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January 29, 2026 60 mins
On Thursday, Rich reacts to the viral 'Bananas and rice' meme made famous by Somali-American Nasra Ahmed of Minnesota and details her arrest for attacking or impeding ICE officials. Then, this Throwback Thursday, we ask: Do you remember when President Barack Obama called for illegal immigrants to be deported? Plus, the wild case of the geriatric Brit bankrolling illicit activity from an unsuspecting location. 

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:05):
This is America with Rich Valdez, powered by politiweek dot com.

Speaker 2 (00:09):
And Rich Valdees is with us former Christian Administration official.

Speaker 1 (00:12):
You works at Chris Christieve and follow us each a
lot of public service stuff.

Speaker 3 (00:15):
Rich Valdez calumnist now with the Washington Times.

Speaker 1 (00:18):
This is America, Richiev.

Speaker 3 (00:19):
You're on the air with a nation Nation with America.

Speaker 1 (00:23):
With your host, Rich Valdez.

Speaker 3 (00:26):
What's up, America. I am Rich Valdes. Valdes with an
s at Rich Valdez on all of the social media.
You're a liberty loving Latino amigo. Here at our new
Time Square studio seventeen blocks from Madison Square, guard in
New York City. Blessed to be here with each and
every one of you tonight, and welcome to our late
length national town hall conversation. If you want to join us,

(00:47):
can be a call eight seven seven Valdes one, eight
seven seven Valdez one. And check this out. The news
cycle is serving up more absurdity than you would expect
for a Thursday. Right, we're talking about peak Lokua, right,
peak crazy, straight from the headlines. Even the limbs are

(01:08):
scratching their heads. I think at some of these headlines,
at least a couple of them. Listen to this. First up,
we've got the Minnesota man man, God blessed the Midwest.
But sometimes they take that Minnesota nice to a whole
new level, a whole new level of unhinged. Right, this
guy shows up at the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn,
New York, posing as an FBI agent. He's got fake papers.

(01:31):
They're quote unquote signed by a judge, a Minnesota driver's license.
And listen to this. He's armed with a barbecue fork
and a pizza cutter. Mm hmm, yet you heard that right.
This guy's plan was to spring Luigi Mangioni, the guy
who was accused of shooting the CEO of United Healthcare,

(01:55):
and now he's become a folk hero to everybody who
doesn't like insurance. Well, he was the mastermind here of
Operation Deep Dish right, throwing papers everywhere, and he claims
that he's packing heat, but it's just kitchen utensils. Listen,
If you're gonna impersonate the FEDS and then try to
bust somebody out of jail, at least bring a real

(02:16):
badge and maybe some real firepower. But no, not this guy.
This guy brings Uh, he's lucky he didn't bring tongs
with him, right, a barbecue fork and a pizza cutter.
You think he was armed for the Fourth of July.
Cook God. Anyway, this is why we can't have nice
things in America, right, because this guy is from man Cato, Minnesota,

(02:38):
and he probably thought FBI stood for free the brother immediately,
right or something like that. Anyway, Meanwhile, the real FBI
is probably thinking, we can't even keep our own impersonator
straight anymore. Kelestre. Anyway, this is the kind of story
that makes you think man only in America or the

(03:00):
sort now speaking of federal raids and election drama, because
nothing says democracy like the Feds kicking in the doors
waving the four force. The FBI just rated the Fulton
County Election Center. Yes, that Fulton County, Fulton County, Georgia,
home of Funny Willis.

Speaker 1 (03:18):
And.

Speaker 3 (03:20):
That was one of the biggest, you know, punchlines of
every election joke. Back in twenty twenty, they did this
surprise raid. Everybody's raising an eyebrow over this. President Trump
himself chiming in saying it's about time. This is the
stuff that keeps the swamp creatures up at night. I'm
hoping that it materializes into something. I don't know that
it will, but sometimes I feel like, because people are

(03:43):
getting restless, we start to see a little activity, but
I don't know if the activity actually amounts to actionable
you know, outcomes. We'll see. But that's where we're at
with that, and I'll touch on that a little bit
as well. I'm just trying to lay out some of
what we are going to talk about this Thursday night.
Let me see. But wait, there's more poetic justices in

(04:06):
the air. Speaking of Minnesota madnas. Remember that viral Somali
woman a couple of days back. She went viral for
describing her a Somali identity and saying it was similar
to bananas and rice. Yeah, that one. Well, she turned
this food combo into a cultural metaphor that had everyone
cracking up. It was funny, very funny. And well, she's

(04:28):
just been arrested, believe it or not, in a big
federal sweep along with fifteen others, for allegedly assaulting officers
during an anti ice riot in Minneapolis. And that's something.
No bananas and rice for her. She went from bananas
and rice to behind bars and Rice oh Man or

(04:48):
whatever they serve in that part of the world in Minnesouluta.
So she's now gonna, you know, do her time and
figure out what peaceful protest is there, mostly right, as
they like to say, mostly peaceful, and let's see what
Tom Holman has in store for the rest of the
people in I was gonna say Illinois, but it's not Illinois.

(05:08):
It's actually Minnesota. I have a tough time keeping my
left wing cities, keeping them in check over here. Anyway,
I want to shift gears to some pop culture stuff
because even in the middle of all this chaos in Minnesota,
the entertainment world is still delivering gold. Right. Nicki Minaj
the queen herself, she's out there becoming Trump's number one fan.

