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Friday 07-25-25 Bill Meyer Show Guests and Information

Podcasts on www.BillMeyerShow.com  Facebook – www.Facebook.com/billmeyershow

6:15 MRC guest: Nick Fondacaro, Associate Editor, NewsBusters. www.Newsbusters.org

FCC Chairman Brendan Carr comments vis-a-vis legacy media

(Yesterday) This morning on Fox News, Brendan Carr, the Chairman of the Federal Communications Commission, called on legacy media to make a “course correction,” and return to “serving the public interest” by engaging in “unbiased, trustworthy journalism.” 

Carr’s comments come on the heels of the White House issuing this statement about ABC’s “The View,”  “Joy Behar is an irrelevant loser suffering from a severe case of Trump Derangement Syndrome. It’s no surprise that The View’s ratings hit an all-time low last year. She should self-reflect on her own jealousy of President Trump’s historic popularity before her show is the next to be pulled off air.”

The media watchdogs at the Media Research Center (MRC), are available to give insight, context and analysis to Carr’s comments. Nick Fondacaro, Associate Editor, NewsBusters has produced study after study exposing the unhinged bias on “The View.” 

 

7:10 Greg Roberts, Mr. Outdoors from www.Rogueweather.com

 

7:35 Dr. Carole Lieberman, M.D., M.P.H. known world-wide as America’s Psychiatrist and the Terrorist Therapist, is the host of Dr. Carole’s Couch on VoiceAmerica.com, and The Terrorist Therapist® Podcast. She is a forensic psychiatrist/expert witness, bestselling-award-winning author of 4 books – 2 on terrorism and 2 on relationships.

America’s Psychiatrist Says Kohberger Got ‘Sadistic Pleasure’ Withholding the Motive From Victims’ Families

What is Incel Theory?

Bryan Kohberger speaks just three words when given chance to explain why he killed four Idaho college students

Newly unsealed Bryan Kohberger docs reveal creepy incidents at victims’ home before University of Idaho murders

July 23, 2025: Bryan Kohberger sentenced to life without parole for Idaho student murders

Idaho Students’ Killer May Be An ‘Incel’ Who Felt Rejected—Psychiatrist

 

The University of Idaho victims murdered by Bryan Kohberger came home to find their front door wide open and loose on its hinges — just days before they were viciously stabbed to death.

 

The students also spotted a man lurking outside their home in the weeks before the shocking quadruple murder.

 

The eerie happenings were laid bare in a massive trove of documents released by cops late Wednesday after the 30-year-old cold-blooded killer was sentenced to life in prison for butchering Xana Kernodle, Kaylee Goncalves, Madison Mogen and Ethan Chapin in their off-campus Moscow home.

 

In one frightening ordeal, a disturbed Goncalves had told her roommates that she’d seen a strange man staring her down when she took her dog, Murphy, outside roughly a month before the Nov. 13, 2022, slayings.

 

FIND HER WEBSITE HERE AND HERE AND HERE:

 

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Thursday 07-24-25 Bill Meyer Show Guests and Information

Podcasts on www.BillMeyerShow.com  Facebook – www.Facebook.com/billmeyershow

6:35 John O’Connor, is author of Postgate: How the Washington Post Betrayed Deep Throat, Covered Up Watergate, and Began Today’s Partisan Advocacy Journalism
John breaks down the Tulsi Gabbard “Obama Treason” Russia Gate press conference
He served as an Assistant U.S. Attorney in Northern California representing the United States in both criminal and civil cases.

John O’Connor is an experienced trial lawyer, practicing law in San Francisco since 1972.  He has tried cases in state and federal court throughout the country. He served as an Assistant U.S. Attorney in Northern California from 1974-1979, representing the United States in both criminal and civil cases. Among his interesting assignments have been representation of the government during the OPEC oil embargo of the 1970s; writing Fifth Amendment and “state of mind” briefs for the prosecution in United States v. Patricia Hearst; representing the FDIC, FSLC and RTC during the savings and loan crisis of the late 1980s and early 1990s; representing California Attorney General Dan Lungren in campaign-related litigation; defending R.J. Reynolds Tobacco in significant smoking and health litigation; representing Coach Don Nelson in litigation with Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban; and representing W. Mark Felt regarding the revelation of his identity as Deep Throat.

www.Postgatethebook.com

 7:35 Bonner R. Cohen is a senior policy analyst with the Committee for a Constructive Tomorrow, where he concentrates on energy, natural resources, and international relations. He also serves as a senior policy adviser with the Heartland Institute, senior fellow at the National Center for Public Policy Research, and as adjunct scholar at the Competitive Enterprise Institute.

