Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:04):
It's that time, time, time, time, luck and load.
Speaker 2 (00:11):
Michael Very show is on the air.
Speaker 1 (00:14):
Probably then jet play.
Speaker 2 (00:19):
When I be back again. I hate to go.
Speaker 3 (00:30):
The President of Columbia refused to accept a flight of migrants.
Speaker 2 (00:33):
He said he wouldn't take them.
Speaker 3 (00:35):
Donald Trump said, We're going to enter the f around
and find out portion of this conversation. Within an hour
of making that threat, the President of Columbia said, whoa.
Speaker 4 (00:45):
Wa, whoa.
Speaker 2 (00:45):
I'll send my own plane to pick these people up.
Fly to zero niner.
Speaker 5 (00:49):
You are cleared for takeoff. Roger, huh, departure frequency one
two three point niner. Roger right, request factor over, but
fly to zero niner air for a victor at three
two four.
Speaker 2 (01:01):
We have Clarence Clarence Roger Roger, what's our victory?
Speaker 4 (01:04):
Victor?
Speaker 6 (01:07):
But opening up to anyone who's in the country illegally
and going into schools and grabbing them to that kids don't.
Speaker 2 (01:13):
Message needs to be clearless consequences in a country illegally.
If we don't show this consequences, you never go pick
the border front right. But we are a country of laws.
Speaker 7 (01:30):
For our immigration policy to make sense, it is necessary
to make distinctions between those who obey the law and
those who violate it. Therefore, we disagree with those who
would label any effort to control illegal immigration as somehow
inherently and immigrants Unlawful immigration is not acceptable.
Speaker 8 (01:54):
Because they've committed a crime. Deport them, no questions asked.
They're gone. If they've been working and are law abiding,
we should say, here are.
Speaker 2 (02:07):
The conditions for you staying.
Speaker 8 (02:08):
You have to pay a stiff fine because you came
here illegally. You have to pay back taxes, and you
have to try to learn English, and you have to
wait in.
Speaker 2 (02:16):
Line with some mestation.
Speaker 4 (02:20):
You'll know that.
Speaker 1 (02:24):
You remember doctor ethan Heim who exposed Texas Children's Hospital
was conducting trends procedures on children in violation of the law,
and they went after him and they tried to destroy
that man. President Trump has pardoned him, yet another major move.
(02:47):
We can't get to every major move in one day.
We will in time as they unfold, take them one
by one. But I have a message out to Ethanheim,
and he is welcome on our show as soon as
he possibly can, as soon as he can work it in,
and we're going to take a victory lap. Many of
(03:08):
you will remember the multiple interviews we had, and a
lot of you worked hard to make this happen and
keep his case top of mind. That's that's important when
you're in that situation, is to not be forgotten. We
have resolved who the player was that I was thinking,
(03:31):
did you do.
Speaker 2 (03:31):
The did you do the build up music? The background?
Speaker 1 (03:34):
Okay, something's wrong in our speakers because I couldn't hear it.
It's only coming down one channel. I think that's why
did you know who it is? About twenty people sent
it in and I got to think it wasn't David Justice.
(03:54):
It wasn't David Justice. I was thinking of David Justice's face,
but this was darker skinned than David Justice. He was,
as I remembered very fast. Let's say he's fifteenth all
time stolen based leaders, kad.
Speaker 2 (04:12):
He locked a very good that's it.
Speaker 1 (04:15):
Played for the Astros, Indians, Braves, White Sox, Giants, Pirates, Cubs, Yankees, Phillies, Dodgers,
and Texas Rangers.
Speaker 2 (04:25):
That's right.
Speaker 1 (04:26):
Actually went to the University of Arizona in a basketball scholarship,
made it to the Final four in eighty eight.
Speaker 2 (04:33):
Didn't join the baseball team till his junior year.
