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June 30, 2025 • 38 mins
Rep. Gabe Evans (R, CO-8) joins Ryan prior to the hopeful passage of President Trump's 'Big, Beautiful Bill' upon it returning to the U.S. House from the Senate prior to the Independence Day holiday.
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (00:00):
Is it fun?

Speaker 3 (00:01):
Are you having a great time? Senator? No, this sucks.
I mean we're debating a bill that's going to cut
healthcare for sixteen million people.

Speaker 1 (00:09):
It's going to give a.

Speaker 3 (00:10):
Tax break to you know, massively wealthy people who don't
need any more money. They're going to be kids who
go hungry because of this. Building is the biggest reduction
and you know, nutrition benefits for kids in the history
of the country. I mean, this is the most deeply
immoral piece of legislation that I have ever voted on
in my entire time in Congress. We're obviously going to

(00:31):
continue to offer these amendments to try to make it better.
So far, not a single one of our amendments, not
a single one of our amendments to try to make
the build better, has passed.

Speaker 1 (00:39):
But we'll be here all.

Speaker 3 (00:40):
Day, probably all night, giving Republicans the chance over and
over and over again to slim down the tax bets
for the corporations, or to make life a little bit
more less miserable for hungry kids, or maybe don't throw
as many people off of health care, maybe don't close
so many rural hospitals. It's going to be a long day,
a long night when.

Speaker 1 (01:01):
Democrat dimwit Senator Chris Murphy from Connecticut is against it
and says things like this sucks and that the big
beautiful bill is the quote most deeply immoral piece of
legislation he's ever voted on. Well, then that's how you
know it's good, Ryan Schuling live back with you here,

(01:21):
launching you into your Independence Day holiday coming up later
this week and joining us now. He is a man
who has served in many capacities for our country, including
in our armed forces, including as a police officer, including
in the General Assembly, and now in Congress representing Congressional
District eight in Colorado. Representative gab Evans, Gabe, thank you

(01:42):
so much for taking the times.

Speaker 4 (01:44):
Always good to be on with you, Ryan.

Speaker 1 (01:46):
Yeah. Absolutely, And I just want you to respond to
what you heard there from Senator Murphy. Is this the
most deeply immoral piece of legislation that he's ever voted on?

Speaker 4 (01:57):
Oh, it's fear mongering at its finest. What the bill
actually does. It gives tax breaks in Colorado. This is
a Colorado specific number. It gives tax breaks to the
bottom eighty five percent of wage journers in Colorado. It
puts for the average Colorado family of four over two
thousand dollars back in their pockets through these tax breaks.

(02:17):
It takes care of our small businesses, so not the
big corporations. It takes care of our small businesses by
making sure that their tax rate doesn't go up above
what the big corporate tax rate is. This thing secures
the border so that we can get the cartels and
the criminals and the gang bangers who have been terrorizing Colorado.
Keep in mind, Colorado is ranked this year the second

(02:39):
most dangerous state in the country, in large part because
of the sanctuary state policies that have welcomed all of
these foreign criminals here. Like Trendy Arragua, which has set
up Denver, Colorado is their national headquarters. It secures the border,
It gives resources to make sure our communities are safe,
and it protects medicaid for the people who need it most.

(03:00):
If you're pregnant, you're a kid, if you have disabilities,
if your elderly, guess what, you're not involved in this bill.
The only people from a medicaid perspective involved in this
bill are illegal immigrants getting tax payer money. People who
are able bodied, working, aged and who won't work for
their free taxpayer funded healthcare, or people who are ineligible

(03:21):
for the benefit in the first place, except Biden paid
them to stay home and wouldn't let states kick him
off the rolls. Those are the only people that are
involved on the Medicaid side.

Speaker 1 (03:29):
So if we reverse engineer that Congressman Evans what Senator
Murphy and many other Democrats, you know, they're trotting out
these same talking points. What they're saying is the very
people you just described, So these fifteen million, sixteen million
that are going to lose health coverage that he is arguing,
in fact, in favor of those able bodied, working age
folks to stay on these Medicare Medicaid services, that illegal

(03:53):
aliens in fact, yes, should be receiving healthcare although they
are not citizens of the United States, and the people
that you're talking about that there are no exceptions for
Democrats as to who should be able to go to
the government trough and receive these goodies. Right, Look no.

