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May 8, 2025 • 32 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
So Bernie was asked about spending over two hundred thousand
dollars on private jets to fly during his fight the
oligarchy term in Isn't it just so ironic that the
socialist wants everybody else to suck up and limit their travel,

(00:20):
but he's just too important to go? Wait if he
died at airlines to get on a plane.

Speaker 2 (00:30):
I was just looking real quick. You see if I
can find that because I watched him yesterday and I
watched Bernie Sanders. Let me see Bernie Sanders on what's
Brett Bear's show called? Dang it? What's his stupid show
called Brett Bear? Well, we'll just say Brett Bar Fox News.

(00:57):
Let's see if we can find that little here we go,
all right, do.

Speaker 3 (01:09):
It? Three?

Speaker 2 (01:09):
Yeah? I get through the stupid commercial and it's a
thirty second commercial. Anyway, While the commercial is running, I'm
listening to Bernie and I happen to think to myself,
you know, the problem is I like the guy. I
hate everything he stands for, but I admire the fact
that he's on Brett Special Reports, the name of the program,

(01:30):
and he's talking about I mean, he's basically saying, yeah,
this is what I believe in, and here's why I'm
believe in it. It was fascinating to me.

Speaker 4 (01:39):
Obviously there is a lot to be passionately against right now,
but it has.

Speaker 5 (01:43):
To travel with a clearer picture of what this.

Speaker 6 (01:46):
Our party is unified, and that took a major hit
frankly last November.

Speaker 5 (01:51):
Understand question this.

Speaker 6 (01:55):
It should come as no great surprise that a Democratic
party which is abandoned working class people would find the
the working class has abandoned them. First it was the
white working class, Now it's Latino and black workers as well.
While the Democratic leadership defends the status quo, the American
people are.

Speaker 5 (02:09):
Angry and want change, and they're right more.

Speaker 4 (02:12):
Than I agree with what that guy said. Guys going rock.

Speaker 5 (02:14):
One hundred days in, is it the same thing?

Speaker 7 (02:17):
Absolutely? Look, Brett, what we don't do is a nation.
Let's take a hard look at where we are on
the issues of most relevance to ordinary people.

Speaker 2 (02:26):
Where Robb Before we go into his explanation, remember what
the discussion was Brad was talking about here. The Democrat
Party lost all of these different constituent groups because you
completely oh damn it, you didn't like I mean, you
lost all these constituent groups because you didn't do anything

(02:48):
to address the issues that common people are dealing with.
And Bernie waggs his finger and said, you know, I
agree with that guy, but well, what's the butt using
Fox News?

Speaker 1 (03:00):
Why?

Speaker 2 (03:01):
Because I got to play the ads? I gotta do
all of that. Okay, screw Bernie, We're not gonna do
Bernie right now.

Speaker 4 (03:06):
I need to find it for you.

Speaker 2 (03:08):
Well, I've got it right here, but the problem is
I gotta scroll. I gotta wait for the stupid ads.
I can't find it on the clipping service. It's not there.
They've got one little thing, but it's not the part
that I want. So this is what happens when I
allow a listener to hijack the program and think, oh,
you know, that's actually an interesting thing. It wasn't part

(03:31):
of my show prep. But you know what, you know, Dragon,
I've had a bad morning already anyway, just had allows you.
Are you looking for it?

Speaker 4 (03:41):
I ain't listening to you, that's for sure.

Speaker 2 (03:43):
Well I know that. Well if you can instead, well
good when I was planning to do. If he finds it,
we might get back to it. I want. Here's specifically
a part that I want if you can find it.
I want the part where Brett starts asking about the tour,

(04:05):
the Oligarchy tour, not just the jets. That's interesting too,
but I want the entire part about the oligarchy if
you can find that. So instead, what we'll do is well,
good one I was really going to talk about at
the beginning. Remember yesterday we went through the report card
that the Denver Gazette reported on about all the you know,
the stuff that should be what do you have it? Okay? Well, then,

(04:29):
damn it? Well, can we do any more start stop
this morning than what we've done so far?

