Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
It's time.
From Newport Beach, california,the sun is shining, the beaches
are packed and the waves arerolling in, all while the last
gay conservative prepares toshare more truth with America.
He's America's binary brother,the holiest homo and the gayest
conservative of all time workingto restore common sense
(00:20):
conservative politics in theAmerican household.
Welcome to the Last GayConservative Podcast.
Here's your host, chad Law.
Speaker 2 (00:57):
This week, I will
also end the government policy
of trying to socially engineerrace and gender into every
aspect of public and privatelife.
We will forge a society that iscolorblind and merit-based.
As of today, it will henceforthbe the official policy of the
(01:21):
United States government thatthere are only two genders male
and female.
Speaker 3 (01:28):
Hello America and
welcome to Freaky Friday on.
The podcast Got a lot to covertoday Big stories out of
Portland.
The new analysis of thePortland city economy is very,
very grim.
If you live there or arethinking about living there,
turn the other way.
Move out, get a job somewhereelse.
The writing is on the wall.
(01:49):
This city is collapsing.
I also got permission to readyou guys a little bit from my
book from the publisher, so aslisteners, you'll get a sneak
peek into what America's Mumbaiis all about and what the book
is all about as well.
I'm really excited to sharethat with you guys.
It's been a really fun project.
(02:10):
It took me off the podcast fora very long time.
Well worth it.
Well worth it.
Having a picture, a forwardlooking picture, of what the
potential is for other citiesand their failures are has been
an incredible tool and just alife affirming tool about all
the decisions I've made in mylife and all the principles and
(02:32):
values that I believe in.
This place, portland, oregon,is scary.
What's happened?
It is a socialist hellscapethat has been infested with
things like DEI and all sorts ofideologues all through every
single aspect of government, waybefore COVID, way before COVID,
(02:53):
and now there's a new mayor anda new city council.
The new mayor, keith Wilson, isone of the bigger idiots that
I've ever met and heard.
It's funny because the people inthe city hall call him Ted
Lasso, and I think that's funnybecause Ted Lasso I mean, he was
a great coach, but everybodyliked him.
He was a nice guy and that'skind of how Pete is.
(03:15):
He's a spineless nice guy.
The inmates are still runningthe asylum.
The only leadership move heever made was after he was
elected and got into office.
He sent out a memo, a return towork memo, to make all the city
hall employees come back,because you know, in Portland
we're still on COVID protocol2025, they've still got people
(03:35):
doing COVID protocol.
It's ridiculous.
So he says everyone needs tocome and work from the office.
And granted, you know Portland,the city of Portland last time
I heard I think they might havesomething like a 70, some huge
percentage of vacancy, downtownreal estate, so City Hall is
(03:56):
empty.
When he comes in, he does areturn to work order and what
happens?
All the unions get together andthreaten a strike and he backs
off.
No one's going to work.
They're doing hybrid andthey've all got their own little
individual things and you know,again, it's just all a big sham
because you can't get anythingdone.
Even if he was the mostconservative, or even if we
(04:16):
elected Donald Trump himself tobe the mayor of Portland,
nothing can get done.
Done because every single partof government has a DEI,
socialist and poor economicfoundation.
All of it.
Homeless programs, health care,police, ambulance, hospitals,
(04:36):
schools, all of it.
It's all bad.
The Portland public schools areso bad and although they are
managed by the superintendentand it's not necessarily, not
necessarily, the jurisdiction ofKeith Wilson, the mayor of
Portland, he won't put any'sbecause, like many first term
presidents and I talked aboutthis when we talked about the
(05:08):
historic actions of Donald Trumpmost first term politicians and
this, this is a double whammybecause not only are they first
term but they're also first timefirst time in public service or
or politics, and first time orfirst term in office.
So that's a double whammy.
(05:28):
Because you want people to likeyou and if this is something
that you want to do for the restof your life which I think most
of these people on city councildo have political aspirations I
can't say anything about themayor, but if you want to do
this for the rest of your life,you're not going to start
ruffling voter feathers now bydoing and taking more extreme
measures to turn things aroundand all the measures that are
(05:50):
required to turn things aroundin this city.
Nobody wants because they're notliberal and they're not free
and they can't just be taxed.
You know they've tried to taxtheir way out of this nightmare.
I mean, multnomah County, whichis the county Portland exists
in, is the highest tax bracketor the highest taxed residents
(06:10):
in the United States, higherthan the Hamptons in New York
and Manhattan.
It's insane.
They have free preschool forall, which has cost millions and
millions and millions, and theeducation is really, really bad.
See, that's the issue.
I don't think any of theseliberal people here have a
problem paying high taxes Atleast that's what they say but
(06:32):
when they get nothing to showfor it, then what do you do?
How is it that this county youpay the highest taxes in
Multnomah County in the countryand you can't get someone on the
phone from 911?
Literally, you're on hold foran hour, never get anyone on
non-emergency.
You're stepping over needlesand you're paying the highest
taxes.
And they want to talk aboutpreschool, preschool for all.
(06:55):
Really that's what we want totalk about right now, when you
can't walk outside your housewithout stepping over someone,
some fentanyl zombie, orwatching someone else drill into
a gas tank.
I mean, the criminality of thehomeless here is insane.
It's not like LA.
It's not like New York, wherehomeless people in LA like a
(07:15):
Skid Row, for example, theydon't really make it over across
the Los Angeles Avenue At leastthey didn't when I lived there.
They stick to where they belongand mostly they're heavy users
and they do their thing and theydon't really bother anyone In
Portland because their wholesort of thought process is it's
(07:35):
not illegal to be homeless.
You have all these criminallyminded people that live within
the homeless communities,whether they're homeless or not,
but it's invited all thiscriminality and it's really
really scary.
Perfect example when you drivearound Portland, you will see
broken down RVs and trailerseverywhere.
You might be saying the samething that I said when I saw it
(07:58):
how did these people afford tobuy these things in the first
place?
An RV is expensive.
Well, we found out in ourefforts for the book that most
of these people are turning overtheir welfare and their food
stamps to members of organizedcrime as a lease of the RV.
Part of that lease, the RVsaren't gassed, they're infested
(08:19):
with rats or bugs and it's allup to the homeless people to
take care of it themselves.
And it's disgusting.
It's a sickening, sickeningthing.
Meanwhile, 50 to 100 milliondollars is going to house
illegal immigrants in hotels.
