Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, everyone, it's Sophia. Welcome to work in progress.
Speaker 2 (00:16):
High whips Marties.
Speaker 1 (00:18):
As many of you know, I consider myself very blessed
to be a Californian and even more blessed to be
an Angelino. I loved growing up in LA and I
love the city for its diversity and its energy, and
its art and it's people. And as my home city
(00:38):
is being ravaged by ice and aggression coming from the
White House, I can't believe I have to even say
that out loud, but here we are. I wanted to
ask some questions of someone who has been tasked with
holding us together and tasked by us by the people.
Today's guest is none other than our esteemed Mayor Karen.
(01:00):
She serves as our forty third mayor of Los Angeles,
and prior to becoming mayor, she served in the US
House of Representatives in the thirty third and thirty seventh
district in California, also in the State Assembly, and was
the Speaker of the California State Assembly during her final term.
Karen is also an angeline. She is someone who inspires
(01:22):
me so much. She's carried her passion for public health
through her entire career. Through her many degrees, and she
has been a community organizer for nearly as long. I
don't know many emergency medicine physician assistants or clinical instructors
who have also studied philosophy, but Mayor Bass has done
it all. I so appreciate the way she looks at
(01:47):
our human responsibilities, how we show up for each other,
how we make space for each other, and how we
go farther together. So, today, as the President wants to
put a target on the city of Los Angeles is back,
I want to talk to the woman who's actually standing
in front of our city with a shield and making
sure that everyone in Los Angeles and in the surrounding
(02:11):
areas knows they're safe with us. Let's dive in with
Mayor Karen Bass. Mary Bass, thank you so much for
joining us today. It means the world to have you
call in from Los Angeles, and first and foremost, I
(02:34):
just want to thank you for all of your efforts
to hold the city together in such a fraught time
for the nation.
Speaker 3 (02:42):
Thank you, thank you, thank you. I appreciate that it
is a tough time, but you know we've been down
this road before. We'll be okay.
Speaker 1 (02:50):
But it doesn't mean that we don't fight, are we Absolutely? Absolutely?
And something I admire so much about you for folks
who might not be from our city or necessarily know
everything about your background, is that you've always been so
deeply invested in public health in California, in our city
(03:12):
of Los Angeles. You know, from Keech Medical School to
cal State University, you have leaned towards studying health and science,
and you've been a community organizer since the nineteen eighties.
You are the definition of a person who shows up
for good for their community. So I want the world
(03:35):
to know how long you've been at this before we
dive into what's happening in the present moment.
Speaker 3 (03:41):
Well, thank you, I appreciate you raising that, And I
do think that a lot of times people do not
see the centrality of health in so many social and
sonomic issues.
Speaker 1 (03:54):
Absolutely, and I think perhaps it's a great background for
the moment we find ourselves in. You know, we are
experiencing six months into this second Trump administration, so much
national trauma, with people realizing that this administration wants to
cut our health services, wants to deregulate our clean air
(04:18):
and water protections, wants to destabilize families that are low
income from having any access to things like food, I
mean basic resources, and that all speaks to public health
in our city in particular. I think it's incredibly relevant
because what folks who don't live near us might not
(04:41):
know is that one in nine Americans lives in California
and one in thirty five Americans lives in Los Angeles County.
Oh yes, I mean a massive statistic. There are forty
states in this country with less population than we have
a county. Medam Mayor, And I say that for our
(05:02):
listeners at home, just to give them the backdrop of
how big our city is and the way our city
shows up for its people, including our incredible immigrant communities,
is because these are our neighbors and our friends.
Speaker 3 (05:20):
You know that's exactly right. But I will tell you
that after serving twelve years in Congress and watching year
after year after year Republicans wanting to cut everything anything
that has to do with people who are poor, and
what I believe is at the root of it is
that they have absolutely no experience with people who are
(05:41):
struggling economically, and they get themselves out of well, you
just need to do X, Y and z not that
there's any systemic barriers, not that there's any reasons. It's
the fault of the individual. Therefore they don't deserve but
corporations deserve everything.
Speaker 1 (05:58):
Oh well, what an insane thing, isn't it that we
treat corporations like people more than people?
Speaker 2 (06:04):
You know, I think you illustrate.
