[00:00:08] If you're useless and you know it, clap your hands.
[00:00:12] The Kate Dalley Show starts now.
[00:00:15] General Washington.
[00:00:16] Sit, please.
[00:00:17] We need your strength for the fight ahead.
[00:00:20] We fight for a country of our own, a new nation, where we choose our own laws.
[00:00:27] Here, here, sir.
[00:00:28] Choose our own leaders.
[00:00:30] Yes, sir.
[00:00:31] And choose our own systems of weights and measures.
[00:00:36] Weights and measures, sir?
[00:00:42] Yes.
[00:00:43] Yes, I dream of that one day.
[00:00:46] Our proud nation will measure weights and pounds and that 2,000 pounds shall be called a ton.
[00:00:54] And what will 1,000 pounds be called, sir?
[00:00:57] Nothing.
[00:00:58] Because we will have no word for that.
[00:01:03] Seems like we should have a word for 1,000 pounds, sir.
[00:01:07] And yeah, we won't.
[00:01:11] Because we are free men.
[00:01:13] And we will be free to measure liquids in liters and milliliters.
[00:01:18] But not all liquids, only soda, wine, and alcohol.
[00:01:22] No, sir.
[00:01:24] Yes.
[00:01:25] Because for milk and paint, we will use gallons, pints, and quarts, God will.
[00:01:30] Okay.
[00:01:31] How many liters are in a gallon, sir?
[00:01:34] Nobody knows.
[00:01:37] Distance will be measured in inches, feet, yard, and mile.
[00:01:43] So 12 inches to a foot?
[00:01:45] 12 feet to a yard.
[00:01:47] If it were only so simple.
[00:01:49] Three feet to a yard.
[00:01:51] And how many yards to a mile?
[00:01:53] Nobody knows.
[00:01:55] How many feet to a mile?
[00:02:01] 5,280.
[00:02:03] Of course.
[00:02:08] The number that everyone will remember.
[00:02:10] Same for animals.
[00:02:16] One when they are alive.
[00:02:18] And a different one when they become food.
[00:02:23] So cows will be beef.
[00:02:25] Pigs will be pork.
[00:02:27] And chickens, sir?
[00:02:30] That one stays.
[00:02:43] So funny.
[00:02:44] I love that clip.
[00:02:46] It's a combination of some clips of his.
[00:02:48] Oh, so funny.
[00:02:49] Weights and measurements.
[00:02:50] It always reminds me of Canada.
[00:02:51] So it's kind of been on my mind this week a little bit.
[00:02:54] Look, there's so much about the fires.
[00:02:56] I went over in the first hour.
[00:02:58] Or I just barely even skimmed the surface, to tell you the truth.
[00:03:02] I've got a lot of notes on this.
[00:03:05] And did a deep dive.
[00:03:06] Went through documentation and all kinds of stuff.
[00:03:10] City, county documentation on what led to this.
[00:03:14] What's going on?
[00:03:15] Because it seems as though constant turmoil in California with these fires.
[00:03:20] And I grew up there.
[00:03:22] So for me, I wasn't surrounded by fire all the time.
[00:03:27] The threat of fire.
[00:03:29] And I'm looking at the last 20 years.
[00:03:33] And I've been actually kind of blown away at what's been going on there.
[00:03:37] And then, of course, whole neighborhoods just poof, gone.
[00:03:42] James Woods' house gone.
[00:03:44] He was very vocal about losing his home in the Palisades.
[00:03:48] And also the fact that his insurance dumped him.
[00:03:51] So there's that, too.
[00:03:52] And so if you would like to call and comment on this and all of these things that are surrounding the issue from insurance leaving California.
[00:04:03] So you can't get your home insured to not all the companies, but they're starting to go now.
[00:04:08] State Farm.
[00:04:09] There's different companies that won't insure you.
[00:04:11] And if they do, it's a lot of money.
[00:04:13] I don't even know how people are actually staying in California, to tell you the truth.
[00:04:16] And then also the land grab, changing zoning when somebody wants to rebuild after the fire, changing the rules on them.
[00:04:25] It's impossible to do so.
[00:04:27] So there's so many different things going on that I'd love to get your take on this and what you're seeing about the fires.
[00:04:33] Go ahead, caller.
[00:04:35] You're live.
[00:04:35] Go right ahead.
[00:04:36] Hi, Kate.
[00:04:37] Hi.
[00:04:38] I've lived in California since 1981.
