Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:07):
Do not call nine one one if you live in
the state of California, because chances are the system from
the seventies doesn't flip and work. Also, do not ride
public transportation if you can help it, especially if you're
in a deep blue city. A horrifying story out of Chicago.
And do not use a fake ID in Arizona lest
you be taken into custody by the law enforcement officials
(00:31):
who are stopping under a strinkers from doing so in
a bar, which I actually totally drew it. Then we'll
talk about a little bit more later. All that more
coming up on this episode of Turning Point Tonight. My
name is Jobob. Thanks so much for tuning in. Together,
we are charting the course of America's cultural comeback. This
is Turning Point Tonight. Tt at TPUSA dot com is
the email address if you'd like to send us along
(00:51):
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(01:12):
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(01:35):
beneficial when it comes to finding Turning Point Tonight material
on the Internet. We also do an extra segment each
and every day of this show. Yesterday I told the
story about meeting Charlie Sheen, which is actually, I think
pretty interesting. I don't want to, you know, hype it
up too much, but it is pretty interesting. The One
Last Point podcast, Charlie Sheen was the most fascinating jewel
(02:01):
in the context of which we met him, and I
would love for you to get that opinion, but you
can only find it on social media platform So type
in Turning Points Tonight or just Jobob on any of
your social media platforms. You'll be able to find it
there to get to what I think is important. I
recognize we talk about California quite a bit, one because
(02:22):
I and the entire Turning Point Tonight team live in California,
behind enemy lines, in this communist hellhole. But two, the
main point is I, even though I want California to
succeed and want them to do well, and want them
to reverse course so that they can succeed and do well,
(02:43):
I also want the rest of the country to know
the terrible things and the terrible people and the positions
that those people have been put in in this god
forsake and state, so that it doesn't happen to you.
If you're watching this in Tulsa, Oklahoma, I pray and
I hope that you take what's going on in California, Illinois,
in Chicago with some sort of oh my gosh, we
(03:04):
can't let this happen to our red state. So speaking
of California, I thought this was very interesting and compelling.
Now it's not necessarily new news because this was reported
on several months ago, but it is interesting because the
guy who headed up the department that had these blistering
(03:25):
failures has announced he's running for governor of the state
of California. Yes, sixty seven year old former HHS secretary
Xavier Bisera. It's like Javier but with an ex so
Xavier Bisera is running for the governorship of the state
of California. Now, aside from being a left wing lunatic
(03:48):
slash hack, Xavier Bessera has had several administrative missteps when
he was the head of Health and Human Services under
the Biden administration. Now, he was a proponent of EH
kids can transition. Yeah, we're gonna give unlimited subsidies to
whoever wants them via Obamacare. And also, by the way,
(04:11):
remember RFK got a ton of flack for well, he's
not a doctor, but he's a head of the AHHS,
and neither is Xavier Bessera. Also not a doctor. By
the way, and we mentioned this at the time, there's
only three doctors to ever run the Health and Human
Services Department, so that's not a big thing, including them
(04:32):
on their own side all the people that complained about it.
So anyways, one of the big things administratively that I
think should be revisited and made sure to be brought
up again and again and again is HHS. But the
Biden administration's horrible handling of all of the illegals coming
into the country. Now, this is no surprise, and I
don't need to reiterate it or reset the scene. The
(04:54):
Biden administration left the border completely and utterly wide open,
which was a problem for really everybody, including the people
who came here illegally, in part because there was a
hotline set up inside of the Health and Human Services
Department that was supposed to function as well, Hey, we
(05:14):
know you're here in the country illegally. And I'm sure
some legal aliens probably also called the hotline, but I
would venture to guess that the majority of people who
called this hotline were illegal. They called this hotline, and
turns out, as we found out earlier this year, thatang
thing didn't work. Now, this is a Biden administration problem,
(05:35):
but if you remember, three hundred thousand children were either
misplaced or placed with unvetted people when they came into
the United States illegally under the Biden administration. Now, in
as a subset to that, and as a part of
that problem, inside AHHS, they also set up a hotline, Hey,
if you have any issues, if you want to report
(05:57):
abuse sexually or otherwise, if you want to report human trafficking,
you want to port fraud, all of those things can
be directed to this hotline, and the hotline under Xavier
Bessera completely ignored sixty five thousand of those calls. As
it was reported earlier in March twenty twenty five, there
(06:19):
was a sixty five thousand report backlog discovered by the
Trump administration amid the three hundred thousand kids who were
misplaced or put with randos in the United States. Now,
the good news is that the Trump administration is working
diligently and as harder than fast as they possibly can
(06:40):
Secretary Nome and President Trump to try and figure out
this massive mess that they were left. Thankfully, of those
three hundred thousand, twenty four thousand, four hundred have been
either made contact with or their situation solved. Again, that's
nowhere near where we would all like it to be,
(07:01):
just on a human level. But at the same time,
at least they recognize the problem and are identifying and
working their best to solve the problem. But what still
consists here, what still is the main issue, especially for
states like California, is you have a guy who was
running a department that effectively ignored sixty five thousand calls
(07:23):
for help and two to the point, as of July
twenty twenty or July twenty twenty five, six months into
the Trump administration's tenure, fifty nine of those backlog reports
have been processed. It probably is fully done until now,
but that's the most up to date information I believe
that everybody has. Bottom line remains is this the guy
(07:45):
running for the top spot in the state, in the
country's most populous state, completely ignored sixty five distressed calls,
completely abandoned sixty five thousand people calling for help, the
people that they led into this the country I legally
completely ignored. Which we can go on and on about
(08:05):
a conservative and liberal divide on things, but conservatives are
apprehensive of systems. If they don't think the systems can work.
