Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:04):
It's that time time time time lucking load. So Michael
Arry Show is on the air.
Speaker 2 (00:19):
Right looking into mic and we gotta feed a beard.
I don't plan to shave, and it's good thing, but
I just gotta see I'm doing all right? Will got
make me support its I'm beating Ridyton.
Speaker 1 (00:38):
That's a drug.
Speaker 2 (00:41):
It's neither drink the drug and snood just doing a market.
Speaker 1 (00:47):
It started off strong this morning on news over the
weekend of a US China deal in Switzerland. I believe
that would have been on Saturday, may have been yesterday.
I don't consume news as actively as I do during
(01:07):
the week on the weekend, but a trade delegation from
the Trump administration, led by Scott Bessen, met with the
Chinese who were very, very eager to do a deal.
The Chinese economy is in trouble right now and they
need a deal. They can talk tough. That's I think
that's hard for some people to understand. How the fact
(01:31):
that someone is talking tough does not mean they are
from a position of strength. It is a position of
weakness trying to strengthen their position. But Donald Trump understands
this game and he plays it as well as anybody.
So in any case, that deal being done set off
the stock market this morning. I haven't checked in a
(01:54):
few minutes, but it was rather active and on the upswing.
I am not a financial advisor, I don't play one
on the radio, and I'm not your financial advisor. But
I believe this is a purely personal opinion, based on conversations,
reading intuition, that we're going to see our economy catch fire,
(02:19):
just as it was in January of twenty twenty when
everything unraveled so that they could defeat Trump that year.
I think that you're going to see the American economy
catch fire. And what that means is, well, the factors
that are going to matter is the FAD can't keep
the rates this high forever, and they're signaling that they're
(02:41):
not going to drop the rates now, and I'm okay
with that. I'd rather see a rate cut, but I'm
okay with that because a rate cut in the fall
or even early spring means economic activity is at its
peak in November of next year, which is when we'll
have the midterms. But i'd like to see it now,
(03:03):
Aside from the political schedule calendar, I'd like to see
it now because that's one of the things holding back
a resurgence of the American economy. I would like to
see that. But whether we see that or not, that
is going to occasion some inflation. There's no doubt about that.
When money is more available than things, it creates the
(03:26):
auction effect of a free market, drives up prices. But
I think that's a trade off we're willing to make
right now to increase economic activity that is home buying,
furniture buying, jewelry buying, and everything else that is financed
and everything else that is occasioned by borrowing money. I
(03:49):
think that you're going to see some of these deals
start to be made, and they're going to start rolling in.
I'll take it face value. The discussion that the Trump
administration has made through Scott Bessen or maybe it was
Howard Letnik, of twenty deals that will be announced in
short order, and I think those deals are going to
(04:09):
be favorable to the United States. There's no question in
my mind about that. I don't know how many of
those countries will deliver on what they're promising. You know,
if you if you promise to build a twenty billion
dollar facility in the United States, in order to get
short term concessions so that you can get back to
trading with us in the way you were under Biden
in previous presidents, where you're ripping us off. Yeah, I
(04:31):
do think there are there are some some con men,
hustler shuisters that will do that, and I think that's
absolutely going to happen. But I think some of it
will come through, and I think you'll start seeing ground
being broken for facilities here, even if they're only a
distribution facility here with some level of manufacturing, because the
(04:52):
game is if we require American manufacturing products be manufactured
in the United States in order to be sold within
the United State, dates, the game is going to be
that you basically assemble here. So you take a massive
warehouse space, you bring all the products in from wherever
you're already making it, China, South Korea, you name it.
(05:13):
You bring them all here and you assemble them here,
and you call that an American maid. And you know, look,
wherever you stand on whether that complies or not and
whether we should be doing that's that's your own. But
that I think that's what's going to happen. I think
that's what we're going to start seeing a lot of
which is going to create overnight an accelerated amount of
(05:36):
economic activity. A ton of economic activity is going to occur,
and you're going to see that, and some people aren't
gonna like it because you're going to start seeing foreign
owned businesses coming into the United States and some Americans
are going to be uncomfortable with that. Well, you can't
have it both ways. Either you want the manufacturing hero
(05:57):
you don't. You're not all. You're not going to get
all native originated economic activity in this country. You're just
not because your American companies are not building manufacturing and
distribution facilities over the last twenty years, they're moving them abroad.
