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February 19, 2025 • 34 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
I have worked downtown multiple times over the decades. It
used to be for one way streets there was at
least three lanes, and then for two way streets there
was at least two lanes each way. When I was
in downtown Denver earlier this week, many of the one
way streets only have two lanes going one way, and

(00:22):
then the two lane streets only have one lane going
each way. It's so difficult to get around downtown in
a car, but it's.

Speaker 2 (00:30):
Real easy to get around downtown in a bicycle, like
I'm sure today. I bet the bike lanes are just
jam packed today.

Speaker 3 (00:38):
All those Lime scooters all over the place there in line.
I love the Lime scooters. I love those.

Speaker 2 (00:45):
So while all these restaurant tours in downtown Denver are
rightfully so complaining about what a crap hole downtown Denver's
turned into, and while the spokesol for the City and
County of Denver talks about, oh, you know, the mayor's
goal is, well, we don't care what your goal is.

Speaker 3 (01:03):
What are you doing? How about that? Well, let me
tell you.

Speaker 2 (01:06):
What they're doing before we get into the larger issue
of American urban areas in general. This letter is from
Covington and Berlin LLP, a world an international law firm,
one of the largest law firms in the country, offices

(01:28):
in Beijing, Brussels, Dubai, Frankfurt, Johannesburg, London, Los Angeles, New York,
Palo Alto, San Francisco, Soul, Shanghai, and in Washington, d C.
It's dated a couple of weeks ago, February seven, to
Katie McLaughlin, Acting City Attorney. Reference engagement letter. Dear Miss McLaughlin,

(01:51):
we are pleased to confirm that we will represent the
City of Denver in a congressional inquiry by the US
House Committee on Government and Reform. We appreciate the opportunity
to work with you on this matter. Of course they
do because wait till you hear the fee structure. We
understand that the City at Denver will be our client
in this representation and not any affiliates or related parties.

(02:14):
Let me skip through this. We will render our statements
to you monthly. Our fees for lawyers, legal assistants and
other professionals will be based on our rate arrangement, in effect,
when the services are rendered for work performed. In twenty
twenty five, we have agreed to discount our rates and
provide a blended all attorney rate of one thousand dollars

(02:38):
per hour for all partners, counsel and associates, and a
blended rate of five hundred and ninety five dollars for
all professional staff and other words staff attorneys, pair of leegals,
and the like. In addition, the firm has agreed to
provide the first fifty hours of partner time on this
matter at no cost to you. Remember that in just
a minute. We normally view and adjust our rates once

(03:01):
a year as of January one, although there are circumstances
in which we may adjust rates at other times. We
further agree that the initial funding for this engagement is
two million dollars. The parties agree the City Council of
Denver's formal approval of this funding, executed in compliance to

(03:25):
Section blah blah blah, is expected no later than February eighteen,
twenty twenty five, which I would note was yesterday. The
initial funding is expected to cover part of our work
performed through the date of a hearing in front of

(03:46):
the US House Committee on Government and Reform, including but
not limited to preparation in advance of this hearing and
the initial work related to document review and production. This
is a fairly standard and aagement letter from a firm
like Covington and Berlin. The retainer is two million dollars
to be paid for by the taxpayers of the city

(04:09):
and County of Denver, including the restauranteurs who just sent
a letter bitching and moaning, rightfully so, about the conditions
in downtown Denver. The hearing, of course, is about Mayor
Johnston's so he's the one that is causing this fee
to be incurred his public statements about how he will

(04:33):
not comply with you know, immigrations and customs enforcement, and
that Denver will remain a sanctuary city.

Speaker 3 (04:39):
And of course this is also due in part to
Governor Jared.

Speaker 2 (04:43):
Polus and his comrades, the communists at the Colorado Pollup Bureau,
who continue to maintain Colorado as a sanctuary state. So
it is costing you initially a two million dollar retainer
built at a rate one thousand dollars for the partners
and a blended rate of five hundred and ninety five

(05:05):
dollars for everybody else that he ever ever even touches
this matter. So I don't know what they'll charge. I
assume they charge a fee for all of their expenses,
including copies and you know, whatever the charges they have
car service up to the hearing. So in addition to

(05:26):
the from the five hundred and fifty million dollars that's
supposed to go to improvement of downtown Denver, you can
subtract at a minimum two million dollars for legal fees
for an international law firm to represent Mayor Mike Johnston
when he hauls his little butt up to DC to

(05:47):
testify about all the great things he's doing for illegal aliens.
It is also costing taxpayer money in the State of Colorado,
and as somebody, I'm completely forgotten about this until somebody
reminded me on the text line even though the State
of Colorado cannot accept your tax return yet because they

(06:09):
don't have the forms uploaded.

