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November 29, 2025 48 mins

Breaking Point with David Zere - November 29, 2025

A - David listens to Real American Voices at the Embassy Diner in Bethpage, NY

B - David listens to more Real American Voices at the Embassy Diner in Bethpage, NY

C - David chats with Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakeman

D- David is with Michelle Morrow, founder of the National Alliance for Education Reform

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:11):
Everybody.

Speaker 2 (00:12):
I hope you out a terrific Thanksgiving with your families.
Thank you for watching Real America's Voice News. I'm David Zier.
You're watching Breaking Point. And I went to the Bethpage
Embassy Dina just before Thanksgiving, and I sat down and
did interviews with the salt of the earth, hardworking middle
class Americans of Nassau County, Long Island indicative of most

(00:34):
families across the country here, but we got Mamdani across
the Nassau border in New York City, hundreds of thousands
of commuters from Nassau County and Suffolk County, Long Island
go into the city. Cops are worried, financed people are
worried about their jobs moving south and all kinds of things.
But we got their stories on the ground with the owner, Gus.

(00:56):
He's just terrific. Check out these awesome interviews with American voices.
Happy Thanksgiving everybody here from the Embassy Diner, beth Page,
New York. We got Gus here, the owner, just such
a great guy.

Speaker 1 (01:10):
What's going on?

Speaker 3 (01:10):
Everything's good, Happy Thanksgiving and gett ready for Christmas. Thanksgiving.
We're gonna have huge Thanksgiving dinner here. The NBC diner.
And I appreciate you guys being here.

Speaker 2 (01:17):
Yeah, so we talked to real American voices on the
ground here, hard working, middle class America, just outside.

Speaker 1 (01:23):
Of New York City.

Speaker 2 (01:24):
A lot of communitists concerned about Mendannie, concerned about the economy.
But it's a thanks Giving holiday. You got this place
amazing here. You do this for all the holidays. Why
is it so important to you.

Speaker 3 (01:36):
It's important because you have to you have to give
a good vibe, not just good food, but you have
to give a good atmosphere. Anybody can serve you a cheeseburger,
it's how you serve the cheeseburger, well kind of vibe
you give with it.

Speaker 2 (01:46):
Yeah, And this is a fixture to the diner culture
on Long Island. This place has been here almost seventy years.
Diners on Long Island are part of our culture.

Speaker 1 (01:53):
Here. Late night, after you hit the clubs, you come
in here.

Speaker 2 (01:56):
But times to change a little bit, right. It's a
little harder now, more expenses, higher labor costs, higher utility costs,
more taxes, higher insurance.

Speaker 1 (02:05):
Big time. Times have changed, big time.

Speaker 3 (02:06):
Back in the day we used to go out to
the clubs, and come to that there's no more clubs anymore,
there's nothing go to clubs.

Speaker 1 (02:11):
Well, there's nothing gonna have to be open twenty four hours. Well,
nobody wants to work. In the mind that nobody wants
to work anymore after two o'clock in the morning. Nobody
wants to work.

Speaker 2 (02:18):
Maybe that's part of America's problem, you know, in a
nutshell here.

Speaker 1 (02:21):
But we're in beth Page, this place, you know, as
a home to grumming.

Speaker 2 (02:26):
We won World War Two out of here, the Cold
War with the F fourteen and the E two Hawkeye.
You know, incredible history here, rich history. Tell us about
your food costs these days? And we're still reeling from
twenty twenty.

Speaker 3 (02:42):
Right, the food cost was terrible over the past four years.
Now it's starting to get much better. On the Trump's
doing the right thing, and see it changing big time.
I see a huge difference in the meat especially. All right, Well,
that's good, that's good to know. And you think twenty
twenty six.

Speaker 1 (02:56):
Will be a good year for the economy, Yes, I do,
one hundred percent. I believe that. All right.

Speaker 2 (03:01):
Well, well that's really great. Tell us about Thanksgiving? What
are you doing this year?

Speaker 1 (03:05):
Thanksgiving?

Speaker 3 (03:05):
We're gonna have We're gonna be here all day, one
day and all night, nine o'clock in the morning to
ten o'clock at night. Come by and have turkey, anything
you want, Hamlet the lamb. We got it all here, all.

Speaker 1 (03:13):
Right, Gus is the best.

Speaker 4 (03:14):
Uh.

Speaker 3 (03:14):
You know, I've been watching you all day. You like
hanging out with the people. It's all about the people,
that's what you know. People come in here and you
treat them like family. We're all family here in Bethpage.
I'm moving in, baby, I'm moving in. Thanks Happy Thanksgiving.
Appreciate your hospitality and letting us do this and your
house awesome.

Speaker 1 (03:35):
Sounds good. Don't tell my wife, she'll kick me out.
I'll see you later.

Speaker 2 (03:39):
We got Brian zak Chevski here. You're plumbing contractor, right.

Speaker 5 (03:43):
Yes, Sam, a small business, a small business owner.

Speaker 2 (03:45):
So we're here at the Dinah, working class people in
and out of here.

Speaker 1 (03:49):
Everyone's working hard. Right. It's a little harder today, right,
a little bit.

Speaker 3 (03:54):
So we were better, though, very hard because of Trump's policy,
trumps power.

Speaker 5 (04:00):
He's haven't really affected us yet.

Speaker 6 (04:01):
I think next year they're going to be in full
force and we're going to really feel a little burden
lifted off.

Speaker 1 (04:07):
So we were talking like twenty sixteen, twenty seventeen.

Speaker 2 (04:10):
It took a little time, but the economy was really
good in twenty eighteen, twenty nineteen, and what happened in twenty.

Speaker 6 (04:15):
Twenty Then they got shut down somehow it got sabotaged.

Speaker 2 (04:19):
By I don't know if they go was sabotage, Oh, coronavirus, Yeah,
the China virus.

Speaker 1 (04:23):
Yes, shutting down the economy, the Trump economy, they.

Speaker 5 (04:25):
Shut down, the shut down the whole world.

Speaker 1 (04:27):
Do you think it was done to foil the election?

Speaker 6 (04:29):
The reactions absolutely. People they were confined to their homes.
You weren't allowed to have six people to your house.

Speaker 5 (04:35):
But Thanksgiving?

Speaker 1 (04:36):
What did it do to your business?

