Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Scott Vordiez. We saw a post on Facebook on the
Douglas County Sheriff's office official page about an hour ago.
I've been watching this and connecting it with some details
that I've been trying to reach out and get some
communication from Immigration Customs Enforcement on as well as something
(00:21):
that several listeners have brought to my attention over the
past several weeks, and that is a website, and there's
been more than one, but there's been one particular site
that has been saying here are all of the nation's
sanctuary cities or counties, and one of those is Douglas County, Nebraska,
sanctuary county. Now that's interesting because you reach out to
(00:45):
officials and this is not the first time that an
area around Omaha has been labeled a sanctuary this or that.
And you reach out to the officials and go, are
you a sanctuary county? And they say no, and then
the conversation pretty much dies there. And then I try
and reach out to the people who do the reporting
on which areas are designated as sanctuary counties, and I
(01:10):
get nothing. So Douglas County Sheriff Aaron Hanson, who joined
us live from our nation's border with Mexico. He was
down there in Texas a couple weeks back, and we
talked to him live there from the border, and he
talked about some of the things he was seeing. He said,
I'm learning a lot of really interesting things about how
(01:33):
every community in America is essentially now a border town.
And he said, I'm going to get back to you. Well,
today he got back to us and posting this Facebook video.
If you want to watch it, it's on the Douglas
County Sheriff's Office Facebook page. It's about ten minutes long.
Here's a portion of it in the middle that I
found very very interesting. Here's Sheriff Hanson.
Speaker 2 (01:55):
So we got a presentation when I was down in
Texas by the chief of the Del Real sector of
the Border Patrol, Chief Gloria Chaves, and she explained that
in one twenty six day period that it was over
forty six thousand individuals encountered coming over the border just
(02:15):
in the Del Rio sector alone. Well in the Del
Rio sector alone, the federal government only has the ability
to detain thirty five hundred people at any one time.
Think about that, thirty five hundred detention capability beds at
any one time for a long period of time, and
(02:35):
forty six thousand people over twenty six day period coming
over the border. Thirty two thousand of those forty six
thousand were Venezuelans, of which we know nothing about. That
nation will share nothing about who those individuals are, what
their backgrounds are, completely unvetted. Why do we have such
a detention problem. Well. Previous to twenty twenty one, many
(02:59):
low local counties across the nation, Douglas County included Dougas
County Corrections Included, would contract with the federal government. Federal
government would pay the county corrections on the local level
millions of dollars a year, offsetting local property tax costs
millions of dollars a year to stand as a temporary
detention facility for their federal detention facility, essentially supplementing those
(03:24):
detention capabilities. In twenty twenty one, counties across the nation,
Douglas County Corrections Included gave the federal government notice that
there were no longer going to be having a contract
with the federal government to serve as temporary detention facilities
for the federal government.
Speaker 1 (03:43):
That is, Douglas County Sheriff Aaron Hanson here posted this
morning on the Douglas County Sheriff's Office Facebook page again
about a ten minute video. You can watch all of
it if you're on that social media platform. So to
recap what he just said, we were down here in
this this little area, Texas, and this little area Texas
(04:03):
along our wide border with Mexico at one point was
having thirty five hundred people a day coming across the
border in this area, and many of them were from Venezuela.
No details about who these guys are. Now, the way
it's supposed to work is you would then be detained
(04:24):
as we try and assess who you are. That's not
how this administration does it. That's not how the Biden
Harris administration does it. Instead, they say, all right, we're
going to have a hearing on your request for asylum.
Come back to this courtroom on Tuesday, October fifteenth, twenty
thirty two, and we'll see you then. Now in the meanwhile,
for over the next eight years, you know, try not
(04:46):
to cause any trouble. We'll see you. And then eight
years later they sit around there and go, all right,
it is Venezuelan immigrant number two here. No one shoot,
I tell you what, this day is really going poorly.
No one's here. Sure, this is absolutely asinine. So since
(05:09):
they since they don't have enough people there, or said
they don't have enough rooms in some of their detention
centers to take care of the forty six thousand people
came across in less than a month, they only have
about thirty five hundred beds I think is what he
said there. So what the Immigration Customs Enforcement would do
(05:31):
is they would reach out to cities and counties across
America saying, look, we have some people we need to detain.
