Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:02):
It's that time, time, time, time, Luck and load.
Speaker 2 (00:10):
Michael Very Show is on the air.
Speaker 3 (00:17):
One of the things I didn't get to that I
wanted to make sure we did was Donald Trump talking
to Greg Guttfeld. And I want you to hear him
talking in a way that he does not always talk.
I'm not saying he's not a Christian. I'm not saying
he's not a man of faith. I'm not saying he
doesn't love God. But I want you to hear how comfortable,
(00:38):
how it rolls off his tongue to talk about him
being alive is because God chose.
Speaker 4 (00:49):
For him to be alive.
Speaker 3 (00:51):
You know, experiences change us and they reveal things to us,
and once that happens, you can't help but testify. And
that's what you're hearing right here. I didn't get this
in yesterday. I wanted to, and so I just I
think this is a really, really powerful As an evangelist,
(01:17):
I say I'm an evangelist. I'm not a preaching church.
But as an evangelical Christian, this round here is very,
very powerful.
Speaker 5 (01:26):
I believe I have a lot of friends that wanted
to run, thinking about maybe not doing it, but here's
the only good thing is that it's always a consequential
president that gets shut at, and fortunately so far I've
been very lucky.
Speaker 6 (01:42):
Or something is greater than all of us.
Speaker 5 (01:50):
UK is something is up there, some one who's up there,
maybe watching over so I.
Speaker 4 (01:54):
Think he's voting for you.
Speaker 2 (01:57):
It's funny.
Speaker 7 (01:58):
I was thought the most dangerous job is feeding the view.
Speaker 4 (02:02):
You bring up God. You bring up God and you've
almost been killed twice.
Speaker 3 (02:07):
Do you think more about your own mortality and what
happens after you.
Speaker 6 (02:11):
Go move on?
Speaker 5 (02:12):
Yeah, not about mortality, but I do think more about God,
because Okay, Butler was really I'm the greatest of all mercy.
Speaker 6 (02:21):
If I'm not looking over there, and.
Speaker 5 (02:23):
I mean a full turn exactly ninety degrees, I wouldn't
be here right now, and your ratings would be a
little bit lower.
Speaker 4 (02:30):
Perhaps we kill me there.
Speaker 6 (02:33):
We have to tell the story of how we first met.
The ratings over remember that one week he just played
that thing.
Speaker 5 (02:40):
But I do think about that because the chart, it
was basically an immigration chart. We had the lowest numbers
that we've ever had in immigration, and I very rarely
use it, maybe fifteen twenty percent. It's always on my
left and it's always at the end of a speech.
So now I said, bring down the chart, right very beginning, almost.
Speaker 6 (03:01):
Like the first sentence of the speech.
Speaker 5 (03:02):
Bring down that chart because immigration is such a big
thing now with you know, our country being basically taken
over by Venezuela and lots of other people. So I said,
bring down the chart in the shot, dropstand and I
go look at those numbers, and I look over to
the right, ping, and that was that I knew something.
Speaker 6 (03:21):
Was definitely wrong, and it was a mess. I touched.
I said, that's unusual.
Speaker 3 (03:27):
Guy Benson is a Fox News contributor, and here he
is talking about the coverage of Trump, and he says
it has to be relentlessly negative because any success of
his is evidence of their failure. This is important to
understand about Trump. The reason the left wants Trump to
(03:51):
fail is because they said he would be hitler. They
said he would fail. So if he succeeds, it's not
just that he succeeds in the rest of the country benefits.
They fail because of that. It's a reflection on them.
(04:12):
So they are invested in his failure.
Speaker 2 (04:16):
But it's nothing new with the US news media.
Speaker 8 (04:18):
I've put news almost in air quotes, because these are activists, right.
They don't just hate his language and his style, they
hate his ideology, they hate his political party, they hate
his supporters, and so allowing any inch or two of
success to be admitted is almost a failure on their part,
(04:40):
which they refuse to concede. And so it's the drumbeat
of negativity, even when some positivity at least is certainly warranted.
I think with Democrats, most journalists are Democrats or even
further left than that. When a Democratic politician or president
or whomever is struggling, they still will often try to
(05:01):
prop that person up with a glass half full approach.
But with Trump, the glass is always empty, and it's
because they are activists who don't do their jobs.