Speaker 3 (06:13):
Huh. Now, I find that kind of interesting.

Speaker 2 (06:17):
And of course that's under the Department of Revenue, which
is a part of the executive branch of the State
of Colorado, which is headed by a Yahoo by the
name of Jared Polus. Now what I found interesting in
the stories that were all over the news yesterday about

(06:39):
how the Department of Revenue cannot accept your tax return yet.
Now look, I don't care because I have to wait
till a certain you know, form CA's and everything else
come in. So I hardly ever get my tax I
almost always have to file an extension. So just make
any difference to me. But for many people, as many
of the news stations reported, you know, a lot of
people are for whatever reason, and it's just to get

(07:02):
their refunds back, and they can't get their state reap.
They can't get their state tax return filed. And every
news aullent that whose story I saw only talked to
a spokeshole for the Department of Revenue. Not one person,
not one reporter seemed to want to call the governor

(07:25):
and ask the governor, Hey, the Department of Revenue is
under your control. Those are your people, those that that's
your department. What's going on?

Speaker 3 (07:37):
What is it?

Speaker 2 (07:39):
Uh? The Feds have been ready to take tax returns
for a month or more and Litlo, Colorado can't get
their act together. And you wonder why this is a
crap hole state. This is why it's a crap hole state.
Let's go to Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. Ever been to Harrisburg? I

(07:59):
had to go Harrisburg, Pennsylvania one time shortly after nine
to eleven to meet with the Governor Tom Ridge because
we had an offer to make him there forget. Bush
had sent me in someone else to go to Harrisburg

(08:21):
to tell him we'd like for him to become the
president's first Homeland Security advisor. Oh was Ridge excited about that.
But anyway, there's a toy store called Treasure Trove in Harrisburg.

(08:41):
I've never been to this store, but in reading about it,
apparently when you go in to a toy store called
Treasure Trove, you won't find any toys. Well, you'll find
instead are boxes of Narcan, which is a medication you
used to treat, you know, emergency rug over doses. This

(09:02):
sits right on the front counter, near the cash register,
and next to it you can find these photos online.

Speaker 3 (09:09):
Is a handwritten sign that says free.

Speaker 2 (09:12):
So it's a free toy store, except you don't get toys,
you get narcan. It opened about a year ago in
Harrisburg as a satellite store of their toy and second
hand good shop in nearby newberry Town, but the second
location within spitting distance of the Pennsylvania State Capitol has

(09:32):
evolved into something like a mission for the chronically homeless
that also sells funkal pops, figurines, cracking colexels all the time.

Speaker 3 (09:43):
Yeah, missus Redbeard does well. She's told me that you
are actually the one that buys. They've got little eighty
bitty ones called bitty pops. She's totally obsessed with those
now because they're so much smaller.

Speaker 2 (09:53):
Well, you should take her to a trip to Pennsylvania
and you can pick us from Narcan while you're there.
Oh sure is At any day, considering everything I have
to talk about in this program, I may start doing drugs.

Speaker 3 (10:04):
One of us will exactly exactly.

Speaker 2 (10:08):
The owners a nerdy couple by the name of Jason
Kerenzy and Jeff and er Jay Z Corensey said it
was impossible, impossible to operate their retail business in a
downtown where hundreds of deprived, homeless people just wander the
streets like zombies and actually outnumber the regular pads that

(10:30):
you would normally see in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, the freaking state
capital of Pennsylvania. In July, the Crenzies were featured in
a really feel good story in the local newspaper about
turning their business into a hub for helping the homelessness.

Speaker 3 (10:47):
Yeah, I wonder a house working out for them. But
let me tell you.

