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November 19, 2025 39 mins
Listen to The Next-Gen Report live! Sundays at 7:00 p.m. on AM950, KPRC.  
 
 Bitterness and anger seem to be consistent personality traits of any radical leftist, and radio host Jennifer Welch seems to be proving that. She's also demonstrating how the left really feels about government and white people. 
 The House and the Senate have both officially voted to release the Epstein files, so with the bill now awaiting Trump's signature, how long till we see results? 

Jaclyn Brown with Terra Rose Odysses joins The Next-Gen Report to talk about travel!

Reach out to Terra Rose Odysseys for all your travel needs! 
https://terraroseodysseys.com

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@the.ethanbuchanan 
@_ethanbuchanan

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:02):
From the heart of the Space City to the heart
of gen Z. Welcome to Next Gen Conversation, not Dad's
Talk Radio. Ethan talks to you about the issues and
events that men are to our generation. This is the
Next Gen Report. Put ethanbu Can in.

Speaker 2 (00:23):
Hey everybody, how are we great? To be back with
you real quick. If you're not listening to the Sunday
evening show, you're missing out seven pm AM nine to
fifty KPRC. Tune in. It's a great show every single Sunday.
I cannot recommend it enough. It is my show, so
I'm biased, but I have a great time doing it.
I think you'll have a great time listening. If you're

(00:43):
not tuning into that, tune into it. And if you
can't you're busy seven pm on Sunday evenings, that's fine.
We podcast it's available to listen the next Monday morning
every single weekend. So just wanted to put that out
there on your radar. If you don't know where to
find it, the best place to start looking would be
at Underscore Ethan Buchanan on X That's where you can

(01:03):
find me. All Right, we got a lot of talk
about today. I want to start by talking about something
that I think is kind of fun. This woman, who
if you're listening, you can't see her, but if you're watching,
you can. She's up on the screen right now. Is
UCLA pro Palestinian protester Maya. That's the only name I
have for her. And she got hospitalized because she went

(01:28):
on this hunger strike and didn't eat for nine days
and she ended up having to go to the hospital
because wouldn't you know what the human body needs food.
Take a listen to this video that I guess her
friend recorded this. Check this out. This is what happens
when UCLA ignores their students. Okay, no, it's not. This
is what happens when you don't eat for nine days
because you're an idiot. She's going to the hospital. She

(01:54):
just passed out. Please hear her.

Speaker 3 (02:01):
She's literally being hospitalized because of you.

Speaker 2 (02:07):
Again, I think it's incredibly important that we pay attention
to the language UCLA. She's being hospitalized because of you. No,
she's not. UCLA didn't make her stop eating. She chose that.
She chose that. I mean, this is all her doing.
UCLA can clear and free wash their hands of this.

Speaker 4 (02:32):
This is on you, UCLA.

Speaker 3 (02:35):
Hi My name is Maya and I'm one day six
of my hunger strike. Although there has been no response
from UCLA about my hunger strike, I have been been
aware that they know about the strike and they're monitoring it.
You CLA claims to care deeply about the health and
safety of its students, it has failed to directly speak
to me about my hunger strike. Many people do not
know just how involved UCLA and other universities across the

(02:55):
country are in the Palestinian genocide. Universities and institutions of
learning are run like for profit businesses. They hold billions
of dollars in investments and private equity funds. This means
the people who run this university to directly profit from
the slaughter of Palestinian children.

Speaker 2 (03:12):
I mean, she's jump into a whole lot of conclusions there.
I don't know what her logic is, but the point
here isn't even about Palestine or anything like that, because
for all intents and purposes, I think that ship has
pretty much saled. That war seems to be over. The
ceasefire last I check is holding up just fine, and
the UN has approved the long term piece deal, so

(03:35):
we're pretty much good there. The point is these people
are stupid. I mean, this chick just jumps to some
conclusions about how evil UCLA is the college she's choosing
to go to, and rather than doing something that might
actually affect their bottom line in some way, like drop
out and stop paying tuition, she just says, no, I'll

(03:58):
just stop eating. Achieves nothing for anybody except get you
sent to the hospital, and I mean maybe gets you
some attention online, which I think is probably her end goal.
So anyway, whenever I see things like this, it just
kind of cracks me up. Whenever I see these leftists,
you know, hunger strike themselves and get themselves hospitalized in
the ridiculous protests, it just goes to show that, you know,

(04:24):
Darwin was wrong about a lot, but not everything. Natural
selection is real and it comes in the form of stupidity.
All right. Now, let's also talk about this instance. This
is Antonio Enriquez. He is, from what I can tell,
a legal alien. They're upset that he got arrested and detained.
Here's the video about this. This is him being detained fifteen.