Speaker 3 (05:12):
Tools Gabbard spoke at the TPUSA conference this weekend. She's
the director of National Intelligence at least for now, and
at the Turning Point event she talked about the deep state.
And remember she's part of this president's administration. So for
(05:36):
her to say the deep state has a power over
her that she can't curtail should should tell you something
about the power of the deep state.
Speaker 9 (05:53):
I think the campaign was hard. Do you think what
President Trump went through was hard, and it was the
road ahead will not be easy. I can attest personally
that in my work as the Director of National Intelligence,
the deep state is fighting us every step of the way,
(06:14):
and it exists within every single federal agency.
Speaker 4 (06:17):
And so I feel the.
Speaker 9 (06:18):
Same frustration that I see many of you expressing on
X or in different platforms about why aren't things going faster?
Speaker 2 (06:26):
Why aren't we getting.
Speaker 4 (06:27):
Results more quickly?
Speaker 9 (06:29):
I feel this frustration every single day. We are pushing hard,
know that they are pushing hard back.
Speaker 3 (06:40):
This is Laura Ingram speaking at that event, and she
starts with the issue of the Epstein investigation, and she
is surprised.
Speaker 4 (06:54):
I think that she kind of gets bood and.
Speaker 3 (07:05):
Then well, just listen to this and turning point USA
is Donald Trump's I don't know that there's a single
gathering that is a higher density of Trump hardcore fans.
Not one person cheers at the beginning, and there is
(07:27):
a raucous applause at the end, a raucous applause at
the end. I think the base is unhappy, and I
don't think this changes anytime soon. I think something has
to be done about the Epstein list. I don't think
it's going away. Maybe I'm wrong, but just listen to this.
Speaker 10 (07:47):
How many of you are satisfied you can clap satisfied
with the results of the Epstein investigation.
Speaker 11 (07:55):
Clap?
Speaker 4 (08:01):
Okay, I told you to clap. You guys are listening.
I'm not going to grade you want to cur so.
Speaker 6 (08:07):
I was going to get to that. How many of
you are.
Speaker 10 (08:10):
Not satisfied with the results of the.
Speaker 12 (08:12):
Arrest Americans a nation that can be defined in a
single word.
Speaker 4 (08:17):
I was going to put him number nine.
Speaker 7 (08:20):
Not only was it authentic frontier jibbery Phil.
Speaker 4 (08:23):
Ex Presto Curry Scene of the Day, Michael Berry Show.
Let's go back to the.
Speaker 3 (08:28):
Issue of illegal immigration, deportation, ICE raids. And this is
shockingly Bernie Sanders on CNN pointing out with regard to
border security that democrats, the Democrats have failed. This is
Bernie Sanders saying this, Mind you.
Speaker 4 (08:49):
You don't have a country without borders. Have you have borders?
You should enforce that border. Democrats have not done.
Speaker 13 (08:56):
It's going to job as they should period end up discussion.
Speaker 2 (08:58):
That's correct, But I will.
Speaker 4 (09:00):
Tell you something else.
Speaker 13 (09:02):
In this country right now, you have millions and millions
of people who came from Latin America or wherever, but
working in meat packing plants, They're harvesting crops. They've been
in this country for years, their law abiding, they are
(09:23):
paying taxes, and they are doing some of the most dangerous,
underpaid work in America. So we have to deal with
immigration broadly, with comprehensive immigration reform.
Speaker 4 (09:35):
We have failed in that.
Speaker 1 (09:36):
Democrats Republicans have failed in that for many, many years.
Speaker 4 (09:39):
We need right now to come up.
Speaker 13 (09:41):
With some way to protect these workers who are.
Speaker 1 (09:43):
Maintaining the economy. Trump wants to throw them all out fight.
The price of food will double or triple. God knows
what will happen to nursing homes in this country. So
we need a rational, humane solution, not having people with
masks on them throwing people into vans.
Speaker 3 (10:00):
Here is Joyce Vance, an MSNBC contributor, basically saying we're
going to shoot ice agents and we know that people
have done that.