Speaker 2 (10:51):
One of Trevor Trove's employees is Daniel, seventy five year
old veteran. He's been sleeping in a tent since twenty
eleven until the Chris were kind enough to let him
live in the store building. Now, the problem is that
the homeless don't always love the owners of the store back.
Less than a month after this article appeared in the Burg,

(11:16):
somebody named Toby walked into the store and angrily demanded
three thousand dollars for a new e byte. Now Toby
not like the dog of friends of ours. This is
actually a human being. Is a twenty six year old
homeless person who's infamous among the local merchants and residents

(11:36):
because for years now he's been aggressively demanding no strings
attached financial assistance. Now, the Crisensa's offered Toby some free clothes,
here's some drinks, and here's some leads on some affordable housing,
but they would not hand over the three thousand dollars
that he wanted. Guess what happened next? According to Ms Crazuinzi,

(12:04):
he then threatened to sue me, then kill himself, and
then charged at my husband. Had my huge husband, ripping
apart part of his beard, hitting him with a mop,
throwing his phone, breaking inventory. He ripped Jason's shirt, kicked
and hit him, and refused to let him go for
several minutes. As we kept yelling let him go, stop it,
stop it. Jason was on the ground, unable to breathe

(12:25):
until the popo arrived and immediately pulled him off. It's
not many who would even try to attack a six
hundred pounds store owner. Dragon six hundred pounds store owner
makes you look like a whimp who does nothing, but
you have free got into the homeless all day long.
I could go off on so many directions here. Think

(12:46):
about this. Forget the six hundred, forget the fact he
weighed six hundred pounds. But here's a couple tried to
open a toy store, a retail store in downtown Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, America.
Just it's Harrisburg. Is like any other mid size capitol

(13:07):
you drive around. It's topeak. He might as well be
in tepeak as being Harrisburg. Toby the twenty six year
old homeless guy, has a completely different perspective about what
took place. He was the blameless one and he was

(13:27):
being discriminated against. He claims the owner started yelling, cursing,
and harassing him. If anyone supports this business, he wrote,
they are not human. And the moderators on the Facebook
page where this group is sided with Toby and banned
the Chrisiensis from the group. So when the owner protested,

(13:48):
he said he was first told they didn't want to
infringe on the homeless person's First Amendment rights, to which
I would say, well, wait a minute, what about the
owner's First Amendment rights? This is the insanity, utter insanity
that is eating away at this country. At the same
time that at least at the federal level and among

(14:10):
us who still have our brains intact, are trying to
attack this insanity at the federal, state and the local
level ourselves. Today. You can go online. You can find
this group on Facebook. Toby the twenty six year old
homeless guy is still begging for pay power Venmo donations.

(14:33):
Now I want you stop him. Think about this for
a minute. Toby is twenty six years old and he's
homeless Dragan, how do you how do you access paypaler Venmo.

Speaker 3 (14:43):
Through your phone?

Speaker 4 (14:44):
Oh?

Speaker 3 (14:44):
A phone? Through a smartphone? Yeah yeah, not a flip phone, like.

Speaker 2 (14:53):
Not an old motorola, right, you got to have like
one of these, right, Yeah?

Speaker 3 (14:58):
Okay.

Speaker 2 (14:58):
I just wanted to make sure because he's making for
money for through PayPal and Venmo, which requires a smartphone
to access that. Or I guess you could access a
little laptop too, a homeless guy that has a smartphone
or a laptop.

Speaker 3 (15:15):
Hmm. Interesting.

Speaker 2 (15:18):
The interesting thing is if you go through and you
look at the Facebook group and Harrisburg is liberal lean.
Don't get me wrong, Harrisburg is a liberal. Harrisburg is
like Denver in that way. They don't want to put
an end to it. And then I would wonder, even
if they wanted to put an end to it, could

(15:39):
they because this is not an uncommon story. I think
nearly every American city now has a version of Toby,
and they've got a version of this store.

Speaker 3 (15:54):
It's groups of individuals moving.

Speaker 2 (15:57):
Around, you know, being swept from one location or even
like in the case of the Metro Denver area, being
swept from a roar into Denver and then from Denver
into Lakewood, and then from you know Lakewood back into Littleton,
and then from Littleton back over into you know, Commerce City,
and they just get shuffled all over the place. They

(16:19):
terrorize entire blocks, neighborhoods, they terrorize public transit. Let's go
to San Francisco as an example. Let's talk about Lacey
since twenty twenty. I should laugh at this, but Lacey
chases people and their children around city parks well screaming

(16:43):
at them. Now, this has been going on for years
in San Francisco, and nobody stops Lacey. Nobody puts Lacey
in a mental institution. They just let Lacey chase people
around the park and their children. Children are terrorized Austin.

