Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
CROWNI was it the presidents supposed to pardon the turkey
before Thanksgiving.
Speaker 2 (00:06):
That's pretty good right there. That's pretty good that the
Denver Post had an editorial. The headline is Denver's mayor
was wrong to threaten armed conflict to protect immigrants. Now
when I saw it, you know, Dragon laid this over
here on the console this morning.
Speaker 3 (00:25):
When I saw it, dude wants a T square.
Speaker 2 (00:28):
Yeah, I thought to myself, Well, the Denver Post, the
Denver Compost has come out and said mayor, you're wrong.
Well not exactly, because the headline is slightly different than
the editorial itself. I know, are you Are you okay?
Back there?
Speaker 3 (00:48):
I feel faint. Oh, you know what, this is horrible radio.
I'm gonna do it anyway.
Speaker 2 (00:56):
I want people to start out in the right frame
of mind today. So there have been many, many instances
in which Tamra she never violates any confidentiality whatsoever. She
never tells me the names or anything about some of
the children that she may be counseling. But she describes
and I try to do them. No, Mama, Ma, ma, mama,
(01:18):
I don't want.
Speaker 3 (01:18):
To hear it.
Speaker 2 (01:21):
I just the stories are just infuriating, their heartbreaking, they're disappointing,
and they're frightening. I'm sure I could come with some
other agetis too, but those are the first ones that
come to mind.
Speaker 3 (01:33):
And she will describe these children to me, some of whom.
Speaker 2 (01:37):
Are just in dire circumstances. And we're talking about Douglas County, Colorado.
We're not talking about the South side of Chicago. We're
talking about one of the wealthiest counties in the state
of Colorado. And they're not and don't misunderstand me, they're
not all illegal aliens either. They're us working class folks
(02:02):
who are just barely getting along. But then there are
some stories that she will you know, today, I had
a little girl in that you know, blah blah blah
blah and whatever. And I think to myself, that child,
let's say she's eleven years old or thirteen years old,
doesn' make any difference.
Speaker 3 (02:23):
It is going to grow up.
Speaker 2 (02:24):
And I think, to my sense, and sometimes sometimes I
say it out loud, is going to grow up to
become a serial killer, some sort of criminal. Just they're
totally totally out of control. And of course it then
falls on public education to try to correct the situation. Now,
in cases of abuse, she is required by law, and
(02:45):
she does. She's a very she's stickler about it. If
there's an abuse situation going on, will she contacts the
she contacts law enforcement, and law enforcement gets involved along
with child protecting services, and they do an investigation and
that runs its course and they do whatever they need
to do. But in many cases, it's just pure unadulterated piss.
(03:10):
Poor parenting and behavior problems that caused me to think
this child's going to grow up to become a serial killer.
Speaker 3 (03:17):
This, this is the thug that'll end up in a you.
Speaker 2 (03:20):
Know, if I'm still doing tax payer relief shots in
ten fifteen years and that child is now, you know,
eighteen or twenty one or whatever, that child will end
up being a tax payer relief shot, you know, breaking
into somebody's home or pointing a gun at a cop,
or doing doing something wrong.
Speaker 3 (03:38):
Well, as I was pruising.
Speaker 2 (03:40):
Through excuse me X yesterday, one of the accounts that
I follow posted a video of a child in a walmart,
and the child in the Walmart is and you know,
I don't know anything, you know, I don't know all
the circumstances except I don't know whether the child is
is deaf, mute.
Speaker 3 (04:02):
I don't know.
Speaker 2 (04:03):
I don't know anything about the child. I don't know
whether the child is on adderall or on antidepressants. I
don't know anything about the child whatsoever. What I do
know is what I observe the child doing. And the
other thing I know. And if you listen carefully, but you'll, you'll, you'll,
you can see it and hear it. This is what
I want you to look at today. You'll hear the
(04:24):
mother as Walmart employees try to intervene and stop the child,
tell the employees, no, just back off, leave her alone,
don't touch her, don't do anything. And the mother does
not do anything to intervene to stop this child. Now,
near the end of the clip, the child walks over
(04:47):
and grabs a bottle of you know, the what is
that dragon like the alcohol free champagne or something.
