Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Psley. Denver City Council has postponed their twenty six k
Mountain Retreat getaway to learn how to work better together.
They've probably already put down the fifty percent deposits of
thirteen k's out the door. Great suggestion by someone that
they already have a great place to go in Denver
with large amanity conference room in the kitchen. How about
(00:23):
that in Besley Suites on Hampton or maybe the Travel Tree.
Those are great hotels.
Speaker 2 (00:30):
Let's see.
Speaker 3 (00:30):
Let me just scroll through my X timeline and let's
see if I can find where. Umm oh, here's something interesting.
As I just bear with me, I'm just going to
prove my own timeline for a moment. Yes, fourteen hours
ago I posted this. Just checked in at my optalmologists
(00:56):
for my annual examination, which would much longer than I
expected because my stupid retina that I surgery I had
is they may want to do something else to it.
Speaker 2 (01:08):
Uh.
Speaker 3 (01:08):
Just checked in at my ophalmologists for my annual examination.
First thing they want now this is a yearly examination.
I My entomologist is doctor Gary Jimmel. He's he's a
fantastic entomologist, a great doctor, and we've gotten to the
stage since my retina surgery is many years ago that
(01:31):
I just see him on an annual basis. But you know,
because well, because I'm so impressive, right dragon him, because
I you know, I make such an impression.
Speaker 2 (01:40):
On people that you know, you are memorable. I am memorable,
that's right.
Speaker 3 (01:46):
So when I go in, they generally, you know, oh,
good to see you again, Michael. It's been a while. Yeah,
it's been one year exactly since I saw you last night.
Speaker 4 (01:55):
Uh.
Speaker 3 (01:55):
First thing they want when I walk in is my
current oron a driver's license because my previous driver's license.
This is all on record at my ophthalmologist. They know
that my previous driver's license had changed, and now they
need a copy of my new driver's license with the
new expiration date because because that's you know, because I'm
(02:18):
voting in my optomologist's office. So they want a driver's license,
a current driver's license, so they can examine my eyes.
But to vote, Yeah, it just tell us your name.
Isn't that kind of inverted? Isn't at least inconsistent? Doc,
You want proof of your patient's identification, But the election
board in Colorado just tell us your name. That's insane.
(02:42):
I just saw that one. But let's see there's the
other one down here that uh where was it?
Speaker 2 (02:47):
Hang on a.
Speaker 3 (02:47):
Second, no, you know, I'll get to it. Just hold on,
You're not going anywhere. So let's see. Oh, there's the
one about the Denver Police Department. We'll get you know,
let's just do that one right now, since we're here,
Since I mean, Brian moss Over at CBS Colorado is
(03:10):
one of the last of the great investigative reporters, and
he has discovered that the Denver Police Department. Now, before
I even tell you, surely you or surely you've heard
this story. But think about how many times that I'll
(03:32):
give a crime stat or gun stats or whatever else
it might be. And then, of course what instantly happens.
Agent Jed, a our listener up at you know, at
the end of the runway in New York, will send
us an email, you know, probably thirty seconds or three
hours later. Your stats are all wrong. Your stats are
(03:52):
all wrong because I found this source and I found
that source. Okay, well, you know, congratulations, you found a source.
I found a source. You got stats, I got stats.
We all got stats. I wonder why there's a difference
in the crime stats. CBS News Colorado Reports exposes the
Denver Police Department downgrading serious crimes to letter to detective
(04:17):
seven years later. Sources say this practice continues. Offenses like
aggravated assault, non fatal shootings are coded to ninety nine
ninety nine letter to detective when there's no suspect or
cooperating victim, making serious crimes invisible in the national data
(04:38):
crime data reporting system. So that raises really serious questions
about transparency in public safety. Supervisor several d CBS News
several different police department sources. So the type of cases
that were reclassified ranged from property crimes to serious crimes
like assaults and other violent crimes. Again, citizens supervisory officers
(05:03):
officers in both District one and District three are being
queried about why so many crimes were downgraded to his
status that would essentially make them invisible and present a
more positive picture of crime. Murray said there was an
immediate reason to believe anybody intentionally. Oh no, there's no
reason to believe that anybody would intentionally manipulate cases, and
(05:25):
said what occurred could be a simple training issue. Ah training,
Let's go back and see if we can't train people
because we've just failed to train incorrectly. That way, the
original crime reports would not be reported to the Toronto
Bureau of Investigation and would not appear in any official
state or national statistical totals. They are not reported to
(05:48):
the CBI as a crime stat said Denver Deputy Police
Chief Matt Murray, referring to the way the cases were
reclassified to letter status. Murray told CBS four that a
full blown internal investigation was launched Monday into the way
the crime reports had been downgraded. The actions of certain
individuals need to be investigated from an internal affairs standpoint,
(06:09):
and that's just what we're going to do.