Liberals will shout from the rooftop how good the system
might be, and then when it doesn't work, refuse to
take responsibility for it. I'd be willing to bet that
conservatives could get on board with a functioning system that says, hey,
(08:28):
people that are experiencing abuse in any way, shape or form, fraud,
human trafficking, here's a hotline to call, but also conservatives
would make sure the dang phone line works, make sure
somebody picks up the calls, does any sort of amount
of investigating into each report. Liberals, on the other hand,
will say, look at all of these great things we
are doing for the people that are in the country
(08:50):
illegally and also actually don't want to do any of
the work, So sixty five thousand of these calls will
just that's fine, just good luck. We've got the credit
for wanting to do it, which makes us seem nice
to the voters. We got more nonsense coming on in California.
(09:11):
Gavin Newsom in the California Libs who run the state
waited an absurd amount I laughed, because it's easier than crying.
They wasted an absurd amount of money setting up a
system that doesn't work. I will formalize my pitch for
doing the same exact thing, but for less money, to
(09:31):
save the taxpayer dollars on building something that doesn't work.
We're going to talk about that next. Also, the horrible
situation that happened on a train in Chicago on Monday.
We will discuss that all that more TBTATPSA dot com
also go subscribe to our turning point in a YouTube channel,
the Rumble channel, the Instagram account, the Facebook page, this
(09:53):
the ex account. All of those is where you get
exclusive content. Specifically it is for social media. U let's see,
there's a bunch of fun. We're trying a new format
type of way to we start off the segment on
a high note and then devolve into treachery and awfulness
because that's the way the new cycle works. But we
want to as a part of trying to be the
(10:15):
lighter hearted ten PM show here in Real America's voice,
we're trying to, you know, at least start segments with
some levity. So that's how we're going to do things
now format wise, until it changes. That's something to look
out for. As soon as we come back from the break,
don't go away, We'll be back.
Speaker 2 (10:30):
All right.
Speaker 3 (10:37):
Well, I know you don't want to tuck it in,
but Mama said it would look better touched down.
Speaker 4 (10:40):
So you have to remember that girls only speak things
in mystery. When she says that she really means to
tuck it in, she doesn't mean it would just look better.
Speaker 1 (10:49):
She wants you to tuck it in.
Speaker 2 (10:50):
Girls don't say what they want. They want you to
read their minds.
Speaker 4 (10:53):
And it's a little confusing, but I might as well
go ahead and learn it now.
Speaker 1 (10:57):
Look for approach. Just she's not gonna tell you what
she actually wants. She's gonna hint at it, sometimes more
aggressively than others. I feel like, say, name a restaurant
for dinner, which means you gotta go to that restaurant,
or you gotta get that thing, you gotta wear that
shirt or whatever it is. It's veiled. But the earlier
(11:20):
you know that, That's why I like. The earlier you
know that, the better off you are. Because if you
if you get into your I don't know first, second,
third year of marriage and don't understand that yet. One
how did you get married in the first place, And two,
you're gonna be in for a rude awakening when your
wife says it would be nice if we hide it
(11:42):
up a little bit, or would be nice if the
mailbox got painted, or it would be nice if the
sliding door was smoother. That means do it. This is
not a suggestion, this is a command. Oh don't think that.
This is not something that you have. It's his option.
This is an optional thing. For me to do. Nope,
the dad is teaching his son right, and the sooner
(12:06):
you'll learn it the better. Speaking of things that you
learn sooner than later, is California. Places like California waste money.
I know this comes as a shock to many of you.
We talked, geez, we talked about it probably every day,
about California wasting money. Yesterday we were talking about the
unbelievable amount of corruption that goes on with money changing hands,
(12:28):
and hey, there's money in this account. Well, what if
we bill it as this business expense? And then also,
what if my consultants write off a one hundred and
seventy thousand dollars Mexico vacation for their birthday as a
tax deductible business expense. And then what if this company
gets a contract from the government that's one hundred million dollars,
but then they donate to this guy. It's a whole thing.
California is just a racket and a half, and good news.