Speaker 1 (04:55):
That, Yes, it's like the yeah, some kind of grape.
Speaker 2 (04:58):
Something I don't know, yeah, cider or whatever, but but
it looks like a chambagne bottle. And she grabs one
of those, and she tosses that on the floor.
Speaker 1 (05:06):
And she knows what she's doing.
Speaker 3 (05:08):
She knows precisely what she's doing.
Speaker 1 (05:10):
When I'm spoiler alert here for those who haven't watched
it yet, Michael says, go here dot com. But she
throws one of the bottles and it doesn't break, and
she reacts like.
Speaker 3 (05:23):
Dang right, So she grabs another.
Speaker 2 (05:27):
Grabs another because the purpose and there's there are a
couple of other indications that she knows what she's doing
because at the very beginning of the video, she pulls
some what appears to be like maybe there's the meat
counter or something, and it's like, you know, chicken wrapped
in the plastic or whatever. I'm not quite sure. It
looks like fresh meat of some sort.
Speaker 1 (05:48):
I thought it's just one of the signs that says
on sale five ninety nine pounds.
Speaker 3 (05:52):
No, I think it's actually a product.
Speaker 2 (05:54):
But any whatever it is, she throws it on the
floor and she stomps on it. She grabs a few more,
throws it on the floor. She stomps on it several times.
Then she walks around behind a display which you can't see,
and she's now taking stuff and throwing it off the display.
A Walmart employee comes out sirs.
Speaker 1 (06:12):
My fat ass sees the display and goes Christmas tree cakes.
Speaker 3 (06:16):
They've got a lot there, got.
Speaker 1 (06:19):
There has like three or four.
Speaker 3 (06:21):
But yeah, you're thinking about a Walmart trip today, man.
Speaker 2 (06:26):
This she walks over, uh and and there is in
the display. It's it's cereal or crackers or who knows,
but it's that kind of box. And again to Dragon's
point that she knows precisely what she's doing, she inserts
her arm into an open space and reaches around behind
(06:46):
and then shoves them all off the shelf. Now, mind you,
Mom is following her as she's doing this. Mom's just
following around as she doesn't And then when she finally
grabs the fake champagne or whatever, it is.
Speaker 1 (07:02):
Roughly what a half a dozen or more?
Speaker 3 (07:05):
Yeah, And I think.
Speaker 2 (07:07):
Because it's it's her height, I think she would have
done more. Except that's right, that was the shelf. That
was her height. So she got all of them off
that shelf. And then she sees the champagne bottles and
she walks over to the yeah oo glass and again
Mom is following, just telling everybody back off, leave her alone.
Speaker 1 (07:28):
Again, there's what about a half a dozen or just
a little bit more Walmart employees and customers and customer background, yes,
a camera, and.
Speaker 2 (07:37):
The last person who attempts to intervene once she throws
the first champagne bottle or whatever, it is.
Speaker 1 (07:43):
Not wearing a blue vest.
Speaker 2 (07:44):
Not wearing a blue vest. So I assume it's not
an employee. I mean, I suppose it could be a manager.
But it strikes me as he's a big black guy,
and he strikes me as a customer who's who has
observed this going on and walks up and says, I've enough,
And Mom is like no, no, no, no no, don't
don't bother her.
Speaker 3 (08:05):
Now.
Speaker 2 (08:05):
That's posted at Michael says, go here dot com once
you go watch it. Because as much as we talk
about politics, you know, I was getting ready to talk
about illegal immigration and the cost to Denver and the
Denver's mayor stupid. You know, I'm going to stand up
(08:25):
to whatever Donald Trump does. We talked about all of
that stuff. But there is a sickness in our culture
because Dragon and I both had I'd already thought this,
I hadn't said a word to Dragon. Dragon's watching it
(08:47):
gets posted and then says, in my ear, had that
been either you or me, we probably wouldn't be alive today.