Speaker 2 (06:10):
By golly, we're going to get to the bottom of.
Speaker 3 (06:12):
This one thousand Denver Police Department crime reports from the
last several years of being reported. Multiple sources familiar with
the internal probe confirmed to CBS four that the reports,
which came primarily from District one in northwest Denver and
District three in Southeast Denver, were downgraded from the way
(06:33):
they were initially reported as criminal offense reports to letter
to detective man. You scroll through my x timeline, there's
some pretty interesting stuff in here. Let's see, but there
was where was the one about the stupid? Here again
(06:55):
again it comes from CBS four A mid layoffs. Remember,
city council prepares for twenty six thousand dollars mountain retreat.
Just to show you how prescient I am. I ask
this a very simple question. This is to the City
and County of Denver. Your city attorney didn't think to
(07:16):
put a cancelation clause in your contract? What a way
to little play on words here, what a way to
do better Denver? You just didn't want to step over
the homeless or face the crime if you did your retreat.
Speaker 2 (07:28):
Downtown tag do better Denver.
Speaker 3 (07:32):
In seriously, you plan a convention, there's always an outclause.
I mean, if you're an attorney worth your salt, you
put some sort of cancelation clause in there.
Speaker 2 (07:45):
Oh, it's still going to cost you.
Speaker 3 (07:46):
It may cost you, or it may be a negotiable
arrangement depending on the reason, or you know, it may
be tiered that you know, if you cancel within one year,
six months, six days, six hours, six minutes, seconds, depends
on you know what you're what you're going to pay.
But the other part of the story that fascinates me
(08:07):
is the city council was unaware of a budget shortfall
and it was what what's.
Speaker 2 (08:16):
The news report two weeks later or three weeks.
Speaker 3 (08:18):
Later, doesn't make any difference whether it's two days or
it's two hours or three hours later. The mayor announces
that the budget shortfall is so significant that they've got
to close a two hundred million dollar budget gap, and
the city in County Denver didn't know about it. Government.
(08:39):
I think virtually everywhere you know. There are a few exceptions.
I heard the mayor of Dallas, Texas, yesterday, who happens
to be a Republican shocker, is telling businesses and he's
actually out poaching businesses from New York. Hey, if Mondani wins,
you might want to consider moving to Dallas, because we're
(08:59):
not social me believe in free markets and free free enterprise.
Maybe Oklahoma, maybe color I was gonna say, maybe Color
that up. That's obviously not true. There are probably some
places around the country where, uh, the incompetence, the absolute
incompetence of the Denver City City Council is not replicated.
(09:22):
The sad part is, I think the incompetence of the
Denver City Council and the Denver Mayor are probably replicated
in almost every major city around the country. I wasn't
gonna do this, but this show has already been hijacked
by damn talkback.
Speaker 2 (09:38):
Let's just do this.
Speaker 3 (09:38):
Let's let's go to Minneapolish. I know it's early in
the morning and many of you are still trying to
wake up. And this is what a political rally looks
like in fundamentally uh you know, like fundamentally transformed the
United States of America. Well, we're going to fundamentally transform Minneapolis.
(10:00):
This is this is a campaign rally.
Speaker 2 (10:02):
The same.
Speaker 3 (10:11):
Virginia thank you so wanae.
Speaker 2 (10:15):
You don't know what the.
Speaker 3 (10:18):
Yeah uh that that's from a rally for the bug eyed,
light bulb headed, dumbass Caucasian Hayton Islama commi uh Omar
Fatah who actually regards Somali as home. But what's to
be the mayor of Minneapolis. Now the whole rally for
(10:43):
nearly twenty minutes, a berker clad woman shrieks Omar Follow's
name into a microphone, surrounded by a crowd chatting in
Somalian Arabic. The rally was punctuated with bursts of applause,
shouts of insha Allah God willing, and in invocations of
Iman Chaffi, the eighth century Islamic jurists whose ruling still
(11:05):
guides Samali religion today. Now, assimilation, I guess, is just
commpletely out of the question for some time now. This
is foreign conquests right before our eyes, brought about by
progressives to give them the demographic leverage to impose their
agenda US platform.
