Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time, time, time, time, luck and load. So
Michael Very Show is on the air. Go for it.
You ain't got no job.
Speaker 2 (00:20):
You're young and you got your hail. What do you
want with the job?
Speaker 1 (00:29):
I believe we drove around all day and there's not
a single job in this towne there is nothing, not
a zecond. Yeah, unless you want to work forty hours
a week.
Speaker 2 (00:38):
Really shit, quit that same job? Man, Hey, Man, I
wish I could man stuff I equipment.
Speaker 1 (00:43):
The whole place would fall apart without Man, I'm gonna
need it there, man.
Speaker 3 (00:46):
Responsibility is a heavy responsibility.
Speaker 1 (00:48):
Man, I don't like my job, and I don't think
I'm gonna go anymore.
Speaker 2 (00:53):
He's not gonna go?
Speaker 1 (00:54):
Yeah, won't you get fired? I don't know, but I
really don't like it, and I'm not gonna go. There's
a woman anchoring on Fox right now who looks like
she's Ai. You see it. I think they're putting filters
on the screen or something. It doesn't look like a
(01:14):
real person, you know. That's the look now, that pixie
look that they're going for. She's the only non blonde
that I've seen all morning, and she really does look
like a computer. Animation. It's going to happen. This might
just be the day. If you have a four to
(01:36):
oh one K or any sort of stock portfolio, you
might want to take a moment and check it out
right now because you probably made some money today. If
you didn't make some money today, email me and I
will send you to my financial advisor, because you should
be making money today. Jerome Powell gave a speech in
Jackson Hole and it is suggest it is being interpreted
(01:59):
by the market that we're going to see a rate cut.
And I'm telling you, when this rate cut happens, all
hell is going to break loose. It is going to
be you go over to Max right now, to Gallery Furniture,
and there's probably two or three people ready to help
(02:19):
you and buy your furniture. When that rate cut hits,
you're going to go in there and it's gonna hey,
can somebody help me over here? Because it is going
to be. Cars are going to be flying off the
lone star Chevy Lot, Furniture is going to be flying
out of gallery furniture. Houses are going to be selling
(02:40):
our mortgage companies are going to come back to sponsoring
the show. You don't hear mortgage ads. You notice that
there's no mortgages to write. The only thing that's being
written right now is refi. And the only reason somebody
is refining is they need to pull some cash out
or kind of one off situations. The days of the
(03:04):
you know, two and three eighths mortgage and people were
sitting on a nine percent I had listeners who would
email me, I don't want to refinance. Keep telling everybody refinance.
I don't read finance because then you got to pay
expenses when you refinance. All right, well, how much do
(03:24):
you still owe that one hundred? Okay, how long have
you owned the house? Then we'd go through the whole thing.
I said, well, this is how much you can say.
But you know what, I don't give a damn. I
don't get a commission off of you. Just keep floating
along with your stupid interest rate because you don't want
to give somebody a few bucks to get in a
better instrument. Okay, fine, and then poo poo, poo poo
(03:48):
poo poop bear went that interest rate and it got
back up. And you know you you notice names, especially
cantankerous grumpy people, because you can't wait until the day
that you can do the I told you so, dance
on them and they come back. Oh well, I'm not
refinance now. Good luck Gary Lacamo, who went on our
(04:13):
Palm Beach trip. Right, Cracker Barrel is the new Loubies.
They can't convince kids to eat there, which means their
parents to eat there. Go on all the consumers. All
the consumers are old. When one dies, they cannot be replaced.
They can't convince kids to eat there, which means their parents.
(04:35):
I think what he means is because the kids won't
eat there, the parents won't eat there. So I made
a statement a few years ago that Loubi's is for
old people. I don't like Loubies, and lubis is for
old people, and I don't like Loubies, something to that effect.