Speaker 1 (06:07):
Such a beautiful point that if you're not on the ground,
if you don't know people, if you don't know their struggle,
if you've never known a family that's trying to decide
between paying rent or putting food on the table, you
might not understand what those decisions feel like. Clearly, Mike Johnson,
who's the Speaker of the House, doesn't you know he's
out there saying that their six figure salary of one
(06:27):
hundred and seventy four thousand dollars a year and free
healthcare as elected officials is not enough to support a
family in America, while he's trying to cut things like
SNAP for families that live below the poverty line. Social
services help people generate more successful lives. They don't make
(06:47):
people lazy. We know this. We know that immigrants in
our country commit crimes at far lower rates than citizens,
But for some reason, these talking points that we know
not to be true about how oh it's that guy
over there, it's his fault that you're not doing better,
(07:07):
or he's the one who took your job, or he's
someone you can't trust. They get through because fear takes hold,
especially when it's making you afraid of something irrational. Understanding
the human tendency to be afraid and what we're up
against at the federal level in terms of harm being done,
(07:32):
how does that make you, as the mayor of our
great city analyze where this kind of rhetoric is coming from.
How does it make you operate in our community? Knowing
how much we in La love all of our neighbors.
How do you kind of contextualize the misinformation they're spreading
(07:55):
about these communities? As you know, ice is moving through
Los Angeles.
Speaker 3 (08:00):
Well, you know, I think that oftentimes we do not
pay attention or even are knowledgeable of history, and so
it's very, very important to link events that are happening
today with events that happened in the past to give
people some sort of insight as to where it could go.
For me, the way I deal with it here is
(08:21):
really lifting up the reasons why people struggle because in
Los Angeles it's a very very expensive city and the
divide is massive. For example, in our city we have
sixty two billionaires. We have you know, I don't even
know how many millionaires. And so to explain to people
(08:42):
how much it costs to rent an apartment, to you know,
put gas in your car, you total those up and
paint a very real picture, and then you take away
the belief that this isn't this is the lack of
individual effort. I mean, if they just worked harder, they
would millionaire like me. And I'm a billionaire because I'm
(09:03):
so brilliant, as opposed to I inherited four hundred million
dollars from my friend and then by the way, I've
made it all by myself.
Speaker 2 (09:12):
Must be nice, honey, right.
Speaker 3 (09:16):
I think it's important to illustrate in very practical terms,
link it to history, paint a picture why people are struggling,
attach the policies that contribute to that, and then put
it in its historical context. That's the way I analyze things.
And I think it's so important because we tend to
be an in the moment culture and we don't link
(09:38):
up to the past. We don't link up to systemic structures.
We just talk about what is in front of us.
Speaker 1 (09:43):
Right, and if we don't know our history, we're doomed
to repeat it. You know, there's a reason the phrase exists.
Speaker 3 (09:49):
Absolutely.
Speaker 1 (09:50):
And now a word from our sponsors who make the
show possible. I am curious knowing the history of our
city as well as you do, having worked on advocacy
(10:10):
as well as you have. I mean, I have watched
the number of unhoused people you've gotten off the streets
and into safe housing, into restorative repair organizations in ways
that no one has been able to in the city
in so many years prior to your becoming our mayor.
(10:31):
It's it is such a massive city to understand again,
one in thirty five Americans in Los Angeles County. How
do you then work at the state level, like with
our governor, because y'all are you're doing the work, you know,
from helping us recoup from the fires to dealing with this.
(10:54):
And I can imagine, although you are not the mayor
of San Diego, when you knew ice raids began and
in San Diego, were you then in communication with the
state understanding how quickly they'd be in Los Angeles? Did
you know Los Angeles was next? Is it kind of
a guessing game with these agencies? Do they tell you anything?
Speaker 3 (11:16):
No, As a matter of fact, right now, we have
no idea how long this is going to go on.
Is it going to be every day? How many are
they going to do a day? Where is it going
to be. No, we are not knowledgeable of any of that.
In terms of other mayors, yes, mayors are in contact
with each other all the time. As a matter of fact,
once a week we meet. And that is not all
(11:36):
of the mayors in California, but it's the mayors from
the thirteenth largest cities and we byquically have an advocacy
agenda that always centers on homelessness, but there might be
other issues. So yes, Mary, Gloria and I are definitely
in regular contact. But again that is part of the
(11:57):
reason for the sense of fear and just you know, anxiety.