Big, big problem.
I'm telling you folks, if youlive in the Pacific Northwest,
(08:40):
get out now, because this cityis collapsing.
This city is absolutelycollapsing, and I have all the
details to share with you later.
Furthermore, whoopi Goldbergdecided to run her mouth she's
going to be freak of the weekfollowed by that NFL punter,
chris Cluey, who decided to gethimself arrested in Huntington
(09:01):
Beach yesterday.
And I do want to touch a littlebit about this Zelensky nonsense
.
He's on the cover of Voguemagazine, how funny.
And talk about what Marco Rubiosaid in regard to the rare
mineral deal.
I think that is absolutelycrucial that we look at that as
a reason for some of Trump'sfrustration and everyone's, I
(09:22):
think, frustration across theboard.
And then, if we have time, I dowant to jump into some of this
tranny nonsense.
I recently heard an interviewwith a trans attorney who was
just talking about how horriblethe administration is and how we
want to eradicate and killtrans and this and that it's all
bull, but it's scary.
(09:44):
Kill trans and this and thatit's all bull, but it's scary.
And I'm frustrated because I'mso tired of the trans movement
and these trans radicalshitching their wagon to the gay
movement or to LGBTQ people,even though there's a T in there
.
There shouldn't be.
But they use gay people as away to try to gain acceptance
and understanding, because thereare many, many, many, many,
(10:07):
many more gays and lesbians thanthere are trans people.
So they're sort ofindoctrinated or by default into
this LGBTQ umbrella.
But all of you have gay friends.
I don't know if any of you havetrans friends.
I don't.
I've never.
I've talked to them but I'venever met one really as a friend
and spent extracurricular,extracurricular time with them,
(10:31):
but so, because of that, if youassociate gays with trans, then
they're looking for a level ofacceptance at the same level.
The difference is is that, likeI always say, there's a
difference between anorientation and a gender.
That's a serious mental defect.
It's a serious mental illnessand it needs to be addressed.
(10:52):
It's in the DSM Now.
It's called gender dysphoria,but it's been handled as a
serious mental defect for manyyears and it's not helping by
allowing this to fester and growfor any other reasons other
than biological reasons, andthat is the problem.
That's.
What's happening is thatnurture now has overcome nature,
(11:16):
and people are making thesevery, very serious decisions
based on nurture and whatthey're seeing around them and
not based on the actual biologywithin their bodies.
All right, I'm going to take aquick break.
I'll be back after these words.
Speaker 1 (11:33):
Have date nights
turned into just sitting on the
couch in your sweats eatinggreasy popcorn and scrolling
through your phone.
Put down the phone, Take yourhand out of the popcorn.
Do you remember when you twowould spend all day in bed
instead of on the couch?
You should try Bluetooth.
(11:53):
It's delivered directly to yourdoor, so let the fun begin.
Whoa.
Speaker 3 (12:04):
That a boy.
All right.
As I mentioned, there's a newreport straight out of the
Portland Metro Chamber,sponsored by Bank of America,
that's talking a little bitabout Multnomah County and
Portland and what's going on.
They use the term urban doomloop, which we'll talk about in
(12:25):
a bit, but I just want to goover some of these at a glance
stats because they're scary.
The net population loss wasabout 5,000 people in 2023.
Is that a negative in MultnomahCounty?
That's big.
There was 10,000 lost jobs andthey were all in the financial,
manufacturing and professionalservice sectors.
(12:46):
Incoming people that are movinginto Multnomah County are now
bringing a medium income ofseventy three thousand, down
from well over one hundred, andthe income of people moving
neighboring county in Washingtonstate, clark County, is now at
(13:06):
105,000.
Portland ranked second to lastin national real estate
attractiveness 80th 80th out of81 cities.
The county population continuesto decline while more and more
people move across the bridge toVancouver or Clark County,
which is much more conservative.
It's a red area and has betterservices, better police, better
(13:30):
everything, and people areflocking there like crazy.
The metro jobs that have beenadded are just like kind of what
we're seeing in the governmentin Washington DC.
They added jobs in privateeducation and health care,
government, a little bit ofnon-farm employment and then
(13:51):
trade, transportation andutilities.
They lost jobs in professionaland business services, leisure
and hospitality, construction,manufacturing, financial
activities and information, withno light at the end of the
tunnel Zero, the report readsout.
Migration remains concerning,though it has slowed in
(14:13):
Multnomah and Washingtoncounties.
Among the four metro areacounties, washington County is
the only one with noteworthynatural population increase.
Clackamas County hasexperienced almost no growth in
recent years, while Clark Countycontinues to lead the region in
population growth.
That's the county in Washingtonthat's more conservative.
Multnomah County relies heavilyon international migration,
(14:36):
indicating that its near-termpopulation growth depends on
attracting people from abroad.
Who the hell from abroad wouldwant to live here?
Over the past year, local sectoremployment grew while traded
sector employment declined.
That's a critical shift witheconomic implications.
Traded sector jobs, which sellgoods and services outside of
(14:58):
the region, bring in new money,while local sector jobs that are
typically lower payingrecirculate money within the
local economy.
There's no new money coming inin and it's the same dirty money
that's circling around and it'sall factored around the city
and the county governments.
It's all public sector, theonly thing holding up this city
(15:20):
is the public sector right now.
That is very scary because thepublic sector is generally
funded by the private sector.
So when one dies, the other oneshortly dies later.
That's why I'm telling you guys, this is not good.
This is not good.
And this report does put alittle positive spin on the end
that says, you know, localofficials are getting the hang
(15:41):
of it or whatever, but they'renot.
Nothing's getting fixed.
Portland's appeal in the nationreal estate market hit a two
decade low, ranking 80 out of 81in the Urban Land Institute's
latest survey.
This survey asked real estatesector leaders to measure the
attractiveness on a city foroutside investment.
Despite some improvement in2024, this is the city's worst
(16:03):
performance since the ratingsbegin, with only Hartford,
connecticut, scoring lower.
Wow.
And then they go on to say well, there is a silver lining.
Local respondents rank Portlandhigher, suggesting a more
optimum.
What do you think?
The industry's regional leaders?
Of course they're going to rankit higher.
That's the, it's their breadand butter, that's how they're
(16:24):
making money, they're investingin this area, they're regional
investors.
They're not going to say, ohyeah, it's really bad, really
bad.
No, they need to say it'shigher to bring more people in.