We will pay you to if you have any room
in a jail cell and a detention center, if you
have any room anywhere, we'll pay you to put these
individuals there. And the county jails were like, great, we
(05:55):
have room. The federal government's paying absolutely this is isn't
money that comes out of the local taxpayer. Good deal,
and we'd detaining potential bad guys. Heck of a deal.
This is also the same process where if you remember
what happened to a young woman here, a Bellevue University
(06:15):
student named Sarah Root, who was driving in South Omaha
one night was hit by a drunk driver who was
speeding and running a red light and was in the
country illegally hit the car that Sarah Root was in,
killing her. That individual was supposed to be detained, but
(06:37):
in the waning days of the Obama administration, that didn't happen. Immigrations,
customs enforcement, the local jails, the correctional facility, individuals, there
was no communication, there was no agreement for detention. He
was released. We haven't seen that guy since. So what
(07:04):
Sheriff Hansen is saying is that basically, under President Trump,
there was an agreement that ICE would pay local cities
and counties for the opportunity to house potentially dangerous individuals.
But in twenty twenty one, that policy changed when local
counties all across the country suddenly had the same idea
(07:27):
at the exact same time. What say we stopped working
with ICE to detain their criminals when they ask us to.
Amazing that throughout the year twenty twenty one, all of
these cities and counties across the country suddenly had the
epiphany at the exact same time not to take any
more federal money to detain illegal immigrants. What in the
(07:49):
world happened throughout twenty twenty one. Let's see, there was
COVID I remember that. Oh yeah, Biden and Ras came
into power in Washington, d C. And suddenly communities across
the country amazingly all lined up and sent letters like this,
(08:15):
dated September twenty second, twenty twenty one. This letter serves
as written notice of Douglas County's intent to terminate our
agreement with Immigration Customs Enforcement ICE. We have determined that
continuing this agreement is no longer in the best interests
of the Department of Corrections or Douglas County. We will
(08:36):
honor all terms of the agreement for the period of
one hundred twenty days from today's date, per Article nine
of our agreement. Please feel free to contact me with
any questions or concerns you have regarding this matter. Respectfully,
Michael Myers, not Halloween or Austin Powers, Respectfully, Michael Myers,
(08:59):
Director of Care Directions, Douglas County, Nebraska. Again, that was
dated September twenty second, twenty twenty one. That was a
letter from Douglas County Corrections to Immigration Customs Enforcement. What
happened after one hundred and twenty days after that point, well,
(09:21):
Ice wasn't building new detention facilities, and no other communities
were stepping up and saying we'll take them. So people
were just released into this country. The people have been
coming into the country by the millions during the Biden
Harris administration have just been released into the country, not
(09:43):
completely alone. They go into communities where Federal Emergency Management
Agency FEMA money is redirected from disaster relief to helping
these communities house and feed and provide education and healthcare
for the individuals who are suddenly pouring into these communities.
Whether it's the forty thousand Haitians in Springfield, Ohio, or
(10:07):
the I don't know how many Venezuelan gang members in Aurora, Colorado,
that's federal money that's going to help those communities deal
with the influx of migrants. That federal money used to
go to communities like Douglas County, Nebraska to get them
to detain potentially dangerous criminals. We talked about this on
(10:34):
another front where suddenly it was a big push that
we need. The problem was is that there were too
many juveniles locked up here in Omaha, and so rather
than look at the trends and say, well, there's a
lot more juveniles committing a lot more dangerous crime. Maybe
we should build a larger juvenile detention center instead. The
(10:56):
push was shut down the larger juvenile detentions and open
a much smaller one that does not meet our needs,
thereby solving the problem. Oh, the problem of juveniles committing crime, No,
the problem of juveniles being locked up. How do we
stop from detaining more juveniles? How do we say, here's
(11:17):
how many juveniles offenders are in detention right now. How
do we change? How do we get that number better?
Some people have decided we make that number better by
just no longer locking them up. Hey, look, we fixed it.
We used to have this many juveniles in detention. Now
it's only this many. Oh did they stop committing crimes?
(11:38):
Oh no, they're still committing a lot more crimes, probably
more so than ever before, because they see there's no
real punishment for it. We just stop locking them up.