Speaker 1 (04:35):
You know, you see some of these guys, they're just
phenomenal athletes. You know, Dave Winfield could have been an
NBA I don't know if he had been a star,
but he certainly could have played in the NBA. But
instead he chooses baseball. They guy didn't look like a
baseball player, but a Keem Elijah wan a Keem doesn't
play basketball until very late in life compared to where
(04:59):
we expect. And then you got all these little kids
in Beaumont, you know, doing little dribblers from the time
they're two years old, and not one of them going
to the NBA. And there's a chem over there in
Nigera in Nigeria, the the goalie of his soccer team.
And this guy, I mean, when he came to Houston,
(05:20):
guy Lewis went. I mean, look, he was seven to one,
they say seven three, seven to one. But when he
came to Houston, if you look early on, he's a
little clunky, he's a little rough around the edges, but
by the time he hits his stride, by the time
Ramadan came and you could be pissed off at him
that he wasn't gonna drink water, and his numbers were
(05:41):
gonna drop. That guy was so silky smooth. I loved
watching him.
Speaker 9 (05:48):
I loved watching him, and I loved watching Clyde so
much because not just because they were are uh guys
and the Cougars and and then you know Houston and
all that.
Speaker 2 (06:00):
I loved watching Clyde when he was in Portland. I
wished he was here.
Speaker 1 (06:04):
I loved the fact that he would take a rebound
and he's built like a small forward, but he plays
like a small guard at that point, and he would
put his head down, which you're not supposed to do,
put his head down and start dribbling and go down
and it would just be it was George Gervin smooth,
but just faster and harsher. And then when he would
(06:26):
pull up and shoot, and he would shoot like a rifle,
I mean, line drive. Everything they did was again but
that dream shake man, the foolishness he put on.
Speaker 2 (06:36):
Poor David Robinson.
Speaker 1 (06:37):
I saw an interview with David Robinson last week where
he was talking about like, basically he still looked shell
shocked from the experience.
Speaker 2 (06:44):
All right, Brett, how did they catch you to arrest you?
Speaker 4 (06:49):
All? I was right, well this time that I was
already on Barball threed. I had three two cases in
Harrison County and I had like seven and four ben
And every time that I would get a car, I
would just feel like I had to address, you know,
(07:12):
and I felt like, Okay, I ain't gonna smoke in
my car. I ain't gonna do this, and.
Speaker 2 (07:17):
Uh, Brent, no, no, no.
Speaker 4 (07:22):
I smoked weed. I didn't get I didn't do dangerous drugs.
I smoked weed. But you know when you get thrown
over and they smell it, that even if they don't
smell it, if they want to search a car, then say,
well we smell weed, step out the car. So I
stopped smoking weed and putting weed in my cars. But
(07:44):
this time I just got pulled over for like a
uh traffic stuff in uh Jersey Village. Next thing I know,
man man had to throw calls and it was over
with it, and uh I ended up going down for
seven years today.
Speaker 2 (08:05):
That's a long time, brother, That is a long time.
Speaker 1 (08:10):
We have an update on Colony Ridge as of this
morning coming up.
Speaker 2 (08:29):
Man Kenny Lofton was one of Bad News.
Speaker 1 (08:33):
Career batting average of two ninety nine Dad a round
that up career batting average of two ninety nine, twenty
four hundred hits, one hundred and thirty home runs, seven
eighty one runs batted in six hundred and twenty two
stolen bases.
Speaker 2 (08:51):
He led the league.
Speaker 1 (08:55):
In steels five times, all of the American League and
steals five times all of Major League Baseball three times.
And this isn't the Ricky Henderson there. In ninety four
he led the league the al and hits, and in
ninety five he led the majors in triples. He holds
the all time postseason stolen base record with thirty four,
(09:15):
having broken Ricky Henderson's record in.
Speaker 2 (09:17):
Two thousand and seven. That's saying something.