Speaker 4 (04:35):
Sure?

Speaker 2 (04:36):
Can we start and stop again? Okay, let's listen. Now.
Is it such that did you find it on the
Fox website?

Speaker 7 (04:44):
No?

Speaker 4 (04:44):
I have to go to YouTube. I hate that Fox website.
It's terrible. It is.

Speaker 2 (04:47):
It's awful, isn't it? Okay, so you get it on YouTube?

Speaker 4 (04:49):
Correct?

Speaker 2 (04:50):
Okay, Well, in that case, start it and we'll stop it.

Speaker 6 (04:54):
Can says Bernie Sanders spent two hundred and twenty one
thousand on private jets fighting the Oligarchy tour, paid for
by friends of Bernie Sanders.

Speaker 5 (05:02):
That you've spent millions of dollars in campaign funds on talk.

Speaker 2 (05:06):
Just from them paid for by friends of Bernie Sanders.
So Bernie has done something that everybody else does. Every
politician has a super pack, or they got an individual pack,
or they got some pack with some fancy name like
you know, American Freedom Unlimited or We Love Godmother and

(05:30):
apple Pie pack, whatever it might be. So Bernie's doing
nothing different than any other politician anybody else. And for
that matter, he's doing something that's no different than than
a lot of corporate executives, do you know, the oligarchy.
So he's acting just like everybody else while trying to

(05:53):
present to the audiences that he goes to as being
something different than everybody else. So continue gravel over the years.

Speaker 5 (06:04):
How do you push back on both of those things?

Speaker 7 (06:06):
The last time you saw Donald Trump during a campaign
mode at National Airport, No, no, no.

Speaker 2 (06:12):
Does bus People who are running for president do exactly
the same thing. Now, they don't use a pack. Now
he uses Donald Trump. But Donald Trump's acception not. Donald
Trump's a million a billionaire and Donald Trump has his

(06:33):
own seven fifty seven. So it's not like Donald's going
to use DCA. He's not going to use IAD well,
he's not going to use dullas or national. He's going
to use you know, FBOs maybe at those airports, but
he's probably not flying into those anyway, because he's not
campaigning there. Instead, he's going to marry in Ohio. He's

(06:56):
going to Tulsa, Oklahoma, and he's using a fixed based
operator at Tulsa International or if there is an airport
in Marion, Ohio. I don't know where I got that name.
So again, is trying to use Donald Trump as the
boogeyman doesn't work. Now let's just say it's not Donald Trump.

(07:18):
Let's say it's Well, Kamala Harris isn't a good example
because she was vice president or she was running for
vice president. Well, I guess you could still use her
as an example because Joe was a former vice president,
so he's got a little bit of secret service. But nonetheless,
when you're now, the first time during COVID, he only
campaigned from his basement, but the second time he actually

(07:39):
had to get out a little bit. So what do
they do. I've told you forever that money is the
mother's milk of politics. You got to have money because
you can't go you can't board a flight on United
Airlines at DA when you have to be in Marion, Ohio,
and then you do a rally in mary In, Ohio,
and then going to Tulsa, and then you're going to Austin,

(08:02):
and then you're going to Albuquerque. So they raise enough
money so that they can charter a jet, or they
might set up a pack or a separate entity, and
they will ask their big fat ass with rich donors
to contribute to that so that they can fly from
place to place to place. Don't make a judgment. This

(08:26):
is just the reality of our politics. If you're running
for governor of the state of Colorado and you've got
to be in Yuma one day, in Yuma in the
morning and Durangle in the afternoon, you can't or tell
you right, tell your right. Even more difficult to get
to to go from Sterling to tell your ride in
Colorado is not just okay unless you want to do

(08:48):
and even this probably won't work. Work. We'll do our
rally in Sterling at five thirty am, and we'll do
our rally in Tell your Ride at five thirty pm.
They he gives us grant an hour for the rally
in Sterling, and now You've got eleven hours to drive
down to get to tell you right, and that's going

(09:09):
to be cutting it close, depending on traffic and where
you'd go, and if you're trying to avoid rush hour
in Denver, so you go around Denver, you know. So
it's it's it's Birdie playing on ignorance, and quite frankly,
it's Brett Bear ignoring the practical realities of what it
takes to run any campaign at any level.