The problem was we have too many people detained across
this country from foreign lands, and I guess that looks
(11:58):
bad to some people. How do we fix that? Do
we close the border and have them stop coming into
this country? Or do we just fix the glitch and
no longer lock them up anymore. Where counties across the
country throughout twenty twenty one told Immigration Customs Enforcement, yeah,
we're not taking any of your detainees anymore. This was
(12:23):
geppetoed by the administration of President Joe Biden and Vice
President Kamala Harris, and big money behind this told these
counties stop working with ICE. Now, there have been websites
that have come out and said Douglas County, Nebraska is
a sanctuary county. And you reach out to the Douglas
(12:44):
County commissioners or local elected officials and they go, no, no,
we work with ICE. We'll give them my heads up,
and both are seeming to be true. Here's what happens.
Lucy Chapman sneaks into this country in the middle of
the night, she says I'm free, comes to Omaha, Nebraska,
starts committing crimes. She's arrested by Omaha police or the
(13:08):
Douglas County Sheriff's office. They reach out to Immigration Customs Enforcement.
We got Chapman, L chapman O. We got Lucy L.
Chapman O, the diabolical Venezuelan gang member. We just arrested
her in Omaha, and Immigration Customs Enforcement says, great, bang
(13:30):
up job, you guys, wonderful work. Will you please detain
her until we can get there and arrive. No, good luck,
and Lucy's released. And then the county says, we told ICE,
and ICE isn't gonna say anything because ICE is under
the Biden Harris administration and is not supposed to make waves.
(13:53):
So Lucy's detained briefly, but rather than hand it over
to ICE or detains until ICE can deal with it
because they don't have as many people and they've got
a lot to deal with, rather than detain them, and
ICE will say, look, we'll pay you to detain her.
They say no, we ended that agreement with ICE in
September of twenty twenty one. So the county says, no,
(14:17):
we give ICE a heads up if we get dangerous people,
and ICE says, yes, they give us a heads up,
and that's where it ends. That's how big a joke
this is. That's why Douglas County is a sanctuary county
but not a sanctuary county, and well they're playing semantics
(14:39):
and playing politics. Americans are left to deal with this
influx of potentially dangerous individuals. In our country. Clay Travis
and Buck Sexton had a great point on their show
yesterday here on eleven ten KFAB. They were talking about
the ovations by the Harris administrator or the Harris the
Harris campaign, not administration now yet, evations by the Harris
(15:04):
for President campaign to try and shore up support among
especially young black men. They're sent Barack Obama out to
chastise blackmail voters. You know, how dare you not vote
for Kamala Harris? And they said, you know, with three
weeks before election day for them to be working to
try and shore of support among the group that they
(15:25):
historically have always had in their back pocket, that doesn't
seem like a campaign that's in control of this election.
That seems like panic button. Why in the world would
especially young black men or black men in general, why
in the world would they suddenly not be inclined to
vote for Kamala Harris. Maybe because they've looked in their
communities and they said, you know what, born and raised here,
(15:49):
grew up here, raising families here, trying to get ahead,
try to do things the right way, and no one's
paying me any money. Yet I see this influx of
illegal migrants into this community and they're getting jobs, they're
guaranteed jobs, housing, sometimes in four star hotels that have
been repurposed as migrant facilities. They're getting housing, they're getting
(16:14):
food allowances, they're getting phones, their kids are going to school.
They don't have healthcare, so they just go and clog
up the emergency room if they get a hangnail. It's
a drain on public service. It's raising costs around here,
it's eliminating jobs, and they're being treated a lot better
(16:34):
than I am. I never asked for anything in my life,
but I certainly didn't feel like we get to this
point in the country and they're the ones responsible. And
maybe I'm not so inclined to vote for Kamala Harris
for president. Something was talked about on Clay and Bucks
show yesterday. You'll find them today eleven to two here
on news Radio eleven ten. Kfav so very interesting posts
(16:59):
this morning on the Douglas County Sheriff's Facebook page, as
Sheriff Aaron Hanson is well, first of all, he's out
in the trees and you see bunk to tent, sleeping
bag stuff like that around there, and he says, I'm
here in this residential area of Douglas County where we
got a word that there was someone who might be
(17:21):
a Haitian immigrant who's just living here in the trees
next to this neighborhood. Which neighborhood, any neighborhood. This is
happening all over our community, and this is not the
humane thing to do for people trying to come to
this country to make a better life. All right, that's
(17:43):
the end of that sermon as of right now, Lucy,
when you're sick, do you feel compelled that you have
to come into work or do you feel like you
can take a day off. You'll be You've got opportunity
for paid sickly you take the day off. Do you
feel like anyone's pressuring you to come in here? I
don't why, I ask your microphone? So quiet? What I
(18:05):
got you? But now, yeah, it's fine. It was turned
down in here.