Speaker 5 (04:45):
Him no no, no, no, no, no no, but.

Speaker 3 (04:52):
Why not get why.

Speaker 2 (04:57):
Let's see the arresting him. He said no, he's saying,
let's go to my house. Let's go to my house.
In Spanish, here's why he's saying that. Was walking to
Melrose Park store last month when agents decided or demanded

(05:20):
to see his documents. He told them they were a
few blocks away at his home, pleading vamos micassa, let's
go to my house, but agents ignored him. The offense
took Enriquez to the Broadview Ice facility. He was held
for six hours until she took a copy. It doesn't
say who she is, but I assume his wife. Until
she took a copy of his Green card and Social

(05:43):
Security card too, showed eyes to get him out of pertainment.
Now the left is mad about this case, but this
is actually an example of the system working. You might
not know this, but if you're a legal immigrant, someone
like a Green card holder who's not a citizen, you're
actually required to have your documents on your person all
of the time. Like it's not one of those things

(06:05):
where you can just leave it at the house. You
are required by law, by federal law, to have your
green card on your person, not somewhere else on your person,
and immigration agents are allowed to ask you for proof
of citizenship. They are. The Left will try to tell you, oh,
this is just like Nazi Germany. We're asking for people's papers. No,

(06:27):
it's not like Nazi Germany at all. This is the
set law. It's been the set law forever. This is
nothing new. This is standing law. It's being enforced. I mean,
this guy got detained for six hours and then he
was able to present his documents, and he was like, Oh,
that's the system working. He wasn't even arrested, he was detained.

(06:47):
That's a specific different legal thing. So I mean, basically,
this guy suffered a six hour inconvenience because he didn't
follow the law. And the Left will try to point
to this and is an example of how evil is
I mean, if you have an alternative for the requirement
that you keep your documents on you at all times
if you're a legal immigrant, I would love to hear it,

(07:10):
because without the you have to have your green card
on your person. We basically just have to take everyone's
word for it every time they say they're here legally
and they have a green card, which I don't know
if you know this, but the honor system is not
overly reliable, especially when it comes to immigration. So again,
I don't know what the left wants here. What do

(07:31):
you want? And the answer is just a wide open border.
They want everybody, regardless of whether or not they're here legally,
to be able to just hang out. I mean, that
doesn't work. We've tried that. I'm sorry. All Right, stay tuned.
We've got a lot coming up today on the Next
Gen Report. My friend Jacqueline Brown is going to be
with us in the third segment. I'm looking forward to that.
We'll be right back here, all right. I'm gonna be

(08:20):
a little bit late to the party on this one,
but I want to talk about this lady. She started
really making the rounds kind of last week. I had
never heard of her before, but she fascinates me. I
think she's a very interesting case study in what just

(08:41):
outright leftism does to you. Does to your mind, it
turns you into very bitter of a person, and that's
demonstratable on multiple fronts. But I think this lady, this
Jennifer Welch, she's a radio host, much like myself. I'm
not sure where I believe. She's kind of political talk,

(09:03):
but she's left wing political talk, which is probably why
I've never heard of her. I don't know if you
know this, but left wing political talk radio doesn't tend
to do very well. I mean, I guess she's got
her show, and you know, good for her, I guess,
but she seems like a legitimately awful person, like just

(09:24):
very very bitter and angry and hateful frankly, but also
kind of crazy. And we're going to dig into this
because I mean, she really is, as far as I'm concerned,
just like the perfect example of late stage leftism. So
I want to start by playing you this video. And
I'm not sure if this is on her show or

(09:46):
someone else's show or what, but here is she super
upset at any conservative who goes and you know, eats
at a Mexican restaurant or a Chinese restaurant, and she's
like really mad about this. Take a listen to this,
and I'm gonna try to I'm gonna have to bleep

(10:06):
out a whole bunch of this and I'm gonna try
to get all of it. But if I miss something,
forgive me. I'm operating under FCC guidelines. So if you
hear a word that you don't like, give Congress a call.
I can't fix it. I'm there's so much I have
to bleep out here. I'm just focusing on bleeping out
the stuff that the government tells me I have to,
So take a listen. I've had it with.

