Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
This is a podcast from wor from Everywhere USA. It's
Fox Across America with Jimmy Fayla.
Speaker 2 (00:09):
Oh girl, here we go, Here we go. Got an
absolute food fight of a three hour radio show coming
your way on Fox Across America.
Speaker 1 (00:17):
With Jimmy Faylot.
Speaker 2 (00:18):
We have stacked the deck to help us get the win.
Byron Donald's, a man who could be the next governor
of the Great State of Florida, is going to be
here Sean Davis from The Federalist. He is the founder
and CEO of the Federalist, throwing the challenge flag at
the Obama administration because of their role in persecuting and
prosecuting Donald Trump. And of course we will attempt to
make just the smallest bit of sense of a horrific
(00:40):
shooting that took place here in New York in Midtown
Manhattan last night. Jenny Tayor from The New York Post
is going to be stopping by to get us an update.
Eighty eight seven eight eight nine nine one zero. If
you want to be a part of the show, the
show has one rule. Whether we got a good news
cycle or we've got something terrible like we're dealing with
in New York right now. Agreed, disagree. Nobody cares. I
(01:02):
am a talk show host. I am not an activist.
I am very much an inactivist. So we don't care
what you take is. We're just trying to encourage people
to have the conversation. So edu eate seven to eight, nine,
nine one zero. As I said, the only role be
a Republican, be a Democrat. Just don't be a bang
happy Tuesday, everybody. And before we start the show, I
(01:23):
should thank our man Paul Morrow, retired n YPD inspector,
Fox News contributor, who did a great job of holding
down the show yesterday while I was trying to make
my way back from the great state of Texas. We
had a phenomenal time. If you are in East Texas
listening on KTBB and you showed up to the Country
Tavern to see Lincoln and mysell, if they would.
Speaker 1 (01:42):
Go great, great, great, great time.
Speaker 2 (01:46):
We had an outstanding time Sunday at the Rangers game,
So thank you to KTBB and Paul Gliser for the tickets.
Speaker 1 (01:51):
We had a wonderful time.
Speaker 2 (01:52):
There were so many Fox fans it really was like
the Patriot Awards if they just all happened to be
wearing Texas Rangers hats for the most part. But it
was an incredible experience. I tell you this all the time.
What I love about Texas is they don't know the
difference between hospitality and a hazing ritual. Meaning when you
show up in the State of Texas hospitality, he's like, Hey,
can I get you some heat?
Speaker 1 (02:12):
Hey? Can I get your beer? When you show up
in the.
Speaker 2 (02:14):
State of Texas, if somebody says they're going to buy
you a beer, they're actually going to buy you sixty
five beers. They're not buying you one beer. That's the
hook he got, Hey can I get your beer? I
guess next thing you know, you're in a toga arguing
with a cop on the side of the highway with
the set of the hiccups on your map.
Speaker 1 (02:30):
You know this could be a problem, big problem. But
shout out to them.
Speaker 2 (02:33):
We had an outrageous time and we're happy to be
back in New York, although we get back under some
said and challenging auspices. Of course, A lunatic walks into
three forty five Park Avenue last night, an address that's
just a few blocks from here, about four blocks up
three avenues over NFL headquarters. Of course, Blackstone Headquarters were
being told that indications are that he had some type
(02:54):
of a gripe with the NFL related to CTE and
people who have died from that concussion related illness. I
don't really have the specifics on that. What I have
is an appetite to discuss this from a million different
angles without necessarily giving you a side. The one thing
I will tell you is, you know, we live in
this knee jerk society now where social media does not
(03:17):
reward nuance.
Speaker 1 (03:18):
It revolves absolute positive.
Speaker 2 (03:21):
One hundred percent maximum strength, all or nothing analysis. Okay,
this happened because these people are wrong, or this wouldn't
happen if those people weren't in charge. But sometimes when
you got people dead, what we owe the world is grace.
Speaker 1 (03:38):
What we owe the world is restraint.
Speaker 2 (03:40):
What we owe the world is an opportunity to get
all the facts and try to figure out some type
of healthy and productive way forward.
Speaker 1 (03:47):
Do we have that right now? In the aftermath of
the shooting.
Speaker 2 (03:52):
No, okay, there were people all over CNN last night
calling for gun control. CNN is the worst they will
To be fair, that wasn't the worst argument. They put forward.
We had a moment in the media aftermath, as the
mugshot was making the rounds of the shooter that CNN
described him on air as possibly white.