Speaker 5 (09:29):
You may continue that he's also not fighting the aligarchy.

Speaker 7 (09:33):
No, and you run a campaign and you do three
or four or five rallies in a week, the only
way you can go around to talk to thirty thousand people.
I think I'm going to be sitting on a waiting
line at United.

Speaker 2 (09:43):
Stop waiting stop now. The only reason I find that
funny his first port. Part of that is absolutely correct.
If you're going to do rallies around the country, you
can't go stand in line at United at Denver Internet
National Airport waiting to board a plane because think of
the logistics of doing that. You've held a rally in Denver,

(10:07):
the next rally is in Kansas City, so you've got
to finish the rally in Denver.

Speaker 4 (10:11):
Wait wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, no, No, I'm going
to fight you here on this one. Okay, going three
or four or five rallies in a week, so you're
flying once a day, and I'm talking about campaign.

Speaker 2 (10:25):
I'm talking about campaign. I'm talking about campaign. Agree, he's
talking about his rallies. So his rallies are Yeah, he'll
do one a day.

Speaker 4 (10:34):
Huh, he might even do two a day.

Speaker 2 (10:37):
But let me finish. Hey, just just hang on, let
me finish. Because he's conflating rallies to run for president
and what he and AOC are doing, which is their
protest against oligarchy. So when you first talk, when you
invoke Donald Trump, you're invoking national campaigns. Then when he's

(11:04):
when Brett Behar then asked about, well, but how do
you push back on your oligarchy tour and you're flying
private jets, Well, here's where he can. And I gotta admit,
I think this is smart. I don't I don't buy it,
but I think it's smart. He's he's set up the

(11:24):
premise that he's running a political campaign and he's in
Donald Trump. So you're thinking about a presidential campaign where
you've got to Dragon's point, you got to have three
or four rallies a day, so you're flying all over
the country. You got to have a private jet. But
then Brett says, well, how do you push back on

(11:45):
the people that are complaining that on your You know,
you're complaining about the oligarchy, and here you are using
private jets and you're doing it to do rallies. So
he makes this what I think is a brilliant swerve. Now,
of course Drag someone like Dragon will pick up on it,
but he makes this brilliant swerve from presidential campaigns to
what he in AOC are doing, And what he in

(12:07):
AOC are doing is not running a presidential campaign. They're
running a issues campaign for lack of a better term,
So they are they're just doing a rally in Denver.
They might do another one that day, but they're not
doing four or five in a day. They're doing one
a week, two a week. Whatever. They could go to

(12:32):
United and they could board a flight to go from
Denver because they finished the the rallying in Civic Center
Park and now they're going to go do a rally
in Dallas. Well, there are plenty of flights on Southwest.
There are plenty of flights on United or probably even others,
maybe even Old Frontier or somebody has got flights between

(12:52):
either Denver and love Field or Denver and DFW, and
they could go do that. But it's not that's not
the that's not the point. Go back and listen to
how he talks derisively about how you expect me to
go stand in line at United.

Speaker 7 (13:11):
You know what, thirty thousand people are waiting on Scaley Way.
You can get around, No apologies for that. That's what
campaign travel is about. We've done it in the past,
We're going to do it in the future.

Speaker 5 (13:19):
And you think that this is hitting a mark.

Speaker 2 (13:21):
Can you think it's Smith's changing? This is the part
about United.

Speaker 7 (13:26):
I'm going to be sitting on a waiting line at
United waiting. You know what, thirty thousand people are waiting
on Scaley Way.

Speaker 4 (13:31):
You can get around.

