Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time, time, time, time, Luck and Load. Michael
Vari show is on the air.
Speaker 2 (00:13):
This aspect of what is now being investigated as a
as a second attempted assassination of former President Trump has
been identified. If I already say, his name is Ryan
Wesley Roath. He allegedly poked his muzzle of his AK
forty seven star rifle through a chainling fence as he
was hiding in the bushes a former President Trump's golf
(00:34):
course at West pom Beach, Florida.
Speaker 3 (00:36):
That's when an agent saw it and opened fire. Cooking
with a long history, you know, that's a little bit old.
That arts a couple of months old. And if you
want to really see something that said, take a look
at what happened.
Speaker 4 (00:56):
Let's remember Charlottesville, where there was a mob of people
carrying tiki torches spewing anti Semitic hate. And what did
the president then at the time say, there were fine
people on each side, but.
Speaker 3 (01:12):
You also had people that were very fine people on
both sides.
Speaker 5 (01:16):
And you had.
Speaker 3 (01:17):
People and I'm not talking about the neo Nazis and
the white nationalists because they should be condemned totally.
Speaker 4 (01:25):
Donald Trump, the candidate, has said in this election. There
will be a blood bath if this and the outcome
of this election is not to his liking.
Speaker 3 (01:34):
Those big monster car manufacturing plants that you're building in
Mexico right now, and you think you're going to get that,
you're going to not hire Americans and you're going to
sell the cars. Now, We're going to put a one
hundred percent power for in every single car that comes
across the line, and you're not going to be able
to sell those CAUs if I get elected. Now, if
(01:55):
I don't get elected, it's going to be a blood
bath for the whole that's going to be the it.
It's going to be a bloodbed for the country. That'll
be the least.
Speaker 6 (02:04):
President Trump sat down with NBC's Tony Lamasse. He was
asked about the shooting deaths in Minneapolis, and everybody else
has had their say, Let's hear what the President has
to say.
Speaker 7 (02:14):
After the shooting of Renee Good. You said Ice made
some mistakes. What were the mistakes?
Speaker 3 (02:19):
Well, look, I'm not happy with the two incidents. It's
not you know, it's both of them, got one or
the other. He was not an angel and she was
not an angel. You know, you look at some tapes
on back. But still I'm not happy with what happened there.
Nobody could be happy, and ICE wasn't happy either. But
I'm going to always be with our great people of
(02:41):
law enforcement, ICE police.
Speaker 5 (02:43):
We have to back them. If we don't back them,
we don't.
Speaker 1 (02:45):
Have a country.
Speaker 7 (02:46):
You mentioned Renee Good and not and Alex Pretty's not
being angels. Do you think any of that justified what
happened to them?
Speaker 3 (02:54):
Though, no, it should have not happened. It was a
very sad to me. It was a very said two incidents,
and you know they mentioned the one, now they don't
mention the other.
Speaker 5 (03:03):
Well, I think they were both said.
Speaker 3 (03:05):
And you know who feels worse a better than anybody,
the people of ICE. They're strong, tough people, and they
have to be tough because we're dealing with hardened criminals.
We're dealing with people. You know, jails have been emptied
into our country from all over the world, from Venezuela,
where we had great success, you will admit, but from Venezuela,
(03:27):
from the Congo and Africa, from all over the world, jails,
the jail population was emptied into our country. If we
don't have strong people you're not getting them out, and
we're getting them out.
Speaker 6 (03:40):
You know, it's interesting when you're living through something that's
so wonderful that you knowed you're going to look back
a lot of times when there's an amazing time in
your life, you think things will always be that way.
I've had people who were the children of someone famous
(04:02):
or someone who had this amazing life, and I say,
you know, that's all I knew. I knew this amazing life.
I didn't know that there would be a time that
that wouldn't be my life. And I would look back
and go, wow, you know, look the time is still
rolling forward, it's still marching on. But it is interesting
to know, as I do, that we are living through
(04:23):
the solid days. These are the good old days. People
email me every day that they're losing their mind, and listen,
let me tell you something. I got news for you.
It ain't getting better than it is right now. It's
going to be a lot worse now. If you want
to be depressed over how much worse it is. Because
a lot of people on our side are in a
(04:46):
constant state of semi depression. They could win the lottery tomorrow,
Trump wins, We win every House seat, every Senate seat,
every state house, and they'd go.