(05:32):
She showed up at a Treasury event with the President
flashing a gold Trump card and free of charge. She
didn't charge anybody for the appearance, she says, and announcing
her citizenship paperwork is being finalized, from being a Trinidadian
citizen to being a United States citizen from Queens, New York. Right,
So she's now the Maga darling and listen, I've always

(05:54):
liked Nicki Minaj. I think she's terrific. She's a very
talented person, sings good, she raps good, she's very pretty,
and she's funny. I think funny is a big thing
for me. Anyway, Trump called her up on stage, thanking
her for investing hundreds of thousands of dollars into these
new Trump accounts for kids. She's out here paying it
forward like a boss. Listen, Nicki Minaj, if she can

(06:16):
go full Trump mode anything as possible. Now, maybe next
she'll drop a track called super Bass Maga Edition. I'd
love to hear that, right, Yima he not imagine what
that would be like. The libs are already melting down, you know,
cutting her off. Anyway, we'll see how that goes, and
I'll play that clip a little bit later as well.
Then we've got Daddy Yankee right, speaking of a little

(06:37):
Puerto Rican news there. Daddy Yankee is a big rapper
from Puerto Rico, one of the biggest in the world,
and he is making headlines right now in Puerto Rico.
He's been the king of reggae dong for a very
long time, and President Trump recently featured one of his
biggest hit records, Gasolina on one of the White House's
social media posts, which I thought was interesting. But that's

(07:00):
not the news here is that Daddy Yankee and Old
Gattan Jung, another singer, have been chosen by the Tourism
Department of Puerto Rico to be the face of Puerto
Rico's twenty twenty six tourism campaign. He was also honored
by the State Senate in Puerto Rico, making him the
official Ambassador Cultural Ambassador for the island of Puerto Rico,

(07:24):
and even the city of San Juan and it's mayor
gave a bunch of kudos. I mean, I couldn't go
too far without seeing all the news about Daddy Yankee yesterday,
so Sadulo said that a Yankee did for him. Congratulations
and I love that. Let's see what else we got here,
what's next? That was just through the beginning of it.

(07:46):
But we're gonna do the FBI. The fake pizza cutter,
the girl with the bananas and rice, which I like.
By the way, that's actually a popular thing in many
Hispanic households. Colombians love it. They don't call it banana.
They call it by nao, which is always funny to
me to hear that, But anyway, keep it locked right here, folks.

(08:07):
There is more to come straight ahead. I got lots
more to talk about. We're gonna talk about the meltdowns
that are happening all across the country, from different left
wing factions to everything that's happening with Hollywood. Who got
the Grammys coming up and all that stuff. I know
you're not interested, but I always like to get, you know,

(08:28):
a little update on what's going on there. So keep
it locked right here. I'm Rich Valdez.

Speaker 1 (08:33):
This is America. This is America, all.

Speaker 3 (08:52):
Right, Egos, welcome back. It's Rich valdesk' that's with it.
That's that Rich Valdet. I'm all of the social media
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(09:35):
Like that's it. One click. It's not that hard to
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(09:55):
If I was your appointment listening and I'm not anymore,
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(10:18):
you asap. But we are I think we've handled that
and we're working on that. If we haven't handled it,
already in your neck of the woods. Anyway, I want
to get into this bananas and rice stuff.

Speaker 4 (10:28):
Now.

Speaker 3 (10:28):
If you haven't heard this, I want you to hear it,
because I thought this was pretty interesting, right, this is
believe it. It made me laugh, you know, you know me,
I get a little countercultural here sometimes with things. I
know most people go back to your country, get out
of here. I found this to be funny, almost borderline cute.
And I was like, you know, I love meet some
bananas and rice. I love a good sunny side up

(10:49):
fried egg with white rice. Throw a banana in there.
Oh my goodness. This is how poor people eat, right,
And I grew up poor, so these when there's no meat,
you figure out what you can eat your rice with.
Listen to this.

Speaker 5 (11:02):
So I'm Somali. I'm proud to be Somali. To me,
being Somali isn't just eating bananas with rice. It's a
it's a lot. It's like, it's uh, it's a it's
an interesting thing. It's uh. It's very hard to describe
what means to be Somali and what it means to
be American. But it's like a cultural fusion. It's kind

(11:26):
of like the bananas and rice. You know, people don't
really see like you know, it's a it's a it's
you know, people don't think, oh, you can eat bananas
with rice. But that's what it's like to be Somali
an American. It's like that combination of banana and rice.
But you're gonna get what I mean.

Speaker 3 (11:49):
You're gonna get what she means. Well, her name is
hang On, not I Mad. She gained national attention just
a couple of days ago over her cultural identity remarks.
And this is according to Fox News, when she was
arrested by the Attorney General's office to respond to her
attack on federal officers. So good old banana rice girl

(12:12):
seemed very nice, very innocent, very innocuous. She was out
there in them streets again. Nasrah Ahmed, twenty three years
old of Minnesota, And she became very famous describing being
Somali and being American as bananas and rice. And when
it all across social media, I'm sure you've seen it.
If you have it, you're welcome. You got to hear
what she had to say, ums and ohs and everything

(12:33):
in between. She became famous just a few days ago,
and now she's behind bars, Attorney General Pam Bondi saying
Wednesday that she's in Minneapolis as federal authorities are stepping
up enforcement after the recent unrest involving federal law enforcement,
announcing that sixteen people have been accused of assaulting or
impeding federal agents, and miss Ahmed was one of them.

(12:55):
Little extra accent there forgive me. That's her Bananas and Rice.
I thought this was fake. I thought it was ai
when I first saw it, not the arrest story, but
her giving that speech. I thought it was an interesting
word choice. You know what, Listen, this girl may have
a future in politics, right, look at AOC. She may
have a future in being a social media influencer, creating,
you know, amazing content like that Bananas and Rice. I

(13:18):
mean I've watched that, no lie, like four or five
times already. It was I thought it was fantastic, Attorney
General Bondi, writing, I am on the ground of Minneapolis today.
On I was gonna say on FedEx. You said it
on X also known as Twitter. It's got to be Twitter, right,
you start calling it X, then I start saying FedEx. Anyway,
Bondi saying this, we expect more arrests to come. I've
said it before and I'll say it again. Nothing will

(13:40):
stop President Trump and this Department of Justice from enforcing
the law. So many other people arrested as part of
this action were Christina renk ab Di, Kadir Newer, Madeleine Tishida,
Nizana Flores Hell City, Boroska, Quentin Williams, William Verme, Paul Johnson,

(14:01):
Jillian Etherington, Joshua Doyle, Kiubilly Adibelli, Margaret Sager, Elon Wilson, Sohler, Ahmed,
Alice Valentine, and Matrem Charlebois. Wow, you see these pictures
of these people. What a bunch? What a bunch. If

(14:22):
you showed me this picture, I would say these people,
these people are professional protesters. That's exactly what they look like.
I mean, you can't make this stuff up. Maybe I'll
put this out on Twitter so you can take a
look at it. Check it out on Twitter or any
of the other social media as well, like truth Social
at Rich Valdez with an s at Rich Valdez. So
that's the latest from Minnesota. Now I want to continue.