Speaker 4 (04:12):
Further than what's happened here in the state of Colorado,
where the federal government has asked we call it hickpuff
health care policy and finances. The full name that is
the state agency that administers Medicaid. The federal government has
asked the State of Colorado for information about who's actually
getting benefits, and the State of Colorado right now is
dragging their feet. They don't want to turn it over

(04:33):
because they know there's a bunch of illegal immigrants and
people who are not eligible for this benefit, this taxpayer
funded healthcare that are on the rolls. And so you know,
in the sanctuary state of Colorado, they're doubling down on
giving taxpayer money to illegal immigrants. And the people who
get hurt are again the people for whom Medicaid was created.
A disabled people, kids, pregnant women, elderly. These are the

(04:58):
people that we are fighting to protect to make sure
that they don't get cut in line and have their
resources stolen away by ineligible people, illegal immigrants, or people
who are able bodied, working, aged and won't work part time.
I should add it's a part time requirement.

Speaker 1 (05:12):
In the bill. Yeah. Congressman Gabe Evans joining us as
they are preparing to vote on the big beautiful bill
in the Senate now they're considering amendments. A lot of these,
as Senator Murphy pointed out, are being offered up by Democrats,
But I don't know that there's gonna be a lot
of changes made to where the bill stands right now.
Caroline Lovett addressing the same points that Gabe was just making.

(05:34):
And this is where I'm going with the question for
Gabe is why is it the Republicans have such a
harder time closing ranks, staying focused, hurting cats, getting everybody
on the same page. Doesn't seem like Democrats fall off
the way that Senator Tom Tillis has on this issue,
and he's a no vote.

Speaker 5 (05:51):
But if the White House's response to Senator Tillis's criticism
articulated from the Senate floor yesterday in which you said
passing the Big Beautiful Bill would betray President Trump's promise
to protect.

Speaker 1 (06:04):
Medicaid, well he is just wrong.

Speaker 6 (06:07):
And the President and the vast majority of Republicans who
are supportive of this legislation are right. This bill protects Medicaid,
as I laid out for you, for those who truly
deserve this program, the needy, pregnant women, children, sick Americans
who physically cannot work. And what it does is it
ensures that able bodied Americans who can work twenty hours

(06:30):
a week are actually doing so, and that will therefore
strengthen and protect those benefits for Americans who need it,
as well as cutting out the waste, fraud and abuse,
as well as getting one point four million illegal aliens
off of the program. So all of those measures are
actually going to protect it for those who need it.
That's the President's position, and that's what this bill does,
and that's why Republicans need to vote for it and

(06:50):
get it to the President's vesta.

Speaker 1 (06:51):
So if Senator Tom Tillis is joining the Democrats here again,
they are endorsing that, yes, there should be waste, fraud
and abuse when it comes to these programs. Yeah, we
should pay for illegal aliens to be on the programs. Yes,
able bodied, working age Americans should be able to just
sit at home and collect these benefits without contributing to
our economy and our society. First question out of this one,

(07:14):
Representative Evans, is why there is you know, kind of
this discord within the party And it's only a few members,
but it might be enough. As we know, balance of
power in the House being as narrow as it is,
your vote is so important. But you know, your colleague,
Representative Thomas Massey is fundamentally against it. And virtually every
spending bill we see tillis coming out, we've heard Grand
Paul arguing against it. Why is it in your mind?

(07:37):
Do you think that Republicans have a harder time coming
together on issues like these? Yeah, just a couple quick.

Speaker 4 (07:43):
Thoughts for you, Republicans. We are the party of free
and independent thought, and so that means Republicans tend to,
you know, we look at these things a little bit
more deeply. We don't just toe the party line because
we are the Party of free thought. But I'd also
point out that there's been five times already in this
Congress where a lot of the pundits said, I don't
know if the Republicans are going to be able to

(08:03):
hang together and get it done. And guess what, every
single time we've got it done. We're five and zero
right now. Starting with the speaker vote. People didn't think
we'd have a speaker. Guess what, we got a speaker
on the first vote, and then going through the Continuing
Resolution to keep the government funded, which by the way,
also cut seven billion dollars out of federal spending first
cr in I can't remember how long that's actually cut

(08:23):
money and then all of the big votes with this
big beautiful bill. So we're just making sure that we're
doing our due diligence, that it's good policy. But we're
going to deliver this thing the same way we've delivered
five other victories before when folks didn't think we were
going to get it done.