Speaker 5 (04:37):
You suffered a little bit.

Speaker 6 (04:39):
I'm any central worker, so I was allowed to go
out and work, but there were nobody on the roads.

Speaker 2 (04:45):
Unless young people are going into the vocation, right, so
there's not as much. You know, I feel like years
ago there were there were plumbers and electricians everywhere. But
I'm in construction, and uh, you know, I have a
hard time getting contractors qualified guys.

Speaker 6 (04:58):
Right while west to it, this person has to pick
up truck over in They call themselves a contractor.

Speaker 1 (05:04):
And all they do is is something no insurance.

Speaker 6 (05:07):
Well I have everything and I have to I have
to build a little bit higher to cover that. But
you have guys going around, not saying illegals, but the
guys going around trying to get a funny story twenty sixteen,
my son flowillified to go for his driver's license. But
then they gave you illegals the opportunity to get driver's license.

Speaker 1 (05:25):
It foiled a lot of people from here.

Speaker 6 (05:26):
And we were at the end of the line to
get a driving license and we were American citizens and
they won't.

Speaker 1 (05:31):
That was wrong. Yeah, I know.

Speaker 2 (05:33):
I tried to get my daughter a permit during that time.
I had to get five five pieces of.

Speaker 1 (05:38):
ID, but you didn't need any as an illegal.

Speaker 5 (05:41):
No, nothing. They show up but nothing and they walk
out with driver license. And we were online with them.

Speaker 2 (05:45):
And you remember the lines during COVID of illegals in
New York City and New York on Long Island here
like wrapped around the corner of illegals and regular people
couldn't get in an American.

Speaker 6 (05:54):
Citizen that it was me, that was me and my son's
like dad what's going on herew you're.

Speaker 1 (05:58):
Getting your driving license? All the people getting the driving license.

Speaker 2 (06:01):
How important was it that Trump got elected over commonis?

Speaker 6 (06:05):
Oh, we would have been invaded by China or we
would have been invaded by Russia. That's how important. When
you're over and you're up and you're saying, a friend
in need is a friend. Indeed, the whole will was
laughing at us. Remember when she did that in Poland?

Speaker 1 (06:18):
Yeah, yeah, Well she didn't even know where Ukraine was
or Poland was.

Speaker 5 (06:21):
And she's been to the border.

Speaker 1 (06:22):
Yeah she does. Where the border is? The border?

Speaker 6 (06:26):
Are you?

Speaker 1 (06:27):
Are you of Polish immigrants?

Speaker 7 (06:30):
Yeah?

Speaker 5 (06:30):
Yes, But my faun of foot in World War Two,
right for.

Speaker 1 (06:33):
The US or in Poland the US?

Speaker 6 (06:35):
Okay, wow, yeah, incredible d day he lost his middle finger.

Speaker 1 (06:39):
Wow, the war hero. Amazing, amazing.

Speaker 5 (06:41):
Yeah, definitely was an amazing man.

Speaker 2 (06:44):
Well, listen more American, real American voices on the ground
here and Brian Vatchevsky, Yes, sir, thank you. It's a
pleasure to meet you, and I appreciate your insight. It's
real American voices on the ground. The holiday weekend is here,
thanks Giving. We have Matt and Marchhie Katchman here, friends
for a long time here, very active with the American

(07:06):
First Warehouse Patriots on Long Island. But there's a lot
of issues that we have to address here on the island.

Speaker 1 (07:12):
Right while we celebrate the holiday. How are you?

Speaker 8 (07:16):
We're doing good?

Speaker 5 (07:17):
We're doing good.

Speaker 2 (07:19):
Good yeah, yeah, And so it's a time to I
guess count your blessings, right, and the abundance in America right,
absolutely so.

Speaker 1 (07:31):
But there's big issues here.

Speaker 2 (07:32):
You're both in real estate for decades and young people
can't stay here. Everybody's renting, uh and they're paying three
four thousand a month in rent sometimes and how do
you ever save to buy a home?

Speaker 5 (07:46):
Well, they can't, they can't.

Speaker 8 (07:47):
And what Huckle is doing is, yeah, she is having
all apartments are being built, Rental apartments are being everywhere.
We're in Port Jeff It was a quite quaint town
and now there are apartments on every corner.

Speaker 1 (08:04):
It's a going everywhere near railroad station.

Speaker 2 (08:06):
As part of that, like Agenda twenty one stuff in
the un you know, they want, you know, everybody to
walk to a train and get rid.

Speaker 1 (08:12):
Of their cars, right right, right, It's terrible.

Speaker 8 (08:15):
They don't want them to own a house.

Speaker 1 (08:17):
This is suburbia. But there's no equity. They're not building
any equity.

Speaker 5 (08:20):
That's right.

Speaker 1 (08:21):
That's so what do you see out there?

Speaker 2 (08:23):
You know, we're talking about this problem we've had in
the country for a long time regarding you know, people.

Speaker 1 (08:29):
Don't want to sell their home because they locked in
at two three four percent.

Speaker 2 (08:33):
Right, So there's not selling, there's no inventory. What does
a young person do and what are some of the solutions.

Speaker 9 (08:39):
Well, some of the solutions are as as Trump said,
maybe a fifty year mortgage where at least you can
get in for a lower payment, which beats paying rent.
An adjustable rate mortgage they worked years ago. It's still
an option, and you can refinance down the road or things.

Speaker 2 (08:57):
Are so anything to get them in to get a
deed home owner of opportunities.

Speaker 9 (09:01):
It beats you know, the young people are attracted to
socialism because they don't own anything. They don't have anything. Yeah,
and so there's that that's their option. But home ownership
is still the American jusaber rate mortgage.

Speaker 1 (09:13):
Did just see them coming back?

Speaker 9 (09:15):
I do, I do, I absolutely do, because it gets
people in the door, and it's better to own than rent.

Speaker 1 (09:21):
Yeah, a lot of a lot of issues to address
here on Long Island.

Speaker 2 (09:25):
Margie, I wanted to talk to you about you know,
you lost a couple of children, two children to fentanyl,
and you know it's been.

Speaker 1 (09:33):
A big issue. Trump cloths the water. You think that's
helping things.

Speaker 8 (09:38):
Absolutely, it's helping things. He's stopping that NOL coming into
this country to kill our young and blowing up those boats.
There's six maybe five six people on the boats that
and yeah they get blown up and they're gone. But
a little bit of thatl is killing a lot. They're
poisoning a lot of our youth.

