All Episodes

June 27, 2025 • 32 mins
Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
You know, you go all over town and you see
all these homeless people pushing their belongings in a shopping cart.

Speaker 2 (00:08):
One might wonder where do you go to buy a
shopping cart?

Speaker 3 (00:14):
Hmm.

Speaker 2 (00:16):
Shopping Carts are Us. I mean they are. There are
at least five franchises in Colorado that I know of.
There's one down by us. So, you know, every time
we need a shopping cart, we just go into Shopping
Carts are Us. And they got all sorts. You know,
they got carts, they got baskets, they got the big carts,
they got the little mini carts, they got everything.

Speaker 3 (00:36):
Dirt carts with ones on top of the other.

Speaker 2 (00:38):
Yeah. They even have the special section of the carts
where the wheels shake and you can't it's really hard
to move.

Speaker 3 (00:44):
Just the one though, just well, just the.

Speaker 2 (00:46):
One wheel, yes, just the one wheel, and you can
get the left wheel the right wheel to you know,
to shake whichever one you want. It's it's it's an
amazing franchise. I've actually thought about quitting work and getting
with those franchisees.

Speaker 3 (00:56):
I like the one that just spins around Randow.

Speaker 2 (00:58):
Yeah, that one's good too. And and then you have
this with homeless people, and I want to be respectful,
but I also I couldn't help but think about this today.
So I'm you know, my routine to get my diet
Cocha has changed somewhat, and so now I exit at
Bellevue in twenty five, which drives me crazy because the

(01:18):
lights there just suck, totally suck. But nonetheless, so today,
as I've noticed for several times over the past several weeks,
there are homeless people that are beginning to sleep on
that intersection. Well, today, as I'm coming down the off ramp,
I see, oh, we have a new homeless person. But

(01:40):
rather than being on the corner, he's probably a good
twenty maybe twenty yards away from the intersection, so he's
kind of up the ramp a little ways. And I'm
always I'm always disappointed in homeless people because someone needs

(02:01):
to teach them marketing. And by teaching them marketing, i'm
talking about you know, they always have the cardboard from
you know, a box that they've cut up or torn up,
and that's fine. The material doesn't make any difference. But
you've got to learn to tell me your story succinctly

(02:27):
with brevity. But you also need to use a font
or print it, or however you're putting it on there
in letters that I can read it. I can't even
if I'm slowing down to come to a stop and
you're not. And here's this guy's problem. One. He's holding

(02:47):
a sign that's about the size of my laptop screen,
so it's about, you know, a sixteen inch screen, and
he's holding it and he's sitting down, his legs are
stretched out. Yuh. He's not at the intersection where when
I come to a stop, I could squint and maybe
read the sign. But no, he's up away from where

(03:10):
the cars are going to stop, and he's just sitting there.
He's wide awake, because I look, he's wide awake. I glanced.
He's wide awake. He's just sitting there. He's got the
sign in his lap, holding you kind of holding it
up against his stomach, and you can't read it at all.
So I don't know what a story, not that I'm
going to do anything. I can't read the sign. It's

(03:32):
written too small, it's the lettering's not dark enough against
the brown cardboard, and he's just not even trying.

Speaker 3 (03:39):
I see that a lot also with like garage sale signs.

Speaker 2 (03:42):
Oh, those dry, I mean nuts too.

Speaker 3 (03:44):
Big thick letters, big thick arrows. Please, Yes, there'll be
so much more helpful. And you're homeless people out there, yeah,
who maybe we'll read a little bit more if we
can read it, if.

Speaker 2 (03:55):
We could read it exactly. And then you have to
learn to position yourself. You can't be you know, first
of all, you need to stand up if you're if
you're if you're gonna sit there now, if you're asleep,
that's one thing. If you're still asleep, I'm okay with that,
because I know it's five o'clock in the morning and
it's you know, it's a nice summer day and you're asleep.
I get it, and I'm fine with that. But if

(04:15):
you're gonna be up and you're gonna be panhandling, then panhandle.
Put some effort into it.

