Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Well trust arrangement syndrome is real and evidently there is
no known cure for it as far as we can tell,
and the latest person to be infected with it is
Shade Perkins. Uh. Formerly on the Houston Food Bank board
you know, some some sort of food group for Houston
(00:21):
that you know. Anyway, she was a mayoral appointe, not
of the current mayor. She's no longer a part of
that board, thank goodness. Uh. But you may recall she
had a little something to say about the Texas floods
and all those white kids that got killed.
Speaker 2 (00:37):
I know, I'm probably gonna get canceled for this, but
Camp Mystic is a white's only girls Christian camp. They
don't even have a token Asian, they don't have a
token black person. It is a all white, white only
conservative Christian camp. If you ain't white, you ain't right,
(00:58):
you ain't getting in, you ain't good only period. And
I think that context needs to be said in this.
Speaker 1 (01:07):
Matter, does it really? She also identified as being in
East Texas, so I don't know if she's a from
here or come here, but geography is obviously in our
strong suit. Greg Travis joins, a former Republican city councilman
from the City of Houston, Greg, I don't know how
you follow up somebody like that. I mean, it wouldn't
(01:27):
do any good to explain to them the error of
their ways, because it wouldn't change anything for them, would it.
Speaker 3 (01:34):
You know, you'd like to think that's just a one off,
that that's the only person out there that's like that. Unfortunately,
there's a lot more. I mean, she just showed her ignorance.
This isn't about race. This is about innocent people perishing
in a natural disaster. Is terrible, and your thought, and
my first thought, in most normal people's first thought wasn't
(01:56):
about race. It wasn't about politics. It was about a
fellow Americans who need help. And that's the normal response.
And there's a lot of abnormal people out there, and
I don't know how they're proliferating, but they are, and
it's getting worse and worse. We never had this during Harvey.
We all stepped up when Harvey happened. We all stepped
(02:19):
up during nine to eleven. Everybody cared about everybody because
we're fellow Americans. And this has just gotten out of control.
Speaker 1 (02:26):
You know, when I first heard her say it I
was thinking Greg that maybe she's been studying at the
Jasmine Crockett School of Public Relations. Maybe she's just trying
to make a name for herself, which I think is
most of what Jasmine Crockett does is an act, trying
to make a name for herself, and unfortunate it's highly effective.
Speaker 3 (02:43):
Well, Jasmine Crockett actually does her act for people like this.
These are her voters. These are people who think like this,
who vote for Jasmine Crockett, and that's again horrendous. It's
terrible that we've come to this. I mean, I don't
know how anybody says I did not know these people
were white, Black, Asian, Hispanic. I did not know. All
I knew was that little eight to nine year old
(03:05):
girls were missing, and that tore my heart apart. And
I just don't understand why somebody would go there and
make it a point. I mean, I don't care if
a Christian or not Christian. They're people, and you know,
there's somebody's daughters and of course these aren't going. It's
not just the little girls that died there. There's adults
that died, and they were still somebody's son or daughter
or mother or father, and you know, not to think
(03:29):
in those terms is just it's not, it's outrageous.
Speaker 1 (03:33):
I guess you have to get to a point, and unfortunately,
there are a lot of people that have got to
this point in the prisi of left where you look
at people who are conservatives and you don't consider them
people anymore. Yeah, we must, we must be to these people,
we must be in animate objects. That that's all the
way you can talk about somebody that way, especially after
a tragedy like this.
Speaker 3 (03:54):
Well, these are the same people that during COVID were
wanting the unvaccinated to starve to death, couldn't go to grocery,
couldn't leave their house. They wanted you to lose your job,
They wanted to put you in prison. Remember, they kept
thinking that you're evil if you decided that maybe the
vaccination wasn't proper for you. And these are the same
people out here doing this that were doing that. And
(04:16):
it's not Honestly, I do judge people by that. I
judge by how they react to this because those aren't
my friends, and those aren't my people. I hang out
with everybody that I know is caring, and I hang
out with him for a reason, and if you're not,
and if you're one of those people that wants to
sit there and put people in prison and starve them
(04:36):
because they didn't get vaccinated, or you wished evil upon
somebody because they're white. I'm shaking my head right now.
You know, it's just even in now. We're talking a
week later, or you know, five days later, and I
still can't get it out of my head. And there's
that doctor, doctor Christina Props, the pediatrician. Oh my god,
(04:58):
does she treat her patient differently based upon their political views?
I don't treat When I was a city council and
everybod knew I was conservative. When people needed water during
the freeze, I got them water, and I don't care
what they needed. I got it. I didn't ask their
political views. I didn't ask that they voted for me.
I didn't ask any of that. All I knew is
they needed water. And that's the key you have to have.
(05:19):
I'm not sure about this doctor. I think this doctor
might have sat there and treat your patients differently based
upon their political vias.
Speaker 1 (05:24):
Maybe I'll tell you what. I wish we could find
a way to just distance ourselves from these people. But
I think it's importantly know who they are and where
they are so we can keep our distance and not
pay them any further attention. Greg, thank you so much,
appreciate your time for Republican City Councilmen from Houston. Greg
Travis seven twenty eight