Speaker 4 (10:29):
White people that triple Trump. Yeah, that have the nerve
and the audacity to walk into a Mexican restaurant, a
Chinese restaurant, an Indian restaurant, go to perhaps their gay hairdresser.
I don't think you should be able to enjoy anything

(10:51):
but cracker barrel. And if you want to triple Trump
and you want to browbeat DEI, and you want to
browbeat gay people, and you want to browbeat black people
as you've been doing for four hundred years, and you
want to browbeat this generation of immigrants that come over
here and open up businesses, earnestly pay their taxes. You
want to demonize them and call them rapists and felons

(11:12):
and all this shit, when the felon is the teeny
weenie mushroom piece of cankles taco tits at the top
of the ticket. I have had it from top to bottom,
white people that triple Trump should be banned, boycotted from
enjoying the best thing that America has to offer, which
is multi culturalism. Get your faces out of the Mexican restaurant,

(11:34):
get your fat asses over to cracker barrel, because nobody
wants to see your full gas teeny weenie pink arm,
big gut around.

Speaker 2 (11:45):
Nobody wants to see that shit. No one. So she
seems like a nice lady. And again, for the listeners,
I know I got everything, but for the YouTube viewers,
it's coming in on a different feed. I apologize if
I miss something, But anyway, she seems nice. She seems
real polite. Here's my question, who cares what restaurant you
eat at? I mean, I'm what I guess you would

(12:07):
call a triporal Trumper. I didn't vote for him in
twenty sixteen because I wasn't old enough, but I voted
for him in twenty twenty. I voted for him in
twenty twenty four, and I voted for him in the
primaries in both those elections. So I think technically I'm
actually a quadruple Trumper. Or no, he wasn't on the
prime There really wasn't a real primary in twenty twenty,

(12:29):
was there. But I have voted for Trump as many
times as I was afforded the opportunity, and I proudly
eat at Mexican restaurants and Chinese restaurants, not really Indian
food because I don't like Indian food, but everything else
on the list I've dabbled in. And I really enjoy
Mexican food because I live in Texas and I grew
up eating Mexican food, and I think it's great. What

(12:50):
the hell is it to you, lady? I can vote
for whoever I want and go eat whatever I want.
As a matter of fact, I can vote for whoever
I want, eat whatever I want, and then if I can,
that's when that somebody working at that restaurant is a
Leegal alien, I can call ICE on that person and
still go back to eat there, cry about it, cry
about it. But again, I guess her point is, you

(13:15):
can't eat this food if you want these people to
port it. And my point is, hey, lady, not all
these people are illegal Aliens. That to me, I think
is through real racism here, right. I mean, you're assuming
just because they're Hispanic that I want to call ICE
on them. There are legal Hispanic people. I have no
problem with them. I welcome them with open arms. Come

(13:35):
to America, make me a taco or whatever. This is
gonna get clipped. I'm gonna get canceled already. I don't care.
This is how I feel you can eat Mexican food
and support Ice closing the border. That's allowed. I have
another clip here of her, but I really don't think
you'll be able to actually hear her voice in any
meaningful way over the background noise in this clip, so

(13:58):
I'm not gonna bother playing it, But essentially what she
says in this other clip, it's from Zorhan Mamdani's victory party,
and she talks about the fact that, oh, just white
people and Americans have no culture. And she goes to say, oh,
this party would be so much worse if there was
just a bunch of white people here. And I mean
there's a significant number of white people in the background.
If you're watching it right now, you can see it.

(14:21):
But I think this just goes to show you that
she's a very bitter woman, and she's a very self
hating woman, Like she goes so far out of her
way to disparage white people, and I think that's a
good example of what happens when you dedicate yourself so
thoroughly to the kind of modern DEI white people are

(14:42):
evil leftism, Like, I really do think that this is
just a self hating cracker. That's who she is. That's
who she strikes me as. I mean, if she's not,
I'd love to hear it. But she makes the point
in this video that, oh, white people have no culture.
America has no culture, We have nothing going on. White
people have so much culture. There are so many beautiful

(15:03):
and awesome white cultures, and the American white culture is
by far my favorite. And I'm sorry to you, lady,
if you've never managed to experience that, but you're missing
out and you're frankly probably just ignorant. This I think
is really fascinating, Just to double down on my theory

(15:27):
that she just is a self hating white person. Here
she is quite literally kissing the feet of Jasmine Crockett
and then getting on video and bragging about it. I'm
not making that up. We don't know who Jasmine Crockett is.
She's like, she does a phony ghetto bit when she's campaigning,
but she's a congresswoman from Texas, from the Dallas area.