I mean the fact that peoplejust and they don't see this.
Not one person in city hall willread this report other than the
politicians.
(16:44):
They won't do anything, becausewhat actually has to be done to
fix this is you have to bringin private sector business, you
have to get people back to work.
But here's the thing is thatdowntown is empty because, ok,
first all the covid protocol,but then they started as they
started, bringing people back towork the homeless and the crime
(17:04):
is so bad that the employersdon't have the heart to make
their people come in and have tostep over piles of human feces
and needles and tents and brokendown RVs and get screamed at by
people who are either comingdown or going up on drugs.
So they say, okay, work fromhome, we give up, or they move
(17:27):
it up to Clark County.
This is really, really scaryfor a major metropolitan area
that represents a massiveeconomy to be underwater like
this.
I mean they were a twenty sevenmillion dollar deficit.
That's big for a small citylike Portland.
It is a relatively small city.
When you look at other metroareas from a population
(17:49):
standpoint, it's not very big.
It says the takeaway Portlandand its peer cities are
grappling with both short termdisruptions of the pandemic See,
still the pandemic, thesepeople are so stupid and longer
term challenges of an aging, lowfertility society.
I'll tell you what's lowfertility is?
The men up here, I mean the menin Portland, are just sad.
(18:12):
They're hardly men, let's justput it that way.
I see some of these dads outhere and it just it makes me
absolutely sick.
The Portland region's leadersmust consider their attitude on
growth, because the path tothriving economy must be driven
by an intentional growthstrategy to attract talent and
jobs for more stable revenuebase.
(18:32):
Here's the thing you can't gettalent and jobs without
companies.
There's no companies.
Intel is faltering, nike isflat.
They just did a huge round oflayoffs.
Those are the two main bigmajor corporations in Portland
and they are struggling.
That should tell you what theoutlook looks like.
(18:54):
And again, even if the entireUnited States economy starts to
rebound as it is, I mean, thestock market's strong, all the
economic performance indicatorsare getting stronger and
stronger and Portland's gettingworse and worse because it's
going the opposite direction asother states are freeing up
regulations, freeing up taxes,freeing up services, investing
(19:17):
in services that are going tohelp people feel great about
where they live.
Portland is adding taxes,limiting services, taking things
away, making it harder to move,making it harder to deal.
It's not business friendly hereat all.
It's horribly unbusinessfriendly because with employees
(19:37):
here it's mainly a union state,so every single employee I feel
like here is union.
Even the Starbucks people arein unions here.
It's very, very odd.
Even the Starbucks people arein unions here.
It's very, very odd.
And there's a bunch of culturalissues too that top talent like
myself would never deal withlong term here.
I mean just the mere fact thatpeople are so stinky and smelly
(20:02):
here.
But the city this is a perfectexample of what liberals do to
cities and it's.
And people say, well, what didthey do exactly?
And I just said it.
I mean, it's not that hard.
They increased the taxes abovea threshold that they could
stand, while minimizing servicesand minimizing the value of
those taxes and making it moreunfriendly for businesses to
(20:25):
thrive.
And it's not the pandemic.
This has been in the works fora very, very long time.
Let me take a really quickbreak.
I'll get ready and then I'llread you guys a little bit from
my book A Year in America'sMumbai.
I'll be right back after thesewords.
Speaker 1 (20:40):
Why do 80% of NFL
players choose a Sleep Number
smart bed?
Speaker 3 (20:43):
Because the higher my
sleep IQ score the better I
play, but that's not the onlyreason.
Speaker 5 (20:46):
He likes his side
firm, I like my side soft.
Speaker 3 (21:10):
Sleep All right and
we're back, and here is a
chapter from America's Mumbaihow Police, Politicians and
People Destroyed Portland.
A few weeks after I arrived Ithought I would take my dog Ron
on a walk and, if theopportunity presented itself,
maybe chat with a few of thehomeless.
I've lived in Los Angeles.
(21:32):
I've walked Skid Row at night.
I've also lived in Atlanta andhung out in Bankhead and
underground Atlanta.
Needless to say, I'm not easilyscared.
Having my loaded and chamberedBeretta with two 17-round
double-stacked 9mm magazines onmy hip really helped with my
confidence as well.
To nine millimeter magazines onmy hip really helped with my
confidence as well.
However, in my travels all overthe world I've never actually
(21:53):
felt an urgent need to evenreach for my weapon.
I figured there was no wayPortland could come close to
Skid Row or Bankhead.
I wouldn't even need a gun.
Probably Boy, was I wrong?
The first person I spoke to wasa woman, belinda.
She came up and politely askedif she could pet my dog.
She looked like she was in herlate 50s, but something told me
(22:13):
she was much younger.
She had dark, stringy blackhair that covered her face.
The bags under her eyes lookedlike military-style duffel bags.
You see soldiers carryingthrough the airport.
The first thing I noticed washer faded blue-green face
tattoos that I couldn't quitemake out.
She loved Ron and he wassoaking up all the attention, so
it seemed to be the perfecttime to start my work.
(22:33):
Once she stood up from beingcrouched down to pet Ron, I
looked down on her Poor thingmust have been maybe 5'2".
Her eyes were hard but sweetand her skin had that look that
it had been trying to survivepacks of daily cigarettes for a
very long time.
When she introduced herself,her voice cracked.
She told me her name wasBelinda, very raspy smoker's
(22:54):
voice, but she was known aroundtown as Bambi.
I asked her which one sheprefer I use and she laughed and
said I don't care.
As I listened to her go on andon about endless pointless
topics, I realized she probablyhasn't spoken to many people in
a long time.
You see, contrary to popularbelief, the liberals who created
this situation for Belinda andthousands of others in Portland
are not warm, welcoming or evencourteous to the homeless.
(23:20):
I would venture to say theyhate them.
It is not uncommon for ahomeless person in Portland to
talk your ear off franklybecause no one else is listening
.
I let her talk and noticed hershoes had holes in them and her
purse had a makeshift strap onit, sewn as if it broke.
She talked and played with Ronand I couldn't help but think OK
, she's a little rough aroundthe edges, but why can't she
work or why is she homeless?
It actually started to eat awayat me.
(23:40):
I'm looking at this able bodiedwoman, possibly high on
something, but who canarticulate sentences and seems
normal enough to hold a job Intoday's semi automated workforce
.
Surely she could say would youlike to upgrade your meal to a
large?