(12:51):
It doesn't stop there. Not only is it corrupt, it
also is dysfunctional. Is in it doesn't work. The most
recent example of that is Governor Newsom in California's plan
to revamp calling nine to one one. Now I know
that you all know this, but calling nine one one
and having emergency services show up to your house or
(13:13):
dwelling is probably pretty important. Like if somebody, if something happens,
somebody breaks into your house, if you take a pretty
bad fall, you want to be able to call nine
one one, and you want it to work. Unfortunately, in
California kind of shot in the dark. Governor Newsom promised
to modernize the system in twenty nineteen, calling the analog
(13:37):
system that had been used literally for decades astounding. How
could we still be using this in the quote unquote
most technically advanced state in the Union. The current legacy
system that California uses for their nine to one one
operation is from nineteen seventy the nineteen seventies. The infrastructure
(13:58):
is literally falling apart, and finding people who have the
expertise to fix it when it does fall apart is
become a huge problem in the formerly Golden State. Can
we call it the poopy State? Is that? Like? I
wonder if that's like, can we just do that? Can
we just make it happen?
Speaker 4 (14:16):
Uh?
Speaker 1 (14:16):
Yeah, that would be a problem. Hey, Bill, who's ninety
five years old, is the only one who knows how
to fix this specific system that we have because it's
fifty years old. So Bill was fixing this in his
prime in the forty five years old. Now he's ninety five.
We still haven't updated the system. So we had to
drag Bill out of retirement to go fix this thing. Oh,
(14:38):
by the way, Bill needs a part that had they
stopped producing in the eighties, because this stupid system is
over fifty years old. Again, would you expect that sort
of thing from the quote unquote tech hub of the world. No,
but remember it's California. I think Ronald Reagan said, if
you put the this is talking about the federal government,
(14:58):
but also applies to California. If you put the federal
government in charge of sand, if you in scharge of
the Sahara Desert, ruined the punchline there in about five years,
they'd run out of sand. Anyways, back California, the current
system is literally falling apart. And I like this. The
statistic from the I believe this is from the California Globe.
(15:18):
They said nearly forty million Californians utilize or rely on
nine to one one services. They're forty million Californians as
a whole. It's the whole population. They could have just
said one hundred percent of people utilize or could have
to utilize the nine to one one services. Four hundred
dispatch centers exist across California that all need to get upgraded. Well,
(15:42):
good news, California is going to upgrade it. After the
twenty eighteen campfire that killed eighty plus people, it drove
the original redundancy design to need some upgrades. People went, hey,
this fire was terrible. The nine to one one, the
emergency services didn't work as expected. We need to upgrade.
(16:05):
So fast forward a couple of years later, they say, hey,
we're gonna do it. All of the money is approved.
The first part of it was gonna be of those
four hundred dispatch centers, there's gonna be twenty three dispatch centers.
Originally transitioning into the new rollout of the new system,
all of the analog nineteen seventy stuff was going away,
(16:26):
all of the new stuff was coming in. The problem is,
once all of the new high tech stuff came into
place in these twenty three dispatch centers, it didn't work,
which I laughed, but it's not funny. Right. If you
have an emergency and the nine to one one system
that recently gets transferred over to the new and improved system,
(16:47):
you call a Hello doesn't work, that's a problem. Calls
were lost, they were misrouted, and they created significant operational disruptions.
There was a twelve hour outage that occurred in one
of the counties once the new system was activated. So
at the to put a fine point on it, this
(17:08):
whole system was put in place to make California more
reliant on new technology that was developed in this decade,
which again seems crazy. If a state is one the
tech hub of the world and two has more tax
money than any state in the country, why can't they
figure that out when this is clearly not that big
(17:29):
of an issue elsewhere. All that to be said is
it just doesn't work. There is a glimmer of hope though,
despite the fact that the nine to one one dish
pass system, the new revamp, the new and improved system
didn't work. At least it was extraordinarily expensive to the taxpair.
(17:49):
I left because crying is probably not acceptable on TV. Again,
I live in California, so this hurts me internally, and
we bring these Californian stories to you to make sure
that it doesn't happen in the same state, the hopefully
well governed state that you live in. Four hundred and
fifty million dollars was spent on the failed regional nine
(18:11):
to one one systems between twenty nineteen and twenty twenty five.
Of that, there's a group called the NNGA nine to
one one and a system called Center Gem Technologies. They
were paid one hundred and four million dollars and fifty
nine million dollars respectively. Those two vendors have now been scrapped. They,
(18:32):
in other words, Californians paid one hundred and sixty three
million dollars to these two companies for a system that
didn't work. Now, obviously you're going to think, well, that's
way less than four hundred and fifty million dollars, And
that's true. That's probably because there's a bunch of other
smaller vendors. But just these two vendors got one hundred
and sixty three million dollars over the course of this
revamp and what they did didn't work. I'd like to
(18:56):
throw this out as an offer to Governor, King Gavin,
or any who is in charge of the decision making
in the god forsaken hellholed that is California. I will
design Joe Bob Media LLC. We will design a telecom
system for emergency services that does not work for half.
(19:17):
It's actually a pretty good deal if you think about it.
