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July 10, 2025 • 33 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time time, time, time, luck and load. The
Mighty Very Show is on the air.

Speaker 2 (00:13):
It's not at least to get to buy a boat
or chain is thank you.

Speaker 3 (00:32):
This was a huge, I mean a monumental victory for
President Shop the biggest legal win of this.

Speaker 1 (00:39):
Administration so far.

Speaker 3 (00:40):
A total embarrassment for crazy Judge Bosburg who's been trying
to force this president to bring foreign alien terraces back
onto American soil, trying to turn our planes around, trying
to empty presents in foreign countries and bring them back
to our soil. This is a monumental, colossal victory for
the rule of law, for the Constitution, for our founding

(01:01):
generation John Adams who signed this law into effect in
seventeen ninety eight, and for President Trump.

Speaker 4 (01:06):
In fulfilling, we wrapped up that last discussion with regard
to Ice and illegal aliens. American people want illegal aliens deported.
Every poll is clear on that. CNN has reported it repeatedly,
and they didn't want to report it. Every poll says

(01:29):
the vast majority over ninety percent of Republicans and over
eighty percent of Democrats want illegal aliens supported. They also
want less legal immigration. People are tired of feeling overwhelmed
in the community they live in, where nobody speaks their language,

(01:49):
nobody is of their culture. You can say you're a
horrible person, but show me one community around the world
where you say, hey, you guys live in this neighborhood, right, Yeah,
we're going to bring a bunch of people look just
like me, and we're all going to live here. And
now you're going to feel like an outsider. Nobody wants that. Oh, well,
you're a terrible person for feeling tribal, really against what somalis. Okay, well,

(02:17):
you want to know the most tribal people in America.
Somalis in Mogadishu, I mean Minneapolis. Do you know how
tribal black people on the South side of Chicago are?
Go try to work, Go, try to walk through certain
neighborhoods in Philadelphia as a white man, and tell me
how tribal you are or how tribal the locals are

(02:42):
because you're interrupted their shootout. But you'd make for easy pickings. Well,
show me a white neighborhood where a black man can't
walk through. Who's tribal now? Who's tribal now? Anyway, once
you decide you're going to do the will of the
people and you're going to deport and the Democrats decide,

(03:03):
we're going to shut down large cities until you stop.

Speaker 1 (03:08):
What did Trump do? Brilliant move this.

Speaker 4 (03:12):
I've always made fun of Trump supporters who refer to
three dchess. This was three D chess. Hats off. This
was genius. He simply announced and followed it up with
phone calls. We're going after the people who are funding
the protests, and the protests stopped. Did you notice that
within forty eight hours the protests were done because he

(03:35):
meant it, and they knew it, and he knew who
was funding it. Sometimes it's hard for people to understand this.
We're never as smart as we think we are, and
elected officials are never as in the dark as you
might think they are, especially somebody who's really really crafty
and wily like Trump. One of Trump's great assets street smarts,

(04:02):
really really good instincts. In street smarts, he understands the
source of power in a way that most people don't.
Most people think that the powerful person is the guy
in the big office or the big car, or the
fancy suit with the title. Most people think that if

(04:24):
someone tells you they can't do something, that they can't
do something.

Speaker 1 (04:29):
Trump has an.

Speaker 4 (04:30):
Understanding that people do or don't do what they want
to do, and that they serve their own interests, and
he understands that their interest sometimes is not obvious. Sometimes
they're cutting side deals. Sometimes their real profit is in
a different unit of the business. Sometimes their greatest competitor

(04:52):
is someone who does business differently than they do. So
when they say that this manufacturing process or this distribution
process needs to be changed to this because it's better
for the environment or the people or whatever else, what
they're really doing is taking what they do and making
that the thing that is legal and what their competition

(05:13):
does and makes that illegal. But it sounds small to
say that, So instead you make what you're doing what
saves the earth, and what they're doing the greatest pollutant.
And he's very good at picking up on these sorts
of things, very very good. So when he announced, Okay,
we can't possibly arrest every protester driving around with the

(05:36):
Palestinian flag or Humas flag or Hasbela flag or whatever
other crazy flag they're running around, rainbow flag, and we're
not going to because that's a war it's a war
of attrition and we don't want that. We've seen Ukraine
Russia play out. What I'm going to do is cut
off the snake's head. We're going after the fundersoop and
it was over, and that was.

