Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
M Miss NBC has canceled Joyreid's show Win No why
Megan Kelly had Victor Davis Hanson on, But it's really
Megan's segment. She pulled the ratings right, so hey, it's
not that the quarterback got fired because he's black. It's
that the team is losing. Here are the actual numbers
(00:23):
for Joyreid's show.
Speaker 2 (00:25):
We just pulled the ratings from Thursday Night. On Thursday Night,
this is in the twenty five to fifty four demo.
I mean, this is just unbelievable. Like truly, when I
was at Fox, We're a Bad Night in the demo
would be in the threes, three hundred change, but it
was often six hundred thousand, seven hundred thousand and change
in the demo. Those are now the overall numbers, the
(00:46):
total audience numbers on a great number for most of
cable news. Here's her demo number from Thursday Night, fifty
nine thousand. She was a four thousand away from Slashies,
which is but.
Speaker 3 (01:01):
Well, No.
Speaker 2 (01:01):
Nine thousand, which is fifty thousand, she was fifty nine thousand.
That's what she got in the overall demo. She lost
to her competitor on CNN who had one hundred and
four thousand lost to Laura Ingram who had three hundred
and eighty nine thousand, lost the whole ratings race inside
MSNBC where their great white hope Jensaki, who's taking over
(01:23):
now at nine. This is all part of a reshuffling.
She got sixty five thousand in the key demo. Sixty
five that's okay, that's their future. Rachel Maddow, she's their
big star. For thirty million dollars a year. All you
have to pull is one hundred and forty four thousand
in the demo, which I think is what we got.
(01:46):
I don't even I mean, like maybe overnight at three
AM during a weekend program lineup at Fox. One hundred
and forty four thousand now earns you thirty million dollars
a year on MSNBC. And then the next lowest well
after Read and Sake was Stephanie Ruhle with eighty eight thousand.
Laurence o'donald got one hundred and three six thousand. These
(02:06):
are all terrible, terrible, terrible numbers. And that's one of
the many reasons Joy Reader is out.
Speaker 1 (02:15):
You know, Look, this is why you measure things because
those ratings reflect dollars. Wins and losses affect how many
people buy tickets to the and sit on and watch
the game, and how much advertisers want those people. This
is why people don't want to be measured, because they
come up short. Poor Joy. There's something about her black tears.
Speaker 4 (02:41):
To use her term, there's a thing about both white
vigilantism and white tears, particularly male white tears, really white
tears in general, because that's what karens are right, they
care now And Thennesouza get constants freed the waterworks. White
(03:02):
men can get away with that too, and it has
the same effect.
Speaker 1 (03:07):
And so when Joy Reid posted her video of her tears,
which I guess if white people have white tears, hers
are black tears. Boy was that fun. Here was her
last video addressing the cancelation of her show. I think
there might be some black tears.
Speaker 4 (03:24):
My show had value, and that.
Speaker 5 (03:29):
My show had value.
Speaker 6 (03:30):
I am somebody, tell them, I am somebody, tell them,
I am somebody, just value And in the end, I'm
I'm not. I try not to cry on TV, and
I think this is kind of like me on TV.
I am somebody And then and then it kind of
and then it mattered. I see karenbod is there and
she's been texting me as well, and so what I
(03:50):
will just say, you came in the end, thank you.
Where I land is that the moment that I've of guilt,
that I felt that I went hard on so many issues,
whether it was the black lives matter of a young
baby or a mom or dad that was killed when
(04:13):
we opened up people's eyes to the fact that Asian
Americans were being targeted, not just black folks, or it
went hard for immigrants who all things but come to
this country like my parents did and try to make
a life and defended them, or whether we've talked about it.
Speaker 5 (04:30):
You shall had value.
Speaker 1 (04:32):
You don't worry about You shall had value.
Speaker 7 (04:37):
People need to make informed decisions and you're giving them
the inso, Michael Barry, because you're a public Paul Revere
kind of ringing the warning.
Speaker 1 (04:47):
Though, Ramon, I've I'm increasingly of the opinion that there
are very clever opinions being voiced out there that deserve
to be amplified that are not famous people, and we're
going to do more of that. You don't need to
have a name or a title to have a great opinion.
I came across this guy, this woman sorry, who is
(05:09):
a former federal worker, and she shares her opinion on
federal workers and what kind of people it is that
Trump and Elon are laying off, and it's not a
very pretty picture. Just give this a listen.