Speaker 3 (08:57):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (08:57):
My first reaction again was the Christmas tree cakes. But
then I was like, wait a minute. If I'd have
done this then I was a kid, I'm not sure
I would be breathing on my own.
Speaker 2 (09:06):
I think my ear or my hair one would have
been stripped from my head as my mother dragged me
like a caveman out of the store and then whipped
my ass really really hard out in the parking lot
before throwing me in the car Sam's car seat. Of course,
because we didn't have car seats back then, nobody gave
a rat's ass and hauled my butt home and threw
(09:28):
me in my bedroom and locked me in the bedroom.
And of course I wouldn't have had an iPhone or
I wouldn't have had anything. I would have had my
little train sister radio, and she might have taken that
out of the room.
Speaker 1 (09:38):
If I wake up sometime next week, going where am I?
Speaker 3 (09:41):
What happened?
Speaker 2 (09:42):
It's exactly right when I'm in the hospital. But that's
not what we do today, is it?
Speaker 3 (09:48):
Now?
Speaker 2 (09:48):
I know this is not this is a generalization. This
is a blanket statement about parenting in general. And I
know that many of you do not you know, so
I said many of you, because I think some of
you may actually be parents, like I hope not, but
I can't rule it out. But I want you to
think about that child growing up as not that's not
(10:11):
even a free range child. Do you remember and I
don't remehether I did the story here or on the
I never do remember which show I do.
Speaker 3 (10:20):
I just don't remember which program I'm doing.
Speaker 2 (10:23):
But sometime, maybe it was Saturday before I either went
on vacation or sometime, there was a story. What was
that damn story about that kidd? Just it just completely
left my brain, just boom popped out. But children are
(10:46):
just simply not being disciplined, They're just being allowed.
Speaker 3 (10:50):
Oh I know what it was. A mother got in trouble.
She was arrested.
Speaker 2 (10:56):
I don't know what the outcome of the case was,
but in some rural town in Iowa, Nebraska, Ohio, someplace,
someplace in the Midwest.
Speaker 3 (11:05):
She was arrested.
Speaker 2 (11:07):
Because she had gone into town because one of her
other children was at a doctor's appointment, and she left
the eleven year old at home. The eleven year old
left the house and walked a couple of miles into town,
and the cop showed up and arrested her.
Speaker 3 (11:29):
I don't know what you know.
Speaker 2 (11:31):
I know, I know I'm an old fart, and I
know that I grew up in the dark ages, but
you know, and I rode my bicycle to school uphill
both ways in the blizzard.
Speaker 3 (11:41):
I know it was. It was.
Speaker 2 (11:42):
It was a tough childhood. But really, we're going to
arrest a parent for a This shows how diverse this country.
Speaker 1 (11:55):
Did the kid do anything wrong? Did they shop left
at the no the girl.
Speaker 2 (12:00):
The mother's in trouble for endangering her child by not
being home and allowing the child on his own to
open the door of his own volition, step out, walk
through the front yard, get onto the dirt road that
leads into town, and walk the five miles into town
(12:22):
or what you know, a mile or what it does
make any different? It doesn't make any difference. But it
was one mile or fifty miles the child on his own,
an eleven year old child, walked into town, and the
cops came and arrested mom for doing it, for having
endangered the child by allowing that to happen. Huh yeah. Now,
compare and contrasts that with this mother that you'll watch,
(12:47):
whose child is committing illegal acts of vandalism, destroying private property,
and is she is actively prohibiting people from interview to
stop her child's criminal activities. That child will grow up
to be a serial killer. That child will grow up
(13:09):
to be a ward of the state. That child will
grow up to be not you know, maybe maybe not.
Maybe it'll be some intervention now, some kind of I
don't know.