Speaker 3 (04:21):
And when you just sit there, when you're panhding, make
sure you stand underneath that sign that's now posted that
says you know, hey, panhandling doesn't help, right, you stand
directly under that one with your sign that says you
give me money.

Speaker 2 (04:35):
I will give Douglas County credit for that. They they
do have the signs up and not nearly enough, which
fascinates me because somebody going back to the Denver Post
poll about how good of a job Mayor Johnston's doing somebody.
I've moved on from it, so I don't have it

(04:55):
in front of me. But somebody said I wanted to
thank for me for attempting and accomplishing to some degree
moving the homeless out of Denver into the suburbs. Well,
I can attest that is true in Highlands Ranch, in
the Denver Tech Center, in Greenwood Village. I mean you

(05:16):
can go there everywhere now, absolutely everywhere. I'm going to
get back to the try and clear out some of
the pos. But before I do, the other thing that
I tend to collect during the week are sound bites,
and I get a lot of sound bites that are
just hilarious. Jamal Bowman, remember him, the black congressman. I forget,

(05:38):
I forget which his district is.

Speaker 3 (05:41):
Is he the fire alarm guy?

Speaker 2 (05:42):
Yes, he's a fire alarm Now maybe I think he
got beat. He may have been defeated in a primary.
I'd have to double check, but yeah, not that we care.
But he's on CNN. He was on CNN this week,
and I now understand that whether it's the cancer, diabetes, obesity,

(06:05):
whatever it is, we now know the cause or killed.
Hold on, let me finish about the motive of the
person who did it.

Speaker 4 (06:13):
These were two Democratic elected officials in Minnesota who were
killed to Tree your Life synagogue shooting, killed Christ Church,
New Zealand slaughtered Ami Church in South Carolina.

Speaker 2 (06:25):
On and on and on.

Speaker 5 (06:26):
This is America Catholic.

Speaker 6 (06:30):
We're not dealing with America's original sin and its disease
of hate and racism towards black and brown people, and
sexism towards women and anti LGBT sentiment.

Speaker 2 (06:43):
We are not dealing with that.

Speaker 5 (06:44):
Your colleagues in the Republican Party do not hold each
other accountable when it comes to the racism that comes
from the party on a consistent basis. Where you are
about this, I'm a black man in America. The reason
why heart listen to what I'm saying, The reason why
heart disease and cancer and obesity and diabetes are bigger

(07:08):
in the black community is because of distress we carry
from having to deal with being called the N word
directly or indirectly every day. If if your colleagues would
listen and try to learn and engage and grow and
stop being so hateful. We could have a better country,
but unfortunately.

Speaker 2 (07:27):
We're still here. Jamal's coming from one, Jamal, I feel.

Speaker 5 (07:30):
Your passion, and I understand where you're coming from.

Speaker 2 (07:33):
Sincerely, I really really do. It happens on both sides, Jamal.

Speaker 6 (07:37):
You might think it happens more on your side, Jamal, Jamal, Jamal.

Speaker 2 (07:40):
When I leave the show? Can I leave the show? Jamal?

Speaker 7 (07:43):
My Twitter?

Speaker 2 (07:44):
Yes, and they're acquitted.

Speaker 5 (07:48):
Rodney King, Abner, Louima, Eric Gardner, Trayvon Martin, black cops
in Memphis. It's not this, and I don't I don't
want to qualify or quantify pain.

Speaker 2 (08:04):
That's not what I'm talking about.

Speaker 5 (08:06):
Everyone goes through pain, but the racism in this country
is the disease that will destroy us, and it's destroying
us right now as we speak. January sixth, everybody was pardoned.

Speaker 2 (08:18):
Everybody's part riots.

Speaker 5 (08:20):
In LA Their insurrection is but we parted everyone January sixth.

Speaker 2 (08:26):
I was evacuating January sixth. That was not a racist incident.
I don't know why you're making.

Speaker 5 (08:30):
Them walking through the Capitol with it.

Speaker 2 (08:32):
I was there, its evacuated.

Speaker 4 (08:35):
What does the Confederate flag represent come on Congressman, I'm
asking you a question.

