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Thursday 06-12-25 Bill Meyer Show Guests and Information
Podcasts on www.BillMeyerShow.com
Facebook – www.Facebook.com/billmeyershow
6:35 Dr. Bruce Everett PhD, CO2 Coalition Board of Directors, and respected oil and gas exploration expert. We talk the huge expansion of the administration into oil and gas projects. Also kicking around just how much we have in energy reserves. Also, the massive non-science smear about CO2. | ||
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7:10 Kerry Lutz, Host of Financial Survival Network, has two really interesting articles out on his site and Substack that we discuss today.
More on Kerry: www.financialsurvivalnetwork.com
Kerry’s substack address – https://khlfsn.substack.com/
15 Companies Tesla Could Obliterate with Unsupervised FSD
By Kerry Lutz, Host of Financial Survival Network
Tesla’s rollout of unsupervised Full Self-Driving isn’t just a product launch – it’s an extinction-level event for any business still chained to yesterday’s transportation models. With FSD now capable of operating with no human driver, the fallout will hit far more than just car companies. Think about aviation. Insurance. Ride-hailing. Real estate. Even roadside pit stops. This isn’t evolution; this is detonation. And it’s due to be released in early June, while empty Teslas have already been driving themselves around in Austin, Texas for weeks. We’re entering a world where machines drive themselves, nobody owns a car, and software eats what’s left of the middleman. [more…]
TrumpGPT – The AI Battle Plan
By Kerry Lutz, Host of Financial Survival Network
What if I told you that the comeback of Donald J. Trump in 2025 wasn’t just the result of voter frustration, election momentum, or a series of lucky breaks? What if it was the result of a battle plan – AI-generated, gamed out, and executed with machine precision? The whispers began long before the election. Behind the scenes, a team of rogue technologists and political operatives worked with models not unlike GPT-4, trained not only on publicly available data but on deep simulations of political outcomes, psychological responses, legal pathways, and sociocultural tipping points. The objective? Prepare for every possible countermove. They knew the election would be contested. They knew indictments were coming. They knew mainstream media narratives would be weaponized. And they planned for all of it. [more…]
8:10 Jackson County Administration Danny Jordan digs into the highlights and projects in the newly approved 660 MILLION (!) Jackson County Budget!
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Monday 06-09-25 Bill Meyer Show Guests and Information
Podcasts on www.BillMeyerShow.com
Facebook – www.Facebook.com/billmeyershow
6:35 Josh Phillipp Epoch Times Chief Investigative Correspondent – See his Crossroads podcast HERE: https://www.youtube.com/@CrossroadsWithJoshuaPhilipp
Today Josh catches us up on the LA riots and border situation, and the China/USA trade talks with President Trump and Chairman Xi.
7:35 State Representative Dwayne Yunker with an update on the session, what’s passed, what’s bottled up. What’s happened to the GOP desire to “Fight” for their constituents.
8:10 Dr. Dennis Powers “Where Past Meets Present”. More at Dennis’s Site www.DennisPowersBooks.com
Shady Cove
By Dennis Powers
Dating back to the mid-1800s, passersby described the shady cove—from which the town derived its name–as a shelter where weary travelers could rest from the hot sun. This river bend is located 300 yards upstream from the present Highway 62 bridge in town, and the name then was descriptive, not an official name. It isn’t known precisely when folks started referring to the bend as the “cove” or “shady cove.”
The place was also where people stayed while waiting for the ferry at a nearby river crossing. Before bridges were built, folks crossed the Rogue this way, whether it was to commute between the gold camps at Jacksonville and John Day in Eastern Oregon, or to travel between Trail and Eagle Point.
In the early 1900s, two developers built a home and vacation cabins at the cove, and they were the first to officially use the name in their recorded map. Area residents came to spend their summertime while enjoying the river away from the summer’s heat. Over time, however, the cabins were abandoned, pathways washed away, and vegetation took over the beach.
As with most Rogue Valley communities, the economy depended on the timber industry. With it being on a main access to Crater Lake–which is 60 miles away–tourists naturally passed by or stayed at the town. As timbering moneys diminished, it became more of a tourist and retiree destination. The town grew as newcomers replaced the loggers and suppliers to the industry.
In 1964, however, the disastrous Rogue River flood nearly destroyed it. After five days of heavy rains and snowmelt, the swollen river rose over its banks on the night of December 22nd. The raging waters hit Shady Cove almost the hardest. The flood and mudslides destroyed numerous homes, stately pine trees, the original bridge crossing, the saw mill adjacent to the bridge, and other structures, as tons of heavy mill-logs and rooftops surged past to crush downstream houses. The town was totally dark as power was out, but everyone could hear the river’s roar and debris crashing. The town rebuilt, but this took time.
Shady Cove incorporated in 1972, taking the name for the cove that was a natural shelter for those passing through. Led by Faye Thompson, the city embarked on a beautification project to make the town “shady with trees.” The U.S. Forest Service donated Evergreen seedlings that were planted throughout in returning the place to its pre-1964 flood days. Owing to this, people now see near-fifty-year-old Pine trees that stand tall.
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers for flood control in 1977 completed construction of the William Jess Dam and Lost Creek Lake, a reservoir nine miles north of Shady Cove with the Rogue River continuing downstream. The U.S. Army Corps also built the Cole M. River Fish Hatchery, one of the largest in the Western states just downstream of the dam. With the recreational draws of the lake and adjacent parks, the town had another attraction for residents and newcomers alike.
With RV parks, close-by camping facilities, motels, and different parks, Shady Cove has found its niche as a tourist destination. With the magnificent Rogue River running through the city limits, it has found its place.
Sources: Dennis Powers, Where Past Meets Present, Ashland, Oregon: Hellgate Press, 2017.
“Shady Cove” at Pp. 401-403; Mail Tribune, “Where is the ‘shady cove’ in Shady Cove?,” April 22, 2007.