Speaker 1 (13:20):
It's not like the video she's throwing a tantrum or
anything that's a great, great point, screaming or crying. And
I like the little girl is very silent and very niacal,
which with her.
Speaker 2 (13:37):
Actions prouit your honor, which may I reread to the
jury the witness's statement. The child was not throwing a fit.
The child was silent, The child was quiet. The child
was just very methodically going along destroying private property while
her mother protected her from any inn from an outsider.
(14:01):
And I hadn't that is precisely the kind of person
that grows up to be a serial kill.
Speaker 1 (14:06):
I hadn't thought about it.
Speaker 3 (14:06):
You're a stool shooter. For example.
Speaker 1 (14:08):
She may be mute, she may be deaf, but nothing
in her actions indicated any of that.
Speaker 2 (14:21):
And even if she was that does not justify the
lack of intervention to stop her behavior.
Speaker 3 (14:28):
I just, at the last minute this morning, I.
Speaker 2 (14:33):
Remembered that video, so I quickly sent it to Dragon
because I really do want you to go watch it.
Speaker 1 (14:40):
Michael says, go here dot com.
Speaker 2 (14:42):
Because while you and I talk an awful lot about
illegal immigration, the economy, politics, we throw in culture here
or there. This is one of those cultural stories that
you really do you just need to I don't know
how many times I watched it. I that I watched
it five times, and you know, and by the fifth time,
(15:04):
I had the volume cranked up so loudly that you know,
I was hearing the static and everything, because I was like,
surely Mom is saying at least I would think Mom
would say, oh no, if you'll stop, if you stop it, well,
if you stop, I'll give you a cookie. Right, if
you stop it, We'll I'll get you. Somebody scream no, no, no.
Mom is saying to everybody else, leave her alone, stay away.
Speaker 3 (15:27):
What is she armed?
Speaker 2 (15:29):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (15:30):
Is she armed?
Speaker 2 (15:31):
Does she have like an uzi under her little skirt
that she's gonna pull out and blow away everybody? Well,
maybe not today, but maybe ten years from now she will,
she'll be the one that shows up the school, walks in,
you know, or she'll become a trans and she'll show
up at some school in Kentucky and she'll walk in
and she'll be all dressed up, or he'll be all
(15:52):
dressed up at that point, and they'll start, and then
everybody will scratch her head and say, huh.
Speaker 3 (15:56):
I wonder what went wrong? And when it went wrong?
Speaker 2 (16:00):
Well, it went wrong today or yesterday or whenever that
video occurred. That is the beginning. That's the beginning. Now,
I know that not all parents. I certainly know my
parents aren't like that. And I know that tamer and
I as parents, and I certainly know that mister Redbeard
(16:21):
and his children were not like that. And I know
that his mother was not like that. So I, at
least in my little circle right here, that I can't
relate to this. But go back to my point about Tamra,
I hear these stories all the time. I don't like
to hear the stories. In fact, she oftentimes says, I
(16:44):
know you're not listening to me. I know you're trying
to ignore me. True, and I am, I truly am
trying to ignore it because It's so frustrating because there
are two types of stories. There's a story where I
want to get in the car and go find this family,
and I went to intervene, and I want to do
something to help these children myself. And then there are
(17:06):
the other situations where I went to intervene and I
want to go inflict my own taxpayer relief shot to
save the child from the abuse that I hear about
going on, and I am frozen, and I cannot do
either one of those things.
Speaker 1 (17:25):
Er just Michael says, go here dot com.
Speaker 2 (17:30):
So take take take a gander, take a look at it,
send me a text message.
Speaker 3 (17:38):
Oh, I'm sorry you already have.
Speaker 2 (17:43):
Oh this is a great point about the kid that
got or the mother got in trouble for letting her
son walk to town Gooba number sixty sixty twenty.
Speaker 3 (17:52):
One, Mike.
Speaker 2 (17:52):
The kicker is when she was arrested, though the cop left.
Speaker 3 (17:56):
The kid alone at home. That's funny.
