
Sonoma County, Mendocino County, Humboldt.
SPEAKER_00
00:52:19
What's the other one up there? Yuba. I have been. Those are areas. That's where I grew up and those people are not happy with the state that they're living in. I can promise you that. My friends and family that are still living in Cloverdale and Lake County surrounding areas, they're pissed. They are pissed. Well, please share this show. And they should be. Oh, absolutely. They should be. They
SPEAKER_01
00:52:42
should be. I was up in Siskiyou County last month and I did a video which was put out on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter and, well, Truth Social, I don't think does videos. But anyway, I did a video. I got out in the rain, in my high heels. I was wearing a suit because I had spoken earlier that day. And I called attention to the nefarious activities by illegal Russians. Or maybe they're illegal, but they're a criminal network that's growing those marijuana grows in Siskiyou County. Oh,
SPEAKER_00
00:53:16
yeah. And
SPEAKER_01
00:53:16
it's contaminating the water with a chemical treatment that they're using on those marijuana grows, which are also illegal. So we've got Chinese, Russian and the Hmong people, some of which I believe have come here illegally, some probably legally, but they're involved in criminal activity. And the sheriff's team up in Siskiyou area in that particular area where I was, Montague, etc.
SPEAKER_01
00:53:47
They didn't have the manpower to get rid of them. And I took the car with Aaron, Aaron Ryan, I believe is a the senior field rep for Congressman LaMalfa. And we drove in there and they started monitoring us. They started bringing out all their trucks. But I got out on the side of the road and I did a video and I talked about it and I was in Yuba County as well. So I hope you'll share this show.
SPEAKER_00
00:54:17
Absolutely. Absolutely. I need
SPEAKER_01
00:54:18
their vote.
SPEAKER_00
00:54:19
I need their vote. Yeah, you do.
SPEAKER_00
00:54:20
I need their help. Like you said, you got to fight. California is the most beautiful. I lived in San Francisco for five years. It's the most beautiful city in the world if you clean it up. You just got to clean it up. It's not going to be hard. Somebody can get in there and in a couple years, they could have that city cleaned up really quick. If you got a good business person in there, somebody who's ran a business, who knows how the market works, who can put the right people in, who can defund the right places, can shut down the right things. You could have that city cleaned up in a year or two.
SPEAKER_00
00:54:49
No problem. And it'd be right back to the most beautiful city in the world. It's so heart
SPEAKER_01
00:54:57
breaking.
SPEAKER_00
00:54:57
And it makes me mad. It makes me mad because they're destroying something beautiful. They're destroying something beautiful. I used to drive into that city going over the Golden Gate Bridge as a kid and you'd look at it and you go, my gosh, how did people build this bridge back then? It's an amazing city. Everything about it is incredible. When I tell people up here that I used to live there, they look at me like I'm from a different planet. How could you live there? And it's like, dude, the way that people think San Francisco is now is sad. People up here should be looking at me going, oh man, you got to live in San Francisco.
SPEAKER_00
00:55:36
How great must that have been? That's the reaction that I should be getting. Not, are you insane? What is wrong with you? So yeah, we need to get, we need, we got to get it cleaned up and I really hope you get in there to do it.
SPEAKER_01
00:55:50
Thank you.
SPEAKER_00
00:55:51
You're welcome. Denise, it's been a pleasure having you on and we'll keep up and keep looking at your progress and hoping that you're going to get out there and win. Get out there and make some noise, Denise. Thank you.
SPEAKER_01
00:56:03
And tell your people to share everything on social media they can that they see on me
SPEAKER_00
00:56:08
because
SPEAKER_01
00:56:08
that's field name recognition. Absolutely.
SPEAKER_00
00:56:11
All right. Good night, everybody.
SPEAKER_01
00:56:12
Good night.