Speaker 2 (10:00):
Yeah, they're saying every boat load has the possibility to
kill twenty five thousand Americans. Right, Okay, what are some
of the other issues that are important to you? What
do you think about the job market here on Long Island?
People being able to go to the grocery. So are
you things are still going up?

Speaker 8 (10:18):
Yeah, prices are going up. But I have faith in
President Trump that next year, this is when it's all
going to kick in, and everything that he's pushing and
working for for the American people, it's going to kick
in next year in twenty six and we're going to
be grateful.

Speaker 1 (10:34):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (10:34):
No, I'm in construction and commercial real estate for almost
four decades, and you know, costs the up thirty forty
percent construction because his supply chain and COVID and other
stuff and high interest rates. Do you see things loosening
up on that? Because I think the economy is going
to take off like a rocket ship next year.

Speaker 1 (10:52):
Oh? I agree.

Speaker 9 (10:53):
Unfortunately, the Biden era created this inflation and we are
unfortunately stuck with it. Very rarely goes down. It means
odd dollar was devalued by the Democrats and now we
have to live with this higher price. But if your
economy is humming along and things are doing well and

(11:13):
fuel prices come down, things will definitely take off.

Speaker 7 (11:17):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (11:18):
Yeah, But you know the other side of it is
that you're getting less at the grocery store, smaller containers.

Speaker 1 (11:23):
Higher prices, and once they raise them, they don't really
come down.

Speaker 5 (11:27):
Now they don't, they don't come down.

Speaker 7 (11:30):
But have the faith.

Speaker 8 (11:31):
Have the faith.

Speaker 1 (11:32):
Yes, Trump didn't do it.

Speaker 9 (11:33):
You can't blame Trump for this.

Speaker 8 (11:35):
They tried to destroy America. They tried to destroy it,
and Donald Trump came in and he's saving America.

Speaker 1 (11:42):
We'll be back with more breaking point right after this.

Speaker 2 (12:12):
I hope everybody had a nice el trip to fan
nap from their dark meat on Thanksgiving, watch them football,
hung out with friends and family, maybe argued with the
crazy uncle a little bit. But I was at the
beth Page Embassy Diana Bethpage, New York, home to Grummin
Aviation van Chow Republic. Right down the road. They built
the fighters that helped win World War II, the Cold War,

(12:35):
and in between, the F six F Hellcat, the TBF Avenger,
the P forty seven Thunderbolt, the A ten Thunderbolt, the
F fourteen, the Lunar Module, the wings for the Space Shuttle,
all these great planes, the E two Seahawkeye built on
Long Island by the men and women. But the culture
and the economy has changed.

Speaker 4 (12:52):
Here.

Speaker 2 (12:53):
We're just outside of New York City and only four
percent is manufacturing. And this is the problem across America.
In a lot of places service economy outside of New
York City. So if New York City's not doing well,
the suburbs don't do as well. And Mam Donnie's scaring
everybody right with his socialistic policies. The finance people commute
to the city worried the cops are retiring early without

(13:13):
being vested in their pensions. So we'll see how it unfolds.
I don't think maddonni will be able to get away
with most of what he's proposing, and they'll be checks
and balances. And Trump is watching him like a hawk,
and he's going to go into this year if he
wants his bus plan free buses, which don't work, would
just be like homeless shelters, you know, in the streets
of New York on wheels. You know, he's going to

(13:34):
lose federal funding if he wants to do that. He
has a seventeen billion dollars shortfall ahead of him. But
check out these interviews with real American voices on the
ground from Long Island, New York. Having breakfast here, real
American voices on the ground, the Bethpage Embassy Diner here
at places extraordinary and we got a lot of issues.

Speaker 1 (13:52):
Here on Long Island.

Speaker 2 (13:53):
And somebody to talk about that is Greg Hack running
for Congress in the third district, trying to get that
Republican sheep right.

Speaker 10 (14:01):
Yes I am, Yes, I am. We're gonna take out
Tom Swasei. In November twenty twenty six.

Speaker 1 (14:06):
Why are you running.

Speaker 10 (14:07):
I'm running because we because of a lot of reasons.
We have a lot of problems in our country. We
have a lack of trust between our representatives and the electorate,
and I think that needs to be changed. There's less
than a ten percent approval rating of Americans who approve
of Congress.

Speaker 1 (14:22):
How are they getting so rich in Congress?

Speaker 10 (14:24):
They're trading on non public information. Actually, some information is
going to be coming out tomorrow.

Speaker 1 (14:28):
Rose's worth a lot of money.

Speaker 10 (14:29):
Now he's worth a lot of money. He's up over
four hundred and fifty percent on his trades.

Speaker 1 (14:33):
Wow.

Speaker 2 (14:34):
So there's a bill in Congress, right, proposed to ban
stock trading.

Speaker 10 (14:39):
Right there is, there's actually an active one already. There's
there's this Stock Act of twenty seventeen. But unfortunately it
used to be enforced by an outside entity. Unfortunately they
move that enforce him back into Congress. So it's the
fox in charge of the henause.

Speaker 2 (14:53):
Okay, a lot happened in the third district, right. George
Santos was convicted of identity theft and why a freud
certain people's living rooms and promised him that you know
those people in the third District on the north shore
Long Island, and to his credit, he won the district
in a second time around, but a lot of people disappointed.

Speaker 1 (15:11):
Do you think you can get it back? I think
I can, and I have a plan to do that.

Speaker 10 (15:15):
I have a plan to be to engender trust with
the voters and give them and actually be worthy of
that trust. And by doing that, you have a better
relationship with the electorate, with your representatives, so you could
be more effective and powerful in Congress.

Speaker 1 (15:27):
For those members.

Speaker 2 (15:28):
Now, I met you about five years ago during COVID.
You guys were outside the Nassau County legislature. You've been
active for a long time, right, tell us about your
outlook for Long Island.

Speaker 10 (15:37):
Well, with Mundani in there, it's a little bit of
a problem. But it's so expensive to live. You have
the average price of a single family home in Nassau
County at over eight hundred thousand dollars. We're not able
to attract the young people to come back unless we
really make changes. I have some great plans for that
to attract young people to come back. But when we
lose the young people, we have an older population. And
when you have the older population, you don't have a innovation,

(15:59):
entrepreneurship for the for the for the district. And when
you don't have that or an economic engine exactly exactly,
then when it gets older, you.

