Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:04):
Welcome to the Brian Mud Show. Thanks for listening. Passion
plus talent is unstoppable. It's time for today's Top three takeaways.
Speaker 2 (00:15):
Deportation from public schools and presidential prayers. My takeaway eas
for you all this Tuesday and as we get going.
Speaker 1 (00:25):
It's working. It's working.
Speaker 2 (00:27):
The president's plan on immigration policy across the board is working,
including common sense prevailing before the United States Supreme Court
and a very important decision yesterday Fox's William Maginus.
Speaker 3 (00:42):
So it was a Biden appointed judge in July, you
should have restraining order stopping ICE from stopping individuals with
just reasonable suspicion that they're in the US illegally, and
bart officials from relying on certain factors like race. Well,
Ninth Circuit upheld that ruling, prompting the administration to go
to the Supreme Court, arguing that the ruling restricted Ice
ability to enforce the law that says you can't cross
(01:05):
the border illegally. So Justice Brett Kavanaugh wrote in his
concurring opinion that race or ethnicity alone cannot be a
reason to stop someone, but it can be considered along
with other factors informing reasonable suspicion to stop someone for
illegal immigration checks?
Speaker 1 (01:21):
Well, thank you, common sense.
Speaker 2 (01:22):
Yes, profiling one of the oldest and most successful forms
of stopping criminals in identifying criminal activity, profiles, stereotypes, they
exist for a reason, right, you know the example I've
always used too, because people will always want to make this,
(01:44):
Oh but minorities, Well okay, don't be an a legal
immigrant and some of that will go away. But what
is the worst crime in society, the most heinous crime
in society? Mass murder? Right, who is your typical mass murderer?
What is the profile of your average mass murderer in
(02:04):
this country? You know what it is? Happens to be
about a forty year old white guy. So do you
want law enforcement scrutinizing, say, twenty year old Hispanic women
the same way as four year old white men and
trying to get to a solution quickly if you have
a mass murderer on the loose, or do you want
(02:25):
to try to get to that answer and get the
purpose quickly as possible by using the best available information.
Speaker 1 (02:32):
So this is all common sense. It's working. Now.
Speaker 2 (02:37):
Do you enjoy going to work and paying your taxes
to support illegal aliens living here illegally?
Speaker 1 (02:45):
Joel is shaking his head. Yes, only if they're extra
warm and extra fluffy. As long as you're a warm
and fluffy you got it.
Speaker 2 (02:52):
Yeah, neither do I neither, But there are officials in
the Palm Beach County School districts who certainly do. But
despite the district's wishes, President Trump's crackdown on illegal immigration
having a profound impact in schools. To start the school year,
the school district has confirmed that enrollment in its public
(03:12):
schools has dropped by six thousand, two hundred and seventy
students to start the new school year. This is something
I told you was going to happen, and I told
you would be made into a woe is the illegal
alien story?
Speaker 1 (03:27):
Here we are.
Speaker 2 (03:29):
So the sixty two hundred and seventy fewer students to
start the year is far greater than the five hundred
or so fewer students the district had estimated coming into
the new school year, and what appears to be the
massive cause of the disparity the Trump administration's enforcement of
immigration laws. As was noted by w PTV in an
(03:51):
interview with pob Beach County School board member Edwin ferguson
children who lack legal status and or whose parents by
legal status account for the nearly six thousand student disparity.
As stated by Ferguson, approximately seventy five percent of the
decline in student enrollment this year appears to be the
(04:14):
result of immigration policy, specifically deportation concerns. Quoting Ferguson, if
a parent is at risk of being deported, I understand
why he or she or they would choose not to
enroll their kid in public school for fear of being
deported and maybe having their families separated. So my heart
(04:35):
goes out to them. Your heart, as a school board member,
goes out to people who are not even living in
the community legally and have been legally abusing taxpayers and resources.
Speaker 1 (04:54):
Here got it.
Speaker 2 (04:57):
It explained several things, including the outrageous level of taxation
imposed by the Palm Beach County School District. But the
better news is that while the school board members are
effectively stating that it's unfortunate, more illegal immigrants are not
ripping you off this year. There is another sign that
the Trump administration's plan is coming together. Yesterday, in my
(05:20):
analysis from the most recent government jobs report, I brought
you this, so there are one point one million fewer
foreign born workers in the US workforce since the start
of the Trump administration. But the data also should suggest
that it's likely self deportation numbers continue to be huge. So,
in other words, and may not be the case that
many of these children whose families lack legal status are
(05:42):
hiding out as was implied by Ferguson. It may well
be the case that they've bugged out by self deporting.