After what seemed like an hourI was freezing but I wanted to
continue the conversation.
I invited Belinda to sit withme at Starbucks and have a
(24:01):
coffee.
We made our way to the cashregister and Belinda ordered a
venti oat milk americana withsugar-free vanilla.
She made sure to tell thebarista that she wanted it extra
hot and double cupped.
I go to Starbucks every day.
I didn't even know you couldrequest double cup.
These Portland homeless surehave fine taste.
I thought At this point shehasn't questioned my motives at
all.
(24:21):
But one thing I realizedquickly was the homeless people
in Portland are expert people,readers that can sense a threat
coming better than a pit bullguarding a junkyard.
It's a skill they've gainedthrough evolution and necessity.
Finally, I start to warm up andBelinda is still talking.
I'm pretending to take notesand engage, but in my head all I
can think about is this personcould be my relative.
(24:41):
She's white, not hideous, hasher teeth and can talk like an
educated adult.
However, her entire existenceseems so sad.
How can this happen to peoplein the richest country in the
world?
More importantly, how does thisperson have no support system?
As she took me on the long waythrough her past history, I was
quickly thrown out of my dayswhen she said then I murdered
(25:04):
him.
It was one of those momentsthat you see happening in front
of you in slow motion.
Excuse me, I said as I clearedmy throat.
Did you just say you murderedsomeone?
I'd never met a murderer beforeand I didn't know what was
expected.
We've all been in situationswhere the appropriate response
is not obvious and you flipthrough your mental checklist of
do's and don'ts in certainsocial settings.
(25:24):
In my head, I started hearingmy mom and dozens of rules
around manners and socialsituations.
Is my napkin in my lap?
Yes, did I pull out her chair.
Yes, not surprisingly, nothingcame up.
My mother was apparently sickthe day we were supposed to go
over.
How to have coffee with ahomeless murderer.
What was I supposed to say?
Was it rude to ask about hermethods?
It was a very touch-and-gosituation for me.
(25:46):
Remember, at this point we'rein public, I am fully armed and
I'm totally safe.
I only had one fear offendingBelinda and she would create a
huge scene.
A video would go viral and myproject in Portland would be
over before it started.
All I wanted to do was keep hertalking, so I decided there was
only one thing to do just behonest, belinda, I'm enjoying
this conversation and you'regiving me so much credible
(26:09):
insight.
I'm sorry if I seem caught offguard.
I really want to keep learningfrom you and I don't want to ask
any questions that might offendyou.
She nodded before I could offerany more reinsurance and said
buy me a carton of cigarettesand you can ask me anything you
want.
That was another trick Ilearned early on in Portland.
Everything is a barter system.
If a homeless person inPortland can sense they have
something you want in my case,stories and truth they will be
(26:32):
very quick to offer up some sortof trade.
As I learned more abouthomeless life, I became an
expert on making these trades,which is how I was able to exact
truth and tap into an endlessstream of information from a
perspective no regular Joe likeme would ever have access to.
I was starting to getoverheated from the forced air
heater blowing on my face and Ididn't want to keep listening to
(26:52):
her stories without my fullfocus, so we walked down the
street, I bought her a carton ofcigarettes and we both agreed
to meet back at Starbucks thenext day around.
From that point on, I carriedsmall denomination cash bills
and American spirits everywhere,just in case I needed help from
a homeless.
The following day proved evenmore interesting.
As I exited the lobby of theAirbnb I was renting One block
(27:14):
down, there seemed to be hugecommotion and a woman was
screaming.
I wasn't sure what was more oddthe scene itself or all the
Portlanders walking as if theyheard nothing?
Rape screams are so common inthe Portland city area.
People tune them out likebackground noise.
I've never been one to shy froma scene and, having two sisters
, it was almost impossible notto jump into action.
(27:35):
Unlike people in Portland, Iwas always taught to run towards
and help screaming women.
I hurried to the scene with myright hand on the handle of my
9mm, ready to shoot an attacker.
However, when I arrived, I sawwhy the woman was screaming.
Laying parallel to the curb,about 10 feet between himself
and a local storefront, ahomeless man was violently
masturbating for all of us towatch and see.
(27:57):
I was horrified, not as much asthe screaming salon owner,
whose clients with kids had afull view, but nonetheless I was
shocked.
At one point I remember feelinga little jealous.
Here I'm pushing 40, and Iwould be lying if I didn't
require the occasional Viagra toperform at my best.
And here is this guy, fullyerect, going full force in
public without a hint of stagefright.
(28:19):
As I looked around, I noticedmore children and older women
that did not deserve to witnessthis guy pleasuring himself on
the sidewalk.
So I stepped in and asked himto leave.
Not only did he not stop, hecompletely ignored me.
Another gentleman I assume wasalso probably not from Portland
either, based on his responselike mine attempted to grab his
(28:39):
arm and, almost like it waschoreographed in a dance move,
the homeless man punched him inthe face with one motion in
between jerks.
The woman was on hold fornon-emergency for an hour and
one of the shop owners gotthrough to 911.
I had to go meet Belinda, so Ichose not to wait for the cops
and assumed the situation wouldbe handled.
I was with Belinda for a fewhours and when I came back the
(29:01):
man was still on the sidewalkwith his pants down asleep.
This time he was bottom up, forwhich I was thankful.
I popped my head into the salonand asked what happened.
One of the ladies in the salontold me that things like this
are a regular occurrence andthey would be surprised if the
cops even actually showed up.
I couldn't believe my ears.
This was a sex crime.
As I leave the salon, this whitevan with emergency lights
(29:23):
double parks in front of thecurb where the homeless man sat.
Two women came out of thevehicle and it was a little
surprising to see.
Both women had short, crew-cutlength hair that was graying.
They wore polo shirts, tuckedinto beige, cargo-ish looking
shirts with white socks andtennis shoes.
I knew there was no way thesetwo women, who both looked like
(29:43):
they were trying to be men, werelaw enforcement.
Before either woman spoke oneof the original shop owners
approached them and pointed tothe guy who was passed out, bare
ass out for all to see, on thesidewalk.
This is the homeless man whowas masturbating on the sidewalk
, the shop owner said.
The two women walked over, onecarrying a clipboard filled with
brochures and the other one hada handlebag with something
(30:03):
inside.
First of all, sir, we sayhouseless, not homeless.
I could see the man physicallybiting his tongue and cheek
while he stormed back into hisstore.