Speaker 8 (08:39):
This was not this was this was about a riot
in the catrect.

Speaker 2 (08:44):
Cross in the American history. What does that mean?

Speaker 5 (08:47):
Google black lynchions in the South and watch the images
that come up with black people hanging from trees and
white people looking and eating sandwiches. This is.

Speaker 9 (08:59):
Stop it, I'm assumed.

Speaker 2 (09:00):
Let me, let me let the Mark correspond.

Speaker 8 (09:02):
I've fought among your self to free slaves, so.

Speaker 2 (09:05):
I mean, but what are you suggesting?

Speaker 3 (09:06):
Mark?

Speaker 2 (09:07):
I mean, there you go. That's that's what passes for
rational logical political discourse on CNN. How many topics did
he conflate? Uh, January sixth, that was a racist because

(09:27):
one person had a Confederate flag. Wow, that's that's honestly,
I'm being very sincere. Honestly, that is the very first
time I think I've ever heard that January sixth was
about racism.

Speaker 3 (09:42):
It made me turn my head and go, wait, wait
what yeah, please explain?

Speaker 2 (09:46):
Right? And then lynching. I haven't done an AI or
a Google or a being being search or anything else,
but I'm not sure when the last lynching was. But
my guess is it's been at least half a century ago.
If not longer. Lynchings occurred primarily predominantly in the South,

(10:10):
and those were crimes. Now did those crimes get glossed over, whitewashed,
buried whatever? Of course they did, And there was a
racist period in our country's history.

Speaker 3 (10:21):
A quick google here is to win was the last lynching?
The last lynching was Michael Donald in Mobile and Alabama
in March twenty one, nineteen eighty one, nineteen eighty one,
eighty one.

Speaker 2 (10:35):
Wow. Does it give any details about what it was?

Speaker 3 (10:37):
It dives in a little bit further. Yeah, it's a
nineteen year old African American who was beaten and killed
by klu Klux Klan members.

Speaker 2 (10:44):
Wow, hung from a tree? All right? Well, okay, so
I'll give this. So it's not it's not as far
back as I thought it was. But it's forty plus years.
Well it is still right, it's still almost half a century.
But still it's not as if we're just willy nearly
lynching blacks all over the country. And that that is
I mean, are there still biggests I'd maintained on this

(11:05):
program for twenty years that biggots still exists in this country.
On both sides, there are black bigots. There are brown bigots,
there are Asian biggots, bigots, there are white biggots everybody.
But let's not forget that he's blaming the bigger numbers
for cancer, diabetes, obesity in the black community to racism

(11:26):
because they walk around with the stress of being called
the inward every single day.

Speaker 3 (11:33):
I wonder who calls him an inward more white guy
or a black guy. Just curious is who drops those
words more?

Speaker 2 (11:41):
Just well, if I were just if I were to
just to kind of diddy in my head about who
might did he be doing that kind of did he
kind of diddy kind of stuff, I'd say it might
be black people. Yeah, I think he just deifying it.

(12:03):
Kind of makes me think that might be the case. Yeah,
do you think it's white people? No, not a chance.
Oh okay, all right, I.

Speaker 3 (12:10):
Justly cannot say that word on air. I think, no,
it's it's no my melon is it a little low?
So I don't know if I could, you know, I
can't really speak to the subject about being called an
inn word or you know, but I can certainly say
that I don't use it.

Speaker 2 (12:30):
No, well exactly, no, I and my my grandfather used
it who was a World War One vet. And you know,
I was taught at a young age. You know, granddad
uses this word and this is a word that we
don't use, and it's drug. I mean, I don't think
they use the word derogatory. But my parents explained to

(12:50):
me how that was his term and it was awful
and we don't use it. And you know, and granddad's
you know, one hundred and seventy years old, and he's
not going to change, and so we just you know,
but you know, I was taught that a long time ago. Now,
let's go to Mexico for a moment, because Mexico is
in essence almost a failed state. Yet the Mexican government.