(14:44):
So everybody's got their panties in a bunch. We don't
know exactly why everybody's mad. Well, and I say that
because President Obama, right, good Obama, the bombster. Obama didn't
have this type of pushback. And of course, you know,
we can see that he had a lot of support
in the media. They were making Ice out to be
the good guys back then, et cetera, et cetera. I

(15:06):
get that. Plus they ignored this, by and large, right,
just like they ignored the pandemic that they had back then,
right the H one n one, When the numbers got
out of control, they just stopped counting and they said,
we're not going to count infections anymore. We're just gonna
let this thing kind of disappear, something that they refused
to do during COVID. But all that being said, President

(15:27):
Obama had a lot to say about this. And I've
got a clip you might have seen on social media
or on the news, or maybe you haven't seen it
yet or heard it since he said it some years ago.
But President Obama sounding an awful lot like President Trump
and like President Clinton. They all sound the same, honestly,
because they're all talking about the same stuff. I want

(15:48):
you to listen to this clip that we have from
two thousand and ten, President Obama talking about the deportation
of illegal immigrants, even those that are simply here just
trying to earn a living. Check this out.

Speaker 2 (16:04):
We face the prospect that different rules for immigration will
apply in different parts of the country, a patchwork of
local immigration rules where we all know one clear national
standard is needed. Our task, then, is to make our

(16:26):
national laws actually work, to shape a system that reflects
our values as a nation of laws and a nation
of immigrants. And that means being honest about the problem
and getting passed the false debates that divide the country

(16:46):
rather than bring it together. For example, there are those
in the immigrants rights community who have argued passionately, he
should simply provide those who are illegally with legal status,
or at least ignore the laws on the books, and

(17:08):
put an end to deportation until we have better laws.
And often this argument is framed in moral terms. Why
should we punish people who are just trying to earn
a living. I recognize the sense of compassion that drives
this argument, but I believe such an indiscriminate approach would

(17:32):
be both unwise and unfair. It would suggest to those
thinking about coming here illegally that there will be no
repercussions for such a decision, and this could lead to
a surge in more illegal immigration.

Speaker 3 (17:49):
You mean, like what happened with Joe Biden.

Speaker 2 (17:52):
Yeah, exactly, And it would also ignore the millions of
people around the world who are waiting in line to
come here lead. Ultimately, our nation, like all nations, has
the right and obligation to control its borders and set
laws for residency and citizenship. And no matter how decent

(18:15):
they are, no matter they are reasons, the eleven million
who broke these laws should be held accountable.

Speaker 3 (18:23):
Wow, is that an AI dubbed version of Trump sounding
like Obama? No, that's the real Obama. Why because they
all said the same thing, right, Bill Clinton said the
same thing. This is the law of the land and
they know it. The federal government has exclusive oversight over
immigration pumpifan period the end, that's it. It's a wrap.

(18:44):
And these guys are just trying to nullify federal law
as if they can. This is not you know, the
the Jim Crow south right, We're not doing that anymore.
You can't just nullify rules that you don't like so
you can keep slavery going, or so that you can
keep illegal immigration going or whatever the case is. And
you know what's interesting to me is they make Tom

(19:06):
Homan out to be the bad guy. Christy nom is
the bad guy. Everybody's angry at everybody. Meanwhile, you've got Homan,
who has served the last six presidents. Right, he was
the same guy that was the chief of Border Patrol
for President Obama and nobody hated him back then. It's

(19:28):
only now that everybody's mad at Homan because he's associated
with Trump. And I think this is one of the
craziest things that you know, they're like, yeah, well Trump
is saying what Obama said, but Trump is meaner.

Speaker 6 (19:42):
Right.

Speaker 3 (19:42):
They're doing it with masks on, and it really just
makes you think, like, what in the world is going
on here? Like, really, what is going on here? When
did we stop being normal? When did we just stop
understanding how life really worked? I don't know, I'm lost
on this one. Listen to Tom Homan press conference earlier

(20:06):
today in Minneapolis.

Speaker 7 (20:07):
In the country. I legally you're not You're never off
the table, you know, but we privatization doesn't mean but
you forgive about your boss. Let me say this, if
the message we send as you enter this country legally
it's a crime. Don't worry about it. You can have
your due process chow open court and not chopping court,
get ordered to move, don't worry about it. Unless you

(20:29):
commit a serious crime, you're good to go. If that's
the message we send to the world, you're never going
to fix this problem. The most vulnerable people in the
world will make that dangerous journey like they did under
Joe Biden administration, over four thousand anilies dying back in
that journey, and again a significant increase in sex trafficking.
Because when they did that and open up borders up

(20:50):
saying we're not going to detain you, We're going to
give you free health care, We're going to fly to
the city of your choice, put you in a free
hotel room, give you three meals a day, and give
your work authorization. Where're you going to bring you in?
And when they did that, they sent a mess the
whole world you can come and do this. And what happened.
They overwhelmed the men and women of the Board Patrol.

Speaker 3 (21:10):
Overwhelming the men and women of the Border Patrol. That's
exactly what's going on. And it's a shame, but this
is the message, right They cherry picked. They said, we're
going after the worst first. Obviously, after first come second.
And I can't believe anybody got behind this idea that

(21:32):
you would only go after the bad guys everybody else
could stay and honestly, personally, you know, I've had this
argument with a lot of people. I know a lot
of people who are here in the process of waiting
for paperwork in this part of the world. I live
in New Jersey. A few places you can go where
a lot of the staff for anything, right, anything. It's

(21:55):
not just certain businesses, it's pretty much just about anything.
I'm talking about McDonald's through I'm talking about construction work,
yard work. Anything you do, you're likely faced with somebody
that's in process trying to get their papers right, so
that if they were asked right now, you hear you
have legal status. This second answers probably, I don't know.

(22:17):
Ask my lawyer. Right, there's a lot of people in status,
waiting for a visa, waiting for a green card, waiting
for whatever. I don't think we should deport every last
one of those people, right. I don't think you want
to go after people that are in the middle of
waiting things. But you do want to go after people
that have deportation orders right now, if the problem exists

(22:38):
in that we're giving deportation orders to every last human
that is or isn't here, then that's, you know, a
question for reformers, for people to take a look at.
But to make ICE look like they're coming after me.
If you look Puerto Rican, if you look Mexican, if
you look like anything, they don't like they're coming after you.