Speaker 1 (05:55):
It, and that was all.

Speaker 4 (05:57):
Meanwhile, Gavin Newsom has designs on the presidency.

Speaker 1 (06:01):
He dreams of being president. But there's a problem.

Speaker 4 (06:07):
The policies you need to claim to be for to
be president are antithetical to the policies that make you
popular in California. So what does he do well at
this point, he has to retain his popularity in California,
but then try to claim to the national audience that
he's more of a moderate. The problem is, for instance,

(06:31):
ICE agents coming under fire, protests gone mad, and Trump
and Homan to his credit. Trump is telling Homan because
you realize you can't give all the credit to Homan,
because he can't do anything unless he's told to do it,
and unless he has the backing. So Gavin Newsom told
the San Diego police stop backing up the federal immigration

(06:53):
agents during their raids, and ABC ten in San Diego says, no,
the police are supporting their brothers behind the.

Speaker 5 (06:59):
Badge projesters in South Park crowded around and spit on
ICE agents cars.

Speaker 1 (07:05):
In Lyndavista, onlookers tried to push through.

Speaker 5 (07:07):
Caution tape to help a man being detained despeccable.

Speaker 1 (07:11):
In both ice raids.

Speaker 5 (07:12):
Federal agents called San Diego Police for emergency assistance, and
officers responded.

Speaker 6 (07:17):
Our world is mainly to maintain the public safety and
respond if somebody needs help.

Speaker 5 (07:21):
SDPD Lieutenant Travis Easter says it's part of their policy.

Speaker 1 (07:25):
It says, quote, officers.

Speaker 5 (07:27):
Will provide emergency assistance to all law enforcement agencies, including
those under the Department of Homeland Security and Border Patrol.

Speaker 7 (07:35):
If somebody is assaulting or harming one of those officers
that they feel they need to call for assistance, we will arrive.

Speaker 5 (07:41):
Is it providing safety for the public or is it
providing safety for Homeland Security?

Speaker 8 (07:46):
Provide a safety for everybody.

Speaker 5 (07:47):
Police say they can use caution tape and other tools
to separate federal agents from the public. Video from Lynda
Vista shows a police vehicle in the middle.

Speaker 1 (07:55):
Of the road.

Speaker 5 (07:57):
Easter believes this does not contradict as fifty four. That's
the California law that limits local law enforcements cooperation with
federal immigration authorities'.

Speaker 2 (08:06):
Part Hard for the freedom to vote.

Speaker 6 (08:08):
The Michael Barry Joe Hard general direction.

Speaker 4 (08:14):
Joel Baker, the Austin Fire Chief. We go to a flashback.
He happens to be a black man from Fox seven
in Austin.

Speaker 6 (08:26):
Listen carefully, Poor. What's important is I'm not the last
African American fire too. That's more important than the first. Chief.

Speaker 5 (08:35):
Baker now oversees forty nine stations and around twelve hundred employees.
He says his goal for the department has changed over time,
but one has stuck through it all.

Speaker 6 (08:44):
One of my goal is ready to increase the diversity
of the Austin Fire Department. It need to affect more
of the community, serve because I believe the youth of
the Austin you know, youth in general, you will be
what you see. So for those young African American jan
Latino people in the Asian community or the LGBT community,
they see more firefighter that look like them and have

(09:07):
similar values of them.

Speaker 4 (09:10):
Leaving inside his speech pattern and the fact that he
doesn't know the difference between plural and singular subject verb
agreement and the like, why is it important that a
person responding to a fire looked like the person inside
the home.

Speaker 1 (09:29):
Explain to me why that is important.

Speaker 4 (09:32):
You know, if you go to a hospital today for
medical care in a major city, the likelihood that you
are going to look like the doctor, unless you're my
wife because she's from India is low because the vast
majority of them seem to be Indian. And nobody says,

(09:55):
wait a second, I'm a smith married to a Jones.
He's an anchortation woman. He can't do my heart surgery.

Speaker 1 (10:04):
Nobody says that. Do you know why? They don't say that.
Even the biggest liberal will never say that. You know why?