(13:14):
Why do I claim it's a failed state, because who
really runs Mexico? Do you think it's the Mexican government,
which is by the way leftists begin with, I think
it's actually run by the cartels. Well. As an example
of why I believe that the Mexican government is rushing
to defend two banks and a brokerage firm that have

(13:37):
been accused by the Department of the Treasury for laundering
cartel funds and facilitating payments to China for the fentonyl precursors.
The Secretary of the Treasury, Scott Besson, said in a
statement released two days ago, financial facilitators like Sibonco, Intercom

(13:58):
and Vector are in the poisoning of countless Americans by
moving money on behalf of cartels, making them vital calls
in the fentinel supply chain. Then that pissed off Mexico's
Secretariat of Treasury and Public Credit, who said they requested proof.
We want proof upon being notified of the actions against

(14:18):
the cartail linked institutions. Now, according to the Secretariat of
Treasury and Public Credit, their internal revenue guess what found
no evidence or criminal wrongdoing. Wow. So if if the
leftist government, who is scared of the cartel does an

(14:39):
internal review to see if any of these banks that
are also scared of the cartels are involved in any
money laundering schemes or transferring funds and making payments to
the Chinese government for the final precursors, and they find
no evidence or criminal wrongdoing, then I should just say, okay, well,
never mind, never mind. But then they would to say

(15:00):
this that the Treasury Secretary's information pertained to are you
ready for this? A small number of transactions. Wait a minute,
whether you do one money laundering transaction or you do
a thousand money laundering transactions, isn't it okay for me
to then claim that you're involved in money laundering? I mean,

(15:22):
what money laundrys money laundering? A review by Mexico's National
Banking and Securities Commission reportedly found only administrative faults, not
what they would call criminal activity. Now, all of these
are part of the larger allegations by US in the

(15:43):
Treasury Department that they've been these groups Sebanco, intercom Vector,
they've all been working with the drug cartels to launder
millions in drug proceeds and then facilitate the payments from
money laundering for the federal precursors. And of course Trump's
about to crack down on the federal trafficking and combat

(16:03):
the cartels, which he is designated as foreign terrorist entities.
Do you know that the cartels are currently operating in
all fifty states and they even attack border patrol using
drones as part of their effort to attack US defending
our own southern border. There is a point at which

(16:27):
we ought to declare Mexico indeed to be a failed state. Now,
I know it's horrendous to mention these two words regime change.
And I'm not advocating putting boots on the ground because
I'm sure that would rally the Mexican people and they
would be absolutely offended if we invaded Mexico. But they've

(16:50):
been invading us. They've been invading us for decades now,
and we just like, okay, well whatever, and then Trump
comes along and says no. And then Scott Bissett comes
along and says, oh, and by the way, your banks
are engaging in money laundering and they're also paying the
Chinese Communist Party for the fundal precursors, and we wanted
to stop. Okay, well, we'll investigate. Oh we only found

(17:13):
one or two instances where that's the curse. So no,
they're not involved in it. Potato potato, tomato, tomato. I
don't know it's money laundering.

Speaker 3 (17:23):
I too, am surprised at the lack of initiative you
find in the homeless community.

Speaker 2 (17:34):
I get the irony, and I get the starcas, but
you would think that you would make some effort if
you're asking people for money, and many you know, there
was a maybe a week or so ago, I took

(17:57):
a photo of there was some new homeless at that
same intersection, and I took a photo they were all asleep,
and I showed us my friend who works for the
Colorado Coalition for the Homeless. I said, so, what can
you ascertain from this? And she looked at it for
I don't know, it seemed like thirty seconds or so,

(18:17):
and she handed my phone back and said, newly evicted.
Someone newly evicted. Those people there are lots of services
that they can obtain. And I would think that if
and I've never been home, so I'm speaking purely theoretically here.

