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May 19, 2026 38 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Six one seven two six six, sixty eight sixty.

Speaker 2 (00:03):
Eight is the number.

Speaker 1 (00:05):
Should parents be held legally responsible for the actions of
their teenage children? Janine Piro, the US Attorney for the
District of Columbia, says yes, and now in response to
this epidemic, and it is now an epidemic of what
are called teenage takeovers, where you have mobs of young

(00:29):
people fifteen, sixteen, seventeen years old going into establishments, businesses, pharmacies, restaurants,
and I mean they are just they're fighting with each other, brawling,
terrorizing the customers, the patrons, destroying everything in sight and
then moving on business to business, establishment to establishment. She

(00:53):
says she's had enough. She's not only going to throw
these young people in prison, She's now going to hold
the parents responsible for neglect and lack of parenting and supervision, saying,
if you're not going to do your job, then we're
going to do hours and start putting you in jail
for your failure to properly parent and watch over your child.

(01:16):
And so she now says the parents are going to
be fined, some will be forced to take mandatory classes,
and if they're not careful, some will be charged on
contributing to the delinquency of a minor and they could
spend up to six months in jail. Agree, disagree. Let's
go back to Chris in Tampa Bay. He said that

(01:39):
he had an altercation. The police brought him home, his
father gave him a good spanking right on the butt.
And then, when he was a little bit older, at sixteen,
flexing his muscles, he called his mother a blanking b bitch,
the B word, and Chris, please pick up where you

(02:03):
left off. So you called your mother a bee? And
then what.

Speaker 3 (02:07):
My dad heard it? And he called me into the
living room and he was standing up and he said,
he said, very nonchalantly, what did you call your mother?

Speaker 4 (02:18):
I says, what he said?

Speaker 3 (02:21):
You heard me? What did you call your mother? I
told him? And because I was six foot one, one
hundred and eighty five pounds, could no longer spank me.
So what did he What do you think he did?
He punched me, Jeff, He punched me hard. I hit
the deck and I was right in front of the bathroom.
It was summertime and the windows were open.

Speaker 2 (02:47):
My mic, what just happened? Chris? Are you there?

Speaker 1 (02:54):
I think Chris, Chris just put us on hold by accident.
I'm serious. Sorry, I don't mean to laugh, but it's
just and then he puts us on hold. So but
I guess I'll let's put it this way. I think
he never called his mother a name an insult. Ever, again,

(03:17):
my dad would have given me an open hand slap.
He would not have punched me, but I'm telling you,
it would have been an open hand slap to the
face probably once, maybe even twice or three times. It
would have been like bang, bang bang. And then he
would have threatened to kick me out of the house.

(03:37):
And I mean he would. I mean, he had a temper.
I mean you could you know, the whole house could
hear him yell and scream. I mean, and you know,
it's you know what it is. It's not so much
of the blow that bothers you. I mean, of course
it hurts, you know, an open hand slap to the
face that hurts, you know, for my father, But it's

(04:00):
the humiliation. It's that you're sixteen seventeen and now you're
like being spanked because you're such a jerk, and deep
down you know you're wrong, and so you're also shamed
in the process. And when you see how angry your

(04:21):
parents are. You can see how much you've disappointed them.

Speaker 2 (04:25):
So it's sort.

Speaker 1 (04:26):
Of emotional, it's psychological, it's also physical. But the point
is there were, you know, consequences to your actions. Now nothing. Honestly,
they defend the kids. I mean, I'm gonna play you
cuts from Janine Piro. The parents are coming out and saying, so,
let me ask all of you if you out of fourteen, fifteen, sixteen,

(04:50):
seventeen year old child, boy or girl, it doesn't matter.
And they start going around beating each other up. I'm
talking really just slugging each other and kicking, choking, and
then they're destroying a restaurant and they're throwing chairs, and
they're threatening to hurt, you know, hurt innocent people, including

(05:13):
two three year old children, babies, And this was your child.
Would your response be that my little Jenny or my
little Jimmy doesn't have enough after school programs to distract
him or her, that there just isn't enough extra curricular

(05:34):
that's what they're saying. There's not enough extra curricular activities
for these kids to do. And so she has to
come out with a list paid for by taxpayers. By
the way, that includes you and me about I mean,
dozens and dozens of things that these kids could be
doing paid for by the taxpayer, you know, from the

(05:58):
local YMCA, to just go on all kinds of clubs.
I mean, you name it, okay, the chess club, that whatever,
every freaking club under the sun.

