Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Very interesting. Kansas Cities city owned grocery stores were shut
down after burning through tens of millions of dollars in
subsidy for a multitude of reasons. But I am sure
New York City mayoral candidate Mam Damis communism will be
a different style and he'll just do it right, Mam.
Speaker 2 (00:26):
Nanna, because you got so many welfare colonists, illegal aliens, migrants,
whatever phrase you want to use.
Speaker 3 (00:39):
From the world, from the third world.
Speaker 2 (00:42):
In the United Kingdom, violent crime skyrocketing. I wonder how
much crime here is attribute? I mean, I'd like to see.
I should try to research this. How much of any
crime rate of any particul through crime category is committed
(01:03):
by US born citizens versus foreign born residents or occupants.
Speaker 3 (01:11):
Of this country. Well, we kind of know.
Speaker 2 (01:13):
In the United Kingdom now the top priority of the
popo in the United Kingdom is not public safety. It's
now political correctness. Instead of attempting to try to restore
public order, they engage in this kind of nonsense, which
really is nonsense from the Daily Mail. Undercover cop let
me read correctly. Undercover police officers have started a new
(01:36):
campaign to crack down on men cat calling female runners
by posing as joggers themselves, cat colleague, does anybody Well,
I don't know. I'm happy to say that I don't
know of anybody in my circle of friends or even
(02:02):
acquaintances that would ever cat call women.
Speaker 3 (02:06):
Hey, baby, what you're doing leg.
Speaker 2 (02:08):
A bar of undie and I, since I can't whistle
worth crap, I can't can you whistle dragon?
Speaker 3 (02:15):
Well?
Speaker 2 (02:15):
See I can't. I couldn't do that. You do that
all the time. You walk around this building doing that,
don't you? You cat call women all the time, don't you?
Speaker 4 (02:24):
Only to rob Dawson Dawson.
Speaker 2 (02:29):
So the cops, the undercover cops in the United Kingdom,
are actually posing as joggers themselves so they can crack
down on men cat calling female runners. The Surrey Police
sent two officers out running at rush hour to show
the scale of harassment that women are facing. These behaviors
may not be criminal offenses in themselves, but they knew
(02:51):
to be. They do need to be addressed. A spokesman
for the force said about the patrols, you mean there's
not enough crime in the United Kingdom that you're going
can you imagine? Well, yes, I can't imagine. I started
to say something you really stupid. Can you imagine the
Denver Police Department or the Denver Police chief or the
(03:11):
Aurora Police chief. Do we even have a police chief
and Aurora right now? Because it's a revolving door, I'm
not sure who the police chief is.
Speaker 3 (03:18):
Yeah, what day of the week is it? Yeah? Exactly exactly. See.
Speaker 2 (03:22):
Can you imagine them, like, with all the crime going
on up and down the front range, can you imagine
them sending out a patrol, Hey, go out to Cherry
Creek State Park, go out, you know wherever jogger's jog
and jog and if you're find any guys cat calling,
doing that whistle or saying hey babe or whatever, pull
(03:42):
them aside.
Speaker 3 (03:46):
I don't know.
Speaker 2 (03:46):
Maybe it probably would go over in Colorado because that's
how stupid we are sometimes. Then as far as addressing
actual criminal offenses, well maybe that must be an inconvenience
for the illegal aliens. At least they've managed to find
to use for female cops.
Speaker 3 (04:03):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (04:04):
Too bad Trump can't send in the National Guard like
he thankfully did in uh.
Speaker 3 (04:09):
You know, in DC, because doing that there, Wow.
Speaker 5 (04:14):
These women aren't friends out for a run, They're actually
undercover police officers taking to the streets and sorry as
part of a new operation trying to stop people cat
calling and harassing female runners.
Speaker 6 (04:28):
We get hold at the stair in the hanging out
of the window just to look at us, and it
just it's so so so prevalent.
Speaker 2 (04:37):
Wait a minute, hey, we got we got guys as
we jog along the street are hanging out the window
watching us.