 Bio-https://www.cfact.org/bonner-cohen/

What we discussed today-https://wtop.com/world/2025/07/the-uns-highest-court-will-decide-wednesday-on-the-climate-obligations-of-countries/

Dr. Cohen’s Take – No one should be surprised that the UN’s top court, the International Court of Justice, has issued an “advisory opinion,” saying countries that do not fulfill their obligations to combat climate change are in violation of international law.  This comes at a time when the sun is starting to set on the nearly four-decades-old climate hoax.  The Trump administration has withdrawn the United States from the December 2015 Paris Climate Agreement.  And few other industrialized countries are anywhere near meeting their commitments to reduce their emissions of manmade greenhouse gases.  The global transition to green energy has ground to a halt, as more countries refuse to commit economic suicide of becoming reliant on wind and solar power to meet their energy.  Even Britain, whose countryside has been blighted by thousands of unsightly wind turbines, has just announced it plans to move forward with a new nuclear power plant.  The International Court of Justice is not only an oxymoron, it has no mechanism to enforce its misguided opinions.

 8:10 Dr. Jane Orient MD talks about a recent New York Times investigative report detailing how hospitals are WAY to quick to harvest organs from donors, possibly from people who could have LIVED or recovered from their injuries.

Jane M. Orient, M.D. – AAPS Executive Director

Jane M. Orient, M.D., On Air contributor speaking on Healthcare Reform. Dr. Orient has appeared on some of the largest TV and Radio Networks in the country and her op-eds have been printed in hundreds of local and national newspapers, magazines, internet, followed on major blogs and covered in the Wall Street Journal and The New York Times.

Doctor Orient is the Executive Director of Association of American Physicians and Surgeons and has been in solo practice of general internal medicine since 1981. She is a clinical lecturer in medicine at the University of Arizona College of Medicine. She received her undergraduate degrees in chemistry and mathematics from the University of Arizona, and her M.D. from Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons. She is the author of Sapira’s Art and Science of Bedside Diagnosis; the fourth edition has just been published by Lippincott, Williams & Wilkins. She also authored YOUR Doctor Is Not In: Healthy Skepticism about National Health Care, published by Crown. She is the executive director of the Association of American Physicians and Surgeons, a voice for patients’ and physicians’ independence since 1943.

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Wednesday 07-23-25 Bill Meyer Show Guests and Information

Podcasts on www.BillMeyerShow.com  Facebook – www.Facebook.com/billmeyershow

6:35 Eric Peters – Wheels Up Wednesday with great talk and reviews on cars and more on www.EpAutos.com

7:35 Bryan Bouteller – Gospel Rescue Mission in Grants Pass, a catch up on Mission Village project, which will help homeless SENIORS get off the streets and live with dignity. Read all about it here: https://gospelrescuemissiongp.org/village/

 

 

 

8:10 State representative Dwayne Yunker discusses Governor Kotek’s call for a special session to raise taxes for ODOT, August 29th.

 

8:35 Kristen Roberts is an intellectual property attorney, founder of the Trestle Law Firm. Kristen seals regularly in the specialized fields of trademark and copyright registration, licensing, enforcement and litigation. She has also worked as an adjunct law professor, teaching various intellectual property courses, and is heavily involved in giving back to her community. Her many cases have involved transactions with companies like Walmart, Target, Lululemon, Chipotle, and more.

 

https://www.trestlelaw.com/about-us

 

Attorneys are examining a ruling by a federal judge that allows three authors suing artificial intelligence startup Anthropic for copyright infringement to represent writers nationwide. The judge’s ruling means the three can bring a class action lawsuit on behalf of writers whose books Anthropic allegedly pirated to train its A.I. system. Anthropic allegedly downloaded the books from so-called “pirate libraries” to create a repository of millions of books.

 

“This made sound like an inside baseball intellectual property case, but it has wide ranging implications for authors of all books and all future authors to come,” says longtime Intellectual Property Attorney Kristen Roberts (see short bio below). “The question of how far A.I. can go when it comes to all human generated works, including online content creation, must be resolved as soon as legally possible.”

 

Anthropic may have illegally downloaded as many as 7 million books from the pirate websites, which could make it liable for billions of dollars in damages if the authors’ case is successful.

An Anthropic spokesperson said the company was considering options to challenge the ruling and that the court failed to account for the difficulty of establishing copyright ownership.

 

So what does this mean for all writers, artists and content creators?

