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March 24, 2025 34 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time, time, time, time, luck and load.

Speaker 2 (00:11):
So Michael Verie Show is on the air.

Speaker 3 (00:14):
You've heard Turn the Beat Around by Vicki, Sue Robinson,
Heaven on the Seventh Floor, La Freak by Chic Fly,
Robin Fly By, the Silver Connection, and now number five
on the station where the seventies survived, KB I l Y.

Speaker 4 (00:37):
America is on the cosp of a new golden age.

Speaker 5 (00:40):
But we will have the courage to seize it.

Speaker 6 (00:44):
We're going to take it. We're going to make it
a current.

Speaker 5 (00:46):
I mean, we're going to bring this into a golden
age like never seen before.

Speaker 6 (00:51):
The win with every single facet.

Speaker 4 (00:54):
We're gonna win so much.

Speaker 7 (00:55):
You may even get tired of winning, and you'll say, please, please,
it's too much winning. We can't take it anymore, mister President,
It's too much.

Speaker 8 (01:06):
And I'll say, no.

Speaker 1 (01:06):
It isn't. We have to keep winning.

Speaker 8 (01:09):
We have to win more. We're gonna win more.

Speaker 7 (01:12):
We're gonna win so.

Speaker 2 (01:13):
Much understated, it's fun to state it.

Speaker 4 (01:39):
And we will restore and renovate our nations once great cities,
making them safe, clean and beautiful again.

Speaker 2 (01:46):
We are Americans.

Speaker 4 (01:48):
Ambition is our heritage, Greatness is our birthright. But as
long as our energies are spent fighting each other, our
destiny will remain out of reach.

Speaker 6 (02:00):
And that's not acceptable.

Speaker 4 (02:02):
We must instead take that energy and use it to
realize our country's true potential and write our own thrilling.

Speaker 5 (02:10):
Chapter of the American story.

Speaker 6 (02:12):
We can do it together. We will unite. We are
going to.

Speaker 4 (02:15):
Come together, and success will bring us together.

Speaker 2 (02:20):
It's fun spended book.

Speaker 4 (02:44):
The years of war, weakness, and chaos will be over.

Speaker 6 (02:48):
I don't have wars.

Speaker 5 (02:50):
I had no wars other than Isis, which I defeated,
but that was a war that was started.

Speaker 6 (02:54):
We had no wars. I could stop wars with a
telephone call.

Speaker 4 (02:58):
Just a few short days ago, my journey with you
nearly ended.

Speaker 6 (03:03):
We know that, and yet here we.

Speaker 4 (03:06):
Are tonight, all gathered together, talking.

Speaker 5 (03:08):
About the future, promise, and a total renewal of a
thing we love very much.

Speaker 6 (03:15):
It's called America. We live in a world of miracles.

Speaker 4 (03:19):
None of us knows God's plan or where life's adventure
will take us.

Speaker 9 (03:39):
The knives are out for Chuck Schummer.

Speaker 10 (03:43):
The far left has become more and more aggressive. They
no longer want a seat at the table of the
Democrat party.

Speaker 9 (03:54):
Now that they have weaseled their way in, they.

Speaker 10 (03:58):
Are pushing out the power structure. And the Democrats should
have seen it coming. But they needed boots on the ground.
They needed folks to riot. They needed the folks to
show up at rallies. They needed folks who were willing
to smash windows and burn tesselas. And that was useful

(04:21):
to them. That was the muscle that they needed. But
the problem is those folks don't want to be the
foot soldiers any longer. You see this in revolutions in
third world countries where the military will serve under the
direction of the dictator and the military will be used

(04:45):
to suppress revolution, and in time the military leader realizes, hey,
I have the power, not the dictator, and so they
topple the dictator. And then you see this cycle, this
vicious cycle, repeat itself again and again. Well, let's start

(05:09):
with the White House Press Secretary Carolyn Levitt with this
week's MAGA Minute.

Speaker 11 (05:15):
It was another very busy week here at the Trump
White House.

Speaker 2 (05:18):
Here are the facts.