Speaker 1 (16:05):
Lose the jobs.

Speaker 2 (16:06):
We're very top heavy here on Long Island. About one
in four work for the government in some level. And
then you take healthcare, which is about fifty percent government funded.
We used to be the home to defense, the space
shuttle wings, you know, the lunar module, the F fourteen.

Speaker 1 (16:20):
Right, it's changed.

Speaker 10 (16:21):
Yeah, aviation's got a great Yeah, it has changed, but
aviation is Long Island has a very rich aviation.

Speaker 1 (16:27):
In World War Two. Oh wow, we got to talk
about that further. Greg. I want to thank you so
much for coming on. And where can people follow you?
Thank you, Dave. Yeah, they can go to Greg hack
dot com. That's g R E g H A c
H dot com. All right, thank you, Happy Thanksgiving, thank you.
Just finishing breakfast up here at the Bethpage dying and this.

Speaker 2 (16:44):
Place is incredible, the decorations for Christmas here and Gus
the owner, We're gonna sit down with him on the
on the cost of doing business in New York. A
small business owner, you know, struggles insurance, utilities and everything.

Speaker 1 (16:57):
It's expensive to live here, right.

Speaker 11 (16:58):
Guess Long Island is one of the most expensive place
in the entire country to live in.

Speaker 1 (17:02):
Jay Weinstein from.

Speaker 2 (17:03):
The Belmore Patriots here, super patriot, very active on Long
Island for many years here.

Speaker 1 (17:08):
But you're like a border town for New York City. Right,
You've got a lot of commuters coming from.

Speaker 2 (17:13):
National County into the city, NYPD, FDNY financial services type
people and others.

Speaker 1 (17:19):
Right, a lot of people commuting hundreds of thousands.

Speaker 11 (17:22):
Yes, that is correct.

Speaker 1 (17:23):
We have worried.

Speaker 11 (17:25):
I am actually worried because MNDNIE getting in can really
affect Long Island in a big way. Thank god, we
got Blakeman in right now, who's putting three hundred more
cops on the force to protect Long Island from New
York City. So hopefully that makes a difference.

Speaker 1 (17:42):
Yeah, but yeah, a lot of early retirement.

Speaker 2 (17:44):
You know, last year, the last two years, a lot
of cops retired without invested, be invested. They just wanted
to get out. Other cities recruiting them, like Houston and
down South and Phoenix. And you know, do you think
the cops, the veteran police officers will continue to step down.

Speaker 11 (18:01):
I think from what I'm hearing through the Great Vine
to my friends, so and is about fifteen to twenty
percent of the police force will be stepping down come
January first, because they're afraid of defunding the police. They're
afraid that they're not going to have any respect that
I mean, dining is not going to give them them
the war, I should say, the way the ability to

(18:22):
do that job, than the ability to do their job
the way it needs to be done. And they're afraid.
You know that the criminals are going to rule New
York City and they're gonna get hurt because they are
being hindered.

Speaker 2 (18:31):
Well, this year aloon on, there's been about sixty seven
thousand felony and misdemeanor assaults. It's an incredible number. Rape
is still up seventeen percent in New York City. And
they talk about shootings being down twenty percent and murders
being down twenty percent.

Speaker 1 (18:46):
But other things are up and the quality of life
isn't there.

Speaker 9 (18:49):
Right.

Speaker 11 (18:49):
Let's be honest here, I don't believe any of those
numbers that they tell you. We all know that they
play with the numbers. They hold off on the numbers
until after the fact and then they put them in
there where it doesn't show in the polls. Polls the
meaningless and.

Speaker 1 (19:01):
Bragg is playing down the felonies to misdemeanors, right.

Speaker 11 (19:04):
That is correct.

Speaker 1 (19:05):
And Donnie doesn't believe in misdemeanors, right.

Speaker 11 (19:07):
No, he doesn't. He believes a social worker can handle
all this for sure.

Speaker 2 (19:12):
So Long Island has a lot of issues that are
that our bell weather for the rest of the nation.
Like Loudon County was, we have transgender issues now National County.
Bruce Blakeman here is really rigid on preventing men in
women's sports.

Speaker 1 (19:26):
But you have a controversy in a local school district
in Massapeak or tell us about it.

Speaker 11 (19:31):
Yes, Massapeka right now has a transgender child that wants
to go into the ladies bathroom and change and be
one of them. The girls do not want it. They've
been very vocal about it. They feel uncomfortable, they feel
you know, they're already having a tough time coming out,
you know, growing up right now, and now they have

(19:51):
to do this in front of a kid.

Speaker 1 (19:52):
Now.

Speaker 11 (19:52):
The school was amazing what they did. They created a
bathroom specifically for this one child. This way doesn't interfere
with anyone else. Everybody feels comforted.

Speaker 1 (20:01):
That was turned down by the student.

Speaker 11 (20:03):
That's correct. That is correct. Students turned it down. Wasn't
good enough for him, So the parents and LGBTQ are
student the school district over.

Speaker 1 (20:11):
So I covered Louden County schools with that controversy. You know,
the kid gets secretly shipped to another school, assaults another girl.

Speaker 2 (20:19):
But the PTA had a solution in Loudon County to
have let him use one of the teachers lounges bathrooms.

Speaker 1 (20:26):
To change and do a thing, but the school rejected it.
Is it purposely trying to shove this down on.

Speaker 11 (20:31):
The roads, Yes, it is. They are trying to shove
it down the throw and that all comes back to
the Democrats who are allowing this. They're refusing to stop this.
They think it's funny, they think it's amazing thing because
they're going to get votes from the LGBTQ, But it
actually hurts women. I mean, look what happened in Virginia.
If you remember, an LGBTQ person went into a women's bathroom.
I shouldn't say lgbt's sorry. A trans agenda went into

(20:53):
a women's bathroom and raped the girl in Virginia.

Speaker 2 (20:56):
Yeah, I believe it, and then got transferred and did
it again, you know, without anybody knowing. All right, I
want to talk about Massapequa. Taka Pusha Indian the mascot.
By the way, my mother made the Indian symbol in
Massapequa when she was thirteen years old, seventy years ago.