(22:58):
It's a lie. It's an absolute lie. That's not how
this thing works. And that's why I always come on
here and I go market myself safe. Yet again, ICE
has not deported me. And I say that because I
really want people to understand there are no ICE people
running around these streets looking for random people. Right when
they indiscriminately say things like people are getting shot in

(23:21):
the face, they're killing American citizens. Yes, American citizens die
in the electric chair, they die by lethal injection, they
die all the time. If that is the fate that's
associated with the crimes they've committed. And you have some
of these people that have attacked law enforcement, right and

(23:42):
I get it. A lot of people are good people,
good people, and the media is trying to use your
compassion and your goodness against you. I'm just going to
say this when you've got four or five police officers
trying to wrestle someone to the ground to put handcuffs
on them, because that is how this works, right, This
is not a negotiation. Right. The cops don't wear all
this gear so that you know they they could say, hey,

(24:05):
how you doing, how are you so and so? My
name is Fred Smith. Here's my business card, here's my ID.
I'd like to let you know I'm interested in arresting
you today. I'm gonna be patting you down. If it's
okay with you, I'd like to pat you down to
make sure you don't have any weapons that could hurt me.
And what we're gonna do when somebody's in your face,

(24:25):
you know, F you f the police, coward shame right
and just yelling and spitting and I'm gonna go after
your kids. How would you like it? You know, calling
them a little B word and all that. I mean,
come on, the rules in the use of force pretty
much universally are whatever they do, you can escalate. I
understand they're allowed to yell, they're not allowed to like

(24:46):
spittle on your face. You know, depositing droplets of spit
on your face is not allowed, right, So clearly you
got to back up. Now, this guy, he's kicking police
cars and he's all sorts of angry, and clearly he's
been radicalized and he's all messed up. This man, in
his deranged state, wants to get into an argument, screaming
at the top of his lungs at the police. They

(25:09):
get into this altercation. He's trying to help someone else,
and you know we've been through this already. Bottom line
is he reached for the gun and that's why he
got shot. I don't think he even knew that that
gun was gone, or maybe he felt them taking it
out and he was going to check. Either way, dumb move.
When you're wrestling with five cops, why would you go
for your gun? Right? So to me, the question I

(25:30):
would say is was this a situation of suicide by cop?
Was this guy looking to die? Is that why? You know,
a very successful ICU nurse that was otherwise a mild
mannered person that your daughter should date and everyone should
be and the image of perfection, right, isn't that what
Anna Navarro said that he was all sorts of perfect
he was all sorts of awesome. He was just fantastic

(25:50):
that we would we would love this guy. But instead
that's not what happened. So again my question becomes, how
does this whole thing go south? He goes south when
he reaches for the gun, and any cop in their
right mind is gonna shoot you before you shoot them.
This was, again an unfortunate thing, just like the Renee
Good and I talked about this the other day. I
don't want to keep going over the same points, and

(26:11):
I really would love to talk about something other than Minnesota.
But bottom line is same thing. I don't think she
was intentionally trying to kill that dude, but she did
run him over. She did hit him because of the
girl next to her, her spouse, whatever, the woman that
was with hers yelling go go, go, go go, putting
her under pressure. Maybe she got nervous and trying to
do things hastily, hit the gas in the wrong direction.

(26:32):
But she hit him. She hit the guy, and he
shot her. Now, I would say both of these things
could have been avoided if these people would have been
protesting at a distance, not on top of the police.
That's all I'm saying. I would bet you anything. I
would love to bet you. I'm gonna bet you a
piece of merch. Right, one of the famous hats on
our show here, the American flag, mesh back mossy oak front,

(26:53):
looks like the MAGA lettering and it says Liberty Loving
Latino and meigo, I'm gonna bet you one of those hats,
brand new, produced by an America company and printed here
in New Jersey that you can't even find footage of
these people ever protesting, peacefully holding up a sign, being
outside of the face of law enforcement. And if you

(27:14):
find it and you post it and you tag me,
and I see it and I agree with you, I'm
going to send you a hat because I think you'll
be hard pressed to find it. I don't believe these
guys are doing this because they they are observers, right,
conscientious objectors. No, no, no, I believe this is their religion,

(27:37):
this is their identity. We are threatening their existence. That's
how they feel on the inside. Right, ice is threatening
their existence. The fact that we have people that are
not allowed to be in this country because because Trump
is a thirty four count felon, He's a felon. How
could anybody, how could a felon tell us what to
do right. It's all these false equips, valencies, false dichotomies

(28:02):
that ultimately lead to nothing but these people dying. And
I don't want to see people die. I don't think
anybody wants to see well, I'm gonna say, I don't
think President Trump wants to see people die. I don't
think Homan wants to see people die. I certainly don't
want to see these people die. I do think there
are a lot of people that would love to see

(28:24):
these people die. I think there's a lot of people
that would love to live in America where they only
live with people that agree with them, not me. I
don't mind the friction, I don't mind the disagreement. I
don't mind the nuance, the heterodoxy. I don't want to
live in one of those places where everybody thinks what
I think, because you know, we need to be our

(28:47):
own people. We need to have difference, but we also
need to have normalcy, and we need to obey our laws,
and we can discuss our differences while still following the law.
I think that's the part we're missing, all right. I Mean,
he goes taking a pause right here, coming right back
more to come. Straight ahead, don't go anywhere. I'm Rich Aldez.

Speaker 1 (29:07):
This is America. This is America.

Speaker 2 (29:17):
The forty fifth President Donald Trump thinks it's an honor
to speak with Rich Valdez.

Speaker 1 (29:23):
Oh very good.

Speaker 3 (29:28):
The honor is all yours. Conservative talk with a dash
of sofrito. Now here's Rich Valdez. All right, and he goes,
welcome back, Rich Valdez, keeping your company tonight. And uh,
like I said, I don't want to talk about Minnesota,
but there's so much to talk about. Earlier I mentioned

(29:49):
a woman named Navarro. Right, Oh boy, oh boy, oh boy.
Beer beer. This is one of my favorite songs. Wasn't
expecting this, but I'll take it. Hey, hey, hey, this
is a challenge all over social media. That's a new
It's called a deeper challenge. This is a song from

(30:12):
many years ago, and a lot of people enjoyed dancing
to you. And the band that sing this is actually
my new syndication company. They have a media company in
the Dominican Republic and throughout the Caribbean, and they made
this song and they also are in the television space
now with the Roku channel and a few other things

(30:33):
they're doing. Anyway, kudos to Otro Soli Tho shout out
to them. Not what I wanted to talk about. I
wanted to talk about Anna Navadu and she's not omitting
a superstar and a Navarro is from the view and
she said some crazy, crazy stuff right. One of the
things that she said that I thought was ridiculous was

(30:54):
how she believes that this man Preddy was perfect. Right,
he was just this perfect person. He was this person
that you you'd want your daughter to marry, and you
know you want to be like this guy. He's the
best guy ever. And clearly you know this was I

(31:14):
don't know, a mischaracterization at worst, at best, I should say,
but that's never stopped her. Here's Anna Navarro saying, this
guy's fantastic. Listen to this.