Speaker 1 (04:55):
Well, I bet we want to win next year.
Speaker 6 (04:57):
Okay, okay, calm down, because nobody wants to vote for
the guy's recommendations. When the guy is a constant downer,
nobody wants that. But let me say this, I take
heart to breed deeply and understand what a wonderful moment
(05:18):
we are living through that we have a president who
can sit down and clearly articulate. By the way, mark
that moment down, I just President Trump is articulate. That's
probably the first time you've ever heard a white man
referred to as articulate. That's usually what they say for
(05:39):
a black fellow who conjugates.
Speaker 1 (05:41):
The B verb.
Speaker 6 (05:42):
He's articulate. What do you mean to say, he's a
black guy talks like white people. Trump was asked if
he's learned anything from the ice operation in Minnesota. This
is a moment of self reflection, and this is an
interesting moment from Trump that he says this.
Speaker 7 (05:57):
Mister president, speaking of Minneapolis.
Speaker 1 (05:59):
What did you learn?
Speaker 8 (06:02):
I learned that.
Speaker 3 (06:05):
Maybe we can use a little bit of a softer touch,
but you still have to be tough. He's a criminal
we're dealing with really hard criminals. But look, I've called
the people. I've called the governor, I've called the mayor,
spoke to him, had great conversations with him, and then
I see them ranting and raving out there.
Speaker 1 (06:22):
Literally.
Speaker 6 (06:23):
As Oco was in made, he was asked about the
corruption in our elections and if he wanted to nationalize
future elections.
Speaker 1 (06:31):
This is what President Trump said, you've.
Speaker 7 (06:33):
Recently suggested nationalizing elections.
Speaker 5 (06:35):
What do you mean by that when?
Speaker 3 (06:37):
And I didn't say nationally. I said, there are some
areas in our country that are extremely corrupt. They have
very corrupt elections. Take a look at Detroit, take a
look at Philadelphia, take a.
Speaker 5 (06:47):
Look at Atlanta.
Speaker 3 (06:49):
There are some areas that are unbelievably corrupt.
Speaker 5 (06:51):
I could give you plenty of more too.
Speaker 3 (06:54):
I say that we cannot have corrupt elections if we
have to, if they don't straight in out as example,
voter ID. Why don't the Democrats want voter ID? You
know who does want voter ID? Democrat voters want it,
but Democrat politicians don't. Why do they want it? Because
they want to cheat on elections. Can you imagine if
(07:15):
I were a politician and they asked me, do you
want voter identification? And I said no, there's no way
you could win that debate. But even the Democrats don't
want voter ID. If they don't want voter ID, that
means they want to cheat. We can't allow cheating in elections.
Speaker 5 (07:32):
Now.
Speaker 3 (07:32):
If we need to put in federal controls as opposed
to state controls, remember this, they're really an agent. They're
really accumulating the votes for who wins an election. If
they can't do it honestly and it can't be done
properly and timely, then something else has to happen.
Speaker 1 (07:50):
Bizarre is on well done. So this is the Michael
Verie Show.
Speaker 6 (07:59):
The interview with the President Trump when he sat with
NBC reporter Tony Lamas, he was asked about the weapon
used in Venezuela that he has dubbed the discombobulator.
Speaker 7 (08:12):
You talked about the weapon, the discombobulator, discombobulate.
Speaker 3 (08:16):
Well, I'm not allowed to talk about it, but let
me just tell you you know what it does. None
of their equipment works. That's what it does. Everything was
it was my name. I'm very proud of the name.
Everything was discombobulated.
Speaker 1 (08:28):
It was it was my name. I'm very proud of
the name.
Speaker 3 (08:30):
Practically a shot wasn't you know?
Speaker 5 (08:32):
They were ready and when we came, I.
Speaker 7 (08:35):
Mean we couldn't know it. If you saw this on
the video, you could tell Tom.
Speaker 3 (08:38):
It discombobulated everything.
Speaker 7 (08:41):
Nothing worked, even including humans.