Speaker 3 (18:07):
I don't necessarily feel compelled if i'm if I'm super
really really sick.
Speaker 1 (18:12):
No, I understand that a lot of people do feel
that way. And this is an issue that got really
really highlighted during that pandemic. Remember the pandemic heard about it.
There was a thing called COVID oh, thankfully, it's all
behind us now. Anyway. The next one, yeah, people were sick,
(18:37):
and the policy was don't come to work sick, and
if you have COVID, don't come to work for like
ten days. And the people said, look, I don't want
to come to work, get on my coworkers sick, but
I can't. I can't take ten days off work. And
then if you had a positive COVID test but you
felt fine, you still weren't allowed to come to work.
(18:58):
So that's when the push from a lot of different
very left leaning organizations looking out for workers rise. I
think a lot of times their hearts are in the
right place. Said we need to have mandatory paid sick leave.
And this is another initiative that started up in Washington,
d c. Or New York or California and started popping
(19:23):
up around the country, which brings us to this ballot
initiative for Nebraskans on November fifth, the Paid Sick Leave
for Nebraskans Act, And basically it says, if you want
people to have paid sick leave, then vote for this
amendment and people will get paid sickleave. And you think
(19:45):
nice deal. Nebraska's probably inclined to vote for this. After all,
we voted for increased minimum wage a few years ago,
thinking let's give workers a little bit more money, and
let's look out for the little guy here. And if
the little guy is sick, I don't want his boss
to retaliate against him, going you're sick again, You're fired.
You know that we don't want that to happen. There
(20:09):
are a couple problems with this though. Number One, when
you mandate that a business, I don't care if it's
a small business, big business, medium sized business. When you
mandate that a business pay someone not to come work,
usually that also means you have to pay someone to
(20:30):
come in and work their shift when they're not working.
Now the business is paying double. And this is also
potential for abuse. I know you probably don't believe this,
but there are a lot of people who call up
and say I'm sick. They take a paid day off.
Business has to get someone else to come in. There.
(20:52):
Also there's the potential for abuse where you get employed
by someone you just got hired. Great, I can't wait
to start. I'm hired right signed everything, I get my
paid sick leave. Oh, I've got I don't know the
I got the bad case of the hebgb's and the
(21:12):
mumbo jumbos can't come in. And now you're starting off
with a couple weeks vacation. Then you quit, then you
go do the same thing someplace else. Don't put it
past people. There are some horrible people out there doing
things like this. But the biggest thing is we're business owners.
(21:32):
We know what it takes to succeed as business owners
to be able to get the best employees. We offer
up paid sickly because we feel it's the best thing
for our business. We decided government didn't decide for us.
We decided that we're going to offer paid sick leave,
and we do have it with some parameters. You get
so many days a year. After that you do have
(21:54):
to dip into your vacation and we'll let your roll
over paid sick leave for vacation from year to year
so you don't lose it. But there has to be
a ceiling on this otherwise, I mean, we're just going
to get abused. But when we offer this and when
we do it, that's fine. But if we have a
(22:16):
lot of people out sick, especially during the pandemic, we
get a lot of people out sick. That means we've
got to bring a lot more people in here. We're
paying people who are off sick, paying people to come
in here and work these shifts. It's costing us double.
Guess who pays for that?
Speaker 2 (22:29):
You do?
Speaker 1 (22:30):
Anytime you buy those goods or use those services, when
the business is having to pay twice the cost of labor,
you're going to end up paying more for whatever that
thing is that you're buying or using. And here's a
spokesperson for the National Small Business Association on this issue, said, quote,
(22:51):
the more restrictive the government is in how businesses can
develop their benefits programs, the less flexible business owners can be.
If it's paid leave, you're paying somebody who's not going
to be there, and you have to pay somebody to
replace them. That has the potential to affect the bottom
line for a lot of small businesses. Unquote, there's a
(23:13):
reason why the ACLU and a lot of really left
leaning groups are putting this initiative on ballots like Nebraska's
on November fifth. They want to stick it to these
business owners. Now, look, a lot of people look at
this and go greedy business owners not paying people because
you know, they're sick, and what do you want them
to do? Come in here and get everyone sick, and
(23:33):
they retaliate against people. They had a guy, the Secretary
of State in Nebraska, had a public hearing on this
because they have to when there's a ballot initiative, and
they had a bunch of people show up. They're all
ready to go saying, oh, yeah, this policy is needed now.