(06:19):
As mad as we are about this fact, it's these
American companies who have chosen to offshore their manufacturing. And
there's no doubt about that. All the way down to
when Bush and Clinton what the point of NAFTA was.
Instead of the being done in China, that would be
(06:39):
done in Mexico, it was not that it would be
done in the United States, which is why Union members
to this day hate George H. W. Bush over the
offshoring or moving of American manufacturing. And almost none of
that is still there today. I read an article not
(07:02):
so long ago about I think it was Whirlpool or
ken More or Kitchen Aid or they were going to
manufacture refrigerators and washing machines, but the Mexican infrastructure was
so bad. There are things you take for granted that
you don't have in infrastructure in a community that lacking,
(07:26):
that you can't manufacture, and that whole I would argue
that whole thing was an absolute and utter bust. What
a weekend, What a weekend. Graduations. Lots of folks sitting
me your graduation pictures of your kiddos graduating from college.
Chad's son Kai had his last Little League game this weekend.
(07:46):
They sent Chad, as the assistant coach, out to do
one final mound visit, just to tell him to, you know,
kind of take it in. Lots of weddings, folks telling
me that your kiddos are getting It's the season into
school year, getting ready for the summer. Now, Christy, he's
eating right now.
Speaker 3 (08:04):
He can't be right, Michael Mary, Sir, please do not
call him a fat pig.
Speaker 1 (08:08):
See I'm trying to be nice. Don't call him a
fat pig.
Speaker 4 (08:19):
I saw her on the television news one day.
Speaker 1 (08:22):
She had a quiet voice, but a lot to say
about Vaccinea's vacccus. She spoke in her whispered through her
cop and masked. She's a judge with a grudge.
Speaker 5 (08:37):
If you have to ask, if her name is Leena
l I n Aileen.
Speaker 4 (08:45):
Lely lyle No, she had a little bomb hair cut
to go with her napoleonic com like tight sweater.
Speaker 5 (09:01):
Oh my lead, clearly l.
Speaker 4 (09:08):
She seems so harmless, set in there with her ry
little smile and.
Speaker 1 (09:13):
Telepromp there clean clearly plea. Well, I got in it.
Speaker 6 (09:31):
I was safe in in Try this hot little Mexican American.
Speaker 5 (09:36):
I imagine so hard.
Speaker 4 (09:37):
That a packet so sweet would be a pint of
bull of jacent treats.
Speaker 1 (09:42):
Well, I'm not the world's most absurd and guy.
Speaker 5 (09:45):
But as I listened to her talk, well I almost
fell poor lean.
Speaker 7 (09:51):
Cleanly ell, I.
Speaker 1 (09:56):
Coming dn't day. It's back from the s nuthouse. She's
so let's see, So she's committed crimes for which she
was in No. I guess they never actually indicted her,
did they. It was her top three people. The thought
(10:16):
was eventually one of them would turn on her. Well,
then she cheated in the last election. Everybody knows that.
Then she went away for a while. We don't worry,
Rodney said, I'm in charge. We know you've been in charge. No, no,
I'm really in charge.
Speaker 3 (10:32):
Now.
Speaker 1 (10:34):
She's at the crazy Farm. Okay wine. And then she
came back and then they did a media tour of
see you can recover from being crazy. Well crazy, it's crazy.
The little girl child is having another meltdown. So Harris
(10:55):
County Sheriff's deputies were coming before county commissioners to ask
for pay raise. Now, whether you think they should get
a pay raise or not, that doesn't matter. What matters
is you should be listening to what they have to say.