Speaker 1 (08:37):
Congressman Gabe Evans joining US eighth Congressional District. They will
wait on passage of the big beautiful bill through the Senate,
and then with whatever changes come back to the House,
then you guys will have to sign off on it
a final time before it goes to the President's desk,
if I have that right, and Gabe, are there any changes?
I know you're keeping close eyes on this. Has there
been anything done to the bill? We saw that there

(08:59):
were some dead exceptions that were maybe going to be
cut off the table that Senator John Soon was trying
to work his way through that. Are there any no
goes for you as it pertains to anything that the
Senate might add or subtract from the bill.

Speaker 4 (09:14):
Well, one of the big things to remember with the
Senate is even though we have a majority in the Senate,
we being Republicans, we don't have a filibuster proof majority.
So we have fifty three votes in the Senate, but
you need sixty to overcome the filibuster. And so the
Senate Parliamentarian is who's sitting there deciding, is, you know,
are these provisions that are in the bill either subject

(09:35):
to the filibuster and therefore you need sixty votes to
get it passed, or do these things pass under the
rules of the Senate reconciliation process and there they only
need a simple majority. And so we've seen some some
provisions that unfortunately got stripped out by the Senate parliamentarian,
specifically around states like Colorado that give taxpayer money to

(09:58):
illegal immigrants. And so those are some of the things
that be the Senate Republicans are working through trying to
figure out how do they either add those back in
in a way that passes that it's called the burg rule,
passes the Burg rule, and therefore they can be passed
with a simple majority. And there's there's a motion that's
actually happening right now. Right before I jumped on, I

(10:18):
was watching this on social media. It sounds like there's
a vote that's being forced right now by Republicans up
or down vote that says, should we continue we being
the federal government, should the federal government continue to subsidize
taxpayer funded payments to states that give that tax payer
money to illegal immigrants?

Speaker 1 (10:39):
And again it's before the Senate as we speak, and
Representative Gabe Evans kind enough to join us with his
with his thoughts on this. Should this get across the
finish line. Gabe and Caroline love It has already said, yeah,
we expect that to happen by the Independence Day holiday,
and President Trump has encouraged you guys to stay on
the job, to not take any time off, to not
leave early on vacation. Let's get this through. We know

(11:00):
Vice President Vance was able to lean on Senator Lisa Murkowski.
Her vote's always kind of up for grabs. It seems
like she might be a yes on this, at least
she was to get it through to a vote through cloture,
like you stated, and then coming back to the House
with Speaker Johnson you kind of briefly mentioned him and
being able to pull this all together in the wake
of a lot of people on the outside going, yeah,

(11:21):
I don't know if that's going to happen, And yet
he's getting it done, like you said five and oh
on that front, So in your mind, should this all
come together? And I think you and I are both
confident that it will. Who deserves the most credit in
making that happen?

Speaker 4 (11:35):
Oh, this is a team effort, you know. But if
I was going to name any one particular name, you know,
I would say that Speaker Johnson has been working on
this for well over a year. The first time I
met him, he believed, you know, firmly that God was
going to give Republicans the House, the Senate, and the presidency.
And so since, like again, since the first time I

(11:56):
met him, he's been talking about laying the groundwork to
get some thing like this done in the event that Republicans,
as they do now, controlled the House, the Senate, and
the Presidency.

Speaker 1 (12:07):
We just saw this post now from Elon Musk, and
I want to read it to you how you respond
to it, because this echoes some of the sentiments we've
heard from Representative Thomas Massey as well. And I get it.
You know, the Republican Party wants to be a fiscally
conservative party, at least those that are in your shoes
Senator Ran Paul in the Senate and Massey himself, and
there's many people that would like to cut spending, but

(12:27):
it's difficult to do, especially in a bill of this
size and scope. But Musk says, quote, it's obvious with
the insane spending of this bill, which increases the debt
ceiling by a record five trillion dollars, that we live
in a one party country, the porky pig party. Time
for a new political party that actually cares about the people.
That from Elon Musk, how would you respond to those criticisms?