Speaker 11 (05:20):
President Trump invoked the Alien Enemies Act to deport legal
migrant foreign terrorists and trend de Aragua.

Speaker 12 (05:27):
Members to El Salvador.

Speaker 11 (05:28):
President Trump also launched decisive and powerful military action against
houthy terrorist baces in Yemen. Companies like Boeing, Johnson and
Johnson and Navidia announced billions of dollars in new investments
in America, which will bring thousands of new jobs to
communities like yours across the country. President signs in executive

(05:48):
order aimed at dismantling the Department of Education after decades
of declining academic performance despite trillions of dollars being spent
on this federal agency. USA astronauts who were abandoned by
the Biden administration were finally brought home safely thanks to
President Trump and Elon Musk. President Trump also delivered on

(06:10):
his promise to release the JFK files with no redactions
for the American public's consumption, and President Trump became the
first sitting president in history to address a crypto conference
and last, but certainly not least, Egg prices have officially
fallen more than fifty percent since President Trump took office.
Gas prices have declined nationally for the fourth straight week

(06:33):
in a row, and we are on our way to
renewing the American dream. We are not tired of winning yet.
We'll see you for next week's Maga Minute.

Speaker 13 (06:42):
You know.

Speaker 10 (06:44):
That's such an important lesson everyone can learn. President Trump
is a master of messaging. So why does he have
to do why does he have to order that a
Maga minute be constantly created every week? Because he understands

(07:04):
that people that do what I do and people that
do what you do, activists, posters, srec chairman, precinct chairmen,
local elected officials in order to tell his story, He's
got to help us tell his story, because if he doesn't,

(07:24):
a story might not be told. So part of being
effective as a company, as a church, as an organization,
as a parent is setting the message and then reinforcing
the message. And you cannot take for granted that that's
being done if you don't do it. Some people get

(07:47):
tired of bragging on their company and what they're doing
and how they're doing it. They get tired of reminding,
let's say, their children, these are the value you. Sometimes
I'll say to the kids when I'm lecturings are we're
going to go and meet this person. Remember to remember
his name, look him in the eye, shake his hand.
I got it, dad, I don't let let let me

(08:09):
just say it. Because it's good to reinforce that Trump
is the master, the master of message.

Speaker 2 (08:23):
It's the Michael Barry shows to see you all the round, you.

Speaker 14 (08:46):
Good, loving all that.

Speaker 13 (08:50):
You do, A lot of you.

Speaker 10 (09:11):
Tim Waltz and Beto houror will be gathering in Houston
this Thursday, or what I call Beto and Gato. Tim
Waltz is now kind of the face of the party
along with h and Alexandria O Cassio Cortes. Well, let's
talk about his last few weeks. First, he's celebrated when
Tesla's stock value declined, saying on my phone, I don't

(09:33):
send you know this on the iPhone.

Speaker 2 (09:34):
They've got that little stock app.

Speaker 15 (09:36):
I added Tesla Tude to give me a little boost
during the.

Speaker 2 (09:38):
Day two twenty five and dropping.

Speaker 15 (09:44):
So and if you own one, if you own one,
we're not blaming you.

Speaker 8 (09:52):
You can you can do flock.

Speaker 9 (09:55):
Let me be very clear.

Speaker 10 (09:56):
You're rooting against a company that's American made, American workers,
American investors, American owner, American brand, and you're rooting for
their stock value to drop. Then they point out, oh,
your state's pension is invested in Tesla stock.

Speaker 9 (10:14):
So he had to crawfish.

Speaker 15 (10:16):
This guy bugs me in a way that is probably unhealthy.

Speaker 2 (10:19):
And but but.

Speaker 15 (10:26):
I have to be careful about being a smart ass.
I was making a joke. These people have no sense
of humor. They are the most literal people, most little people.
But my point was they're all mad and I, you know,
said something I didn't you know, probably shouldn't have about
a company.

Speaker 2 (10:42):
He is a agree a great So I make the case.

Speaker 15 (10:48):
I make the case they're all but hurt about the
Tesla thing, but they don't care the disrespect they have
shown to employees at the Minneapolis VA who care for
our veterans, and they fire them.