Speaker 2 (13:32):
No apologies, Fine, no, no apologies. So he he goes
from the presidential campaign to you think that I'm going
to go stand in line at United while there are
thirty thousand people waiting at a campaign rally in Des Moines,
while I'm sitting, you know, trying to I'm boarding, I'm
going through TSA and boarding. This is the one. It's

(13:54):
brilliant how he sweers from one example to another and
conflates them. Also a brilliant insight into his thinking. Wait
a minute, you're a US senator. You're not accustomed to
waiting in line at United anyway. You're like John Fetterman.
We played the sound bite yesterday of John Fetterman sitting
up in first class. Not when you show a seat belt,
because this fat ass is laying over it. In his hood,

(14:17):
he's laying over it. Well, Bernie's like, you think I'm
gonna go, Well, I got thirty thousand people waiting yeah tomorrow.

Speaker 4 (14:23):
Yeah, but I got my mom and dad waiting for
me when I travel out of state. Now, what makes
you know them less important than your thirty thousand people?
Kind of the numbers?

Speaker 2 (14:32):
Because you're not Bernie, You're not you don't have you
are producer, Red Beard, you're not senator.

Speaker 4 (14:42):
You're people waiting on you are no more important than
the people waiting on me.

Speaker 2 (14:46):
Dragon, I can't believe you don't. Those people are different
than us. Those people they don't have to wipe their
butt when they do number two. It's just us, perfectly clean.
They're different than us.

Speaker 7 (15:04):
Yeah, you may continue what the campaign travel is about.
We've done it in the past, We're going to do
it in the future.

Speaker 2 (15:10):
And you think campaign travel, he's once again conflating campaign
travel with these rally now unless you want to say, well,
wait a minute, are you which is what I would
have said if Brent again, if you would listen to
the answers, I would have said, oh, so you are
running a campaign? Are are you? And are you in

(15:33):
AOC running for president?

Speaker 5 (15:37):
Hitting a mark?

Speaker 6 (15:38):
You think it's it's scratching the itch that voters want
to hear from all.

Speaker 7 (15:42):
I think at a time when the people on top
of doing phenomenally well, when seniors, working class people are struggling,
people want to hear action to stand up to the
people who have the wealth and the power and create
an economy that works for all of us, not.

Speaker 2 (15:56):
Just the people on top.

Speaker 6 (15:57):
Well, senator, senators, I appreciate you coming on talking about
the issues, and we'll have you back.

Speaker 2 (16:01):
So there you he's one admire him for coming on.
Brett Bear Show. Uh, Brett didn't really grill him as
hard as I would have liked to, but you know,
they have a time limitation and here's the other thing
I admire about Bernie Sanders. Even though I disagree with
him on every single political issue, I think he's wrong.

(16:26):
He's a self avowed socialist. He wants to fight the oligarchy.
It's uh. He might as well stand up and say
workers of the world unite. He might as well just
have celebrated May Day with you know, tanks, you know,
driving down the streets somewhere. But at least he's willing
to go articulate, at least articulate what he believes in.

(16:49):
At least he's willing to go into enemy territory Fox News,
And at least he's willing to talk about this is
what he believes in. Now, I know it's all bull crap,
and I know that he puts in all these flowery
languages about the working class and the working man and
blah blah blah. I know all of that. But at
least he believes what he believes. At least he's not

(17:11):
like the Uniparty. At least he's not like I can't
believe it sitting here spending the entire segment defending Bernie Sanders.
I'm not defending his policies. I'm defending that here is Oh,
you know, one other thing I thought about. He's I
think I have to confirm this. I think he's older
than Joe Biden. Do you remember listening to Joe Biden. Yes,

(17:31):
sady're doing that BBC interview. I mean, at least he's
got the vim, vigor and the vitality to go on.
And man, he's he's jabbing his finger, he's, he's, he's
did you know too, is he wearing a short sleeve
shirt dragon, Bernie? Yeah, did you know? I know he's
got the jacket on, but you don't see his his
his you don't see his cuff.

Speaker 4 (17:53):
He looks very Yes, Bernie Sanders is eighty three. Joe
Biden is eighty two.