Speaker 2 (11:26):
Is this.
Speaker 3 (11:32):
Fata Oh, I'm sorry, Omar Fatah. He wants to freeze
rent and cancel rent, cancel mortgages and utilities. I'm moving
to Minneapolis. He wants a twenty dollars minimum wage. He
wants free public transit. Does that sound familiar to anybody
(11:54):
in any city around the country, Denver? Does that sound
familiar to you. He wants to abolish cooperation with ICE,
even if it involves a violent, convicted criminal alien, doesn't
make any difference to him. He wants to single payer
healthcare system. He wants to abolish fossil fuels completely. He
(12:15):
wants sanctuary city policies. No, not for illegal aliens, no
for abortion and gender transitions. And he wants income tax
hikes that hit the middle class. When you consider the
economic and the societal consequences that would result, it ought
to be obvious if you have, you know, a mustard
(12:38):
seed of IQ in your brain, faultalling. His supporters essentially
want to reduce Minneapolis to Mogadishu.
Speaker 2 (12:47):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (12:49):
Now, the scary part is his support goes beyond those
Somalian welfare colonists. It includes the Democrat Socialists of America,
the Communist Party USA, the SEIU, the Service Employee International Union,
you know, the union that represents a lot of federal workers,
well just government workers in general, plus all the service
(13:11):
employee unions around the country, which you know, by the way,
very instrumental and bringing Barack Obama to power the Sunrise Movement.
Bernie Sanders our revolution. He personifies the alliance of two
malevolent ideologies.
Speaker 2 (13:27):
Sworn to our destruction.
Speaker 3 (13:30):
That's known as the Red Green Axis after the colors
associated with the combination of two ideologies, Marxism and Islam.
To some of those are religions, but I consider them
to be ideologies. You know, the more Muslims their liberal
allies can import, the more threatening this alliance is going
(13:51):
to be count And I think that's why that leads
to a story. You know, I'm going to set this
story aside. I'll do that later now. Instead leads me
to a story that I was going to do later
in the day, but I think I'll do it now.
I woke up, had not planned this story, but I
woke up. I had, you know, had the dollars, did
my usual routine, puttsed around the house, sat down at
(14:13):
the computer at the laptop, opened my email, and there's
the New York Times morning email. I normally don't do
it because I normally just go to The New York Times,
but this subject line caught my attention. The Democrat Party.
I'm sorry. Technically speaking, they say the Democratic Party. The
(14:36):
Democrat Party faces a voter registration crisis. Well, I think
I'll look for that story real quickly before I go
on into the studio. The first paragraph sums it up perfectly.
The Democratic Party. I don't why they keep saying Democratic.
It's the Democrat Party. I know Democrats call it the
(14:59):
Democratic Party, but it's the Democrat Party. The Democrat Party
is hemorrhaging voters long before they even go to the
polls of the thirty states that tract voter registration by
political party. Democrats lost Grand Republicans in every single one
between the twenty twenty and twenty twenty four elections, hyphen
(15:21):
and often by a lot. That four year swing toward
the Republicans adds up to four and a half million voters,
a deep political whole that could take years for Democrats
to climb out from. And then they've got this cute
little chart. It's amazing. So on the left are which
(15:43):
is kind of ironic. Right on the left side of
the page are Democrat voters, and on the right side
of the page are Republican voters. And this chart is
titled change in Share of Registered Voters between twenty twenty four.
Between twenty twenty and twenty two twenty four, these states
(16:05):
lost Democrat voters. Oregon, Ohio, California, Nevada, Utah, Arizona, Alaska, Wyoming, Colorado,
New Mexico, Colorado, South Dakota, Nebraska, Kansas, Oklahoma, Iowa, all
of those. Now you think about Oklahoma, where all seventy
seven counties voted for Donald Trump, They're losing Democrat voters,
(16:27):
so they're already.
Speaker 2 (16:29):
In the hole in Oklahoma.
Speaker 3 (16:31):
And even further then you take a deep blue state
like California, they're losing voters.
Speaker 2 (16:39):
Now.
Speaker 3 (16:39):
The degree is I'll give you some numbers in a minute,
but the degree is indicated by the length of the
arrow pointing downward.
Speaker 2 (16:48):
And Colorado is.
Speaker 3 (16:50):
Slightly above average in the number of Democrat voters lost.
Nevada is huge. I mean, California is not that great.