Speaker 1 (09:21):
You got to figure if you have any stolen base
record that Ricky doesn't already have that he broke. Ricky
broke every Lou Brock record, and for you to break
any Ricky record. So anyway, thank you to those of
you who let me know it was Kenny Lofton. I
was thinking of not David Justice, but Lofton is darker
(09:41):
skinned than I remembered him being. Okay, let's finish with
Brett because I want to get to some of this
other stuff, and we're going to talk to doctor Ethan
Hymen who was targeted. Over all that nonsense, Brett, How
is prison different than people on the outside perceive it
to be?
Speaker 2 (09:57):
Just if all we've seen is the movies, It's not.
Speaker 4 (10:04):
Like, it's not violence on the corner of every life.
You don't see people getting killed, rain and all day,
all day long, every day. It's not really like that.
It's not like that at all. I've been in the
worst places with the worst people. They were classified by
them for the worst things, and even they didn't have
(10:25):
violence like that. So that's one thing. It's another perception.
You would have to give it to me because you know,
I don't really know how people look at president out
of there. You know that it's a bad place.
Speaker 2 (10:44):
Well it should be miserable, right.
Speaker 1 (10:47):
The idea is that people would say, I don't want
to go to that place, so I'm not going to
engage in this behavior. I mean, look, you didn't sell
drugs because you were bored. You sold drugs because it
was easier than going and finding a job. You know,
busting rocks, right, I guess.
Speaker 4 (11:07):
Yeah, they don't do that no more either, elf us.
Speaker 1 (11:09):
Ruck no, no, But I mean finding a job as
a carpenter or a plumber or electrician, or a shelf
stopper or a forklift operator. Did you learn any skills
in prison? Breat that helped you when you got out?
Speaker 4 (11:25):
Social skills. The first time I went down, I did
twenty years. I didn't lie anything, and I came home
but stupid, and I was like, well, if somebody could
teach me how to do something, some kind of apprenticeship
made me ten dollars hour because I never came home
without anything, because I had my mom, like I came
from a good place or were home, so I didn't
(11:47):
come out like where my next mail coming from. But
when that went sober, I had like a job of
doll of general and that went sour. I went back
to the street, you know, and it was easier. The
money just start coming.
Speaker 1 (12:02):
Now, Bretton, if we're being y, did the dollar general
go sour because you didn't act right.
Speaker 4 (12:09):
Well at first? At the end, yeah, I got fired
for a reason. I tripped out. But if I just
didn't like the high archy and the way, you know,
everybody is the boss and they want to like the
boss would tell me to do something, he would leave,
and if somebody else woul tell me to do something else.
When I first started working there, I wouldn't even rag
(12:31):
up a after chilling gun. And I asked them not
to put me on the register now because I was
gonna steal. I just would press out prison now. I
didn't want to be looking people in the faith like that. Well,
the first thing they did, he said, now I'm gonna
put your talking. I wanna put your stalking. And then
the first time was there, He's put me behind the
register with no training at all, And so I can't
(12:55):
go on to him and ask him. And what's a
text to them? These people say they got textes them,
these people. I don't know nothing. But the general manager
happened to be in there that day and he was like, see,
your people need you too much. But he never told
the guy that that was my first day. And the
next thing, you know, I had to write up for
the general manager. Nobody stood stuck up for me, and
(13:16):
that I was like, man, that that's terrible. I just
wasn't it. It's not all the general's fault that I
didn't make it beast. I just wasn't mainly ready for that.
You know, that kind of environment.
Speaker 2 (13:32):
You did twenty years the first time.
Speaker 4 (13:35):
I did twenty years.
Speaker 2 (13:36):
Michael, you got a sentence in twenty years or you
served twenty years.
Speaker 4 (13:42):
I don't a sentence for twenty years. What happened was, I, Uh,
I was, I was young. I was. I was all
into that stuff man, the gangst them, music, the thug
in the forty onnson, all that stuff. And I got
into some some mess of some duels and uh, therey
after I shot, I shot the apartment. I shot. I
(14:03):
didn't shoot them. I shopted the apartment. And you might
know this guy who came to give me. His name
was always good.
Speaker 2 (14:10):
Luck Officer knock Head.
Speaker 4 (14:13):
Yes, sir, Mike, yes, sir.