Speaker 1 (21:12):
She won on our contest. They adopted as a village seal.

Speaker 2 (21:15):
So Chief Taka Pusha sold the Rockaway Peninsula here to
the Dutch in a civilized transaction.

Speaker 1 (21:21):
It was It wasn't. The white man came in and
killed everybody.

Speaker 2 (21:25):
And the school adopted the Taka Pusha logo, especially for
the village a Massapeka and their high school.

Speaker 1 (21:31):
Now they're getting rid of it. Tell us where that stands.

Speaker 11 (21:34):
Well, the problem is what Hkel doesn't realize or doesn't
care to realize, is Long Island was all indigenous. It
was all Indians.

Speaker 1 (21:43):
That's what I means named after him.

Speaker 11 (21:45):
That's correct. Massapiko Alone's name is named after a tribe
of the Indians. And it's disrespectful to remove the logo.

Speaker 1 (21:51):
And this is it's in honor of the Indian. That
is correct, They're not being exploited.

Speaker 11 (21:56):
No, they're not any trading. Actually, most of the Indians
wanted to remain. They're actually fighting it.

Speaker 2 (22:00):
Yeah, Connectqatt School here on Long Island have to change
their name from the Thunderbirds.

Speaker 1 (22:04):
Right, that's correct.

Speaker 11 (22:05):
And thank god massa Peaker is standing the ground and
they are fighting this. They have been going to court.
They lost the first round, but they are going back
and Trump is stepped in and is trying to help
out Massapeker as well.

Speaker 2 (22:16):
Wow, tell us about affordability on Long Island. You see,
you know, people scaling back for the holidays. What's your assessment.

Speaker 11 (22:27):
Yes, people are scaling back unfortunately. I mean Trump's doing
an amazing job, but it's very hard to bring down
with Biden coys. It takes a long time. Unfortunate people
have to be patient. But food is expensive. I mean
your eggs has come down, but milk is skyrocket is
sixteen percent.

Speaker 1 (22:43):
At this point you go to.

Speaker 2 (22:45):
Down, rolls are down sixteen percent. Hash potatoes I think
are down one and a half percent.

Speaker 1 (22:52):
But it's not quick enough, right, No, it's not.

Speaker 11 (22:54):
And you know, people are really hurting during the Christmas
times with people losing their jobs right now. Inflation being
as high as is, people can't afford to do an
average meal. They can't do a family function anymore.

Speaker 1 (23:07):
Yeah, no, I get it. So tell us what are
you thankful for on the Thanksgiving Holiday?

Speaker 11 (23:13):
I am thankful for, you know, just being here, having
a wonderful family. I'm thankful for Trump getting in as
president of the United States because without him we've been
dire need I mean, having sleepy Joe. And to get
about Kamala Harris being in there, we'd really be in trouble.
So Lis, he's trying to protect us and get us
back to where we need to be.

Speaker 1 (23:31):
All right, well, maybe we'll get back there.

Speaker 2 (23:33):
And I appreciate your time, Jay, and you have a
great Thanksgiving holiday, happy and health.

Speaker 1 (23:38):
Thank you for everything, and thanks for bringing the crowd
down here, said the Dina.

Speaker 2 (23:41):
It's nice, of course, all right, Real American Voices on
the ground, don't go anywhere. We'll be right back with
more breaking point on Real America's Voice News. I interviewed

(24:14):
Real American Voices on the Ground at the Great Beth
Page Embassy Diner. You know, a commuting community to New
York City, a suburb outside of New York City here.

Speaker 1 (24:23):
But there are problems.

Speaker 2 (24:24):
Are the nation's problems. You know, people are dealing with
affordability issues. If you're in business, high insurance prices, general abilities.

Speaker 1 (24:31):
Through the roof.

Speaker 2 (24:31):
If you're in food, the food courts are high, their
supply chain, you can't get good help.

Speaker 1 (24:37):
Nobody wants to work anymore. Of the work ethics gone.

Speaker 2 (24:39):
But the place was beautiful at the Beth Page Diner,
and I got to speak with Bruce Blakeman, who's the
NASA County executive. He's doing a great job with ice,
doing a great job to put a barrier up between
Mamdani and Nassau County, which neighbors New York City. He
may run for governor, but I think it's at least
staphonics or the wanting. And she's got a lot of money.

(25:00):
But he is a terrific county executive. Maybe tossing his
hot into the gubernatorio race. Check out my interview with
Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakeman. Really a standard bearer for
the rest of the country to follow. This guy is
really great.

Speaker 1 (25:14):
Check it out here at the Bethpage Embassy Diners.

Speaker 2 (25:17):
The place is a landmark for six seven decades over
here in Nassau County. But we're on it to have
with us a very popular county executive, just one re
election here in Nassau County, Long Island, Bruce Blakeman, how
are you.

Speaker 12 (25:28):
I'm doing great. You are in the most patriotic diner
in all of America. Gusta's an amazing job and we
love him here. Yeah, it's it's extraordinary in his family too,
you know. And you know it's hard to be in
business right in New York.

Speaker 2 (25:42):
You've got a lot of overhead, you know, the insurances,
you know, the regulation, hard to find labor right. Tell
us about the Nassau economy and what you're doing to
address and keep it, you know, because NASA is doing
pretty well compared to most counties.

Speaker 12 (25:58):
NASA is doing great. Are economy is booming. People are
moving to Nasau County, businesses are moving to Nasau County.
We have full employment. We have the lowest poverty rate
of any county in New York State. And it's not
easy because we're fighting the liberal, woke, anti business policies
of Walbany and Governor Hochel. And now we have a
communist as the mayor of New York City, which is

(26:21):
bordering on Nassau County.

Speaker 1 (26:22):
So it's not easy.

Speaker 12 (26:24):
But our people are very hard working. They believe in
hard work and that you get rewards if you play
by the rules. And our economy is doing incredibly well.
Where the safest county in America. Niche magazine said, We're
the most desirable place to live in New York State,
and our economy is doing great. So if you want
a great job, you want to move your business here,

(26:46):
Nasau County is the place to be.

Speaker 2 (26:48):
Okay, let's talk about you bought in New York City, right,
you feel like you're the last line of defense. You're
in between Suffolk County and New York City. A lot
of commuters, hundreds of thousands of commuters go into New.