Speaker 3 (08:42):
Well the way, we lost no equipment in a very
strong and they're good fighters, great fighters in a very
bad environment. It was a military base, the biggest in
South America in a very because the house was in
a base in South in a very very tough environment.
We lost no man and we lost no equipment.
Speaker 7 (09:04):
The discombobulator just knocked it.
Speaker 5 (09:05):
Well, it did something.
Speaker 6 (09:09):
David Hawk is Nick Shirley's investigative partner in the Minnesota
Somali fraud.
Speaker 1 (09:15):
Let's not forget that's what all this was about.
Speaker 6 (09:18):
He testified in front of the House Judiciary Committee about
the level of fraud they uncovered and uncovered and how
he decided he needed to look deeper into these Somali Daycares.
Speaker 8 (09:29):
My journey into uncovering fraud of Minnesota and ultimately throughout
the entire United States, as it turns out, began when
I started to notice very unusual changes in the Minneapolis area.
Remember I grew up there, so I know Minneapolis very well,
most notably the enormous number of childcare facilities that.
Speaker 5 (09:44):
Had opened up.
Speaker 8 (09:45):
I would drive around the Twin Cities and had seen
these childcare facilities were literally on every block. Some blocks
had two or three childcare facilities on the same block.
Minnesota sees a fair amount of snow in the winter,
and I began to notice driving by these child fasheriliest
there were never any footprints in the snow outside these
childcare facilities.
Speaker 5 (10:03):
And I go buy them three four, five times.
Speaker 8 (10:04):
A day Monday through Friday because my office is in
the heart of where a lot of these childcare facilities are.
So I said, well, what's going on here with all
these child facilities? So I began to check the Minnesota
Secretary of State's website to find out just who owned
all these childcare facilities. And guess what, every single one
of them was smallly owned. Not every childcare facility in
Minnesota was, but the ones that I was looking at
(10:26):
that were by my office, and there were a lot
of them.
Speaker 5 (10:29):
What's even strangers that every.
Speaker 8 (10:30):
One of these facilities located in a commercial or industrial building.
No play areas, bad neighborhoods, and several of the childcare
facilities had signage who had stated they were open either
seven am to ten pm, two pm to ten pm
quality learing center, for example, or open twenty four hours.
Who the heck brings their kid to stay overnight at
a childcare facility in a rough neighborhood. None of it
(10:52):
made any sense. The leering misspelling was the final straw
for me. That's the spark that ignited my full on investigation.
Speaker 6 (11:00):
So where are the reporters who we expect to be
investigating these types of things, Well, they don't want to
investigate these kinds of things.
Speaker 1 (11:18):
Think about what they do.
Speaker 6 (11:19):
Investigate and it'll tell you everything. People will say that
you hear the phrase, if you want to know what
somebody's priority is, look where they spend their money. That's
the second best tell on where their priorities are. What
really matters, Look where they spend their time. Look where
people spend their time, and that's how you'll know what
(11:41):
matters to them.
Speaker 1 (11:43):
Ramon, we have a race card alert. Everyone a race
card alert.
Speaker 6 (11:48):
You ever notice, more often than not, the race card
gets pulled when somebody either doesn't know what they're talking about.
Speaker 1 (11:57):
Or they get backed into a corner. You ever notice that.
Here's a great example.
Speaker 6 (12:05):
A boxer by the name of Deontay Wilder was on
a British sports program and he was asked about opposing
white boxer Tyson Fury. Well, he didn't want to answer
questions about Tyson Fury, so he just pulls the race
card out on the white host.
Speaker 5 (12:26):
I wanted to move you on to Tyson Fury.
Speaker 1 (12:29):
I want to talk about him.
Speaker 5 (12:31):
We're here about that, but you can understand we're not
going to talk about it. I'm not going to talk
about him at all. Understand that I feel enough I did,
so let's move on. It's all about k Richard Sore
and that's it.
Speaker 1 (12:39):
I understand that you've called him a cheek. It leads
me to it's in boxing that's like a little bit flaky.
Speaker 7 (12:45):
You lost those fights, and those fights were lost kind
of disappointing.
Speaker 1 (12:48):
To me because I know the truth. I have the facts.
Speaker 5 (12:51):
Okay, I understand that.
Speaker 8 (12:53):
I don't.