Speaker 2 (06:09):
And she's like, do any of this.

Speaker 1 (06:14):
But the point is the parents are like, well, they
don't have enough to do.

Speaker 2 (06:20):
That's why they're doing what they're doing.

Speaker 1 (06:24):
Instead of hey, come here, come here, come here, You're
never gonna do this again, do you understand anyway, Look,
my dad, first of all, I would be spanked. I
mean it doesn't matter if I'm sixteen or seventeen or whatever.

Speaker 2 (06:40):
Spanked.

Speaker 1 (06:40):
He would have hit me, as I said, a couple times.
He would have yelled, he would have screamed. It would
have been World War three in the house. He would
have personally brought me to the restaurant, made me apologize
to the owner, and then made sure that I there
and helped clean it up completely. And my dad would
pay for the damage. And then he would tell me

(07:01):
to get a job to pay him back for the damages. Okay,
just very quickly, I want to go to market New Hampshire.
But this is Janine Piro, and you can tell you
can almost see the smoke coming out of her ears.
I mean, she really is at the end of her rope,
saying enough is enough. We're going to start prosecuting, We're
going to start jailing, we're going to go after these teenagers.

(07:25):
We're going to restore law and order. But we're also
now going to start targeting to parents. Listen now to
Janine Piro saying that the parents are complaining. This is
what I find incredible. Don't blame my child for beating
an old lady to a pulp, or don't blame my

(07:45):
child because he was spotted on a video throwing a
chair all the way across at Chipotle and smashing some
customer in the head. No, no, no, no, he doesn't have
enough to do on his spare time. In other words,

(08:06):
blame society. He just where are the programs? Where are
the extracurricular activities? My son is bored, That's why he's
doing this. Roll cut one hundred Mike. They're coming out.

Speaker 5 (08:25):
And they're in Bolden for whatever reason, and it's time
to let them know that that's not going to serve them. Well,
and the truth is, these kids, these teens, if you
want to call them kids, they need to find something
productive to do. Yes, and parents, that's your job.

Speaker 2 (08:44):
That's not our job.

Speaker 1 (08:46):
Yes, yes, I don't know, get a job ah ah,
As I said earlier, I don't know.

Speaker 2 (08:54):
Maybe do your homework. Ah.

Speaker 1 (08:58):
You know, I'm just saying I'm not a big fan
of video games. But okay, after school, I don't know,
or seven eight o'clock at night after dinner instead of
going out and I don't know, smashing up on McDonald's
and putting somebody in the hospital. Maybe I don't know,
play video games. If you have to read a book,
watch TV, work out a million things.

Speaker 4 (09:22):
You know.

Speaker 1 (09:23):
Whatever they got iPads iPhones is to watch the iPhone
listen to music. I don't know what else to tell you,
So listen out to this. So she goes to the parents.
The parents are like, well, no, I have nothing to do.
Oh my god, what are they gonna do? So she says, Okay,
this is what we're paying to give your children all

(09:46):
kinds of extracurricular after school programs so they have nothing
to do. Really, roll cut one hundred a mike and
I am sick and.

Speaker 5 (09:58):
Tired of people saying to me, all the teams have
nothing to do.

Speaker 2 (10:02):
Yes, they do.