Speaker 4 (31:25):
They chose to they killed the wrong guy, right, because
this is this is like the perfect guy. Alex Pratty
is the guy you would want to date your daughter,
the guy you would want your son to grow up
to be a decent human being who was serving humanity.

Speaker 3 (31:41):
Sir, hold on NNA, while you're serving humanity. I do
not want my daughter dating anybody who is pulling up
on the cops spitting at them kicking their vehicle. No, man,
that is some serious feminine energy, right like the saying
on the street goes real GE's moving silence. We don't
need anybody losing their mind like that, getting all sorts

(32:03):
of angry and screaming at the top of their lungs.
That's not manly behavior. Anna, A real man takes note.
You don't lose your cool. You can have all the
fighting in the world, you could do all all all
the action, but you don't have to scream the way
they do at the beating of their chest. It's petulance.
It's childlike behavior. Now listen, I've been guilty of it

(32:26):
in the past. I've lost my cool and gone into
that type of energy. I have not on many occasions,
but I've learned over the years it's not what I
want to do. You're gonna sit there and get into
a shouting match, and that's what little girls do. No, no, no,
not doing that, right, Either do it or you don't,

(32:48):
But we're not gonna sit here and scream about it.
Go ahead, play the tape.

Speaker 4 (32:52):
Irving sick veterans?

Speaker 1 (32:54):
Who is you know?

Speaker 4 (32:56):
There is nothing that has been said about that man
that isn't wonderful, and so they can't malign him. They
can't malign him because we.

Speaker 3 (33:05):
Have I think he's doing that himself, Anna, Right, I
think he totally did it himself. I think the videos
that are out there, the hymn, cursing at the police,
spitting at the police, kicking the light out of the car.
I mean, think about the times you've kicked something angry. Right,
I'm sure somebody here has kicked something. Did you actually
kick it hard enough to knock the light out of

(33:25):
an suv? Wow? But he did? All right? Is there
anything left? Play it up?

Speaker 4 (33:29):
Have the videos check?

Speaker 3 (33:31):
Yeah? Well, the videos speak for themselves, Anna, and this
guy unscrewed up. Mister pretty screwed the whole thing up.
So anyway, I just wanted to play that for you.
I don't want to stay on Minnesota any longer, though. Listen,
I'm gonna keep saying I don't want to talk about Minnesota,
and we're gonna keep coming back to it because it
is like the gift that keeps on giving, from the
fraud to the daycares, to the leering center, to the

(33:53):
cash that's moving through the airport, going straight back to
al shabab. I mean, I haven't seen something this is
JU see in forever. And to think of all places,
all these crazy people are coming from Minnesota, right, Minneapolis,
Twin City, Saint Paul crazy, you know, for people like
me right who are pretty isolated. Right, grew up in Brooklyn,
New York. Or I was born in Brooklyn, New York.

(34:14):
I should say I grew up in Jersey, Hudson County.
I'm a New Yorker, a New Jersey guy. Listen, by
all accounts, I can tell you I don't know much
about I've never been to Minnesota. So you tell me Minnesota.
I think, who do I know ofm Minnesota? Mike Lindell, right,
and a few of the radio stations that I know,
But that's it. I don't know much. I always thought
it was mild mannered. I thought it was chill. I

(34:36):
didn't think it was crazy town like we're having right now,
or like we're seeing right now, absolute insanity. Anyway, let
us continue, and this is going to be my final
installment in that we're not talking about Minnesota, but we're
gonna talk about Minnesota segment, because why number seventeen, Ill
han Omar, You're not gonna like me for this one.
This is going to be real unpopular opinion here. And

(34:57):
you know, I don't like ill hen Omar because I
think she was very flippant when it came to discussing
the nine to eleven the way you know, some people
did something. I thought that was wrong. I thought that
it was uncouth. But I am going to say this,
ill han Omar is a congresswoman. She married the fundraiser.

(35:18):
She has a heck of a lot of social media followers.
You know, if you and me had that many social
media followers, we would make a whole income based off
of that following, right, That's how many she has on
multiple platforms too. So I have to say when she
says that some people are mad that she's living the
American dream, I think part of that is true. I

(35:39):
think it's not mad. They're not mad at you, Il
Hunt for living the American dream. But they are mad
at you, that is true. And they're mad at you
for being ungrateful. They're mad at you for not coming
here and loving this country as much as the rest
of us do. But I can't in the same breath
say because I'm mad at you, ol Hank go back
to your house. I don't really have a right to
do that. I also don't have a right to do

(35:59):
any thing. The only thing I have a right to
do is saying ill hand. I hope that you get
exposed if you're committing fraud, and if it's not just
that you're doing a heck of a great job of
saying the craziest, most incendiary things that you're left wing
people like to eat up and donate money to, then
that's that. But if it's something else, if there's fraud here,

(36:21):
something untoward, then guess what. I hope she gets what's
coming to her. I don't know what the facts are.
I don't know if she married her brother seems that
way in some reports. Not trying to defend her, I'm
just saying, look, there's so many things we can do,
there's so many people we can pick on. Why are
we doing this? And I said the same thing with Biden, right,
I remember it was Biden, Sleepy Joe. It was funny.

Speaker 6 (36:42):
I love it.

Speaker 3 (36:42):
I called them Joe Ed Babboso Biden. Look, I have
a good time like everybody else, But in reality, I
knew if you listen to my show during that time,
I oftentimes said, oh, Joe Biden today did something similar
to my dad with dementia would do. He did this.
My dad had a brain injury and he did that, right.
I saw these similarities in my dad. I'm not the
only American that's I didn't find sympathy there, but I'm

(37:05):
sure some people did. I'm sure some people said, you
know what, Joe Biden reminds me of my grandpa. And
I love my grandpa, so stop picking on my grandpa.