Speaker 1 (05:52):
This is my second takeaway today.
Speaker 2 (05:54):
I mentioned that all of the stories out there about
you know, the left trying to make Alligator alcatract out
to be what do they call it, an internment camp,
and all these just outrageous things, outrageous things, outrages As
it may be, it has an effect, right, because you
don't want to go to the internment camp. You want
to get out of here on your own terms, right,
(06:15):
And so a lot of people have been self deporting.
And on that note, and take a look at even
stories like this in Chicago. Probably already Chicago's safer today
than it was yesterday, in part because of what I'm
getting ready to share with you, but also continues to
have an impact across the country. As Christy nomes message
in her ads that if you're here illegally, you will
(06:37):
be next.
Speaker 1 (06:38):
It's a little bit closer to home.
Speaker 4 (06:40):
Twenty year old Katie Abraham was killed in Urbana, Illinois,
in January by a hit and run previously deported illegal immigrant,
who police say was arrested days later trying to flee
to Mexico. Abraham's parents in a Department of Homeland Security
video by X.
Speaker 1 (06:56):
Large piece of you is gone, I'll ever be back.
Speaker 5 (06:58):
Why do these people who break these laws, who are
not US citizens deserve due process?
Speaker 4 (07:04):
Katie got nothing, she got Doe DHS in Katie's honors
says it will launch Operation Midway Blitz in the coming days,
with the reportedly hundreds of additional federal agents and assets
moving in. It says to help target criminal illegals who
flocked to Chicago and Illinois.
Speaker 1 (07:22):
Fox and chef Manaso there.
Speaker 2 (07:24):
Yes, and to the point of the mother, why is
it the people that are here illegally abusing our resources,
abusing affordable housing, abusing our schools, abusing our quote unquote
free lunches and things of that nature. Why is it
okay that that occurs while people can't afford the property
(07:45):
taxes to keep the roof over their head, or tax
o their homes that have done everything right their entire lives.
So what this means to you. Let's bring this all
home for a second, so we take a look at
the situation Balm Beach County school.
Speaker 1 (08:05):
Districts in particular. I was speaking to.
Speaker 2 (08:08):
The per student spending for the twenty twenty five to
twenty six school year, as determined by the State of Florida,
is nine one hundred and thirty dollars. Okay, So that's
how much the state kicks in for education in Palm
Beach County. If you divide the school district's current budget
across the estimated current enrollment numbers, what do you think
(08:29):
your total per student spending amounts to this year?
Speaker 1 (08:33):
Approximately?
Speaker 2 (08:36):
By the way, these numbers, I should do a better
job of talking about this anyway, because people hear the
number from the state, and I think they associate that
as being the actual number that spending students spending twenty
nine thousand dollars per student this year. Twenty nine thousand.
You're shaking your headcheel it just sounds it sounds like
a lot of money.
Speaker 1 (08:58):
Yeah, for a kid in the classroom. Yeah, I would agree,
it's a lot of money.
Speaker 2 (09:03):
Given the decline in student enrollment, the savings, if properly
provided back to taxpayers, would amount to about one hundred
and eighty two million dollars this school year. Okay, let
me put this another way. In Palm Beach County alone,
(09:25):
taxpayers were ripped off by illegal aliens in the classroom
to the tune of one hundred and eighty two million
dollars last year, last school year, one hundred and eighty
two million dollars just in Palm Beach County. And again
we're talking about just one county. I'll be it a
(09:47):
big one. And so there are a lot of reasons
why property tax relief needs to happen in the form
of the elimination of property taxation. When Florida's DOJE audits
be going to be released, we're going to have a
better idea of many of those things. Local school districts
always want higher student headcounts because funding from the federal
government and the state is determined by enrollment rates. However,
(10:07):
when it comes to properties access, the largest year goes
to school districts, and this appears to be a place
where there is an immediate opportunity for cost savings. Also
of note, the Indian River and Oquechobee County school districts
also saw declines and overall enrollment they were small, while
small increases in public school enrollment were seen in Martin
and Saint Lucy Counties. One thing we know is that
(10:30):
all of these counties continue to experience population growth, so
you can begin to then see some of this is
going to be due to the voucher program and greater
use of the voucher program moving kids maybe to private
schools for example, But no doubt, as we saw, like
with the Palmache Counting example, a lot of this just
because you have a lot of illegal alien kids that
(10:51):
are not abused in our schools, not to the extent
that it was happening last year. And then you have
the heart going out to the illegal aliens, the lawbreakers
by the Palm Beach Cutty School district.