I was right there with him.
It was obvious these people didnot care about the impact to
his business this may havecaused.
Next was my turn.
Excuse me, are y'all lawenforcement officers?
I wasn't sure who or what theywere, as the last time I saw two
(30:24):
women dressed like that it wasat a dog breeder convention.
Both women looked up at me andsaid almost at the same time
we're community resourceofficers or something of the
sort.
I quickly said oh, okay, Ithink they're waiting for the
police.
This homeless guy wasmasturbating and then punched
someone.
He needs to be arrested forassault and indecent exposure.
(30:46):
Again, one of the two correctedme to say houseless, not
homeless.
They proceeded to explain thatPortland doesn't arrest people
for being homeless.
As it's not illegal, I quippedyes, but assault and battery is,
and children were around whenhe was masturbating.
I could feel myself gettingheated, like the shop owner, so
I took a deep breath.
Both of the officerscontinually repeated the
(31:08):
Portland mantra it's not illegalto be homeless.
This also happens to be thePortland Police Bureau's excuse
for not doing their job either.
At this point, these women haveoffered no resource except
excuses and dishonesty themasturbating man and have a
(31:29):
conversation with him.
One of the officers handed himthe tote bag and another a few
pamphlets and casually walkedhim across the street to the
park as they came back to theirvan.
I yell that's how y'all handlesex offenders in Portland.
Huh, someone should have justshot him.
They stared at me like a coupleof pit bulls in a dog fight.
One of them walked over to meand said we gave him a tent so
he could masturbate privately,and I couldn't help but respond
(31:49):
with a slow clap andsarcastically as possible,
saying you both should be soproud.
I then did exactly what theshop owner did I bit my tongue,
turned around and went home.
I immediately took a shower andwashed myself top to bottom
with Dawn dish soap.
There's nothing like a day indowntown Portland that forces
you to disinfect yourself in theshower.
As I cinched my robe and lookedout onto the city streets,
(32:16):
every ounce of empathy I feltfor the hundreds of people on
the streets in Portland drainedfrom my body.
While my anger rose up, I keptthinking of my mom, who's the
most important thing to me,sitting getting her hair done
and having to see violentmasturbation on the sidewalk.
I don't think it's any differentthan flashing, and flashers are
almost all sexual predatorsearly in the making.
Whether or not his actions weredriven by addiction, perversion
or a mental breakdown with sexacts, police should be involved
(32:39):
at the very least.
Secondly, you must rule outperversion before you can let a
potential sex offender back onthe streets.
Instead, two community officersrewarded the predatory behavior
with a tent and brochures,rather than law enforcement.
This is why I call PortlandPolice Bureau PPB police passing
the buck.
I could have never imagined acity so callous that their
(33:02):
concerns about verbiage areprioritized over law and order.
And there you have it, folks.
Just a quick reading fromAmerica's Mumbai how police
people and politicians destroyedPortland.
And it's my story, living ayear in Portland and
interviewing dozens of homelesspeople residents, politicians,
(33:22):
private business owners, etcetera and creating my book
about why I believe it happenedand why I think it will never,
ever get fixed.
All right, let's take a quickbreak.
We'll come back and get back tobusiness as usual.
I'll be back after these words.
Speaker 6 (33:38):
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Go to dailyharvestcom and getthree free cups with code
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Speaker 3 (34:08):
That was fun.
That was good.
I'm so glad I got to share that.
Thank you all for respondingwith your feedback.
I hope you enjoyed it.
It's always weird to sort ofread straight on the air, but
Some people do it, some peoplelike it.
We get a lot of requests.
So there you are.
That was the book.
All right, let's get back ontrack here.
One of the judges actually justcame out and talked about why
(34:33):
Trump can't fire any federalemployees.
Speaker 5 (34:37):
Have a listen, I just
don't want my employees
thinking that their jobs dependon performance.
I mean what?
Speaker 4 (34:48):
sort of place is that
?
Speaker 5 (34:49):
to call home.
Speaker 3 (34:51):
Sorry, I had to do it
.
It's one of my favorite scenesin the Office.
Michael's like I don't want theemployees to feel like
performance makes a differencewith their job, because all he
cares about is being popular.
That is the federal government.
That's all this hiring people,all these probationary jobs that
came in through Biden.
They are just ways to prop upthe votes and to acquire more
(35:15):
voters.
That's it Because we know that80% of the federal employees are
Democrats and that's becauseDemocrats promised them all
sorts of luxuries, if you will,that we don't get in the private
sector and we don't believethat it should be that different
.
Someone doing the same job for,let's say, chase Bank and
someone an analyst for theTreasury let's say, two analysts
(35:37):
that just because someone worksfor the Treasury doesn't mean
their job should be market-proof, recession proof, leadership
change proof and set in stoneforever whether they do a good
job or not.
And that's all we're saying,talking about merit, you either
do your job or you don't.
And for these lifers that havehad all this time to make the
(35:58):
fixes that have needed to bemade and they haven't, they need
to go.
And that's my only hesitationabout some of these
probationaries.
I wonder if some of these newerpeople would be better to train
without bad habits than some ofthe people that have been in
for life.
Either way, the spending needsto get cut because we're
approaching bankruptcy.
So, speaking of spending, ourfreak of the week, whoopi
(36:19):
Goldberg, had some really greatinsight into federal contracts.
Have a listen.
Speaker 4 (36:24):
Let me say someplace
that could really use a lot of
cutting.
You know, yeah, Elon has verymany.
What?
Speaker 7 (36:36):
do you call it
Government contracts?
Speaker 4 (36:37):
Yeah, yeah, I think,
because I don't remember.
Maybe y'all heard it, but Idon't remember looking for an
armored car and I don't remember.
I don't, I don't care what itlooks like, I don't remember
asking for it.
I don't know why I'm paying forit.
Yeah, I want to know.
When did I say, hey, we needanother agency next to NASA?
(36:59):
Yeah, so, let's just so.
When did we start paying forhis stuff?
You're talking about SpaceXoverseeing FAA?
No, no, you know that he'sgoing to be cutting NASA.
Yeah, yeah, that's thecompetition.
So what is the real deal here?
If we want to cut some money,let's cut some of these.
(37:19):
I'm okay with that.
Follow the money, because wehave to pay for it.
You are paying for everythinghe sends up let's cut some of
these.