[00:04:41] Yeah.
[00:04:42] And originally I'm from Boston.
[00:04:44] But for the first 20 years I lived in California, they didn't have these crazy fires.
[00:04:50] Right.
[00:04:50] And so I think what's responsible is the chemtrails.
[00:04:56] And the reason I think that is there's nano-sized aluminum particles when they're spraying.
[00:05:01] And the nano-sized aluminum particles, when you nano-size a metal, it becomes incredibly flammable.
[00:05:08] And so it causes the fires to burn at a super high temperature.
[00:05:12] And so just my take on it, everything is covered with this dust.
[00:05:17] And the fires take off at a ferocious rate.
[00:05:23] And beyond that, like 10 years ago, the power company got approved by the legislature in California to pass on.
[00:05:34] If they got sued for starting a fire, they could pass it on to the people that were receiving power from them.
[00:05:41] And they knew this was coming.
[00:05:43] That's what that indicates to me.
[00:05:45] And so the nano-sized aluminum particles in the atmosphere cause the atmosphere to be conducted.
[00:05:50] Good point.
[00:05:50] And so the power is jumping to the ground and starting fires as a result of that.
[00:05:57] And it's like this is new.
[00:05:59] I mean, it's 20 years new.
[00:06:00] But people are like accepting the fires.
[00:06:02] Oh, it's the wind.
[00:06:03] It's the wind.
[00:06:03] Yeah.
[00:06:04] Yeah.
[00:06:04] Blaming the Santa Anas.
[00:06:06] Because I was like, I had Santa Ana winds.
[00:06:08] They didn't cause these fires.
[00:06:10] I mean, we were just not seeing that back then.
[00:06:13] So something's very awful.
[00:06:14] You're right.
[00:06:15] Yeah.
[00:06:16] It was like the skies were clear.
[00:06:18] Yeah.
[00:06:18] We just never had whole neighborhoods burning down.
[00:06:21] Yeah.
[00:06:22] So true.
[00:06:24] Yeah.
[00:06:24] And I think when the fire gets going, then it creates a wind and you get like a pyroplastic flow.
[00:06:29] And that's why you're getting the destruction that we're getting.
[00:06:33] Wow.
[00:06:34] Those are my thoughts on that.
[00:06:35] Thank you.
[00:06:36] Yeah.
[00:06:37] Some great points.
[00:06:39] Thank you for giving me the opportunity to speak.
[00:06:41] And I love your show.
[00:06:42] And I love what you do.
[00:06:43] And I love the truth that you put out.
[00:06:45] Thank you.
[00:06:45] I really adore you.
[00:06:47] Thank you.
[00:06:47] Thank you so much.
[00:06:49] Thanks for calling in.
[00:06:50] I love it.
[00:06:51] I want to hear from you.
[00:06:53] 888-673-1450.
[00:06:55] 888-673-1450.
[00:06:59] Very, very weird stuff.
[00:07:02] Because when I was looking at it, like I shared in the first hour, on average, about 8,000 fires every year.
[00:07:11] Which, come on, there's something strange about that, right?
[00:07:15] I mean, wouldn't you imagine that it would be not so close to a variable every year that's that tight?
[00:07:22] That's weird.
[00:07:23] And the acreage spans from, you know, 400,000 acres to 1.5 and inside that, you know, 8,000 fires on average.
[00:07:36] But what's crazy is 2020, 4.3 million acres.
[00:07:41] All of a sudden, we got huge jump in numbers.
[00:07:44] And they really couldn't tell anybody why.
[00:07:46] The focus went on how COVID was keeping everybody from doing their jobs and fighting the fires and everything else.
[00:07:56] But I actually don't believe that.
[00:07:59] Because even during Blovid, you had, and even in my city of St. George, Utah, county workers were still working.
[00:08:08] There were still people within those capacities still working.
[00:08:11] So I know that California had a hard lockdown, but I don't believe that.
[00:08:16] I just don't believe that that was the main cause of that.
[00:08:20] I think they took advantage of a situation in which people were home because what happened a year later was a constant stream of Fed money to those fires.
[00:08:34] And so shoring it up with more Fed money coming into the state of California with the bill that passed through with the help of Feinstein, the late Feinstein,
[00:08:44] in making sure they had streams of millions and millions and millions of dollars without question.
[00:08:50] And where's all the accounting for that money?
[00:08:52] I would love to know that, too.
[00:08:54] Hi, caller.
[00:08:54] Welcome to the show.