Speaker 8 (11:02):
They don't care.

Speaker 2 (11:05):
The conversation.

Speaker 10 (11:06):
So mister mister stolen valor now cares about the veterans
and he uses butt hurt in a way that makes
me think that he is and I don't mean that
his feelings are hurt. He was also a guest on
Gavin Newsom's podcast where he said he could just beat
up Republicans.

Speaker 16 (11:24):
You got to respect people you disagree with, even you
can't just dismiss people.

Speaker 6 (11:32):
Well, this take most of their ass.

Speaker 2 (11:34):
I do. I know I can, but I don't know
if we're going to fall into that place. Where we
want to.

Speaker 15 (11:40):
Okay, we challenge you to a do you know a
w w E fight here type.

Speaker 16 (11:44):
Of thing, but it is it's a natural reaction. I
think it's one of the reasons we're losing so many men.
And again it's multi ethnic. It's not just white men
we're losing them. We're losing them to these guys online.
We're losing the people that I'm bringing on this podcast
as well. It's why these are bad guys though these
are the guys, but they exist.

Speaker 9 (12:04):
He didn't count on the mayor of.

Speaker 10 (12:08):
The Big Boy Yeah, Tennessee Mayor Glenn Jacobs Cain a
world a WWE superstar, answering the call.

Speaker 2 (12:17):
Here's what he.

Speaker 8 (12:17):
Had to say.

Speaker 17 (12:18):
Glenn Jacobs, the Knox County mayor and folks, he knows
the thing of two about wrestling. In the WWE twenty
seven years he wrestled as Cain, the Undertaker's brother, and
he is a WWE Hall of Famer. Jacob's posting this saying,
everyone is always asking me if I have one last
match left. I think I've found my final victim, I

(12:41):
mean opponent. The mayor of Knox County, Glenn Jacobs, joins
us now here on Newsline. Great to see you, Mayor Jacobs,
thank you for having me on. You know, I think
Newson was really uncomfortable. I don't know Tim Waltz his
aspirations for twenty twenty eight.

Speaker 12 (12:59):
I mean, he he had trouble even.

Speaker 17 (13:00):
Shooting a gun and now he wants to take on
a cage match.

Speaker 6 (13:04):
Is he for real?

Speaker 18 (13:06):
I know he's not for real, and that's the issue.
I think there's a memo that's gone out among the
Democrat Party that we have to appear tough and we have.

Speaker 8 (13:14):
To appear masculine.

Speaker 18 (13:16):
That's a lot of the reason that Donald Trump has
been so successful. But you're not a character on TV.
You can't just change your personality. The reason I've been
successful is whether you like me or not, I am
who I am.

Speaker 8 (13:29):
I ain't going to change that. Same with Donald Trump.

Speaker 18 (13:32):
And apparently folks like Walls believe, oh, we just have
to talk tough, and everybody's going to suddenly believe that
we're a tough guy. And one other thing I'd like
to point out as well, if Donald Trump had.

Speaker 8 (13:43):
Said something like that in jest, obviously, but.

Speaker 18 (13:46):
If Donald Trump or say something like that, if I'd
said something like that. We would be excoriated. We're threatening people,
we're intimidating people. But it's perfectly fine for Tim Wats.

Speaker 8 (13:55):
To say so.

Speaker 9 (13:56):
True.

Speaker 10 (13:57):
I would like to see Tim Walsh accept Caine's challenge.
Now he's now his you know, Christian named Glenn Jacobs.
But I would like him to accept that because we'd
like to make the wrestling promo for the Big Bout,
I mean, Tim Walls versus Kane?

Speaker 9 (14:15):
How good would this be?

Speaker 19 (14:18):
All right, folks, if you're just joining us, we have
some huge new WWE superstar and Hall of Famer Kane
has just challenged Minnesota Governor Tim Walls to a match
at WrestleMania.

Speaker 2 (14:30):
In what will be the final of his career.

Speaker 20 (14:33):
Oh that's right, we're talking wrestle media. But wood Walls
even want to show face here? Would he show up?