Speaker 2 (17:59):
Yeah, so here here's here's no far that's older than
Joe Biden. And he's articulate. He's able to you know, really,
he's able to put us a complete sentence together. He's
got a subsequent a verb and they actually work, they
actually work together. So yes, Alexa, I watched it and
I was fascinated by it. I was utterly fascinated by it.

(18:21):
And thank you for teaching me not to use the fox,
because I hate the Fox news website.

Speaker 4 (18:26):
I can never embed clips either from nationalities.

Speaker 2 (18:28):
He used to go to YouTube. So there's a YouTube.
There's a Fox News YouTube channel.

Speaker 3 (18:32):
Yep.

Speaker 2 (18:32):
We'll have to remember that next time instead of putting
around through the commercials.

Speaker 3 (18:40):
If he'll find it, the man says, oh, he'll find it.
He's dragging red Beard producer extraordinary.

Speaker 4 (18:52):
Well, and you're good, you're good. The other guy, well,
should we tell them.

Speaker 2 (18:59):
What we're thinking about doing later today? Hmmm, Well you
think it'll drive them away. I think they'll be intrigued
by it.

Speaker 4 (19:10):
It's it's like a car wreck.

Speaker 2 (19:12):
It is.

Speaker 4 (19:13):
That's that's you can slow down and look, but.

Speaker 2 (19:17):
But you still want to keep going. Still top where
you're going exactly, but you still want to rubber neck
and look right because you're just waiting. It's like going
to you know, it's like going to you know, a
racing event. You you, deep down inside are looking for
the crash.

Speaker 4 (19:34):
You want to see the explosion.

Speaker 2 (19:36):
It's right.

Speaker 4 (19:37):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (19:38):
Remember how yesterday we played a couple of clips from
Joe Biden speaking to the BBC. I heard somebody I
don't know again, I just it wasn't important to me,
but I thought it was hilarious.

Speaker 4 (19:53):
Somebody asked to which you can watch that interview at
Michael saysco here dot com, as well as the Bernie
Sanders Brett Bear interview that's already up at my says
go here dot com as well.

Speaker 2 (20:01):
Well, very good. This is one of those things where
I just hear and I just laugh about it, but
I really don't care who said it. But the question was,
why do you think it was that Joe Biden picked
the BBC? Why talking that's not even America first? And
somebody had a great retort to that question because nobody

(20:23):
else asked him. Nobody in this country wanted to talk
to him, so the BBC, So his publicists, his pr
people were trying to get you know, CNN or MSNBC
or somebody to talk to him, and nobody would talk
to him. But oh the BBC would some program on
the BBC that doesn't even air in the United States probably,

(20:44):
so he went there. Well guess where he's going today
because either they asked him or he asked them, I
don't know which way it went, but he's going to
be on the view. Yes, we're thinking about taking that
and letting you listen to it. Maybe you do a

(21:06):
little color commentary as we go along.

Speaker 4 (21:09):
Is he gonna be there for the whole show or
just one segment?

Speaker 2 (21:13):
I can't imagine that they bring him on for just
one segment. And because it's it's it's the President of
the United States and doctor Jill Biden, So I'm not
sure who'll do most of the talking. But either way,
it's got to be. It's got to be a S show,
a total S show. First of all, they'll kiss his

(21:35):
ass all. It'll just be glorious. But anyway we're thinking
about doing that, well, we we shall see. Let's see.
So yesterday we went through the Denver Gazette's report card
on the state of various economic, social, education, and criminal

(21:58):
stats on Colorado. Well after the program, I'm obviously doing
some show prep and I ran across the US News
and World Report story on crime in the United States,
and I really dreaded, but I couldn't help it was
again like a car wreck I wanted to look through.
The story is titled the ten most Dangerous States in America.