It was like five points, I don't like Louis Lubis's
for old people. Lubies isn't any good. I don't like
(04:57):
Louis Lewis for I got emails from people saying, Michael,
I'm twenty four years old, I love Loubies, and I
got a surprisingly high number. So I get home and
I tell my wife and she said, your kids love Loubies.
Michael tea and Crockett Mike Loubies. She said, yeah, if
(05:21):
you're traveling or you have a meeting and we eat
out and we're not with you, we go to Loubies.
Why why do you do that? Why would you do that?
There is nothing wrong with Loubies. I think in the
United king Kingdom they refer to such food as swill,
(05:42):
but they have prohibited it from being sold to port
now I mean, yeah, to pigs. There is nothing wrong
with Loubies. If you don't like salt, pepper, garlic or
anything else. If you if you just want a commodity,
he did by steam over a water and some iced tea,
(06:08):
and and and jello. If if you and there's nothing
wrong with this. You know, if you've lost all your teeth,
you can't get them replaced, or you know, you're my
dad who loves jello. You know there are people like
if if you're just a person that thinks to themselves.
You know, there's four million, two hundred and thirty eight
thousand desserts from Canole's to cake to you name it.
(06:32):
But what I want, what I want is just uh,
just some some sugar water so I can think about
Bill Cosby some sugar water in a packet, and I
want it to be in little squares. And when I
when I when I, when I shake the bowl, I
wanted to jiggle a little bit. That's what I want
for dessert today. Well, we got the Italian cream cake
(06:54):
over here. Nope, I want I want to go where
I can get because see, you can't get good jello
anywhere else? Are you gonna get good jell o? Good
jello hard to find these days? All Right, when I'm
making a list of who I've managed to piss off today,
somebody said you pissed off. You managed to piss off
Cracker Barrel fans and the Bill Miller fans in one segment,
(07:14):
And I said, I think you're repeating yourself. At least
there is not like it's two. The truth of the
matter is nobody likes Cracker Barrel. They don't. They think
they do. There are a lot of things that we
think we do. We have to hold on to things
that give us a good memory or that we kind
(07:35):
of define our So I like Crackerber. Sir, y'all going fancies,
I'm going Cracker Brow. You have been to Cracker Brow
in ten years? I like it though do you do you?
What do you get there? What do you get? What
does the felon, illegal alien or high school kid that
makes the food? What do they serve you? What slop
(07:56):
do they serve you? What dish do they have that
is identifiable? I like gul for breakfast. Who can screw
up breakfast? You know what? You don't have to tell
people you like you just like waffle house, there's a corporation,
simple too. They don't try to get Kitchie all that here,
it is waffle house. We'll give about six hundred square feet.
(08:18):
We're gonna put about four hundred people in there. You're
gonna love it, and us doing the rog Michael.
Speaker 2 (08:30):
Gets it down like the Eastern Did.
Speaker 1 (08:32):
Joe go to the cafeteria when you were a kid,
We had a Whitts Cafeteria in Orange and after church
we'd go. It was over on eighty seven in the
Northgate shopping center and it was in the vortex right there.
And many many a time did we eat it to
Whitts Cafeteria? And then Beaumont had a Piccadilly. They had
(08:56):
Piccadilly and Beaumont and then what was the other tay
the one that's still good. I'll go in there and
crush today Clevebland Cafeteria if you'll pay, I'll go to
Cleveland right now. That Greek can make some food like
you would not believe. I still have not figured out
how the Greeks are such good restaurant owners. And the
(09:19):
funniest thing, they don't do Greek restaurants, none of them.
They all do this cafe style restaurant. I don't know
where this comes from. By the way, one of my
favorite Greeks in the whole world, not just in Houston
or Texas, Spiro Jy Pappas turned ninety this past week,
(09:42):
turned ninety. I called him, what's today Friday? I called
him on Tuesday or Wednesday to wish him a happy birthday,
and he was sounding chipper and normally grumpy. If you
know Jimmy Pappas, his son, Jimmy's ten times grumpier. Spiro's
not always that grumpy, but he's I think Jimmy got
a little bit of it from there, and then he
(10:03):
just he expanded the family trade. It became really grumpy.