Speaker 3 (04:49):
The horror.
Speaker 2 (04:52):
So Dragon, I told you that. Last night, this friend
of mine and I went to the Columbine Steakhouse. Yeah,
because we've never been before. It is a dive to
true dive. I went there because Westward listed the top
ten steakhouses in Colorado are actually in Denver, and that
was in the top ten list. And I've never been there.
(05:14):
I've always heard about it. It's been there for fifty
six years. It's like at Third, it would be South Third.
It's just south of six six sixth Avenue on Federal Boulevard.
It's a little sketchy. Not the steakhouse, but the neighborhood
is really sketchy. So my friend and I are sitting
(05:36):
at the bar. He had a t bone and I
had a fla. They were delicious, I mean cooked perfection.
I put a little more salt and pepper on mind,
just for a little more flavoring. But it could have
gone without. Make potatoes of really fancy salad. You know what.
The salad was dragon chopped up iceberg, lettuce, but homemade dressing.
Speaker 3 (06:00):
That was it.
Speaker 2 (06:03):
And at full bar I had I had some really
nice tequila. He had a diet coke.
Speaker 3 (06:08):
It was. It was good.
Speaker 2 (06:09):
But I tell all of that because while we were
sitting at the bar, this drop dead gorgeous woman walks
by us and stops and says, he's, sweeties, what songs
would you like to hear? The jukeboxes on me? And
(06:30):
we looked at her, and then we looked at each other,
and after she was out of earshot, we were like,
holy crap, was she good looking? You know she played
you know, the first song was that she picked out Baby.
We didn't say it, We didn't say a word. We
just said, well, we will, we want to listen to
(06:51):
whatever you.
Speaker 3 (06:51):
Want to listen to.
Speaker 2 (06:53):
Because she had a big boyfriend back there, so we
weren't about to try to engage with him. Johnny Cash
is Ring of Fire, Oh yeah, So we were like, ooh,
good choice. You got good taste. But if if I
had done that, if I'd watched her walk back to
her table like I was, these women would have given
(07:14):
after me.
Speaker 3 (07:14):
These cops would have.
Speaker 5 (07:15):
Been after me and harassing female runners would get hold out.
Speaker 2 (07:20):
I want to make clear we did not harass her.
We just noticed that she happened to be a beautiful.
Speaker 6 (07:26):
Female staring the hanging out of the window just to
look at us, and.
Speaker 2 (07:30):
It just hanging out with the window just to look
at us.
Speaker 3 (07:34):
So you send cobs out.
Speaker 7 (07:36):
It's so so so prevalent, and police teams are ready
to intervene the moment the officers are beaked out, followed
or shouted out, pulling people over.
Speaker 2 (07:49):
This this video actually shows cops pulling cars over because
they honked at women jogging.
Speaker 3 (08:00):
I'm not trying to be a sexist. I'm not trying
to be some sort of pervert here, But you don't
have anything better to do.
Speaker 8 (08:07):
Seriously, those kind of behaviors may not be criminal offenses
in themselves, but they still need to be addressed. And
of course, the people that are likely to commit those
kind of behaviors, you know, they may then go on
to commit more serious offenses.
Speaker 2 (08:22):
Yes, whistling at beautiful women. Watching beautiful women walk down
the street leads to more serious crimes, you perverts out there.
Joe Biden was never ever I you know, I've told
you that my dealings with Joe Biden when he was
(08:42):
a US Senator was dealing with just a pure, unadulterated
politician that didn't give a right to us about any
policy issues. All he cared about was being liked, being
seen being on TV, and then spouting whatever he could
spout to be to try to pretend to be the
smartest guy in the room. Well even before whatever's brought
(09:04):
in his brain sometime prior to the twenty twenty election,
but at least in his younger days, he understood that
crime in the district of Columbia was indeed a serious problem.