(18:41):
If if you've rented an apartment, you know something about finances,
you know something about contracts or leases, you know something
about that process, that whole situation, and so I would
think that you being homeless, why, I know, it's depressing

(19:03):
and it's shocking, and it's uh causes you to be discombobulated.
That nonetheless, you would make some effort, some effort whatever
that might be, to figure out a way that if
I'm going to beg for money, to do it in
an effective way. And I just find it interesting that
and I'm sure I'm quite certain that the legitimate homeless

(19:31):
organizations that try to get them hooked up with services
would never provide marketing skills, never provide you know, a
marketing seminar. Here's what you need to do with your sign.
You need to stand on the corner. You need to
be you know, be smile and you know, and you
know or or or have a dog with you, or
have a kid with you, any number of things. Nobody,

(19:51):
no legitimate organization is going to teach them that. Well,
you would think among themselves that they would learn that that.
Among them, they would figure out a way that, oh,
I've got to be And I'm not talking about being aggressive.
I'm talking about marketing, about how to figure out a
way to present yourself such that despite all of us

(20:13):
knowing that, the worst thing we can do is to
hand them something. The two Black Ladies. In fact, my
friend asked me have you have you had any contact
with them? And my answer was no, But I guess
it was last week sometime I was going through my

(20:33):
text messages and deleting old ones you know that were
like you know, most of them, like the two factor
of verification. Those are set to automatically delete once they're used,
but then I get a lot of other text messages
that are like just one offs. So I'm going through it.
I'm deleting, delete, delete, delete, delete, and I come across

(20:54):
the number that I don't recognize. So I click on
the text to see, you know, before I delete it,
what is that? Oh, it's from one of the black ladies.
And I hesitated for a moment and thought about calling
and just asking how are you doing, what's going on?

(21:16):
Did you get settled? Did you do what I asked
you to do? And in terms of reaching out, because
I gave them Carol's personal cell phone and said, this
is a friend of mine that you can call, and
she's not going to pressure you. She's genuinely going to
help get you connected with the right organizations and services

(21:38):
because this is what she does. And I'm just telling
you you can trust. And so I'm seeing I think,
do I make the phone call. So at dinner, when
I had shown Carol that photo of the people that
over here on Bellevue in twenty five, I mentioned that
I come across that number or maybe she asked me
if I had heard from them, and I said no.

(22:00):
I told them the story about the text messages, and
without any reservation. She said, well, don't do it. Don't
do it, and so that kind of that piqued my curiosity,
and I said, why do you know something that you
can't tell me, like, you know, did you get them?
Said no, I don't know anything, but I'm just telling
you don't do it. Why. Well, I think I know

(22:23):
why because once again I was becoming an enabler because
they know I was trying to help. There are all
these organizations that can do that, and that's where they
that's where they need to be going. And it's not
as if they don't have access to that information. So
now let's go back. I'm trying to clean up my
pos here MSNBC. This is from a couple of days ago.

(22:53):
They're talking about illegal immigration and the deportations, and Alex Witt,
who's one of the hosts, has this to say, can't
call you first.

Speaker 8 (23:05):
I mean, because Molly mentions those people that are the
farm workers certainly have the bag industry that's being affected.
You've got hospitality industry. Going to a restaurant even I mean,
you may not have people being able to clear your
place move so quickly, the food being served. The people
are going to like that can't call you for.

Speaker 2 (23:21):
How how arrogant? Oh, who's going to clear my plate?
Who's going to serve me my you know, who's going
to serve me my dinner? Well, that presupposes that everybody
that's working in a restaurant is an illegal alien. That's

(23:41):
pretty damn racist if you ask me. But that's the MSNBC.
That's exactly how they think.

Speaker 8 (23:48):
Call you first, I mean, because Molly mentions those people
that are the farm workers certainly have the egg industry
that's being affected. You've got hospitality industry going to a
restaurant even I mean, you may not have people being
able to clear your place moved so quickly, the food
being served.

Speaker 2 (24:02):
People gonna like that. Life is horrible. Life is horrible.
But that's how they think. Eric small Well, remember him
well in a discussion about zorn Mondami or mon Domi, Mom,
Donnie or mon Domi whatever it is, I don't care

(24:24):
either one. He's really upset too, because guess what.

Speaker 10 (24:32):
We are moving on to more serious commentary here. Something
that Democrats do really need to contend with, and something's
quite serious for the party right now is Zoron mandamim Mumdanni.

Speaker 2 (24:42):
She can't get it either.