(12:47):
Congressman evans that this is a porculus package. There's too
many kind of carve outs, that sort of thing. We've
talked a little bit about the salt exceptions for the
big blue states like New York and California, for state
and local tax is. How would you respond to that?

Speaker 4 (13:02):
So, if you use actual math to analyze this bill,
at the very worst, this bill is deficit neutral. Best
case scenario, this bill actually cuts about two trillion dollars
in the federal deficit. And here's why. The federal deficit
is really two things. It's how much revenue is the
federal government bringing in, and then it's also how much

(13:24):
spending is occurring. So this bill cuts spending. But the
other thing that this bill does is because it cuts
red tape and it lowers taxes, even though the government
is taking in less money from each individual person or
business because taxes are getting cut. Turns out that actually
turbo charges the economy, and so the GDP, the gross

(13:45):
domestic product as a whole, grows and the government brings
in more revenue even though across the board taxes are
lower because of those pro business and pro growth policies.
And so the problem with folks that say that this
bill adds to the deficit is they are using a
one point eight percent annual growth factor for the economy.

(14:06):
If you go back and you look at history, the
US has averaged between two and a half and three
percent annual growth factor. And then when you have good,
positive pro business policies like in this bill, we actually
get closer to four percent. So if you just use
the historical average for annual economic growth in the United States,
this bill is deficit neutral. If you get the turbocharged

(14:30):
economy that we're all anticipating that we saw on Trump's
first term when they cut taxes the first time, this
bill is actually deficit reducing by a couple of trillion dollars.
The problem is the official entity in Washington, DC that
does that math is staffed significantly by either known registered

(14:50):
Democrats or Democrat donors, and they're not giving the math
a fair shake. They're saying that the economy is going
to grow at a slower rate because of all of
these tax breaks, and we know that's just not what happens.
You cut taxes, you cut red tape, the economy grows.
This bill actually is probably going to end up be
deficit reducing.

Speaker 1 (15:08):
Couldn't agree more. It happened before, it'll happen again. My view,
the same as the congressman, is get this through, get
it into action, get that economy churning. You'll see the results,
and then the Republicans will have momentum going from there
with a robust economy, jobs being created, and everything goes
along with it. Final question, Gabe, always appreciate your time.
How will you be spending the Independence Day holiday.

Speaker 4 (15:33):
Probably in Washington, d C. Getting this thing across the
finish line. You know, we know that the Senate's voting now.
Once it comes back to the House, we have to
have a certain amount of time for us to be
able to look through it and make sure we're up
the speed on all the changes that the Senate made.
So we're we're, you know, planning on being in Washington,
d C. Until this thing gets done.

Speaker 1 (15:53):
Hard working, getting the job done for Colorado's eighth district.
Make sure to follow him on ex A. Rep. Gabe
Evans the congressman joining us on Ryan Schuling Live. Gabe,
thank you as always for your time. Enjoy the fourth.
Hopefully you've got everything done by then and you actually
can go out and celebrate the holiday.

Speaker 4 (16:08):
Thanks so much. Aw, it's good to be on with you,
all right.

Speaker 1 (16:10):
Representative Gabe Evans. There your thoughts and reaction five seven,
seven three nine. Oh, this one's rather harsh. Ryan Murphy
is a bleeding heart scumbagh. That's that's not nice.

Speaker 4 (16:21):
Now.