Speaker 5 (10:04):
The Department of Parks and Recreation has over seventeen hundred
individual programs for teens and parents. Take advantage of this
and have your kids get involved in everything from basketball, baseball, boxing, tennis, ballet, cheerleading, kickball,

(10:25):
track and field.

Speaker 2 (10:27):
She goes on and on.

Speaker 1 (10:28):
I'm not kidding, Chess club, Dungeons and Dragons Club. I
mean it goes it goes on and on and on
and on. And you know, how about just get a
job and instead of trashing the Chipotle, work at the Chipotle,
instead of trashing the McDonald's, work at the McDonald's. Uh,

(10:50):
put a little money in your pocket, get some responsibility. No,
Instead again, bames, blame society, blame the government. In other
word word, it's never blamed themselves. Mark in New Hampshire,
Thanks for holding Mark and welcome.

Speaker 6 (11:10):
Good morning buddy, Mark.

Speaker 2 (11:11):
How are you, my friend, warm.

Speaker 6 (11:15):
And enjoying a beautiful sunny day? Jeff, you know it's great. Hey,
A couple of quick things. First off, what's gonna happen
when this mob of kids goes into the wrong store
and the shop owner feels threatened and the size to
unload with his nine millimeter God forbid. But it's gonna
happen sooner or later, Jeff. The guy's gonna defend himself,

(11:38):
and you're gonna have a half a dozen dead kids
because they were stupid. You know, that's my first year.
You want, you want to talk about riots, it would
be madness. But the broader picture though, Jeff. You you touched
on it, Fotherolessness is a plague, and it's uncomfortable and

(12:01):
people might not want to hear it, Jeff. But there's
a common denominator in all these team takeovers Jeff. And
there is a cultural problem among certain communities Jeff, where
this stuff is either endorsed or thought of as funny,
thought of as as you know, a right of passage.

Speaker 2 (12:23):
You know.

Speaker 6 (12:24):
Fatherlessness, Jeff, is such a plague in one particular community Jeff,
where you know civil rights, Pre civil rights, fatherlessness was
like twenty percent. Now it's over seventy. You look at
every study that's been done, Jeff, eighty five percent of

(12:46):
use that are in juvenile detention come from fatherless homes.
Over seventy percent of high school dropouts come from fatherless homes.
You know, girls who are grow up close to their
fathers are percent less likely to get pregnant as a teenager.
You want to know what the issue is, it's fatherlessness.

(13:07):
And it's this society and culture that has turned people
away from being fathers. They look at fathers as a joke,
They look at fathers as unnecessary. Look at every TV show,
every sitcom. Fathers are made to be bumbling morons, I
can't do anything right, and and they wholeheartedly knock fathers.

(13:29):
They say, Wow, single mothers are just as good. Single
mothers are smarter. If they're smarter, why are they single?
Why do they make the bad choices to get involved
with these with these scumbags. Clearly it's it's a problem, Jeff.
And fatherlessness is the biggest contributing factor. I mean, you're
you're there. They're four times more likely to be to

(13:51):
live in poverty in a single parent hole, you know,
and that leads to everything because they just they can't
survive out in society without having a father in that home.
You know, if that was one of my kids that
did that, Jeff, the next day, he'd be there cleaning
that place. He'd be there giving me the names of

(14:13):
every single kid that was in there. Otherwise he'd be
sore for about a month. You know, this crap has
to end, and the only way we can make a
fundamental change is by getting away from this stigma of
it's okay, just have your babies, we'll take care of you.
It puts these kids behind the eight ball more so

(14:35):
than they already are. And it's disgusting, and it's endorsed
by the left and by politicians and by Hollywood and
by the media who say single mothers are heroes. Look,
I'm all for I love the moms to try to
raise their kids, okay, but having a father in the
home is more valuable than anything.

Speaker 1 (14:58):
Mark, what do you think about to masculinity, this push
now by feminists in high school, in colleges, in universities,
across Hollywood, popular culture, that it's tied into this attack
on fatherhood, that if you're just a man, if you're manly,
that somehow that's toxic. It's dangerous. That we don't want

(15:20):
men in families, we don't want men in society. We
want men to be neutered, to be feminized. Is that
a problem as well?