Speaker 1 (04:15):
People aren't buying at CNN, you dumb best suits. Okay.
Speaker 2 (04:18):
And I only say that because if you've seen the
image that's since gone viral of a madman walking into
the building with an AR fifteen at his side, there's
a lot of conclusions you might draw about his ethnicity,
none of which literally none of which are white.
Speaker 1 (04:35):
He knows what he's talking about.
Speaker 2 (04:37):
So a bad moment for the media, But I don't
want it to turn into a bad show for you. Okay,
That's never the goal here is we get on the air.
We're not trying to advance a political agenda on the show.
We're very much trying to advance humanity's agenda. Meaning I
look at this stuff through the lens of how does
this move the ball forward? On behalf of all of us.
(04:57):
I tell you this all the time. It work in
media as a TV and a radio host, but I
spent most of my adult life as a cab driver,
and that job is so primal because you're dealing with
people in every facets of existence late to an interview,
just got dumped about to go into labor, fleeing a
drug deal gone bad. I've picked up people who've been shot.
(05:19):
I mean, all kinds of wild stuff that has far
graver consequences than whether or not you get likes on
Twitter tonight. So I try to show some restraint. But
in the process I have developed such an incredible amount
of respect and empathy for the men and women who
put on uniforms, whether they're cops, whether they're first responders,
(05:42):
because I realize the emotional and physical adversities that they're
exposed to every day are happening at a level that
we don't even have the luxury of fathoming when we
watch a police video and pass a verdict, you know,
when you watch one half of a guy getting pulled
over and decide the cops are and we should burn
down the whole city. All of that stuff that takes
(06:03):
place in that digital vacuum that's devoid of nuance is
the worst thing that's ever happened to us in society,
and in a lot of ways, it's poisoned the bloodstream
because in the summer of twenty twenty, when we all
had a, you know, an understandably adverse reaction to George
Floyd being killed by Derek Chalvin. Now you can tell
me he was gonna die a fentanyl and maybe that
(06:25):
technique was taught in a police academy. Those things can
be true, but it doesn't mean you're gonna watch a
guy nil on a net for eight minutes and walk
away feeling good about the cops role in his death. Okay,
so let's leave that there for a second. What metastasized
from that anti police blowback is people like zoron Mom Donnie,
who was of course a hot topic last night all
(06:45):
over Twitter. Why because the guy is running for mayor
of New York City and the guy has called on
dozens of occasions to defund the police.
Speaker 1 (06:56):
Stupid, use your commonses.
Speaker 2 (06:58):
It's the weapons grades to do, but it should be
disqualifying from public life.
Speaker 1 (07:02):
He's not the first guy to say it.
Speaker 2 (07:04):
I have a montage I play you here all the
time of dozens of Democrats calling to defund the police,
and I'm convinced to this day that they would have
defunded the police except Joe Biden thought the police were
a British rock band. Okay, that being said, here is
AOC and everybody else in the squad leading the charge
to defund the police.
Speaker 3 (07:25):
Yes, I support the defund movement because this is about
the investment in our communities which have historically been divested.
Speaker 4 (07:35):
Not only do we need to defund, but we need
to dismantle and start a new Why use.
Speaker 5 (07:40):
The word defund? Why use the word defund?
Speaker 6 (07:42):
And it's like, this is the word that's coming from
the streets. Defund the police does not mean abolish the police.
Speaker 7 (07:49):
It means a dramatic reduction in a number of police
in our poor communities.
Speaker 1 (07:54):
I am for defunding the police.
Speaker 3 (07:55):
No, the reality is we can't rely upon the police
to provide public safety.
Speaker 6 (08:02):
It's a moment to reimagine Gleason to take things off
the shoulders.
Speaker 2 (08:06):
And what we also want is a reconception of how
we achieve public safety.
Speaker 8 (08:11):
How do we take out many of the responsibilities that
police officers are now dealing with by investing more into housing,
into education, into these other things.
Speaker 4 (08:21):
You know, in many cities in America, over one third
of their city budget goes to police.
Speaker 1 (08:27):
So we have to have this conversation what are we doing?
So that's Kamala Harris, AOC the squad all calling to
defund the police. Life is hard, but it's harder when
you're stoopid.
Speaker 2 (08:41):
Now, I open this show by telling you, in the
aftermath of a tragedy, I'm not here to politicize it
and give you a side, Okay, meaning I don't have
a side that could have prevented this. I don't have
a side that I outright blame for this. This is
a lunatic who wants to shoot up the NFL has
his hands on a gun than people. They're like, well,
it's illegal and we got a bannon and wah, okay, great,
(09:03):
but you know what else is illegal murder and he
committed it anyway. Okay, the fact that it was illegal
didn't make it any harder to purchase. I can tell
you this as a former New York City cab driver.