I will only charge you eighty million dollars California to
also build a system that doesn't work in any way,
shape or form. Again, I know I'm selling myself short here.
I realize I'm probably worth the full one hundred and
sixty three million dollars. Honestly, I'm probably worth the full
four hundred and fifty million dollars. But like I said,
(19:38):
out of the generosity and goodness of my own heart,
I will build you a system that is non functional
for half to save the California tax payers dollars because
I'm just I'm a good American like that. Part of
the dysfunction that is being pointed out is that nobody
in a position of influencer power was consulted. The Fire
(20:02):
Chiefs Association and super large emergency response services like LAPD
say we weren't consulted. Nobody talked to us about this,
and well it it shows believe it or not. A
bunch of the major project leaders have left. The transition
is being criticized because there's no benchmarks, no delivererals, just
(20:25):
high level of reports with a lot of zero's. Yeah,
that seems to be the case for the last few
of us here who are actually paying attention to the
bottom line of California. California is racing to bankruptcy with Illinois,
but that's a different conversation for a different time. But
the worst trust, it gets worse. Believe me, it gets worse.
There is a path forward. The state is now completely
(20:49):
restarting the state wide design with similar technologies as other
states use. Now, why they didn't do that in the
first place, I don't know. It's probably because Gavin's best
friend's nephew owned one of those companies that build the
state one hundred million dollars, but again all alleged. I
don't actually know. I'm just thinking that's probably the case.
(21:13):
Some of the new infrastructure they say is is working,
so maybe that's a silver lining. But even then, they
identified this problem in twenty eighteen set it in motion
twenty nineteen. The new updated system in the tech hub
in the richest state in the union is set to
be twenty thirty, okay, And I'm not entirely sure how
(21:37):
difficult telecoms systems are to set up if you have
any experience in the telecom world, and if you know
what it's like to set up one of these systems,
not even like inner offices might Like, Dude, I've been
in offices that have telecoms systems throughout the whole building,
and it's all do you dial this and it goes
here and all of that sort of stuff. This doesn't
(21:58):
seem that hard. Am I taking crazy pills?
Speaker 4 (22:01):
Like you?
Speaker 1 (22:01):
If you have any experience or insight into the telecom world,
is it really that hard?
Speaker 4 (22:09):
Like?
Speaker 1 (22:09):
Is that that hard to set up a system where
people call report something is happening, then you redirect that
call to where it needs to go. They do it
in India every day. I write like, this doesn't feel like
it's rocket science. Why is it gonna take ten years
to maybe get it right? By the way, Maybe because yeah,
this is a new goal, a new deadline, twenty thirty,
(22:33):
But they also set deadlines before this, and guess what,
none of it freaking worked. There's four hundred dispatch places.
They only did twenty three, and those twenty three were failures,
and it still cost half a billion dollars. What assurance
do I have that it'll actually work? The answer is
freaking none for something that doesn't seem to be that hard.
(22:54):
But again, my offer remains on the table. If you
would like to join me in submitting a bid, you
know what I mean, I think I need because California still,
I think, does the DEI contract stuff. So I'm a brown,
which which helps, but I'm also a mail which knocks
me down a peg. I'm also straight, that's knocks me
down a peg. And my dad was an immigrant, but
(23:15):
I wasn't. So here's what I need. If you out
there are watching and you would like to get this
contract with me to help build a system that doesn't
work and build California taxpayers for eighty million dollars, send
us an email tpt ATPUSA dot com. You need to
be a woman, lesbian, person of color, immigrant. I think
(23:36):
that'll check all the boxes. Then we can develop a
company together. We can put together a proposal of a
telecomsystem that doesn't work and then bill them. Actually, you
know what, We'll even do it for a quarter. My
new company venture. We will do it for forty million dollars.
That's how generous we are. But if you fit any
of those DEI checkboxes and you think that you're able
(23:59):
to with me form a company that will also create
a system that doesn't work, let me know. I feel
like I've be labored that joke on probably a little
bit too long coming up. You know, it's tough to
make more jarring transitions of things that are relatively serious.
But I do want to talk about that horrible, horrible
(24:21):
incident that happened in Indiana when a woman was set
on fire by somebody who should have been in jail
for a very long time. Might have been talked about
on some of the other shows, but I think some
of the details are freaking interesting, and even though we
generally have fun on this show, is something that needs
to be talked about, needs to be talked about thoroughly.
(24:43):
TPTTBSA dot com is the email dress also, go subscribe
to our YouTube channel. We'll be right back after the break.
Speaker 2 (24:48):
Don't go wait.
Speaker 1 (24:53):
Do you rather date a guy with a dad bought
or a six pack?
Speaker 4 (24:57):
Well?
Speaker 1 (24:57):
I'm not gay?
Speaker 2 (25:00):
Sorry?
Speaker 1 (25:03):
What okay? That that guy's defends.
Speaker 4 (25:08):
It?