Speaker 8 (05:26):
I used to be a federal employee, and I'm going
to tell you why I don't feel bad for federal
employees being forced to come back into the workplace. I
worked for the Army Corps of Engineers for almost a year,
and the abuses that I saw by government employees was
astounding and shocking. I worked as a realty specialist, and
(05:51):
that is someone who manages government on lands, so when
farmers and ranchers LEAs land to grace, we would manage that.
When I was hired, my boss bragged that it was
basically impossible to get fired from the federal government and
that in her entire time working for the government, she'd
(06:12):
only seen one person fired, and that person assaulted a
fellow employee. And she wasn't even fired for assaulting the
employee at work. She was fired for lying about it
because they caught it on camera. When I worked for
the government. We were allowed to work fifty percent in
(06:32):
the office and fifty percent from home for the most part.
In some cases, if you'd work there, like I think
over ten years or something, you could actually work from
home three days a week work from the office two
days a week. I use the word work very loosely.
One employee spent his time remote working running his own farm.
(06:59):
Another employee bragged about this work, driving and going out
to lunch with her friends for Margarita's when she was
supposed to be remote working. No one would log into
their computers and you can see it because they're not
on teens and no one ever checked. Ever, There's something
called the eighty twenty year roll, where eighty percent of
(07:23):
the work in government is done by twenty percent of
the people. And this is very very true. People who
get a job in the government a lot of times
find out that it's very difficult to fire them, and
they take advantage of this. One employee would come into
the office. His start time would be six thirty, and
he knew nobody would be there. And when I came
(07:43):
in at seven thirty and I was the next person
to come in, he was snoring at his desk. Every
single morning. Another employee would take the government truck on
an almost daily basis so that he could go out
to lunch and then go and take a nap in
(08:03):
his favorite part under a shady tree in the government truck.
One of the very first things I did when I
started working for the Core, I spent three months cleaning
up their real estate files room, which was a disaster.
The government is using an antiquated system that was developed
sometime in the nineties and using regulations that haven't been
(08:25):
updated since the nineties to manage our dams and our
government lands. Our government is filled with the most incompetent
and most lazy people and an occasional hard worker, and
those hard workers are severely punished every time they outwork
(08:47):
their colleagues, because then the colleagues realize people will see
that they're lazy, and they don't want to have to
work more. They're just buying time until they retire in
almost every case. My point is some of our government
organizations haven't been maintained or updated in so long that
(09:07):
you basically need to create a new organization and start
from scratch, because there's almost no way to transfer it over,
and there's so much red taped in between. It'll never
get done. But I know that our government is inefficient
because the people working for it are not doing what
they need to do to take care of the rest
(09:28):
of us. So no, I don't think government employees should
get the benefit of working from home. If our government
is not working for us, we shouldn't have to take
years to do anything in a technological age.
Speaker 3 (09:43):
They choose to take that long. That's a choice. So
they can choose to do things faster, more efficiently, and
then they can choose to get remote work back. I
don't feel bad for them at all.
Speaker 1 (09:58):
There you have it. People who've left the government will
tell you what the government is like. And the good workers, oh,
they're suppressed. They they're not. Just like in the schools,
the good teachers, they don't promote them, they don't give
they end up leaving. It's amazing how many good teachers
leave the public education system because the kind of people
(10:22):
who survived there and control it are the worst to
the worst. Sadly, and this is why nobody cares that
Doze is going in and eliminating people. Nobody feels sorry
for those people. We're glad to see them go. Karen
Finney is a former Hillary Clinton campaign advisor. This was
a few days ago, and she asked Scott Jennings if
(10:44):
he would still support dose if somebody died.
Speaker 7 (10:48):
I actually think it's okay if they run into a
stumble here or there. Because the project is so massive,
the need to cut is so massive, the government is
so massive, it's inconceivable that you would make a mistake
here or there. But I think that's acceptable if the
greater goal is achieved, which is a smaller government, more
efficient government.
Speaker 9 (11:06):
If someone, even if someone is someone dies, or even
if someone because someone has died from I don't we
don't know. I'm talking about when the rubber meets the road.
I'm talking about for example, Kansas City, thirty thousand government
employees might be laid off. It will destroy the economy
of Kansas City. That's okay.
Speaker 5 (11:25):
Why say that I'm going to die to die?
Speaker 9 (11:29):
I've been saying that they're very good.