(22:22):
These states, the subhead says, ranked lowess for public safety
based on property and violent crime rates. This is from
be Tuesday at midnight. Both violent crime and property crime
declined in the US in twenty twenty three, according to
Esthamus from the FBI, which overy well whatever, with the

(22:45):
rate of murder and non negligent manslaughter dropping by about
twelve percent and the burglary rate down by about eight percent.
The rate of vehicle theft meanwhile increased by twelve percent.
But the prevalence of crime, along with perceptions the rhetoric
surrounding it, can vary from state to state, shaping residents
quality of life, along with the futures of politicians I

(23:07):
wish and other officials charged with ensuring public safety. So
they go through and they list the These are the
ten most dangerous states in the United States according to
their Best States analysis. Now the FBI, they write, stresses
that numerous factors can affect the amount of type of

(23:28):
crime occurring in different states. You know, it sounds like
the FBI is trying to rationalize that. You know, don't
get upset if your state's pretty bad, including climate. Oh,
climate affects crime. Well, if they mean climate, like it's
freezing your ass cold out, you know, it's colder than
a well digger's ass all the time. And then yeah,

(23:49):
maybe that does affect crime. Or if it's hotter than hell,
that might affect crime too. Either way, economic conditions, law enforcement, priorities, priorities,
and population density, which I find interesting because when you
find out what the number one state is in the country,
you think population density. I'm not really sure about that.
But in reverse order, So starting with the tenth worst

(24:12):
and working our way up, you've got South Carolina, Nevada, California,
Washington State, Alaska, Arkansas at number five, Tennessee at four,
Louisiana three, and New Mexico at number one.

Speaker 4 (24:28):
Hey wait a minute, what I can't math so good?
But you missed one? I did you missed a number?

Speaker 2 (24:36):
I did? I missed number two?

Speaker 4 (24:38):
Uh huh?

Speaker 2 (24:38):
And I missed number two. Because it's embarrassing that we
came in second place. We're not the winner. We're only
number two. We're only the second worst state to top five. Well, okay,
if you want to, you know, but and I guess
if this is the Olympics, we're still on the.

Speaker 4 (24:58):
Stand, right, we're on the podium.

Speaker 2 (24:59):
Yeah, we're on the oh odim So yeah, Colorado came
in number two, came in number two. The violent crime
Rate'll just give you some perspective. Louisiana's violent crime rate
is five hundred and forty eight per one hundred thousand.
New Mexico, which is the worst, is seven hundred and

(25:20):
forty nine per hundred thousand. Violent crime rate in Colorado
is four hundred seventy four per one hundred thousand. But
the property crime rate in Louisiana at number three, is
two hundred sixty three two thousand, six hundred and thirty
thousand per one hundred thousand. New Mexico is two thousand,

(25:44):
eight hundred eighty seven per hundred thousand, two thousand, eight
hundred eighty seven, which puts them at number one. We're
at two thousand, eight hundred and seventy nine, just a
few twelve points below New Mexico. Wow, we're number two.

Speaker 4 (26:05):
And for anyone possibly thinking that the US News and
World Report might be kind of askew with their data,
I'm like they might be wrong because these are just
their their own data points. I'd like to give a
friendly reminder out to anybody who was possibly listening. In
January of twenty twenty five, where Business Insider had ranked

(26:27):
Colorado number eight worst, and then the Hill in May earlier,
earlier this month, or excuse me, may have last year
of My Apologies ranked them third of the unsafest. So
this isn't just oh no, it's not an outlier. It's
not a one off. Yeah, it's it's many many other

(26:51):
sites are coming up with the same serious But seriously.

Speaker 2 (26:55):
At some point you think about yesterday. You know what
I find fascinating is that didn't forget gase. That story
that I posted on X yesterday is still, as of
going to bed last night, still getting reposts after repost
after repost. It again shows a couple of things. It
shows one when I talk about your sphere of influence,
because I go back and I've just randomly checked a

(27:17):
lot of the people who are reposting it, and they're
not people that follow me, So it's obviously people who
follow other people who follow me. So my little sphere
of influence has broadened out to thousands, thousands of people.
Yours can do exactly the same thing. But the other

(27:38):
point I would make is this, at some point, seriously,
at some point, when are people in Colorado going to
say enough is enough? Because the Democrats just keep making
you less safe over and over and over by doing
things like expanding transgender rights, but at the same time