Speaker 1 (25:10):
I put a lot of money on that. If you're
just listening to this, you're not watching on the if
you're just listening on a podcast. This man is wearing
shorts that are shorter than should be legal, a skin
tight T shirt, has some sort of crown, is at
a Pride festival, and most specifically and most glaringly is
wearing a rainbow cape nine times out of ten, ninety
(25:34):
nine times out of nine hundred, ninety nine times out
of a thousand. I put all, I'm going all in
making bets that guy's gay one hundred percent. I also,
I'm not even sure if I believe him. Oh, I'm
not getting really is it some sort of like suppression
thing you're trying to turn a corner? I don't know
(25:55):
if I believe him. To begin with, I'm calling BS
on all of this. Not only do I think that
was a totally justifiable question to ask of a man
wearing a rainbow cape at a Pride festival, I don't
even know if I believe the man. I'm not get
out of here, dude, Wow. To transition entirely, I'm not
(26:15):
sure if that was the right clip to lead into this,
because that seems very whimsical and fun, and this is
not whimsical and fun. But here we are. Anyways, you
probably have heard about this. And by the way, too,
I misspoke last segment. I think I said this happened
in Indiana. No, the victim was from Indiana. Bethany McGee's
(26:36):
twenty six years old, a graduate of Purdue from Indiana,
was lit on fire when she went on the Chicago
Blue Line at nine to twenty four pm on Monday.
And there's a lot of things going on here, but
just to give you some context, everybody thinks this is
(26:58):
entirely unprovoked. It's not like she did anything. She's reaching
for her phone allegedly when she was doused with gasoline
and lit on fire. Thankfully, she was able to put
the fire out by stop dropping and rolling. And again
I don't want to make light of this, but that's interesting.
That's something we all kind of know. If you're on fire,
(27:18):
stop stop dropping, well roll. There's other people that were
able to put some blankets on her. She was able
to survive, which is fantastic, and we'll get to the
not fantastic in just a second. But she's going to
hopefully make a full recovery. It's going to take three
months in the hospital. But what in the world is
(27:39):
going on with these random attacks on public transit. It's
almost as if the lowest of the low are just
hanging out on public transit with no supervision whatsoever and
are allowed to effectively do whatever it is they want.
And unfortunately, and I saw this firsthand, a bunch of
(27:59):
the no people that are riding the public transit feel
like it's odd and uncomfortable to look to their left
and keep an eye on what's going on. Actually, Producer Glenn,
we're gonna throw this in later. Here's a picture of
I took this photo we were in I was in
San Francisco. I flew into San Francisco Airport and barded
(28:22):
to Berkeley, honestly because the bar was just gonna be faster.
And I took this photo of this girl who this
is the epitome of what the heck are you thinking?
Just sitting politely on the train next to a guy
with a speaker on his bike, full mask. Looks scary
(28:44):
and she's just sitting there. I'm sure this is fine,
nothing bad will happen to me. Absolutely not. Keep your
eyes peeled, keep your head on a swivel, especially if
you're in public transit. Thankfully, in that situation nothing happened,
but that that can't be the default, especially for young women,
to not pay attention to what is going on around.
(29:05):
They're not trying to victimly. I'm not trying to say, hey,
if you were more careful, I'm just saying in general,
people need to be more aware of what's going on
because the system has failed us. The criminal justice system
in so many ways have failed. And I know that's
not a surprise to all of you find folks, but
get this. The suspect a guy named Lawrence Reed. He's
(29:29):
fifty years old. He allegedly filled the gasoline container twenty
minutes before his attack. Whether or not he planned to
do that, who knows what's going on the head of
these crazy people. He was charged with federal terrorism and
had fire related injuries on his hand when he was arrested.
But more importantly and specifically, he had a criminal history.
(29:55):
How shocking is that somebody with a criminal history in
Chicago up being out on the street and then commits
more crime. Well, what kind of a criminal history? You know?
Was he shoplifting as a kid? Stuffed some stuff in
his pocket, got caught. Was he vandalizing again as a kid,
did some graffiti? You know who knows? Actually we do know.
(30:16):
And while it is shocking, it's not really surprising. Lawrence Reid,
age fifty, had seventy two prior arrests with multiple felony
convictions over the last three decades. His most recent release
happened in August, where he was given an ankle monitor like, oh,
(30:38):
go ahead and be out among society, despite the fact
now he was in for assaulting a social worker, despite
the fact that the prosecutor said, hey, maybe this guy
shouldn't be out in public. The judge said, nope, we
can't keep everybody in jail because the state's attorney wants to.
(31:00):
That's that the actual drug judge said. Judge Teresa Molina
Gonzalez said during Lawrence Reid's release, I can't keep everybody
in jail just because the state's attorney wants me to.
And as a part of this whole bail reform justice whatever,
which is not justice. It's just soft on crime lunacy.
(31:24):
This guy was out on the streets able to light
some poor young woman on fire for no apparent reason.
They didn't have a prior connection. She was not doing
anything in his direction to make him to set him off,
and even if she did that, you can't respond with
lighting somebody on fire. But the bottom line here is
(31:47):
we have a problem, especially with liberal ideology, that says, oh, yeah,
this is this is mean to keep people in jail.