Speaker 11 (10:12):
Now, you know what I've never seen a federal agent
working a case do is pull a mask up so
nobody knows who they are and go out and terrorize
a civilian population. And I think it's important for us
at this point to be very plain speaking, when we
say that this is not normal, it's not acceptable, and
it's a danger sign. You know, we are well past
(10:35):
the point where we can just identify danger signs and say, oh,
there might be problems down the road. The problems are here,
they're in the right now, and as we see people
being pulled off the streets, you know, the danger to
law enforcement, quite frankly, is that when you're masked like
that and people don't know who you are, someone might
exercise their lawful right of self defense to protect themselves,
(10:58):
thinking they're being kids.
Speaker 6 (11:00):
Now, so the notion that this is for law.
Speaker 11 (11:02):
Enforcements protection is utterly ludicrous, and we need to do
away with that.
Speaker 3 (11:08):
Remember back when Anna Navarro was supposed to be a Republican,
she was a Latina Republican and we would have to
hear her tell us, you know, I'm a Latina, but
I'm a Republican.
Speaker 4 (11:17):
Well then she wasn't a Republican.
Speaker 3 (11:20):
And now all she does and is trash Republicans and
take up every argument of a liberal Democrat. So she
was playing, she was costplaying as a conservative Republican. And
isn't it interesting she's Latina and she's this wait, well, no,
she never was that way. Here she is dismissing the
opinion of a CNN panelist because he's a white man.
Speaker 14 (11:44):
Also, I want to respond to you saying that I
was hyperbolic when I talked about.
Speaker 6 (11:48):
A reign of terre.
Speaker 14 (11:50):
No, it might be hyperbolic for you as a white man. Oh,
it's certainly not hyperbolic for me as a Latino.
Speaker 15 (11:56):
No, I'm not being racist opinion being away.
Speaker 14 (12:00):
Well, I'm not dismissing your opinion. I am telling you
that what Latino, the Latino community, the brown community in America. Okay, Well,
let me speak with my voice. I mean you said
I was being hyperbolic. Me, I'm not being a white
man as an insult.
Speaker 6 (12:15):
When you invoke it to dismiss my.
Speaker 14 (12:17):
Being a white man as an insult, do you think
do you do you think Latinos are living circumstances right.
Speaker 16 (12:26):
Now We're about to have a whole conversation about that
very thing. But I just want to make a point
that Brad, all she's saying is that her view of
the situation is different from yours.
Speaker 4 (12:38):
I don't think that's an insult.
Speaker 12 (12:39):
Basically said, she just said, I see it, I see it.
Speaker 4 (12:44):
She said, I see it differently.
Speaker 16 (12:46):
From you, which is not an insult.
Speaker 2 (12:48):
It's not and it's also not a racial.
Speaker 3 (12:52):
We've been having some fun among the team. This was
a montage put together by somebody calling themselves the clip Keeper,
like the cryft Keeper, but the clipped the clip the
clip keeper, and it is a montage of Joe Biden
and Barack Obama telling people to learn to code when
(13:15):
they lost their jobs. Hey coal miners, we're gonna put
you out of business. Learn the code. Hey oil oil
field guys, we're gonna put you out of business. Learn
the code.
Speaker 4 (13:28):
So I want you to.
Speaker 3 (13:29):
Think about this. I want this top of mind for you.
Every time you see that the government is laying off
lazy federal employees as part of DOGE. Every time you
hear this and they go, but we're gonna lose our gent,
learn the code.
Speaker 12 (13:48):
Anybody can go down from three hundred to three thousand
feet in the mind.
Speaker 6 (13:52):
Sure he can learn how to program as well.
Speaker 17 (13:55):
No one's born a computer scientist, but with a little
hard work and some math and science, just about anyone
can become.
Speaker 4 (14:02):
Anybody can throw cole into a furnace. You can learn
how to program for Gud's sake.
Speaker 17 (14:08):
You're a young man or a young woman, whether you
live in a city or a rural area, computers are
going to be a big part of your future.
Speaker 2 (14:15):
That future is yours to shape.
Speaker 4 (14:19):
Again, another bit of audio.
Speaker 3 (14:21):
Look, there are things that we play because like you,
I'm always reading, always listening, always watching, and there are
things that I see that catch my attention. And I think,
you know what, We're going to amplify that on the show.
