Episode Transcript
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0:00
this is your summer
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that means six flags in the taste of
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an ice cold coca-cola cola for
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talking thrilling coaster heard
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through moments together
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coke
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is summer refreshment when you need it most another
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ride your summer
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six flags, $20,
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plus daily ticket starting
0:27
at forty four ninety starting
0:47
have you on the rising we
0:51
have only just psychologists we
0:53
love have any on katie how are you crazy
0:56
i'm wonderful joe how are you
0:57
i'm doing very well you are wonderful i agree with you
1:00
speak another so much going on we talked about as briefly
1:02
before we started today and it's not necessarily
1:04
why you were coming on today we have you on at least once
1:06
a month that it's generally on tuesday and
1:09
and more than that of something else pops up by the
1:11
moral ago yesterday and the raid
1:13
on a former presidents home and
1:16
he wasn't even there was very strange for this thing unfolded
1:19
this is wreaking havoc on people when it comes
1:21
to politics and this psyche
1:23
that goes along with your political persuasion the
1:26
already there is a bit of a division and the real
1:28
on republican side some people are
1:30
done with trump very few other people
1:32
trump is the next guy again and we
1:34
have to support him america first go go go there's
1:37
to go out to see medicine people who made some other people
1:39
man there was a normal reaction
1:42
to viscerally we're like
1:44
the raid was happening to you as you
1:46
watch his unfold on the news
1:49
what i don't think so you know i
1:51
think trump's persona
1:53
i'm in the the waited at he pulls people
1:55
in of people become very attached
1:58
to him and his
2:00
right right and his it is entire platform
2:02
to the way that he interact with people mean when he
2:05
does a rally like you feel like
2:07
speaking to your heart
2:08
right employee think a lot of people really appreciate
2:10
that about the president of and he was like
2:12
the people's president like he he was really
2:15
the guy that i feel like a lot of people felt like understood
2:17
the plight of the general american people
2:20
and , is obviously twenty twenties
2:22
but like a huge loss to a lot of us
2:25
and it's felt like this personal attack
2:27
right because he thinks it's a lot of people
2:29
thought trump is kind of this this beacon
2:31
of hope this guiding light of the he's going
2:33
to to again and gonna be the next
2:35
president of and it gave a lot
2:38
and will be still does give a lot of people hope
2:40
that with the future looks like and
2:42
now that we have seen this you if the
2:44
if b i raid on moral ago moral
2:46
lot of that comes into question can he even
2:48
run again is this gonna be like a black mark on
2:50
his record in a what what's the rest
2:53
of the story what don't we know
2:54
it's an interesting angle because you're right
2:57
arm be impeached him twice he was exonerated
2:59
both times but now his competitors
3:02
the other side can say it was twice impeached
3:05
now they're going to be able to say the f b i raided
3:07
his house even if it was invalid
3:09
which by all accounts even for alan dershowitz
3:11
who's a lefty ah he says that was invalid
3:14
they should have subpoenaed the information if
3:16
they didn't into the subpoena then maybe you go there it'll
3:18
just show up knowing that he's not there and
3:20
and and take a bunch of stuff and and
3:22
cause all this havoc so what
3:25
what about that use their wordplay
3:27
politically speaking at it again those
3:29
of us listening to it will psychologically
3:31
react but is there wordplay now they can
3:34
say well he's been rated by the f b i why would you vote
3:36
for him
3:37
i think absolutely i mean it
3:40
week we criticized bill clinton when he was running
3:42
but has he
3:43
marijuana once were in the great cook who
3:45
cares
3:46
that now i'm at a desk be irate
3:48
it's is far more concerning
3:51
then you know somebody's smoking pot
3:53
once in their lives yeah i'm people will say
3:55
well below the f below i wouldn't have done it if there wasn't
3:58
probable cause there must have been in and
4:00
they had that we don't know he must
4:02
be hiding something arm and
4:04
and who knows what the true intentions are am kind of
4:06
waiting to find out before i pass any judgment
4:08
by i am i think absolutely they're gonna
4:10
they're gonna use that this against him and it's
4:13
the loot wordplay
4:14
it's like dr coleman dot com go and check out dr
4:16
catherine coleman or you'll see her on newsmax
4:19
all you'll see her on on fox news of
4:21
course you've been coming here for a long time now and
4:23
go check it is the instagram the you want people to
4:25
go to they're going to call you on social or you're not really into social
4:28
you can find them and twitter
4:31
more likely than than instagram no one wants