But Spiro, who I adore, I called wish from half
birthday and I said, Spireau what's a man doing his
ninetieth birthday? And he said, well, as you know, I
haven't been feeling good. I've had all these health problems.
But my guysk my trainer's coming. He's coming in an
hour and a half. He's going to be here. I said, Oh,
(10:26):
that's so exciting. Yeah, yeah, it's a highlight of my day.
Well I didn't tell Petrow this, but Petrew said years ago, Michael,
you have to understand when we go into people's homes,
A lot of these people he just a woman just
this morning signed up seventy nine years old and she's
(10:47):
gonna have knee surgery next week and they're starting her
upper body training two days later. But she wanted to
get the She wanted to get her deal done signed
and get started with her training regimen so that when
she woke up from her surgery she knew she was
going to be training. Because she said, if I don't
(11:08):
sign it before the surgery, a month will go by
of just trying to heal, and then I'll lose the
you know, I got it. It's hard to get off,
you know, off off what's the phrase high center? It's
hard to get you know, going get started create a
new habit anyway. So that's what she was doing. But
Petros said, you know, you got a ross for a
lot of the people. They don't get out much anymore,
(11:31):
the older portion of our they don't get out much anymore.
So somebody coming into their house who's young and fit
and nice, coming in. Hello, mister peppers, how are you
doing today? Well, I mean okay, well that's good. And
you know they go into these old people's houses, you know, Hello,
(11:52):
mister Smith, I'm happy to be here. Good to see.
How are you feeling well? I hadn't pooped the water? Okay,
that's good. Well, let's let's get started on these dumbbells.
Let's get some of that blood flowing. And ten minutes
in that person is you know, they're not running a
marathon or competing against lee Lebroda, but they're getting the
blood flowing and they're accomplishing something and they're being told
(12:14):
that's it. Let's do one, all right, one more. Old
people need that ramon, they need it. Let's go to
the phone line. Let's go to John. Is that the
same John? It's been sound like you just smoked forty
cigarettes at one Have you seen that deal in China.
They got a cigarette factory and these people have to
(12:36):
try each cigarette to make sure the filters are working.
And so these guys smoke like a thousand a day,
but they don't really smoke it. They just tug it
and make sure that the filter and the different mechanisms
are working. And then they got another guy. He's on
one of those sites vine or TikTok or one of those,
and it's a gatling gun of cigarettes. And so he
set the record for most cigarettes smoked in a minute.
(12:58):
And he just puts his mouth in there and that
thing turned gatling GUNNL cigarettes from them. You didn't expect
to ever hear that on the show. This had been
a doozy. This one here, we got them all round up. Uh, John,
you're on the Michael Show.
Speaker 3 (13:14):
The program, Sir, I guess I met John you're talking about? Yes, sir, Yes, yeah,
you got it. You got it wrong. On Cracker Barrel.
It was the original BUCkies. The reason you didn't go
there for a restaurant evening out was because they were
the in between place. But each place told the history
of the surrounding area. They had candy confections. It was
(13:37):
a place you went during Christmas or Thanksgiving travel and
everybody looked forward to it. It became a part of
the memory. And they sold outfits like swim suits in
the summer, and it was a Southern thing. And I
mean they were all up and down, I ten everywhere.
But when you're on a trip, that was where you went,
you know, and it was it was just it was
(13:57):
a different place and you could get on it, so
you could get anything from biscuits and gravy to anything.
Speaker 1 (14:04):
Yeah, you're talking on that. How long have Well?
Speaker 2 (14:08):
I think I guess I don't want to see them
go away, But if they're going to make a change,
I'd like them to change back to the original, go
back to what.
Speaker 1 (14:16):
It was, right. I mean, no, and I get it.
I think it's a fascinating study. But you don't really
there much anymore, either.