You are an undocumented person, You've been working every day
for twenty years, you know, supporting your family legally, and
then I go to work to them. Should I go
to this kid's school and drop them off? You know,
(12:18):
should I go to the store. I mean that level
of fear and anxiety. I mean, I think the well,
I mean, you just can't imagine it, you know, Am
I going to be walking down the street? Is somebody
gonna snatch me? You know? And so that it's exactly
your point of Are you in contact with No, they
do not communicate with us. In terms of state legislature. Yes,
(12:40):
I'm very very comfortable there. I serve there for six
years and speaker in my last two years. I have
a fine relationship with the governor. We collaborate on a
lot of things. You know. We spent the first five
months of the year collaborating on the fires, and now
we're collaborating on the presidential overreach, right.
Speaker 1 (12:59):
Well, and that's just it. The overreach is the problem.
What the president is doing is blatantly unconstitutional. It is
a violation of the law. And what frustrates me as
a constituent. You know, I'm not an elected official, but
I pay attention to politics. He would not call the
National Garden on an actual violent mob beating and killing
(13:20):
police officers and trying to kill elected officials in our
state house, right, But he sent the National Guarden against
the will of California state elected officials when protests were
still peaceful, and I'd love if you could speak to that,
because I know there's a lot of misinformation and disinformation,
(13:42):
and I know it began with certain issues around the wildfires,
and y'all have done as best you can to tell
people what the facts are. But now it seems the
misinformation is even worse because AI is powering crazy videos,
crazy images that.
Speaker 2 (13:58):
Are not real.
Speaker 1 (14:00):
So are you how are you dealing with that letting
the public know what is happening, letting people know that
prior to the escalation that began with uniformed officers, these
protests were largely peaceful.
Speaker 3 (14:17):
Well, they were largely peaceful, but even when they weren't,
it was a small amount of folks. So last Saturday night,
for example, when the President was tweeting that he led
the peace in La because the National Guard did a
splendid job, the national Guard was not even here. They
didn't arrive until the next day. And the big outburst
(14:41):
that he was talking about was about one hundred and
twenty people and twenty years arrested. And so it doesn't
make sense any way, shape or form what you're referring
to around AI. I'm actually not aware of but we
have just been communicating on every platform possible what is
actually happening and has been violence. I had to do
(15:04):
a curfew. Andalism is really what has been the most prolific,
graffiti just everywhere, and then on Monday night there was
looting of stores, and then a little bit of that
on Sunday, but on Monday it got worse. The point
is is that the National Guard is not doing any
of that. They are guarding one building. They are guarding
(15:27):
the Federal building. Anything else that's happened has happened with
local police. As local police, you know, they might have
other people with them, the share of other departments. But
I think it's always important to know why this even happened,
because one week ago today Los Angeles was completely peaceful,
(15:48):
nothing was happening. The problems started on Friday when Ice
came and did raids on several workplaces, and they also
did a high profile, pretty aggressive arrests of David Werta,
one of our beloved, well respected labor leaders. That is
what tip the whole thing off. And so it would
(16:12):
hear like it was a purposeful provocation, because again it
was fine. There was nothing happening on Thursday that warned
to Friday, and then that led into Saturday, Sunday and Monday.
So it is important to look back at the origin.
But one thing that you said that I think is
really important now this is even remembering recent history, okay,
(16:34):
is in Trump's first term, he did everything he could
to change the judiciary in terms of nominating and having
and passed judges that interestingly, we're all in around in
the same age range, which is around in their forties.
So what you said is blatantly illegal. I'm not sure
(16:56):
anymore because it a court ruling where if this it
happened six years ago, we would have said, well, I mean,
that's just ridiculous. The courts will throw that out. I mean,
we don't even need to worry about it. Oh no,
we need to worry about the courts at every level.
So it be important to remember what happened before, because
I think a lot of people would just say, I'm
(17:16):
not worried about it. It's just, you know, we can
just rely on the courts.
Speaker 1 (17:21):
Absolutely, and you know, to try to reshape a democracy's judiciary,
to give yourself monarch powers is simply an American and
it bears repeating for all of us. And you know,
something that you just said is something I really want
to noodle on for a beat for our friends at home,
(17:44):
because the provocation, as you reference, is really crucial here
when you consider again, one in thirty five Americans lives
in La County, and we know the blueprint of Project
twenty five is to weaponize the American military against our
own citizens, starting with Blue Cities, to come to the
(18:08):
biggest democratic city in America and provoke its people, enact violence,
arrest a labor leader for standing quote unquote in their way,
to raid children's graduation ceremonies, and pick up people who
and this is important as well you reference this, are
(18:30):
here legally. Being undocumented is not illegal. People who are
going through their hearings and their asylum procedures, some of
whom it takes fifteen years for are here legally. They
are doing it the right way. They are simply not
documented yet. That's why these people are being arrested at
(18:52):
their court hearings with their families. They are provoking our
people by doing harm. They are choosing cruelty. They denied
Maxine Waters her absolute congressional right to go into that
ice facility and check on David Huerta, even though it
is the law that she be allowed in They are
(19:14):
coming to our cities to act lawlessly and harm our neighbors,
to try to provoke a response. And what's interesting to
me is the protests that began, as you said, very peacefully,
even within twenty four hours. For again, one in thirty
five people in the whole country lives in LA and
(19:35):
twenty seven people got arrested.