Speaker 5 (12:53):
I risk my life for you entertainment to seem absolutely what.
I ain't never lied about none of this business.
Speaker 1 (12:58):
It's so hard to believe a black man, white man. Yeah,
why why? Why? Nothing to do with color?
Speaker 5 (13:10):
We got something?
Speaker 1 (13:13):
You think your life has been like mines.
Speaker 7 (13:16):
Listen, you know you've got a white prim brother, I'm.
Speaker 1 (13:20):
Gonna do us.
Speaker 5 (13:21):
I'm I'm gonna do I'm a black man with skin.
Speaker 7 (13:23):
Ain't nothing that would be given to that we didn't
be doing so much so much.
Speaker 1 (13:28):
Want to move on, Try to give you a.
Speaker 5 (13:32):
Inside of what we do.
Speaker 3 (13:33):
Who has black people?
Speaker 5 (13:34):
Man?
Speaker 1 (13:34):
I go that. You know, you don't get it. None
of y'all get it. Y'all don't get it. And that's
the problem. You think you get what you don't understand.
Why is it so hard? Let me get here, bro,
I'm out of here.
Speaker 8 (13:46):
I'm out of here talking about my peoples and all.
Speaker 5 (13:48):
That as hard white man.
Speaker 6 (13:52):
And there you see why certain people don't want to
interview a person, hire a person, live next door to
a person, interact with a person, because guess what, white
people get to have opinions too, and people get tired.
Oh you're raging, you're angry, you're mad at the world.
(14:14):
Well guess what, I don't know. You an apology, and
I don't want to interact, And nobody wants to walk
into an interaction a transaction with the idea that that
person has the upper hand and you just have to
sit quietly because you don't understand what they've gone through. Okay, well,
then you go through it over there. How about I
(14:34):
never interact with you? How about the whole sports world
doesn't interact with you? How would that be? This idea
that this power kick that people are on with the
race card?
Speaker 1 (14:46):
When I want a race card, where does somebody get it?
Speaker 6 (14:48):
Where do you get a race card?
Speaker 5 (14:51):
This year?
Speaker 9 (14:51):
Skip the boring greeting cards and celebrate identity with a
brand new line from Hallmark's sister company, race Cards, Because
now there's a card for absolutely everyone. Are you white
and your African American coworker has a birthday, but you
don't know which card to buy?
Speaker 1 (15:08):
Things can get tricky.
Speaker 9 (15:10):
Try this race guard design with the African American in mind.
Speaker 1 (15:13):
A sent on your calendar today a.
Speaker 7 (15:16):
Queen was born.
Speaker 1 (15:18):
That's right, baby, isn't that wonderful?
Speaker 9 (15:21):
Are you a Spanic and your one white friend is
having surgery but you don't know how to convey your feelings?
Speaker 1 (15:27):
That's an easy one.
Speaker 9 (15:30):
Are you an Asian parent who wants to congratulate your
child on a job well done. We have a race
guard perfect for every race and every occasion. Science race guards.
If there's a category, there's a card.
Speaker 1 (15:50):
Amazie.
Speaker 6 (15:51):
How we stopped talking about the bay care centers in
Minnesota and the billions of dollars in fraud. Nick Shirley's
investigative partner, David Hawk talks about how how daycare licensing
works in Minnesota, which suggests suggests, which basically proves that
at a minimum, the Minnesota state officials were derelict in
(16:16):
their duties. At the worst, they were directing them or
involved in them.
Speaker 1 (16:22):
You decide.
Speaker 8 (16:24):
So, Minnesota has two different childcare licenses available. One covers
six am to six pm and the other one covers
six pm to six am. There are two very different licenses.
So for childcare facility to be open twenty fours a day,
or even from two pm to ten pm, they need
both licenses. How many of these facilities that are open
(16:48):
these extended hours have two licenses, none of them zero.
They all have only one license. Minnesota childcare supervision requirements
include the following. For infant care that deserve to seventeen
months of age, you have to have one adult supervising
for every four children and MAX eight in a group
(17:09):
for toddlers, which is eighteen and twenty three months of age,
it requires one adult for every five children to supervise
Max ten children in that group. For two year olds,
you need one adult for every seven children, so Max
and fourteen in the group. So if a child care
facility was billing the State of Minisola for ninety nine
children ie Quality Litering Center, that childcare facility would need
(17:31):
to have at MEUS eight employees supervising those children. These
cannot be ten ninety nine employees. They have to be
W two employees. That means we're going to have at
least eight W two's and we're going to have at
least eight I ninees. So if the Feds went in
and checked that, what do you think they're going to find?