Speaker 6 (15:33):
And that's one of the biggest problems. You know, you
see these people out there screaming, Oh, you're raising your
child to be a man. Yes, i am. I'm raising
my child. I'm raising my boys to be strong, to
look out for other people who can't look out for themselves,
who would step up if needed, you know, who would
take responsibility for their actions. I'm not going to raise

(15:56):
you know, these mellie mouthed, little whoosy boys that are
going to sit back and say, oh, just video what
I can't get involved. If my boys see something wrong,
they're going to step up and try and help. And
they I don't know what it is about people that
sit here and say, oh, masculinity is so bad. Yeah,
you know what. Masculinity is what built this country. Masculinity

(16:17):
is what keeps this country safe. And for these clowns
to run around spewing this garbage, all it does is
can contribute the downfall of so many of these these poor,
you know, black and minority kids who are already struggling
to get through this world. And by taking fathers out

(16:38):
and pulling them out of the homes and saying we
don't need you, it's a it's a baldfaced lie Jet.
They one hundred percent need their father.

Speaker 1 (16:47):
Oh amen, Mark Dynamite, outstanding call. I think you hit
the nail right on the head and you take the
father out of the home. And that's what they did
with the great society that was LBJ, the Democrats and
their push on welfare. You can text the cooner Man
seven zero four seven zero seven zero four seven zero.

Speaker 2 (17:09):
This is from seven to eight one. Jeff.

Speaker 1 (17:14):
Archie Bunker was the first TV dad portrayed as an
idiot dad. You know, that's a very good point seven
eight one, that is true. And remember they made him
like this conservative, Nixon loving buffoon, arch concern you arch patriot,

(17:36):
you know, Republican, and of course you know he was
a racist and a bigot and a homophobe and a sexist.
And I mean they turned the guy into you know,
the second Coming of the KKK. I mean, it was
a well written show. It was a very well acted show.
That's where meathead Rob Reiner got his big break and
became well known across the country. But you're right, it

(17:59):
was a very anti conservative and anti male, especially anti
father show. I mean, Archie Bunker was he was the
epitome of evil. So you're dead on. You're absolutely dead on.

Speaker 4 (18:14):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (18:14):
This is from six to.

Speaker 1 (18:15):
Oh three And apparently there are six to oh three
is coming to Sandy's defense for referring to Chipotle as Chipotle.
So this is this is what six oh three wrote Jeff,
just a couple of points first off, in Sandy's defense.
Ever since Chipotele came into the American lexicon, there have

(18:39):
been five or six different ways to pronounce it. It took
about two years for the public to finally settle on
the way you pronounce it, which, by the way, is
a miracle that you don't butcher it like you do
other names.

Speaker 2 (18:56):
But let that go. It'say that dig ah what you buddies.

Speaker 1 (19:01):
With mic or something six oh three look at that
dig But anyway, personally, I don't think sitting in a
jail cell for any period of time will make a
dang bit of difference in these teens' lives. We have
a lot of litter on the sides of our roads,
lots of potholes that need filling. If I were the judge,

(19:23):
I would put these teens in pink jumpsuits and put
them to work publicly. Idle hands are the devil's workshop.
So give those hands in mind something productive to do.

Speaker 2 (19:40):
God puts sweat.

Speaker 1 (19:42):
In a man's body to cleanse his soul through hard work.

Speaker 2 (19:48):
Interesting.

Speaker 1 (19:50):
So six' oh three is, saying don't put these teenage
punks and thugs you know who are involved in these teen.
Takeovers lock them up for six months or a year or.
Whatever they'll probably just turn them into even worse. Criminals he's, saying.

Speaker 2 (20:06):
No put them to.

Speaker 1 (20:07):
Work community, service public, works phil potholes is hard, work
by the.