Speaker 9 (09:19):
Driving home, my staff lives here in the hill reminded me,
don't stop at a stop light until I'm out of
town if I see a red light late at night,
since it's very little traffic flow up at the other block,
so I never come to a full stop except in
the middle of the block because of car jackets stopping
(09:40):
the light, people standing in a corner walking up with
a gun.
Speaker 3 (09:45):
Wow.
Speaker 2 (09:47):
But we're told that crime, you know, crime is not
a problem, and that Trump is creating a police state
trying to stop nonexistent crimes. And there's there's old you know,
mush brain put in brain Biden telling us some forty
years ago. Oh yeah, it's pretty serious. It's pretty serious.
(10:09):
The NFL Dragon. You're a big NFL fan, right, Oh yeah, sure? Yeah,
Well I think they found another way to maybe drive
you away. Okay, I don't know who it's for, uh,
and nor do I care?
Speaker 4 (10:23):
Oh my god, that was a totally worth an audio
clip you played that had no bearing on anything. Thanks
for that.
Speaker 2 (10:31):
Well, I got to watch it. I watched it, and
I enjoyed it. Just because you couldn't see it doesn't mean,
I mean, I really don't care. Do you think this
program is about anything other than me? And I just
talk about what I want to talk about. I want
I watch what I want to watch.
Speaker 1 (10:48):
H huh.
Speaker 2 (10:49):
And if people want to, you know, be voyeurs and
kind of peer in and you know, kind of imagine
what I'm watching or talking about.
Speaker 3 (10:54):
Didn't that's you know, then that's the mission accomplished. Way
to go, Trailblazers.
Speaker 4 (10:59):
You know Robin Williams was the first male cheerleader for
the Denver Broncos back in the seventies.
Speaker 3 (11:04):
So woo good for you.
Speaker 4 (11:06):
Now it's twenty twenty five.
Speaker 2 (11:09):
Okay, how about this one? Even Fox thirty one in
Denver recognizes that ICE is going after more criminal illegal
aliens and arresting more than they did last year.
Speaker 10 (11:21):
And a new immigration detention center is going to open
in Colorado as the President tries to shore up his
immigration enforcement plan.
Speaker 11 (11:26):
And a new facility will open in Hudson, about thirty
miles northeast of Denver at Estate Prison, which is currently closed.
Let's go live now to Fox a win shall Turner
in Hudson tonight with reaction shall.
Speaker 3 (11:38):
Well.
Speaker 11 (11:38):
Ice tells us they have just run out of room
at the Aurora facility after making more arrests so far
this fiscal year than in all of twenty twenty four.
Speaker 3 (11:50):
And they go on, that's enough. You know, I can't wait.
Speaker 2 (11:54):
I can't wait for that facility to open, because you
know what we're going to have, Well, another place for
Jason Crow to go. We'll have another place for Antifa
and you know, uh, well do better. Denver'll be able
to go up there, and I'm sure they'll be able
to find you all sorts of dreads of society, you know,
protesting that you know, we're housing them and we're not
(12:14):
giving them water and we got starving children in there.
Speaker 3 (12:17):
It'll be absolutely wonderful.
Speaker 2 (12:19):
And uh, it'll give the corporate media here.
Speaker 3 (12:22):
In Denver h something too well to talk about that's
absolutely meaningless.
Speaker 2 (12:29):
Uh speaking of Mondami, a community owned grocery store in.
Speaker 12 (12:34):
Kansas meantime, ask questions mount about the impact of socialist policies.
Just yesterday, a community owned grocery store in Kansas City, Missouri,
similar to what Momdanni is advocating for in New.
Speaker 13 (12:46):
York, it closed its doors for good.
Speaker 10 (12:49):
So Brian Yennis back on a trail Staten Island today,
Brooklyn yesterday and hello.
Speaker 3 (12:54):
To you there, Brian, Bill and Dana.
Speaker 10 (12:58):
Good morning, was Zora Mama. Five day anti Trump citywide
tour continues here on Staten Island, which is perhaps the
most conservative of the five boroughs. For sure, he'll be
visiting a restaurant behind me, a Mediterranean restaurant.