You already know the answer.
Speaker 1 (17:51):
How does that happen?
Speaker 6 (17:53):
See, the Feds give them money to the state. The
state gives them money to providers of services, and it's
the state's responsibility and their contract with the Feds that
they'll make sure the money's being administered to people who
are really providing the funds. So when the state chooses
not to do their job, you have to wonder why
(18:16):
is this why Timmy Waltz determined that he's not going
to run for reelection. Is he afraid of being prosecuted?
David Hawk said, he and Nick have been accused of
targeting the Somali community. Oh, this is just because they're
You're pointing out all this fraud, just because they're Somali's.
Speaker 8 (18:35):
One issue that has often brought up is that we
are unfairly targeting the Somali community. This is a fair
point to be made. As one Somali gentleman exclaimed in
our second video, We're not the only community that does fraud.
Fraud certainly exists in every community. It was the sheer
volume and the blatant nature of the Somali fraud that
(18:55):
demanded my intention. When one facility makel Childcare has enough
childcare Mini Childcare registered at the same address, but the
sign still says make O Childcare, it kind of stands
out and again, no children, no footprints in the snow. Ever,
this is what I mean by being blatant, misspelled signage,
posted hours that require two licenses, no child footprints in
(19:17):
the snow, not even once.
Speaker 6 (19:20):
And then David Hawk, while speaking before the House Judiciary
Committee revealed the genesis of the Somali fraud.
Speaker 1 (19:27):
How did all of this start?
Speaker 6 (19:29):
And we have seen this again and again and again.
How did all the fraud start? Well, it started during COVID.
Of course, large authoritarian efforts like that spawn fraud and corruption.
Every time. No, I didn't say I wanted genesis. I
(19:57):
said the genesis of the fraud. Say I'm trying to
explain to people what's going on, and then they're like,
wait a second, why is there a song playing?
Speaker 1 (20:04):
Are they going to break?
Speaker 3 (20:05):
See?
Speaker 1 (20:06):
This is why we can't have nice things.
Speaker 6 (20:07):
See, we could be like a big show with a
lot of listeners, everybody thinking we're real smart. Not you,
I mentioned genesis and you start playing. Phil Collins, By
the way, thank you to all of you who have
supported our show, every program director who put us on
your station, every listener who called your station and asked
(20:29):
that we be added to the lineup. We have crossed
one hundred affiliates and growing by the day. That that
was a goal at some point. We love what we do.
The more people who can listen, the better, and we
appreciate your support along the way. So here's what he said.
Speaker 5 (20:46):
So, how did we arrive at this point. Why are
we having this hearing?
Speaker 8 (20:49):
We got here because of politicians, almost exclusively Democrats. A
couple of names come to mind. Jody Harpstaid, the former
commissioner the Department of Human Services, and Sharen Gandhi, the
current commissioner of the Minnesota Department of Human Services. Harpstead
put the whole fraud on steroids. She was steering the
(21:09):
ship from twenty nineteen to twenty twenty five during the
COVID nineteen pandemic. This is when the whole fraud network
exploded into what we see nationally today and to what
we see in my numbers, which are accurate.
Speaker 5 (21:24):
So now we hear that.
Speaker 8 (21:26):
Minnesota Department of Human Service is forging documents and backdating paperwork,
all in effort to cover up their complicity in this fraud.
This is just more criminal behavior from the gang at
Minnesota Department of Human Services.
Speaker 5 (21:39):
It's criminal behavior.
Speaker 8 (21:41):
Minneapolis was the incubator for this nationwide fraud which you're
now seeing in Maine. We're seeing it in Washington State,
we're seeing it in Columbus, Ohio. It was constructed here
in Minneapolis, and the idea behind it was, if you
can get a population in here and fit them into
this fraud framework. You have a guarantee voting block for
(22:01):
all eternity. The fraud was started and then it expanded out,
and now you see it all around the Country's.