I tried to call out sick after getting COVID and
my employer threatened to fire me. I had to go
(23:54):
in sick getting everyone else sick. It was terrible. You know,
if businesses are treating people poorly, you're not going to
get people to want to work there. Let the free
market decide this. I'm not a fan of mandatory government
(24:15):
interference and how business operates for things like this. I
wasn't a fan of the increased minimum wage, and I
think this is the same thing. It's going to raise
costs of goods and services for Nebraskans. We already have
enough of that. So that's something on the ballot here
in Nebraska on November fifth.
Speaker 3 (24:37):
And you can print that out and read it before
you get there, and I highly encourage you to do that.
Because even the people who write these admit that they're
written poorly.
Speaker 1 (24:49):
Yeah, and then you've got people that say, look, I
want to get my ballot ahead of time so I
can look everything over. And I don't want to just
go in there and go I don't know whose school
board you know this is? These are important things, and
so a lot some people go to their party and say,
who are the Republicans up for? For example, Elkorn Public
Schools board, and there are four people running and you
(25:12):
see one name on there, and you go, all right,
that's the one Republican. But that's not exactly the case.
I'll explain next. Scott Voices News Radio eleven ten kfab
Ryan email says, what problem is this trying to solve?
What is these specific issue happening? Businesses don't want to
lose employees. Yeah, businesses are saying most of us do
(25:34):
offer this. It's the same thing with minimum wage, when
they were saying, well, you need to offer more money,
you need to offer at least fifteen dollars an hour,
and places like fast food restaurants were saying, we offer
eighteen dollars an hour because that's what we as free
market people have decided, and we still can't get people
to take these jobs. All you guys have said, well,
(25:56):
if you offer fifteen dollars an hour, people come work.
There No try another one. So it's the same thing here.
You need to offer pay sickly. We do, but there
are some people who abuse it, and we don't want
to be forced to pay the abusers. Listen to this email.
David email says I used to be a customer service
(26:18):
manager at a grocery store years ago. I had an
employee call and tell me she couldn't come in because
her favorite movie star died and she was in mourning.
Under that new law, i'd have to accept that excuse,
whereas I didn't in this case, I would have been
impressed by her honesty. All right, Scott atkfab dot com.
(26:42):
You can email as well. People try and look at
the ballot. As Lucy mentioned a moment ago, you can
print out sample ballats. You can get acquainted with all
of these different things. There's a lot of confusing language
and frankly, a lot of candidates for these down ballot races.
Where most people realize when they you know, through the year,
like wow, school board is really important. School Board is
(27:03):
really important. It might be more important than the President
of the United States. School Board is so important. And
then they go in and vote and they fill in
the bubble for the President of the United States because
they're ready to go on that one, and then it
comes up on school board and they think, ah, crap,
I forgot to check in on school board. So let's
(27:23):
say you're a Republican. Let's go out on a limb
and say that those listening to news radio eleven to
ten KFAB today are Republicans. You can go to the
Douglas County Republican Party gop list online and you can
look at each race and go all right, here are
the candidates who are Republican. This story from k ETV
(27:46):
News Watch seven says all of the four candidates on
the ballot for the Elkorn Public Schools Board are Republican.
Now that automatically is shocking to me. School board race,
all of them are Republican. Now, officially, it's nonpartisan. When
you get that ballot, it has the names on there,
(28:07):
it doesn't say Republican or Democrat. It's nonpartisan. But if
you're trying to dig then they would KTV News Watch
seven Doug a little bit and said, these are all
four Republican but only one person on the list published
by the Douglas County Republican Party. Only one of them
(28:28):
gets the endorsement of the Republican Party. There's a list.
There are actually a couple of lists. One of them
is called the twenty twenty four Republican Candidates in Douglas County,
and they're endorsing a candidate there now. One of the
other ones says, I've been a registered Republican for over
forty years. I don't know why my name isn't on
(28:49):
the list, and another one says I'm a Republican too.
And my fear is that if you go to the
county Republican Party site and you don't see my name,
people are going to assume I'm a Democrat. I'm not
a Democrat. And it's not the only the Elcorn school
Board where this is the case. There are lots of
(29:10):
school board races and legislative district rate all kinds of stuff.