(15:48):
Here is this Jennifer Welsh lady quite literally you can
see in the picture kissing her feet and then bragging
about it. Take a listen, and can you confirm it?
I just kissed your sneakers. She's on camera. Thanks, She'll
do the radio. I am, I am, We're doing it.
Future Senator of the Great State of Texas. I'm a

(16:10):
miss ted cruise so much. He's so likable. Can you
confirm that I just kissed your shoes? Yes, she did,
Future Senator of Texas. Please calm down, calm down. If
Sheila Jackson Lee could never make it out of the
House of Representatives. Jasmine Crockett definitely is not. But I mean,
here's the picture. You can see it right there, just
so you know it's not AI. Here is her own account.

(16:34):
This is Stephanie Miller's account posting the pictures, bragging about it.
She is happy to have kissed Jasmine Crockett's feet because
she's crazy. I think this demonstrates two things. One, it
demonstrates the racial self flagellation that's required of the modern

(16:58):
far leftist. And also, I think it's a good example
of the fact that leftists really do worship government, and
so a member of the government like Jasmine Crockett is
seen as sort of a prophet of the Ultimate God.
That's how they view government. And I mean, that's the
only reason I can think of, Like, this is exactly

(17:21):
what I could imagine your average Muslim doing if they
saw a vision of the prophet Muhammad is getting down
and kissing his feet. If Jesus Christ himself appeared to
me in a vision, that's probably what I would be
doing to him. And here she is doing it to
Jasmine Crockett. These people are just weird, y'all. Our enemies

(17:41):
are weird. Our political enemies are crazy and weird. I
have nothing else to say about this. We'll be right
back with Jacqueline Brown in just a sentid. All right,

(18:15):
let's talk about something more fun. I enjoy taking trips.
That's one of my hobbies. I traveled to Gettysburg in
like twenty twenty three. That was a blast. I travel
around the kind of Texas Louisiana area, just going and
doing different activities, doing historical reenactments. It's a great time.

(18:36):
So I wanted to have somebody on to talk about travel,
because that really is a whole world in and of itself,
and so I brought one of my good friends Jacqueline Brown,
who is a travel agent travel advisor? What's the technical term?

Speaker 5 (18:53):
Either work, some go by travel agents, some go by
travel advisor or more sophisticated titles. I usually just say travel.

Speaker 2 (19:00):
Advisor, travel advisor. Okay, so let me start by asking
you this. I just kind of whenever I go on
a trip, just kind of wing it basically, like I'll
like the most planning in advance I'll do is like
I'll pick a hotel and like, yeah, I think this
one has at least four out of five stars, so

(19:21):
I'll stay there in this town. But that's really it
as far as planning that I do. So what exactly
does a travel advisor do? How much planning do you
actually do for your clients? What does that entail? Are
you like picking restaurants or picking hotels or all of
the above.

Speaker 5 (19:41):
So for the way that I set up my travel
agency is I will plan as little too as much
as people would like me too. So if someone comes
to me and they go, I know exactly where I
want to go and what I want to do. I
just don't want to find a hotel or find a flight.

(20:01):
So here's the dates, and this is you know, this
is what I want. I can totally do that for
them and just do hotels and flights, but I'll even
go as far to on a more detailed trip, like
let's say, if it's out of the country, I will
go into dining reservations, We'll do tours, we'll do excursions

(20:24):
for cruises or of course, hotels, transfers, it kind of
anything that you can think of, within of course reason.
There are some restaurants that we wouldn't be able to
do reservations for. You would need to do that, but
as long as it's within my power, I would totally

(20:45):
plan that and have that in the itinerary for my clients.

Speaker 2 (20:49):
So you're essentially like just filling in the blanks, right,
however many blanks you give me, that's how many I'm
going to fill in. If if you know pretty much
what you want except this and this, we'll go there.
Or if you hand me just a blank sheet of paper,
you'll cover that too.