Anything you want to tell me that's illegal in this country,
I will be able to get my hands on five
minutes from now. That is the reality of living in
a city as big as New York. So I'm not
trying to have the argument over gun rights or non
(09:25):
gun rights. They did that all over the media last night. Okay,
what I'm trying to tell you is there are certain
things that are not political issues, like right or left issues,
their life or death issues, which brings me back to this,
Mom Donnie Jackass. Okay, Mom Donnie, as you know, is
a eat the rich guy. He's a socialist. We got
(09:46):
to get rid of the rich people. Okay, what is
Mom Donnie doing right now? He's hanging out in the
richest zip code in Uganda, in a multi million dollar
compound where he's just had a one million dollar wedding.
Now I bring that up because one of Mom Donnie's
harshest critiques of the NYPD has to do with gay rights.
Yet he's celebrating this week in a country that punishes
(10:10):
homosexuality by death.
Speaker 1 (10:12):
What a fraud.
Speaker 2 (10:14):
Okay, But again, I'm not trying to make this about
a side in terms of the particular crime, but I
am trying to find a productive way forward. We're on
WR the Voice of New York. It's a legacy station.
We're on about a dozen stations around the state right now.
But what happens here impacts the rest of the country directly.
(10:34):
And the point I'm trying to make is, if you
don't support the police no one whoever pulls a voting
lever again should express an ounce of support for you, Bingo.
Let me give you these mom Donnie tweets. And this
is the only thing I come back to yesterday. I'm
walking up sixth Avenue. I was supposed to be on
Hannity last night. Of course, breaking news. You get bumped.
(10:55):
There's a mass shooting. They're not gonna have me on
to make balloon animals and talk about the Sweeney's breasts.
Speaker 1 (11:01):
Hubba hubba.
Speaker 2 (11:02):
I know they're a big topic in the news cycle
right now, but sorry, Jimmy, you're gonna have to just
talk about Sydney Sweeney's boobs in the car going home
by yourself, which I did, okay, But understand, the only
thing I kept coming back to last night is you're
hearing about a thirty six year old cop who is killed.
He is here from Bangladesh. He has two kids, with
(11:22):
a third kid on the way. Is that family lost
a dad?
Speaker 1 (11:26):
Okay?
Speaker 2 (11:27):
A family that works the mom who worked at Blackstone
also shot. She's dead just the same, okay. But when
the game is on the line and those bullets are flying,
who is running into that building? The NYPD ems anybody
in a uniform with a badge and a gun that
can possibly get a situation under control in a billion
(11:47):
dollar high rise in one of the most crowded areas
of New York City. Again. NFL headquarters right there, Major
League Baseball headquarters right down the block, every big banking
institution in Manhattan, right there. The best steakhouse on the
planet of Earth, Bobby Van's, on the corner of forty
sixth in Park. It is all going down. It is
(12:07):
wildly populated, Okay, and the cops have to get what
turned out to be a horrific event from becoming a
generational defining catastrophe that could have cost us hundreds or
dare I say thousands of lives given the population in
the area. For that reason, yes, a round of applause
for the cops. But does a guy like mom Donni
(12:31):
who wants to be the mayor get those applause? Okay,
let me give you Mom Donnie last night. Okay, Mom
Donnie is over in a heavily guarded compound in Uganda,
armed black ops guards with masks on. Now traditional Mom Donnie,
here he is. We don't need an investigation to know
that the NYPD is racist, anti queer and a major
(12:56):
threat to public safety. What we need is to de
fund the NYPD.
Speaker 1 (13:04):
He is so foolish.
Speaker 2 (13:05):
This that's Mom Donnie, the guy who says NYPD's racist,
anti queer, we need to defund the NYPD. He is
surrounded by armed police all over Uganda, by the way,
the whole anti queer thing. Yes, if you're gay in Uganda,
I hope you know how to swim because they're throwing
you off the bridge and into the ocean. Okay, another
(13:25):
Uganda tweet. Another Mom Donni tweet. Someone tweets saw a
cop crying in his car. Laugh my ass off. Mom
Donnie retweets it with nature is healing? Another Mom Donnie tweet. No,
we want to defund the police. So naturally, if you're
(13:46):
trying to be the next leader in New York City,
there's just been a mass shooting and you're over at
a compound in Uganda, and you've previously expressed a desire
to defund the NYPD because they're racist, anti queer and
a major threat to public safety.