Speaker 1 (18:00):
Remember back today, I had some neighbor friends that their
mom would send them to the store to get smokes
that were you know, oh yeah, hey, go get me
a pack of heads. Okay, well give me.
Speaker 2 (18:11):
Number fifty five sixty six Mike, I dropped my son
out of the Shoe Story shoe store. He went home
with no shoes the rest of the kids. Did we
just say he would never raise a fit again? Yep,
probably so. Oh the girls seventeen seventy six. That's a
great phone number. Girls, sounds like a future democrat. I
hope mom had to pay for all the damages. Oh
(18:32):
are you kidding?
Speaker 3 (18:33):
Born in Goobers.
Speaker 4 (18:35):
Yeah, I saw that have video and that little girl
smashing all the products in the walmart. I thought to myself,
I'm gen X. My parents were silent generation. Tell you what,
my ass would have been whooped right then and there
in front of God and everybody.
Speaker 2 (18:58):
And at that time time, nobody would have ever tried
to intervene, Like I mean, you could have gotten a
really good ass whipping from mom or dad.
Speaker 3 (19:07):
Do you know what?
Speaker 1 (19:08):
There might be interventions of patrons coming up and helping. Yes,
mom and dad, Yes, smack back in the head.
Speaker 3 (19:18):
Right I was putting.
Speaker 2 (19:19):
I was going to put it the opposite way, and
that was there would be no interventions to try to
stop the parent from whipping the child's ass for doing what.
Speaker 1 (19:27):
Oh we can't down, well, you smack him if you.
Speaker 2 (19:30):
Exactly here, let's break let's break a bottle of champagne
over her head. Oh go want go watch the video,
Michael says, go here dot com. So back to this
Denver Post editorial. The headline is Denver's mayor was wrong
to threaten armed conflict to protect immigrants. And they just
(19:55):
listen to the first paragraph first.
Speaker 3 (19:58):
They right.
Speaker 2 (20:00):
We'd like to add a little context for a nation
that has been inundated with reports about Mayor Mike Johnston's
outlandish rhetoric about a looming standoff brewing between Denver police
and federal troops or immigration officials. Most Americans probably don't
know that Johnston has worked tirelessly his entire career to
(20:24):
protect America's Dreamers, people who were brought illegally to America
as children.
Speaker 4 (20:32):
So what.
Speaker 2 (20:34):
What does that have to do with his statement that
he's going to stand up and get the Highland's moms
to stand up with him at the border of the
boundary of the city and County of Denver and stand
up and have his Teneman Square moment. What does he
wants to protect dream What does that have to do
(20:56):
with anything? You see, they're actually on the side of
Mike john That's what the Denver Post is really telling you.
Despite what the headline says, we were not surprised. They
say that Johnston recklessly elevated the rhetoric around protecting Coloradoes
without legal immigration status. But that doesn't make it okay.
(21:16):
If Americans are going to protect our friends and neighbors
from Trump's aggressive effort to strip them of their legal
status and have them deported, we must maintain the moral
high ground. Well, wait a minute, if someone's here with
legal status, then they can't be deported. You see, I
(21:40):
would think that a editorial board would be very precise
in their language, because if you're here and you have
legal status, then you cannot be deported. Now, if you
violate anything that you know you've violate a well, let's
(22:01):
say you're here on a green card or a tourist
visa or an H one B visa, I don't care
what it is. If you violate American law, even like
you know, in fact they reference speeding tickets in here,
you could be subject to deportation. You get coddrunk driving,
you burglarize a place, you assault someone, any number of
(22:27):
things with legal status could get you deported.
Speaker 3 (22:32):
So this idea that we're going.
Speaker 2 (22:33):
To strip somebody of legal status is really loose language.
But then it's the Denver composts. What do you expect?
They try to clarify in the next paragraph, thousands of Coloradins.
Wait a minute, Coloradins, if again, think about the language.