Speaker 1 (16:22):
I don't like him because of, you know, kind of
the things that go along with him being a politician.
I mean, this is par for the course in the
dramatization of what's going on. I mean, this being the
most deeply immoral piece of legislation. You know, the theater
of this is not lost on me. And then he
tells Katie Terror from MSNBC that this sucks, and it's

(16:45):
gonna cut you know, fifteen million, sixteen million people off
of Medicare and Medicaid. And the response that you just
heard from Congressman Evans and what I would give you
as well, is good. You know, not everybody is eligible
for those programs, nor should they be. They are need based,
and they should be based on those standards and tests
a threshold beyond which if you're able to contribute to

(17:06):
society and work in a job, and it only calls
for you to work twenty hours a week, and that's
for able bodied people who are of an age that
should be working, that shouldn't be home on their college
playing video games, collecting Medicare or Medicaid benefits. That's just
not what the nature and the spirit of the program is.
He mentioned all the protected classes of individuals like pregnant

(17:27):
women that would still be allowed to have access to
these things, and the people that are being paired off.
You always have to, like I said with him, reverse
engineer this all right. So what you're saying is Democrats
that illegal aliens should remain on the rules, that waste, fraud,
and abuse should remain in these programs. Just spend it,
keep spending it Democrats. I know Republicans aren't great on

(17:49):
this issue, they're not, but Democrats are so terrible on this.
They view your money, our money, my money, taxpayer money
as theirs. They have a right to put their hands
in your pockets and take your money and spend it
better than you know how to spend it. And this
is the key argument against socialism that apparently has been

(18:10):
lost on New York City. The more I hear and
see from the Zoraan Mamdani, I mean, they're making comparisons
between him and Barack Obama, are you uns? He makes
Obama look like a conservative because his stances on public
policy when it comes to pure, unfiltered, unadulterated Marxists theory

(18:32):
are just shining through and anybody that cannot see through
that is not paying attention or they're full on communists themselves.
I don't think that there are enough of them to
elect him in New York City. I share an optimistic
view of this, but you'll hear from Eric Adams as well,
and I'll give you my breakdown on this New York
City race. It's now a three person affairs it stands

(18:54):
right now, and how it might break down and why
and why it matters here in college, and why it
could be kind of a harbinger of things to come
here in Denver again Your tax five seven seven three nine.
Ryan Shuling Live rolls on after this on a Monday.
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(19:14):
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(19:37):
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Democrats winning.

Speaker 6 (21:17):
What'd you think of them, Donnie win for the Democratic
primary here in New York City?

Speaker 1 (21:21):
Is that a Is that a roadmap for what the
Democrats should do well to extend?

Speaker 3 (21:27):
I mean, listen, there are certain things that he stands
for and says that I don't agree with.

Speaker 1 (21:30):
But I think you have.

Speaker 3 (21:32):
To pay attention to the fact that you had a
candidate in New York City that was talking every single
day about the cost of living, and he was proposing
really big, sometimes radical ideas to take power from folks
who have way too much of it, like the big
realty companies that are jacking our rents in New York

(21:53):
City and transferring it to regular people. He did have
a laser like fusing on cost of living Transhi shifting
power to people who don't have enough of it.

Speaker 1 (22:03):
And I think of the Democratic.

Speaker 3 (22:05):
Party written large, spend as much time or as big
a percentage of our communications time talking about the costs
of living as Mumdami did in New York, we probably
win a lot more elections.

Speaker 1 (22:15):
No, it's not a groundhog day. That is Democrat Dimwitt.
Senator Chris Murphy starting off a second consecutive segment this
time on the powerful peal of Zoran Dannie don't mess
with the Zoran starring Adam Sandler. Annam Sandler is one
of us, by the way, just so you know, But
does he this radical Marxist, literal communist you can call

(22:38):
himself Democratic Socialists of America. We're going to play you
some evidence as to why he is full on commedy.
He is full on comrade. Let's go is there a
roadmap to success to winning elections by simply following mom
Donnie's lead, swimming in his wake, drinking his bath water. Oh,
let's not go that far, shall But the way he's

(23:01):
been treated in the media, this soft touch from the
likes of Kristen Welker and my friend Bonci who's a
great follow on x as well, pointing out the batting
eyelashes and the dopeful little look on her face. This
guy is becoming a cult of personality in the worst
possible way. And I know that a lot of people

(23:22):
accuse Donald Trump of the same. And he does have
a very seismic effect on the political landscape and culture
and how he makes people feel. How Donald Trump makes
people like you, people like me, people like Zach welcome back, Zach.
Feel about themselves, about their place in this country? Do
they matter? Are they the forgotten man and women that

(23:44):
are overlooked in flyover country? A big reason why Democrats
are losing elections. And if they try this commie crap
that apparently is working in New York City and maybe
some coastal liberal elite and kind of conclaves, then they're
gonna lose every election that matters from here on out
on a national basis, because this doesn't play in Peoria. Folks.