Speaker 1 (14:00):
What does politics?
Speaker 2 (14:01):
You don't require you to do a complete and total
about face. Here's Mom Donnie. I am heartbroken to learn
of the shooting in Midtown and I am.
Speaker 1 (14:11):
Holding the victims. They're families, and the.
Speaker 2 (14:13):
NYPD officer in my thoughts, grateful for our first responders
on the ground.
Speaker 1 (14:20):
You are so full of shit. Listen to me.
Speaker 2 (14:24):
Okay. I don't care how you vote in the next election.
And the good news is you have like a dozen
opportunities because everyone is running.
Speaker 1 (14:31):
Okay, you got Curtis Sleiewa. I happen to like them personally.
Speaker 2 (14:34):
You've got an independent candidate, You've got Hansy Andsie Cuomo,
and and you've got Mom Donnie.
Speaker 1 (14:41):
Okay.
Speaker 2 (14:41):
But the one litmus test in a city as big
and as primal as this one where the cops are
doing the most difficult police job in the world. Every
head of state is here, every international market is here.
The UN is here. You know, they have their big
convention once a year where all the dignitaries fly in
from around the world and bang hook all over Manhattan.
Speaker 1 (15:01):
Oh yes, I've read about that in the Bible.
Speaker 2 (15:03):
It's a true story, I can tell you as a
cab driver. But the people responsible for making it all
go round are the cops. They're doing the most difficult
job in society. So I don't have a side in
terms of the crime itself. I don't know what have
prevented it. I don't know how we stop it from
happening in the future, although I do have ideas that
I'll share. But the point being is every time one
of these situations unfolds, as tragic and as heartbreaking as
(15:26):
they are, there's one group of people that don't have
the luxury of tweeting about it or getting hair and
makeup and talking about it on TV like I do. Okay,
that group of people is called the cops, and if
you cannot support them, you are not qualified to lead anybody.
Speaker 6 (15:43):
And I'm mad here in the real world, and I
know what's right or wrong or bullshit.
Speaker 1 (15:47):
This is Fox Across America with Jimmy Fayla.
Speaker 2 (15:53):
Jimmy Fayla and Fox Across America. Fox Across America with
Jimmy Fayla, your home for top shelf radio. In a
bottom feeding political world, it is a stampede of stupidity
out there in the media in the aftermath of this shooting.
Speaker 5 (16:09):
The media is a bunch of losers.
Speaker 1 (16:11):
And here they are proving Lincoln right.
Speaker 2 (16:13):
John Miller on CNN after an image of the man
who shot up this high rise on Park Avenue went viral.
Here he is describing him as possibly white. Clip five
with his face visible. I mean, do they have any
idea at this point who he is?
Speaker 9 (16:29):
They do not know who he is. They know he
is a male, possibly white. He's wearing sunglasses, he appears
to have a mustache. And that picture has been distributed
to every police officer in New York City.
Speaker 2 (16:47):
And that picture has been distributed to every police officer
in New York City, Meaning he had seen the picture
and described the guy as white.
Speaker 1 (16:57):
Just a bit outside, he tried the corner.
Speaker 2 (17:00):
It is agenda politics. It's more importantly to get that
into the bloodstream for a few minutes and get people where,
Oh it's.
Speaker 1 (17:07):
A white guy.
Speaker 2 (17:08):
Come on, liberals, get engaged white supremacy. Biden was right,
this is our moment. Do you understand how gross that is?
As people are fighting for their lives, as people have
just died, as the cops are still trying to clear
the building and make sure people are safe. You got
a guy pushing an agenda. And I'm gonna play you
a worst clip in the next segment that has to
(17:30):
do with gun control. And how the First Amendment and
the Second Amendment are to blame. Okay, and this comes
courtesy of former New York City Mayor Bill Deblasio, who
was another dope who pushed to defund the police and
actually cut money from their budget in the summer of
twenty twenty. Again New York, a city so liberal they
(17:52):
wanted to defund the cop in the village people, but
you hope, if nothing else, this is a wake up
call that those people who represent those views are grifters
because they all have security. It is box across America
with Jimmy Fayala.
Speaker 1 (18:09):
Folks.
Speaker 2 (18:09):
Sometimes the news gets heavy enough and crazy enough that
we need to bring in an adult far more qualified
than myself to bring a story to justice.