Speaker 5 (11:30):
What do you think they're going to say when they're
going to get wet.
Speaker 9 (11:32):
Of course they're going to say that. But my point is,
do we think that's smart?
Speaker 1 (11:36):
Yeah? Six thirty three Ramone. The mind of a liberal
is amusing. It is the subject of humor to me,
I don't.
Speaker 10 (11:47):
Want Elon Musk having my SOBS Security number, but I'll
give it to the irs and my job, and the
bank and the hospitals and the university and colleges, the
mortgage companies, the insurance companies, the credit card companies, the
financial advisors, and the car dealership. I'd rather them have
it because I know that they're definitely prone to data
breaches every single year. The mind of a liberal is
so amusing.
Speaker 1 (12:08):
The government made money off of it. We didn't get
nothing the hard time the Michael Arry Show.
Speaker 11 (12:13):
It's a damn shame.
Speaker 5 (12:14):
It's a damn shame.
Speaker 12 (12:15):
It's a damn shame.
Speaker 11 (12:17):
It's a damn shame.
Speaker 1 (12:19):
You know, I'm not a guy. Producer Kenny, who's we've
worked with over the years, loves to go out and
put a microphone in the face of crazy protesters and stuff.
That's never been my thing. Producer Kenny's very good at it.
Owen Schroyer is pretty good as well, and he made
a montage. And this is just for your enjoyment. Now,
remember you cannot let these people upset you. You have
(12:41):
to remember to laugh at them and to enjoy it
with that in mind. Here is till the end of
the break, wacky anti Trump protesters being upset. This gives
me so much joy. I drink up their tears and
I love it.
Speaker 5 (12:58):
What rights is Trump denying you? Oh well, let me
talk about my uterus first.
Speaker 12 (13:05):
I don't have access to appropriate medical care.
Speaker 5 (13:08):
If I'm out abortion. Let's just say what it is.
It's abortion. So what right is abortion? Where do you
have a right to abortion?
Speaker 8 (13:13):
Talk to this guy, the one that those kids.
Speaker 12 (13:21):
He died abortion? Where do you publish?
Speaker 5 (13:26):
I publish all over the place, all over the internet.
Speaker 12 (13:28):
Where can we look for this?
Speaker 13 (13:30):
You can look for this on x elon musk platform.
I'm sure you have an X account.
Speaker 5 (13:35):
I don't look at X.
Speaker 10 (13:36):
I quit X when that bought it because it's like
a Nazi platform.
Speaker 5 (13:40):
It's a Nazi platform. Yeah, yeah, it certainly is. You
should check it out.
Speaker 14 (13:44):
I don't.
Speaker 5 (13:44):
I don't know that. I don't know how it's a
Nazi platform. I'll tell you how. You haven't. Have you
not been on there? I'm on there all the time.
Then you must know you must not pay very close.
What makes it nazi? Read it? Read it friendly? I
do read I read it for news. I just get
news there like I knew this protest place you get news.
I get news from everywhere.
Speaker 13 (14:04):
Actually tell us very right, I mean literally everywhere, Fox, CNN, MSNBC.
Speaker 5 (14:10):
I'm new, have I I've not been doing this very long. No,
So inform me.
Speaker 3 (14:16):
Just the fact that you don't realize that.
Speaker 12 (14:20):
The pro Nazi platform and right wing?
Speaker 5 (14:22):
So how is it pro nazi? Read it? Read it?
When you keep saying read it, but what does that mean.
Speaker 15 (14:30):
Nazi?
Speaker 13 (14:30):
You know Elon Musk has like five Jewish children, It's great,
So how is he a Nazi with Jewish children?
Speaker 5 (14:38):
You got to do your homework. He knows what what homework?
What have I not known? He doesn't What do you
not know? He doesn't care about who.
Speaker 12 (14:46):
His children, his Jewish children, He didn't care about that.
Speaker 13 (14:48):
He doesn't care about them. He just takes care of
him and hangs out with him and sees him.
Speaker 12 (14:52):
He doesn't even hang out with him. You know half
of these?
Speaker 11 (14:54):
Is that one for a human shield?
Speaker 3 (14:55):
Yeah?
Speaker 15 (14:56):
Exactly?
Speaker 12 (14:56):
Okay? And he also has a trans daughter.
Speaker 5 (14:58):
So when did you start hating Musk?
Speaker 12 (15:00):
He has a trans daughter, and he didn't recognize he
got into the treasury and had his minions hacked?