Speaker 3 (37:30):
Yeah, I'm whoopi
goldberg and I am the biggest
idiot in today's media.
God, can someone just take herout like old yeller by now.
I mean she needs I mean, forher own good she needs to just
retire and put herself out ofher own misery.
She's so irrelevant.
Every time I see her cause Ipurposely avoid looking at her
(37:51):
cause.
It makes me throw up.
She looks more and more likeFlava Flav.
I mean she is literallybecoming Flava Flav.
Now take the grammar and theEnglish and the just the
terrible delivery and put it onthe side here.
And if you listen to theessence of what she's saying,
she's such an idiot.
(38:11):
So she's saying Elon's going tocut NASA, which I don't see,
not in any of the plans.
But there are some really weirdprograms that have been
purposely run through NASA thathave nothing to do with Space
Force or space exploration, thatare DEI programs that probably
should go environmental thingsas well.
That's been.
(38:32):
They've kind of used NASA forsome of that stuff before.
So I'm not saying there won'tbe any cuts to NASA.
But if it wasn't for SpaceX,nasa would be nothing right now.
But if it wasn't for SpaceX,nasa would be nothing right now.
Elon has saved the USgovernment trillions of dollars
(38:54):
because SpaceX was the firstcompany not NASA, not NASA
private, funded by him firstcompany that could reuse the
propulsion rockets, the rocketsthat throw the launch the
shuttle up into space.
Every time we launched ashuttle into space it cost
hundreds of millions or billionsof dollars because those
(39:16):
rockets would just fall off andgo into the ocean, whereas Elon
has been able to land thoserockets and reuse them and save
hundreds of millions, if notbillions, of dollars to the
taxpayer.
Boeing is also a separate agency.
Why isn't she talking aboutBoeing?
(39:37):
Boeing has just as many or havehas had in the past.
Spacex has taken morecontracting dollars away from
Boeing because of their lack ofproductivity and the fact that
one of their aircrafts gotpeople almost killed or stuck in
space for the rest of theirlives Again SpaceX having to
(39:57):
bring them back down.
If it wasn't for Elon, we wouldhave none of this happening
right now, none of theexploration happening right now.
There is no secret slush fundand it's not a sub agency.
Nasa says okay, just like somany other things.
I'll give you another example.
Let's look at the all the carsthat the federal government uses
(40:20):
.
Most of them are purchased byFord or GM.
Go figure, american companies.
The federal government uses.
Most of them are purchased byFord or GM.
Go figure, american companies.
Now the government could easilysay no, we're going to build
our own cars and we're going tohave Ford sort of work alongside
of us.
But they don't, because Fordalready does it really well and
it's cheaper and easier to justbuy and negotiate government
(40:41):
contracts for all of those carswe don't want to produce, if we
don't have to, if we haveprivate enterprise that can do
this stuff faster, cheaper andbetter for the American tax law.
That's all SpaceX is.
Spacex is essentially a privatecompany that has empowered NASA
(41:02):
to be able to do about a hundredtimes more than they would
normally do in their operationalbudget because they have a
private partner that can dothings for much cheaper and get
much better results.
So Whoopi also should betalking about Boeing.
Boeing has space contracts upthe wazoo.
So does Northrop Grumman wehave up the wazoo.
(41:27):
So does Northrop Grumman wehave.
Nasa has contracts all over.
There's no side agency, it's agovernment contractor.
And regardless of who's the CEO, no one can argue with the fact
you don't like the CEO'spolitics Big deal.
If it wasn't for him, we wouldnot be able to get into space or
do the things that we are doingnow in space better than anyone
else.
The Russians and the Chinesewould be way, way ahead of us
(41:48):
and, once again, we're the onlycountry, and SpaceX is the only
ones, that have been able toreuse propulsion rockets that
are billions of dollars, thatallow us to go out into space
over and over and over again,base, over and over and over
again.
So that she is so ignorant andstupid and it makes me so mad,
(42:08):
because you can't disparage goodthings, because your little
feelings are hurt and you can'ttake little oh the side.
Or armored car, armored carwhat are you talking about?
Armored car is she talkingabout this 400 million dollar
cyber?
Look, look, I agree, theCybertruck contract probably not
the best optics.
From what I understand, it wasin the works a long time ago,
(42:31):
but whatever, it wasn't the bestoptics, shouldn't come out in
the press, but it did, and thisis why it's so sad.
So, according to her, if SpaceXis a side agency to NASA which,
by the way, they're notcompeting NASA supports SpaceX
with resources, astronauts, etcetera.
Those are all NASA astronauts.
And, on the flip side of that,spacex supports, from a general
(42:54):
engineering standpoint,technology and just all the
additional pieces that it takesto make this stuff go faster and
better and cheaper.
And Blue Lagoon, or whateverJeff Bezos's company, is doing
the same thing.
So for her to say that thatwould mean that every single
(43:16):
government contractor is a sideagency.
Ford apparently is a sideagency to transportation.
Ford apparently is a sideagency to transportation.
That would mean that GE is aside agency to the FAA and to
the train industry, or to thetransportation industry when it
comes to rail, because again, wehave, you know, federal trains
and we buy the engines from GE.
(43:37):
Right?
Same with Rolls Royce we buyjet engines from Rolls Royce.
So we use SpaceX propulsionrockets.
It's just a standard contract.
But this is the kind ofstupidity that we're dealing
with and the middle Americansgoing yeah, that's not fair.
When little do they know?
(43:58):
Every single dollar that wehave given SpaceX has come back
tenfold in savings and inresults, including bringing
people home and givingUkrainians Internet and giving
the fire victims Internet.
You know, because all thesenational disasters that we've
had in the last couple of yearshave all been fought easier and
(44:22):
more effectively with freesatellite internet from who?
From SpaceX, from Elon.
It's ridiculous.
On the flip side of that, wehad another idiot, another freak
of the week, that I was goingto try to push back, but he was.
He's too good, this guy, chrisCluey.
He lives in Huntington beach.
He's a punter.
I do have a serious question,though.
(44:42):
Can you guys look this up?
I'm really curious, and this isI.
Probably you guys know I'm afootball fan this is going to
make me seem like I'm not but dopunters get hit in the head?
I mean, I know everyone on thefield.
It's a tackle sport and I knowthey can get tackled.
But my question is is let'stake don't not quarterback, or
like a main player, let's takesomeone else on the offense,
(45:05):
take another uh, you know, maybeI don't even know take another
player and look it up and lookat head statistics and tell me
who are the least likely to geta head injury.