Speaker 2 (14:23):
Do you. Well I would if they would change their menu,
but I don't need it. Red lobster and a lot
of other exactly exactly, because it's just order off the
order off the refrigerator.
Speaker 1 (14:35):
That's exactly. You know that that is a perfect analogy
that that what we're doing. We used to they used
to talk about this in radio. People with Black people
would say, they listen to you know, magic one oh
two or whatever. You know, twenty four hours a day,
seven days a week. You're voting. You're not you're not answering.
So people are voting for cracker barrel. They want cracker
(14:58):
barrel to be something, because it's in importing that cracker
barrel be there. Right, They stood by while all the
Confederate monuments were torn down because they didn't have the
balls to stand up and say, why are we tearing
down the monuments of people who believed they were defending
their state and their people against a northern aggressor. So
people sat by, they watched that, they watched their people
(15:20):
be called racist. They watch all this. So what cracker
barrel is, let's call it what it is. Cracker barrel
is a holdout of old Southern pride, regional pride in
a cuisine, and all of those things. And so people
like to know that cracker barrel's there, and then when
they drive they see it and they wave at it
and they go, oh, it's great, and they'll tell people
(15:41):
about cracker brew and they'll be cracker barrel jokes. Leahn
Morgan will tell about cracker barrel and they'll talk about, yeah,
when you come to the South, you're gonna eat Cracker
Brew and everybody Cracker Barrel is in Cracker Barrel that
but nobody goes there, and that's the whole reason. That's
the whole reason that they're changing everything. Nobody goes there,
and the people who own it hate you. And so
(16:02):
the combination of the two is that people are sad
that Cracker Bear is going away, but they're not. It's
like the Blockbuster stores. Well, they're going to close the
last block, but ah, man, I remember I used to
go to that block. Boy, I hate that. Golly, I
hate that. I always say, how's the message been to
block But twenty years? Uh, twinkies, I hate the twinkies
(16:23):
are going away? Boy, I used to love how's missus Hanloing?
Speaker 3 (16:27):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (16:27):
I don't know, thirty years sorry, Michael. I've noticed of
this this new little game we're playing as Republicans are
elected officials because everybody in the era of Trump wants
to have some big old thing that they promise. And
(16:49):
so the latest is property taxes. Okay, I'm all yours.
What would you like me to pay attention to you about? Today?
Property taxes are evil. I agree. It's a horrible form
of taxation. If you pay property taxes, you don't actually
(17:10):
own your home. You just rent it from the government,
because even when you pay off your home, you still
have to pay your property taxes. I agree. Kevin Williamson
said that to me twenty five years ago when he
was writing for the National Review, and I thought it
was brilliant. I've said it as often as I could since. Then. Next,
property taxes, we must do away with them. They are horrible.
(17:32):
I agree. Let's do that all in favor of everybody.
In favor. Nobody wants property taxes, right, we won't to
have property taxes. Okay, Well, in the state of taxes.
That's how we fund our government. Don't have property taxes
(17:52):
and don't raise money. Now, what what happens? Now? What
state function can you not live without? There aren't many.
There are not many, hardly any. Actually, what local function
(18:14):
can you not live without? Well, Michael, the schools. A
lot of people don't send their kids to public schools anymore.
People that send their kids to private schools are paying
for your public school and their private school. People at
homeschool are paying for your schools that they won't even
send their kid to even if it's free, technically it's
not free. They've paid poverty taxes. They don't want to
(18:36):
send their kids to school because the schools are such crap.
They're teaching crap that they've they've allowed bad people in there.
They don't want to, they don't want and it's a
waste of time, a lot. There's dysfunction and inefficiency in
the school system and it's so bad you can't root
it out now, So they don't. They they're paying for
(18:57):
a state service that they don't use. So now what
happens if you do away with the public schools. Well, Michaeol,
I like to go on Friday nights, and you know,
we like to. We got the little cushioned seats and
we carry them with us. We got our whole thing.