Speaker 6 (37:12):
Right.

Speaker 3 (37:12):
And I think for il han Omar, she may be
that person for a lot of people. They might be like,
you know what, she is a Somali beauty queen. She's
the one that came here and made it. Nobody rocks
a burka like she does.

Speaker 6 (37:25):
Right.

Speaker 3 (37:25):
I'm sure she has a fan club and those people
love what she's doing. They love that she came here,
that she became a United States citizen by hooker, by crooked,
that she is now married to her fourth husband, who
is the fundraiser that worked on her campaigns and has
gotten her these multimillions of donations. And people in Congress
can create something called a Congressional Leadership Fund, and they

(37:47):
can keep a lot of that money. It's easy to
keep it right. These are the hidden secrets that you know.
Kudos to Matt Gaates for exposing a lot of this.
Being a congressman is a very lucrative job if you
can pull it off. It's not an easy one. You
got to be able to pull it off. You have
to have that gift of gab. You have to be
able to get people to want to believe in what

(38:09):
you are saying so much that they're willing to give
you a portion of their paycheck. I don't want that.
I mean, eventually I might not run for Congress. I'm
just saying I might want you to spend some money
on some merch or, you know, a VIP type of
subscription to this program, behind the scenes, live live events,
things like that as we expand our business here. But

(38:31):
I don't want your money. I want your conversation. I
want your listenership. I want to be able to have
a dialogue with you. I want to hear what you
have to say, and I want to hear what I
have to say. You know, I want to have It's
a conversation, right, That's what they call it. Anyway, Ilhanimer
says people are just pissed off because she's living the
American dream. Check this out.

Speaker 8 (38:49):
And so I know that there's always been an attempt
to smear my character, to smear the character of the
community that I ethnically belong to. There's always is sort
of sad reference to the fact that I'm a refugee.
It seems like these people seem to have a problem
with the fact that I am living the American dream. Yes,

(39:12):
I was once a refugee. Yes I did survive war.
Yes I did come to the United States when I
was twelve years old, not speaking English. But I did
make it to the United States of Congress, representing our country,
helping write the laws of this country and helping appropriate
the resources that are utilized by all Americans. So, yes,

(39:33):
that is the American dream. They do not believe that
the American dream is possible. And I think the fact
that I'm a fysible representation of that American dream polsis
that I'm off.

Speaker 3 (39:47):
She's a fysible. I'm not making fun of her. I'm
enjoying it with her. Listen, the American dream to me
is not becoming a member of Congress. And forgive me,
if you're one of my friends that it's a member
of Congress. I think the American dream, in many ways
is as simple as home ownership, having a family, having
the liberty to do what you want right, having the
liberty to go and make a sign that says orange

(40:10):
man bad and chant your to your heart's content outside
of the White House, and whatever it is that you
want to do. For me, it's getting on this microphone
and now soon on camera to share my thoughts and
my opinions and the conversations we're having with people in
our culture and our society and with you guys. Every
one of our amigos are familia, the Valdees, VIPs. That's

(40:35):
how I do it, and everybody else does it in
different ways. And this is why I said, unpopular opinion here.
I can't be I will only be mad at il
han Omar for her stupidities, right, for the way she
talked about nine to eleven some people did something. Yep.
I'm going to be mad at her for her contempt

(40:57):
for the United States. I'm going to be mad at
her for her Russian said, I'm going to disagree with
her over that. I'm not mad at her, right, I
really not. I could care less. I have zero anger
towards ilhan Omar, but I do disagree, very strongly disagree.
And that's what debates are for, and that's what the

(41:17):
what I'm doing is all about. Right, I'm here talking
to tens of thousands of people, hopefully millions, and the
goal is to get you to see things from my perspective.
And if you don't, you don't. But at least I tried.
And she's doing the same thing, and somebody's gonna win
and somebody's gonna lose. And I hope that my team

(41:38):
wins and her team loses. Right, that's the bottom line.
But if she's doing something illegal, lock her up, throw
away the key. But we've seen how this thing looks, right,
We've seen Hillary Clinton and Bill Clinton say yeah, we'll
be there, We'll be there in Congress. All right, guys, Ah,
too bad, too slow, We're not going. And now maybe
it's going to be a vote next week. We're gonna

(42:00):
see what happens. I mean, come on, really, come on, right,
We've seen what happens with James Comy, We've seen what
happens with Letitia James, a whole lot of nothing, feeble
attempts and This is not a critique on Trump or
anybody else. This is just saying, look, when you're dealing
with criminals, right, it's very difficult to have an expectation

(42:23):
that they're not going to break the law. If you're
dealing with politicians who are experts in creating these laws,
it's very difficult to have the expectation that they're not
going to know how to circumvent or walk right up
to the line of these laws. So good luck out
smarting them. Now, to his credit, I constantly praise who
I like to call El Trumpito, don all this magnus

(42:46):
to forty fifth to forty seventh president of these United States.
Why because El Trumpito knows how to do it. He
knows how to get at these people. He knows how
to bring them down to reality and make a deal,
and he knows how to spar with them, and he
knows how to gauge in between. This is why he's
able to argue with people and make it look like
he's their worst enemy, and the next thing, they're laughing

(43:08):
and they're shaking hands. Because he truly is about the deal.
And you've got to respect that. Some people want to
stay stuck in their emotions. They want to be mad forever.
I don't like what you stand for, so come on.
That doesn't work, in my opinion, doesn't work. I think

(43:28):
America was the happiest when the uniparty got along, right,
You hear it all the time, Ronald Reagan and Tip O'Neil.
Everybody was thrilled back then. Right instead of Marjorie Taylor
Green and Jasmine Crockett fighting over who's wearing fake eyelashes
and who's built like a bodybuilder, back then, it was

(43:49):
the gentlewoman from here, the gentleman from there, my colleague
on the right, my colleague on the left. Everybody got along.
It was the same deep state then, it's the same
deep state now. They were doing the same stuff then
and they're doing the same stuff now. The only difference
we've gone behind the curtain. We've seen who the wizard is.
So I don't know, maybe you know, do you like

(44:10):
the red pill? Would you prefer the blue pill? Where's
my buddy? Bongino says the black pill? Don't take the
black pill. We don't want the malcontents. We don't want
the people that are whining about everything. Nothing's ever enough
that that we don't need I'm saying, hey, let's let's
be let's let's get along, right, I'm with the Rodney King.