Speaker 5 (15:06):
Are what's been hacked?
Speaker 12 (15:10):
The treasury man?
Speaker 5 (15:11):
Okay, they must have no, No, nothing has been hacked.
Nothing has been hacked.
Speaker 11 (15:17):
Tell us more about that.
Speaker 5 (15:18):
Okay, would you like me to tell you?
Speaker 13 (15:21):
So the Department of Government Efficiency is going into all
the different funding data. They're going into all of it,
and they're finding hundreds of billions of fraud is what
they're finding.
Speaker 5 (15:30):
The found they found no fraud, No fraud. So how
so how old? What's the average age for somebody to live?
Speaker 12 (15:35):
Well, you're talking about one hundred and fifty years.
Speaker 5 (15:37):
How do you even know about the fraud?
Speaker 12 (15:39):
That's not fraud, dude.
Speaker 13 (15:41):
So paying somebody that's one hundred and fifty years old
social Security isn't fraud?
Speaker 12 (15:45):
You know, Well they're not. You know, they're paying it.
Speaker 5 (15:47):
Because they're in the system. So what dose is doing
is fine. But release the actual data.
Speaker 13 (15:55):
It is every day there's literally a website.
Speaker 5 (15:59):
It's there's literally a dote line. You show me the
they are releasing the contracts. They literally show the contracts.
Speaker 1 (16:06):
He's saying, we found him, and they don't show any
other more reality television show and show the actual proof line.
Speaker 5 (16:13):
What's happening every day.
Speaker 13 (16:14):
Yeah, let's see, here's your data on social security, my dad,
here's here's a thousand of a thousand people above age twenty.
Speaker 5 (16:22):
Proof that's just a bunch of numbers.
Speaker 13 (16:24):
This is literally the social security data sheet. This is
literally the social security data sheet. We're paying over one
thousand people over age two hundred and twenty social security.
Speaker 5 (16:34):
So do you know anybody over two hundred years old?
Speaker 16 (16:37):
Sir?
Speaker 12 (16:37):
Oh no, that's not true.
Speaker 5 (16:39):
Though, it's not true. See that's what it is. It's
just not true. Oh, what's wrong with Project twenty twenty five?
Speaker 16 (16:46):
Everything?
Speaker 5 (16:47):
Can you name one thing?
Speaker 6 (16:48):
Yes?
Speaker 12 (16:49):
For starters, the anti rit state of stamps?
Speaker 5 (16:53):
Who's anti immigrant?
Speaker 1 (16:56):
Pump?
Speaker 5 (16:58):
Wait? How is Trump anti immigrant? What are you doing
out here? Why does he hate that vote? That's your dad?
So no, are you sure? Because it looks like their litter? Okay,
(17:23):
well it's not want it?
Speaker 3 (17:26):
No?
Speaker 16 (17:27):
Sure?
Speaker 5 (17:28):
Come on, man, so you just littered on?
Speaker 15 (17:31):
Sure?
Speaker 10 (17:32):
You?
Speaker 5 (17:33):
What about Musk? What don't you like about Musk? He's
also a sug and he's he's not an elected So
what about all the people that aren't elected? There? Should
we get rid of anybody who's not elected?
Speaker 6 (17:45):
Word?
Speaker 5 (17:47):
What you don't like Trump?
Speaker 13 (17:51):
Well, he's uh president, that's maybe the greatest president in
modern American history.
Speaker 5 (17:56):
I do. Yeah, I'm sorry. Why are you sorry?
Speaker 12 (18:01):
I'm shiny for you?
Speaker 5 (18:02):
Why?
Speaker 12 (18:03):
Because you're deluded?
Speaker 5 (18:05):
How am I to do you know that?
Speaker 3 (18:08):
No?
Speaker 5 (18:09):
I don't want an awful person for president.
Speaker 11 (18:11):
Anybody else need an awful person for president?
Speaker 15 (18:13):
So what's off someone that's rude and nasty and has
no redeeming qualities?
Speaker 5 (18:19):
Only anybody?
Speaker 2 (18:22):
You?
Speaker 5 (18:22):
Only Rosie o'donald? Who's racist? Ignore that? Who do you
think is racist? Why? Yeah? Well what makes him racist?
What has he done with racist? Can you tell me
(18:48):
what you don't like about dose?
Speaker 7 (18:53):
Yeah?