If you're a Coloradin, I'm a Coloradin. You know why,
(22:55):
Because I'm a resident of the state of Colorado. That
makes me a Coloradin. I suppose I've got I must
have dual citizenship because I could also claim residency in Wayho, Mexico,
so I could be a new Mexican. Thousands of Colorado's,
(23:15):
they write, those with temporary protected status, Deferred Action for
Childhood Arrivals, DACA, Humanitarian parole, and asylum protections are at
risk of Trump stripping them of their legal status and
deporting them, regardless of their families, their careers, or the
dangers that await them in their country of origin.
Speaker 3 (23:38):
Yeah, so what.
Speaker 2 (23:43):
Temporary protected status is simply an executive order that Joe
Biden announced so that citizens of Cuba, Venezuelan, and Haiti,
three s whole countries could come here and have temporary
temporary protected status.
Speaker 3 (24:04):
They're not residents. They're here temporarily.
Speaker 2 (24:09):
At least are supposed to be here temporarily, and Trump
can and should, with a stroke of a pen rescind
that executive order strip them of their temporary protected status,
and they should be sent back to Haiti, Cuba, or Venezuela.
The Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals again another executive order.
(24:31):
And I've got a problem with NAKA, but it may
not be the problem you think. And that problem is
children who have no legal status of their own. In
other words, they have no agency of their own. You're
two years old, you don't have agency. You're two years old.
(24:53):
You don't have any independence, you don't have any You
are subject to whatever your parents do. So if you're
two years old and you get your ass dragged across
the border illegally by illegal parents who become illegal aliens,
but you're here, and then you grow up here, I
(25:13):
honestly don't know what to do with you.
Speaker 3 (25:16):
I don't.
Speaker 2 (25:18):
I still think you're an illegal alien. You weren't born here.
Now that's a whole different issue of those who are
who have come here illegally, or those who are born
here to illegal parents, illegal alien parents. The whole birthright
citizenship of I think we ought to get rid of it.
(25:40):
No other country in the world, I think, or maybe
only one or two other countries do it. I don't
think we should do that at all. So these people
are at risk of being deported, and I do believe
rightfully so. But then they write Trump has used out
landish rhetoric casting these individuals as criminals of the worst kind,
(26:02):
rapists and murderers. No, he's very specifically said that there
are among them rapists and murderers. And we know that
the others are indeed criminals because they came here illegally.
The minute they crossed the border without authorization, they became
illegal aliens, and that is the term in the federal statute.
They are illegal aliens. They are illegally in this country.
(26:29):
Trump has said he will use military force to round
up those without permanent legal status and deport them. Okay,
the Denver Post says we cannot stoop to his level
by pledging a violent confrontation to stop such a travesty
from occurring. That is what Trump wants. No, that's not
what Trump wants at all. I don't know of any statement,
(26:53):
any inference, any implied real read between the lines that
Trump is looking for some sort of violent confrontation. Now,
Tom Hohman has said directly to Mike Johnston, don't dare
test me, because Tom Horman is right. Federal law is
(27:15):
supreme here and Mike Johnston has no legal basis at
all on which to stand and stop Tom Homan from
deporting illegal aliens. But the Post says the path forward
is one of smart resistance. Oh, so the Denver Post
(27:35):
is actually for resistance. They just want smart resistance. They
say that Coloradines will gladly hand criminals over to Trump's
operation to deport as many people as possible, but our
friends and neighbors are off limits. What listen to this again?
(27:57):
I had the Denver a dying company is trying to
have it both ways.
Speaker 3 (28:07):
Just listen to this.
Speaker 2 (28:08):
Colorado's will gladly hand criminals over to Trump's operation to
deport as many people as possible, but our friends and
neighbors are off limits, and any effort to strip them
of their legal status and deport them to countries they
often don't even remember will be opposed by every legal
tool available.
Speaker 3 (28:28):
To this state.
Speaker 2 (28:28):
Our cities, our counties, our churches, and our individual households.