Speaker 2 (20:15):
Way put them to, work you.

Speaker 1 (20:18):
Know let them clean the, roads clean the, sidewalks go
out there and beautify the. Community put them to, work
and maybe a they'll get some, skills and b maybe
they don't want to do it again because they don't
want to do six months to a year of hard
labor and hard.

Speaker 2 (20:38):
Work and maybe.

Speaker 1 (20:40):
It'll straighten them out and teach them hard work and
discipline and a good you, know good work, ethic and
some self reliance and personal. Responsibility so let me throw
this on the. Table is the, answer not putting them in,
jail but putting them to. Work six one seven two

(21:01):
six six sixty eight sixty. Eight maggie In, amesbury thanks
for Holding maggie and.

Speaker 4 (21:09):
Welcome good, Morning.

Speaker 2 (21:11):
Jeff Hi, Maggie.

Speaker 7 (21:13):
HI i agree with most of the callers And judge Pierro,
uh but one. CAVEAT i would say, that don't paint
parents with a broad. Brush look at the evidence in each.
Case AND i say that because my parents RAISED i
had great parents who raised nine of. Us eight of

(21:34):
us were successful and one was troubled from day, one
and my dad and mom did everything with my. Sister
she would sneak out of the. House my dad would
drive around the town looking for. Her he went to
court with her time after, time trying to help. Her
they tried, therapy. Everything SO i Guess i'm just saying,

(21:54):
that don't think that it's always the. Parents in many,
cases you parents are, helpable AND i do believe should
be held. RESPONSIBLE i love the idea of putting kids to,
work but there are sometimes kids that are so troubled
mentally or get in the wrong, crowd and parents do
everything for them and they still can do bad. Things

(22:18):
so that's ALL i. Say with the, CAVEAT i don't
disagree With Judge.

Speaker 2 (22:21):
NO i hear, YOU i hear. You, Look.

Speaker 1 (22:23):
Maggie just to reinforce what you're, saying you, know we
used to call it a bad. Seed that's that's the
term that we used to. Use and in other, words
it's just a bad. Seed it's not the mother or the.
Father it's and you, know your, EXAMPLE i think is
is an excellent one where they, go, look there were
in your, case nine, kids but usually be like there's

(22:44):
four or, five six. Children all of them turned out,
great one. Didn't parents didn't do anything. Different it's just
they they have free will and they just make consistently bad.
Decisions it's very. Sad it's very, tragic, honestly for the.
Family it's usually. Heartbreaking It's kelly with the previous. Caller

(23:06):
kelly said about her. Brother, LOOK i know this BECAUSE
i have. These this is family back in the old.
Country my mother's older, sister lovely, woman honestly, pious church.
Going you couldn't get a better mother than. Her and
her husband, were you, know very good parents they, were
and they had, multiple multiple. Children all of them turned

(23:28):
out great except, one the, oldest and he was always a,
problem like since he was, young always a, problem and
the parents tore their hair, out like what did we do?
Wrong and my mother would, say you didn't do anything.
Wrong you disciplined them like you did the other. Children
you loved them the way you did the other. Children

(23:49):
you took care of them the way you did the other,
children every step of the. Way the guy made every
single wrong, decision and he eventually got Into he got into.
Alcohol he became an. Alcoholic he ended up having one
broken marriage and a second broken. Marriage you had children
out of. WEDLOCK i, mean he was like the family black.

Speaker 2 (24:11):
Sheep BUT i remember when.

Speaker 1 (24:15):
We used to take me back to the old country
to you, know And i'd visit my. FAMILY i never liked.

Speaker 2 (24:20):
Him the other.