Speaker 4 (10:11):
Then I will say, ah, and I'm having open heart
surgery here. I am Jewish and my doctor is Berenstein.
And I'm just thinking to myself, you know, we don't
have enough black female doctors. See if I can't find
me a black female doctor do my open heart surgery.

(10:33):
If the doctor who was referred to you was the
best doctor and they happen to be a black female,
you wouldn't mind, But you wouldn't you wouldn't go over
the head of the one that was referred to you
by your primary to go looking for something that isn't
present in the doctor you were recommended for. So why

(10:56):
are we doing that with firefighters? Because it matters who
the car biologist is, but it doesn't matter who the
firefighter is. See, this is what's happened in America when
you start allowing this nonsense. Hey, we're not going to
give the job to the highest score. We're not going
to give the seat to the highest score. We're not
going to give the position to the highest score that

(11:17):
anyone can compete in. We're going to pick and choose
based on things unrelated to your ability to do the job.
Your gayness or your blackness has nothing to do with
your ability to perform the functions that the job does,
just as it has nothing to do with whether you're
a good cardiologist or a good quarterback. Well, we would

(11:42):
never say our local team has a white guy at quarterback,
and we really don't think that's a good idea. So
we're looking for an Asian female to stick in the
position so that young Asian females will all feel like
one day you two could be the quarterback of the Cowboys.
We don't do that, you know why, because we understand

(12:03):
that the decrease in quality by choosing someone on the
wrong basis would cost us games. Well, guess what happens
when you put people in office for reasons other than competence.

Speaker 1 (12:17):
It costs you games, it costs you lives. So this
same jackass who's put.

Speaker 4 (12:24):
There because he's black, says, I want to put a
bunch of other people in positions because they're black. Because
you know what people do, They validate their own blue
ribbon by giving blue ribbons to other people on that basis.
When people are from an Ivy League school, they want
to hire other people from Ivy League schools. You know why,

(12:46):
because that makes their degree more. Aggies people that go
to Texas A and M University are the best I've
ever seen in the country of all universities, followed oddly
enough at number two, behind Texas Tech. People from Texas
A and M University will go above and beyond to
hire somebody from Texas A and M University, and people

(13:11):
think it's because of a love of the institution. Yeah,
that's true. But if they make it a policy to
hire other Aggies, then going to Texas A and M
makes your degree worth more because it's a separator between
you and the guy that went to another school. Every
school is going to hire people like them. Everybody. Naturally,

(13:34):
we gravitate to things that are similar to us, and
we rejector at least suspect, things that.

Speaker 1 (13:39):
Are dissimilar to us. We all know that.

Speaker 4 (13:44):
But when you start making it a priority to hire
people on the basis of anything other than being good,
you've got a problem. So mister black fire chief in Austin,
guess what he did. He chose not to send the
firefighters down the road to Kerrville where children were drowning
white children, perhaps if they had been black. Here is

(14:07):
the president of the Austin Fire Association, Bob Nicks.

Speaker 9 (14:11):
I just don't even have words. Our firefighters are trained
for that area. Our firefighters had the equipment, they had
the desire, they had the will, they the power to
go up. And actually, I know some of those girls
could have been survived if we had had the best
boat crew the day before on scene. I know it.

Speaker 8 (14:30):
I know in my heart.

Speaker 9 (14:31):
I know as a as a potentent chief, I know
it is a former swift water tech myself, And.

Speaker 1 (14:37):
The fact that.

Speaker 9 (14:39):
We didn't do it, and we let them down, it's uncomfortable.

Speaker 1 (14:46):
You know, when you are.

Speaker 4 (14:51):
A superhero, you feel it feels a pool of the draw.
It's something that non superheroes don't experience. You feel the
need to be in the game, on the field, whatever cliche,
whatever metaphor you want to use, you want to be there,

(15:13):
You want to contribute it. It is a draw.

Speaker 8 (15:18):
You know.

Speaker 4 (15:18):
You saw the dad who jumped into water when his
four year old kid fell off the side of the
cruise last week.

Speaker 1 (15:26):
He drove in.