(24:07):
You've heard that saying before, and what it means is
that there are common folk in a place like Peoria, Illinois,
or Grand Haven, Michigan, or Manitoac, Wisconsin. These are people
that are never gonna sign up for full on, full
blown commi policies transferring wealth. I mean, listen to these people,

(24:29):
listen to this language. What gives them the right. We're
gonna do a whole wealth redistribution program here, eat the rich.
I get it. It's a fun thing to say. It's
a great phrase for the lefties out there. Rob from
the rich, steal from the rich to give to the poor,
Give to the poor, penny for the poor. The fact

(24:53):
of The matter is that when we look at America today,
those who are successful condemn them because they're billionaires and
they shouldn't exist. They shouldn't exist. That's what Zorain Moundani
said in his interview over the weekend on Sunday, Meet
the Press with Kristen Welker. Now here's that.

Speaker 3 (25:18):
You are a self described democratic socialist.

Speaker 1 (25:21):
Do you think that billionaires have a right to exist?

Speaker 7 (25:25):
I don't think that we should have billionaires because, frankly,
it is so much money in a moment of such inequality,
and ultimately what we need more of is equality across
our city and across our state and across our country.
And I look forward to work with everyone, including billionaires,
to make a city that is fairer for all.

Speaker 1 (25:43):
Of them, fairer. Who said life is fair, life is
pain highness. Anyone who tells you otherwise is selling something
that's from the Prince's bride. That's Wesley talking to Princess
bought akup. But it's true. Life isn't fair. You don't
get to have fair. Life is what you make out

(26:05):
of it. Life are the opportunities that you create for yourself.
Now are those that there are those that are born
with a silver spoon in their mouth. Absolutely, should you
envy them? I don't know. I kind of like to
be them. When I see a billionaire creator, like an
Elon Musk for instance, or a Steve Jobs, I want

(26:27):
to know what makes them tick? How did they become successful?
Where did that ingenuity come from? Where did it lead? Well,
what it led to was this massive ingenuity, creativity, job creation.
The job creators in our country guess what they are,
by and large billionaires and certainly many of them millionaires.

(26:52):
Billionaires shouldn't exist. Why are we drawing that arbitrary line
in the sand. Listen, when you get to nine hundred
ninety nine million, all right, you got to stop to
put a cap on that. There shouldn't be billionaires. I
don't think we should have billionaires, says Zora Mundani. Who's
going to create the jobs? But for those giants of
business and industry who make the investments, who take the

(27:15):
chances with their own capital at risk. Say, I'm going
to bet on myself. We're going to create a business here,
We're going to create some jobs. It may work, it
may not work. Who pays for that risk? Should? Somebody
that's just sitting around doing nothing automatically be guaranteed equity

(27:36):
or equality. Equality comes in the form of opportunity. What
you make of it. From there, that's your own boat
to float. You pack your own shoot, is my biology teacher,
mister Bob Stowe used to say at grass Light High School.
And it's true. Now, might there be some disadvantages you
encounter along the way? Yep? And that's life. Nobody gets

(28:00):
everything guaranteed to them. There is no such thing as
a free lunch. You get by on your own guts
and guile and the strength of your work ethic and ultimately,
at the end that will prevail. The cream rises to
the top, as macho man Randy Savage once the cream rise,

(28:20):
ooh year to the top. But why should a lazy
loser be guaranteed anything? Yeah? Nothing, This whole notion of
universal basic income. Remember Andrew Yang was selling us that
bill of Goods and the Democratic Primary a couple times ago. Now,
guaranteed you just sit there, don't worry about a thing,

(28:43):
don't lift a finger, don't contribute to society, don't get
a job, don't contribute to the economy. You'll just sit
there and collect a living wage. That's madness. That's what
these people on the far left believe. However, that simply
you exist means you are guaranteed certain things to be

(29:03):
given to you by the government. And then okay, who
pays for that? All those evil rich people over there.
The class warfare nature of the bourgeoisie and the proletariat
has been mapped out through the writings and teachings of
Karl Marx dating back to the nineteenth century, and it

(29:23):
is in full form right here was Zoran Mundani and
Eric Adams really cuts to the corps on this one.
You know, I'm not his biggest fan, but if you're
giving me the choice, and it's those two, and I'm
telling you, folks, it is those two. I love Curtis leiwa.
He's a great man, but he's a Republican and he
has basically slimmed to no chance of winning this election.