Speaker 1 (14:43):
Oh?

Speaker 2 (14:44):
I don't believe it.

Speaker 14 (14:46):
All that music here he comes, it's all Timmy Wall.

Speaker 20 (14:52):
I don't believe it. I'd absolutely have seen it all.
Here he comes in his beak. Was he gridity here
blushing like a little school girl?

Speaker 2 (15:03):
Boy will believe in me?

Speaker 8 (15:05):
I believe it is.

Speaker 20 (15:12):
Timmy has no regard for men kite because he's waving
his jazz hands through the crowd all the way to
the ring.

Speaker 2 (15:22):
It's a ring.

Speaker 9 (15:24):
Well, let's send it on down to the ring and
see what old Timmy Walls has to say for himself. God,
oh what that's a longer walkome you think?

Speaker 14 (15:33):
All right, Caane, you said you wouldn't hear from me.
Well I'm right here, buckerooge, and I accept your little challenge,
and you're gonna rude the day because let me tell
you something, mister. You don't want to mess with this
old ball coach, just as my former players they'll tell
you roll that beautiful, vain foot.

Speaker 2 (15:55):
Man coach Walts. If we weren't hitting the whole.

Speaker 10 (15:57):
Hard, and I mean hitting that whole hard, he would
yere harder, and we've hit it hard.

Speaker 2 (16:02):
He say harder, and we hit it hard and he did.

Speaker 8 (16:04):
Well you know what I mean.

Speaker 14 (16:06):
Now, I know you're a big man, Caine, and I'm
gonna tell you something.

Speaker 9 (16:10):
I ain't a big man like you. For breakfast every morning.

Speaker 14 (16:14):
I'll be all over your budd at WrestleMania. It's gonna
be so bad the next day you'll be asking yourself
what is my butt? Then you're gonna remember oh yeah,
temmy wall, it's.

Speaker 19 (16:30):
You heard it here first, it's cane, it's walls. It's
under from down under my brun Australia WrestleMania.

Speaker 2 (16:40):
We'll see you there. The Michael Verry Shaw please clap, please,
please clap.

Speaker 1 (16:55):
High. He's do.

Speaker 13 (17:00):
This soon.

Speaker 1 (17:01):
To the Engine of Morning found this one song sings
about the woman's really new the nine before, but about.

Speaker 6 (17:22):
The way they.

Speaker 2 (17:25):
Were, say sixteen hours, there's.

Speaker 8 (17:29):
Nothing mustn't do.

Speaker 1 (17:32):
And you don't feel my slider says.

Speaker 20 (17:37):
My wife told me to be more in touch with
my feminine side, so I crashed the car.

Speaker 8 (17:50):
And then ignored her all day. For whatever reason.

Speaker 10 (17:55):
I read a meme this morning that said, fun fact,
women spend more time wondering what men are thinking then
men spend actually thinking. And it's true. It is amazing
to me how much time we men. I'll speak for

(18:15):
myself spend staring off into space. I will sometimes burn
fifteen minutes thinking to myself.

Speaker 2 (18:26):
You know.

Speaker 10 (18:27):
Ted Williams goes into the last game of the season
with a four h two batting average and his coach says.

Speaker 9 (18:37):
This will never be done again. You will be the
last guy to hit four hundred.

Speaker 10 (18:42):
Take the final game off and ride into the sunset
with a four hundred plus batting average for the season.

Speaker 9 (18:48):
That's one for the history books.

Speaker 10 (18:50):
And Ted Williams says, no, I'm going to play goes
out and what was he six for seven or I
mean just whatever was five or six ends up? I
think he bumps his batting average up to four h six.
It's not important. There'll be somebody that will even know
it's four or five mins. It doesn't matter. The point
is it's the kind of thing that I will sit

(19:13):
and think about for untold periods of time, and I
just don't think women's minds work that way.

Speaker 8 (19:21):
Yeah.

Speaker 10 (19:21):
Then he goes and vice Japanese loses a few seasons
of baseball, comes back, picks up where he left off.

Speaker 9 (19:28):
No big deal.