[00:08:55] Go right ahead.
[00:08:56] Hi, Kate.
[00:08:57] Hi.
[00:08:58] This is really something else.
[00:09:01] I know.
[00:09:01] But you send your professional firefighters equipment to the Ukraine.
[00:09:09] I mean, they could have used some of that money to buy new equipment here in the States.
[00:09:15] I mean, how could you be so wrong?
[00:09:19] It boggles the imagination.
[00:09:22] Me, too.
[00:09:23] Me, too.
[00:09:23] Thank you.
[00:09:24] Thanks for the call.
[00:09:24] Yeah, me, too.
[00:09:25] I'm with you because nothing they're doing makes sense.
[00:09:29] So they're hardcore supporters.
[00:09:31] Are they still OK with all of that?
[00:09:33] The ones that put them in the office, the angry lesbians that are in office in L.A.?
[00:09:39] Are they I'm serious.
[00:09:41] There's like a little tribe of them.
[00:09:42] Is this are people that ardently supported them?
[00:09:46] Are they are they are they finally seeing the writing on the wall that these people are incompetent, incapable and criminal?
[00:09:55] I don't know.
[00:09:56] I hope so.
[00:09:58] I hope so.
[00:10:00] I see a lot of disastrous people going into city and county government and people don't get it yet that some of the worst are in local government.
[00:10:10] Right.
[00:10:10] I know this for a fact.
[00:10:12] I call her.
[00:10:13] Welcome to the show.
[00:10:14] Go right ahead.
[00:10:14] What do you think of the fires?
[00:10:15] Yes.
[00:10:16] Yes.
[00:10:16] I have so much to say on the subject.
[00:10:18] I lived in the coastal zone, the California commission.
[00:10:21] Yeah.
[00:10:23] Excuse me, coastal commission zone.
[00:10:25] And it's all right.
[00:10:27] Marxism.
[00:10:27] So is this insurance.
[00:10:29] California.
[00:10:29] Yeah.
[00:10:30] Marxism.
[00:10:30] Wherever you have government intervene and the more they intervene in the economy, whatever industry, you have the highest increases in prices.
[00:10:39] A really good example is health care.
[00:10:41] Health care is probably the most regulated, controlled industry in America.
[00:10:47] Massive increases, way above inflation rate and health care in the last 60, 70 years.
[00:10:53] But the areas where you have the least amount, for example, computers, you have a lower price.
[00:10:58] Often prices are actually dropping.
[00:11:00] But the caller was kind of right.
[00:11:02] There's incendiary chemicals in the chemtrails.
[00:11:06] They've enhanced forest fires all over the world.
[00:11:11] They burn much faster.
[00:11:12] But I want to get back to something that's really important.
[00:11:16] I lived 59 years in California, Southern California.
[00:11:19] I grew up in the area.
[00:11:21] It was the windiest area in Southern California.
[00:11:23] And I lived in that coastal area for 26 years in the coastal zone.
[00:11:27] And the first thing about the climate.
[00:11:30] So what kind of climate are they saying that the so-called global warming is causing?
[00:11:35] It's the Santa Ana winds.
[00:11:37] Santa Ana winds have been occurring probably millions of years, if not hundreds of thousands of years.
[00:11:42] I've seen 70-mile-an-hour Santa Ana winds several times in my youth.
[00:11:47] There's nothing new about that at all.
[00:11:50] Back to the commission.
[00:11:51] This was created in 1972.
[00:11:54] And I fought it in 1972.
[00:11:56] And then they made it even stronger by the legislature.
[00:11:59] They passed an initiative in California in 1972.
[00:12:03] And they blamed the need on the Santa Barbara oil platform leak.
[00:12:11] And they exaggerated horribly the environmental cost of that.
[00:12:16] Only about 3,500 birds at most died.
[00:12:20] And there's millions of birds up the coast.
[00:12:22] And that was the main argument.
[00:12:25] What this does is, for people out of state, the entire coast of California is controlled by them.
[00:12:32] All the way from about a half a mile or a little over a half mile to 5 to 10 miles inland.
[00:12:37] And they control everything.
[00:12:38] Right.
[00:12:39] Building, planning, everything.
[00:12:41] And that's outright Marxism.
[00:12:42] Yes.
[00:12:43] There's no private property rights if you live along the coast, basically.
[00:12:46] Thank you.
[00:12:47] Really appreciate that call.
[00:12:48] All that.