Speaker 10 (24:43):
A Democratic socialist who beat Andrew Cuomo for the Democratic
nomination in the New York naoral race, Alexandria Carsso Cortes,
says there is a bigger message in his nomination. Listen
to this.

Speaker 9 (24:55):
We have a choice to listen to that message that
people are sending us or not. This isn't just about
mister mom Donny as an individual. This is about the
message that the people of New York City are trying
to send to our party.

Speaker 10 (25:13):
What do you think the message is?

Speaker 7 (25:17):
People want to be able to afford to dream and
they want a government that bets on them. So if
you're going to work hard and bet on yourself, your
government your country should bet on you. Bet on your
kids education as AI threatens to change everything, bet on
your health care and make sure it's affordable. Bet on
your career, and make sure that if you work hard,

(25:39):
you do better and dream bigger and frankly, stylistically, and
I'm not a socialist, and I don't associate myself with
what he has said.

Speaker 2 (25:47):
About the Jewish people. But stylistically, I'm not a socialist,
so I don't associate myself with what he said about
the Jewish people. What he said about the Jewish people
has nothing to do with socialism, it's anti semitism. So

(26:08):
if you could see this clip when he's asked the question,
so what do you think the message is, he hesitates
ever so slightly because he's not quite sure how to
deal with it, because what he's actually saying is all
of those things that he wants, like you know, free

(26:29):
groceries or government run grocery stores, and free rent and
free transportation. He actually believes in those things. He actually
wants those things.

Speaker 10 (26:37):
It's commentary here, something that Democrats do really need to
contend with, and some things quite serious for the party
right now. Is Zorn Mundani Mumdanni, the Democratic socialist who
beat Andrew Glomo for the Democratic nomination in the New
York nyoral race. Alexandria Crosser Cortez says, there is a
bigger message in his nomination.

Speaker 2 (26:56):
And there is there's a huge message in his nomination
and how she tries to spend it.

Speaker 9 (27:04):
We have a choice to listen to that message.

Speaker 2 (27:07):
That we have a choice to listen, Okay, that I
choose not to listen to it. Actually I do choose
to listen to it. Because I think it's an incredibly
important message that if we don't pay any attention to
more people like him, we're going to run for office
and we are going to end up with government run
grocery stores. We are going to run into free health

(27:29):
care and free transit and free everything else, and then
the country will absolutely collapse.

Speaker 9 (27:34):
People are sending us, she says.

Speaker 2 (27:38):
The people are sending us that message, are they or
we just now they may be sending a message that
says rents too you know, the rents too damn high.
Gas is too high. Uh, you know, interest rates are
too high. There's a there was a story I read
last night in the Wall Street Journal about how people
are beginning to, you know, abandon the other mobile industry

(28:00):
and holding on to their cars longer and longer. And
I'm just abandoning cars altogether because they're too expensive to maintain,
which is why I took the beamer to the garage yesterday.
Speaking of maintenance, you need to take yours to the
garage too. So they're sending a message that things are
too high. They take that the AOC's and the mandamis

(28:23):
of the world take that and interpret that to me. Oh,
then you want. You want that stuff to be free.
You want the government to provide that. That's exactly what
she's saying. Swollowell can't deal with it.

Speaker 9 (28:34):
They're not This isn't just about it'ster Momdania as an individual.
This is about the message that the people of New
York City are trying to send to our party.

Speaker 10 (28:46):
What do you think the message is?

Speaker 7 (28:50):
People want to be able to afford to dream and
they want a government that bets on them. So if
you're going to work hard.

Speaker 2 (28:59):
People want free stoff, they want free stuff. That's exactly
what the message is. But he he knows that's the answer,
because you can see it in his eyes. He knows
that's the answer, but he can't say it.

Speaker 7 (29:13):
And bet on yourself, your government, your country should bet
on you, bet on your kids.

Speaker 2 (29:17):
How does the government bet on me? Well, they bet
that I'll pay my taxes. They bet that I'll keep
working and pay my taxes, and I won't you know
that I'll be one of the producers. They will help
them take and redistribute my will to those who are
not producers.