So k E TV News Watch seven reached out to
interim Douglas County Party Chair John Tucker, who issued a
statement and said this candidate and that candidate some of
the Republicans who are I'm a Republican. How come my
(29:30):
name's not listed? They said, Well, these people, this person,
and that person have never interacted with the Douglas County
Republican Party and showed no intention of doing so. They
feel entitled to paid promotion for their campaigns despite the
complete lack of communication. They also don't appear to be
running as committed Republicans due to accepting support from liberal
(29:51):
groups and even appearing on leftward slate cards. We fully
stand by our endorsement process and look forward to our
recommended candidates winning up and down the ball at this election.
It should be noted that, as we've covered over the years,
more and more of the county and even state Republican
Party stuff here in Nebraska has been moved from more
(30:13):
old school Republican to new school trumpy Republican. There has
been a divide. I think most of them are trying
to make enemies out of friends, and it's very weird
to see. But John Tucker, who I like. He's a
funny guy. He's a good guy. He said, Well, we
do have another list. Here's the list of twenty twenty
(30:35):
four Republican candidates in Douglas County. But if you want,
there's another list, and it's called quote non controversial normal people.
These might be Republicans, these might be independent or nonpartisan,
they might be Democrats. We just determined them to be
non controversial normal people. And one of these people on
(31:00):
the Elkorn school Board, who's a longtime Republican, well she's
on that list non controversial normal people. That's funny, Lucy.
When I have at least three stories and the only
common denominator in any of them has to do with
a certain former president of the United States, I put
(31:21):
them together in a segment we call a Trump Date
to the Dancy, is your chance to do the Trump?
Do the Trump to Trump? Do the Trump to Trump,
the Trump Trump, the Trump to Trump.
Speaker 2 (31:42):
Do you know what we do?
Speaker 4 (31:43):
Win?
Speaker 1 (31:43):
Win the Trump to Trump. Y'all wants to do the
Trump to Trump. Ha, Let's do the Trump to Trump. Samoens,
do the Trump to Trump? All right, here we are
Trump Date that starts with Nancy Pelosi saying she cannot
even say Donald Trump's name out loud. Pelosi's got a
(32:05):
book coming out. Did you know that The Art of Power? Power?
The Art? Where's my synergy? Of Influence music. I don't know.
The Art of Power doesn't have the same ring to
it as Omaha Poli's chief Todd Schmader's book Synergy of Influence.
But the Art of Power, I don't think that that
(32:26):
title is just something that they threw together. What is
Donald Trump's big book named The Art of the Deal?
Nancy Pelosi's book is the Art of Power? Weird as
she says that she can't stand Trump. Won't even utter
his name. Yet it seems like this head of the
(32:49):
Trump Derangement Syndrome Department in Washington, d C. Can't get
him out of her mind. He is living in whatever
is in that skull of hers. Rent free listen to
what she said though about this upcoming election, because first
of all, you know, she sat down Joe Biden and said,
(33:13):
all right, Joe, time for you to go huh what why?
You know they had that conversation. So she's doing interviews
about this book, and she spoke with a reporter in
a podcast called Politics Weekly America that sounds like some
alphabet soup hello chat gpt AI. Can you come up
(33:37):
with a generic name for a podcast about the state
of politics? And you know, in America Politics Weekly America. Like,
is that the Chinese to English translation. Nope, that's the
name of the podcast. Sounds good to me. Politics Weekly America.
We do good podcasts. Can't believe you in video, I'm
(33:59):
your Nigerian uncle. So she's talking and they said, now
you forced Biden out. Have you talked with him since
you had that intervention with him in July? And she
said not since then, no, but I'm prayerful about it.
Prayerful about what exactly. But she started talking about Biden said,
(34:22):
I have the greatest respect for him. Yeah. That again,
that's the person who was the is the current president
of the United States. You led a coup to remove
him from power because you didn't think he was fit
for another four years, even though he wanted to serve
another four years, or at least try.
Speaker 3 (34:43):
You can't prove that you have.