Speaker 2 (14:17):
I know him.
Speaker 1 (14:19):
And his Yeah, his son was was a big listener
of our His son passed away. His son was an
officer as well.
Speaker 4 (14:25):
Oh that's terrible to hear. I'm so proud of him though, Man,
he's him away. He was a gang intelligence like my neighbor.
Speaker 10 (14:36):
Yes, and uh, he came, he came to get me,
and anyway, well they didn't really have anything on me
like that. So my dumb self, I signed for ten
years of the third judication of probation.
Speaker 4 (14:51):
Yeah, I didn't hear anything. They said, but I was
going home. Man like, mister Danny, you know we can
get this. Twenty is you know we can do this.
I didn't care. I was trying to get out of
county jail. It was terrible. Then man, seven oh one,
it was terrible. So I come back three months later.
I got four different charges and they're like, wow, that's
(15:11):
no big deal, you know, but you got a fee.
You can't get you for this one looking off of
your sin, and there's nothing you can do about it.
And next thing, you know, I said, well, I'm too
young to du tam eighteen. Next thing you know, I
had twenty and I did it day for days, day
for days.
Speaker 1 (15:28):
So you did twenty the first time, and then you
got out and you did another seven.
Speaker 4 (15:34):
I'll be another seven. And I stopped counting of the
forum school te one. See when down at thirty five, forty,
all that stuff, I did it all.
Speaker 2 (15:44):
How old are you now, Brent, I'm fifty years old.
Fifty years old. That's a lot of time, man, that's
a time.
Speaker 4 (15:56):
Wait.
Speaker 1 (16:01):
We have connected with Darryl Youngers, the United States Marine
from Cleveland, Texas, who has been pardoned by President Trump,
and he will be our guest. In just a moment,
we are finalizing getting him on a good line. It'll
be just a few minutes and we'll have him on.
(16:22):
But first, it's always a pleasure, and may I say,
an honor to have with us the sage of Sunnyside.
Speaker 2 (16:34):
Joyce aka Rejoice Joyce. How are you, sweetheart?
Speaker 6 (16:39):
I'm doing good.
Speaker 1 (16:40):
First things First, how are your nineties compared to the eighties.
Speaker 6 (16:47):
Well, my steps for getting shorter, my forgetting dimmer, but.
Speaker 2 (16:56):
Nobody can steal your joy.
Speaker 6 (16:58):
I just don't have as much as I had in
the eighties, but I'm still moving.
Speaker 2 (17:04):
What are you now? Ninety two.
Speaker 6 (17:08):
Ninety two March twenty fourth, March.
Speaker 2 (17:11):
Fourth, ninety two, My goodness, life. Okay, we'll have to
plan something.
Speaker 6 (17:14):
Yes, yes.
Speaker 4 (17:18):
I have.
Speaker 6 (17:19):
This is old news, but I learned a couple so
weeks ago that the city council had sanctioned that a
terminal as an airport would be named for Sheila Jackson Lee.
That just upset me. You know that car recording that
(17:40):
was played, that was enough, Michael, for anybody to repute that.
And you know, young men had been saying for years
that this woman treated them like that, and they were
all called liars. But it was on tape, and I'm
a a and I'm in a back setting, and these
(18:00):
are people ninety three, ninety four, sixty eighty years old,
and they were angry at the person that made the tape,
not angry at Shiela Jackson Lee. And that's just I
can't even believe that my people are this stupid. And
you know, anybody have heard me. For years, I had
(18:22):
a problem with the Black Church. They were a lot
and Michael. I couldn't understand it. They would always bring
her in late. She never came in on time, and
they would parade her down that middle aisle and the congregates.
Congregates would get up, amen, he hey, Louia the God
and I'm glory to God out that front at that door.
(18:44):
I wasn't stay in a church and listen to her.
I just didn't understand this lady was. You know, I
didn't hate her, you know, I still loved her. But
this lady was snuty, She was rude, she was a bully.