I know he's got seventy two prior arrests, i know
he's got multiple felony convictions. We're just so nice and
it's so mean to keep him locked up that we
(32:08):
just have to release him onto the streets now. Unfortunately,
even in spite of this, this is the mayor of Chicago,
Brandon Johnson, talking about his idea of jail and why
it's such a bad and terrible thing. And mind you,
this clip was after this horrible incident on this train.
(32:31):
This is how libs and a specific lib mayor, Brandon Johnson,
thinks that this should be handled. Watch this.
Speaker 3 (32:37):
We cannot incarcerate our way out of violence. We've already
tried that and we've ended up with the largest prison
population in the world without solving the problems of crime
and violence. The addiction on jails and incarceration in this
country we have moved past that.
Speaker 1 (32:55):
It is racist, it is immoral, it is unholy, and.
Speaker 2 (32:58):
It is not the way to drive.
Speaker 1 (33:00):
Once done, I do not care. I do not care
a single iota how many people need to go to
prison if they break the laws that we all agree on.
Build prisons, not schools. I say, I don't care if
(33:20):
forty percent of the population, if we agreed upon laws
and those laws are reasonable and just, I don't care
if forty percent of the population has to go to prison.
The only problem I can see with this is we
don't have enough prisons California. They're shutting down several prisons
in California because there's just so many that we need
(33:41):
to lessen the percentage of the population that's in prison. No,
we don't. If you don't like the laws, change the laws.
But the laws are on the books, and if you're
going to have a functional society, you need to enforce
the laws that are on the books. That doesn't mean, hey,
we just let people out of prison. Because this is
the conversation that continually goes on about prison and incarceration
(34:03):
and jail systems and so forth, is what is it
set to do? Is it supposed to rehabilitate people so
that they can be reintroduced to society. Is that its
main function or is its main function to separate the
criminals and those who have been convicted of doing wrong
(34:23):
from the rest of society. I can understand this side
of it that says, well, you know, we want to
be able to rehabilitate, and that's great, But as I
get older, I realize the priority is not to rehabilitate.
The priority is to separate the people that are willing
to commit crime from the rest of us. That's the
primary function of what the incarceration system should be, not
(34:48):
against having rehabilitation programs and not against any of that
sort of thing. But that's not the main purpose. The
main purpose is for the prison system to incarcerate folks
who would seek to do harm to me, my family,
to you, all of us law abiding citizens. That's what
the prison system is for. So when Brandon Johnson says, well,
(35:08):
it doesn't work, it hasn't lessened the crime. Okay, maybe
you haven't locked enough people up. Maybe you should try
locking more people up, Brandon, Maybe that's the case. Who
get a little heated. Let me play one more clip
for you of another individual who echoes these types of
(35:33):
ridiculous claims. It's a little bit longer.
Speaker 4 (35:35):
But watch this kill the cop in our head?
Speaker 1 (35:39):
Yeah, over and over again.
Speaker 2 (35:40):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (35:42):
People ask me this, Well, if we're not gonna have police,
what what well? What other? What is the new police
gonna look like? And I'm like, no, it's not some
new form of police.
Speaker 1 (35:52):
Though.
Speaker 4 (35:53):
Policing is about violence work, and I want to get
the violence out of it, whatever we call it. And
that doesn't mean turning social workers into violence workers, and
it doesn't mean trying to pretend that cops can be
social workers. And it also doesn't mean everything has to
be under the control of the state. If we're gonna
get police out of our lives, it's not just about
(36:15):
setting up a set of social programs. It's also about
doing that hard interpersonal work in our everyday lives.
Speaker 1 (36:24):
Oh yeah, so that's insane. That is a crazy person
with an insane take on how human beings and how
society works. But I think here's the other really interesting
element to that now, by the way, that is a
guy named Professor Alex Vittali, who is Mum Donnie's transition
team community safety dude. Actually, you know what I'm gonna
(36:49):
have to check on this during a commercial break. I
think I did a documentary where we interviewed this guy
for The Daily Caller. Actually, I'm pretty sure this is
the guy on this dude, if that's if that happens
to be the case, not not to bury the We
did documentary the Daily Caller when I was over there,
and we did one on policing, and I think my
(37:11):
flight was delayed so I didn't actually get to the interview,
and the producer interviewed this guy, not me, but I
remember this guy. More to come on him. But the
bottom line here is this. If you have the mindset of, well,
we just won't need police someday, okay, the only way
that that's possible, and it really isn't that possible, is
(37:34):
if everyone if everyone were a devout, practicing Christian. Sorry,
that's that's the only way that's feasibly possible. It's kind
of like policing is. You can probably interchange it with
socialism when it comes to the the what's it called
Ronald Reagan quote where he says socialism only works in
(37:57):
Heaven where they don't need it, and Hell, where they
already have. It could be said about policing. The only
place where police are not necessary are is heaven probably
and the only way and again this I recognize this
is not even achievable and attainable here because we know
we are falling individuals and we make up a society.