(44:30):
Can't we all just get along? All right? Guys, I'm
rambling a little bit. I'm gonna take a pause right here.
We're gonna come right back. Your thoughts and more, plus
your calls. Eight seven seven Valdes one, eight seven seven
V A. L. D. E. S. And the number one.
Don't go anywhere.

Speaker 1 (44:45):
This is America. This is America. He's making pod casting
great again. This is America with Rich Valdez.

Speaker 3 (45:07):
All right, and he goes, welcome back. It's Rich Valdez.
Valdez with an asset, Rich Valdez on all of the
social media. Give me a follow on that social media
if you can, I'd appreciate it. Let's keep in touch
that way. Of course, you can always call. I got
some of your calls lined up, and we're gonna do
that right now, straight ahead. Eight seven seven Valdez one,
eight seven seven Valdes one. Let me know who we got.

(45:30):
Do we have a regular, do we have a repeat offender?
Do we have somebody there? What do we have in store?
Hit me? All right to the phones. We go Let's
go to Canada. Quebec, Canada. Ooh, Canada, Canada. That's got
our guy, Antonio. Antonio is calling us from Canada. Tony's
the regular here. Go ahead, Antonio, go for it, my

(45:50):
brother godead rich Tony.

Speaker 6 (45:55):
If there was cash corruption in criminali to the tune
of eight billion dollars, some of that money had to
flow back to politicians. Why is Peggy Fleming sorry, Peggy Flanagan,
Peggy Flanagan, why is she lieutenant governor? And never said
a word about the cash corruption and criminality that.

Speaker 3 (46:18):
You're talking about Minnesota? Right, Tim Watz?

Speaker 6 (46:20):
Why has Tim Waltz not said anything about the cash
corruption and criminality. Why isn't the ag of the State
of Minnesota, mister Ellison, Why isn't he said something about
the cash corruption and criminality of eight billion dollars? Why
has anybody in the government not stepped up and said

(46:42):
this not today, not yesterday, but ten years ago, and
it was a parent or five years ago. Because there
has to be some suspicion that this money was flowing
back to different politicians.

Speaker 3 (46:55):
Yeah, I agree with you. I think this has a
long pattern and these people have been at this game
for a long time, and ultimately, what's your I guess
your bottom line here on this fraud? How far does
it go? How deep? Tony?

Speaker 6 (47:09):
A conclusion drawn from a pattern of conduct demonstrating cash
corruption and criminality is not based on prejudice. It is
a system that is based upon a pattern of conduct,
and any person or whistleblower who perpetuates this type of

(47:32):
behavior is part of the system. When the whistleblowers came
along and pointed it out, people started calling them racists
using a racist shield, and the whistleblowers or those who
wanted to point out the fraud were afraid of being
labeled publicly and canceled as racist. So it's a system

(47:56):
that perpetuated itself for years to the tune of a billion,
but it's probably even three times more than that if
we once get to the bottom of all of the fraud.

Speaker 3 (48:07):
Yeah, good point, Antonio, Thank you for your call, my brother.
Shout out to everybody listening in Canada, which is our
number two country, right. I think we get something like
ninety seven percent listenership from the United States, we get
two percent from Canada, and that last one percent Venezuela.
Shout out to all our Venezuelan's tuning in internationally. I

(48:28):
think that's going to change with our new Spanish language syndication.
But we're getting a lot of action from Latin America
coming in on our on our charts there. But Tony
brings up a good point about fraud and criminality, and
I wanted to switch gears a little bit from this Minnesota.
You know, I've had it up to here. I've had

(48:48):
it up to here with Minnesota. But I want to
talk about something that's, you know, also interesting in my
opinion that I haven't done a is these crazy stories. Right,
there's a story about four hundred million dollars being spent
and bankrolled in a father and son criminality case. And

(49:11):
I'm going to get into that in a second. It's
going to surprise you. But first I want to go
to a true crime story. A mom's body was found
stuffed in a trash bin after her adopted teen son
allegedly killed her. Man. Talk about a freaking tough break.

(49:32):
Let's talk about this one. This Oklahoma mom was murdered
and her body was dumped in a trash can right
in front of her sunny suburban home. And they believe
it's her own adopted son who did it, and he
was arrested for this killing. Her name Spring Wems. She

(49:53):
was killed, they believe, at some point on Wednesday, late
in the day yesterday. To cops who discovered her body
after responding to her home that's in Edmund, neighbors had
rewarded two teen boys fighting with weapons. I don't know
what that means. When cops arrived, one of the boys
accused the other of killing their mother and stuffing her

(50:13):
in a trash collection bin. When officials looked inside, they
found miss Weems dead inside the bin. The accused teen
was arrested for first degree murder and sent to juvenile detention,
but has not yet been charged. Both of the boys
had been adopted by the Weems and she was their
sole caretaker in their home near Oklahoma City. The boys

(50:38):
are sixteen and seventeen. According to The Daily Mail, who
first reported this story, Wow, really crazy stuff here. And
though it remains unclear which was accused of the murder,
Weems appeared to be a very caring mother to her boys,
with social media posts showing her constantly attending their high

(50:58):
school wrestling matches and showing off a stream of their
every accomplishment for her friends to see. Miss Weams also
was a devoted member of her church and appeared to
have encouraged the boys to follow her faith as well.
What a sad story really just unbelievable. Many of her
social media posts had to do with Christian teachings, including

(51:19):
one where she recalled teaching her children not to fight
but to love one another, saying, quote, our father wants
the same for us, So tomorrow let's reflect on unity
as we are all brothers and sisters under the same creator,
and he wants his children to live in harmony together,
she wrote in one post. In another, Miss Weams shared

(51:40):
a photo of one of her sons covered in paint
after a church activity. They may come home dirty, but
they leave with a message of faith, community and accountability,
leadership and moral as well moral compass in their difficult
teen years. Is what the posts said. Man, what a
shame lady out here trying to do the right thing.
Ms Weams killing was very shocking, obviously to her neighborhood.