[00:12:49] So true.
[00:12:49] Be right back.
[00:12:50] Kate Daly Show.
[00:13:07] This is the Kate Daly Show.
[00:13:09] Kate Daly Show.
[00:13:22] And talking about the fires.
[00:13:23] Really sad to see all that burn.
[00:13:26] And in the way that it's going down.
[00:13:29] A lot of questions.
[00:13:30] We're left with a lot of questions.
[00:13:31] And here's a question for you, too.
[00:13:33] Do you trust your local government?
[00:13:36] Do you have people that have invaded your local government?
[00:13:40] I don't care where you live.
[00:13:42] That are woke and will blame climate change.
[00:13:46] I'm just wondering.
[00:13:47] I have those in my city.
[00:13:49] And you probably do in yours, even though I live in what's supposed to be a conservative part of my state.
[00:13:56] And when it comes down to what's going to affect your local life with rebuilding or county or with weather warfare and how your county approaches it and how your cities approach it, have they gone woke?
[00:14:09] Do you trust that they wouldn't change the game on you or change zoning or throw in all of their mixed use, which they seem to love because it's a product of the World Economic Forum, the horrid WEF.
[00:14:24] But just throwing that out there because I don't know that we think about it.
[00:14:27] You know, sometimes the disasters are everywhere else and haven't hit you yet or me yet.
[00:14:33] And I think there's a lot more of this kind of stuff coming.
[00:14:37] I really do.
[00:14:38] If you ask me off the air, I would probably say, yeah, we're going to we're going to have way more weather events, way more things like this.
[00:14:44] But let me let me dispel something.
[00:14:48] So so the AP news yesterday.
[00:14:52] Right.
[00:14:52] Government news.
[00:14:53] It's the government news.
[00:14:54] OK, and from Fox News to CNN to AP to Reuters.
[00:14:58] It's all government news.
[00:14:59] And they said the fires have gotten faster.
[00:15:02] The big culprit we're suspecting is a warming climate that's making it easier to burn fuels when conditions are just right.
[00:15:14] Now, I know I know that you do not believe that garbly gook.
[00:15:19] Right.
[00:15:20] And why do I say that was such conviction?
[00:15:23] Because you can go into history and you can you can actually prove this wrong right now.
[00:15:31] You can actually look into history and go, wait a minute, wait a minute, wait a minute.
[00:15:34] Things have not changed during the Mexican-American War.
[00:15:38] Commodore Robert Stockton reported that a strange dust laden windstorm arrived at night while his troops were marching through California in January 1847.
[00:15:48] OK, and of course, you know, they come out and they talk about this in almost every article is climate change, climate change.
[00:15:57] That's coming out of government news because they have to shore that up because that's what the big ticket items are based on in our future.
[00:16:02] And so they said typically about 10 to 25 Santa Ana wind events occur annually.
[00:16:07] A Santa Ana wind can blow from one to seven days with an average wind lasting three days.
[00:16:13] The longest recorded one was 14 days.
[00:16:16] But then, you know, they actually keep contradicting themselves, too, because ABC News cited that this is how climate change contributes to the wildfires.
[00:16:26] OK, this is how it does it.
[00:16:29] So there was this article.
[00:16:30] But inside the actual ABC News government news article was that 85 percent of wildfires are actually started by arson by humans.
[00:16:39] I mean, they contradict themselves in the articles.
[00:16:44] It doesn't I could go to any article and they end up having to contradict themselves because they know what they're saying isn't true.
[00:16:50] And I can go back and I can look at fires and things that occurred with the same types of conditions minus the chemtrails, same types of conditions clear back 100 years.
[00:17:04] So I'm sorry, you can't you can't keep blaming global warming gobbledygook for the stuff that's going on.
[00:17:12] And but your government news will do that.
[00:17:15] They'll keep shoring up that lie.
[00:17:16] So the chemtrail is an interesting point on the contents of those chemtrails, chemtrails versus contrails.
[00:17:26] Contrails disappear, evaporate, chemtrails stay.
[00:17:30] And I know you've seen them in the sky.
[00:17:32] Don't say that you haven't because you have really wild tire tracks going on in the sky all the time.
[00:17:37] So not all the time.
[00:17:39] But when you see them, usually weather comes after or something is is is going on.
[00:17:44] That's a little strange.
[00:17:45] Merle Haggard even sang about it.
[00:17:48] This is not some weird conspiracy.
[00:17:50] It's already been outed.