(17:04):
Go down to Austin for a moment. Romie Zawade. He
routinely smashes the city property with a sledgehammer. He cuts
down trees with a chainsaw.

Speaker 3 (17:15):
HU, don't ask me. I don't know how he gets
a chainsaw.

Speaker 2 (17:18):
He cuts down He cuts down trees with a chainsaw,
and he walks around with a machete all the time.

Speaker 3 (17:23):
And he shrieks all through the night.

Speaker 2 (17:26):
Now, due to a confrontation with Daniel penny in a
New York subway car. The entire nation is aware of
Jordan Neely forty two prior arrests, three subway assaults, one
of New York City's top fifty list of homeless peaces.

Speaker 4 (17:45):
It's pretty easy to stop that crime. In Denver, as
a victim of a car hacking car near carth at
the Dia, I was sitting there with my grandkids in
the parking lot. Call him on my truck smashed, called
the place and play said, oh, we can't come. There's
no officer to respond. So you know, no report equals

(18:08):
no crime. BINGO next election.

Speaker 2 (18:12):
Unbelievable. I mean, it's believable, But it's just it's just
that this is what I mean when I talked about
the fact that we're living in a post apocalyptic society
where this craziness goes on. Then let's go back to
Harrisburg for a minute, because I forgot about another story.

(18:34):
Because it's not just Toby that's running around, you know,
asking for then Moe and everything else. There's another homeless
guy in Harrisburg, and according to Angela Fox, who owns
a laundromat, he just comes in and he's ranting and raving,
torturing customers, yelling in their face for money, doing drugs.

(18:56):
It was so sad to see that he's not just
tortured the other small business on the street, but he's
torturing the entire community in a four block radius. One
person is terrorizing the community and nothing is being done.
So you might ask yourself, why's he on the streets?
What's law enforcement doing?

Speaker 1 (19:16):
Well?

Speaker 3 (19:16):
The local cops say they can't.

Speaker 2 (19:17):
Do anything because he hasn't hurt a kid yet, He
hasn't hurt he hasn't anything violent yet.

Speaker 3 (19:23):
Now I thought that terrorizing people.

Speaker 2 (19:26):
You know, if you go back to Germany, like you
talked about yesterday, if you do something that offends somebody,
they can throw you in jail. But here you can
just terrorize people's children. San Francisco, Austin, downtown, Denver, wherever
it is. You can do all of that and cops
them and do a damn thing. Or why aren't there
cops to show up at d I A m hm uh,

(19:50):
I see now I know. I know that there is
a division of the Denver Police Department that is assigned
to Denver International Airport, and I because they stand out
there at the stupid security entrances, and they stand there
because TSA has no law enforcement authority, So they are

(20:11):
there in case somebody forgets that, Oh I forgot I
left my glock in my backpack. Not that I would
ever do that, but you know, they forgot about they
had a glock in the backpack. So they're there for that,
which rarely happens. And yet they can't walk out to
the garage and handle that situation. This is the post
apocalyptic society that we live in. This is the degradation

(20:33):
of modern American cities.

Speaker 3 (20:37):
Why would you live in one?

Speaker 2 (20:39):
Why why you know, you want to talk about white
flight from the sixties, how about we just have flight
now in the twenty twenties, the cops in Harrisburg say
they've arrested this guy forty five times since twenty seventeen,
but it doesn't warrant longer jail time. Well, wait a minute,

(21:01):
he's a repeat offender, isn't there something? And what about
you know, I keep saying, why don't we institutionalize these people? Well,
in Harrisburg, they had a state mental institution. They closed
it down in two thousand and it sat decrepit, abandoned.

Speaker 3 (21:20):
I guess guess what happened to it.

Speaker 2 (21:24):
Yeah, a bunch of homeless people moved into the state
mental institution, state mental hospital that had been shut down,
so kind of like you know, insects and flies and
everything to a dead animal or a dead corpse laying
you know, I guess dead corps is redundant. To a
corpse laying out on the ground, they just flocked to

(21:45):
it and start to eat it alive. Well, the homeless
people just moved into the middle institution and burned it
to the ground last year. In that I think that's
a wonderful metaphor for America's under institutionalized problem. This goes

(22:06):
back to John F. Kennedy the Community Mental Health Act
of nineteen sixty three, in which most of this country's
mental hospitals were closed over the second half of the
twentieth century. And it was bipartisan. It wasn't just Democrats.
They wanted to shut down these middle institutions and quit

(22:32):
warehousing people and just let them out into the streets. Now,
let's be brutally honest here. Let's say that they were
being warehoused. Would you rather have these crazed, pathetic, sick
individuals warehoused, or would you rather have them out on

(22:55):
the streets creating mayhem, you know, kind of like that
all state, just creating mayhem out on the streets, assaulting individuals,
committing crimes, destroying the vibrancy of a once great downtown Denver.