(52:04):
Those saying that it's tragic because it involves youth, and
I say this is wild, right, I mean sadly, we
hear too many of these cases and it's almost like, oh,
let's see, you know who killed their parents this week? Right,
a few weeks ago is Rob Reiner's kid. I mean,
everybody's freaking out and doing some crazy stuff. This to
me may not be at the level of epidemic, but

(52:26):
to me, it's an absolute epidemic when children are killing
their parents, when you've got young people that have totally
lost touch with humanity, with life, with the caring about
their fellow man, they don't care that you live or breathe.
No heart, man, we got a problem, right, What is
it that we've taught our children. I understand we have differences,
and this is why I always harp on trying to

(52:47):
get along with the other side. So if we sit
here and talk about you know, ah, I can't live
with those people. Oh you got to get rid of
these people. Even if it's just rhetorical. Guess what, there's
little people around there there grow up totally hearing that,
thinking you know what, Yeah, we got to get rid
of the other the people we disagree with, and that's
not acceptable. We have to deal with the people we
don't agree with. Right, most people don't get along with
their bosses. Some people are lucky enough for it, but

(53:08):
most people don't. You got to learn how to get
along with them, or make a choice and leave right,
find a new way of doing things, new way to
pay your bills. But you can't sit there and talk about,
you know, eliminating these people, killing these people. This is
crazy lefty stuff and we're not crazy lefties anyway. My thoughts,
prayer's condolences with this woman, his weims and her family
and with these kids. You know, honestly, I think they're

(53:30):
monsters for doing what they did. Whichever of the two
did it, but I pray God have mercy on their soul,
because man, God don't like ugly, It's all I can
tell you. And things are getting out of control, all right.
I think they've been out of control and they're getting
worse now. Other story I wanted to get into. This
one's interesting and if you want to call on this,
feel free. Eight seven seven Valdes one. Listen to this headline.

(53:52):
This is just a doozy eighty year old lottery winner
sentenced for bank rolling four hundred million dollar drug empire
from his cottage with his son. John Spivey, eighty years old,
used his twenty ten lottery winnings, lottery winnings to run
a drug empire from his small cottage alongside his son

(54:13):
and two other accomplices, and he's now been sentenced to jail.
John Eric Spivey, eighty years old, sentenced to sixteen years
in prison in England after an investigation uncovered counterfeit pills
worth up to four hundred million dollars and they found
them in Greater Manchester. Who knew. What's interesting here is
that his son, John Collin Spiby, thirty seven years old,

(54:33):
was only sentenced to nine years. They operate a fully
industrialized drug manufacturing business capable of producing millions of counterfeit
tablets containing a highly dangerous substance. And that's according to
Detective Alex Brown, inspector of the serious organized crime group
that led to this investigation and then eventual capture. The
volume of tablets they recovered, along with the sophisticated machinery

(54:56):
demonstrated how deeply embedded this group was in the other
the drug supply chain. Again, this is out in England.
It goes on back in twenty ten, when he was
only sixty five years old, he cashed in two point
four million dollars, or I should say two point four
million pounds, which in twenty twenty six standards is the
equivalent of three point three million US dollars today. Again,

(55:20):
this happening in Manchester, England. So this Bijahita office rocker
for right crazy stuff bankrolling a drug business. Now, I
don't know if this was his dream and I can't
wait till I'm retired and I have enough money to
start a distribution opportunity with the cartel. Yeah, maybe that
was what he was thinking, the old British guy. I

(55:41):
don't know, but I do know that his son seems
to have gotten off the hook here and the dad
got the kingpin charge, and that I find interesting. I mean,
I guess if you're an old man, you're like, look,
I don't have much time left and my kid has
his whole life ahead of them. I'll take the fall here.
But at the same time, I would probably say the
same for my the other way around, thinking my dad
only has a few years left. We don't want to

(56:03):
see an old man in jail. You know, I'm young
enough I could do the time. Put me in jail,
let my dad free. I don't know. I guess I
guess the old man won here. Very interesting stuff. But
who hits the lotto and says I'm going to become
a drug dealer? Believable. You know, my brother Bobby, Robert
Valdesk got rest his soul. He was a United States

(56:23):
marine and he owned a few delis out in Long Island,
and he he'd won twenty dollars on a I'm sorry,
he played twenty dollars on a scratch off and he
won five million bucks. Now he had actually sold a
bunch of his bagel store, so he was doing all
right in life to begin with. But hitting that lotto,
that scratch off wasn't too shabby. So these things do happen, right,

(56:48):
They do happen to people, and I'm grateful for anybody
they happened to. It's real nice, right, Who wouldn't like
to just stumble on an extra five million bucks? And
I guess, listen, somebody out there might there might be
somebody who doesn't want to do that. If if you
do give you a call, You can call in anytime,
twenty four hours a day, anytime you listen to this,
you can call and just leave a message and I
can play your comments on this show. Our producers have

(57:09):
set up an amazing job. Technology is amazing where you
can now join the show anytime, which I think is fantastic.
So let me know your thoughts. Would you like to
become a millionaire by winning five million bucks or let's
say you're a millionaire already. Do you want more money
or is it more trouble than it's worth. I'm interested
in knowing your thoughts. Eight seven seven valdesk one. Now

(57:31):
this is the part of the show where I bid
you ado and I thank you, of course for sticking
around as long as you did. We'll be back tomorrow
with a new show for Friday, kicking off the weekend.
I thank you for your patience, and remember, in early
February we will be kicking off our video stream, which
will be mirrored on Roku tv in Spanish and English.

(57:53):
You can check it out on rimbol dot com, which
is where we plan to house that, and of course
the audio will remain here on Heart Radio and you
can catch that on Apple Podcasts, on Spotify and all
the other podcasts and streaming locations. So we continue to
pump out as much content as possible. If you miss me,
you know exactly where to find me. I'm right here.

(58:15):
I start at Rosima. Take care, good night, and God
bless you America. Now, I always say you got to
stand for something, because if you stand for nothing, you'll
fall for anything. And in today's a political climate, and
logical climate and philosophical climate, we've got to stand for
something because all too often, where people are taking the bait,
they're falling for everything. And remember, the only thing necessary

(58:38):
for evil to triumph is for good people to sit
there and do nothing. So do something until the next time.
I start at Broxhima. I am rich Valdez, and this
is America.

Speaker 1 (58:49):
This is America.

Speaker 7 (01:00:01):
Assass
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