[00:17:52] And I'm sure the pilots of these planes are told that what they're doing is something good for us.
[00:17:59] You know, you just know.
[00:18:00] Right.
[00:18:00] It's all.
[00:18:00] It's just about bringing on some rain.
[00:18:03] You know that these pilots that work for military have to stay a little more quiet about it.
[00:18:10] You know, are they threatened?
[00:18:12] I don't know.
[00:18:12] But I think they genuinely think that they're doing something good.
[00:18:15] But the chemicals within those chemtrails, it's a solid point.
[00:18:21] It's a solid point because why?
[00:18:22] The government news keeps coming out and saying, oh, it's it's climate change.
[00:18:28] Right.
[00:18:28] Because they couldn't decide warming, cooling.
[00:18:30] Can't never decide on on the actual narrative itself because it flip flops about every 20 years.
[00:18:35] So now it's just change.
[00:18:37] How convenient.
[00:18:39] All right.
[00:18:39] Seven decades long.
[00:18:41] Be right back.
[00:18:41] Kate Daly show.
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[00:20:41] This is the Kate Daly Show.
[00:20:44] What I hate is looking up and seeing chemtrails in a clear blue sky today.
[00:21:01] Blocks on a highway in my way.
[00:21:05] Hi there.
[00:21:06] Welcome back.
[00:21:06] Kate Daly Show at your service today.
[00:21:09] And tomorrow I have John Knox calling in.
[00:21:13] He's a firefighter in California.
[00:21:15] And can't wait to hear from him, actually.
[00:21:18] Absolutely.
[00:21:20] Also, I want to talk about the movie Homestead and Wicked and the Bob Dylan movie.
[00:21:26] Mostly Homestead though, because it brings up some really valid points.
[00:21:30] If you haven't seen it, go see it.
[00:21:32] Homestead's, it's a good movie.
[00:21:34] Go see it.
[00:21:35] All right.
[00:21:35] All right.
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[00:21:41] I really appreciate you because those sponsors, I handpick them.
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[00:22:39] Okay.
[00:22:39] So there's a couple of things, actually.
[00:22:42] You can call in 888-673-1450.
[00:22:45] I told you I'd take calls.
[00:22:47] 888-673-1450 is the call in number.
[00:22:52] And I, if you're listening to me live here, here's the deal.
[00:22:55] This was so weird to me.
[00:22:56] You know, the budgets of Cal Fire were like 300, 400, 600,000.
[00:23:03] And then all of a sudden, 2019, 2020, it went up over the billion dollar mark.
[00:23:10] And people were angry.
[00:23:12] The LA Times actually did an article about the fact that they got 1.3 billion in wildfire relief from the 2018.
[00:23:21] Remember those big fires?
[00:23:22] That's what wiped out Paradise City.
[00:23:24] And the victims received nothing.
[00:23:27] What they got was low-income housing, which cities and counties are big fans of.
[00:23:34] Okay.
[00:23:34] Kickbacks.
[00:23:35] Kickbacks must be huge.
[00:23:37] Anyway.
[00:23:38] So a lot of money went into things like that and didn't make sense to the victims, which rightly so was really, really strange.
[00:23:45] Now, victims have insurance, too.
[00:23:48] But if you realize the scam of the fact that the number of fires has increased so much so, as I said in the first hour, in the 1950s, in the whole decade, you had like two major wildfires.
[00:24:04] Two major ones.
[00:24:05] Okay.
[00:24:06] And in the 60s, it was like three.
[00:24:09] Okay.
[00:24:10] So then you go into now and we're looking at, like, say, 2010 to 2012, just two years, 2010.
[00:24:19] And all of a sudden, there's over 40.
[00:24:21] Okay.
[00:24:22] So the money has steadily increased and they've been able to do this.
[00:24:26] And in 2021, boy, did they hike that up through money, through bills that went through and were able to do so.
[00:24:36] And how did they get away with that in 2021 as far as boosting up just a trainload of money constantly going into California for wildfires?
[00:24:46] So not solving the problem, just hijacking money that's being transferred, right, from the feds to the state.
[00:24:55] So huge amounts, millions of dollars, okay, going to the state.
[00:25:00] Well, where is it going?
[00:25:01] They're obviously not doing anything with it because they haven't been doing any preparedness for with the trees.
[00:25:08] They haven't been doing anything and they've cut water.
[00:25:10] So we have a problem there.
[00:25:13] Dry fire hydrants.