Speaker 1 (34:44):
The greatest respect for Himuh, she said, I think he's
one of the great consequential presidents of our country. I
think his legacy had to be protected. I didn't see
that happening in the course that it was on. The
election was on. My call was just to go with
let's get a better course, she said. Elections are decisions
(35:05):
you decide to win. Now, listen to this. I decided
a while ago that Donald Trump will never set foot
in the White House again as President of the United
States or in any other capacity direct quote quote Nancy
(35:27):
Pelosi said, and I quote, I decided a while ago
that Donald Trump will never set foot in the White
House again as President of the United States or in
any other capacity unquote. Now that's something. If Nancy Pelosi
was picked up on the golf course with a sniper
(35:48):
rifle and a manifesto and it's had that note, that's intent. No,
but we're definitely not trying to push people into the
possible assassination of the former president. No, you know, to
say that he shouldn't even be allowed to set foot
in the White House again in any capacity, whether it's
(36:11):
as president, part of a ceremony with former presidents, or
if he just walks in and says, did I leave
my glasses in here? He should never be allowed said
I can't even utter his name. I think it's a
grotesque word. It's up there with swearing.
Speaker 3 (36:32):
Did she just make Trump a verb? Yeah?
Speaker 1 (36:37):
Now, Trump held a town hall around Philadelphia yesterday. He
was out there with South Dakota Governor Christy Nome, and
it was a packed room, a very hot, packed room,
and people were getting the vapors. Two people passed out
during the Trump rally, which was kind of like Q
(36:59):
and A moderated by Governor Christy Nome, which I think
would be really interesting to be a part of. So
after like the first time, someone had a medical issue,
and so they stopped the conversation and Trump requested that
ave Maria be played, and the av person found a
(37:20):
version of ave Maria and played it, and then they
the person was tended to, and then there was a
second medical issue, and Trump said, play ave Maria again.
But what I meant was the version of the song
by Pavaratti. So now the person's in there furiously typed
YouTube dot com. Gotta wait for the ad. I'll shoot
(37:41):
us a fifteen second ad. I can't skip it. After
five seconds, Trump's up there staring at me, and you
find the Pavaratti. They played Pavaratti's version of the song,
and then after the second person was up and moving,
Trump spoke for a few more minutes before he said,
you know what, it's hot in here. People are going
(38:02):
down and we love them, and so let's just He
kind of said, like, let's just have some great music,
and then sat there dubious as to why people weren't leaving,
as he didn't leave the stage, as he's just basically
up there playing DJ, like Marshmallow or one of Britney
(38:27):
Spears husband, just up there as a DJ. First, of course,
he said I want to hear YMCA, and everyone's dancing
and doing the YMCA and Trump said how about this?
And they started playing more music, and for forty minutes
there's just playing music. Musical selections concluded Nothing Compares to
(38:48):
You by Sinnado O'Connor, Rufus Wainwright's version of Hallelujah by
Leonard Cohen, and then November Rain by Guns n' Roses,
and no one's leaving, and Trump like, no one's leaving,
what's going on? That's because you're still on stage. It
was very, very weird. Finally Trump left, people were still partying,
(39:12):
but people were posting posting social media saying DJ Trump
is up there. I don't know if he was calling
for I want to hear that song from the Guns
n' Roses use your illusion, which one, mister President. Now,
I mean which album use your illusion one or two?
You want to hear Don't Cry. You want to hear
Civil War. It's a great song. You could be mine.
(39:35):
Underrated rock song, not the long one. Okay, we're playing
the whole thing like when it goes into the orchestra
part at the end. Whole thing. Huh Okay. Here comes
November Rain by Guns n' Roses. Very weird Trump rally.
Here in Omaha, people are having their political signs still
(40:00):
or destroyed. Now. The story here from k ETV News
Watch seven does note that there are at least a
couple people that say, yeah, my blue dot sign was stolen,
But mostly here it's people saying it's their Trump signs
that have been stolen, destroyed, defaced, whatever. And it looks
like most of this is teenagers just walking along saying, oh,
(40:25):
here's something in a yard, let's destroy it. It doesn't
matter what that is. A political sign, a halloween decoration,
a decorative rock, a fence, a sapling, it doesn't a
pineapple to denote that you want your neighbors to stop
(40:46):
by whatever. It's just teenagers walking around doing teenager walking
around stuff. But of course here's the story going. People
should be able to show their political persuasions without fear
of reprisal. It's okay to have a disagreement. You don't
need to come on my property and steal my sign. Well,
(41:06):
I'm guessing this is overwhelmingly happening for the Trump signs.
Don't know, just guessing. And that is a Trump date.
Speaker 4 (41:18):
Trump Trump Trump, Trump, Trump travel Trump Trump.
Speaker 1 (41:30):
Scott Boyes News Radio eleven sei KF A b