(29:46):
In a three way race. Eric Adams does have a
chance of winning. Eric Adams at one time was a Republican.
Eric Adams now is an independent. Eric Adams I think
in many ways has been redpilled through the experience that
he's had as mayor with having to fund and put
up and supply and pay for illegal aliens residing in

(30:10):
his city. Oh did he get worked up over that?
And he sounds downright trumpy at times. But here's a
fair analysis. I think about one thing that Zura Mandani
wants to do. I mean, go through his list of
policy positions. They're insane. He wants to empty Rikers Island.
These are some of the most notorious, dangerous, violent criminals

(30:32):
in existence. But prison inherently is a corrupt system, don't
you know We should release these prisoners, and they also
should have the right to vote. We need to re
enfranchise them. Here's Eric Adams's response to that.

Speaker 2 (30:45):
So when you have a candidate that states he wants
to empty Reikus Island after ball reform was put in place,
the most dangerous people are now going to jail on
Reykers Island. When you empty Reikers Island and those dangerous
people back to the communities that they have prayed on,
that just makes no sense. And only an academic elitist

(31:07):
will come up with these philosophical initiatives that are not
rooted in logics.

Speaker 1 (31:13):
May sound good, may.

Speaker 2 (31:14):
Sound good to do everything for free, but when you
actually implement them, they just they do not make sense.

Speaker 1 (31:21):
Is exactly right. This is coastal liberal elite thinking and
academic institutions like Harvard. We used to have so much
reverence for the Ivy League, right, but in those echo
chambers which are never challenged in this arena of theory
and things that we'd like to do pie in the
sky type stuff in a classroom we're writing a paper
or a thesis. Yeah, this is gonna fly among like

(31:45):
minded individuals who are all of the left. But you
get out there into the practicality of the matter. The
implementation of these absolutely bat blank policies and squalor is
what follows. And that's the point that Eric Adams is
making soft on crime. I mean, go down every single
issue that Zora'mamdannie stands for, and it will lead to

(32:08):
the bottoming out of New York City. And unfortunately, maybe
that's what they're going to have to endure to realize
the failures of socialism historically in the world. It does
not work. It will not work. A time out. We're
back wrapping up our number one on this Monday edition
of Ryan Schuling Live. After these Okay, I was just
messaging back and forth on Facebook Messenger with Ashley Key

(32:33):
and Keyfrontrange Homes dot Com is where you can begin
your home search odyssey and get the best home of
your dreams that you possibly could imagine from somebody that
knows the market, that's affiliated with Live Southby's International Realty
and Ashley be coming in joining me Live in Studio
on Wednesday, so stay tuned for that. We'll have another

(32:55):
updated segment. I'm telling you what She's given me a
lot of homework here and I'm looking through it on
I don't know this. I mean, I'm like President Trump, right,
I'm very curious. I've got an inquisitive mind, but I
know what I don't know, and I don't know a
thimblesworth compared to the knowledge of Ashley Key and this
real estate market. And it's not just for those high

(33:15):
level homes, but that is what she specializes in. If
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(33:36):
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That's key Front Rangehomes dot Com. A proud sponsor of
Ryan Shuling Live, Tier seven three nine. To close out

(34:03):
hour number one of Ryan Schruling Live. Want to bring
back into the fold the conversation that now bearded Zach
seegers back on the controls. Zach is back, Zach, welcome back.
How was it man? You were gone for like two weeks?
Two months? How long was it? Two weeks in the Bahamas?
It was great. I got to say, were you on
you were? You were on an island like castaway Tom Hanks,

(34:24):
and you came back with a beard. It doesn't quite
look like his in that movie, though. I did lose
a tooth. Though, what happened? Tell us the story? Okay?
I just okay, I thought maybe it did? You know,
art imitating life and vice versa. What was the highlight
of this trip? Man, I've never been, never been to
the Bahamas. You can't recommend it enough.