[00:25:14] We have a problem, right?
[00:25:15] So very, very screwy, very criminal.
[00:25:18] But it was so strange that it was in the bill.
[00:25:22] And it has, in fact, I can't think of the title.
[00:25:26] The title had nothing to do with California wildfires, but it was snuck into the bill that was posing the threat, because it's every year, right, the threat of the government shutdown.
[00:25:35] And so it was kind of slapped in there and the money train was put in there.
[00:25:41] And then all of a sudden they're getting this steady stream of money in California.
[00:25:44] But it went from millions, just like our deficit.
[00:25:47] It reminded me a lot of the deficit.
[00:25:49] And then you go into the year 2020 and now all of a sudden you're looking at billions for fire, you know, billions for fire, trillions for deficit.
[00:25:59] So same thing, because when I started radio, it was I was like, I think the budget was like 600, you know, 600 billion or something like that for the budget.
[00:26:10] And then 2020 came around and all of a sudden we're looking at trillions now.
[00:26:15] And no one batted an eye because we were all so busy with COVID blovid.
[00:26:21] So that lie.
[00:26:22] So we were all sort of entrenched in that and not not realizing that the CARES Act, all of these acts bumped it up into trillions.
[00:26:29] Same thing with fire.
[00:26:32] And they won't solve the problem.
[00:26:34] But somebody's pocketing an awful lot of money because there's an awful lot of money going in there.
[00:26:40] And people are saying, look, we're not exactly getting any of this.
[00:26:43] So if you're going to say it's for us, don't because we're not receiving it.
[00:26:48] What they're doing is they actually earmarked like in that 1.3 billion in in 2019, they actually earmarked 300 million of that.
[00:26:59] To finance housing for low income renters.
[00:27:04] Yeah.
[00:27:06] Strange, right?
[00:27:07] Aren't you kind of wondering why they would do that?
[00:27:10] Doesn't make any sense.
[00:27:11] Third pot of money.
[00:27:13] The 400 million was to repair roads, which, OK, water systems and other infrastructure and make other public improvements.
[00:27:23] But didn't do anything to lessen what was happening with the fires.
[00:27:29] I mean, you can find a lot of uses for money that appear to be something that could have been could have been affected by the fires.
[00:27:37] But it doesn't mean it was.
[00:27:39] And you could say, well, we want to do this road over here.
[00:27:41] Oh, yeah, I was affected by the fires.
[00:27:45] What if it wasn't?
[00:27:46] Who's to know?
[00:27:47] Because all the money that they funneled from the feds are tax money back to the state of California.
[00:27:54] They don't really have to showcase or show anything that they're that they're doing with that money.
[00:27:59] They just earmark it and then they do what they want to do.
[00:28:02] An additional 250 million was dedicated to rebuilding homeowners, single family homes.
[00:28:09] But I'm not sure.
[00:28:11] And they never did spell it out that it was actually.
[00:28:15] It was actually for victims of wildfire because the victims of wildfire said we didn't get anything.
[00:28:22] See how that works?
[00:28:25] Amazing.
[00:28:25] And like I said, it's 8000 on average fires a year.
[00:28:30] Why is that?
[00:28:31] Why isn't one year like 20,000 and one year like two?
[00:28:36] Why is it always around the same number?
[00:28:38] Doesn't that seem a little too stamped?
[00:28:41] OK.
[00:28:42] And so they created these e-funds.
[00:28:46] The e-funds funneled billions of dollars, billions of dollars.
[00:28:50] The budgets went way up 20, 2020 to 2021 included 2.5 billion for Cal Fire when previous budgets had been like 400 million, 600 million.
[00:29:03] 2.5 billion.
[00:29:06] Oh, my gosh.
[00:29:08] And no one's saying anything.
[00:29:12] That's insanity.
[00:29:13] This is insanity.
[00:29:15] And, of course, FEMA.
[00:29:17] So you've got FEMA in the mix.
[00:29:20] And whenever FEMA shows up, very, very strange things occur.
[00:29:24] Right?
[00:29:25] Things don't get done.
[00:29:26] Just weirdness.
[00:29:27] Just absolute weirdness.
[00:29:29] By the way, 1910, just to dispel the whole climate change gobbledygook.
[00:29:34] I can't believe people are so stupid to believe the climate change things.
[00:29:37] After seven decades of getting told it's all climate change.
[00:29:40] Anyway, climate change is going to kill us.