Talked about how she acted on the airlines, and you
go to name it after this woman. I can't believe it.
(19:07):
I'm upset about it.
Speaker 1 (19:08):
It's an affront to decency and dignity and honor and integrity.
It's an affront to the very concept of naming something
for someone it really is. And you know, Joyce, you know,
you know all too well. But what ends up happening
is white people are so desperate to honor somebody black
(19:29):
because then they feel like, look at me, I'm over
here honoring.
Speaker 2 (19:32):
This black person. I can't be a racist. So they
find whoever they're told is the black person that they're
supposed to all be behind.
Speaker 1 (19:39):
Oh, they love to hold MLK and they love to
tell you that they really like this person, and they
think that that makes them look good, but they don't
know anything of what they're talking about.
Speaker 2 (19:48):
Shela Jackson Lee was an absolute monster.
Speaker 1 (19:50):
And I could line you up if you gave me
a day, you gave me two days to make phone calls,
I could line you up one hundred staffers that she
had over the last thirty five years, including going back
active city council because I was on city council after her.
And I can tell you there are people that can
tell you stories of her calling them the N word,
the B word, that unit insulting them and humiliating them
throwing books at them.
Speaker 2 (20:10):
It's I mean, there's lawsuits about it. She's a monster.
She was named worst Congressman.
Speaker 1 (20:15):
You got four hundred and thirty five of them, Joyce,
to get to be number one out of four hundred
and thirty five multiple times, I don't care what it is, tallest, shortest,
you know, most active, least active, ugliest, prettiest, to get
to be the number one out of four hundred and
thirty five multiple times, you gotta really be special.
Speaker 6 (20:33):
Mut of times yesterday. And you know how you've heard
me say when it was time to front hit, they
would have sometime twelve sign Sheila Jackson lined up in
our communities and we are so stupid and you are
right about and I feel sad for white people that
(20:55):
accept this. That was the same way with Obama. Oh
well if I go for well, they won't call me
racis they call you more racist? Then? So I just
don't just cut out the foolishness because I wouldn't name
nothing after Teela's acting me and I just I couldn't
believe it when I when I when I heard that.
(21:16):
So that that was that's my up set for today.
But I'm calmed down now I'm okay.
Speaker 1 (21:20):
Ramon just said he thinks it would be nice if
if Mary Whitmyer was to name something for Joyce to
say your sunnayside.
Speaker 6 (21:28):
Uh, I would not. I guarantee you I wouldn't get
any votes.
Speaker 2 (21:34):
I'll tell you that you'd get ours.
Speaker 1 (21:36):
You'd get what's our friend's name that Paula and Tom
beas On that came and visited you.
Speaker 2 (21:41):
They'd vote for you. We don't have like a boulevard,
I said.
Speaker 6 (21:45):
In my community, my my, my, my black sisters and brothers.
You know, people have always asked me to run for
that office, for that office, I can my neighborhood wouldn't.
Speaker 2 (21:59):
Not for me.
Speaker 1 (22:01):
You know, Joyce, we know a lot of people in common,
and we know a lot of things that most people
don't know. But I have had so many friends over
the years who were black and tried to represent the
districts that have long had black elected officials. And I'm
not talking about Wesley Hunt winning a district that's primarily white.
Speaker 2 (22:19):
Who will who don't who doesn't care that he's black.
Speaker 1 (22:21):
They want a congressman who's conservative and they love his
record and they but but Wesley Hunt couldn't get elected
in Sunnyside or or you know, or.
Speaker 2 (22:32):
Or Trinity Gardens or Lake.
Speaker 1 (22:34):
You know, and that that really it's it's it's hard
to believe Wesley Hunt couldn't get elected in Acres Homes,
but Sylvester Turner can. And Wesley Hunt's had a lifetime
of service and Sylvester Turner, well, shall we say, hasn't.