4:33
to see my instagram
4:33
here is the revolutionaries above i'll
4:36
be honest with you had if we actually the back and forth
4:38
about that with armor that extent of it when it
4:40
comes to politics know you mentioned something that really
4:42
does the and outs donald trump was the
4:44
billionaires millionaires everybody wanted to rip be around
4:46
donald trump's and really wanted to be on the apprentice
4:48
him but he wanted him in their music videos whether
4:50
you are rapper or a country singer or whatever
4:53
he was the go to guy he's had his own football
4:55
league in everything else besides to run for president
4:57
suddenly he's the evil on earth which doesn't
4:59
make sense to anybody how was
5:02
he able to you fake to be that
5:04
guy that you just said sounds like
5:06
he's speaking to me when he speaks while the other
5:08
side i mean joe biden alleges
5:10
that he from scrapes and he's really kind of not as
5:13
he not an elitist that he really kind of is and isn't really
5:15
had a job at his life but but
5:17
march himself to be the regular guy and
5:20
he's not donald trump isn't a regular
5:22
guy he's a billionaire but somehow he can
5:24
speak to me how does it work
5:27
well a donald trump found a way to
5:29
connect to the american people end of
5:31
it whether the embassy was true
5:33
or is it when i was fake it it
5:35
doesn't really matter he spoke to
5:37
the heart of americans you know he went out and
5:39
visited with farmers and
5:41
minors and you know she knows how
5:44
to build a business he knows the struggles of
5:46
people that are building a business he's employed
5:48
you know how many you know
5:51
the hundreds or thousands of people
5:53
get that every possible
5:54
possession right and he takes care of his employees
5:57
are you know he's he's raised a family
5:59
i'm it in the language that he
6:02
used he when he when he speaks
6:04
the people she doesn't use
6:07
really the word
6:08
we go off script and he makes funny
6:10
jokes like he makes fun of
6:12
himself you make fun of other people mark
6:15
had a rile up a crowd and anthem up and
6:17
get them excited i'm he he
6:19
has an understanding of what the issues are
6:21
and knows had a dive deep and and
6:23
this attack it were
6:24
need to pay
6:26
we gotta get there are a couple of things there and it's doctor or
6:28
katy called and good dr coleman dot com k u
6:30
h l n a n dot com i'm
6:33
a couple of things their one side
6:35
says he's a a disconnected
6:37
i'm billionaire who wants to be a fascist dictator
6:39
the other side says here's a guy who is living
6:41
the life we all want to live and gave
6:44
it up last a billion dollars while he was
6:46
president just because he loves the country
6:48
and it really use up to us to decide what message we're
6:50
taking in right
6:53
what is enough obviously it depends on
6:55
the sources that you're listening to as well and
6:57
when i don't i don't think that we should punish somebody
6:59
for for being a billionaire being successful
7:02
am it it sounds to me like the keys mates
7:04
and some good decisions and his life
7:07
and he had passed on some valuable lesson
7:09
to other people going up and he's incredibly
7:11
philanthropic trump back
7:13
it's gonna be interesting share this whole thing six that you're
7:15
right it's still in the early stages it looks like of illegal
7:17
raid to me dershowitz said it looks like
7:19
that turns out from the new york post that the
7:22
the judge they signed off on the warrant ah
7:24
is somebody that is somehow connected
7:26
to far left wing to you know organizations
7:29
are people at least self what will figure out
7:31
exactly what this whole thing is but i'm glad the
7:33
sort of spell that out in a would you do when you see some
7:35
like this happens the a runaway from trump
7:37
the or on to him the show more support the we
7:40
i do we say forget it he's damaged goods and
7:42
i think those are the politics are being play that of washington
7:44
secretary com and we've received stop and
7:46
my let's talk about police the back
7:48
to receive more attrition in the ranks
7:50
people are leaving before their pensions
7:53
are are even up a be people eating two years
7:55
before if you waited two more years to get a big that
7:57
pension and electorate were out here because
7:59
we hit you'll know support from city hall
8:01
we feel no support from the mayor specifically
8:04
and we we feel this eggs with the people in the
8:06
in the population what's happening in the ranks
8:08
of please you know that you deal with them directly a lot
8:10
what were the same thing that we've been dealing
8:12
with for years and and on problem is
8:15
is that when it comes to to law enforcement
8:17
it takes time to hire them are
8:19
either is is often times very strict
8:21
nine months
8:22
and even a year depending on the agency
8:25
and york mayor rang through background sex there
8:27
have been a do polygraphs and sides and
8:29
drug tests and and they got to an academy and
8:31
a leg good field training and so
8:33
officers are leaving the ranks at
8:35
us i just had a quicker rate and
8:37
i can even hire people and then
8:40
you also are dealing with here who
8:42
are who who can they hire who want to
8:44
even do the job anymore or that a
8:46
lot of departments are seeing a lesser quality
8:48
of candidate because simply put a lot of