Speaker 3 (13:13):
Now.
Speaker 10 (13:14):
Mamdannie insists that this anti Trump tour is necessary because
the president is attacking the city with his policies cutting
Medicaid and food benefits for New Yorkers, But critics say
Mam Donnie is focused on Trump to distract from his
socialist ideals and extreme policies like government run grocery stores
and instituting an immediate rent freeze, citywide rent.
Speaker 2 (13:35):
Free, citywide free grocery stores. What more could you ask for?
And the London, Kansas City, Missouri just yesterday shut down failed,
utterly failed. We're supposed to be shocked by this, why
because socialism has never ever worked.
Speaker 3 (13:55):
Then you find the ironic, the irony.
Speaker 2 (13:59):
Of Chris Matthews, former chief of staff to House Speaker
Tippleneil on MSNBC confessing something that they didn't money.
Speaker 14 (14:08):
Here, Yes, we have special correspondent of Vanity Fair and
hosts of the Fast Politics podcast, Mulla John Fast, the
president of the National Action Network and host of MSNBC's
Politics Nation.
Speaker 13 (14:19):
Reverend Al Sharpton.
Speaker 14 (14:21):
And former MSNBC host Chris Matthews joins us.
Speaker 13 (14:24):
His substack is entitled Hardball with Chris Matthews.
Speaker 14 (14:28):
We love it and Chris, you also served as a
Capitol coppin DC.
Speaker 13 (14:34):
I want to ask you, not just.
Speaker 14 (14:36):
Your take about this move by President Trump, what you.
Speaker 13 (14:39):
Feel about it, but also how.
Speaker 14 (14:44):
Democrats should be responding.
Speaker 13 (14:46):
What do you think the politics of this is.
Speaker 14 (14:49):
I think it's a political win for Trump, and I
think that the Democrats need to go beyond saying no,
look at the data, crime going down.
Speaker 13 (15:01):
I feel that is exactly.
Speaker 14 (15:02):
The wrong response politically, even if it's true, because the
problems that DC is facing, whether the data shows it's
going up or down, is homelessness, crime, rats, poverty, disparity
in wealth, all the systemic problems that cities are facing.
(15:25):
And I'm wondering if Democrats need to go beyond the
data and come up with a real answer to these problems.
What do you think in terms of this on the
political level. Do you think this is a win for Trump?
How do you think Democrats are responding?
Speaker 3 (15:43):
Well, there's a couple of things here.
Speaker 15 (15:45):
I think he's showing strength, which is always a big
thing with him. I want to go back to what
you just said. Initially about me, I was a capital police, but.
Speaker 3 (15:52):
Just for three months. It was a patronage job.
Speaker 15 (15:54):
I later became a legislative assistant to a senator. But
I got to tell you when he as a guy
in the Justice department. Now, who said kill the cops?
Kill the cops? During the January sixth event, I'll never
forget that.
Speaker 3 (16:08):
The president of.
Speaker 15 (16:08):
The state says nothing, pardon the people that committed crimes
that day and had their pictures taken, so you have
hard evidence of their criminality, and he let them go.
He pardoned them, and then he put this guy who
says kill the cops in the Justice department.
Speaker 3 (16:22):
It's awful.
Speaker 15 (16:23):
Is he for the government or against the government. That's
a good question. Now, in terms of DC, I've chosen
to live my life here.
Speaker 13 (16:30):
I love DC.
Speaker 15 (16:32):
I think it's a beautiful city when I go to work,
when I.
Speaker 13 (16:34):
Do morning Joe, coming in early in the morning.
Speaker 15 (16:37):
I got to tell you, it's a beautiful city. Jefferson Memorial,
the Washington Monument, the Lincoln Memorial.
Speaker 3 (16:42):
You come up to Washington Ball, it's beautiful.