And it it bums me out how many people like
you who I tell you what, you'd have a Trump
effect if you were to be from the Homeowners Association
(22:56):
to the Church Leadership Committee, to city case to the
state to being a state representative, you would have a
Trump effect of going in there and just telling them
how to countate the cabbage. And it would have such
a good effect on anybody in anybody of any organization
that has gotten gotten lazy and corrupted.
Speaker 2 (23:17):
And you would just be man, because I just.
Speaker 6 (23:25):
Don't understand how we can just in this late in
our neighborhoods. And you know, I've cheffed many times. If
you can come to my neighborhood this morning, I could
take you on a tour. Is garbage stacked up? It's
just like it's it's like the garbage dump in Sunnyside neighborhood,
(23:46):
and nothing is being done about it. It's just lined up,
and it's been lined up for much. These people are
out here talking about Cheta Jackson did so much for
us em com in the community.
Speaker 2 (24:03):
See what you did, yet it's terrible. Joyce. We love you,
we pray for you, and we look forward to March
twenty fourth. We've talked before him very Michael.
Speaker 6 (24:17):
Hello.
Speaker 2 (24:18):
Junior Park.
Speaker 1 (24:20):
Soldiers have begun arriving in El Paso as part of
President Trump's promised to send more than one thousand US
troops to conduct enforcement operations along our southern border. The
Department of Defense will also provide airlift support for flights
operated by the Department of Homeland Security. Apartment Homeland Security
(24:41):
has a new leader in Christinoan who was I think
hers was unanimous. I think hers was unanimous. Marco Rubio
leaving the Senate to become a Secretary of State.
Speaker 2 (24:55):
JD.
Speaker 1 (24:56):
Vance leaving the Senate, of course, to become the Vice President.
Christy Noam stepping down as Governor of South Dakota to
become the Department of Homeland Security. Pete Hegseth with a
fifty one fifty win. You get to fifty one because
of a fifty vote tie, fifty to fifty tie, at
(25:16):
which point the Vice president. Now recently former Senator Jay d.
Vance casting his first vote in the Senate on behalf
of in favor of Pete Hegseth to be the.
Speaker 2 (25:31):
Secretary of Defense. I saw a lot of.
Speaker 1 (25:37):
Commentary from active duty military and recent veterans. And I'm
not a veteran. I didn't serve neither in peacetime nor war.
But I do talk to a lot of folks and
I ask a lot of questions, and folks who served
(25:57):
in peacetime will tell you it's different. It's different if
you served in the nineties and you served at a
desk job, it's still service to this country, but it's
a very different experience then if you got sent to
Iraq or Afghanistan, especially about three four, five oh six, seven,
(26:18):
eighth nine for that matter, it's very different. It's a
very different experience. That were body bags coming back. There's PTSD,
there's life changing memories, memories you wish you could suppress. Frankly,
(26:38):
and a lot of those guys talk about the fact
that they didn't feel they had a defense secretary and
a leadership, a president who was protective of them and
supportive of them. You know these warmongers that we've had
in the White House, and we've had a string of
them that loved to go to war, the Warhawk. I mean,
(27:01):
you look at Lindsey Graham. There's a guy over there
that you're just afraid at any moment.
Speaker 2 (27:08):
Moan.
Speaker 1 (27:08):
Did you ever see The Wolf of Wall Street? So
you remember Jonahill played Donnie, his buddy Donnie. Well, there's
a party that Jordan Belfert is holding. He's the Wolf
of Wall Street and it's it's craziness, right. There's booze
and drugs. He's got swimming pools on the beach. And
(27:31):
the woman who will end up being his wife comes
in with another guy. She's at the door and he
meets her and he says, uh, she go out on
the jet skis and she says, I've never been on
a jet ski. He says, you've never been on a
jets ca, you never been on a jeki. And the
guy she's with, who realizes he's lost this she's gone
(27:52):
to Jordan Belfer says, she told you she had been
on a jet Ski. You asked twice, and it's like
I might ask a few more times. She clearly he
wants to stay with Jordan Belford. I means Jordan Belford's books,
so he gets to tell the story the way he wants.