Speaker 5 (21:05):
Yes, that's kind of what travel advisors are for. We're
specialists in the destinations and in the products that we sell,
or even some people have certain niches like okay, honeymoons
in the Caribbean or hiking in the I don't know

(21:30):
the the andes or you know, things like that. There
are certain people who have specific knowledge in those products,
and so if someone comes up to a travel advisor
and it's like I want to do this, then they
can set that all up for them. We have tour
operators and people that we have very close relationships with

(21:52):
to be able to just someone to tell us hey,
I like to and we go, okay, well, do you
know where you want to hike or do you want
to just go somewhere and hike. And that's where our
expertise comes in and we go, Okay, this is what

(22:15):
we think that we should do. How does that sound
to you, and kind of customize it to what they like.

Speaker 2 (22:21):
I kind of had an experience like that when me
and my wife went on our honeymoon. We did a
big cruise and I was looking at some of the
excursions and I discovered that, like, Facebook groups are a
big thing in the cruising community. I'm learning this all now,
relatively for the first time, because I've never been on

(22:42):
one before. But there was one where it was like, hey,
this is the Facebook group for this cruise port, and
this is the Facebook group for this cruise ship and
this is the Facebook group for this specific sale date.
And I'm looking at all this stuff and I'm like,
I don't trust any of the things I'm seeing in here.
I've got some random guy from Honduras saying like, hey,

(23:04):
I'll give you the best deal on a tour. It
is like, I don't want to get drugs by you, bro.
So it seems like kind of your whole thing is
eliminating that guesswork, right.

Speaker 5 (23:16):
Yes, So we work with trusted providers or trusted what
we call suppliers of whatever product you're looking for. There are,
of course cruise excursion special specialist suppliers that we can go, Okay,
we have this person and they're selling on this cruise

(23:37):
bees dates what is available, and then we as a
travel advisor, get that information back and we go, okay,
well this person is not really into water sports, so
let's take those out. We'll just send them. You know,
they want to do things with food and they're big
foody and culinary, so we'll pool those excursion and take

(24:01):
them to our clients and say, hey, these are some
great options that you can do on your support days.
And that's that's kind of how we work.

Speaker 2 (24:12):
So do you have personally kind of like a thing
like are you, like, you know, a hiking expert or
a foody expert, Like what is your like favorite I
guess my question is what's your favorite type of trip
to plan? Like what's one where somebody goes, I want
to do this and you're like, yes, uh.

Speaker 5 (24:35):
That is It's a really hard question for me. But
whenever I set up my travel agency, I set it
up and the name is Tara Roodes Odysseyes and so
what I really wanted to give my clients a feel
of and the clients that I look for or the
trips that I love to plan, are customized trips. So

(24:58):
it's not something that you find in a package and
you just say, oh, hey, I like that package, let's
just book it. Although I can do that for you
and would love to. I love to do personalized travel,
and so I more of have some destinations that I

(25:19):
have specialized knowledge in and not necessarily like I only
do hiking, or I only do food, or I only
do this. I like to do a little bit of
all of it, but within certain places. Again, I can
do anywhere, but there are some specializations I have some

(25:42):
of my destinations that I love to book to are
South Korea, Greece, the South Pacific, Japan, and then more
stateside would be like Florida and Tennessee and places like that.

Speaker 2 (25:57):
So you've got a big trip or something that you're
putting together to South Korea? Right, Can can you tell
me about that? And am I right on that it
is South Korea? Right?

Speaker 5 (26:08):
Yes, So it's our South Korea fault odyssey. And I
understand that fall basically almost over, but it's not this fall. Yeah,
it's it's it's not in a couple of weeks. That's
not when it is the it's next October and it's

(26:32):
in South Korea. We're going to be doing a lot
of touring and sight seeing. But also what I like
to do in my group trips is have free days
for the passengers on the group. And what I do

(26:53):
then is I give personalized recommendations to them based off
of whether they want to go on a food route
or a K pop route, or a cultural route, beauty
and wellness things like that. So it's going to be

(27:13):
a ten day, nine night trip and we'll be flying
from most likely Dallas because that is where we can
get an international flight. I just lost the word. It's
an international flight, but it's a no stopovers, no layovers
or anything. It's a straight there flight from DFW. If

(27:37):
you go from Houston area, you're going to have to
stop somewhere else and then switch planes. But we're going
to go to Seoul and then yung Ju and Bussan
and then back to Seoul. So there's going to be
three different cities that we're visiting and then yeah, just

(28:01):
a bunch of a bunch of fun.