This guy's clearly got a headinjury.
I mean, he is so crazy.
You look at his face and youknow that there's something
really, really wrong.
And what I love is this guy isa champion for supposedly for
(45:28):
gay marriage, which is he keepstalking about it.
It's done, we don't careanymore, it's over with.
But he's this gay marriagechampion and the reason why he's
dying on this cross is becausehe's convinced himself that he
got removed from the NFL becauseof his gay marriage stance,
when really his game was justsucking.
(45:48):
He wasn't doing very well andso he got let go.
And then he went from one teamto the next team and didn't play
and he was done.
His career was over, like somany we see before.
And punters and kickers are notnormally people we see in the
spotlight.
They don't get picked up dealswith Nike and Frito-Lay or
whatever unless there's someother press play.
(46:10):
So clearly.
Here's this guy.
He's got PTSD, he's got a headinjury.
He's convinced himself thatMAGA is Nazism for real.
Speaker 7 (46:32):
And here's a listen
to him.
And what he calls civildisobedience at the Huntington
Beach, california City Hall.
Have a listen to him.
And what he calls civildisobedience at the Huntington
Beach, california City Hall.
Have a listen.
Unfortunately, it's clear thatthis council does not listen, so
instead, I'm going to take mytime to say what MAGA has stood
for these past three weeks.
Maga stands for trying to erasetrans people from existence.
Maga stands for resegregationand racism.
Maga stands for censorship andbook bans.
(46:53):
Maga stands for firing airtraffic controllers while planes
are crashing.
Maga stands for firing thepeople overseeing our nuclear
arsenal.
Maga stands for firing militaryveterans and those serving them
at the VA, including cancelingresearch on veteran suicide.
Maga stands for cutting fundsto education, including for
disabled children.
Maga is profoundly corrupt,unmistakably anti-democracy and,
(47:21):
most importantly, maga isexplicitly a Nazi movement.
You may have replaced aswastika with a red hat, but
that is what it is.
I will now engage in thetime-honored American tradition
of peaceful civil disobedience.
Speaker 4 (47:31):
Get the heck, get out
.
Speaker 3 (47:38):
I don't know if those
cheers are for him or what, but
it's interesting.
You know he's in HuntingtonBeach, california, and you all
know I live in Newport Beach,which is, well, 10 out of 10.
Huntington's like a three outof 10, but I'd still rather live
there than Portland.
But Huntington is a surfer town.
It is extremely conservative,it is extremely middle class, it
(48:00):
is extremely blue collar.
It's generally where, um, mostof the people who do
construction and you know it's agreat beach town I take the
dogs there every day.
They have the largest dog beachin the country but, um, it's
very, very concerned.
So, first of all, he's livingin the wrong place.
Okay, 15 years in Huntingtonbeach, go move somewhere in LA.
(48:22):
So that's what I don'tunderstand is like these people,
they want to stir the pot whereeverything is fine.
You know, everything's goingwell.
All of his assertions, I meanhe just listens to CNN and
repeats it yes, we are forcutting funds to education, and
if that includes cutting fundsthat are supposedly supposed to
be going to disabled childrenand aren't making it, then yeah.
(48:45):
So all of these things airtraffic controllers while planes
are coming down give me a break.
There's still more air trafficcontrollers than there has been
way before Biden.
All of those things can beargued and I don't even want to
go through them because they'reso silly, but then he sits on
the ground and he gets draggedout by police.
I think the Nazi thing is reallyjust disgusting because if
(49:07):
there were any Jews in the room,you know it's so offensive.
I don't think he's probablyever been to Auschwitz.
I don't think he's probablyever spoken to any Holocaust
survivors.
I don't probably think he'sever read the Diary of Anne
Frank or Man's Search forMeaning.
If you've done any of thosefour things, there's no way you
(49:29):
could use the term Nazi that wayagainst Democrats or
Republicans.
It's a horrific, horrific thing.
These people single-handedlyalmost exterminated an entire
group of people and to use thatflippantly the way he did is
hysterical and just.
(49:50):
It's so offensive to any Jewishperson.
And I apologize on behalf ofthe left for their very casual
use of the term Nazi and Hitler,because every time they do that
they're spitting in the face ofJews who went through an amount
(50:12):
of tragedy that is unknown by99% of the world.
And, like I said, if you haveany questions about that, just
read Diary of Anne Frank or myfavorite book.
I read at least once every fiveyears A Man's Search for
Meaning.
Pick it up and see and you tellme how.
Chris Cluey, who's got his cushyNFL retirement right.
(50:36):
He's a punter for the NFL andhe doesn't have to work nine to
five like everyone else does, soit's easy for him to go commit
civil disobedience, calleveryone Nazis, when he's had no
hardship and really hasn't hadto do anything.
So he's just a privileged whitepiece of crap and he's using
(50:56):
his white guilt and his guilt,the guilt of his privilege, to
bring other people down.
And it's really sad.
You know that's what you'regoing to do over a plaque at a
library.
Give me a break, that's whatyou're going to do.
And um and again, I'm just.
I'm so sickened by the Nazicomments, especially because
(51:16):
there's a very large Jewishcommunity in Orange County,
california, and it's offensive.
I have a temple right down thestreet.
It's offensive and I'm not aJew but I'm a huge friend of
Jews and Israel and that is whatdrives me crazy.
And that's why he got freak ofthe week for saying that we
replaced a red hat with aswastika.
I'm going to take one morequick break and I'll be back
(51:37):
after these words.
Speaker 8 (51:39):
Man remember that
time when our eye bags made us
look sexy?
Yeah me, neither.
Now we can reduce our eye bagsby drinking less alcohol,
sleeping more cold compresses,blah, blah, blah, blah and blah.
One, that's way too much work.
And two, don't worry, there'sParticle 6-in-1 Face Cream for
(52:00):
Men.
All you have to do is wash yourface daily and then rub in some
particle for 30 seconds andyou'll look a lot less like that
guy and a lot more like thisguy.
Particle six in one face creamfor men, first of its kind.
Anti-aging cream designedspecifically for men Fights eye
bags, dark spots and wrinkles.
(52:20):
Because C is believing.
Speaker 3 (52:25):
That particle stuff
is actually really good and I
have to tell you for those ofyou who know Amin, it's La Mer.