Speaker 4 (15:26):
He dove into treacherous waters four stories high and treaded
water for twenty minutes before they got a boat out
to save him and his child. That's superhuman stuff. There
was not a ledger where he put well the benefits
of saving my child, but the risks of trying to
save my child. Let me see, there's not a moment

(15:48):
of thought that is my child. I will save that
child if I lose my life in the process. My
life has no meaning. You can hear in the voice
of that man, the desire to save children. You did
not get that from the fire chief. No.

Speaker 1 (16:07):
Why he's not a fire chief to save lives.

Speaker 4 (16:09):
He's a fire chief as a place marker and as
a self dealer just trying to make more money for himself.

Speaker 10 (16:15):
Is when Jimmy Carter loses his.

Speaker 1 (16:19):
A couple of days ago, I played the Vice President JD.

Speaker 4 (16:22):
Vance talking about the fact that you cannot swap ten
million people from anywhere in the world, bring them here
and expect America not to change. You can't. I got
so much feedback from that. Well, there's two other things
he said in that speech, in that conversation that I
wanted to share that I didn't get to. And this

(16:44):
is him talking about the New York mayors race. This
Zorn Mumdatti, the communist white people hater, and he says
he won high income educated New Yorkers. Let me tell
you something, high income educated New Yorkers will be their
own downfall. They have tried to ride a tiger and
it's going to turn and bite them. And this is

(17:05):
not the first time you will see this. This happens
with rich, elite people where they think that they will,
you know, empower these people, and they end up they
start a fire which ends up burning them.

Speaker 1 (17:20):
One other quote from JD.

Speaker 4 (17:22):
Vance talks about the radicals on the far left do
not need a unifying ideology of what they're for. They're
not all four the same thing. Instead, they rally around
what they are against. This is how you get more
socially conservative blacks in favor of some of the training stuff,

(17:44):
which tends to bother blacks much more. This is how
you get Muslims to be for the same thing that
the training community is for. It's interesting you share an enemy,
and that's how you mobilize people.

Speaker 8 (17:58):
Well.

Speaker 4 (17:59):
Jdvance does a better job of explaining this than any
politician I've heard.

Speaker 11 (18:03):
Now last weeks has become sort of the main political story.
Over the last couple of weeks, a thirty three year
old communist running an insurgent campaign beat a multimillion dollar
established machine pop politician in the New York Democratic mayoral primary. Now,
I don't want to harp too much on a municipal election,

(18:24):
but there were two interesting threads that I think came
out of Mandani's victory that I think are worth us
understanding because they're reflective of where the broader American left
is at this moment in time. The first is that
it drives home just how much the voters in each
of the respective parties have changed. If our victory, if
President Trump's victory in twenty twenty four was rooted in

(18:46):
a broad, working and middle class coalition. Mamdanni's coalition is almost.

Speaker 1 (18:51):
The inverse of that.

Speaker 11 (18:53):
If you look at his electoral performance precinct by precinct,
what you see is a left that is completely left
behind the broad middle of the United States of America.
This is a guy who won high income and college
educated New Yorkers, and especially both young highly educated New Yorkers,
but he was weakest among black voters and weakest among

(19:16):
those without a college degree. That's an interesting coalition. Maybe
it works in the New York Democratic primary. I don't
think it works particularly well in the United States at large.
He did particularly well in the Bangladeshi areas of New York,
but he did particularly poorly with non Bangladeshi Asian immigrants,
particularly Chinese Americans. And if you look at the precincts

(19:37):
where he did the best, it was in New York's
gentrifying neighborhoods, places like Ridgewood and Bushwick, places I haven't
heard anything about, but I read about it.

Speaker 1 (19:45):
In a paper.

Speaker 8 (19:46):
His victory was the product of a.

Speaker 11 (19:48):
Lot of young people who live reasonably comfortable lives, but
see that their lead degrees aren't really delivering what they expected,
and so their own prospects with all the college debt
may not in fact be greater than those of their parents.
And I say that not to criticize them, because I
think that we should care about all the people in
our country, particularly those downardly mobile, college educated people who

(20:12):
feel like the American dream is not quite all it's
cracked up to be. But we have to be honest
about where his coalition is. It is not the down trodden,
It is not poor Americans. It is not about dispossession.
It's about elite this disaffection and elite anger.