Speaker 2 (28:03):
All right, real quick, we're almost out of time. I
got less than a minute left. Tell people what's the
best way If they're interested, they want to book a
trip with you, they want to look into this trip.
What's the best way for them to find you, to
connect to learn more about your agency and get a
trip booked.

Speaker 5 (28:20):
So the best way would be to either email me
or go into my website or even give me a call.
So my email is Jacqueline, which is jac l yn
at Tara Roseodisseys dot com. My website is Tara Rosodissees

(28:44):
dot com, and my phone number is eight three to
two six one seven four five three.

Speaker 2 (28:52):
Four all right, awesome, Well, Jacqueline, Hey, thank you very
much for taking the time to join us. I appreciate it.
Thank you, alrighty, thank you once again to Jacqueline for

(29:15):
taking the time to talk with us about a shared passion.
I really do love traveling. I'm looking over the next
couple of weeks at or not in the next couple
of weeks, but over the next couple of weeks, I'll
be looking at planning another trip because I have a
one year anniversary coming up in the late spring of

(29:36):
next year, so I'm excited for that. I am I
looking to see you about booking out with Jacqueline. I
highly encourage you to. She's a great person to talk to.
She's a good person to be friends with. Known her
for a long time, she's she's just I can't sing
her prizes enough. I'll link all the information to find
her down below. If you're listening right now on the podcast,

(29:57):
you can see it right there. If you're watching on
you you Tube, you'll be able to see it. But anyway,
let's talk about some late breaking news that we had
here in Texas. Our new congressional maps have for the
time being, been blocked by a federal court. Now, before

(30:18):
everyone loses their minds about this, this was part of
the plan. This was not a surprise to anybody. This
was not a blind side or anything. Look at what
the chronicle said about this. Texas gup drawn congressional maps
blocked by court in a stunning blow to Republicans. If
you really thought this was a stunning blow to Republicans,

(30:40):
you have got another thing coming. This was a panel
of federal judges that blocked this. This is going to
be appealed directly to the Supreme Court on a rocket docket. Basically, hey,
look at this right now, get to it as soon
as possible quickly. This will be overturned within a month.
I'm calling it right now. I'd put my on it.

(31:00):
We have precedent from the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals
from the state of Texas that says what we just
did is fine. This ruling we saw coming. We know
we were going to have to get it through a
liberal court before we got it to the Supreme Court.
This will be overruled. I'm calling it now. This was
not stunning at all. Everybody knew this was going to happen.

(31:24):
If you didn't see this coming, you're a political idiot.
That's not stopping the Democrats from doing a victory lap,
though the Texas House Democrats tweeted this out, Texas's rigged
redistricting maps just got struck down by a federal judge
as an illegal racial gerrymander. That's different from what actually happened.

(31:45):
They didn't get struck down, they got blocked, which means
we're prevented from implementing them for the time being. Again,
I cannot stress this enough. This ruling will be overturned.
One of my least favorite Democrats, James Tallarico, he got
himself into some hot water as well, but I'm not
going to go into that. James Talerrico said, My fellow

(32:05):
Democrats and I broke quorum to shine a national spotlight
on Trump's redistricting power grab. We inspired other states and
millions of Americans to join the fight. Moments ago, a
federal court struck down this rigged map. This is why
we fight back. This is going to be really funny
when this gets overruled. And again, the irony cannot be overstated.

(32:31):
The Democrats, while singing the praises of the court that
blocked this map, are going to also sing the praises
of Gavin Newsom, who did the same thing in his
own state as a rebuttal to what Texas did. So
somehow it's a threat to democracy and corrupt and jerrymandering

(32:53):
when we do it, but when you do it, it's fine.
What am I missing here? Honestly, what am I missing
is Gavin Newso I'm going to go in campaign for
his old maps to be restored, because remember they passed
their own jerrymandered maps right after we did. They made
a big deal out of it too. So now that

(33:14):
our maps have been blocked, are you gonna undo that? No,
because it was never about fairness or protecting your voice
or whatever garbage they fed you. It was always just
about the power. Jan Wu had one too. This is
why we first broke quorum and then fought the maps
in the courts. Texas HDC, that's House Democrats will always
fight for the voices of everyday Texans to be heard.