(38:17):
But the only way that you can even come close
to this is that everybody has a religious and moral
code of conduct that they themselves practice, so that enforcement
of the laws is done internally by the self and
doesn't have to be done by an external police faction.
That's the only way that this happens. And the only
(38:39):
reason I bring that up is because I guarantee you
freaking guys like this are total atheists. They're like, you know,
man can make his own morality, man can make his
own ethics. I'll guarantee you that that's the case. I
don't know specifically if that is the case for all
these people, but if I were to put money on it,
(39:00):
I would put the same amount of money on that
guy the previous clip being gay. Then I would on
this guy thinking that Christianity is a net negative and
just it's funny, it's ironic that these types of people
think that policing should go away and at the same
time are against in most cases religious formalities inside the
(39:26):
individual that would hinder or that would keep them from
committing crimes, which would then ultimately necessitate less law enforcement.
Does that make sense, But of course that's not possible,
and that's not going to happen, And we're not going
to pretend that there's some utopian world, as Karl Marx did,
that any of that is attainable. We were going to
(39:47):
look at those people, throw back our heads and laugh
if not for the fact that that guarantee you that
guy will be instrumental in the downfall of the safety
of New York City, which is a problem. It's things
given week, we're gonna we're gonna have some more fun
stuff to get to here, So stick around after the
break TPTTPUSA dot com if you want to send us
(40:08):
an email. I know those a little bits of a
lengthy dissecting of what's going on on the safety front,
but let's know what your thoughts. TPTATPUSA dot com. Also
go subscribe to our YouTube channel all of our social
media accounts. Really appreciate all you do in that because
we do an extra segment of the show each and
every day that doesn't get to air on Real America's
Voice just because we have too much stuff to get
to and too little time to get to it. So
(40:28):
TBTATPUSA dot com. We'll be right back after the break.
Speaker 2 (40:31):
Don't go away.
Speaker 1 (40:51):
Oh that's I'm mad about that. That feels like that
video that we saw in Los Angeles where the guy
had like a tree house on the side of the
street and it was like three stories high. Or the
people that have like their hammocks hanging up in a
bus station. Oh, that's even worse. That's like coveted real estate.
If you're just listening to some on the podcast, there
(41:13):
is a clip that we are coming back from commercial
to where a bunch of these homeless bums and freaking
junkies put their tents on the side of a hill
in Beverly Hills, which is again arguably one of the
nicest real estates maybe in the world, and they're just
living there for freeing a tent. Because if you're a
homeless methadic you can do anything you want. I think
(41:34):
that's actually written long the stay if you're home. If
you ever get caught doing something wrong in the state
of California, just say, don't worry, I'm a homeless drug addict,
and they'll be like, oh sure, We'll then go ahead
and do whatever you'd like. That's how we do things
in California. Where are there? What are their property taxes?
What would the property taxes be half? If they had
a house on that piece of land and people could
(41:56):
actually build there, I would be it would be astronomical.
But of course they're homeless, mathetic. They could do whatever
they want. The stay of California. Is the point of
this to put me in a bad mood? Producer Glenn, I,
honest to God, don't know where we are. We can talking
about this video I thought was fascinating. This is This
(42:19):
is a video from the New York Times. I again
subscribe to the New York Times. I read the New
York Times. I watch their videos to punish myself for
my sins and so that you don't have to. One
of the videos they put out the other day is
a video of inside after school program in Charlotte, North Carolina,
where an exorbitant amount of the population percentage wise, is
(42:41):
apparently there illegally. Again yeah crazy, But this video is
put out by the New York Times as if it's
just this horrible, disastrous thing that law enforcement is enforcing
the law. Watch how terrified and scared they all are
again possibly being caught breaking the law.
Speaker 4 (43:03):
Hi Donald, this is a leave from Oarbridge. I'm just
calling because we had a report that isis trolley on camp.
Speaker 1 (43:08):
As we were wanting to see where it could by
grounds exactly.
Speaker 5 (43:14):
This after school program in East Charlotte has been a
safe space for immigrant children.
Speaker 1 (43:19):
Yes, in the front interest.
Speaker 5 (43:21):
But today there are reports that Customs and Border Patrol
agents are approaching and.
Speaker 4 (43:25):
I'd like people down at this entrance as well to
just watch that door, do not.
Speaker 5 (43:29):
Steph rush to lock down the building.
Speaker 4 (43:31):
They do not have the right to be on this
as his private property.
Speaker 5 (43:34):
They say. This is the second day in a row
that immigration enforcement has showed up.
Speaker 1 (43:39):
We are walking up right now to a TBP siding here.
Speaker 5 (43:43):
In a statement to The Times, the Department of Homeland
Security stated it did not target a school or daycare
and denied trying to enter or make any arrests near
the building. Across Charlotte, more than three hundred and seventy
people have been arrested so far, sending large parts of
the immigrant community here into hiding. A lot of families,
(44:03):
even regardless of legal status.