You can't always speak to the veracity of it, you
can't always attest that it's accurate. But this is a
(14:43):
woman named Nita Farahani. She's a former Obama appointee. And
this was at the dreaded World Economic Forum, And I
will let what she says speak for itself. And Jim,
will you play this and then Paul for a second
and play it again. And the reason is you've got
(15:04):
to hear it second. The first time you hear it,
you'll think you didn't hear it, right, it's only thirty
seconds long. The second time you hear it, you know
what's coming. So now you can really really listen carefully seeing.
Speaker 18 (15:17):
That person commit the crime, even though that person's utterly
innocence that it becomes a planted memory, and so there's
some really interesting research that we can plant false memories
in the brain and in a different context. One of
the emerging areas that's really interesting in law ner science
is pain detection, and once we understand the circuitrees that
(15:39):
cause pain, I guess the question is could we then
instill pain and use that in many coercive measures in
the legal system as well? Having seeing that person commit
the crime, even though that person's utterly innocence, that it
becomes a planted memory. And so there's some really interesting
research that we can plant false memories in the brain
(16:00):
and in a different context. One of the emerging areas
that's really interesting in law inner science is pain detection,
and once we understand the circuitrees that cause pain, just
the question is could we then instill pain and use
that in many coercive measures in the legal system as well?
Speaker 2 (16:21):
I did arrist me or take me to Texas? So
talking about gets.
Speaker 3 (16:25):
Out of this state, I think, Michael Berry rob I
like it.
Speaker 17 (16:32):
I have.
Speaker 3 (16:34):
I've been hesitant to bring this up yet because we
have had we still have almost one hundred people missing
from the floods in Central Texas. Most Americans were. Most
Texans were affected in one way or another by somebody
they knew who died in those floods or is still missing,
(16:54):
or somebody they know who died, or at a minimum,
somebody they know who knows somebody who knew somebody who died.
The degree of separation is not many for most Texans.
There were lots of little girls at Camp Missed It
(17:15):
a long standing girls summer camp. The girls have been
going to. Their mothers went there, their grandmothers went there
before them.
Speaker 4 (17:25):
They loved going there.
Speaker 3 (17:26):
They would go there as campers, and then they would
come back as counselors the year between their scene, after
they graduated high school, before they started college.
Speaker 4 (17:34):
It's a tradition. It's a ritual.
Speaker 3 (17:35):
Some of these families, they have done this for sixty
seventy years. It's a terrible, terrible, horrible thing. Now because
of that, we have talked about how long to grieve
and how long to hold off before we start talking
about accountability. I believe every person that dies deserves accountability.
(18:03):
I believe they're families, and I believe every person in
the future deserves accountability.
Speaker 4 (18:07):
And I don't know that there's a good time.
Speaker 3 (18:09):
We're not having that big discussion today, but I will
play something that has been on my mind. A lot
so fellow named Augustus de Rico. He's the CEO of
company called rain Maker. This is on the Sean Ryan podcast.
The reason the company is called rain Maker is because
they put silver iodine in clouds, which is called clouds seating,
(18:34):
and that causes clouds to yield.
Speaker 4 (18:37):
Much more rain.
Speaker 3 (18:40):
I believe it is now established fact that there was
cloud seating done two days before the horrific Curville floods.
I want to be clear, I'm not opening up the
floor to conversation today, but I want this planted in
your mind so that when we do have this conversation
(19:00):
you will remember this isn't some crazy conspiracy.
Speaker 4 (19:05):
This is the CEO of a guy who actually does it.
Speaker 7 (19:09):
The drones that we've built are the only ones in
NATO that are under fifty five pounds that can survive
in severe ice and conditions.
Speaker 2 (19:16):
This is really cold water, right, So we.
Speaker 7 (19:18):
Have these resistors inlaid onto the vehicle that melt the
ice off as it decreases under the drone. So you
find the water with the radar, you fly your drone
up into these conditions hope that it survives.
Speaker 2 (19:30):
You disperse the material, so.
Speaker 7 (19:32):
We have this airsol dispersion system that basically just emits
individual particles that the water freezes onto.
Speaker 2 (19:39):
And then with the same.
Speaker 7 (19:41):
Radar you found the water with, you can now see
it freezing, growing into bigger snowflakes and then eventually bigger
drops and measure how much precipitates downwind.
Speaker 2 (19:51):
So you're essentially.
Speaker 7 (19:55):
Introducing some type of an agent that has weight to
it and that's pulling.