Speaker 1 (24:21):
KIDS i loved his, siblings loved, them they were. Great
him there was something always very dark in his. Eyes
SO i don't know if it was undiagnosed mental health.
ISSUES i, MEAN i don't. Know ALL i can just
tell you by his actions and his. Behavior he was
a bad. Seed AND i Think, maggie to be fair

(24:42):
To Janine piro in your case as an, example or
In kelly's, case you, know she wouldn't, say, well, look
here's a, stable two parent, home multiple. Children the children
are well, raised well brought. Up you got one trouble
maker and the parents are there, supervising you, know going accurt.

Speaker 2 (25:05):
Looking for the.

Speaker 1 (25:06):
Child she's not Gonna what she's talking about is you've
got parents that are not. Home where are they she doesn't,
know nobody. Knows probably doing drugs or off with their,
boyfriend you, know rolling in the, hay or they're dropping
them off to meet up with their friends so they

(25:29):
can do the team. Takeovers so what she's saying, is,
look it's complete. Neglect it's complete lack of, supervision it's
complete lack of, care and you're almost aiding and enabling your.
Kid and that's why she's furious because she, says, look

(25:49):
instead of Saying i'm gonna Give junior a good whack
in the back of the head or a good kick
in the, pants And i'm going to straighten them out
or do the BEST i, can or can you help
me straighten my son, out they come to her and, say,
Well junior doesn't have enough to.

Speaker 4 (26:07):
Do.

Speaker 1 (26:09):
Almost as if it's her fault or government's fault or society's.

Speaker 2 (26:13):
Fault and that's why she's, saying, no you're not.

Speaker 1 (26:15):
Parenting if you come to us for, help we can
sign them up into any, program we can help them
get a. Job we can help them with, tutoring we
can after school, programs before school. Programs we can do
so much for your. CHILD i need you to come
to us like you got a. Care SO i think

(26:38):
what she's talking about is this is complete and utter
indifference and. Neglect usually there's no father, period and the
mother is technically in the, home but is really not
in the, home or she's probably doing drugs. Herself that's
WHAT i think she's really getting. At you, know she's

(26:59):
not getting in To maggie And. Amesbury nine beautiful. Children
eight turned out. Great one just you, know was a you,
know the black, sheep you, know a rotten, egg, whatever
a bad seed that everybody knows that that's free. Will
what you, choose what you. DO i remember a guy

(27:19):
called this show once and it tore him. Up he
was Of irish, Descent Irish, american and he, said you,
Know jeff talking about welfare and he, said you, KNOW
i have six. Children my wife AND i raised. Them
we raised them to, work to be personally, responsible self,
reliant never take a. Handout five of them turned out,
Great so proud of, them every single one of. Them

(27:43):
BUT i have this, daughter ever since she was like
twelve years. Old, though she just won't freaking.

Speaker 2 (27:49):
WORK i don't know what to tell.

Speaker 1 (27:52):
You he, goes she just, won't and we punish her
and we shame, her and we push, her and and
then she got with a boyfriend and she's sitting on
her rear end all day and she's smoking weed and
Watching Jerry springer and just wants to collect the government.
Check and we're killing, ourselves, like what did we do?

(28:12):
Wrong AND i, said, listen you didn't do anything. Wrong
sloth is one of the seven deadly. Sins there are deadly.
Sins people have free, will and some, kids no matter
how well you raise, them it's not. You they just
choose to do.

Speaker 2 (28:31):
Bad it's.

Speaker 1 (28:33):
Heartbreaking but, look obviously you got six five turned out.
Great it's not, you it's. Her and sloth is a deadly.
Sin SO i think a lot of it is just
we have to just accept that some of our children
will break our heart and choose. Wrong but that's not
What Jeanine piro is. Saying Janine piro is not, Saying,

(28:54):
Hey Ashton cooner goes out and punches somebody in the,
face and, suddenly Now Jeff cooner is going to be held. Responsible,
No If Ashton kooner is consistently punching someone in the
face and terrorizing students at school and committing crime after
crime after crime after, crime and daddy doesn't care and

(29:15):
mommy doesn't care and nobody's doing, anything, well, no we're
going to start to hold you. Accountable so it's almost
like a plea for. Desperation no to, Me, Maggie and
you may disagree with. Me how the hell did things
get so bad so?