Speaker 6 (22:07):
Just a citizen journalist doing more important work than any
of these folks. He concluded his opening statement to Congress
with who he believes the victims of the fraud are
and how he thinks and this is important how we
can end it.
Speaker 8 (22:23):
So why is fraud bad? Why is it a bad thing?
Why does anybody care? Fraud is bad because it steals
from the blind. It's steal from kids with cancer, it's
steals from disabled, its steals from the wholeness, it steals
from wounded veterans. It's steals from everybody in this room.
So what is the answer. How do we fix this?
(22:43):
The way we fix this is that the federal government
has to go to the Minnesota Department of Human Services
and every social service agency and say, look, if you
issue a payment using federal money and it goes to
a fraudulent company, you run the risk of US coming
in arresting you, handcuffing you, parading you out, bring you
in front of a judge and putting you in prison.
(23:06):
So if you're going to issue a payment, you better
make sure that it's a legitimate company.
Speaker 5 (23:10):
Otherwise, don't issue the payment. Go on toogle earth. Look
at it's.
Speaker 8 (23:15):
A liquor store, it's a grocery store. Why are you
issue payment to a childcare or a transportation company that
doesn't even exist? Why are you issuing that payment? It's
criminal behavior. The federal government has to has to use
that cudgel over these people and say, look, you better
be sure if you issue that payment that it's a
legitimate payment, or you could end up in prison.
Speaker 6 (23:34):
You hear a dorky, this guy sounds, you hear how nerdy.
These are the kind of people you don't have in
inner city governments. These are the kind of people you
don't have in institutions that are broken. You need guys
like this, Guys that only care that the ledger add up,
that there'd be no fraud. This right here, that's white privilege,
(23:56):
you hear, That's what that is.
Speaker 1 (23:57):
We need more of that.
Speaker 6 (24:04):
You know, maybe New Orleans was always a corrupt crap hole.
Maybe I don't know, but when I was a kid,
New Orleans was magical nineteen eighty four World's Fair. The
people talk so funny. The architecture was glorious, still is
(24:29):
thet the French architecture, but even maybe more so, the
Spanish architecture, the various eras of European influence. The Creole culture,
the Cajun culture, the food, second line, the music. Oh,
(24:57):
the way they bury their dead is amazing, fascinating, fascinating people.
Every person seems so old, like an old soul. Even
the children.
Speaker 1 (25:13):
It's like.
Speaker 6 (25:16):
It's like they're possessed of multiple generations. If you know,
you know, if you don't, probably sounds odd to hear
me say that, but it really is. It really is
a unique place in terms of places you will go
in the United States that are incredibly unlike the rest
(25:37):
of the country, because, let's face.
Speaker 1 (25:40):
It, most of America.
Speaker 6 (25:43):
Is a strip center on a highway at an exit
with a five below, a pet smart you.
Speaker 1 (25:52):
Know, you know, the drill.
Speaker 6 (25:54):
I'm not mad, but that's be honest, that's what most
of it is. There's a guy who's in charge of
national openings for five below or whatever the store of
the week is, you know. Right now, at least in Houston,
it's Hot Chicken used to be dipping dots, you know,
those little things will come and go. A Starbucks will
(26:16):
go in there, and there's Chili's maybe, although I guess
that's on the way out. But there's certain places that
are extremely unique architecture, that the commerce, the transactions, the interactions.
Hawaii unique different. I guess the topography and weather and everything.
(26:43):
You'd say Alaska as well, But the Hawaiian people are different.
Speaker 1 (26:48):
They're unique.
Speaker 6 (26:48):
I mean, they have their own language, and the people
of New Orleans practically do as well.
Speaker 1 (26:56):
They're special. They're different.
Speaker 6 (26:59):
And I don't mean like you know in that special
church later. I mean they're special.
Speaker 1 (27:03):
They're unique.
Speaker 6 (27:06):
And yet every time New Orleans is in the news,
it's bad and that bums me out because I want
New York to I mean, I want New Orleans to
be great. A New Orleans police recruit has been arrested
by Ice for being in the country illegally. He was
even issued a gun. This should not be happening. The
(27:27):
story from WWLTV out of New Orleans.