Speaker 2 (19:59):
Your internal water down.
Speaker 7 (20:00):
You're introducing an agent that the water freezes onto, and
then it's just the weight of the water that pulls
it down.
Speaker 2 (20:07):
So for every you know, pound of.
Speaker 7 (20:10):
This that you put up, you get in access of
forty million pounds down on the ground forty million pounds
of water. Forty million Wow. Yeah, how many drones does
it take to do this?
Speaker 17 (20:22):
Like?
Speaker 2 (20:22):
Three, that's it.
Speaker 7 (20:24):
So what we do is we juggle them, so one
drone will go up once that.
Speaker 2 (20:27):
Reaches out to Toude, the next drone will go up.
Speaker 7 (20:29):
The first rone, after dispersing its full payload, will come
down and you'll just cycle that as long as the
conditions persist. So sometimes that means, you know, you're out
there for two hours.
Speaker 2 (20:38):
Are a forward operation specialists.
Speaker 7 (20:40):
So it's a lot of former vets, National for Service guys,
oil roughnecks, people that are willing just to live out
on a mountain for nine months at a time. Speaking
of which apply to rainmaker dot com slash careers to
become a Ford operation specialist because we need like fifty
dudes in the next three months.
Speaker 3 (21:00):
One of the experts to emerge from COVID, one of
the real heroes in America is a fellow named doctor
Peter McCullough. And he came to my attention by another
hero during that era, and that is Mary Tally Boden,
also a doctor. She was at the time my sinus doctor,
and she became famous, I mean really big during COVID
(21:23):
for speaking out on what she was seeing and how
the medical industry was lying to people. Doctor Peter McCullough
here is talking to Senator Ron Johnson and he's talking
about an autopsy study of people who died because they
took the COVID vaccine.
Speaker 4 (21:44):
And I think my brother is one of these.
Speaker 3 (21:46):
This is people who didn't die of COVID, but died
from the COVID vaccine, the number is almost seventy four percent.
Speaker 19 (21:54):
This should frighten you. The best data are autopsies. So
in the largest autopsy series published today. I know because
I'm the senior author of all the death death we
examined and we re reviewed them.
Speaker 4 (22:08):
We had an adjudication committee, we.
Speaker 19 (22:10):
Had ways of arbitration deciding on did the vaccine cause death?
The answer is of these cases that came in for
autopsy after vaccination, seventy three point nine percent of individuals
it was determined that the vaccine was the cause of death.
Speaker 3 (22:26):
Terrible story out of Texas, actually out of the greater
Houston area. And this is just a reminder of every
one of your parents because my son Michael T. Had
rabdo before his senior year, so two years ago and rabdomyolysis.
I guess it's called I might be pronouncing.
Speaker 4 (22:43):
The last part is.
Speaker 3 (22:44):
Where the body overheats, dehydrates and the kidney shut down.
So you go from a toughness competition to actually dying.
Speaker 4 (22:57):
And it's a real thing.
Speaker 3 (22:59):
And every summer, if you were to look up rabdough
across the country, you will see that this happens. Now
there are people who are more predisposed towards than others
to dehydrate. Based on how much you sweat, you sweat
out all that water. It's also based on how much
water you drink and how many electrolytes you get. If
you are dehydrated, then RABDO is a greater likelihood. Now
(23:23):
you might say, well, we did to today's and never
got water like the Junction boys at Texas A and
m over all those years.
Speaker 4 (23:28):
And that's true.
Speaker 3 (23:30):
But if enough people are dehydrated during summer too days,
and especially young folks see in the pros, it doesn't happen.
Because the pros consider their athletes to be assets. And
if you're paying a guy ten million dollars a year,
you're going to make sure he's hydrated. You don't let
him slip off and not drink water. Well, young people
(23:50):
sometimes make that mistake. This is a young fellow named
Jarvis Spire, seventeen years old, and you know, if you'll
listen to what his mom says is ABC thirteen in Houston.
We do hope he recovers, and we do hope he
has a story to tell to others, and we hope
he has a great story to tell for the rest
of his life about his survival and how close he came.
Speaker 20 (24:12):
A week ago, the future looked bright for seventeen year
old Jarvis Spires, a defensive nose tackle on the Cypersprings
High school football team. He was eyeing colleges and dreaming
of the big leagues.