This is the law you have the constables, but this
is the law enforcement division of the county. That's kind
(11:16):
of important, right. And then she gets in a heated
exchange with Tom Ramsey about this because she left the
room while the sheriff's deputy representative was speaking before them.
Here's the exchange.
Speaker 8 (11:30):
Well, thanks got heated today at Harris County Commissioner's court
while discussing pay raises for Harris County shriff depanties. Fox
twenty six is Randy Wallace joining us live from the
Sheriff's office downtown.
Speaker 1 (11:39):
Yeah, that's right now.
Speaker 9 (11:40):
The starting salary for a Harris County Sheriff's deputy is
about fifty seven thousand, an HPD officer around sixty four thousand.
That will jump to eighty one thousand this July. The
sheriff says the discrepancy in pay will make it hard
to keep ranks staffed. Precinct three Precinc three Commissioner Tom
Ramsey and County Judge Lena Hedongo got a little emotional
(12:04):
today when discussing the deputy pay raise.
Speaker 3 (12:08):
I'm gonna be focused this year on statutory responsibility. The
good news is what y'all do is statutory. Not everything
that's in the budget is statutory.
Speaker 5 (12:19):
It's very small.
Speaker 3 (12:20):
Would you not interrupt me, please, I didn't interrupt you
when you were making some outlandish statements. I will continue
my conversation without you interrupting me.
Speaker 1 (12:29):
Period.
Speaker 8 (12:30):
You don't need to raise your voks. You're exaggerating. Those
are tens five million, not one hundreds.
Speaker 3 (12:34):
I would say statutory response for e liesus what we
will focus on. I'll try to explain that to the
judge what that means and I.
Speaker 8 (12:41):
Want you us to see this headline fucks twenty six.
Harris County Commissioners Cagle and Ramsey boycott twenty twenty three
budget vote. Okay, this the st New York Times. This
is focks twenty six news. That was in twenty twenty two.
They boycotted the budget vote, which meant we didn't have money.
We rescheduled the meeting like four or five times. They
never showed up. Okay, that's politics, and it's purest of course,
(13:04):
I want pay raisis for law enforcement. It'll help us
have better people. And you know what, nobody's gonna be
upset about pay rasis for law enforcement. Iris could be
happy about it. So but the challenges are you there
when it's time to ask for the money. And I
was there along with my colleagues today, So just know
that as people say that they want to support you
(13:26):
and they want this, and then they want that, Okay,
how are you gonna pay for it? So that's where
we are we are, and of course the city taking
the money doesn't help, but that's that's not the fundamental
peace behind what's happening. And as I said, I'm unpatial
because of the Pope, so apologize.
Speaker 9 (13:41):
Yeah, well, yes, everyone obviously wants to see the deputies
get a pay raise.
Speaker 1 (13:46):
The big question where will the money come from?
Speaker 9 (13:48):
Harris Kenny currently faces a one and thirty million dollars
budget deficit reporting live in the Sheriff's office Randy Wallace,
Fox twenty.
Speaker 1 (13:58):
Six News, and you hear what she said. Yes, I'm
emotional right now because of the Pope, and as.
Speaker 10 (14:07):
I sat up, i'munutional because of the Pope.
Speaker 1 (14:10):
I've been upset right now.
Speaker 8 (14:12):
I know I don't.
Speaker 1 (14:13):
I've been upset the foe. I've cussed out my Democratic colleagues,
I've used foul language, I've been in the crazy farm.
Speaker 3 (14:20):
And all that.
Speaker 1 (14:21):
But right now you have to understand it's I'm very
emotional over the Pope, and.
Speaker 10 (14:25):
As I set up, I'm inuncuctional because of the Pope.
Speaker 1 (14:28):
You are the chief executive officer of a county bigger
than some states, and you can't conduct the meeting because
you're emotional over the Pope.
Speaker 10 (14:45):
And as I set up, I'm eunuctional because of the Pope.
Speaker 1 (14:48):
These are the kinds of people you cannot allow into
public office. This is an unstabled, immature stupid person.
Speaker 10 (15:04):
And as I set up, I'm because of the Pope.