Speaker 10 (19:30):
But I will tell you the difference between men and
women are important. My wife is in India for ten
days visiting family, and so it's just me and Crockett.
My oldest son, Michael t is off at the University
of Texas, and so it's just me and Crockett. And
I got to tell you my mind does not work
the way her mind does. I don't think before I

(19:52):
go to bed at night. All right, what all has
to be done in the morning, Okay, George, she.

Speaker 9 (19:58):
Has to be fed.

Speaker 10 (20:00):
Crockett, he has to be awakened, you know, all the
things you have to go on. And I'm kind of
absent minded because I'm dreaming about conversations we're going to
have on the air. Whereas she's buttoned up, she's taking
care of this, She's taking care of this.

Speaker 9 (20:16):
What could go wrong? It was a dog need?

Speaker 10 (20:17):
What did the kids need? Was my husband need? We
are so very different. There is a nurse, an emergency
room nurse in Aurora, Colorado, named Faith Elie or Eli,
I'm not sure which one it is. She posted a
video on social media saying, if you are against the

(20:39):
mass deportations by Ice, you don't know what being a
victim of illegal immigration looks like. And it's very powerful audio.
I'm going to play it for you in the next segment.
It's a longer clip than we have historically played, but

(21:00):
I couldn't find a good spot to shorten it. It's
eight minutes long. But you know, I've come to understand
in life that we think we understand what a cops
day looks like, what a firefighter's day looks like, what
a plant workers look what an elementary school teacher's day

(21:21):
looks like, and certainly what a what an emergency room nurse.

Speaker 9 (21:26):
You know, you have an idea.

Speaker 10 (21:26):
Yeah, it's pretty bad, you know, people coming in they
as some injuries, but it's not until you see what
they've seen and you speak from experience as to what
happened and how it happened. You know, when I've lost
loved ones in the past. There's a is it Auden.

Speaker 13 (21:52):
W.

Speaker 9 (21:53):
H Auden who has the poem, and he's.

Speaker 10 (21:56):
Basically saying, you know, the person he loves the most
in the world has died. How can the clocks still tick?
How can people still go on with their lives? And
it's such an odd thing, you know, when someone you
love dies and you're your world stops and then for

(22:18):
whatever reason you you know, you stop at the grocery
store to get some flowers on the way to drop
off to someone or whatever, and you walk.

Speaker 9 (22:26):
In and people are just and you're thinking, don't y'all know.

Speaker 10 (22:31):
My beloved has died, my mother, my brother, my sister,
or my child, and they don't. Well, that's how I
kind of feel when when you get these Paul Revers
sounding the alarm as to y'all don't realize what illegal
immigration does because you're not in the emergency room when
people come in having been murdered, having been trafficked.

Speaker 2 (22:55):
You don't.

Speaker 10 (22:57):
You don't force yourself to confront what is happening. And
this is one of the many reasons we'll play that
in the next segment. CNN this is a CNN, not
a conservative, reporting that sixty three percent of Americans support
the deportation.

Speaker 9 (23:12):
Of illegal aliens. And then Laura Baron.

Speaker 10 (23:16):
Lopez continues with this leftist talking point of we.

Speaker 9 (23:19):
Don't know who these people are.

Speaker 2 (23:21):
That's the point.

Speaker 10 (23:23):
It doesn't take many of them to be murderers to
cause a real problem.

Speaker 8 (23:28):
But we don't know who they are.

Speaker 10 (23:31):
That's why we can't have them here. See, the problem
is the left's argument is, well, one hundred percent of
them aren't rapists and murderers.

Speaker 2 (23:40):
We didn't say they were.

Speaker 10 (23:42):
It doesn't take many of them to be rapists and
murderers until we have to say all of them have
to be kept out, even if you don't have any
respect for enforcing the laws. If the law is so bad,
preventing them from coming here we make six hundred and
seventy five thousand people into League citizens every year. Naturally,

(24:03):
that's a lot. It's more than the whole the rest
of the world. But if the law is so bad,
change the law. You can't change the law because the
law is popular. Just listen to this. Sixty three percent,
according to the latest Fox News Paul say that they
favor deporting those immigrants.