[00:29:42] The Forest Service embraced suppression as its guiding principle after the big blowup of 1910 when a firestorm scorched three million acres in several towns across the Northwest.
[00:29:53] And state agencies later adopted the ethos.
[00:29:57] But we're supposed to believe that in this day and time, fires occur because of climate change.
[00:30:03] We've had fires before.
[00:30:06] We just haven't had them at this rate.
[00:30:08] Yeah.
[00:30:09] Could it be chemtrails making it very flammable?
[00:30:13] Very interesting point.
[00:30:14] Be right back.
[00:30:14] Kate Daly Show.
[00:30:15] KateDalyRadio.com.
[00:30:40] This is the Kate Daly Show.
[00:30:48] It's a statesman speaking out of both sides of his mouth.
[00:31:08] Welcome back.
[00:31:09] You're listening to the Kate Daly Show.
[00:31:11] And I will take your calls.
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[00:31:15] 888-673-1450.
[00:31:18] Cozy Earth doing their deal this week.
[00:31:21] You got four more days.
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[00:31:24] I'm glad they did it for you again after Christmas because a lot of people wanted it and didn't get it.
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[00:31:41] And their slippers.
[00:31:43] So make sure and get over there.
[00:31:45] CozyEarth.com forward slash Kate.
[00:31:47] And use the code Kate.
[00:31:49] Also wanted to say FIQsupplements with an S dot com.
[00:31:55] FIQsupplements dot com.
[00:31:57] That's where I go get my supplements.
[00:31:59] Make sure that you're healthy.
[00:32:01] Short up.
[00:32:01] Make sure we're okay.
[00:32:04] Because I worry.
[00:32:05] I worry about people in that regard.
[00:32:07] Those are things we actually have control over.
[00:32:08] So we can do those things.
[00:32:10] And there's so much about health that we need to understand and get back to because we've had decades with really no health.
[00:32:17] It's all been pharma doctors.
[00:32:19] Right?
[00:32:19] So make sure that we're learning those things.
[00:32:24] And hopefully I can always dedicate my show to that too because we sure learned a lot, didn't we, since 2020?
[00:32:30] How much we don't know about our health.
[00:32:32] And so FIQsupplements dot com because the ingredients actually absorb into your body.
[00:32:37] And I do like that.
[00:32:39] So, of course, you can call up.
[00:32:41] What I did notice, there was a comment that I thought was so funny out of the government news.
[00:32:46] And it was, you know, of course, climate change.
[00:32:48] So all these articles, climate change, climate change, climate change, is responsible.
[00:32:53] Because why?
[00:32:54] Because it gives them the stream of money.
[00:32:57] Because it's an act of God.
[00:32:59] So you've got to have the money coming in, right?
[00:33:02] Because you don't actually have to fix anything.
[00:33:05] You can increase what's going on.
[00:33:07] The land steal and insurance companies leaving and screwing people over on water and acting like we have a water shortage when all they have to do is go underground for water.
[00:33:18] Primarywater.org.
[00:33:19] Go look it up.
[00:33:21] All of those things.
[00:33:22] So if they just say climate change, it keeps the money flowing, right?
[00:33:27] Because you shove money at climate change, right?
[00:33:30] Isn't that how you fix climate change?
[00:33:32] You shove money at it and taxes and regulations and all those things?
[00:33:36] Yeah.
[00:33:36] That's what they do.
[00:33:37] And so this is a comment that came out after the big headline of climate change is doing this.
[00:33:43] And because they said, you know, the big culprit is climate change.
[00:33:46] There's no sure link between Santa Ana winds, gusts from the east that come down the mountains, gain speed and hit the coast to human caused climate change.
[00:33:56] No link.
[00:33:58] No link.
[00:33:58] Said Daniel Swain, climate scientist.
[00:34:01] He's an actual climate scientist from the California Institute for Water Resources.
[00:34:05] Yeah, there's no link.
[00:34:07] But just read the rest of the article where we propagandize climate change.
[00:34:11] But if you're going after me for a quote, says Daniel, I know there's no link.
[00:34:17] But we're going to make one up for the rest of this 1200 word article.
[00:34:21] You got to love this.
[00:34:23] You guys, this is just really.
[00:34:25] Really?
[00:34:28] So there's a lot of that going on in the articles.
[00:34:31] And this is something you got to point out to kids and grandkids and people that you love, because it's so easy to identify it as government news when the story is so full of holes.
[00:34:43] So I love the headline.