Speaker 3 (23:13):
I'd rather have them warehoused.

Speaker 2 (23:16):
You can call me cold hearted, but we'd rather have
them locked up in a mental institution, just drug them
up every day. Now we could have we could have
a month's long discussion or longer about how did we
end up with so many mentally crazy people to begin with?

(23:39):
And we can have a month's longer, longer conversation about
you know, what's the proper treatment or can they even
be treated? Or do they just need to be institutionalized.
But I'll see, what they don't need to be is
just roaming the streets. And somehow that's that's what progressivism

(24:01):
has brought us. Without those institutions, the tens of thousands,
the millions probably that once house them are instead cycled
in and out of jail, in and out of emergency rooms,
living on the streets, destroy and running away customers and businesses,
and just turning American cities into post apocalyptic hellholes. Nobody's

(24:31):
forced to get treatment, nobody's forced to stay in ash shelter,
and so they just pick up where they left off
after they leave jail, and it gets just worse and
worse and worse.

Speaker 3 (24:42):
And in a.

Speaker 2 (24:42):
Time of ever increasing economic inequality, hyper individualism is the
rise of anti institution. Large informal homeless encampments are now
a standard feature in almost every American city.

Speaker 3 (25:02):
Look around you.

Speaker 2 (25:04):
I know that many of you take my advice on this,
but you ought to take a trip around Denver and look,
I mean really, look, look like I do when I'm driving.
Look at the strip malls. Don't just stay on the
main arterial streets. Get into the heart of the city

(25:27):
and look around, and you'll realize it's a hell hole.
It's truly a hell hole. The dysfunction of these encampments
inevitably spells out into whatever downtown area they're in, And

(25:50):
all these cities all across the country are still suffering
from the post COVID malaise, the post COVID shut down,
and then you get the political vacuum. It just creates
a doom loop effect. Businesses are legitimately wary of investing

(26:11):
in neighborhoods like these, and then when they don't, residents
lack access to essential services, including groceries or you know,
healthy food options. Commercial property values drop, That reduces funding
for public schools and other municipal services. Middle class people
and living in those neighborhoods, what do they do? Will
they move out? And then that exacerbates the concentration and

(26:35):
the clustering of the disadvantage into those areas. So unless
we do policy changes, these post apocalyptic cities like Denver
are going to continue to deteriorate. And then you pile
on top of that deterioration all of these stupid, absolutely

(26:56):
asinine policies like you know, let's reduce people are driving
too fast in residential streets. That may or may not
be a legitimate problem. I don't know, I don't care,
But the solution is we'll make the streets narrow. Well, no,
wait a minute, if people are indeed speeding or driving
too fast in a residential area, if you narrow the

(27:18):
streets the people, some people will slow down, some people
will continue to speed, and both of which will make
the streets even more dangerous for both pedestrians and drivers.
Or you take Broadway or any other street in downtown Denver,
and you make it difficult where someone who's been driving
long enough to know how to drive that. I look

(27:40):
around and I'm like, wait a minute, can I turn
into that lane? Or is it that lane? Or is
it that lane?

Speaker 3 (27:46):
I'm not sure which lane. It is.

Speaker 2 (27:50):
Utter insanity, and I know, don't don't ask me what
the is because the only answer I have is the
group of politicians that run these major cities now have
got to go. I don't know that Conservatives or Republicans

(28:12):
have any better answers. But you know, keep doing you
keep doing the same thing over and over and over
and expecting a different result. It truly is insane. And
not only is insane, it's dangerous in its criminal and
it just continues to get worse. And as it gets worse,
who wants to live in those places? I would, you know,

(28:35):
except the fact I've got two big as dogs, I'd
love to downsize.

Speaker 3 (28:41):
I wouldn't mind living in a.