Alaska's not that good, right, But Iowa, South Dakota, Wyoming, Oklahoma, Louisiana, Kansas,
they're all significant drops in Democrat voters. Now over here
on the right side, where you have the Republican voters,
(17:12):
all of these are well. Only a few lost Republican voters. Colorado, Oregon, Alaska,
So Oregon, Colorado and Alaska both lost Democrat and Republican voters,
But Idaha, Wyoming, Utah, Arizona, California, New Mexico, South Dakota, Kansas, Iowa, Oklahoma,
Louisiana all gained Republican voters, as did Kentucky, West Virginia, Pennsylvania,
(17:37):
New Jersey, New Hampshire, Maine, Florida all gained. The New
York Times describes it as a stamped away from the
Democrat Party, and they point out that these this stampede
is occurring in the battleground states, the bluest states, and
(17:58):
even in the red estates.
Speaker 2 (18:02):
Wow.
Speaker 3 (18:05):
All this data was compiled by some company called L two,
a nonpartisan data firm. He clearly must be nonpartisan to
put the truth out here like this. And I think
this is a shot across the bow by the New
York Times to say the Democrat Party, Hey, dumbasses, wake up,
you're in the hole. I'll give you some more stats
(18:26):
coming up.
Speaker 2 (18:27):
Brownie.
Speaker 4 (18:27):
Are you telling me that why Iman has lost Democratic voters?
Speaker 2 (18:32):
Huh?
Speaker 4 (18:33):
That means we're becoming more read up here. Oh fantastic.
That's the best news I've heard all day. Now, if
we could just get them out of Jackson Hole, have
a great day.
Speaker 3 (18:45):
Yeah, if we can just give them out of Denver
and Boulder, we might be able. Well, you know what,
it's not even Denver and Boulder anymore. So forty three
forty four rights. I just find this hilarious, Mike. The
stats you reveal after the break may dispell my theory
that the shrinking number of Democrat voters doesn't necessarily mean
(19:06):
a shrinking number of Democrat votes, just like shrinking crime
numbers in cities like Denver New York and LA. Doesn't
necessarily mean a shrinking amount of crime. It's just a rebranding. Well,
you've answered your own question. Are your own theory? My
theory that the shrinking number of Democrat voters doesn't necessarily
(19:26):
mean a shrinking number of Democrat votes.
Speaker 2 (19:30):
Ah, you mean there might be some fraud involved? No,
all told.
Speaker 3 (19:40):
This is according to New York Times, Democrats lost about
two point one million registered voters between twenty twenty twenty
four in the thirty states that I've mentioned, along with
DC that allow people to register with a political party.
In the remaining twenty states voters don't register with a
political party, Republicans get two point four million. Now, there
(20:02):
are still more Democrats registered nationwide than Republicans, partly because
of gigantic blue states like California that allow people to
register by party, while red states like Texas do not.
But one of the money quotes in this article, the
trajectory is troublesome for Democrats, and there are growing tensions
(20:26):
over what to do about it. Democrats went from nearly
an eleven percentage point edge over Republicans on election day
in twenty twenty in those places with partisan registration to
just over a six percentage point edge in twenty twenty four.
That swing alone helps to explain Trump's success last year,
(20:50):
when he won the popular vote, swept the swing states,
and according to them, quote roared back to the White House.
Michael Preuser, who tracks voter registration. He does data science
for Decision Desk Headquarters election analysis site. I don't want
(21:10):
to say the death cycle of the Democrat Party, but
there seems to be no end to this. There is
no silver lining or cavalry coming across the hill. This
is month after month after month, year after year after year.
All four presidential battleground states that are covered by the
Times analysis in this story, Arizona, Nevada, North Carolina, Pennsylvania
(21:34):
showed significant Democrat erosion, and then guys like Scott Pressler
who are working in Pennsylvania show an amazing ability to
register new Republican voters and to get some Democrats to
switch from Democrat to Republican. In North Carolina, Republicans erased
(21:56):
almost ninety five percent of the registration advantage that Democrats
held just four years ago. In Nevada, Democrats suffered the
steepest percentage point plunge of any state except West Virginia
between those that during that same four year period, top
Democrat strategists, says The New York Times, say the party's
(22:19):
nationwide registration decline is a hidden, in plain sight crisis
that must be reversed before the twenty twenty eight election.