Speaker 7 (29:33):
Education as Ai threatens to change everything. Bet on your
health care and make sure it's.

Speaker 2 (29:39):
Affordable, make sure, it's a horrible affordable or free.

Speaker 7 (29:42):
Well, bet on your career and make sure that if
you work hard, you do better and dream bigger.

Speaker 2 (29:47):
And I dragon does the government, other than being in
a highly regulated industry, do we have, does the government
care about what we do? No? Not at all, No
at all.

Speaker 7 (30:01):
And frankly, stylistically, and I'm not a socialist, and I
don't associate myself with what he has said about the
Jewish people. But stylistically, he was always on, and he
was everywhere. And I've been encouraging my colleagues we have
to be in more spaces and more places and always
beyond in the way that we communicate. And also, when
you're always on, you're always honest. And that clearly came true.

Speaker 2 (30:26):
Always beyond he was. He was a very enthusiastic campaigner,
always beyond and always be honest. So is that what
he was? Always honest? I think he was. He was
absolutely honest. He was forthright about what he believes in,
free this and free that.

Speaker 1 (30:45):
Hey, Michael, Another thing these so much people can start
doing is us dell benmo other avenues of collecting. Maybe
that would increase their revenue.

Speaker 2 (30:57):
Yeah, all sorts of things that they could do. So, yeah,
get busy and get on it. Let's see, I'm trying
to clean out this box here. I really don't have
time to do the next story I wanted to do.
So let's look at some text messages. Because ninety two hundred,

(31:21):
God bless you. I was homeless, but I had a
job and now I have a family and own my home.
People need to help themselves out and just get it done.
Or this sixty zero eight five race is a really
good point about how there is no common sense anymore.
Before the Biden invasion, there were enough people to clear

(31:42):
our plates and mow the lawns. Think about that, there
actually was. And then they let in he says, or
she says, fifteen million people. Well, probably closer to twenty
million people. So they let in twenty million people, they've
deported what a few thousand, and he says, Now it's
an issue when they're being deported. There just is no

(32:02):
common sense anymore. That actually makes a lot of sense.
So we had plenty of people to pick the vegetables,
We had plenty of people to clear our plates, service
our enchiladas, whatever it was we were, you know, getting
served and to you know, bust the tables and you

(32:25):
let in fifteen to twenty million additional people, you take
out maybe not even one percent of that, and now
we don't have enough people. Yeah, they always lie. They
lie about everything.
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

Bookmarked by Reese's Book Club

Bookmarked by Reese's Book Club

Welcome to Bookmarked by Reese’s Book Club — the podcast where great stories, bold women, and irresistible conversations collide! Hosted by award-winning journalist Danielle Robay, each week new episodes balance thoughtful literary insight with the fervor of buzzy book trends, pop culture and more. Bookmarked brings together celebrities, tastemakers, influencers and authors from Reese's Book Club and beyond to share stories that transcend the page. Pull up a chair. You’re not just listening — you’re part of the conversation.

On Purpose with Jay Shetty

On Purpose with Jay Shetty

I’m Jay Shetty host of On Purpose the worlds #1 Mental Health podcast and I’m so grateful you found us. I started this podcast 5 years ago to invite you into conversations and workshops that are designed to help make you happier, healthier and more healed. I believe that when you (yes you) feel seen, heard and understood you’re able to deal with relationship struggles, work challenges and life’s ups and downs with more ease and grace. I interview experts, celebrities, thought leaders and athletes so that we can grow our mindset, build better habits and uncover a side of them we’ve never seen before. New episodes every Monday and Friday. Your support means the world to me and I don’t take it for granted — click the follow button and leave a review to help us spread the love with On Purpose. I can’t wait for you to listen to your first or 500th episode!

Dateline NBC

Dateline NBC

Current and classic episodes, featuring compelling true-crime mysteries, powerful documentaries and in-depth investigations. Follow now to get the latest episodes of Dateline NBC completely free, or subscribe to Dateline Premium for ad-free listening and exclusive bonus content: DatelinePremium.com

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.