(33:36):
We will not back down. I mean, if you knew
this was going to happen the whole time, which is
what you're claiming, why would you even bother breaking quorum?
Why not just wait for the lawsuits. If you are
so confident that this was so illegal and so wrong,
just let it pass, and then when the lawsuit comes

(33:58):
and strikes the map down, just do a victory lap
and say I told you so, which is kind of
what he's doing here, I guess. But again, I'm saving
all of these tweets because they are going to be
really funny when the Supreme Court weighs in and completely
flips all this on his head. Speaking of Gavin Newsom,

(34:18):
Donald Trump, and Greg Abbott played with fire, got burned,
and democracy won. All right? So if democracy won because
Texas's maps got struck down in the courts, does that
mean democracy lost in California because your maps are still
going into effect. Unless I've missed something big, which I

(34:40):
don't think I have. Even if there was a major
lawsuit against the California maps, I can't imagine it's gonna
go anywhere, not in the state of California. So, I mean,
what's going on here? Are you celebrating victory for democracy
in Texas and also celebrating failure of democracy in your

(35:03):
own state? Gavenusom? And if so again, why because it's
about the power, Gavin Newsom, These democrats, they don't care
at all about democracy or justice or protecting your voice.
All they care about is power. And again they're gonna
lose this power. This is a temporary, minor procedural victory

(35:27):
that will be overturned within two months, if not sooner.
If not sooner, So anyway, enjoy your victory. All right,
More big important news. It looks like we're gonna get
the Epstein files, all of them, supposedly. Senate sends bill
demanding the release of the Epstein files to Trump's desk.
This all happened yesterday. The House passed and then the
Senate immediately also passed this bill that requires the Justice

(35:50):
Department to release all files related to Epstein's investigation within
thirty days of enactment. So I mean assume Donald Trump
signs it soon, which he said he would, we should
have the Epstein file shortly. Now. I'm gonna tell you
this right now. If you're hearing this, if you're reading

(36:11):
these headlines and thinking, oh my god, we're finally gonna
get the blockbuster, We're gonna figure out all these names,
who all these perverts are, and we're gonna take down
the rich and powerful who were abusing our children. I
wish you were right. I pray to god you're right.
It would be wonderful if you are. Maybe I'm just
a pessimist on this, but I wouldn't hold my breath. Again,

(36:34):
this is thirty days after enactment, so God only knows
when that actual date is. I imagine it could be
as long as two more months. Because Trump he said
he would sign it. That video is out there. It's
floating around on x i'le we post it. I don't
have time to play it, but that video is out
there saying yeah, if this gets to my desk, I'll
sign it. I don't care, I'm not on this list.

(36:56):
I will sign it. That's what Trump said. He could
take his sweet time signing it. And then I haven't
read the text of the bill, so I'm not sure.
After signing it, there could still be another delay before
it actually goes into effect. And then after it goes
into effect, there's another thirty days on the end. So again,

(37:18):
this is legislation. There's a lot of games in it,
I guarantee you, and all of those games are going
to be used to draw this out so that they
can make all the redactions and all of the subtractions
and hiding everything they want to hide. Again, I hope
and pray that I'm wrong. I hope and pray that
what we end up getting out of this bill is

(37:41):
the full and complete release of everything we have on
Jeffrey Epstein, including all of his clientele. I hope that's
the case. However, I'm also a realist, and the pattern
seems to indicate that that will not be the case. Again,
I hope it is. I want it to be, but

(38:04):
don't get your hopes up, basically is my thought on this.
All right, I think that's all I've got for us
this Friday. Again, I want to remind you listen to
the Sunday Show seven pm AM nine to fifty KPRC.
If you're not in the Greater Houston area. If you
can't get a clear signal, listen on the free iHeartRadio app.
Just search KPRC nine fifty on the iHeartRadio app. You'll

(38:24):
be able to pull it up. You can also do
that on Apple Music. By the way, you can listen
to the online feed. Again, it's a great show. We
have a great time. And also I just had Jacquelynn on.
I had her on because she's a friend and I
love what she's doing. But if you own a business,
you want to talk to me about your business. I
would love to hear from you. I would love to
hear about your business. I would love to promote you.

(38:46):
If you're a good business, reach out to me. Let
me know. You can find me on x at Underscore
Ethan Buchanan or shoot me an email the next Gen
Report at gmail dot com. All right, that's all I've got.
Thank you very much for listening to the Next Gen Report.
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