[00:34:46] And then, of course, you get in the article and it's this.
[00:34:48] Well, there really is no link, but we're going to tell you there's a link for the rest of the article, just so you'll believe it.
[00:34:52] You'll walk away remembering the headline.
[00:34:56] There was a lot when it came to what was going on with the city of Paradise after it was wiped out.
[00:35:02] And I'm sure it's going to be the same thing with the Palisades.
[00:35:05] And a lot of it was a land grab.
[00:35:09] I mean, if you're going to change zoning on people that try to rebuild after a fire wipes them out, that's not OK.
[00:35:16] That's a land grab.
[00:35:17] And if you're if you can't get in there to do that because now you've lost so much money and the insurance companies aren't doing what they contracted to do with you and you have possible corporations coming in to buy up that land.
[00:35:32] OK, that's a land grab.
[00:35:34] And in towns where no one would buy it.
[00:35:36] Right. So that's that's a land grab.
[00:35:39] And you have that going on all over America.
[00:35:41] So Black Rock Vanguard.
[00:35:44] I'll do more deep dives on that because they like I said, they go through so many corporations.
[00:35:48] It's very hard to track it.
[00:35:51] But in the Palisades, they'll end up telling them they either can't rebuild or changing zoning on them or doing something really sneaky.
[00:36:01] Just like I said earlier, when they were switching out the 2030 plan for the 2040 plan.
[00:36:07] Now they have to do the 2040 plan since 2018 so that if they rebuild now, it's all smart, smart city junk.
[00:36:17] It's all your environmental.
[00:36:22] They're mental anyway.
[00:36:24] They really are mental because they go nuts over the environment.
[00:36:28] And it's bizarre to me.
[00:36:30] But in any case, we're pretty good stewards of the land.
[00:36:33] I promise you don't have to be an environmental nut to appreciate and be a good steward.
[00:36:41] OK, it's just going way far over the mark.
[00:36:44] And so in that regard, they're going to find out in the Palisades that it's going to be very difficult to rebuild because I think all of these land grabs are going on.
[00:36:54] And I think that's why they're making it nearly impossible to live in California.
[00:37:00] Huge utility rates to pay for the now underground cables going in.
[00:37:05] And then you've so they're jacking everybody's utilities way up.
[00:37:09] And then also you have insurance companies leaving.
[00:37:12] You've got I mean, you can't if you can't afford to to do that home with insurance, how are you going to do it?
[00:37:20] You're going to have to pay out the nose.
[00:37:22] And so with state farm leaving now, they have to go to these really weird like Internet Internet based home insurance companies that don't pay out just to get the insurance for their loan.
[00:37:35] So a lot of stuff like that going on right now.
[00:37:38] And so a lot of these homes have been in families forever.
[00:37:41] My grandma bought a home in California.
[00:37:43] She has since sold it, you know, before her death, but but bought it in 1940 for like eight grand, you know.
[00:37:49] So a lot of these homes have been in families for a long, long time and they won't get that value back.
[00:37:56] They won't.
[00:37:56] And it's just so sad to me because these insurance companies, you're going to see a lot of problems with payouts.
[00:38:03] And then what they do is they come out this way where I live and they try to change my power politics here, you know, and you're going to see big influxes, more influxes of people.
[00:38:14] But they did have that big exodus in 2020 because under Gavin Grusom with his huge lockdowns, nonsensical lockdowns and all of the crazy he put on businesses and just they basically are just dismantling California piece by piece.
[00:38:31] That's what I see.
[00:38:33] Between 2020, between this, between all these fires, the last 20 years, 25 years, they are driving people from there.
[00:38:42] How do you afford to be there?
[00:38:44] You simply can't.
[00:38:45] And it's devastating.
[00:38:47] It's so sad that they can work it on so many different angles like this.
[00:38:50] Even the water angle.
[00:38:52] You guys, drought.
[00:38:54] Just wait for all the drought narratives to start up.
[00:38:57] We're in January, right?
[00:38:58] Yep.
[00:38:58] They're about to start up again.
[00:39:00] And there are lies.
[00:39:01] You can go underground for water.
[00:39:03] God made a wonderful earth.
[00:39:05] Plenty of water.
[00:39:06] Trust me.
[00:39:07] He wasn't going to make sure that we were subjects of government to get water and scarcity.
[00:39:13] So be faithful, be fearless.
[00:39:15] And of course, see you tomorrow.
[00:39:17] Kate Daly Show.