Speaker 2 (28:43):
Condo in an urban area, in a in a downtown area,
or you know, even someplace over here. But even over here,
we've got them walking around over here. You think the
tech if you live outside the tech center, you think, oh, yeah,
well you live it, you know, you live down in
Douglas County or whatever. No, it's everywhere, absolutely everywhere. But

(29:09):
without some policy changes, without some personnel changes, cities like
Denver threatened to produce I shouldn't say threat. Cities like
Denver will continue to produce more homeless people and they'll
just quietly slide into oblivion. And the Democrats, who are
busy using the FEDS and using whatever NGOs they can

(29:31):
to line their own pockets, which is what this revealing
is is showing all of us, they'll just make it worse.
We're really at a crossroads, and we can now see
that crossroads. We can see what Trump is doing trying

(29:51):
to clean up the waste, fraud, and abuse, while over
here at state and local levels, unless you have to
live in a good, you know, red state, it continues unabated.
People like Polis and Mike Johnston are relics of a
time that we will look upon and realize that, oh,

(30:11):
that was the destruction of the United States of America. Yes,
people like Polis and Mike Johnston personify the destruction of America,
including the Democrats with the Paula Bureau.

Speaker 5 (30:26):
Good morning, Michael and dragons.

Speaker 3 (30:28):
This is your praise Jew Buber.

Speaker 5 (30:31):
Yeah, Michael, I start collecting like videos of every time
I see the encampment. But there's way too much going on,
with way too way too many videos saved about it.
You know, you know me, I'm from Russia, Ammigrants. It's
a skilling. It really is skilling. And what's happening in
this country.

Speaker 2 (30:52):
Have every day guys, you ought to get on X
and share those videos with do better Denver and let them.

Speaker 3 (30:59):
Look at it.

Speaker 2 (31:01):
Look here's where we are. It's it's all over the country.
And unless we have some sort of drastic policy change,
without some sort of reform, all of these tragedies and
all this decay is going to continue. Now it's an

(31:27):
unbelievable time to be alive because two things are happening simultaneously.
You think about the election of Trump. Trump could not
have gotten elected without urban dwellers, and urban dwellers, particularly
young urban dwellers, turned out in droves for Donald Trump.
That's a good sign, but it's also an indication that

(31:49):
they know that the current policies do not work, and
so as they see their rents skyrocket at the same
time that their standard living continues to decrease as they fear,
you know, leaving. You know, everybody wants to live in,
you know, in in a place like Lodo or Rhino

(32:11):
or River North or where wherever it might be because
of all the amenities. But if the amenities are disappearing,
or if it's too dangerous to you know, go within
walking distance to get to those amenities, then pretty soon
you start looking at, oh, maybe I should just go
ahead and move to the burbs. And I think that's

(32:36):
a horrific thing to happen. Because whether you like downtowns
now I'm not talking about the current status of downtowns,
but whether you like urban centers or not, urban centers
are a vital fabric of American society. It's where you'll find,
you know, where you'll mostly find the you know, the

(33:01):
major sports centers, the major venues for concerts, the the
you know, the high end really nice restaurants, the arts
and the culture. All all of that is generally speaking
concentrated in urban areas. And as the urban areas continue
to decay, and they can and they will continue to

(33:22):
decay because again, look at Denver, Mike Johnson keeps talking
about how this is a priority of his. Yet what's
he doing is spending two million dollars at a minimum
just hire an international law firm to represent the city
of Denver because his immigration policies are so anesthetical to

(33:43):
having a vibrant downtown area that he's now being having
his assholed up to DC to testify about. What's this
we hear you saying about you're not going to cooperate.
Eric Adams gets it and set aside whether or not
you think there's a quid pro call or whatever.

Speaker 3 (33:59):
Long before, long before Trump.

Speaker 2 (34:02):
Was elected, Eric Adams was already bitching to the Biden administration. Now,
I can't afford this. I mentioned that on their numerous times.
So Eric Adams knew that he had to go a
different direction. There's at least one Democrat that recognizes that
the hey, the current policies aren't working, or at least
I can't afford them. He may actually like the policies,

(34:23):
he just wants the money.

Speaker 3 (34:25):
And now that.

Speaker 2 (34:26):
He is agreeing to cooperate, the Democrats want to kick
him out of office. Oh my, the Democrat Party ends
up being the root of all the causes of the
problems in this country, there are a bunch of fellow
travelers Paul wanting to implement Marxist have not communist policies.

(34:48):
Got to call a spade a spade.
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