Speaker 3 (29:31):
Quick?

Speaker 1 (29:34):
AGAIN i don't want to do the whole you, know
WHEN i was growing, up BUT i mean to be dragged.

Speaker 2 (29:39):
To the principal's office was a source of shame to the.

Speaker 1 (29:45):
Parents forget the, child to be arrested was a source of.
Shame to go on welfare was a source of. Shame
now sometimes yeah have TO i get. It but you,
know my, MOM i have enabled bodied, SON i have
an able body, daughter doesn't want to, work goes on.

(30:06):
Welfare the parents were. Ashamed never, Mind we're gonna go
out and beat the hell out of an eighty five
year old woman and terrorize a two year old baby
and grab the high chair and start smashing it over
the head of the. Father, AH i, mean it'd Be

(30:27):
World war three in the. House and instead they're, like,
eh the, government where's the? Government, well you, know not
enough programs for My jimmy and on video and the
girls are taping and laughing and giggling like it's, fun it's. Entertainment,

(30:48):
ah look, look kick.

Speaker 2 (30:49):
Them in the, head whoo.

Speaker 1 (30:51):
Whoo and you got some you, know some forty year
old father on the. Ground they just kick them right
in a. Skull they're, like whoa who and the girls are.
Laughing there's no, conscience there's no right and. Wrong i'm,
sorry they're not. Civilized this is. Barbaric there's no, morality

(31:16):
there's no sense of. Empathy this is a human. Being
you're smashing their skull. In what is wrong with? You
it's almost like a generation of, Sociopaths and so what
are you going to? Do Janine piro is, like IF
i got to start arresting the, Parents i'm gonna arrest the. Parents,

(31:37):
basically everyone's throwing up their. Hands what do you want to?
Do but put the military on the, streets like is
that you know? What do we have tanks sat in
front Of. Chipotle's so they're trying to get the parents
to wake up and, say, look come, on your child
is out of control and if you won't rain them,
in we.

Speaker 3 (31:57):
Will.

Speaker 1 (31:59):
Maggie final word to, you what say you with?

Speaker 3 (32:04):
You?

Speaker 7 (32:04):
Jeff in some cases parents should be held. Accountable and
in reference TO i think a text that you got
the one thing my mom and dad always said about my.
Sister she did better when she had a. Purpose SO
i do, agree round the kids, up put them to,
work let them know what hard life. Is but, yes

(32:24):
in some cases the parents need to be held.

Speaker 2 (32:26):
Accountable, maggie thank you very much for that.

Speaker 1 (32:28):
Call And, NO i got to tell you that text
has really influenced. Me after I've i'm, like you, KNOW
i like. That, uh give them a, purpose give them a,
meaning give Him and by the, WAY i would pay.
THEM i noticed this. Contrent i'm not saying you pay,
THEM i don't, know fifty bucks an. Hour and now you're, saying, Well,
jeff they're. Criminals you, know they just assaulted, someone they're
you know. Whatever a, year six months they got to,

(32:50):
do like you, know mandatory. Work i'd like for them
to have a little money in their pocket to teach
them the dignity of.

Speaker 2 (32:57):
Work, hey, look, work you work, hard you make.

Speaker 1 (33:02):
Money isn't it nice to make, money to properly earn,
It to come home after a, good productive day's work and, say.

Speaker 2 (33:10):
You know, WHAT i cleaned up that. Park, hey you know,
WHAT i filled that.

Speaker 1 (33:15):
Pothole, HEY i took all of these you, know discarded
used drug needles from all these you, know heroin.

Speaker 2 (33:24):
ADDICTS i took that off the. Streets Like i'm doing.