I mean I don't think I've spentunder $250 for a face cream for
him for a long time and heloves this stuff and he is, you
(52:47):
know, the primo primo, more thaneven me.
So you guys got to try it.
I mean, my skin looks and feelsgreat.
I've been trying it for about aweek now.
He's had a little longer andthen a couple of the guys in the
office give it a shot.
Of course I've gone over timeranting about Whoopi and Freaky
Friday, but that's what FreakyFriday is all about.
(53:07):
I get to do whatever the hell Iwant.
Free-for-all Friday, freakyFriday, whatever you want to
call it.
I'm going to play a little clipof the Trump governor's
luncheon and some of thediscussions around transgender
and his transgender ban, hisexecutive order, and that will
then kind of parlay.
(53:33):
I'm going to do a special transepisode on Sunday just on the
trans stuff and getting intosome of the science, and I'm
going to go really deep andhopefully bring on a friend of
mine who's also an expert.
So I've decided, because everyday this week I've tried to get
more trans stuff in, but I justfeel like there's other pressing
issues and so I'm going to justdo a special episode on sort of
this trans stuff.
You guys know I am an expert onall things LGBTQ, including
(53:55):
this trans nonsense, as I'vebeen covering it way, way before
anyone ever was talking abouthow it was going to influence
politics and what was going tohappen With that being said,
have a listen to what DonaldTrump, president Trump, has to
say about all this Two weeks agoI signed an executive order
(54:16):
banning men from playing inwomen's sports.
Speaker 2 (54:20):
Many Democrats are
fighting me on that.
I hope you continue becauseyou'll never win another race.
And it's just crazy If you lookat what happened with the
boxing, if you look at whathappened with the weightlifting
numbers, where a record thathadn't been broken for 19 years
got shattered.
But you know they put up aneighth of an ounce here, an
(54:40):
eighth of an ounce there, andit's 218 pounds or whatever and
hadn't been broken in 19 years,of an ounce here, an eighth of
an ounce there, and it's 218pounds or whatever it was and
hadn't been broken in 19 years.
And then a guy walks up whotransitioned.
He transitioned and he knockedout that record by about 100
pounds.
That would be a record notgoing to be broken again in a
(55:00):
long.
So we put a ban on it.
And to protect women I mean thewomen if you watch the olympics
, you had two transitionedpeople that were fighting in the
women's boxing, that women'sboxing category.
If you saw that, it was brutal.
What happened to the?
The italian woman was a reallygood boxer.
(55:21):
After one punch she said no, no, no more, no more.
I've never been.
It was a really good boxer.
After one punch she said no, no, no more, no more.
I've never been hit.
It was a left.
It was not even a, it was justa left jab.
She got hit so hard she said Ican't do it.
They forced her to go out.
No, go out, go out again,you'll do it.
Goes out again, hits, gets itagain.
No, no, that's it.
She didn't want to die and it'scrazy.
(55:42):
But the NCAA has compliedimmediately, by the way.
That's good.
But I understand, maine IsMaine here, the governor of
Maine, are you not going tocomply with it?
Well, we are the federal law.
Well, you better do it.
You better do it because you'renot going to get any federal
(56:03):
funding at all if you don't.
And, by the way, yourpopulation, even though it's
somewhat liberal, although I didvery well there, your
population doesn't want menplaying in women's sports.
So you better, you bettercomply, because otherwise you're
not getting any, any federalfunding.
Every state Good, I'll see youin court.
(56:23):
I look forward to that.
That should be a real easy one,and enjoy your life after
governor, because I don't thinkyou'll be in elected politics.
Every state has aresponsibility to comply with
Title IX, to have an obligation,a legal obligation, and we'll
be enforcing aggressively andwe're going to be protecting our
citizens.
We're going to protect.
Speaker 3 (56:40):
I mean, it just gets
better and better our citizens
we're going to protect.
I mean, it just gets better andbetter.
You know, historically we'd seethese luncheons and these press
evenings and whatever the BS is, and Republicans and Democrats
because of course we were theuniparty they'd all be friends
and everything would be great.
And you know, the Bushes andthe Obamas and the Bidens, just
(57:03):
everyone would be all McDonald'sand the grandesties of the
world and everyone would begreat and they would just be
talking about how greateverything is and they'd get
their private catered meal andthe president would come shake
hands and tell all the governorshow wonderful they are.
No more.
He called her out so fast that,wow, maine's not going to
(57:25):
comply, huh.
And now it's not just thatMaine's not going to comply.
Remember, this is NCAA.
So NCAA makes the decision.
They've made the decision.
That is a national body.
Okay, so if another statedecides not to comply with NCAA,
then that's a whole other.
What he's talking about it'slike you can't do that.
(57:47):
And then you know Title IX,which is basically what
determines what you can andcan't discriminate against in
order to receive federal funding.
And Biden kind of slyly stucktransgender in there and it
should never be in there becauseit's a, it's a mental illness.
It's not a race or a protectedclass At least it shouldn't be
(58:08):
in my opinion and the thechallenge that Maine is going to
have is with the NCAA, and soeven the most liberal states
like Washington, oregon,california, new York, even
they're not going against theNCAA because they're the body
that manages and deals withcollege sports.
(58:30):
It's their jurisdiction, it'stheir ruling, and if the states
get involved, it's a big,massive mess, and that's why he
called her out and they werefollowing state and federal laws
.
It's like I'm the federal lawand it's true, because the
president has full control overtitle nine.
They can put in whatever hewants and he can take out
(58:52):
whatever he wants.
That is, uh, executive powerthrough and through and cannot
be challenged with.
That being said, I think it's agood time to wrap up.
I'm going to do a special transepisode over the weekend.
I hope you guys listen and Ihope you've enjoyed the podcast
this week.
Please text us.
(59:13):
Just go on your messages or onyour listening app.
On the Last Gay Conservativepage or any episode, there's a
text us link.
Just click it.
It'll open up your message andtell us what you think, even if
you want to tell me to get f off, all right, all right, and I'm
wishing you all a beautifulweekend filled with family and
(59:34):
fun.
This is chad law, reminding youof what reagan once said no
government ever voluntarilyreduces itself in size.
Government programs, oncelaunched, never disappear.
Actually, a government bureauis the nearest thing to eternal
life we ever will see on Earth,ain't that true USAID?
(59:57):
God bless you, president Reagan, and may God save America.
Speaker 5 (01:00:19):
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(01:00:42):
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