Speaker 1 (11:04):
Which is fun.
Speaker 2 (11:05):
Speaking of President Trump's influence in schools, this made me
a happy, happy guy.
Speaker 1 (11:11):
Yesterday. Here's Fox It's Jared Halpern.
Speaker 5 (11:14):
Speaking at a meeting of the White House Religious Liberty Commission.
President Trump said the Education Department will soon have new
guidelines for public schools about prayer.
Speaker 3 (11:23):
Then many schools today students are instead indoctrinated with anti
religious propaganda.
Speaker 5 (11:29):
The President did not detail what new guidance will be,
but spoke of cases in which he says students were
punished for public displays of faith.
Speaker 2 (11:37):
We have to bring back religion in America, bring it
back stronger than ever before.
Speaker 1 (11:42):
Amen.
Speaker 2 (11:43):
Third takeaway here the new guidance, The new guidance.
Speaker 1 (11:46):
So yeah.
Speaker 2 (11:47):
Yesterday, President Trump made a significant statement that new guidance
will becoming regarding prayer and schools, and while speaking to
the Religious Liberty Commission, the President said, I'm pleased to
announce this morning that the Department of Education will soon
iss she knew guidance protecting the right to prayer in
our public schools. While it remains to be seen what
exactly that may mean, well, it is encouraging for potentially
(12:08):
multiple reasons.
Speaker 1 (12:09):
Now, as I've long illustrated.
Speaker 2 (12:11):
You can draw straight lines between the adaptation of the
Department of Education to removal of religious references in schools,
to the increase in atheism, to the increase in mental
health issues with children and eventually adults, along with corresponding
violence in schools. The ball started rolling in the wrong
direction before the Department of Education came along in nineteen
(12:32):
eighty one. It was a Supreme Court ruling in nineteen
sixty two that created the chilling effect that led to
the end of all prayers and religious references in public schools,
even though that was never what the ruling was intended
to be. Did you know and this was part of
what brought about that case that in nineteen sixty two
there were actually thirteen states state law thirteen states that
(12:53):
prayer in public schools it's how you were to start
the day, which often involved a Bible reading in classrooms.
So the Supreme Court's decision and the Ingle versus Vitel
case put an end to that practice. But what was
left in terms of religious adaptation in public schools eventually
eradicated by an expansion of the interpretation of that ruling
(13:15):
by the US Department of Education, along with a long
desired end to the Department of Education. The President Trump's
administration is currently working towards. I've long wanted a case
that would challenge the interpretation of the nineteen sixty two
ruling that has been used as a catalyst to eliminate
all siblance of prayer and religious references in public schools.
(13:37):
Public schools are always off, for example, a protracted period
of time around December twenty fifth.
Speaker 1 (13:44):
Why would that be winter break? Right, gats winter break?
Speaker 2 (13:50):
But it's always at the same I guess it's Peakao,
winter got here officially, so it's galli g whiz, it's
time to take a winter break.
Speaker 1 (13:58):
That's what it is.
Speaker 2 (14:00):
No, it's because of the celebration of the birth of
Jesus Christ period Jesus Christ Birthday. That is why winter
break exists in public schools. We can't even mention the
term Christmas on a public school calendar anymore, can we.
(14:22):
So there's no doubt that any presidential order surrounding prayer
and public schools will be legally challenged by the faithless left.
And that's okay because hopefully the challenges will make their
way to the Supreme Court, where they could undo much
of what's been done that's led to worse academic performance,
significantly higher rates of mental illness, exponentially higher rates of violence.
(14:46):
The new guidance from the President could be the key
to this unfortunate dynamic.
Speaker 1 (14:51):
Finally, turning