We wear the school colors, and we've got our whole thing.
And I've got a hat that says I went to
(19:18):
that high school mysel and we go and we always
sit in the same place and we get our chairs out,
we get all settled in and were sent in and
we washed the cheerleaders and washed the game. And that's okay.
So you need a sports team to root for. Yes,
in your community, that represents your community and the students
(19:39):
more or less live in your community. Yes, I think
we could do that for pennies on the dollar. We
could do that. We don't need a school for that.
What else? What else do we need a school? Well?
What are those kids gonna do if they don't if
they don't have school to go to, Well, those kids
(20:02):
will just be running the roads. You'll have kids terrorizing us.
So if you don't have schools.
Speaker 4 (20:14):
In the city of Houston, how I don't know, unthinking
can you be when you close down city pools, the
meager opportunity and recreation that a child has in an inner.
Speaker 1 (20:28):
City area or maybe a rural area.
Speaker 4 (20:31):
Summer pools totally closed down, So I guess what they're
supposed and parks, so what they're supposed to do besides.
Speaker 1 (20:39):
Having one.
Speaker 4 (20:41):
Person that can monitor the pool, you just have them
running the streets. What sentence does that make?
Speaker 1 (20:48):
Oh? So, what you're saying is that the summer pool
is like what Michael Savage used to make the jokes
about the Friday Night Basketball League. What you're saying is
that there's a certain element in our society that we
have to dress up state institutions so that we can
(21:10):
send them there for prison instead of another prison. But
we feel better about ourselves. Is that what we're doing,
Because that's what we're doing, right, Because if they don't
if they don't have a job, they're gonna mug us.
If they don't have a school, they're gonna mug us.
(21:31):
If they don't have a summer pool, they're gonna mug us.
Speaker 4 (21:34):
When does the youth take up a gun, They take
it up when they don't have a summer job.
Speaker 1 (21:41):
I got news. We got bigger problems in property taxes.
We have gone to a Rube Goldberg construct. We have
built a whole cradle to grave institutional system to keep
some people from mugging us. And the money we pay
to do it, we do it. We've got a head
(22:03):
start school, public school, and we got more public school
and more public school. They're eighteen. What can we do now, Well,
let's make a really expensive public school. Oh okay, yeah,
I'm really expensive. Yeah, And then in that school we'll
teach them how evil this country is that has been
feeding and clothing them their entire lives. And then we'll
(22:25):
really piss them off, real good and we'll give them
all the money they need to have organizations where they
can protest and stuff. Well, this is great, and then
what will we do when we finish that? What happens
when at some point they stop going to that school?
So everybody says we got to do away with the
property taxes property I agree, I agree, but you're not
going to cut these state expenditures. And by state I
(22:48):
mean non private, I don't all mean state of Texas.
That can be city, county, regional, so the traditional political
science reference to state. So what's going to happen? Now,
who's going to pay for all the expenses that you
currently are running that you're using property taxes for? We
don't worry about that. Just keep promising, promising me you'll
(23:09):
cut You're gonna eliminate property taxes when you have no
intention to do it, you have none, but keep saying
that clickbait. Yep, Yeah, that's uh, that's called engagement for me.
Speaker 2 (23:21):
Do more of that?
Speaker 1 (23:22):
Yes, yes, you did that, you go you eliminate them
property taxes? What a bunch of bunk, What an insult
to our intelligence? And all the while steady finding ways
to spend more money. All right, So do a wear
the property tax. Now what you're gonna have a tax?
(23:43):
Right in the state of taxes. We don't want an
income tax. An income tax, much like a property tax,
punishes you based on something that you well. At least
the good news Colorado has a high income tax but
very low property tax. So what a people do They
work in Texas no income tax and retire in Colorado
(24:08):
very low property tax, like tiny low property tax because
you're not making any income at that point. That's what
when we started in Portland that we had listeners in
Vancouver and they live in Vancouver and work in Portland
because it was a property it was a tax issue
that lived just across the river. So if you're going
to do it with property taxes, you have to show
(24:29):
me what tax you're going to use at that point.