Speaker 5 (18:53):
Yeah, you can do better than that. There you go,
get a good one.
Speaker 3 (18:56):
There you go, There you go.
Speaker 5 (18:58):
That's much better.
Speaker 13 (19:05):
You can't ignore me. It's impossible to ignore me. I So,
so this is what happens in colts. Actually, you have
you have people that tell you who you can and
can't talk to, and they'll try to stop you from
talking to somebody that has a different idea. Yeah, I
(19:27):
will have a very unifying message everybody else.
Speaker 5 (19:30):
That's why I hope that she would give me the
maga one.
Speaker 13 (19:32):
I promise my message will be very unified. Hold on
a second, Hold on a Secondly, I've had people begging
cow bells that here for the last hour.
Speaker 4 (19:47):
Everybody, you can't wine.
Speaker 5 (19:51):
I asked that you wait in line.
Speaker 13 (19:53):
You give what it's like to deal with discrimination and hate,
be a conservative at.
Speaker 15 (19:57):
A Let's get down to business.
Speaker 5 (20:13):
Did they said us.
Speaker 11 (20:15):
When we asked, okaya, okay?
Speaker 3 (20:39):
Anuary?
Speaker 9 (20:42):
When exactly when they came from the.
Speaker 5 (20:50):
Red And Nobody's coming for.
Speaker 13 (20:54):
Nobody's coming Protagram movie, nobody is coming for the moving
Nobody's coming for them.
Speaker 15 (21:03):
It's the world as we know that Michael ends of
the world thoughts.
Speaker 1 (21:17):
Sometimes I hear random things by random people who I
don't even know, but they take the time to record
themselves and they post it. And you know, I don't
think that every great opinion is necessarily held by a
(21:37):
famous person. Sometimes a person can share their story and that's.
Speaker 12 (21:42):
Just as valid, just as valid.
Speaker 1 (21:46):
I came across a video friend of mine senter to
me actually, and it's by a woman who calls herself
m K Online. Don't know her, she's kind of cute,
and she's making a pasta is while she's explaining how
multiculturalism has been imposed on white people, and white people
(22:11):
have tolerated it, and how stupid it is. This is
the kind of thing that the only thing the left
can do in response to this six point thirty six
from More. The only thing they can do is claim racism.
But there's nothing racist. You claim racism when you don't
have a response. Frankly, but she's sitting there making the pasta,
(22:33):
and I actually thought she made some really really good points.
Speaker 16 (22:39):
Now, riddle me this. You live under white supremacy, but
somehow white people are only nine percent of the global population,
Yet within all of our ancestral homelands we have mass
and regulated immigration, news and entertainment media that demonizes us
twenty four to sevens, along with academic institutions and governments
that clearly hate us as well. We also now have
(22:59):
countries full of people that either a insists we have
no culture or b insists that we have our culture
flown in since we don't have enough and we need
to use the people of no culture's money.
Speaker 8 (23:09):
By the way, they need to fund all this.
Speaker 10 (23:10):
What do you know?
Speaker 16 (23:11):
This is not only happening to only Western countries that
are majority people of European descent, but it is happening
to every single one. We all need more multiculturalism and
no other countries do. And because we live under white supremacy,
the US, which was ninety percent people of European descent
for hundreds of years, has gone down to fifty seven
percent today. Not only that, but a mainstream talking point
(23:33):
is abolishing whiteness. So basically, we broaden a bunch of
people that think that all the racial tension can't be
solved until white people are just eliminated. That's how we
fix it. Not they go back to their own homelands
if they don't like being around white people. No, no,
it's our fault. Truly, is some white privilege to have
your populations declining birth rates not only tracked but celebrated
by special interest groups and individuals. You get to make
(23:56):
sure we're protecting ourselves against white supremacy because white people
having power in majority white countries is the biggest threat
to democracy ever. We need less representation in majority white
countries and white people because white people gave non white
people citizenship, and as a thank you, the first thing
they did was remove white people from their own institutions.
(24:17):
They then designated us as a cultural evil. And predirected
our resources towards their own in group, No one demands Peruvians, Nigerians, Arabs,
or Koreans to forcefully open up their borders and coexist
with everyone. Also, feel free to let me know which
other countries allow dual citizens to control their treasury, borders,
(24:37):
health standards, things of that nature.
Speaker 5 (24:40):
I don't know.