Speaker 4 (20:27):
I didn't know if we were going to have a
chance to get this on the air, but there's a
couple of things. I'm gonna go quick here because it's
important that you hear it. This is Congressman Eric Swalwell,
who's famous for farting talking about he's on MSNBC's Democrat
from California just he just really, really really loves illegal aliens,
and he wants local police not to catch and deport

(20:48):
and prosecute them. He wants Ice agents arrested. These people
are telling you they're no longer playing the game. They're
bringing the fight to you.

Speaker 12 (20:57):
You know what the Trump administration is said all along
their actions on immigration are to make America safer. So,
as a member of the Whole Land Committee, the Whole
Land Service Security Committee, what you see in those pictures,
is it making America safer?

Speaker 7 (21:12):
No, it's terrorizing Americans, our friends and neighbors, otherwise known
as immigrants, many of them.

Speaker 8 (21:18):
But these are folks who you know.

Speaker 7 (21:20):
They go to our churches, they work at our grocery stores,
they work on construction sites, they work in childcare, they
work in many jobs that would not be filled had
they not done it.

Speaker 8 (21:30):
And I also just sit back and ask who asked
for this.

Speaker 7 (21:33):
Americans were told that the most violent individuals would be deported,
and we're now seeing in the numbers that that is
a very small percentage.

Speaker 8 (21:39):
Of who is being targeted. But Chris were not helpless.

Speaker 7 (21:43):
Democratic attorneys general in these states have their own law
enforcement abilities, and I would recommend, and I have recommended
to them, use those capabilities.

Speaker 1 (21:53):
What's an example of how well, if.

Speaker 7 (21:55):
These agents are committing assault or battery, you can charge
them with assault and battery.

Speaker 8 (22:00):
So we're we're not helpless. You should meet their chaos
with chaos.

Speaker 7 (22:03):
And by the way, I think you're standing on better
laws than they're standing on. And they're also arresting non immigrants.
They're arresting mistakenly American citizens. They arrested a couple of
weeks ago a US marshal by a mistake. They have
deported a four year old US citizen boy battling cancer.
So we're not helpless. The only language that they understand

(22:26):
is strength. And if we are on our heels constantly,
we're never going to protect the most vulnerable in our community.

Speaker 8 (22:32):
So we have to ratchet it up. And I really
mean that it's Congress helpless. No, the Congress does not
help us either.

Speaker 7 (22:38):
So as we go into the you know, budgeting, when
the government funding runs out in September, we can put
in place in budgeting no masks, like we can insist
I'm not going to fund anything that sends these masks
agents like you know bank Robert Bandits would.

Speaker 8 (22:54):
Be the Republicans on board with that.

Speaker 7 (22:55):
Congressman, Well, they need Democrats to pass a budget in
the Senate. They need sixty votes in the Senate. So
if we went back to just supporting the most violent
in our community and finding resources to legalize those who
are here undocumented but working and following our laws. We
have the ability to do that, but that's all the
more the case to be in the majority, because in

(23:16):
the majority, that's where we really have leverage.

Speaker 4 (23:19):
Here is Chicago's Mayor Brandon Jacobs talking about the new
ICE budget as part of the Big Beautiful Bill, and
this is an assault on the civil liberties of all Americans. Well,
actually we're not talking about Americans. We're talking about illegal aliens.
Democrats view illegal aliens as more important to this country
than you because the illegals can be controlled and you can't.

Speaker 13 (23:43):
The other things and all the other cuts pays for
a massive increase in the masked secret police that are
terrorizing our communities. ICE ICE will now have a larger
budget than all but fifteen of the world's militaries.

Speaker 1 (24:06):
It's a four year total.

Speaker 13 (24:08):
Its four year total is more than every military except
for the United States and China. This is a direct
assault on the civil liberties of all Americans and will
fundamentally undermine our rights.

Speaker 4 (24:24):
It's from all the King of ding It and this
other guy, Michael Barry.

Speaker 8 (24:30):
These are the kind of guys, you're like a smacking as.

Speaker 14 (24:34):
There was the creation of fire, the wheel, electricity technology.

Speaker 1 (24:43):
It's an absolute game changer.

Speaker 15 (24:45):
Gum a lawyers are stumbling fumbling word salad.