Consumption tax? Why a consumption tax? If you don't want
to pay taxes or you're having a rough time, don't
buy anything. If you're doing well and making money, you
buy things. Oh, that's a regressive tax. I hate that
phrase more than anything. That's a regressive tax. Anybody who
says regressive tax is trying to make you hate high performers.
(24:57):
You know, I hate text messages, but I got a
tex during the break from Gary P. Nun, So I
just want to give you a heads up December tenth,
which is a Wednesday at the Heights Theater my eightieth
birthday party. We'll make sure you can come. But what
if I can't? You going to reschedule it. We got
(25:17):
to go to that room. Remember he did his seventieth
that's at RCC and he opened for Charlie Pride. What
a gracious, gracious thing. I love Gary P. Nun love
that man. Think he's fantastic. Eighty years Can you imagine
eighty and you're still out there driving around the state,
singing your songs, laughing at people's jokes and drinking red
(25:39):
wine afterwards. We'd always get good red wine for him. Oh,
by the way, I had some of doctor Dukeman's. I
had his fancy word here. I don't know what this
thing is called Agli and Nico or something. Yeah, Agli
and Nico, he said, said, he said, what'd you think
of the wine last night? And I said it was
very good, not that I know the difference between good
(26:02):
and bad wine. And he said, Aglianico always gets better
with more aging. If you say so.
Speaker 2 (26:10):
Doc.
Speaker 1 (26:11):
Anyway, my friend is a wine snob, but not really
know why snob. He just loves wine and they have
He and his wife Lisa have a winery in Driftwood
outside of Austin, and they've won a lot of awards
and it. I've had it before, but I decided that
it's going to be my family our family wine, because
(26:34):
I like to support my friend. And it turned out
everybody loved it. It was absolutely fantastic. It's spelled dukeman
d u c h M. A N Corabas carries it
on the menu. There are some restaurants around town. It's
a really good wine without being a really expensive wine.
Now I'm giving wine suggestions, but I'm not saying I'm
(26:55):
a wine expert by any stretch. I like what I
like and it's good. Big Jeff Keane that Trailer Will
and Frame tells me that Simos Simo is a Greek
owned diner, original owner for decades. So many great comfort
(27:15):
foods that rotate, great price. Simos Simo apostrophe s on.
Shepherd says it's near Trailer Will and Frame. What are
they eighty two to twenty two? Is that their address
do you remember, I think it's eighty two twenty two
North Freeway north of north of mac where's mac on
I forty five. That's probably the most branded directions between
(27:37):
Tendwill and Parker out there. My friend Jim Fultz, the printer, says,
the real problem with cracker Barrel is I can get
better biscuits and gravy at Waterburger. You can't call it
Southern food and serve bland ass flour paste and call
it gravy. See, Jim is not a real opinionated gown
a lot of stuff, but you go sell it, you
(27:59):
go putting slop down and calling it biscuits and gravy.
You gonna make Ben, You'll make Jiff Matt. That's kind
of thing.
Speaker 2 (28:07):
You know.
Speaker 1 (28:07):
You can raise taxes and do all the other stuff,
but that's one of those things up with which he
will not put no, sir. I had a fellow in
a double Wide sent me an email about the Conroe
and about Conroe and Montgomery County. They declared my double
Wide that I bought repossessed and declared value by the
(28:28):
assessor being ninety two, has had an additional appreciation of
four hundred percent over the last year, and they want
to tax me at four hundred thousand for said trailer.
I'd go across the highway and buy a brand new
foundational home for two fifty. This ain't right. His name
is justin Windham, so he went in yesterday. I told
him to send me a report, and here was his
(28:49):
report on meeting to try to get his property taxes lower. Oh,
it was insanely interesting, sir. We arrived to protest and
were taken into a cubicle to have a quote informal review.