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Monday 07-21-25 Bill Meyer Show Guests and Information

Podcasts on www.BillMeyerShow.com

Facebook – www.Facebook.com/billmeyershow

 

 

7:10 Congressman Cliff Bentz updates the Big Beautiful Bill, what’s next, oh, the workings on College Sport Athletes getting paid. Bentz is working on the rules.

 

7:35 Chad McComas talks about the senior citizen tiny housing development, an update on Joy Community, which is having an open house next Monday. https://www.setfreeservices.org/joy-community.html

www.JoyCommunityOregon.org

 

 

 

8:10 Dr. Dennis Powers with this week’s “Where Past Meets Present” – www.DennisPowersBooks.com

 

Klamath Junction (and Emigrant Lake)

By Dennis Powers

 

The Hudson Bay trappers in the mid-1800s followed Indian and animal trails over the Siskiyou’s from California; over time, this path was widened to a rutted, then somewhat maintained toll road. This passage wound its way to a forgotten fork in the road that became named Klamath Junction.

 

Isaac and Elizabeth Hill with their family traveled from Tennessee and settled on a donation claim, several miles at the fork southeast of now Ashland. They had actually arrived in Oregon “wealthy in livestock and possessions,” but a hard winter and a rocky path, instead of a wagon trail to the Willamette Valley, left them broke, wagon-less, and on foot as they found the Valley. 

 

The men built a small one-room, dirt-floor cabin with holes for windows, while the women lived for several months at Fort Wagner, a fortified house in what is now Talent, owing to the wars between the settlers and the Indians. By farming, raising fruit, and hard work, Klamath Junction slowly built up over the years.

 

When the Talent Irrigation District constructed a 110-foot concrete-arched dam to impound upper Bear Creek Basin water (for irrigation and some flood-control capacity), Emigrant Lake in 1926 was created. This gave an irrigation boost to area farming, as well as the peaches and pears needed by Harry and David. That same year, the former wagon/stagecoach trail became improved to become Highway 99, which reached Klamath Junction at the bottom of the grade from the Siskiyou Summit–or where the Ashland-Klamath Falls Highway (known today as Highway 66, or the Green Springs Highway) met the Pacific Highway (Highway 99).

 

This combination formed a place where tourists and residents alike traveled between Ashland, Klamath Falls, and the Siskiyou Summit. By the 1930’s, several houses, two gas stations, a garage (“Caton’s”), café (“Hill’s Café”) and a roadhouse (“The Dutch Mill”, also the dance hall) comprised the town. The Klamath County Chamber of Commerce operated a visitor bureau with a dining room, campground, and exhibit hall displaying Klamath products. By now, the pioneers had planted abundant orchards, complete with a packinghouse and apple press. 

 

A much larger earthen dam, nearly doubled to 204 feet high, greatly expanded the lake in 1960, when the Bureau of Reclamation built what is seen today. The bureau had to buy out homesteads in what became the 806-acre lake bed. As this would also flood the pioneer cemetery, founded by the Hill Family, workers dug up members of these and other families (dating back to the 1850’s) to relocate them to higher ground that overlooked the lake. Travelers stopping by “for a nickel Coke might have had work done on their Edsel” once before, but that now was underwater for more regional irrigation.

 

Omer and Hazel Hill had sold Hill’s Café some years before and moved to Ashland to start “Omar’s Restaurant.” Caton’s garage moved next to Omar’s. People and businesses left, as Klamath Junction was condemned to a watery grave. The Green Springs Highway now heads into the lake, disappears, only to re-emerge on the other side; and the highway was re-routed around the man-made lake. 

 

Drought conditions show Junction remains. The reservoir seven miles southeast of Ashland in 2014 was at 10% of its capacity, the lowest since the 1994 drought. This level was one of the five driest seasons observed there, as it was built to a capacity of 40,570 acre-feet. Boat ramps were left dry, turning the lake bed into a “mucky plain” and revealing mud-caked, old building foundations, debris, and scattered tools at the site: plus remnants of an old, protruding pipe; an old, exposed Capri tire, along with bolts, washers, metal tubing, and brass door latches.

 

From pioneer days to cars, trucks, the Internet, and cell phones, Emigrant Lake with its recreational activities, fishing, hiking, waterslides, and more hides what once was a tiny town, whose people moved away.

  

Sources: At: Klamath County Museum, April 28, 2019, at Image; See also: Lance K. Pugh, “Klamath Junction: History Submerged beneath Emigrant Lake,” at History of Klamath Junction; Mark Freeman, “Ghosts of Emigrant Past,” Mail Tribune, October 6, 2014, at Emigrant Lake and Drought.