Speaker 1 (15:06):
What oh Ramon said, that's his new that's gonna be
his new excuse.
Speaker 10 (15:12):
And as I set up, I'm because of the Pope.
Speaker 1 (15:16):
Oh so, every time you screw up, that's gonna be
your excuse.
Speaker 10 (15:18):
And as I set up, because of the Pope?
Speaker 11 (15:21):
Is it?
Speaker 1 (15:21):
Every time I call for audio and he doesn't have it,
that's gonna because.
Speaker 10 (15:24):
Of the Pope?
Speaker 1 (15:26):
Okay, all right, I needed a laugh to get me
out of that. I did, so that's why you're taking
a nap.
Speaker 10 (15:31):
And as I set up, I'm because of the Pope.
Speaker 1 (15:35):
I needed that right there. Oh so that's when Ramos,
that's when he misspells the name of every caller that
calls into the show.
Speaker 10 (15:43):
And as I set up, I'm sure because of the Pope.
Speaker 1 (15:46):
Last week we had somebody on the line named Clyde.
He spelled at c l I d E.
Speaker 10 (15:51):
And as I set up, I'm because of the Pope.
And as I set up, I'm sure because of the Pope.
(16:13):
I don't know what she's threatened you with. She can
kill with a smile, she can wound with her eyes.
Speaker 5 (16:19):
I don't know what she can ruin.
Speaker 6 (16:21):
Yourr faith with her casual lies, and she only reveals
what she wants you to see. She hides like a child,
but she's always a woman.
Speaker 1 (16:36):
To me, is a factor.
Speaker 8 (16:38):
Equity as a thief factor, This is a Pearl Harbor
moment of our generation.
Speaker 11 (16:44):
She can ask for the truth, but liba belief.
Speaker 5 (16:47):
Equity is a factor, equity as a chief factor. You
give her as long as this free.
Speaker 6 (16:54):
Yeah, she steals like a thief, but she's always a woman.
Speaker 10 (16:58):
And to me, I don't know what she's threatened you with.
Speaker 5 (17:05):
She takes care of She can wait if she wants.
Speaker 1 (17:13):
She's ahead of her time.
Speaker 5 (17:18):
I think it is funny. Actually, I think it's funny.
Speaker 10 (17:21):
And she never gives off.
Speaker 2 (17:26):
She never gives.
Speaker 5 (17:27):
I don't know what she's threatened you with.
Speaker 2 (17:29):
She just changes.
Speaker 5 (17:32):
This is a Pearl Harbor moment of our generation.
Speaker 6 (17:35):
You more than the god loving and she'll carelessly cut
you and laugh while you're clean. But you bring out
the best and the worst.
Speaker 1 (17:47):
You can be, fascinator.
Speaker 6 (17:49):
Blame it all on yourself, because she's always a woman.
Speaker 1 (17:53):
To me, I don't know what she's threatened with.
Speaker 10 (18:03):
And as I said, up, I'm emotional because and as
I said, up, I'm emotional because of the Pope.
Speaker 1 (18:14):
Mm mm hmmm. Clip number seven ramon Lena whining about
a deputy rolling his eyes at her. She doesn't want
anybody rolling their eyes.
Speaker 7 (18:28):
It's very upsetting to her. All these men, all these
men are never showing her enough respect. This is my party,
y'all have to show me respect.
Speaker 1 (18:41):
We hear that we have the support, but we're not
seeing it.
Speaker 12 (18:46):
Sir.
Speaker 4 (18:47):
I hear you.
Speaker 10 (18:47):
I appreciate you.
Speaker 8 (18:49):
I you have the support, but you cannot you. Everyone
has the support to give money away. I see, I
see you rolling your eyes back there. So why don't
you come and tell me? Ask me questions? Come down, sir? Okay,
because I really want to have this dialogue with you guys.
There's there's okay, So there's there's two sides to this.
(19:10):
Let me preface first by saying, how much we all
appreciate you guys.