Speaker 1 (18:19):
And that adult has flown into save the day.
Speaker 2 (18:21):
We are talking about New York Post reporter the great
Jenny Tare back on the show.
Speaker 5 (18:25):
Jenny, thank you for having me.
Speaker 2 (18:29):
Yeah, it's great to have you back. Most people don't
do this show twice.
Speaker 1 (18:32):
Jenny, I'm a repeat.
Speaker 2 (18:34):
Offender, how vald it Well, thank you for that. Obviously,
we've got a crazy story going on here in New York.
We're trying to make some sense of this Obviously, there's
not a lot of sense that can be made. You've
got a madman, you've got senseless death. Not something anybody
gets behind. But what I try to remind people of
Jenny is that sometimes in moments like this, we don't
need a side. We need compassion for the people suffering.
(18:56):
We need appreciation for the cops. And I think that's
more important than trying to use this story as some
type of political cudgel, you know.
Speaker 4 (19:05):
Right exactly, because we know that these were innocent victims
whose families have now been you know, ripped apart by
this tragedy. We have a cop who was expecting, you know,
his child in just a couple months, in a few weeks.
His wife was eight months pregnant when this happened, when
he was killed, and she's now going to raise that
child as a single mother, along with her other kids
(19:27):
that they you know, had together. This took other innocent lives,
some of the executives, an executive at Blackstone as well,
you know, just innocent employees that were at work, you know,
working late that day, a security guard who was trying
to keep these people safe, all of them taken due
(19:48):
to this tragedy.
Speaker 2 (19:49):
Yeah, it's so heavy, and in moments like this, I
feel for them, and I also just developed such an
immensive amount of appreciation for the myp Day, who is obviously,
as we said, in this instant sacrificing life to protect
other people, but keeping a situation like the one we
saw last night, you know, from spreading into something even worse,
(20:12):
if such a thing could be imagined, because what they're
dealing with here in New York, and I think it's
something people around the country don't necessarily understand, is we
have a population density in the streets of New York
because there's a gazillion of us and we're right on
top of each other at all times. And I think
that's one of the reasons he was able to walk
into this building undetected with an AR fifteen in his hand,
(20:33):
is because most people are to themselves, they're looking at phones,
they're talking to friends. And as unfathomable as that might
sound around the country, you know this from spending time
in New York. Anything blends it in this town, does
it not?
Speaker 7 (20:46):
Oh?
Speaker 5 (20:46):
Of course, I.
Speaker 4 (20:47):
Mean I've covered all the migrant crime happening there, and
we know that that happens in plain sight. There's hotbeds
for that, you know, in Times Square, for example, where
cops themselves have also been the targets.
Speaker 5 (20:58):
Yepua, that migrant gang.
Speaker 4 (21:01):
From Venezuela, a prison gang has been able to flourish
on the streets of New York City. And now also
we're in this environment right now, we're at the crux
of something that could possibly happen where the NYPD morale
is low, because what if Mom Donnie is elected mayor
someone who has been vocal against the police, who has
(21:23):
wanted to defund them, but also demonizes them.
Speaker 2 (21:26):
Yeah, that's the part that's so crazy. We're talking to
the great Jenny Tare from the New York Post. They
and you go back and obviously people had a field
day with Mom Donnie tweets last night and he's talking
about you know how, we don't need an investigation to
know the NYPD is racist and anti queer. By the way,
he happens to be in Uganda right now, which doesn't
(21:47):
have the best record for the gay community. And yes,
he is of course surrounded by armed guards. So he
is the antithesis of everything he preaches against. And I'm
trying to make people understand and just how dire the
threat is to New York. As you said, morale is
already low, crime is high. We've taken in a lot
(22:07):
of migrants with a sanctuary city policy. That doesn't make
anybody better off. If you were to add him to
that mix. You know, people talk about a mass exodus
from New York. Im My carpool out of here with you.
Speaker 5 (22:21):
Come on down to Texas, please, dude, I was just there.
Speaker 2 (22:24):
I was lucky to make it back. They get rowdy
down there and we'd love to have you. Jenny, you're
buttering me up now, Okay, give me this, Well, I
still have you here. Do you think, based on what
you know about this city that at the very least
the silver lining could be that this was a wake
up call to people who need to understand how important
(22:45):
the cops are.
Speaker 5 (22:47):
Right, Well, I think if this isn't, then what is.