Speaker 2 (24:48):
Queen climbing her away to the top by staying on
her knees.

Speaker 15 (24:54):
Come on, what can be unburned by what has been?
Got a little bit of what has been.

Speaker 1 (25:07):
On the show, and that's a woman.

Speaker 14 (25:10):
There's a balance to be struck between being tough and
being a bitch.

Speaker 10 (25:24):
Up.

Speaker 15 (25:25):
She has believed with words that way is best described
as bad.

Speaker 8 (25:30):
Don't don't bring.

Speaker 1 (25:31):
It up, Montel Williams. Don't make her mad.

Speaker 15 (25:34):
Come on, she's a brain damage chat cheepach in the
media thinks that weekend, poor ol Kamala, keep it up.

Speaker 4 (25:52):
You're doing great, Okamala, big too?

Speaker 2 (25:57):
Mis running me?

Speaker 15 (25:59):
Is it any wonder that the country's turning red?

Speaker 1 (26:03):
Kamali? You gotta damping her.

Speaker 14 (26:06):
I am here standing here on the northern flank, on
the Eastern flank, talking about what we have in terms
of the Eastern Flank and our NATO allies, and what
is that steak at this very moment?

Speaker 8 (26:24):
What is that steak this very moment?

Speaker 14 (26:27):
Are some of the guiding principles around the NATO Alliance.

Speaker 2 (26:32):
What can be unburned by what has been?

Speaker 15 (26:36):
Got a little bit of what has been on our shoes?

Speaker 2 (26:41):
Oh, come on, look, keep it up.

Speaker 11 (26:43):
You're doing breed old Tamala gotta do misprunning bad.

Speaker 2 (26:50):
Isn't it any wonder that the country's turning red? Kamali,
you gotta damping.

Speaker 14 (26:57):
I'm talking about the significance of the passage of time,
empty head, right, the significance of the passage of.

Speaker 8 (27:03):
Time, empty head. And there is such.

Speaker 14 (27:06):
Great significance to the passage of time when we think
about a day in the life of our children. We
will assist Jamaica in COVID recovery. By assisting in terms
of the recovery efforts in Jamaica, I can imagine what
can be and be unburdened by what has been.

Speaker 1 (27:26):
You know, here is Whitney.

Speaker 4 (27:28):
Coming's a comedian who was on with Bill Maher on
his program called Club Random. And she's talking about Kamala
Harris and making jokes about about it. And by making
jokes about it, nobody will criticize her for pointing out
that Kamala Harris was drunk all the time.

Speaker 16 (27:45):
I was doing this joke last year about Kamala Harris
before the election. Did you see those videos where she's
ostensibly was a little.

Speaker 8 (27:55):
Tipsy when she was giving speeches. How could you tell
me that was the problem. I was like, mommy, mommy,
that was the problem. That that can't want the problems.

Speaker 16 (28:05):
But I was doing a joke about it, going like,
maybe this is what we need. What is scarier than
an alcoholic woman.

Speaker 1 (28:12):
With no children, truly nothing.

Speaker 16 (28:15):
This is the level of fearness and fearlessness we would like.

Speaker 2 (28:17):
Imagine she's like drunk dials Putina two A.

Speaker 8 (28:19):
I'm like, hey, homo, like this could be good and
everyone will got it. Everyone we got it?

Speaker 16 (28:26):
You know it to New York and I it went
like okay, it was kind of and someone was like,
I've never seen that video. I'm like, my whole feed
is Kamala Harris giving speeches. And there's other people that
didn't even get it. So it's like we all had
these that's the problem we bespoke algorithms. I almost feel
like when we start talking to each other, we have
to do like an aldoo.

Speaker 4 (28:46):
This statement, this is six twelve of them, is by
somebody who posts on social media under the name WALP.
Tomp and he says, you know, maybe white people should
start doing what black people do and start voting in
overtly pro white candidates because that's what everybody else is doing. Oh,

(29:06):
this is very upsetting, But is it true white people
should just start voting in overtly pro white candidates because
that's what every other group does and have been doing.