Speaker 8 (34:42):
I'm big into like snorre clean scuba diving. Wasn't able
to scuba, but got some great snorre clean and uh
uh saw some sharks that was crazy. Uh and and
swam alongside one of those big spotted rays from like
the start of Finding Nemo.

Speaker 1 (34:55):
It was cool, love that. What kind of sharks tiger
sharks or what's going on there? Uh?

Speaker 8 (35:00):
Nurse shark was the big one I saw, which those
won't get you.

Speaker 1 (35:03):
So that was that was just cool.

Speaker 8 (35:04):
My girlfriend left me high and dry though, so noted
noted that you know, she she saw a shark and
she was I'm out of here, Yeah she was. It
was a I don't have to, you know, swim faster
than the shark. I just got to swim faster than
zach Man. Can she Uh she got a head start. Okay,
you're gonna blame it on that, fair enough. What was

(35:25):
your favorite meal and or drink that you consume there?

Speaker 1 (35:28):
Man?

Speaker 8 (35:29):
Lots of rum punch, lots of rum punch.

Speaker 1 (35:31):
And then what else?

Speaker 8 (35:32):
Did I a great seafood? We don't get that in Colorado.
So whenever you're you're by a body water, got a
got indulged.

Speaker 1 (35:37):
What what specifically did you partake in there in the
seafood front.

Speaker 8 (35:41):
I think I had a fresh, like grilled group of sandwich,
which is pretty much like a bird. You don't even
neat sauce or anything, but you put some hot sauce
on that and it's like, yeah, it's perfect.

Speaker 1 (35:53):
I'm so glad you were able to take me there,
kind of vicariously living through you there. I hope I
have the chance to go to the Bahamas some David
Zach you beat me to it. Well done, sir, and
welcome back. Five seven seven three nine. Here's Eric Manning.
You're a great American.

Speaker 7 (36:09):
Eric.

Speaker 1 (36:10):
Why did you call Eric punk Ass Adams a Republican?
To my knowledge, he was never a Republican. He was
a Democrat mayor. Huh, well, Eric, I hate to break
it to you, but the file on Eric Adams says
the following. He was a Republican from nineteen ninety five
to two thousand and two. He is categorized as a

(36:32):
Democrat between two thousand and two and present. But I
think he's gone rogue. You know, he wasn't in the
Democratic primary, but he's still running, and I think he's
running ostensibly as an independent. I don't think he's a
bad guy. Eric Manning. There's two different erics here. There's
Eric Manning and there's Eric Adams. And Eric, I know
you're a great American. I know you're a true conservative,

(36:52):
and nothing will ever will allow me to question that.
But for Eric Adams, again, he's not that bad compared
to this Zoran Mamdani character, this text. Democrats were born
with a big empty hole in their brains, and no
amount of punishment or pain is ever enough to fill it.

(37:14):
Look no further than Colorado or California. The only response
to their destructive, dangerous policies is thank you, sir, May
I have some more, may or have another?

Speaker 4 (37:25):
Well?

Speaker 1 (37:25):
The problem too lies and I've talked to my buddy
Hutch about this. Down in Florida. Is people leave New
York City or Los Angeles, or even they're leaving Denver
now Hello, and they go to these new your red,
freedom loving constitutional you know, quasi semi small republics of

(37:47):
their own, like Texas or Florida, Free State of Florida, Tennessee,
and they take their horrible voting habits that led to
the demise and the destruction of the cities where they
resided and they go, you know what, maybe if we
just do it here, it'll turn out different. You know,
the old myth. I don't think Einstein actually said it,

(38:09):
but the definition of insanity is doing the same thing
over and over again expecting a different result. That's what
the Democratic voters are when they relocate, and they should
be like Epiphany style. Look that didn't work. Let's try
the Ron de Santis way, and now you're living large
like Zach and the Bahamas. A time out, Hour two
straight ahead, Ryan Schuling Live
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