Speaker 1 (22:50):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (22:51):
I think you're still going to have people like Mondannie
and the people who support him who aren't going to
have their minds change.
Speaker 5 (22:57):
I think you're still having that.
Speaker 4 (23:00):
Base him because it's so extreme, it's so far left,
and something like this clearly hasn't shaken them.
Speaker 5 (23:07):
I mean, the cop who is killed you were.
Speaker 4 (23:08):
Talking about, you know, some of my mom Donnie's stances
on the cops, and you know with race.
Speaker 5 (23:14):
I mean this cop was an immigrant, Yeah, he was
a Muslim.
Speaker 1 (23:18):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (23:18):
I mean, you can't get more into what speaks to
mom Donnie than that.
Speaker 5 (23:23):
But yet his idea of these cops.
Speaker 4 (23:25):
Are just you know, what they say, are like white
fascist pigs.
Speaker 5 (23:29):
So how are you going to change a mind like that.
Speaker 4 (23:33):
You're really not, You're right, But hopefully this is a
wake up call to those moderates.
Speaker 2 (23:37):
Yeah, to anybody else who was on the fence, who
might actually, you know, figure this out, because you're right
to say, politics have become such a team sport, especially
in these one party towns, that it becomes more important
to them to keep winning elections, and at some point
that happens at the expense of their quality of life.
That's a lot of California just the same. And so maybe,
(23:59):
just maybe this might be that wake up call. But
if it's not, I'm packing the U haul. I have
you on record as saying I can come down and
stay with you guys. Of course, I don't want to
hear it when that doorbell rings and the failest show
up don't don't go hiding from this clip, Jenny.
Speaker 5 (24:14):
We'll do your show straight from the rodeo.
Speaker 1 (24:17):
There.
Speaker 2 (24:17):
It is fair, okay. I got the wardrobe from it
for it, so I'll be good to go. Jenny, Terry
the best. Let's do it again soon. Thank you the
great Jenny tare there. She goes talking about the situation.
And I will say this as someone who covers migrant
crime day in and day out, as Jenny does. She's
well versed on all the migrant attacks we've had on
(24:38):
the NYPD. And the one point that needs to be remembered.
Everybody who tells you the cops or some like good
old boy extension to the klan white guy killing cabal
needs to understand that if you look at every major
city in America, the police are minority majority, meaning minorities
make up the majority of the police police force. That's
(25:00):
the case here in New York, Chicago, Los Angeles, more
minorities than whites on the police force. So when you
try to oversimplify it to all these old racist white cops,
that's not a thing, okay. And the same needs to
be said for everybody that's just trying to blindly invoke
Mom Donnie's religion. There are a lot of people saying
last night, I can't have a Muslim leading the city. No, No,
(25:23):
it's not the problem. The fact that he's a Muslim
has nothing to do with this. It's the fact that
he's an idiot that has everything to do with this.
The cop that got killed was a Muslim. He's from Bangladesh.
Speaker 1 (25:33):
Okay.
Speaker 2 (25:33):
It's not really about religion in any sense. But the
people themselves that have spent their formative years in these
wocalalite institutions that have been taught to see everything through
the lens of race, are one of you know, people
like talking about the biggest threat we face as a
society is white supremacy or climate change or whatever the
Democrats are pushing. No, the biggest existential threat we face
(25:56):
the society is stupidity. And right, and you're right, okay,
And what's been going on is weapons grades, stupid defund
the police. Guys, you don't understand how destructive and dangerous
that is. But you know who does understand it The
people who've been pushing that agenda.
Speaker 1 (26:15):
Bingo, man, bingo.
Speaker 2 (26:17):
They don't really want to get rid of cops. Mom,
Donnie is surrounded by cops everywhere he goes. Okay, he
doesn't want you to have them. It's like Corey Bush.
Do you remember when Corey Bush, the squad member who's
now out in Saint Louis. Thank God, If you're listening
on ninety seven one FM talk, I'm coming out to
see you in January. You have no you better be there,
come on, man, but anyway, stick with me, okay. Corey
(26:40):
Bush famously got caught spending over two hundred thousand dollars
on a security detail comprised of police after calling to
defund the police, and her response was, suck it up,
because defunding the police has to happen.
Speaker 10 (26:56):
I'm gonna make sure I have security because I know
I have had attempts on my life and I have
too much work to do. There are too many people
that need help right now for me to allow that.
So if I end up spending two hundred thousand, if
I spend ten more dollars on it, you know what,
I get to be here to do the work. So
suck it up and defunding the police has to happen.