Consider this, says The Times. In twenty eighteen, Democrats accounted
for thirty four percent of new voter registrations nationwide, while
Republicans were only twenty percent. Yet by twenty twenty four,
(22:41):
Republicans had overtaken Democrats among new registrants. In six years,
Republicans share rose by nine percentage points, while Democrats share
dropped by nearly eight points. You know, you see the
share of voters registering as Republican or Democrats. You've probably
(23:03):
seen these graphs before where it shows the percentage of
registered Republicans percentage of registered Democrats and that crossed over
its Well, Republicans were on a decline from about twenty
nineteen through twenty twenty two, somewhere between twenty two in
it it bottom out around twenty twenty three. What was
(23:28):
going on in twenty twenty three? Because in twenty twenty three, interestingly,
I'm sorry, i flipped.
Speaker 2 (23:36):
I was going backwards.
Speaker 3 (23:38):
The Democrats were showing a gradual decline from twenty nineteen
through twenty twenty three. In twenty three, between twenty three
and twenty twenty four, during the you know, is Biden
going to run again or not run again? There was
only a slight increase. But between twenty twenty four, between
(23:59):
the end of the November election last year and as
of today, it is one of the steepest declines on
that graph of percentages. Now interesting, interesting you go to
the Republican side. They had a major increase between twenty
eighteen and twenty twenty, then it dropped off to twenty
(24:22):
twenty one during COVID. I think people were pretty pissed
off about what Trump was doing. During COVID it dropped off,
it started to recover, and continued to recover through twenty
twenty one, twenty twenty two, twenty twenty three, and in
twenty twenty three it just just as Democrats had a
precipitous decline, Republicans had an amazing increase, so that now
(24:50):
almost thirty percent of registered voters are Republicans and Democrats
have dropped down almost.
Speaker 2 (24:57):
To twenty percent. Just in general, numbers.
Speaker 3 (25:03):
This signals between I think it signals that for me,
the most important part is policy. And I think it
signals that while we may have a problem with whatever,
this newest generation of kids is called that think socialism
is wonderful, primarily because they have no idea what socialism
(25:26):
really is. They just hear free stuff, or they think that,
you know, the rents too damn high, or mortgage rach
or two eye, which they are, thank you, Jerome Powell,
You've got all of those problems. But they somehow think
that the solution of that is socialism. But I think
other generations gen Zer, gen X, obviously, the boomers, the millennials,
(25:50):
I think they all recognize because they're now seeing it
because Democrats, progressive Democrats, progressing Marxist Democrats, have been so
adamant about imposing all of this stuff on us that
those generations that have any modicum of or any semblance
at all of an education about a capitalist, free market,
(26:16):
republican form of government are coming to realize that what
democrats are doing is leading us straight into the into
the arms of Marxism. And they're rejecting that. And they're
rejecting they're they're rejecting all of the identity politics take
to take one little microcosm. Regardless of what you think
about gay or homosexuality, I don't care, because I don't care.
(26:43):
But when you look at some of the online gay
groups that are politically involved log Cabinet Republicans, for example,
they're probably not the best example because they're obviously already conservative,
but all of these groups are beginning to just flatly
(27:04):
reject this idea, this transgender ism ideology. And I think
that is a microcosm of what's happening with larger policies,
economic policies, tax policies, foreign affairs, international relations, all of that.
People be beginning to wake up and see that what
Democrats have been doing with the invasion of the country
(27:26):
by these forms, with with what's going on. I know
because my guess is that Omar Fatal will probably win
the mayor's race in Minneapolis and it will turn into
a crap hole. Well, it's already kind of a craphole city,
but it will turn into a true crap hole, foreign
dominated city run by a Somalian who believes that Somalia
(27:49):
is this true home, not the United States of America. Well,
I don't care. I don't give a ratsk what country
you come from. If you come to this country and
you will to live and be a citizen of this country,
this is your new home. You can still have roots
back in your old place where you came from. I
don't have a problem with that. You can still celebrate
(28:10):
your culture, but you're now an American, and I expect
you to act like an American. And the same with
Mundani in New York. I understand that you, first of all,
you've lied about your past. You've never done anything in
your past. You've not accomplished anything. You lived off mommy
and daddy your entire life, and so you have that
preconceived notion about how great socialism is because that's been
(28:32):
your life. You've lived off other people's money your entire life,
and now you want to translate that into public policy
for New Yorkers. And the problem is in New Yorkers,
there are too many limousine liberals that believe that kind
of crap, and they are influenced by, oh, you've got
a nice, little sweet smile, you have a you know,
kind of a you know, a shiny personality, so you're
(28:52):
the shiny object. So a bunch of dumbasses are going
to vote for you in New York and New York
in Minneapolis will be craphole cities just like Denver, except
there it's a bunch of foreigners that are running it.