Speaker 10 (27:31):
Wednesday, January twenty eighth, and OPD recruit Larry Tamil was
taken into ICE custody. The forty six year old is
from Cameroon and, according to Ice, originally enter the country
legally in twenty fifteen on a visitor visa. Ice says
in twenty sixteen he was granted conditional residency after marrying
a US citizen. Records ww lwise and obtained show a
petition for divorce was filed in late twenty sixteen in Georgia.
(27:55):
We also obtained a second petition for divorce filed in
early twenty twenty three from a marriage. Ice says in
twenty twenty two, Temas application for permanent residency was denied
due to fraud. According to Ice, Temil was quote ordered
to appear in immigration court three times, but continued to
disregard US law but not showing up. They say that
resulted in an immigration judge ordering him to be removed
(28:17):
in absentia. Ice claims he did not have a valid
work authorization. Documents obtained by WWL Louisiana shows application to
ENOPD submitted on February twenty six, twenty twenty five, is
marked yes under legal Right to Work in the United
States plus NOPD. Says Temma passed a criminal background check
and cleared the federal everify system, which confirms whether someone
(28:38):
is authorized to work in the United States.
Speaker 6 (28:41):
There was nothing that was in the packet that would
have us have a reason to believe that this person
did not have legal status.
Speaker 10 (28:51):
Ice maintains otherwise, saying he was recruited by NPD and
quote issued a gun despite the fact that he could
not legally carry a weapon quote as an undocumented imm.
Louisiana long includes an exception to concealed Carrie permits, requiring
an applicant quote not be an illegal alien in the
United States. The recent Permalist Carrie bill passed seems to
maintain that requirement.
Speaker 6 (29:13):
You do, so many things went so wrong in this country,
and so many people just decided, well, it's so bad
it's not even.
Speaker 1 (29:20):
Worth the fight.
Speaker 6 (29:21):
But it is worth the fight, because, as Trump has shown,
if we'll engage, we can take our country back. It's
not going to be overnight, but we've got to be
willing to engage. There are a lot of people on
our side that are real good at bitching, but if
they don't want to actually lift a finger to do
anything about it, it's easier to say it's all going
(29:42):
to hell in a hand basket and nothing can be
done to change it. All right, the border was closed,
you didn't say. You said that wouldn't happen. Deportations have
taken place, you said that wouldn't happen. Things have happened
that people said wouldn't happen because Trump didn't give up.
(30:03):
And by the way, Trump inspired a lot of people,
a lot of people to do things they wouldn't have
done already. Who are we inspiring to do more?
Speaker 1 (30:16):
To be more? Because that's what.
Speaker 6 (30:18):
Really matters, isn't it. What really matters is that we're
inspiring other people to say, well, if Michael and Ramon
can do it, maybe I can do it. If those
guys can stand up speak out, maybe I can.
Speaker 1 (30:34):
That's how it works.
Speaker 6 (30:36):
How many times has one mother and it's almost always
a mother, but sometimes it's a dad, but almost always
a mother. Learned what's going on at the school, and
she goes to school board. Minie says, hey, you got
a teacher handing out a book about raping children with
butt sex. As you know, that's being handed out to
(30:58):
third and fourth graders. That's wrong and this must stop now.
And she's the lone ranger. Nobody else, nobody else behind her.
She doesn't coordinate with anybody. She's just one person with conviction.
Edmund Burke famously said, one man with conviction is a majority.
(31:23):
There's actually no certain proof that he said that, but
it's believed that he did. One man with conviction is
a majority. How about the mom? She's not a public
speaker's non elected official. She just sees that her fourth
(31:44):
grade kid came home and there required reading is a
book about raping children or whatever crazy thing. And she
calls the school and they blow her off, and she
goes to school board meeting. She doesn't have a grand plan,
she ain't running for office. She didn't have anything to gain.
She just a mama bear who loves her kid. How
many times have we seen that spark a revolution inspire
(32:08):
other people to go hey, Miss Smith's never said a
word about anything. How many times at the church as
she spoken out and said, hey, pastors doing this and
I've been a member here, I was born into this
church and it's wrong and I'm standing up. That's how
change comes about. One man with conviction is a majority
(32:29):
of be that man