Speaker 5 (19:14):
Okay. We know the work you do, We know the
danger of the work that you do.
Speaker 8 (19:18):
Trust me, If you asked our voters, would you like
to give law enforcement a raise?
Speaker 5 (19:24):
Of course they want that.
Speaker 8 (19:26):
Everybody wants that, Okay, But if you ask the voters,
would you like to have your taxes increase, They're not
going to want that.
Speaker 10 (19:36):
And then, and as I said, I'm emotional because of
the pope.
Speaker 1 (19:41):
Well, what about the fact that you didn't make that
argument for the universal basic income? Remember that? And you
didn't make that argument for a full time administrator to
do the job that every other county county judge has done,
which is run the county. What about all the vices
(20:01):
that went into having a county administrator and all of
these other offices for DEI, for all of these grants
you gave, for all of these stupid programs you gave.
What about that you don't have to raise taxes for that?
Well you did? You absolutely did.
Speaker 8 (20:25):
You know?
Speaker 1 (20:27):
There are law enforcement officers who have voted for Lena Adalgo.
I don't know if it's one or a thousand. They
should be ashamed of themselves. If people would actually this
is my naive neighbor theory. People can't believe how bad
she is, how bad Rodney is, how bad what the
county is doing is they can't believe it's actually happening.
(20:50):
That's what we're up against. We're up against that people
can't believe that this could actually ever be this bad,
but it is. Longtime Houston photo journalist Shari Pressley was
hit head on by a drunk driver who was released
on a low bond for drunk driving two weeks prior. Now,
(21:14):
I'm going to argue that a drunk driving offense does
not require the highest bond. That happens. People get into
a lot of people, a lot of people. I probably
know fifty people who've had a DWI. Personally, I bet
I know two hundred, but I could probably rattle off fifty. Okay,
(21:36):
mistake made, all right, take an uber whatever, So I
don't blame the low bond for the first DWI. But
now he crashes into Shari Pressley while he's on the
bond for driving drunk, and Democrat Judge Colleen Guido releases
(21:59):
him on a bond of just twenty five thousand dollars,
which means for twenty five for a bond of twenty
five thousand means he pays twenty five hundred, and he's
back out driving drunk again, killing somebody this time. That's
the problem, the first time drunk driving. All right, here's
(22:19):
your bond, Okay, go through your program. Pay the little
scam of blowing into the machine and do all this,
hopefully you'll learn your lesson. But when two weeks later,
while out on bond, you hit somebody head on, drunk
as a skunk, almost killer, and they go, well, let's
give you another little bond again, you think Colleen Godo
(22:43):
had done that. If it had been Colleen Gatto, she
ran into I genuinely wish, as uncomfortable as it makes
people want to say it, I genuinely wish that the
Democrats were one hundred percent of the victims of these crimes,
because then at least they would pay at ten. We're
not wishing crime on you, We just wish that you
(23:04):
would stop supporting people who bring this crime upon all
of us, because some of these people just can't seem
to bring themselves to do that. They just can't seem
to bring Here's the story from Fox twenty six. Disclosure.
Speaker 9 (23:14):
I know Sherry Presley as to most journalists who have
covered Houston for decades.
Speaker 12 (23:20):
In nineteen eighty seven, I went to work for Channel two,
the KPRCTV from nineteen eighty seven to two thousand and eight.
Speaker 1 (23:28):
After that, I went to work for.
Speaker 12 (23:29):
The City of Houston for HTV, which is formerly called
the Municipal Channel.
Speaker 9 (23:34):
On April twelfth, Edward Hernandez is charged with DWR yep.
Speaker 3 (23:38):
He gets out under Channel order one hundred dollars bond
and he's back to the community.
Speaker 9 (23:43):
Saturday, April twenty sixth, Sherry was driving on the hov
land of their golf freeway when police say Edward Hernandez
was driving the wrong way and it was a very.
Speaker 1 (23:53):
Very loud crash. It was a very loud bang. It
was a very very intensive hit.