Johnston should keep his remarks far away from violent conflict
and focus on peaceful resistance. You can't have it both ways,
Denver Post. You simply cannot have it both ways. The
Common Sense Institute, which I have cited numerous times in
this program, just before the holidays, came out with some
(28:52):
new stats. What's the cost? What's the cost of illegal
aliens to just Denver. I'm not talking about Colorado, just Denver.
These numbers are astonishing. Hang tight their next.
Speaker 3 (29:10):
Good morning, you're forgetting.
Speaker 1 (29:12):
Nowadays, if you talk to your child in a loud voice,
it's child abuse.
Speaker 2 (29:19):
Shut up and sit down. I told you that, you
better you do that one more time. Are My favorite
one was I'm going to count to three and you
better be in your room. I only had to do
I only had to count to three one time. After that,
it was one. Rarely, don't even get to two, just one.
Speaker 1 (29:44):
What's scarier the getting yelled at as a child or
getting that real close whisper going you don't do that?
Speaker 3 (29:57):
They were both equally.
Speaker 1 (29:57):
Scared, terrified because you just get that though whisper in your.
Speaker 2 (30:00):
Ears right, Because to this day, someone's yelling at me
and again, I think it's probably part of the legal training.
You start yelling at me, I immediately just get like okay,
and you're really mad, and so if I just remain
calm and cool, you're gonna sputter out of control here this.
Speaker 1 (30:19):
That I'll piss you off even more right.
Speaker 2 (30:22):
Common Sense Institute did a great study forty five thousand
thereabout give or take. Oh, I mean, who's counting forty
five thousand illegal aliens into Denver? Since December of twenty
twenty two. According to this new study, sixteen thousand, one
hundred and ninety seven illegal alien students have enrolled in
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Denver schools. The total costs to the school system there
is two hundred and twenty eight million dollars annually. You
think about how much money you pay in property taxes
for public education in Colorado. Now narrow that down just
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to the city and County of Denver. The total cost
to Denver schools related to those students is two hundred
and twenty eight million dollars every single year in the
Denver metro area. Hospitals spend how much you think in
uncompensated care per illegal alien patient? Do you think area
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hospitals spend on each individual that's uncompensated two nine hundred
and thirty one dollars almost three thousand dollars. How much
money do you have in medical bills? How much money
have you paid out on prescription drugs or on a
trip to the er or to urgent care or just
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to a doctor, or did you have surgery recently? Did
you could you use a three thousand dollars discount? Well,
you should have come here illegally, as in the Denver
Metro area hospital spend here. Emergency departments have delivered an
estimated forty nine million dollars in uncompensated care to illegal aliens.
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Now Denver has spent seventy nine million dollars on all
support services as of November fifteenth, just the middle of
last month. Facilities and hotels for temporary shelter, housing assistance
for up to six months of rent. How would you
like to have six months of rent?
Speaker 3 (32:37):
Housing?
Speaker 2 (32:37):
Is transportation, food distribution? Childcare? I'm scratching my head. Wait
a minute, if you're here illegally, now, if you if
you have temporary protected status, you're entitled tool work permit.
But if you're not here with temporary protected status you're
just here illegally. How can you work the way you
need child care? But we're paying for childcare. In Denver,
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they have spent close to twenty seven almost twenty eight
million dollars just on facilities like shelters and hotels, twenty
three million on personnel. So you know, overhead, you gotta
pay for all the people that are taking care and
spending all of that money. They spend twenty three million
dollars on people to spend the millions of dollars, this.
Speaker 3 (33:26):
Is what we're doing.
Speaker 2 (33:27):
And the Denver Post says, oh, no, mayor, no, we
need to protect these people. No, they need to go home.
But getting lost in all of this is one major
point that I don't think is getting enough attention. Yes, deportation,
I'm all for it. Get it done. Get it done
the first and foremost, seal off the border, stop the leaf,
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stop filling the bathtub, and then worry about the water
on the floor.