Speaker 4 (24:23):
He is going to the NFL.
Speaker 15 (24:25):
And I say going because when he speaks, he says,
one I make it to the NFL.
Speaker 20 (24:30):
We on Saturday. Those dreams seem to be in jeopardy fire,
so coming to a heat stroke during an outdoor training session.
Speaker 15 (24:37):
When there's a lot of athletes out here who don't
understand the importance of being hydrated, staying hydrated.
Speaker 20 (24:46):
By the toime, Spires made it to the hospital. His
mom says he was already in a coma. Doctors managed
to resuscitate him, but then more complications.
Speaker 15 (24:55):
It's kidney's deliver all his organs had failed.
Speaker 20 (24:58):
That's when doctors transferred him at Texas Children's Hospital after
his heart in love's fail Tuesday. His mom says he
had to be put back under in a sense undergone
emergency surgery.
Speaker 15 (25:09):
The lasting that he said was Jesus is my best friend.
And when he said that I just it just made
me feel safful.
Speaker 17 (25:17):
It's Ramon the King of Ding and this other guy,
Michael Barry.
Speaker 6 (25:23):
These are the kind of guys you're like a smacking airs.
Speaker 3 (25:27):
The George Soros district attorney take over.
Speaker 6 (25:32):
Is so.
Speaker 3 (25:35):
Rotten in this country. It creates such a bad situation
in this country. We have a new district attorney in
Harris County because the Democrat who was there before, who
had been supported by Kim by Sorows named Kim Oug,
she ended up prosecuting some of the Democrat local officials
(25:57):
who were engaged in criminal activity, and so they ran
an opponent against her and beat her. Well, here you're
going to hear about her replacement, the Sorols back district
attorney who just didn't bring charges against one man who
killed another man. He just didn't get around bringing the charges. Well,
(26:18):
this is what Sorols wants, the collapse, the combustion internal
of the American model by allowing bad guys to run free.
This is KPRCTV in Houston.
Speaker 21 (26:32):
The District Attorney's office had ninety days to follow murder charges,
but they missed that deadline. The Hill was issued a
personal bond for which is basically means get out of
jail for free today to stay added a new charge
which is keeping him in jail but on a lower bond,
which is an uneasy feeling for Abdul Niazi's family. It
(26:52):
just didn't get done, That's what the stage told the
judge after not having a valid reason for missing the
ninety day deadline to indiagnosed Sulissa Hill on a murder charge.
He's accused of killing US War hero and loving father
of five, Abdul Niazzi in March. Niazzi's cousin feels the
state's excuse isn't good enough.
Speaker 18 (27:13):
Well, to be honest, it's really talking, I mean terrible.
Speaker 2 (27:18):
I don't know.
Speaker 4 (27:19):
I mean we trust the system, but it is.
Speaker 6 (27:24):
They're just like playing with our emotional record show.
Speaker 21 (27:27):
The court noted that at any given time, there are
five grand juries sworn in per term, and Texas has
hundreds of prosecutors and support staff, Yet the state did
not have sufficient reason for why they failed to indict
se Hill. Investigators say Niazi relied on a wheelchair because
he lost both of his legs well in combat. Sahill
(27:48):
allegedly stabbed him twenty times. Nyazzi had been helping him
with his refugee paperwork, and sa Hill admitted to police
he was frustrated with how long it was taking. Surveillance
video showsa Hill entering Yazzi's office building and leaving while
covered in blood. Niyazzi's cousin says after the killing, Sa
Hill called Niazzi's wife, confessing to the crime. Niazzi's cousin
(28:12):
fills the state had plenty of evidence to indict sa Hill.
Do you feel the justice system fail you and your family?
Speaker 4 (28:20):
I mean it is completely fair.
Speaker 21 (28:23):
It's like a Previously, sa Hill had a seven hundred
and fifty thousand dollars bond for his murder charge, but
that dropped with the pr bond. Although he now has
a tampering with evidence charge, the Hill's bond is lowered
to twenty five thousand dollars.
Speaker 3 (28:39):
This is my question, if you.
Speaker 2 (28:42):
Who want to get reponsible, if the guy's release uh
and come back and kill someone else.
Speaker 4 (28:49):
Jim.