Speaker 17 (29:17):
The mayor of New York is talking about how he
wants to raise taxes on affluent white neighborhoods. In other words,
I'm going to use political power to target this group
specifically because they got it in an unfair way, and
I'm trying to fix this system to redistribute.

Speaker 8 (29:33):
I don't give up what you want to do.

Speaker 17 (29:35):
I'm voting in the most racist guy I know, because
I don't actually mean that, but I like, I don't
believe you anymore.

Speaker 8 (29:41):
Like it's not about justice.

Speaker 17 (29:43):
It's so obviously about power and resentment and a complete
double standard, because then they'll bitch and moan and cry
if white people do the same thing. If white people
even start to organize according to their group's interests to
any degree, it's literally apocalyptic.

Speaker 2 (29:58):
Yet these minority ca and it.

Speaker 1 (30:00):
It's like representing these interest groups.

Speaker 17 (30:02):
That's their whole platform, is promoting their eye group's identity.
And then they'll say like, nothing's actually happening. That's not
actually happening, but it is happening because you guys deserve it.

Speaker 1 (30:13):
You should not care.

Speaker 17 (30:14):
About the accusations anyway, it's so obvious.

Speaker 4 (30:18):
I don't watch the WNBA. I've never watched the game.
That's that's not some big statement. Doesn't make me great,
doesn't make them awful. But I don't know anybody who
watches the WNBA. The only thing anybody ever talks about
is Caitlyn Clark and how the black lesbian women hate
her and they're trying to kill her on the court

(30:38):
the way the Pistons were trying to kill Michael Jordan
back in the day. I don't know anybody who watches it.
But as much as the black lesbians hate her, she's
been great for the league. This is six oh six, Jim,
listen to this. They're actually expanding to more teams. I
don't know how, but they.

Speaker 18 (30:55):
Are, And so I get that aspect, But I also
think that you you want to listen to your players too,
Like where do they want to play it.

Speaker 1 (31:06):
Where are they going to get.

Speaker 2 (31:08):
Excited to play and draw?

Speaker 19 (31:09):
And I do think that Miami would have.

Speaker 1 (31:11):
Been agreed for, like everyone loves sporting.

Speaker 19 (31:12):
Nashville is an amazing city, Kansas City, amazing opportunity.

Speaker 18 (31:16):
There's a huge arena downtown that Mila Chusa.

Speaker 19 (31:18):
And I think that the Women's Soccer League is showing
that like people draw, you know, and so I'm not
so sure what the the processes there.

Speaker 2 (31:29):
But today you also.

Speaker 19 (31:31):
Want to explaining a league too fast. I think that
that's it's another thing that we don't want teams to
totally don't man and how teas that are. And so
I just think that I don't it's kind of a
hard situation to discourage situation, but man.

Speaker 2 (31:45):
I don't.

Speaker 8 (31:45):
I don't know how excited are going to.

Speaker 4 (31:49):
Let's make our tour around the country to Los Angeles.
Mayor Karen Mass the mayor of Los Angeles who has
been put on display this year for her incompetence, and
she's says that her job is to make Los Angeles safe,
no matter where you're from, where what country you came from,
So she doesn't really care if Los Angelinos are overrun

(32:12):
by illegal alien criminals. Doesn't matter to her. What she
cares about is illegal aliens. Once you understand that is
their priority, everything begins to make sense at that point.

Speaker 10 (32:27):
Just finished working with our city attorney to file a
lawsuit because we have to stop this mess. You know,
the idea of having troops go through the park and
disrupt a children's summer camp, or drive through the.

Speaker 1 (32:40):
Streets and just pick people off the streets.

Speaker 10 (32:42):
We don't know if a kidnapping is happening or what,
and so our city attorney is leading the way. We're
filing a lawsuit. We're calling for an injunction for this
to stop. We need to remember who we are.

Speaker 1 (32:54):
As a country.

Speaker 10 (32:55):
I'm very clear to who we are as a city,
and I'm clear about my job, which is to make
sure that this city is safe for all Angelinos, regardless
of when you came here, what country you came from,
or why. We gotta stop it. And I know you
know what, We're gonna stand strong because this city is united.
We are not divided, and we're not gonna let anybody

(33:17):
divide this.

Speaker 14 (33:19):
There's no assn It's a lot of good lady, thank you,
and good night.
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