Speaker 15 (16:45):
Now, there are some crimes that are evident and are iconic.
If you committed this city, you're going to see pub tens.
Speaker 4 (16:52):
Mike, how far is that new detainments then are going
to be from the other one in Aurora?
Speaker 3 (16:58):
As the crow flies, I don't know.
Speaker 2 (17:02):
As far as the crow flies, what they say, twenty
thirty miles. It was up by Hudson somewhere.
Speaker 4 (17:06):
I think he was going for a rim shot there.
Speaker 2 (17:08):
Oh oh, as far as the crowfit, God, it took
you a minute, It took me a minute. Yeah, okay,
all right, all right, all right. We often forget that
the long term effects of what the Biden administration, the
(17:31):
Obama administration, what Democrats in general have done, really has
a corrosive effect on our society, and then we tend
to think that one, what Trump's doing is solving it,
which is, but it's not going to be solved today.
It's going to take you know, if it took you know,
(17:53):
if it took a year to create a problem, generally speaking,
it'll take a year maybe sometimes less. We will take
maybe a year to correct the problem. And then we
tend to believe that the problems are elsewhere. They're in Denver, Chicago, La,
San Francisco, Houston, Detroit, they're they're they're not in Nebraska.
(18:19):
With all due respect to corn Huskers, you had a
problem right under your nose, and thank goodness, Trump is
doing something about it. Federal authorities in Nebraska have now
arrested five Indian India not Native American nationals. I won't
(18:41):
even well, yeah, I will, just for the fun, I
would attempt to attempt to pronounce their names. Kentuck, Kent Kenta, Kumar, Chadari,
Rashmi is Somani, a meat Bobby Chadari, another Chadari, a
meat Bababu Chadari, and Mahaskeumar to Dark all for a
(19:03):
llegedly running a trafficking network that was sex, labor and drugs.
So this group of these five Indians owned businesses hotels, motels,
salons all across rural and in some cities in Nebraska, Georgia,
and Texas, and they use those businesses to exploit illegal aliens.
(19:27):
The US Attorney for Nebraska, Leslie Woods, announced the arrests,
said that the indictment claims the victims were coerced into
providing labor and sex that's called sex, trafficking and slavery
to cover the costs of substandard, unsanitary accommodations. So you're
forced to go to work in order to have a
(19:47):
place to live, and to have the place to live,
you have to engage in slave labor. Oh and by
the way, you also have to engage in sex. They
rescued ten minors and seventeen adults, including a twelve year
old girl that was involved in forced labor. They uncovered
(20:08):
victims forced into prostitution, some involving hotel staff, two minor
girls transported across state lines for commercial sex. A former
employee reported witnessing miners coerced into sexual acts in exchange
for lodging, and they found secret recordings of sexual assaults.
The indictment reveals drug traffic at the properties, open drug
(20:31):
use overdoses. The immigrants illegal aliens smuggled into the United States,
some during the Biden Harris government's border crisis, were charged
up to seventy nine thousand dollars for transportation, and then
when they couldn't pay the seventy nine thousand dollars, then
they get trafficed into slave labor and sex. They sieves
(20:57):
more than half a million dollars in cash and hours
taking actions to do a civil actual civil forfeiture of
all the properties that were linked to the scheme. This
is modern day slavery occurring right under our noses, and
we seem to think many I can well whatever, then
(21:23):
do you remember Judge Lewis Kaplan, Judge Caplain's given the
Trump administration until next week or maybe the week at
August twenty sixth, to.
Speaker 3 (21:39):
Comply with a court order.
Speaker 2 (21:42):
That order is to improve detention condition conditions for illegal
aliens at a US Immigrations and Customs Enforcement facility in Manhattan.
The ruling comes about because approving illegal alien is alleging
to detain are held in cramped conditions.
Speaker 3 (22:05):
You mean, like a prison.
Speaker 2 (22:09):
You're getting food, water, caught to sleep on, you had
a place to poop and pee. You got three meals.