Speaker 12 (23:59):
My driver door somehow was punched in and that metal
broke les femur and that's really painful.
Speaker 1 (24:08):
How many breaks do you have? Three total?
Speaker 9 (24:11):
Serry says the arresting officer told her something surprising about Hernandez.
Speaker 12 (24:16):
This guy is out on a bond from a dy last.
Speaker 1 (24:20):
Week or the week before, two weeks. I was stunned.
Speaker 9 (24:24):
The DA's office wanted his bonds said at fifty thousand dollars.
Speaker 1 (24:28):
Yeah, I mean, this is a serious offense. I mean, frankly,
Sherry Pressley, she's lucky to be alive.
Speaker 9 (24:34):
But three thirty seventh Judge Colleen Guido said Hernandez's bond
at just forty five grand.
Speaker 5 (24:40):
He was a freeman in no time.
Speaker 1 (24:43):
He's like he's got rewarded because Sherry didn't die.
Speaker 3 (24:47):
If Sherry had died, certainly it would have been resulting
in a more severe offense.
Speaker 8 (24:58):
I really listen to both sessions of your show every
day with.
Speaker 1 (25:04):
Michael Mary, you have the most pleasant voice. Collaboration was strong,
(25:27):
it will be in the days to come.
Speaker 5 (25:32):
We promised the Spanish media go after you.
Speaker 8 (25:34):
So let me just repeat my remerch in Spanish, Mayor,
there's an impact in all four counties, and so whenever
we have an impact on one county, the commissioner joins.
But all four counties have been impacted, and I don't
feel comfortable.
Speaker 5 (25:53):
With giving special treatment.
Speaker 8 (25:55):
Everybody was notified that you, as a mayor and I,
as a county judge, are speaking of happy for them
to join. But at least if you want to hurt
us speak, let me do the duty to the Spanish transitions.
Speaker 1 (26:08):
I'm glad I made the approval.
Speaker 10 (26:09):
This this is a disaster.
Speaker 8 (26:12):
This is not the time, okay, so and it's fine
your time. You have to think about the timing. It's
(26:34):
no coincidence this is happening in the middle of my
re election campaign that in and of itself should make
very clear that.
Speaker 5 (26:42):
It's politically motivated.
Speaker 8 (26:43):
That it's meant to destruct, to destroy, to harm my campaign,
to harm, to distract me.
Speaker 5 (26:52):
That is I think enough evidence and is very clear
as to what the motive is.
Speaker 8 (26:57):
Some of us are wrapped around the little finger a
woman who I don't know what the she's threatened.
Speaker 7 (27:02):
He was.
Speaker 8 (27:17):
She had almost ten million dollars in the bank, and
she had a US senator, and she had a furniture salesman.
Speaker 5 (27:28):
He can't win them all, can't win.
Speaker 2 (27:30):
All the butt.
Speaker 1 (27:36):
Stanley Dotson, forty one years old, has been charged with
attempted kidnapping of a thirteen year old girl from a
North Harris County apartment. Let's look at who Stanley Dotson
is and his journey, his people like to say, before
(27:58):
arriving at the moment where he tried to kidnap a
thirteen year old girl. In twenty twenty two, mister Dodson
was arrested for indecent exposure, but the charge was later dismissed.
Before attempting to kidnap this thirteen year old girl, he
(28:20):
was arrested not one time, not two, not three, four, five, six, seven, eight,
nine ten. Starting to get the point, this is a
bad guy, not eleven, twelve, thirteen, fourteen, fifteen. Wow, he
can read himself his own rights. He already knows. He
knows the whole system sixteen, seventeen eighteen, keep going nineteen twenty.