Speaker 1 (26:59):
York City every day.

Speaker 2 (27:00):
New York and New York Police Department FDNY Financial Services.
Do you think any of those are going to be
affected by Mamdannie being there, Well.

Speaker 12 (27:08):
I definitely think they're going to be affected if in
fact he does what he says he's going to do,
which I think will just kill the city.

Speaker 1 (27:16):
We love New York City.

Speaker 12 (27:17):
We're on the border of New York City, a lot
of our people, as you said, work in New York City,
and we're very concerned about a guy that wants to
defund the police. He wants to send social workers on
nine one one calls instead of police officers. He talks
about free bus rides will just become rolling homeless shelters.
He's got the wrong approach. The right approach is to

(27:37):
create wealth and prosperity that makes life more affordable for
people because they get a better wage, they can afford
more things, they get better benefits. So we in Nasau
County have a different approach. We're trying to create wealth
and prosperity and economic development that creates better jobs and
that gives people a better lifestyle, and that makes things
more affordable, not just giving free handouts, which doesn't material

(27:58):
improve anybody, doesn't.

Speaker 2 (28:00):
His bus plan it's about seven and a half billion.
He's going to face an eighteen billion dollars short fall
next year. Trump's got all eyes on him.

Speaker 12 (28:07):
Right, Yeah, Well, President Trump, he's the master negotiator. He
wrote the Art of the Deal. He's somebody that knows
how to deal with all types of people, and we're
very fortunate to have him as president. I can't imagine
if Kamala Harris was president right now, that would be
a disaster. And he's doing a great job. He's done
more in ten months than any president in my memory.

(28:28):
So we love President Trump here in Nassau County.

Speaker 2 (28:31):
Let's talk about you've been a leader and a national
leader in the forefront of men and women's sports.

Speaker 1 (28:38):
You banned it in Nasau County, right.

Speaker 12 (28:40):
We were the first county in all of America where
we said boys play with boys and girls play with girls.
I had a little girl from a soccer team come
to me and they said to me, hey, we don't
want boys playing in our sport. We work really hard
to make our team and it's unfair, and it's also
unsafe having biological males and girls' sports. And they don't

(29:00):
want him in their bathrooms and their locker rooms either.
So I got to tell you, I don't understand the
lack of common sense on people who want to put
biological males in girls' sports and put them in their
locker rooms and their bathrooms.

Speaker 1 (29:13):
We don't do that here in Nassau County, and the
parents have been really outspoken. You've got massive people schools, right,
It's a new controversy.

Speaker 2 (29:20):
A boy who wants to be a woman wants to
use the girls bathrooms and locker rooms.

Speaker 1 (29:25):
So I covered Laudin County right and down there they had.

Speaker 2 (29:27):
A solution for the kid who assaulted the girl, raped
the girl, did it again after he was transferred. But
the PTA had a solution to use the teacher's lounge
for him to go to the bathroom and change. Of course,
the school rejected. Are they purposely sticking it in the
eye of the parents or what's going on?

Speaker 12 (29:45):
Well, I can't speak to what others are doing other
than the fact that here in Nassau County we used
common sense. We adhere to American values. Both my parents
were World War Two veterans.

Speaker 1 (29:56):
My mother joined the army.

Speaker 12 (29:58):
They taught us values that basically, Unfortunately, there are a
lot of people want to destroy American values and a
lot of it's coming from people who haven't been here
very long. And I don't know why we're letting people
in our country that don't embrace America.

Speaker 1 (30:10):
Two more quick things.

Speaker 2 (30:12):
Thanksgiving holiday here, right, Taka pusha right Indian chief here
and you know he sold to the Dutch the Rockaway Peninsula, right,
It wasn't taken by force by the white man. Right,
the Massapequa School District has Taka pusha as this symbol.
My mother designed the logo from Massapequa Parks seventy years
ago when he was thirteen. They kept it to this

(30:33):
day with Taca pusher in there, and now they want
to get rid of it here. But it's in honor
of the Indians, right, it's not an insult.

Speaker 12 (30:40):
Well, first of all, you should know I'm an honorary
Massapeak with chief so okay, I wear my massive peak
with chief jacket. I mean, it's just ridiculous. Governor Holkle
doesn't have anything better to do than to come to
schools and tell them that they have to change their mascot.

Speaker 1 (30:55):
Look a chief.

Speaker 12 (30:55):
To me, it means leadership. It means somebody who's in
a position edition of power. So using the chief mascot
is not pejorative to the Indians. It's it's actually saying
good things about Native Americans. The same thing with the
Wanta Warriors. They want to ban warriors. What's wrong with that?

(31:16):
It shows courage. I just think that these people are ridiculous.
They think of new things every day, don't get me
started on on yeah, all the pronouns and all that stuff.

Speaker 2 (31:27):
And Cleveland Indians named their baseball club after her. Panops
got Indian who was a terrific baseball player. I wanted
to talk about Kathy hokl Is, you know's she backed
away from Mamdannie a little bit on the you know,
taxing the middle class.

Speaker 1 (31:43):
And but now she wants to raise corporate taxes in
New York State. That's not sustainable, right, Well, it's a
huge mistake.

Speaker 12 (31:50):
People are leaving our state by the droves, except for
in Nassau County, and they're going to other places that
are more business friendly. And it's just ridicul to raise
the corporate tax because it's a tax on the middle class.
It makes us less affordable. Why are they raising taxes
at a time where we should be lowering taxes. I
haven't raised taxes one dime one penny in four years

(32:13):
in Nasau County. And yet I've hired over one hundred cops.
I've hired, excuse me, over four hundred cops, two hundred
correction officers, probation officers. We're hiring law enforcement officers. We're
managing our budget. We've got seven bound upgrades. I don't
know why the governor can't manage her financial affairs. Maybe
it's because she's giving billions and billions of dollars to
illegal migrants who've been here for ten minutes and they

(32:35):
haven't earned it, but she's giving everything away to free
for them.

Speaker 2 (32:38):
You've been on the forefront of cooperating with ICE. I
know you said last month alone or in October novemb
you deported forty seven illegals.

Speaker 1 (32:48):
Or tell us about your ICE efforts.