Speaker 16 (24:40):
I just think some might call a country that's run
by foreigners on behalf of foreign interests that is also
very clearly hostile to the native population. Some might call
that an occupied country. And just to state the obvious,
your government should not turn on you in.
Speaker 4 (24:55):
Favor of foreigners.
Speaker 16 (24:57):
This quite literally would have caused a massive government overhaul
in quite literally any.
Speaker 4 (25:01):
Other time period.
Speaker 16 (25:02):
Okay, since we normalized it, I guess there's really nothing
wrong with us being completely.
Speaker 1 (25:08):
Leaving aside her delivery because she's a young woman, probably
in her early twenties. Pretty sound judgment, and there is
validity in each person's opinion because it is their opinion,
even if they're white. This fella posts under the name
Captain Common Sense USA and seems pretty common sensical to me.
Speaker 14 (25:31):
So apparently Tom Hanks was on SNL dressed up as
a MAGA supporter and was afraid to shake a black
man's hand because apparently MAGA is racist. The fact that
y'all can't read the room is absolutely insane at this point,
y'all continue to move forward with this played out and
delusional narrative that all of MAGA is racist. White supremacy
(25:55):
is the biggest threat to America, and MAGA is full
of white supremacist and if you're anything but a white person,
you're obviously brainwashed. I'm talking about y'all are quick to
say they don't even like you. And that's totally hilarious
coming from y'all because I have literally seen white people
as shamed to be white and put black people on
(26:17):
a pedestal and say things like, oh, I wish I
was black, I wish I was like you, white people
suck while being white, Like what listen to me? If
MAGA was racist, they absolutely suck at being racist. MAGA
is filled with some of the most supportive, genuine nice
people I have ever met in my life. And I'm
(26:38):
not just talking about white people. I'm talking about black people,
Hispanic people, Asian people, Indian people, you name it. Y'all
have to understand that this kind of stuff right here
is why y'all lost the election in the first place.
Knock it off.
Speaker 1 (26:54):
You're right, it really upsets white liberals When blacks say
things like that, it really really upsets them. I can't
keep up with the left. Here is Trevor Noah and
Princeton University professor Ruha Benjamin. She's Jewish, he's black from
South Africa, advocating for the reintroduction of racial segregation in
(27:17):
American schools. We can't possibly keep up with all the
things they want done. They want blacks here and blacks there,
and then they did no, don't want no, no, no, no,
they want their own what look, God, just make up
your mind.
Speaker 17 (27:30):
I found myself wondering, and this applies to America and
then maybe it'll go to other places in a different
way because Finland ties in. Do you think that integration
was the right move? Like I And now I'm separating
two things because I know in American people like well,
of course, I mean there were people were there was racism,
(27:50):
and there's segregation, and I go, yeah, no, no, no, I'm
separating them. Let's separate someone being oppressed and someone not
being able to get a job and someone not being
able to get a bank law. Let's take all of
those the negative things away, because I'll put myself up
personally and say, I think whether we're talking about gifted
kids who are anomalous, let's say to the norm, whether
(28:10):
we're talking about and I mean anything, anything that does
not fit into a category. I think the part of
the reason Finland is able to do it is because
have you been to Finland. I've been to Finland. You
know who's in Finland, Finish people.
Speaker 5 (28:27):
That's it.
Speaker 17 (28:28):
That's it. And because they're all finished, there's an idea
of like, no, we all head in the same direction.
We all know what our actions mean. And that's a
really powerful thing I've learned in communicating with other people.
When I'm in a room with anyone where we start
to tie together multiple things. So if I'm in a
room with black people already, there's like an implicit trust
(28:49):
because we know what certain actions, words and vibes mean.
And then you're in a room with another African ah already.
Now even if you shout at me, I know what
you're shout means, the same way in Italian knows what
an Italian shout means. Yeah, right, I know it's I'm
prefacing it with a luck because it's a loaded question. Yes,
but I would love to know if you think integration
(29:11):
was the right solution, maybe on the other side of
you know what, America of civil rights.
Speaker 5 (29:18):
Yeah, I know.
Speaker 1 (29:19):
I read a stat that said one in four Swedish
women will be raped as sexual assaults increase five hundred percent.
Forty two years after the Swedish Parliament unanimously decided to
change the homogeneous Sweden into multicultural country, rapes are up
one four hundred and seventy two percent and violent crime
(29:42):
is up three hundred percent. So yeah, so
Speaker 12 (29:47):
Well, yeah,