(27:17):
We need to defund the police and put that money
into social safety nets because we're trying to save lives.
Speaker 1 (27:23):
Oh, Mike, we're trying to save lives.
Speaker 5 (27:25):
What would you do with the brain if you had one.
Speaker 1 (27:27):
Fair question, asked Corey Bush. Suck it up.
Speaker 2 (27:30):
Defunding the police has to happen because we're trying to
save lives. Okay, this is the mindset that launched Zoron
Mom Donnie into politics. Okay, here's a direct tweet. No,
we want to defund the police. Direct tweet. We don't
need an investigation to know that the NYPD is racist
and ty queer and a major threat to public safety.
(27:54):
What we need is to defund the NYPD.
Speaker 7 (27:59):
Alternated.
Speaker 2 (28:00):
You understand, policies like that are disqualifying, and if you
were confident enough to express them publicly, there's no world
where we can tolerate your about face. Because even if
he now knows, ah, you know, in twenty twenty, it
was the thing people were worked up. I was impressionable.
It was a mob mentality. But if you're that impressionable
(28:23):
on a public level, that means the next dumb idea
that comes along, you might be just as susceptible as
joining direct mundo. And that's why it's disqualifying. He can say, well,
I was twenty twenty heat of the moment, George Floyd,
and I got swept up in the zeitgeist. But you understand,
(28:45):
when you're in charge of the most consequential city in America,
if not the world, your job is not to.
Speaker 1 (28:50):
Read the room. Your job is to lead the room.
Zoron mom.
Speaker 2 (28:53):
Donnie has read the room in every woke elite institution
that has had him. He is the son of spectacular privilege.
His parents are rich. He's in a multi million dollar
compound right now in the richest neighborhood in Uganda, surrounded
by armed guards. After telling you we need to defund
the police because they hate gay people and black people,
(29:14):
lo and behold. You know who really really hates gay people?
The government of Uganda. They kill them. Okay, But no
one is more well aware of the importance of police
and the primal threats they face day in and day
out than one of the best callers we have on
the show, Harold retired NYPD down in Raleigh, North Carolina.
Speaker 7 (29:34):
Yo, Harold, how are you, sir? First and foremost, I was.
My last command was the four to seven precinct. Condole condolencis,
go out to the family of that young man. When
I was a police officer, I told my wife more
than once, if I die in the line of duty,
no politicians. I don't want any of them at my
funeral because there's a photo op. And had this guy
(29:58):
lived twenty five years when I they would have.
Speaker 1 (29:59):
Bull Yep, no question.
Speaker 7 (30:03):
You didn't have to defund the police because the police
are defunding automatically because every major department is two three
thousand men short.
Speaker 1 (30:11):
Yep.
Speaker 7 (30:12):
And the reason why, the reason why police officers get
all the drama and the angst and anger is because
the politicians don't want them coming after them. They're the
ones that write the policies. They're the ones that passed
the laws. All police officers do is enforce them. So
if you've got a problem with the law, you need
to get on your politician to change it. If you
(30:33):
think riding around without a license and no insurance is okay,
pass the lord that you don't have to do it simple.
Speaker 2 (30:40):
Yeah, you're making great points, Harold, but this is the problem.
They created a society that had more empathy for the
criminal than the cop. And that's what Mom Donnie comes from.
A guy wants to be the next mayor of New York.
When he sees a shooting like the one we watched
last night, he wants to know how society failed the shooter.
I mean, that's the mindset that makes people want to
(31:01):
defund the police.
Speaker 7 (31:03):
Well, like I said, pretty much, nobody's taking the job,
So they're pretty much self defunding. Nobody wants the job,
nobody wants to be bothered with that headache sicken Monday
morning quarterback. And they took they took a Black Lives
Matter of activist and they took him to a range
in Arizona at the Arizona Police Department, and they made
him walk through what you would call the funhouse, but
you walk through her scenarios pop up and you shoot
(31:25):
or don't shoot. This guy shot everything that popped up.
Speaker 1 (31:29):
Everything, everything.
Speaker 7 (31:31):
And then when he came out, he went, oh, man,
you guys got a difficult job. Well, no fooling, sherlot,
no fooling. It's a difficult job. First, just like, first
of all, you know, I'm sorry, I feel sorry about
that that officer being he's probably doing the pay detail
work and security in the lobby, and you know why
nobody saw him, saw that gun because everybody's on their phone.
(31:53):
He's a guy walking down Middown, Manhattan with a rifle
and nobody said anything.