Speaker 12 (32:51):
Sure, so again, Nasau County was the first. We have
the most comprehensive agreement with ICE. We work in cooperation
with ICE, and it's been a great collaborative effort. So
last month we took out forty seven illegal migrants who
had criminal records. Twenty seven of them were in gang
related activities. We because we have an agreement with ICE,

(33:13):
we removed them not only from Nassau County, but from
the whole region and all of America. In addition, the
other day we had somebody come through the Arizona border
from Mexico, a Romanian with an Irish passport and in
New York City driver's license, committing thefts here.

Speaker 1 (33:30):
We picked him up.

Speaker 12 (33:31):
He would have been let free because a cashless bail,
another stupid thing. But we had an agreement Ice. We
called ICE, they came to the precinct, they picked that
individual up.

Speaker 1 (33:42):
They're gone. So we're very happy to have an agreement
with ICE. All right, And I just wanted to last,
but not least, what is Thanksgiving?

Speaker 11 (33:51):
I mean to you?

Speaker 1 (33:52):
And what are you going to be doing?

Speaker 4 (33:53):
Well?

Speaker 12 (33:54):
It's probably one of my favorite holidays because we should
thank each and every day for all of our blessings,
and it's American tradition. It's an American holiday, and I
just want to wish everybody out there a happy and
healthy Thanksgiving and thank you for what you're doing. I
make God bless American.

Speaker 2 (34:10):
Yeah, thank you for joining us with real American voices,
the hard working people, the middle class of Long Island
here in Nassau County, the great Nassau County.

Speaker 1 (34:19):
And thank you again. Now I'm going to get my omley.
All right, sounds good. Thank you appreciate having me. It's wonderful.
Thank you. We always love seeing Maria from switch to USA.
How are you?

Speaker 7 (34:32):
I am doing very well.

Speaker 1 (34:33):
I am so pumped that we are here in Long Island.
Thank you. Yeah, it's great and I see you everywhere.

Speaker 2 (34:39):
I saw you in Schnecksville, Pennsylvania, Wildwood, New Jersey.

Speaker 1 (34:43):
Is there anyway you don't go? There is nowhere we
don't go. Absolutely right.

Speaker 2 (34:47):
You've been a supporter of a Real America's Voice Breaking
Point for some time.

Speaker 1 (34:52):
Now tell us about Switch to USA.

Speaker 4 (34:54):
Well, Switch to USA is the mom and pop American manufacturer.
We are the parallel economy for all of your essentials
and you never know when you might need another supply chain.

Speaker 2 (35:06):
Wink wink so well made on American soil by American
factory workers.

Speaker 5 (35:11):
Amen to that.

Speaker 4 (35:12):
We have to rebuild our economy and we.

Speaker 1 (35:15):
Are doing it. Where can our viewers find you?

Speaker 4 (35:18):
Please come to switch the number two USA dot com.

Speaker 1 (35:23):
Switch to USA dot com. We love Maria, so great
to see you.

Speaker 7 (35:27):
Thank you so much, David, we love you too.

Speaker 5 (35:29):
Thank you everyone awesome.

Speaker 1 (35:30):
Thank you Maria. We'll be right back with more Breaking
Point on Real America's Voice names.

Speaker 2 (36:13):
Welcome back to Breaking Point. I'm David Zeer. I hope
everybody had a wonderful Thanksgiving with their families. And you know,
one of the great things about being part of Real
America's voices. We're in touch with the people on the ground.
I covered probably close to one hundred and fifty two
hundred TRUMP events, probably about one hundred rallies on the
ground in many states. I've been to thirty eight states

(36:36):
with the network and the people are great. But one
of the great things is, you know, I've been doing
it since twenty nineteen with them, and we meet people
who emerged later. You know, they tell me on the ground, oh,
I'm involved with my school board. Oh I'm involved with this,
so I want to get involved. And then all of
a sudden, three years later they like powerhouses, grassroots powerhouses,

(36:58):
and one of those people so I got to interview
in Wilmington last year. We met on the ground Michelle
mori Or, the founder for the National Alliance for Education Reform.

Speaker 1 (37:08):
Michelle, how are you Okay?

Speaker 7 (37:11):
I'm doing great, and I so appreciate the opportunity to
be back with you.

Speaker 1 (37:15):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (37:15):
I mean, it's amazing how the Trump rallies and things
like SEAPACK and TPUSA and all that over the years
have led to so many grassroots activists.

Speaker 1 (37:25):
This has bottom up. Nobody from CBS News or George
Soros is paying you right.

Speaker 7 (37:32):
Right, Actually they were paying the campaign against me.

Speaker 1 (37:35):
Yeah, Oh that's for sure. That's for sure. Okay.

Speaker 2 (37:39):
So I first met you in Wilmington last year. I
did a couple of rallies that one of them, the
jet flew over and couldn't land, so everyone had to leave.
That was disappointing, but I was so moved by your message.
When I saw you on the war room last week,
I was like, oh my god, that's Michelle and because
your message was really moving, and you were like, I'm

(38:00):
running for the department head of the superintendent of education
in North Carolina.

Speaker 1 (38:05):
Right, great, So tell us what's going on. You know,
you have an.

Speaker 2 (38:10):
Immigration crackdown, get thirty thousand plus students not showing up
for the schools.

Speaker 1 (38:15):
Tell us the story.

Speaker 7 (38:17):
Well, you know, unfortunately they want to make this be
about just one bad day, but that's really not what
was happening. What's happening is this is the result of
years and years of just abuse of our immigration system.
And what we've been doing is telling our students for
the last twenty years that you're not responsible for yourself,

(38:38):
that we are celebrating lawlessness. And I tell you, when
we have students that are cursing law enforcement that are
praising lawlessness, and we have our parents and our teachers
on the sidelines cheering them on. We know that we
are in a very dangerous place in our country.

Speaker 1 (38:55):
What a twisted, twisted, twisted culture we have.

Speaker 2 (39:00):
And I see it and I get exactly what you're saying.
So tell us what happened on that day? The students
didn't go to school and protest because or were people
saying they were afraid of ice coming into the school.

Speaker 1 (39:13):
What was the real story?