Speaker 2 (24:22):
So that's a pretty high number.

Speaker 21 (24:25):
Can you square that with what we just heard from
Priscilla's reporting. Yeah, I think that obviously the President has
kind of blanketed the airwaves, was saying that all of
these people deported to are criminals.

Speaker 9 (24:38):
And given the fact that we.

Speaker 21 (24:40):
Reporters like Priscilla I, we have very limited information to
who exactly has been deported. The government has not handed
over names. I know CBS got a hold of a
list of names, but that hasn't been provided to those
who are asking for who was actually deported. And there
is a difference between someone who came into the country
illegally versus someone who overstate their visa that's not a crime,

(25:02):
versus someone who has no criminal record, no criminal history.
And based on my reporting, based on clearly Priscilla's reporting.
There are some Venezuelan nationals whose family members, whose lawyers
say that they were deported, who have no criminal record,
who have no criminal history, that they legally applied for
asylum and we're trying to gain status where some of

(25:25):
them were in the middle of proceedings and then they
were deported.

Speaker 10 (25:36):
This audio coming up is disturbing. I'm gonna warn you
it's an emergency room nurse that tells some stories about
legal immigrants very show.

Speaker 2 (25:44):
If he doesn't say it, damn who will.

Speaker 10 (25:54):
This is the disturbing but necessary story of an emergency
room nurse in Aurora, Colorado talking about the real cost
of illegal immigration.

Speaker 22 (26:04):
I'm gonna say something controversial, but when has that ever
stopped be If your for you page looks anything like mine,
then I'm gonna assume you've seen a lot of the
stuff about the deportations that ICE is doing right now,
and I'm gonna assume if you're one of the people
that's against it, then you probably have never either been
a victim to what illegals in the country looks like

(26:28):
or you have never personally seen what that looks like.
Well I have, so for reference, I'm an eur nurse
and I work in Aurora, Colorado at a trauma center. Aurora,
Colorado has been on a lot of news stations as
of late because we have been a sanctuary city for

(26:50):
a lot of these immigrants, and it's done a lot
of things to our city, none of which have been good.
I'm gonna start there, so first and foremost, I'm gonna
take you back to twenty twenty, long before this was
a major issue, but one of the issues that started
in twenty twenty was the defunding of the police force.

(27:12):
So Aurora Colorado, their PD is severely, severely understaffed.

Speaker 12 (27:20):
I think right now. The last time I.

Speaker 22 (27:21):
Spoke to one of the officers at work then, is
that they have around like one hundred and thirty one
hundred and forty open positions.

Speaker 12 (27:27):
For just patrol officers. That's wild, Okay.

Speaker 22 (27:32):
The next thing I'm gonna talk about is when you
are the victim of a crime or the criminal can
committing the crime. If you don't get caught, you're gonna
end up in one place.

Speaker 12 (27:46):
That's the er. If you do get caught, you're gonna
end up in jail. That's the second place.

Speaker 22 (27:51):
So I'm just gonna kind of list off some of
the things that I have seen personally in the er
since I started working there in August of twenty twenty four.
I have seen a sixteen year old who was in
the face during a robbery gone wrong, and.

Speaker 12 (28:13):
Yeah, she died.

Speaker 22 (28:15):
Unfortunately, we were not able to save her. Her injury
was unsurvivable. That was due to illegal immigrants the gang
activity going on at the apartment complex that she lived.
I have seen a dollar store worker beat almost unrecognizable.

(28:38):
Uh yeah, because his store that he was working at
got robbed and he tried to defend.

Speaker 12 (28:42):
It and he lost.

Speaker 22 (28:46):
Obviously still alive, but had severe, severe injuries and wound
up back in the hospital several times. I was actually
a his nurse two times in a row a week
apart from when he got beat une recognizable to when
he came back to the hospital because of complications from
the facial and head trauma that he had experienced during

(29:06):
that I have seen assault victims of things that.

Speaker 12 (29:15):
Ryan with grape.