8:50
people just don't want to do the to the job anymore
8:52
and silks the bella homes the people that are
8:54
applying for the job are people that are just looking for
8:56
a job stability maybe maybe they don't feel
8:59
that , passion passion
9:01
being in law enforcement and and if
9:03
there's a lot of reasons for that you know you like you mentioned
9:05
there is dick the community relations there's
9:08
not filling supported by neither
9:10
local governments are the are and
9:13
a lot of the officers that have been
9:15
promoted for example to like a detective
9:17
or something here they are finally detective
9:19
the working homicide cases this is what the body always
9:21
dreamed of doing the department for
9:23
come short staffed and they are calling detectives
9:26
from their positions to go back on the street
9:28
the runway all call
9:30
and they're not happy with that of course because
9:32
they worked really hard and many out there that been on the streets
9:34
and five or six years and but
9:37
you know they have to be responding to calls responding and of course the
9:39
public isn't happy because it's taking longer
9:41
it's it becomes a vicious cycle
9:43
how has the the left in it's who did
9:45
it in this country how are they so successful
9:47
was saying the phone the police university
9:50
from the police must replace them with this or
9:52
less the from the police in there will keep you safe this way
9:54
because said if on the police now i'm fifty
9:56
six are growing up a somebody said
9:58
would you want to be would get older only played the new york
10:00
yankees i want to be a firefighter wix without
10:03
was or i wanted to be a car
10:05
the new generation coming up the we haven't even heard from yeah
10:07
katie hits the police they got better
10:09
they been told their entire lives so far how
10:11
are they so effective in in turning
10:14
complete and utter communities and maybe
10:16
to a whole generation of people against law
10:18
enforcement the number of rubber
10:20
another solution here's the alternative if
10:22
we define the police how do they do that
10:24
while i'm they they offered up some solutions
10:27
with the solutions made absolutely no sense
10:29
in article let's throw social workers and and
10:31
have them respond to domestic violence school
10:34
instead of non first met because you see what they
10:36
need as resources which is it's completely
10:38
asinine makes absolutely no sense un
10:40
pay me enough money to show up alone
10:42
up alone a mess
10:42
because you'll you'll be back victim exactly
10:45
right of you need somebody there who can stop the problem
10:47
right
10:48
and they're one of them as dangerous cause it anyway
10:50
it doesn't make a lot of sense and of
10:52
in law enforcement has that been kind of the front line
10:54
and dealing with mental health crises and that
10:57
, could be other solutions they're on
10:59
the catalina the left the decried the phone the police
11:02
to you know it needs some cases abolish
11:04
the police and it absolutely backfires
11:07
of you don't look at seattle look at portland's
11:09
look at chicago chicago york
11:11
for example of us even in phoenix
11:13
i mean phoenix's down hundreds of hundreds
11:16
is and and by and large
11:18
i think arizona it is pretty supportive
11:20
of our law enforcement phoenix is obviously
11:22
at the large metro city and and as
11:25
a democratic mayor answers a little bit
11:27
different little but they were so
11:29
successful because they they painted an
11:31
entire profession as the enemy they
11:33
made it sound like it's us versus them and
11:35
they are bad and bad focus
11:37
so much on my such as the much on
11:40
small percentage of officers that you
11:42
either make some mistakes or you
11:44
know purposefully are are very bad
11:47
it is miniscule that number is just tiny sounds
11:49
microscopic a end of interesting leads
11:52
are the big meaty didn't talk about as much but even
11:54
in black communities seventy percent in one
11:56
of the phone the police and extra seventy percent
11:58
based on whatever questions are being the probably
12:00
much higher than that of course you want police we
12:03
wanted to live in the community with us am i
12:05
like to see somebody patrolling and making sure that we're safe
12:08
mean held back of the day there was a beat cop and walk
12:10
up and down the street you know his name into his family you
12:12
lose their to keep you safe can
12:14
you and i figured talking about his last time we
12:16
spoke out but but it's really important can
12:18
you d program a kid who's growing
12:20
up hearing that the police are your enemy continue
12:23
make them understand that's not really the case
12:26
when you can admitted it just takes
12:28
it takes work
12:30
when people interact with cultures
12:32
that are different than their own as
12:34
sense to change the narrative and are hard about what they
12:37
previously believed demeco spread for anyone
12:39
right so i might not know anything
12:42
about the germans an mit der
12:44
horrible people but if i spend a week in germany
12:46
getting to know people and my i
12:48
am i still smoke change their example and for
12:50
the same thing goes with with with law
12:53
enforcement and so am i love
12:55
the idea of having going back to community
12:57
policing having and just neighborhood
13:00