Speaker 7 (39:15):
Well, really it's the fear mongering of the left right.
They were telling people not to go to school because
they could be kidnapped by these law enforcement agents that
were going to come into the schools and take them away.
That's what it began, as that's why we see that
they didn't come to school on Monday. But then as
the week progressed last week, we saw students just leaving

(39:35):
their classrooms and as I said, cursing ice and walking around,
you know, throwing things and being angry and leaving the schools.
And that was all in protest of us wanting to
enforce our immigration. So it's very interesting because if you
even listen for a few minutes to the NEA, the

(39:56):
National Educators Association, it's very clear that they have weptanized
our schools in the United States of America. They are
now teaching our children to be political activists, to be
social justice warriors, quote unquote. But the majority of our
kids can't even read, or write or do math at
grade level. And so the that that that's where we've

(40:18):
come to.

Speaker 2 (40:19):
Yeah, I mean, starting with the prominent education under Obama
and Biden and probably Clinton, and all the way through
the NEA, the teachers' unions tacitly endorsing, you know, thirteen
year old kids getting converted to trying to convert them
to another sex, which is impossible, and then sterilizing them

(40:39):
for life. Transgender dysphoria sets in at a later age,
you know, and the decisions they regretted, decisions just like
the you know, a lot of people, so many people.

Speaker 1 (40:51):
So it's really crazy. So who's behind the efforts in
your area in Charlotte? Can you point to Pacific groups?

Speaker 2 (41:00):
And by the way, when we're done, I got to
go get my ice scraper and then return it to
home depot.

Speaker 1 (41:06):
But who's behind your opposition?

Speaker 7 (41:10):
Well, I would say that it's it's the education system itself.
For instance, here in Wake County. Wake County is now
the largest school district in the state of North Carolina,
and our superintendent was encouraging students to stay home and
telling them that he would allow them to do online
classes because they wanted. He wanted to protect them from ice. Well,

(41:32):
this is the problem, and you kind of pointed to
it a little bit when we talk about Obama. He
started something called restorative justice, and restorative justice in a
nutshell is you're not responsible for what you do. We
have children that there are no behavioral standards, there is
no standard code of ethics in our classrooms. It's just

(41:52):
absolute chaos. And what we're seeing is we're doing the
same thing that these people left their countries to flee from.
Right when you talk about people's asigned on what were
they leaving. They were leaving danger, they were leaving lawlessness,
they were leaving chaos. And now we have that not
just in our schools, but in our entire communities. Because

(42:13):
this is just a symptom of a bigger problem. It's
this is not just our schools that are being impacted.
This is our hospitals, this is our highways, this is
our courtrooms because we cannot handle the millions of people
that are here that the Left invited here not to
become Americans. They're just here to get the benefit of

(42:36):
the generosity of America, and we are the ones that
are paying the price for that. And our students and
our children and the next generation are not going to
have the opportunities. They're not going to have the nation
that we grew up in. And that's why it's time
to crack down. This has been years of just letting
lawlessness go. And as I said when I was on
Steve's show last week, you know, corrections are difficult, and

(43:01):
we are having to correct something that's been going on
for nearly twenty years in promising people that they can
come to our nation and that they don't have to
do it legally. And it's time for that to stop.
And it's time for them to go back home and
to either come back legally or go back and change
your nation and make it free. Go back. If you

(43:24):
want to push against a government, why don't you go
back to the government where you were born and make
it be a nation where people would.

Speaker 1 (43:32):
Want to live.

Speaker 2 (43:33):
Yeah, I was going to say, you know, like Mamdannie's
stupid speech on election Now he plays this cool guy.
I'm a cool I play soccer and he relates to
the young kid, and then on he looks like Jay
Grivera on an election night saying that you know, the
immigrants are going to rise up and take power, like
he's talking to a lithium mine with teenagers in the
Congo or something, and that the immigrants are all oppressed
in the United States. Well, any one of them has

(43:55):
a better life in the United States than they did
from their countries of origin. Why not lift them up
and make them appreciate and similar By the way, I
spent a lot of time a Way County. I was
there an election night for the presidential election last year,
and I watched North Carolina shift right less Democrat votes
more Republican votes. Early voters in the western part of

(44:15):
the state, young people forty seven percent of the thirty
six percent of the vote that are on affiliated we're
leaning Republican, helped elect Donald Trump. So where do the
I'll give you the last word a minute and a half.
Where do the young people stand in our education system?
Is there hope in North Carolina that we're going to
have responsible kids coming out of the schools.

Speaker 7 (44:37):
Well, honestly, right now, I think you're going to have
to be in a private school because right now the
superintendent that one has actually been pushing the LGBTQ agenda.
And as I stated, you know, just a few minutes ago,
I have a lot of hope actually for the college students,
the young people that were following Charlie Kirk that were

(44:59):
a part of Point USA. They're getting it. They are
figuring out that socialism is not the answer. They are
recognizing what an incredible blessing it is to be a
United States citizen. They are coming back to their faith
in God and the foundational principles and the morality and
the integrity that made us the greatest country in the

(45:19):
history of the world. And I just want to say this,
when we're talking about making America great again, the way
that we do that is we make America America again,
and we are going to be proud yet again to
be citizens in this nation. And that's what we need
to infuse into our children. That's what we need to
be praising.

Speaker 2 (45:38):
Up one hundred percent in about thirty seconds. Teleview is
where they can follow you and get involved.

Speaker 7 (45:44):
Well, you can finally me on most platforms at Michelle
Morrow and C and or you can go to my
website which is for Better Ed dot org. It looks
like for Bettered, but it's f O R B E
T T E r ed dot org.

Speaker 1 (45:58):
All right, what was What are you thankful for and Thanksgiving?
This holiday?

Speaker 7 (46:04):
I am thankful to be in the United States, and
I'm thankful that President Trump is our president.

Speaker 1 (46:09):
All Right. I'm Michelle Morrow. So great to meet you
last year. I'm really proud of you.

Speaker 2 (46:13):
You've really taken on a big fight and a burden
on behalf of the good people who are tired of
being told they're the bad people. Michelle Morrow, everybody and
I have a great weekend.

Speaker 7 (46:23):
Thank you, Thanks you too.

Speaker 1 (46:25):
All Right, everybody.

Speaker 2 (46:26):
Michelle Morrow, she's the founder of the National Line for
Education Reform. I hope you enjoyed today's show and all
our diner man on the streets here from the Bethpage
Embassy Diner special thanks to Gus over there a true patriot.
You're watching Breaking point of Real America's Voice News. I
hope you had a great holiday. We'll see you next time.
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(46:50):
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