Speaker 2 (19:37):
That's not a big deal for us. It's not a
big protest. It's a couple of people being a.
Speaker 1 (19:43):
Little squirrely and like LA has seen way bigger things happen.
And so to say that that is the reason to
deploy the National Guard when we have the LAPD at
its size and budget and resource level is simply laughable.
And I think these things really are important to hammer
(20:04):
home for our listeners so they can go out armed
with these facts and make sure they don't get bamboozled
by you know, the guy saying the National Guards saved
us on Saturday when they didn't even get there till Sunday. Like,
come on, bro, you gotta fact check yourself a little
bit here.
Speaker 3 (20:20):
Well, there is an opinion about facts, right, true?
Speaker 1 (20:24):
Yeah, you speak the truth, Madam mayor, can I ask
you a question just on a I know we're talking
about all the politics, but I'm also really worried about
our neighbors, and so to take it local for a minute, Yes,
for the folks in LA. But look, we know ice
is coming everywhere. Do you know who they're targeting is
(20:47):
Because they've said it's criminals, we know it's not. It's
mothers and fathers. It's people who are you know, out
their asylum hearings, who are upstanding residents.
Speaker 2 (20:57):
Is it strictly based on skin.
Speaker 1 (20:58):
Color and low income areas? How are they finding these
folks who pay their taxes and participate in their communities.
Speaker 3 (21:07):
Let me just say, let me make it a little worse.
You talked about people going through their asylum hearings. There
are people with green cards who are turning in, turning
up for their annual appointment, which is supposed to happen, right,
So they are definitely here legally. All they're doing is
they're checking appointment and then they get the pay and
(21:27):
maybe with their family. So if we remember, yes, we
started with violent drug dealers, gang members, and we translate
and now we're at a place where exactly what you said,
it's parents, it's people at a graduation. And I know
that ICE agents showed up near my grandson's school and
(21:49):
what they did was they snatched a couple of street
vendors selling food. I mean, again, I just have a
hard time connecting that up with the original goals. But
I know minute to the violence that has happened, that
has happened especially, I don't believe that anybody that is
doing that is actually doing it in support of the
(22:09):
immigrant community. They couldn't be now because if they supported
the immigrant community, they would not be provoking and providing
a reason quote unquote for there to be federal intervention.
And part of what I think is happening here is
that it's social media driven and those things that is
(22:31):
typical where social media gathers people to, you know, do
a street takeover or something like that. So I think
that that's really important. And then some of the other
stories I've heard people being picked up at a customer
being picked up at a car wash and his son
being left there to make his way home and take
(22:53):
care of his family. I had somebody tell me that
they went to their grocery store and the shelves were empty.
Why because people weren't showing up to work. So you
look at the economy in LUs we have very specific
sectors of our economy that cannot function without immigrant labor.
If you think about construction, if you think a bout hospitality,
(23:16):
that's just a but there's a lot of manufacturing jobs.
And by the way, the plant that was raided on
Friday was owned that was Korean owned, and the people
that were detained were both Korean and Latino. And so
one of the biggest problems that the immigrant rights organizations
(23:37):
are having. And you know, we're fortunate in LA to
have a well established, well respected immigrant rights community and
they for years and years, but they said they've never
experienced where they could not contact people. They could sell
them to their lawyers, which is, you know, to me
denying them due process. And also the family members. So
(24:00):
when you have when you know, when the raid is
happening in a in a workplace and then people start
calling their family on their cell phone and the family
shows up at the workplace watching their relatives being carted
out into who knows where they downtown, if they're in
another county, if they've been shipped off to El Salvador.