(28:41):
You've been arrested twenty times. It doesn't really matter what
you've done. Just throw him in the cage. This is
a rabid dog. He can't be helped twenty one, twenty two,
twenty three. You think I'm kidding. This guy cannot be
allowed out in society. So here's the deal. It's like
a chess game. In order for this pawn to be
removed from the board, a decent person's going to have
(29:05):
to be removed. He's gonna have to kill somebody, and
then we can't be sure. He's gonna have to kill somebody,
and Andy CON's gonna have to make a Crime Stoppers
still out of it. Randy Wallas is gonna have to
do a TV show about it. And then maybe at
the end of it all we trade one for one
because all these other victims, they know this guy's still
out there twenty four to twenty five, twenty six times,
(29:27):
he's arrested with multiple convictions, and now he tried to
kidnap a thirteen year old girl. Now what happens after
he rapes her? What do you think he would have
done after he raped her? He's not leaving her alive
to tell who he is. Story from maybec thirteen.
Speaker 11 (29:43):
A man fiddling with his pants outside the Bellevite apartments
on Ella Boulevard, Saturday, A horrified woman records from her window.
Not long after Arisconti, sheriff's deputy, say he attacked a
thirteen year old girl.
Speaker 1 (29:55):
Yes, he on the with then on Miley.
Speaker 11 (29:57):
Her father, Pedro Basilta tells us she was writing her
election scooter with a nine year old friend, but a
man grabs her, knocking her to the ground.
Speaker 1 (30:04):
Yeah, Sultan says. When his daughter gets up, she's.
Speaker 11 (30:07):
Grabbed again, but manages to pull free and takes off running.
Her escape short lived when the suspect catches up and
knocks her down again. The little girl saved only when
another man steps outside for a smoke, spooking the suspect
and sending him running.
Speaker 1 (30:24):
Had no adult's been present.
Speaker 11 (30:26):
His dad fears it might have been the last he'd
seen of his daughter. Tuesday, apartment manager's alerted residence, and
the next day an anonymous tipster tells deputies who they're
looking for. Forty one year old Stanley Dotson, a man
court record show has been arrested at least twenty six times,
starting when he was just thirteen, the same age as
the girl. Deputy say he tried to kidnap everything from
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robbery to assault, even indecent exposure. This morning, the Violent
Offenders Unit moved in, arresting Dotson at his apartment on
Air Decks, less than a mile from the would be
kidnapping and ver says deputies had to break down his
door to get him out.
Speaker 5 (31:03):
Let me content.
Speaker 11 (31:04):
To this dad, it comes as a huge relief, one
less danger for his daughter and the other children at
the Bellevite apartments.
Speaker 1 (31:18):
And it continues, and it continues, and it will continue.
It won't stop. It simply won't stop. Harris Country Republican
Party did not even field a candidate in every judicial race,
so the chances of defeating some of these judges was
exactly zero. And I can't throw that entirely on the
(31:42):
Harris County Republican Party. Somebody out there's got to pick
up the phone call Harris County Republican Party and say, hey,
I want to get on the ballot.
Speaker 4 (31:50):
What do I do?
Speaker 1 (31:53):
Citizen involvement in solving the problems of this country requires,
first and foremost the people. Stop waiting on someone to
come and knock on your door and say would you
be the superman to solve all the problems? People will ema, hey,
I want to do something. Okay, what do I do?
Everything all the time, everywhere. I don't know. What is
(32:14):
your skill set? Take over the school board? Run for office?
I don't know. I can't. There is no blueprint. Nobody
told me. Here's how you run for city council. Here's
how you raise money, Here's how you file the reports,
here's where you show up when you're elected. You got
to figure it out. And we need more good people
(32:36):
to do that, especially our school boards, but our judicial seats.
Speaker 3 (32:42):
All.
Speaker 1 (32:42):
There are a lot of lawyers who are kind of
burned out when practicing law, and this would be an
opportunity to breathe some life, some energy, some vigor into
a law practice by being a public official and being
able to help the community by putting these bad guys away.
(33:03):
I mean, they really are. They're killing us. Between the
illegal aliens and the thugs and the Democrat judges who
allow it. They are killing us one by one. That's
just the reality. Second, stop markets up though two and
a half soon at points right now, just news of
(33:24):
that China dealer. Come on India Pakistan ceasefire. Won't underestimate
that a lot of things come out of India.