May not be what I had last night, but you're
getting three meals, all at taxpayer's expense. Now, I ask
if you remember Judge Kaplan Lewis Kaplan, because that's the
(22:30):
Bill Clinton judge that presided over the Eg Carroll defamation
case against Donald Trump. Now, the order stipulates that ICE
must provide every single detainee that's going to be held
overnight with a betting matt and that ICE has to
clean the toilets three times a day. Dragon, do you
(22:54):
clean your toilet three times a day?
Speaker 3 (22:56):
Not quite that much, okay.
Speaker 2 (22:58):
And let's see, the detainees have to be able to
make a private phone call with their attorney within twenty
four hours of detention, that they be given an information
sheet that informs them that they can request bottles of water,
and they can request an extra meal, an extra scoop
of slop, among other amenities. Now they have until August
(23:19):
twenty sixth to comply. Otherwise, he indicated he might move
forward with a broader restraining order and in an injunction
against the White House if he certifies a class action
before them. Notice I slowed down about that, because the
class action is what the Supreme Court warned these trial
(23:43):
judges about. Don't go try to do a nationwide injunction
by certifying a class unless you fully and strictly comply
with all of the requirements for a class action lawsuit
that currently exists in federal and many state statutes. So
(24:03):
what does he die, He's threatened a class action if
they don't comply. Oh so you're threatening a class which
you have even yet to see whether it's even possible
to certify this group of individuals as a class. Now
the only plaintiff at the moment, which I find there's
(24:25):
only one plaintiff, but he wants to certify everybody. It's
an illegal alien from Peru and His main complaint seems
to be that between somewhere between forty ninety detainees are
forced to share a handful of toilets. I guess he's
never been in an American prison. Gee, I wonder what
it's like in a Peruvian prison now. Notably, paying airline
(24:48):
passengers experience a similar ratio of person to toilet access,
and sometimes probably even worse. You ever been on a
Triple seven or you know the Dreamliner. Oh yeah, there
are lots of bathrooms, but there's also three hundred passengers
on there, and sometimes you have to wait in line,
(25:09):
sometimes the wait and sometimes you can't even get out
of your seat because there's turbulence, or they ask you
to remain in your seat because they're trying to serve
you the meal. They claim that they're also being subjected
to unsanitary and unsafe conditions, having to sleep for days
or weeks on a concrete floor with an aluminum blanket,
(25:30):
often with insufficient space to even lie down, often sleeping
near the toilets. I'd like to see whether that's really true.
Or you know, they've argued that ICE is following the
federal government. Does that ICE is following the legal standards,
but that it is trying to increase hygiene access for
the detainees even though they believe that they have fully
(25:52):
complied with the requirements set forth in federal statute.
Speaker 3 (25:56):
Huh.
Speaker 2 (25:58):
But let's get a class action so that we can mandate,
so that one judge, the judge that oversaw the E. G.
Speaker 3 (26:04):
And Carol, you know.
Speaker 2 (26:06):
Alleged rape case, that you know, the defamation case, so
we can apply this across the entire country. Maybe we
ought to create, like we have a homeless industrial complex,
how about an illegal detainee complex where we have a
hotel in Denver we paid what was it, yeah, nine
(26:30):
million dollars for has been sitting vacant for two years.
It's got brand new bathrooms and sinks and rooms. We
could just put them in there, lock the doors, put
guards outside. It's already fenced in too, So we could
create right here in Denver, jobs for everybody, a illegal
(26:50):
immigrant industrial complex, just like the homeless industrial complex.
Speaker 16 (26:55):
Hey, Michael, I'm pretty excited about Trump cleaning up DC.
We've never been there. I'd love to take a trip
and visit a lot of history. And when this is
all said and done, maybe we can plan a trip
out there and and make some memories.
Speaker 3 (27:12):
It's worth a trip.
Speaker 2 (27:13):
DC is an amazing city and the history it just
oozes out of everything it's in some ways I miss DC.