(24:22):
The latest I heard is that he's talking about taking
the people from LA and bringing them to Guantanamo. Rather
hear that too, closing Guantanamo because there's no need for
it anymore. You know, you are looking to occupy it
with as many people as possible, and just all the
money that the city of LA is having to spend,
all of the money that is being spent on the
(24:45):
military that has absolutely no role here. Do you know
if all of the soldiers that he's talking about are
rolled out into our city, do you know there will
be more military in Los Angeles than remains today in Iraq?
And so those kind of things are just really really
crazy that it's happening. And talk about creating a sense
(25:07):
of fear and terror. But I do feel like that
we're a test case. I think they're like, you know,
flood the zone with little strategy and tactic, and let's
see how it plays with the American people. Let's see
how it plays in Los Angeles. But the trap you're
kind of in is that if people rebel too much,
then that becomes the pretense. Well, let's roll troops. The
(25:29):
other thing. I think that's so important, and I love
what you're saying in terms of one of thirty five people,
I'm I am going to have to use that. I
think I think that is great. But when you look
at our city that is five hundred square miles, protests
occupy about four or five streets, yes, maybe maybe a
(25:50):
square mile. The curfew that I impose covers about six
square miles. That's for a curfew six square miles out
of five.
Speaker 1 (26:01):
Yes, the.
Speaker 3 (26:04):
Unrest of vandalism has been about five streets.
Speaker 2 (26:08):
Yes.
Speaker 3 (26:09):
So the portrayal on TV and this isn't even AI.
The portrayal on the news, especially the national news, is
that there's massive civil unrest happening. I mean, what did
Trump say? The city would have burnt down? The city
would have been, you know in had he not saved
the day. And I'm going to go back to the
fact that the National Guard is guarding one building. The
(26:33):
police response has been Los Angeles police departments, sheriffs and
other adjacent departments that are providing mutual aid. It is
not necessary to one take power away from the governor
and federalize the National Guard. Now, anytime we have needed
the National Guard, the governor is right there and will
(26:54):
Cootate wholeheartedly as he did in the Fires and our
play incredible role everybody, tremendous fans of the National Saintsary.
Speaker 1 (27:06):
Well, but I think there's also something let's let's be
practical as well. When you actually respect our armed services,
you don't want to waste their time, right you don't.
You don't want them bust into a city with no lodging,
no food, no water, you know. For the President of
the United States to send our military around like their props,
(27:28):
like they're you know, uh, extras on the set of
his reality TV show is really, for me, incredibly disrespectful.
Not only is it incendiary for the city, Not only
is it inflammatory, not only is it you know, absolutely fascist.
It's disrespectful to the men and women wearing those.
Speaker 3 (27:50):
Uniforms exactly, and it's an unnecessary deployment. But let's talk
about the military for a quick second. The military is
trained to fight wars on foreign soil. Yes, they do
not arrests, They do not do crowd control, they don't
do any of that. So what is was here? Is
it to turn the military on the American people. Do
(28:13):
Angelinos need to be shot? I don't understand it. So
when you say a prop I just don't know any
other way of looking at these things.
Speaker 1 (28:23):
And now a word from our sponsors.
Speaker 2 (28:33):
Can I ask you about this?
Speaker 1 (28:35):
I'm very curious and listen to be clear, for folks
at home, you know, there were deportations at these numbers
and sometimes higher in the Obama administration, in the Clinton administration,
our government does track folks. And yes, I think we
(28:57):
all agree, no matter how we vote, if there's a
danger criminal in the country that's not supposed to be here,
get them out. But people's moms and dads and children.
This is not acceptable.
Speaker 2 (29:10):
Why Why do you think.
Speaker 1 (29:14):
This is causing such chaos when other presidents have also
worked with federal enforcement. Is it different because it's meant
to be a fear tactic.
Speaker 3 (29:26):
Well, I think it is different because it's meant to
be a fear tactic like you described. But I think
it's also the aggressiveness that they have used, the fanfare
that accompanies it, the rhetoric that accompanies it from DC.
You know, if you're out describing our city as overrun
by migrants, a city that absolute chaos. You know, when
(29:51):
you do things like that, it leaves people with well, okay,
this is the reason why it's being done. So you right,
I mean a lot of peop people were deported under
President Obama, President Biden. What I am not sure of
personally is how that was carried out. But what I'm
absolutely sure of is the rhetoric that did not take
(30:12):
place on.
Speaker 1 (30:12):
This Yeah, we weren't trying to demonize folks.