Speaker 3 (28:49):
This is going to be clip number four from Chad's prep.
You lost your home in the wildfire in Los Angeles
and you're waiting for permits to rebuild. You need to
know that Mayor Karen Bass your locally elected communists. Avowed
communist mayor has other priorities. Remember she committed to quick
(29:14):
permits to let you start rebuilding your home. She has
announced that Los Angeles will provide cash handouts to illegal
alien families affected by the ice raids. She claims that
tax dollars are not being used, but city resources and
staffers are to administer the program. This is US Border
(29:38):
chief at the El Centro section, Greg Bavino on Fox.
Speaker 22 (29:44):
We also are going to have a reinstitution of the
Angelino card, something that Mayor Garcetti started during COVID that
will actually provide cash assistance to people, because you know,
you have people who don't want to leave their homes,
who are not going to work, and they are in
need of cash.
Speaker 10 (30:05):
She is giving out free cash, just cash to illegals.
So if you want to talk about incentivizing illegal activity,
stay home, don't go to work. And then the bishop
out there, one of them says.
Speaker 4 (30:17):
Don't go to church.
Speaker 10 (30:19):
So this is a dream for them and just get
free money.
Speaker 6 (30:24):
Absolutely unbelievable.
Speaker 23 (30:26):
You know what I see there when Marabath says something
like that is she chooses illegal aliens, drug cartels, terrorists,
bad people and bad things over American citizens. And I
can't believe I'm actually hearing this. But that's why the
US Border Patrol and Customs and Border Protection ICE, HSI
and all those allied law enforcement agencies are in these communities.
(30:50):
People like that won't do anything about this.
Speaker 4 (30:52):
So guess what, Laura, We're going to.
Speaker 3 (30:55):
And if you're wondering where all the money in Los
Angeles goes, one hundred and thirty four of Los Angeles's
highest paid lifeguards cost the city seven hundred million dollars alone.
Forty five lifeguards collected between fifty thousand and one hundred
(31:17):
seventy one thousand in overtime payments alone. The top overtime
earner was Remy Smith, who made one hundred seventy one
thousand dollars in overtime and four hundred and sixty eight
thousand dollars in total compensation. This is insane, This is insane.
(31:43):
This is why Los Angeles is broken. And I'll guarantee
you it's not just an overpayment issue. I'll guarantee you
there are kickbacks involved.
Speaker 24 (31:51):
Well appears Baywatch has become a lucrative gig for some
lifeguards in LA and there's new debate over some of
their top dollar baxpair funded salaries. A new report claims
that last year, the top paid lifeguard in La County
took them over half a million dollars thanks to open
the books. Four others reportedly made over four hundred thousand dollars,
(32:14):
and out of fifteen hundred total lifeguards, one hundred and
thirty four of them reportedly earned at least two hundred
thousand plus benefits.
Speaker 3 (32:24):
I like to find audio that I believe to be
interesting in share.
Speaker 4 (32:30):
Sometimes there's no context.
Speaker 3 (32:33):
This is a black woman talking about black people on
cruise ships with some really tough talk.
Speaker 4 (32:40):
Do with it what you want.
Speaker 12 (32:42):
So y'all hated when people saw that cruise full of
black people and they said all kind of racist remark.
But then after the crew at the Carnival port in Galveston,
people are fighting in the terminal and a black woman
(33:05):
on an excursion refuses to get up because she didn't
have the wristband and her child has to almost beg.
Speaker 2 (33:16):
Her to get off the boat.
Speaker 12 (33:18):
This is why make the comments that they make. This
is why they don't want to be around us.
Speaker 20 (33:24):
Too.
Speaker 4 (33:24):
Many of y'all don't.
Speaker 6 (33:26):
Know how to act.
Speaker 12 (33:27):
This is why I avoid carnival. I even avoid the
little short cruises, but.
Speaker 4 (33:33):
Are like real cheap.
Speaker 12 (33:36):
Some of y'all don't know how to leave the ghetto
at home. And these are the people who raise the kids,
who fight the teacher.
Speaker 4 (33:45):
It's all related, y'all.
Speaker 12 (33:47):
And so even black people like myself or others who
got some sense, we always are running, not from black people,
from y'all.
Speaker 4 (34:00):
Us has left for kill. Thank you, and good night.