(28:00):
that they e this rate your Second Amendment rights. So
if we're the second worst state in the entire country
according to US News, and that means we've got a
criminal problem, then why would you limit people's ability to

(28:22):
own semi automatic weapons? Because the criminals we already know
because oh they're criminals, which means they don't follow the law.
They don't adhere to the law law biding citizens do.
So law biding citizens won't be able to buy, Well,
you have to pay to purchase a semi automatic weapon,

(28:45):
but the criminals won't. They'll just go to Federal Boulevard
and all. They'll still pay, but they won't pay to play.
They won't have to go through the training course or
anything else. And the crime will continue just to increase
because the criminals will get more guns and we'll have
fewer guns. And the cops remember the story I told
you about Willy b on that video yesterday talking about
he had a truck stolen. The cops said, well sucks

(29:06):
to be you. You know nobody was you know, nobody
was harmed. Well, will he b was? He's out money
because he's lost a truck worth according to him, worth
forty thousand dollars. Now, he didn't carry you know, he
only carried the minimum of liability. He didn't carry any
collision on it. So he's he's sol, totally sol. So

(29:29):
he is a victim, But the Denver Police Department doesn't
care even though people side of the truck. Now, I
don't know whether he's got a GPS on it or what,
but he knows where the truck is. Wow, congratulations, Colorado
number two worst state in the country for crime.

Speaker 3 (29:47):
Michael.

Speaker 5 (29:47):
This is Goober seventh, three nine six in Lewisville, Kentucky.
I find your idea extremely appeeling.

Speaker 1 (29:52):
It sounds to me like it's gonna be a radio
version of Mystery Science Theater three thousand.

Speaker 2 (29:56):
I'm in the view. So speaking of crime, you wonder
why things are so bad? This is I think her
name is Saquana Saquana. She's doing a Man on the
Street interview. I'm not quite sure where this is, but

(30:16):
listen to what she has to say because it really
does help explain why we're turning into a crap whole country.

Speaker 7 (30:24):
Personally, I don't look at a crime if you're going
into Target, a multi billion dollar company and stealing clothes.

Speaker 4 (30:29):
It's not a crime. Your resource not a crime.

Speaker 2 (30:31):
Hell no, it's here, you're resourcing, resourcing. Target enslaved her
ancestors years ago. Do you remember that period we went
through and Target was just you know, you'd walk into
Target and it was just only black people working there
and they had shackles on. Do you remember that. I
found it a little discomforting. I found it a little

(30:52):
you know, it was kind of it was bizarre. Isn't
a corner sort of like a Boga doll or a bodegas?
Some people say, isn't it isn't a corner store of that?
And don't we have a problem because in New York
City anyway. I don't know about Oakland, but in New
York City they're giving them panic buttons because they're getting
robbed so much. He looked like a blacker, brown person.

(31:14):
Huh so the black and brown owner got broad by
a blacker brown person. Walmart lives Chicago. Why do you
think that is? I can't. Well, Walmart came to Chicago
and displaced everybody we needed housing. Yeah, because a Walmart
store takes up so much room where you could have built,
what you know, a dozen houses.

Speaker 7 (31:35):
From there on it.

Speaker 4 (31:36):
Walmart personally, I don't look at a crime.

Speaker 7 (31:40):
If you're going into target, a multi billion dollar company
and stealing clothes, it's not a crime.

Speaker 5 (31:44):
Your resource not a crime.

Speaker 2 (31:45):
I love that. I just love that. It's not a
crime you're stealing from the Target or Walmart. No, it's
not a crime. You're resourcing. So we now have a
new defense. So all your criminal defense lawyers out there,
it's resource. Your client was simply resourcing. So you know,
I think I don't know because the problem is in

(32:09):
our company Dragon, there's really nothing I want to steal.
There's really nothing there that's of quality that I want
to steal. I'm sorry that I would want to resource.
There's nothing here i'd like to resource. And we wonder why,
I wonder why we're devolving as a as a civilized society. Yeah,

(32:31):
there's why right there.
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