Two very incapable trainees that literally just kept asking us
if we had any evidence that our property had not
gone up four hundred percent in a year. We told
(29:09):
them the burden of proof was on them to prove
that to us. When they couldn't prove it, they got
their supervisor, which was your prototypical HR manager. Can you
tell them to an air quotes because he'd got quotes
inenter type lady, who then stated that a four hundred
percent increase in our tax obligation was completely normal and
the only proof they could give was that we didn't
(29:32):
protest last year, therefore we couldn't protest this year. We
appealed for a formal meeting to the board and were
granted that immediately. The board asked before we started if
we would like to go first or second in the
evidentiary period. I chose to go last, and the board
read the claim and at the end of reading the
claim agreed that four hundred percent was ridiculously undue and
(29:52):
asked us what we would like our appraisaler to be.
We told them we'd be good with what the appraisal
was prior to the four hundred thousand dollars edition, and
they granted in a journal in less than two minutes.
I did ask about the system, and they admitted that
there's an automated system that a sign's appraisals without any
auditing of that which is set. They also said that
they suggest every year, though they all said that they
(30:14):
suggest every year for everyone to protest their property taxes
because they see this all the time and most people
never even know that they've been paying that excessive taxes
whole time. Very happy that we were able to get
past this, but it should have never had to take.
Mean to take a day off from work and my
wife to be anxious for weeks over what would happen.
Thanks for checking back in with us. We also had
a gentleman and a lady my wife had met him
(30:35):
online through a chat, who were essentially advocates of transparency
in this system that joined us there to document the occasion.
They were very instructive and helpful to hold everyone on
as to what the law is and how they conducted themselves.
Thanks justin Needham, Oh sorry, justin Windham. So everybody hates
property taxes, so the politicians say, I hate them too,
(30:57):
and you're supposed to go you hate what I hate,
y then I like you, which is so stupid. Nobody
wants to cut the government. Nobody nothing gets cut ever. Ever,
we like to think how great Texas is. We are
not California, No Surrey, We're Texas. We do it right
over here. You ever seen what our tax rate looks like?
(31:20):
Do you know how much money we waste in the
state of Texas? Well, at least I get this all time.
Well I heard you trashing habit trash in Texas today. Well,
at least we ain't California, you dumbass. You'll end up California.
California wasn't California. You had people like Pete Wilson. And
Duke Majin. You had people there saying, hey, we got
(31:45):
a real problem with the legal immigration. Go back and look.
I think it was eighty two they had a referendum.
Go back and look at the big issue, the legal immigration.
Pete Wilson called it out. It ruined him. They destroyed him.
But there was still a chance to save California. Mexico
hadn't fully invaded yet. They just sent the first ones. Right.
They had Pancho Villa up there with he had its binoculars.
(32:07):
He was looking. We send them over on the right flank,
and then he'd pull a maneuver, you know, he pull
them around the outside, and they'd take the Home Depot
division and they would have them meet at the at
the TG and Y, which was halfway between the Home
Depot and the Lows, and those two divisions would perform
what would create a battalion, and then they'd go over
(32:28):
here and they would attack over there at fifty nine
at about Chimney Rock, and they would pick up all
the stragglers there and they'd put them out front, and
then they would go and they go down West Park
and attack right there. And then there's stopped the little
Mexican joint right there that could eat on the way
just basically, uh just corn tortillas and uh some refried
(32:52):
beans and some rice and a little piece of pork.
But then they that was their rations and then they
march on. And then once you start marching south from
there on Chimney Rock, it's it's you know, it's like
marching into the place. And you know when the Americans
came into into France and they welcomed them. You go
marching down south south Chimney Rock with the Mexican brigade
(33:13):
right there. I mean they all speaking Spanish anyway.
Speaker 2 (33:16):
M hm