Speaker 1 (33:27):
Good i'm doing something positive in the world in my,
community for my. Neighborhood And i'm also making and it's hard,
work but it's rewarding, work and there's some money in my.
Pocket so they come out with appreciating the dignity of,
work and they actually have a. Skill they can go

(33:51):
to an employer and, say, well, LOOK i showed up
to work every day nine to five or, whatever eight
thirty to, six whatever it, is AND i worked hard
AND i did my, job AND i completed all my.
Tasks and you, Know i'm a responsible worker AND i
can work with. OTHERS i, mean there's so many skills they.
Gain so What i'm saying IS i like that idea a.

(34:12):
Lot with some they're so, violent they're so, dangerous you
got to put them buying, bars but others not. Probation
not make, excuses you, know not all Poor johnny or Poor.
Jimmy and put them back out on the. Streets, no
put him to. Work i'm with, you rob in debt.
Him thanks for Holding rob and Welcome.

Speaker 4 (34:38):
Jeff, yeah, Rubbody, hey what's? Happening? Brother this is just
wilding two point zero back in the. Eighties these, kids
the parents from the parents of the, occupiers these kids

(34:59):
being raised by the government and encouraged by the school
systems to be. Reckless Number, one the first Thing i'd
do with these kids is, this they're. Teenagers the, parents
so mister and missus, parent first thing we're going to

(35:20):
do is make sure they do not have any more cell.
Phones number, two they cannot videotape inside of private. Buildings they.
Cannot what the landlord should do is because they said
these properties out to put a sign and you wear a,
mask you trespass, here we will arrest. You the cameras
are on. You and the funny thing about this whole, Thing,

(35:43):
jeff there's nothing new. Here these people are looking for a.
Thrill and all these young GIRLS i remember holding a
sign In, milton by the, Way JEFF i got on
the ballot of the, eighth So i'm the only conservative
running here In. Milton WHEN i was living In, MILTON
i held the sign stop. Uh you know you're talking
about male, talk, uh toxic mail, whatever.

Speaker 1 (36:07):
Talalic, masculinity toxic, masculinity.

Speaker 4 (36:11):
Female, masculinity. WHATEVER i put on the. Sign you should
have seen what. HAPPENED i, Thought, oh THEY i had
insulted the. World the problem is these women are trying
to be. Men they want to be. Equal, okay, okay
miss you want to be. Equal your son assaults, Me
you're You're you're gonna have your own. Problems but you
have enough of this. Nonsense this is just a test

(36:34):
by the leftiest because they're losing the. Election WITH uh
coming up in IN uh In, september they know the
whole thing's falling, apart and they've already they were always
trying something to disrupt and distract from. Everybody So i'm looking.
FORWARD i want to Bring Frank rizzo. Back Remember Frank,
rizzo the mayor Of. Philadelphia when the when the the

(36:57):
protesters took over a, building he drove above it with a,
helicopter drop the bomb on. Them enough of these. People,
okay you have the right to walk the, streets and
you have a right to say to these, kids hey,
kid let me tell you. Something you're going down the wrong.
Street and these police. LISTEN i like the, cops but
they're all political. Now they're afraid to do their, jobs

(37:19):
and we can't have that. Anymore So i'm not worried about.
Anything take the phones away and use all those phones as,
evidence and they can't have. Phones and then put the
kids that made the. Mess let them work Inside tripoli
for the next, year cleaning up the tables and have
a sign on. Them you, KNOW i ruined this. Place
that's Why i'm. Working, yeah pay them a little, bit

(37:41):
but we don't call all these. Kids these are bad.
News and this is the result of just bad parenting
because all the parents have been destroyed by The, democrats
bad schooling because the schools are destroyed by The, democrats
and these kids are, reckless they don't have any sense of.

Speaker 2 (37:57):
Anything, jeff you're dead, on your dead.

Speaker 1 (38:00):
On let me throw this on the table And rob as,
always thank you very much for.

Speaker 3 (38:04):
That.

Speaker 1 (38:04):
Call bad, parenting bad, schooling just bad over you, know just.
Overall by the, Way No god
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