You know, she's just crazy over him. Maybe she was
crazy over his house man, I don't know. But in
the middle of all that, Jonah Hill, who's you know,
(28:14):
he's got he's got big appetites and he's weird. Somebody
looks over and Jonahill's got wiener out and he's going,
you gotta bang her, Jordan, you gotta bang her. And
he's I mean, he's That's kind of what I envision,
as gross as that is, and I know you don't
have to tell me.
Speaker 2 (28:32):
Every one of you.
Speaker 1 (28:33):
That's kind of what I imagine is happening under the
table while Lindsey Graham talks about war. I mean this,
this aging lesbian just fantasizes about war and can't wait
to get.
Speaker 2 (28:50):
Us in more wars. Loves wars.
Speaker 1 (28:53):
I don't know if he's got a you know, young
man in uniform fetish. I don't know what it is,
but it's sick, it's disgusting. I think Cheney, Dick Cheney
loved war because it was good for the bottom line.
It and it gave him an opportunity to be, you know, mister,
to pretend he was patent because he loves the business
(29:14):
of war. I think Lindsey Graham loves the business. But
I think I think there's some real weird stuff going
on there. I don't I don't think you'd want to
see his porn collection. I'm pretty sure there'd be a
lot of military. Yeah, there might be some bombs going off.
Speaker 2 (29:29):
I mean it might really.
Speaker 1 (29:31):
What sets off his rocket might be something else. But
here's heck Seth, who's a guy that has led men,
that has served alongside men, and it's recent enough that
he remembers that experience.
Speaker 2 (29:49):
I do think there is.
Speaker 1 (29:51):
I think time tempers your connection to an experience. I
really don enough time it's been since you've worn that uniform,
since you've had those fears, since you were willing to
run through a wall is very different. And I think
that what happens between when you end your service and
(30:13):
you end up as the Secretary of Defense, it changes you.
Speaker 2 (30:19):
In much the same way. I'm not mad.
Speaker 1 (30:22):
Him, but I only hear really good things about the
new police chief for City of Houston, and I'm talking
about from rank and file officers because that's all I
care about.
Speaker 2 (30:32):
They love him.
Speaker 1 (30:33):
They love the fact that he's not like the chiefs
we've had in the past, where he wants to wear
a bunch of brass and be driven around by a
bunch of people and be saluted and treated like he's
the Eda Mean or something. They really really like that
he is very, very humble. He doesn't need all the
trappings and the pageantry and all that. That's a bad
(30:55):
sign when you see that, by the way, but I
think that with Hegsath, it's been recent enough and he
hasn't changed in the way that that process changes. I
mentioned police chiefs because a lot of police chiefs were
not decorated patrolmen. It's like a lot of principles, and
(31:17):
then superintendents were not great school teachers. You end up
with a lot of principles and administrators and superintendents.
Speaker 2 (31:25):
Of public school systems, especially the big ones.
Speaker 1 (31:28):
The guys that moved from one to the next, they
spent a year at most in the classroom and they
immediately started hopping to the administration. You see this in
police departments where you see a guy that was never
actually a patrol when he wasn't.
Speaker 2 (31:43):
A cops cop, didn't want to be a cops cop.
Speaker 1 (31:46):
They start figuring out how they can get a desk
job and moving up through the ranks and the brass
to get to be a police chief.
Speaker 2 (31:52):
And then they moved from city to city. Well, that's
what you end up with.
Speaker 1 (31:58):
A political appointee, a yes man, a corporate man, a
woke guy. That's how you end up with it. What
was the black guy that was dressed? He had layer
upon layer during COVID, made a complete ass of himself. Yeah,
Lloyd Austin is that his name? That dad was an embarrassment.
I think the heg Seth leadership. I think heg Seth
(32:20):
as Defense secretary. I think that sent of and the
fact that Trump said we're going to bat for this one.
We're going we're going to lay it on the line,
and Mitch McConnell, Lisa Murkowski, and Susan Collins voting against
him to require it to go to that.
Speaker 2 (32:35):
I'll never forgive him