Speaker 3 (30:16):
The demonizing of people who are in this country, the
demonizing of people who I mean, they've gone from violent
felons to saying anybody that's in the country is illegal,
you know, if they came here. Now, I heard the
news today that he's offering five million dollar Trump cards.
I don't know how he did it. You heard that,
but the Trump if you pay five million dollars, you
(30:39):
get a gold card and you get entry into the country,
right to bring you know, sixty seven or to invite
sixty seven thousand people from South Africa to come here.
It's clear that some people are welcome and some people aren't.
But it is so bizarre is that if you were
to expel every undocumented person, our person who was in
(31:03):
wobbly status, the city would.
Speaker 2 (31:05):
Stop, well, the nation would stop.
Speaker 3 (31:08):
Who would do childcare? I don't know who gardening, landscaping,
and childcare I'm referring to as nannies, people and homes.
I don't know who's going to do that work. And
maybe there's other people that could do that work, but
they're not going to be found immediately at such massive.
Speaker 2 (31:26):
Numbers, exactly.
Speaker 1 (31:27):
And by the way, I just want to clarify, it's
not that our immigrant communities are only valuable to us
because of the work they do. It's that the work
they do is invaluable. These are our neighbors, These are
our friends, and they are also integral parts of our society,
our communities, our neighborhoods, our cities, our states, this country.
(31:48):
You know, I don't think to your point, people would
have a clue how to deal with the vacuum in
this society. Were all of these people suddenly gone from
our country, and why would we want them to be?
Speaker 3 (32:03):
Right? Who's going to rebuild the cities? You know, who's
going to rebuild the five hundred thousand units of housing
that we need in Los Angeles. Who's going to take
care of people in hotels and restaurants? Who's going to
do that work? So what he is doing is an
absolute blow to our economy. And understand, it's not so
(32:24):
much the numbers, because we don't even know the numbers.
I have heard now that three hundred people are detained. Okay,
that's a relatively small number considering our population at three
point eight. However, when you do things like this, then
people don't want to go to work, they're afraid to work.
In the first administration of kids didn't want to go
(32:46):
to school, parents didn't want to go to work. They
were paralyzed. So it's the intentional drama that is inflicted
on the city and is inflicted on our population to
say any day we can cold come get you. Don't
but I don't know your house isn't isn't sacred. We'll
come to your house to get you, right, am I
(33:06):
on the list? Is it going to happen to me? Well,
they take one of my children. You know, you saw
the nine year old that got his father was being deported.
And what they've said in this administration is, well, no,
we're not going to separate families. If if you are
of mixed status, then you all.
Speaker 1 (33:24):
Go yeah, well, and they're they're deporting you as citizens.
They're they're deporting our kids. Now it's a lot. Look,
it's a lot that's heavy. I was going to ask
you about you know, what folks should do if a
family member is picked up by ice, who should they call?
But part of the strategy, as you said earlier, is
(33:45):
to ensure that people don't know how to communicate with
their loved ones. And really the overarching feeling that it
seems the administration wants us all to be racked with
is fear, uncertainty, not knowing the answer to these questions.
(34:05):
As a leader of the city and also a community
organizer with decades of getting people together for good under
your belt. For those folks that are scared to go
to work, scared to walk the streets, scared of what
neighbors they can trust. For those of us who want
to know how to defend our neighbors, what do you
(34:29):
want us to know right now?
Speaker 3 (34:30):
Well, I will tell you the most important thing is
for people to be well informed about their rights, which
you could sertain find on the city's website, but you
could also find on the website of organizations like Shirla
that provide that information and also to know your rights,
like for example, if I showed up at the house,
(34:52):
I don't have to open the door, what do they have?
And so knowing the specific questions to answer is what
people need to make sure that they're well educated about.
Thank you and you, thank you, thank you. I appreciate
the time on your.
Speaker 1 (35:09):
Show absolutely, Thank you so much for joining us. Please
go be well, be safe, and thank you for holding
the line.
Speaker 3 (35:20):
Well. I appreciate it. I am going to continue to
do this. I know that this time will pass and
one in thirty five. I got it.
Speaker 1 (35:28):
It's pretty great in La County, right, I was like, oh, okay.
Speaker 3 (35:32):
All right, it's been wonderful to speak to you, so
thank you so much and thank you for your kind
words and support. It means a lot right about now.
Speaker 1 (35:41):
Always thank you so much for what you do for
our city.
Speaker 3 (35:43):
Mayor Okay, bye, bye bye