Speaker 22 (29:16):
I have seen assault victims from just illegal activity. I
have seen people dropped off by their friends in our
ambulance bay do the fentanyl overdoses. I have seen so
many car accidents. I can't even count how many. It's

(29:39):
like at least one a day, if not more. Because
these people come to our country and they don't know
our laws, just basic laws, like driving laws. And then
they get in a wreck. Oh and guess what a
Woripedia is so severely understaffed. When you get into a
wreck here in Colorado.

Speaker 12 (29:58):
They don't even immediately respond.

Speaker 22 (30:00):
No, almost always, the wreck happens, ems gets there, They
take the patients who need to be.

Speaker 12 (30:06):
Transported to the hospital to the hospital, then.

Speaker 22 (30:09):
We care for them, and then a couple hours later,
a couple accident investigation officers and sometimes the patrol officers
show up to talk to the patient to ask and
what happened. I had a patient the other day that
had severe trauma and a liver lac She was bleeding
internally and she had to try and explain to the

(30:31):
officer hours later what had happened because the guy that
hit her ran and fled the scene.

Speaker 12 (30:40):
Do you think they're ever gonna catch you? Chances are
slimmed to none, But they do know.

Speaker 22 (30:46):
It was a vehicle with license plates from Chihuahua, Mexico.
So I'm just gonna assume he's probably not here legally.
Let's see what else have I seen? Oh yeah, a
fifteen year old that got jumped by gang members. He
doesn't look fifteen. He looks much older than that, So

(31:07):
I men to assume they didn't realize he was fifteen
years old. Yeah, it with severe facial fractures. I'm gonna
assume if you don't have a problem with illegals being
in our country, then it's because you have never been
a victim of what it looks like when they are here.

Speaker 12 (31:24):
Well, I have seen it.

Speaker 22 (31:26):
I have seen the lives that's impacted, the lives of
that literally have been lost because of this, and the lives.

Speaker 12 (31:32):
That have been forever changed because of this. So I'm
gonna assume if.

Speaker 22 (31:35):
You're one of the people in downtown Denver protesting this,
waving the flag of whatever country it is, you don't
want these people to go back to, it's because you've.

Speaker 12 (31:42):
Never been a victim of the crimes that they're committing.
And I pray to God that you never are, or
that your.

Speaker 22 (31:48):
Family never is, because I'm constantly in fear of if
my mom or dad is driving downtown in Aurora, but
if they get hit by one of these people and
they have life all during injuries. It truly, I don't
think you guys understand Americans like myself. We're not protesting

(32:11):
ill legal immigration. We're processing illegal immigry immigration. Okay, because
I want the place where my son lives to be safe.
I don't want my son getting jumped when he's older
by a bunch of gang members. I don't want myself

(32:32):
getting assaulted by these people if I am at a
store that they happen to be robbing. Like, I don't
think you guys truly understand what the issues are. Like
we're not just deporting regular, everyday law abiding citizens. No,

(32:53):
they're specifically targeting violent criminals that have been crossing our
borders for a year now, if not more illegally, and
then just reaking havoc on our communities.

Speaker 12 (33:07):
And if you live in some little bubble where.

Speaker 22 (33:09):
You haven't been affected by this, then good for you.
I'm glad for you, but that's not the reality for
a lot of us. Also, these people that do come
to the hospital that are part of this group of people,
guess what, they're either not insured or somehow they've managed
to get Medicaid and they receive better treatment and care.

(33:34):
Then the people that are here legally or were born
here and just have for health care. That also blows
my mind. You could get treated better medically as an
illegal then you could as a natural born citizen in America,
and that's wild to me. So yeah, if you're someone

(33:55):
who has an issue with these deportations, then I would really,
really really like you to just take a moment and
think what it would be like if you were directly
impacted by the crimes that they've been kidding or your
family was, and why it's important that we now have
someone in charge who wants to make our country safe

(34:20):
for our children and for us, because as a mother,
that matters to me and it will always matter to me.
And it's time you all start giving a crap about
your American fellow citizens here and not all these random
people who literally could not care less about you or

(34:42):
the country that they're in.
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