I don't miss the traffic, I don't miss the Beltway.
I don't miss the the backstabbing and the politics. But
(27:34):
as a city, it's a it's a great place to visit.
Was watching television last night and I again drive by consumer,
so I'm guilty of what I bitch about. But they
were interviewing one of these Texas state representatives, who has
you know, absconded and hidden somewhere in Illinois or Iowa
(27:56):
wherever this particular guy was hiding. He had a big
Texas flag behind him. And the question that the talking
had asked was, this must be very expensive because you
flew on a charter jet to get wherever you are
right now. I understand you've changed cities, You're having to
live in hotels, you have to eat out all the time.
(28:19):
So who's paying for all of this? And what caught
my attention was a very good, smart politician didn't answer
the question, and it got me to wondering, well, who
is paying for all of this? Who's paying for their expense?
Are you know most these people claim that, you know, hell,
I can't live on this legislative salary. Well, then why'd
you run run for office? Well, it turns out that
(28:41):
the Attorney General of Texas, Kim Paxton, has announced that
they are actually suing Remember this guy, Robert Francis Beto O'Rourke. Yes,
the ag in Texas is accusing Beto of violating a
temporary restraining order that prohibits fundraising for Democrats who fled
(29:06):
the state during the legislature's special session session that they
called to redistrict the state and deny, obviously denying Chlorum. Now,
Paxton argues, now, I the restraining order, I look through it.
I think it's legitimate. But because they're actually by refute,
(29:31):
by by leaving and not doing their job, by not appearing,
they are actually violating Texas law.
Speaker 3 (29:38):
There's there's a law.
Speaker 2 (29:39):
In Texas that if you get elected, you are required
to appear. Now you have to be It's kind of
like it's kind of like high school. You have to
be given permission, uh and and an excuse absence if
you're sick or have a family emergency, or you're you're
traveling for business or something. You actually have to get
(30:00):
the speaker or the Senate leader to give you an excuse.
These people haven't done it. They've run away. So the
restraining order to me appears to be absolutely legitimate. Well,
the Attorney general believes that he has evidence that Beta O'Rourke,
who is I.
Speaker 3 (30:20):
Don't think he's the millionaire.
Speaker 2 (30:22):
I think he married into the money, but he comes
from a lot of money, and apparently he is funding
their travel. The restraining order, which was granted by a
Tarrant County judge fort Worth area, came after Paxton sued
Beto and his organization called Powered by the People. They
(30:44):
alleged that are work engaged in a misleading financial influence
scheme to support Democrat legislators who broke quorum and protest
of the redistricting efforts. Now, the judges order blocked O'Rourke
and the organization Powered by People from doing any further
fundraising activities. Coxon says, this Robert Francis O'Rourke flak reinvite
(31:06):
and knowingly violated the court order that I secured that
prevents him from raising funds and distributing any funds to
something that they call Beto bribes. He's about to find
out that running your mouth and ignoring the rule of
law has consequences in Texas. It's time to lock him
up now that I want to see.
Speaker 3 (31:28):
I want to.
Speaker 2 (31:29):
See Beto have to go to jail because we find
out that he's been wiring money or sending gift cards
or just hey, here's my American Express number. Check into
whatever hotel and just put it on my card. And
then he calls the hotel and says, yeah, I authorized
these expenditures. And whatever they spend at the bar, whatever
they spend in the restaurant, why do they spend on
(31:50):
steak and wine? I'll pay for all of it. Oh,
oh they need a charter jet, Yeah, tell the charter company,
just put that charge on my American Express and then
my and then my organization will pay for it. The
Beto bribes will pay for it. Powered by people? How
about powered by one person? How about powered by one
(32:13):
loser that can't win elections, that keeps wanting to get
his name out in the news. Holy cow, I just
find it freaking hilarious. Yeah, Beto O'Rourke out there funding
the phantom legislators.
Speaker 3 (32:27):
Why can't we have some fun like that in Colorado?
Why not