Speaker 3 (44:05):
They're afraid and they're staying home.
Speaker 5 (44:07):
People aren't going to work, businesses are closing, and kids
aren't going to school. According to city officials, about twenty
percent of the city's student population was missing from school
on Monday.
Speaker 1 (44:21):
Okay, I mean there's a lot going on there. First
things First, again, I feel like we have to keep
saying this. I know you all know this, but conflating
legal immigrants with illegal limmers, this is a this is
a safe space for migrants or immigrants. Yeah, totally fine
with that being safe for them if they're in the
country legally. If you're in the country illegally, I am
(44:44):
against any place where you feel safe from being deported
from the place that you're not supposed to freaking be
I don't understand why we can't get that through the
mainstream media's head. Why we always have to Well, they're migrants, no, no, no, no,
no no. There's a different there's between legal and illegal,
and I know that everybody watching this show knows that,
(45:05):
but we continually need to have to point it out
because the lib media freaking conflates it. All is if
it's one thing. Second, the school, twenty percent of people
were absent. Twenty percent of kids were absent from school. Well,
that actually does line up with the numbers that the
administration put out that like twenty percent of the entire
(45:26):
city is very illegally So that okay, that actually makes sense.
But the idea that the lady there teaching at the
school says that, well, there's people should people are afraid
regardless of their immigration status. Yeah, because you folks scared
(45:46):
them all. I'm not afraid. My data since passed. But
he was an immigrant. He wasn't afraid. Why because he
did it the right way. None of his brothers and
sisters are afraid, you know why, because they did it
the right way. And the only reason that people would
be afraid regardless of their immigration status is if you
(46:07):
consistently tell them that they might get snatched up. That
to me is evil. Just lying to people because it
helps your political side is actually evil. I gotta take
a quick break because I want to get to this
story out of Tempe, as well as some other funny videos.
Don't don't use a fake ID, just don't do it.
(46:28):
Not a good not good for you, So don't do it.
Explain a little bit more after the break. TTTPA dot
com is the email a dress we'd like to send
us along an email We would love to get your thoughts, comments,
concerns at our email address. Also, go subscribe to our
YouTube channel, where we continually make fun of stuff like
that video there from the New York Times Turning Point tonight.
(46:49):
On YouTube. Just type in job but job ob you'll
be able to find us there. We'll be right back
after the break. Don't go away. Many going to jail
tonight talking about the homye and the gray and the black.
You know the facts. I've never been laxed.
Speaker 3 (47:07):
Everything luxury tax and everybody here getting videos. Make sure
you tell a little money in the same what's wrong
with him?
Speaker 1 (47:15):
Interesting? Okay, So that guy was just making it up
on the fly, and maybe he can be the new
spokesperson for my new Found wants to throw more people
in jail. I don't know if it's new Found, but
I think we talked about it earlier on the show.
I forget which segment that was Bill prisons not schools.
And maybe if if that's what it takes getting that
(47:36):
guy on the road to push that opinion maybe I
don't know, maybe it's worth doing. We need more people
in jail in this country. There's not too many people
in jail. Maybe we have a high percentage, but maybe
it's because there are people who are willing to break
the laws that we've all agreed on in our society,
and those people deserve to and need to be separated
from me and my family. And maybe that guy should
(47:58):
be the spokesperson for that US. Speaking of people being
locked up, a bar in Tempe, Arizona, last Thursday night
saw fifty seven officers going around nine to forty five
PM and arrested two hundred and forty nine people for
underage drinking violations. Most of them, all but three were
(48:18):
sit and released. Three of them were actually booked into jail.
I don't know if that includes the actual owner and
employees of the fine establishment. But interestingly enough, this same
bar was hit with one hundred and seventy three arrests
earlier on in the year in April. One hundred and
sixty five of those were sit and release, and eight
of them were actually booked into the Tempe City jail.
(48:40):
Bottom line, a bunch of people, several hundred folks apparently
frequent this tavern what is it called the Tempe tavern,
to which I say good as a continuing theme here
of me and maybe some of you disagree TPTATPUSA dot
(49:01):
com on the idea that more people need to be
in jail, but also specifically underage drinking is a as
an offense. Law enforcement is there to enforce the law.
And this is probably particular to me, but as a
teetotaler myself, as a semi prohibitionist, yeah, if you're not
of age, you have no business consuming liquid drugs. In
(49:24):
my opinion. Charlie also did not drink, and several people
in the Conservative Donald Trump doesn't drink either, And so
maybe this is a hot take. Maybe some of you
disagree with that. If you do, send us an email
tpt a TPUSA dot com. But I'm one hundred percent
for this. If bars are letting people in who are
not of age and allowing them to participate in the
(49:47):
elixir that is alcohol, yeah, grom in jail, that's gonna
do it for us here at TPT at turning point,
And I appreciate you tuning in. We'll see you tomorrow,
same time, same place. God bless America.