Speaker 2 (31:58):
And the only bull and folks need to understand this.
People in the day and age were living in that
might have spotted him. Their first instinct is to film it?
Speaker 7 (32:07):
Is it to film it?
Speaker 1 (32:09):
It's crazy? Yeah? This smart?
Speaker 7 (32:11):
Why didn't they said? Why did why didn't they send
the crisis interventionist today to the shooting last night? Why
did they have to police?
Speaker 2 (32:16):
Bok Harold, you're killing me? Because these are all I know?
These are all mom. Donnie Points said.
Speaker 7 (32:22):
How long you think? How long did you think that's
gonna last? After a couple of shootings? And first of all,
the guns are not the problem, because some idiots in
Walmart other than you stand eleven people, what are you
gonna do?
Speaker 1 (32:32):
But Van nives Yep, it's crazy.
Speaker 7 (32:35):
Stupid stupid people are the problem. And and the honeymoon
that we had after nine to eleven, they're not They're
not gonna They're gonna forget this in a week or two,
not even a week next week. You probably they probably
couldn't tell you this guy's name. Yeah, because I lived
through the nine to eleven Honeymoon, and then I told
I told all the guys that I was working with
three months to be back to normal, breaking your tops
(32:55):
and showing up. After three months, everything was back.
Speaker 2 (32:57):
To normal, straight up, uh, saying you know everything, everything
about it here in the city, and it's crazy. But
I am just hoping the average voter recognizes the importance
of the cops in the aftermath of this. I don't
know that they will, but I can promise you whoever's
running against mom Donnie the rest of the way is
going to be playing up his tweets.
Speaker 1 (33:18):
Cause his tweets.
Speaker 2 (33:19):
To be clear, you can't distance yourself from the NYPD
is racist, anti queer, and a major threat to public safety.
There's no way to couch that as like what I
was really trying to say. So all I'm telling you,
Harold is you're going to have a lot of New
Yorkers back in your life. If he wins, it's going
to get crowded in Raleigh. Good stuff, my man, the
(33:42):
great Harold, And that's where it's headed. Okay, there were
people out there, as Harold said, that created an all
time low in morale for the police forces around the country.
And whether you're cutting the budgets or not. And to
be clear, they have cut the budgets, cut over a
billion dollars and municipal police budgets in the aftermath of
twenty twenty in the major cities New York, Ela, Chicago. Okay,
(34:05):
but with or without the funding, if nobody wants the job,
the funding ain't gonna do you any good. And in
a lot of instances they've had to lower the hiring
threshold and accept candidates who wouldn't traditionally be qualified because
that's what they did to morale and being a cop
is the proudest tradition out there. So many families have
done it. I mean, how many cops are in my family.
It's one of the most badass things you could ever do,
(34:27):
is throw on the badge and try to protect the public.
But they've turned it into such a thankless profession in
this day and age that we're gonna need like a
societal about face.
Speaker 7 (34:37):
You know.
Speaker 2 (34:37):
Trump is restored morale and gotten people to recognize the
importance of border security, and they've recalibrated trade deals and
everything in between. If there's a leader out there listening
around the country, ever, if ever, ever, Okay, we needed
people to be reminded of the importance of police and
how there's no path forward without them.
Speaker 1 (34:56):
It is right.
Speaker 6 (34:56):
Now the show that solves problem, the old finishing way.
Speaker 1 (35:01):
You and me are going to fight when the l
is at three o'clockical This these Bucks across America with
Jimmy Taylor.
Speaker 2 (35:08):
It is boxing across America with Jimmy Paylo Byron Donald's
coming up. Sean Davis from the Federalist another idiot trot
it out on CNN last night. Here's former New York
City mayor Build a Blasio clip six.
Speaker 6 (35:21):
People are feeling less and less secure in general in
our society. It's a very troubling time, it is. I mean,
you have so many voices saying extreme and dangerous things
that doesn't help on all sides. And then on top
of it, just way too many weapons around and very
little let's stop someone from getting a weapon. I mean,
(35:43):
this is a deeply troubling situation. I keep wondering when
it will be the incident that finally tells people we
have to change something.
Speaker 2 (35:52):
Oh, build the Blasio calling for more laws. The only
problem is everything that gentlemen did yesterday was already illegal.
That's the problem. It's not a law problem, it's an
idiot problem. It's a stupid people problem, and putting more
dumb ones on TV doesn't fix anything wrong.
Speaker 1 (36:14):
This has been a podcast from wor