Speaker 2 (29:04):
Oh.
Speaker 3 (29:05):
I know they're American citizens, but at heart they're still foreigners.
Speaker 2 (29:10):
It's The Dan Kaplis Show Afternoon four to six.
Speaker 3 (29:13):
Taking a break from his duties as twenty third District Attorney,
George Brockler takes the host chair for Dan on Wednesday
with his latest prosecutorial stories of law and order from
Douglas County. Dan Capitlis Law has a model, and that
model is the truth wins. And when you're involved in
high stakes personal injury cases, indeed, it takes a lot
of skill, experience, resources, and a ferocious determination on the
(29:36):
part of your attorney to find improve the truth so
that you can win your case. Well, Dan Capitalis Law
and Dan Caplis himself have proven that they are very
good at finding improving the truth, and I think that's
why they've won so much. All you have to do
is look at Dan's track record. He has record setting results,
including an unheard of five straight multi million dollar jury
(29:57):
verdicts in Colorado crash cases. Dan Is leave to have
won the largest jury verdict ever in Colorado history in
a truck crash case. That only happens when your cause
is true and your attorney has that determination to find
improve the truth in order for you to win your case.
I know how personal injury lawyers work because I'm a
lawyer myself. I made the decision a long time ago
(30:20):
that if either myself or my figure the shiny object,
so a bunch of dumbasses are going to vote for
you in New York and New York in Minneapolis will
be craphole cities just like Denver, except there it's a
bunch of foreigners that are running it.
Speaker 2 (30:33):
Oh.
Speaker 3 (30:34):
I know they're American citizens, but at heart they're still foreigners. Michael,
you can thank Obama for bringing all the Somalians in.
Speaker 2 (30:41):
He brought in the Omar crew.
Speaker 1 (30:44):
That seventy thousand Somalians keep voting for her.
Speaker 2 (30:49):
So this is what you get.
Speaker 3 (30:50):
You know, Obama brought them in and they're going to.
Speaker 4 (30:52):
Keep invading and infecting America.
Speaker 3 (30:55):
I say, let Minneapolis fall on her face, let the
Simalians rule it, and it'll be an asshole. Whether you
want to let them fail or not doesn't make any
difference to me, you know why, because it's going to
happen naturally. And there I think a better way to
(31:20):
phrase what your I think your intent is step back
and let it happen. I get a little frustrated. I
understand why. For example, the Fox News Channel or Fox Business.
I found myself listening a lot more to Fox Business lately.
Uh but Fox the Fox News Channel, well, and I
(31:46):
know many of them live in the New York metropolitan area,
and I know that they work in Midtown Manhattan, Midtown Manhattan,
so they're truly fearful of the election of Zoe Fram
mom Donnie, and I understand that. And I know Zoe
Fram is not his name, but that's a drug, isn't
zo Fram? The anti nausea medicine. That's why he calling Yeah,
(32:09):
that's why I keep calling him Zoe Fram because he's nauseous.
Zoefram Mondanni is going to be elected. In my opinion,
I don't think that Eric Adams or Cuomo can beat him.
He's got too much momentum, and Fox News is out
there just pounding him day after day after day and
(32:33):
even giving advice about you know, why you should or
why you should not vote in explaining all of that,
And I think that's a lost cause I don't want
to see. I mean, I've been in Minneapolis many times.
I've been to New York, you know, hundreds and hundreds
of times. I actually love visiting New York. I haven't
visited there in several years, and I'm not quite sure
(32:55):
I want to right now. But I kind of miss
the food and broad Wad and you know, the shopping
and everything, and I kind of missed that. But I'm
not sure what you're going to go back right now.
But the rational side of me says, let it collapse.
I'd rather New York City collapse so that we can
(33:17):
see and maybe we can save the rest of the nation,
as opposed to many people who want to see the
nation collapse, thinking that somehow will rise like a phoenix
out of the ashes of Marxism and survive a second
American revolution, that's no guarantee. I'd rather keep what we
have and try to fix it than right to try
to start all over again. So let little experiments you'll
(33:38):
let you know. The States are supposed to be the
laboratories of democracy. Well, let the cities be those labs also,
and if they go down the crapper, let them go
down the crapper, and the rest of the country can
see because I think that's what's happening, and obviously amount
of time, but when I get back, i'll give you
an example of why I think the Democrats are absolutely
(34:02):
blinded by their hatred of Trump and blinded by their
love of Marxism, and that's why they're in this hole.