cops the get to know people the neighborhood but the problem
13:02
is that they're sort of sorts that that can they really
13:04
do that when they are a call hold
13:06
it can be really focus on that community engagement
13:09
and there are ago departments that do
13:12
that rinaldo have coffee with a copper
13:14
you couldn't go here , there's different
13:16
community events nestle night i think
13:18
with last week which
13:20
is where are the herds have figure events in they invite
13:22
families and their like face painting and barbecues
13:24
and stuff like that and really good opportunity
13:27
for people to actually get to know lot
13:29
worse i mean there's some of there's best people i know
13:31
very good point hopefully there'll be more we are outreach
13:33
like that but the community has got to reach out as well the
13:35
cages be one sided i think it's doctor
13:37
or a cavern cold and go to dr cooling dot com
13:40
and go check everything she does again on newsmax
13:42
all the time she's on fox all the time what
13:44
is it real americans voice your on their to right
13:46
yes sir nonstop and of course a
13:49
a great friend of ours hear what one last question i want
13:51
to talk about the lockdowns the effect that
13:53
it had doing school resume or or
13:55
whatever where we are basically set of or homes in
13:58
and didn't go anywhere for four [unk] the
14:00
two years because the kobe it on
14:02
a and because of that we say we
14:04
started to disassociate from
14:06
real people we didn't have you been you know interaction
14:09
with in socialize like human being should and
14:11
that mentally harm does and
14:13
that can affect us physically to right
14:16
oh yeah absolutely you know what humans
14:18
are social beings we we need to have
14:20
you know relationships with other people we
14:23
need to have fun he is it to get out of our house
14:25
that we need to be social
14:27
and that's huge when it comes to stress
14:30
reduction and the problem too is
14:32
that you mentioned it it
14:34
affects our physical health when we were stuck
14:36
inside all day you know not everybody has
14:38
a basketball court the back of their yard or minus corridor
14:41
you know lives in a place where they can go hiking
14:44
easily and some before comes
14:46
up and in a small apartments and are
14:48
in an urban area of any you
14:50
were so limited physically and there's such
14:52
a connection between our physical health that our mental health
14:55
or we know that people that are engaging
14:58
cardiovascular activity three times a week
15:00
for thirty minutes that that can be as effective as
15:02
the anti depressants for amount of on and
15:05
sitters a she
15:06
there's there's a huge connection there
15:08
really so cardiovascular activity three
15:10
times a week for thirty minutes is
15:12
as good as an antidepressant for some people that's
15:14
amazing
15:16
the are mild mild levels of depressed
15:18
and yeah
15:19
how do we break out about because the hardest
15:21
part is going to the gym the first day like i went
15:23
today and a been a long time since i've been on
15:26
a how do you have you break that barrier that
15:28
says don't worry about it he just he does have some lunch
15:30
and and chill out take a nap whatever how
15:32
you get yourself back into that mode that we
15:34
were in over two years ago when it
15:37
it's become so commonplace to not
15:39
do a whole lot
15:40
why would happen our comfort zone has
15:42
shrunk yeah it's front because of covert
15:45
you know it all of a sudden we everything
15:47
we we became lazy and we relied on on
15:49
convenience you know i can grab my phone
15:51
right now and i can have any meal in
15:53
the city delivered to me within thirty minutes
15:55
right right is through item
15:56
indigo i don't have to leave the house of i don't want
15:59
to
15:59
the what our comfort zone shrank then
16:02
of we we just don't get out as much and so
16:04
it's fixed a lot of effort and it takes really
16:07
more intention that effort because it's not
16:09
a difficult thing to do it's intention
16:11
to actually push yourself until i get
16:13
to the gym or to go outside and take that walk
16:16
one of the things that are i do i'm
16:18
especially if i if i'm feeling kind of lazy that
16:20
say that but my workout clothes on and then i
16:22
think well i'm halfway there
16:24
i put my clothes
16:26
i should go do some so true story
16:29
i target opponents a workout clothes yesterday
16:31
and never said never would but today put him
16:33
on my went south says that there's there's certainly
16:35
there's a there's a and invisible barrier
16:38
that i know that i face and i think a lot
16:40
of people are like this as well if you break
16:42
through that suddenly tomorrow become
16:44
easier right
16:46
and after about thirty days
16:48
it generally starts to set in it's just it's it's
16:50
dealing with that discomforts for
16:53
that first in a little bit you know there's a see
16:55
if you're submitting you haven't gone to the gym in a while
16:57
you're going to a new place spirits a little bit
16:59
like social anxiety when you when you walk and
17:01
for the first time you're kind of don't know the way out of
17:03
the jammer he noticed the clientele
17:05
that are
17:06
there and you're kind of kind of figure out what
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