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March 27, 2025 • 34 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
If I was Tulsie, I would say absolutely. I don't
think that climate is a national security threat.

Speaker 2 (00:06):
I do know it's changing all.

Speaker 3 (00:07):
The time, and we need to assess situations as it
need be.

Speaker 4 (00:12):
Yeah, exactly. So I have a text message I want
to read you. Then I want to draw your attention
to something. Now, it's from an area code three zero three,
so I'm not going to give well, I just I
can still give you.

Speaker 3 (00:23):
The last four digits.

Speaker 4 (00:24):
It's Goober zero four seven seven, So I'm assuming that
zero four seven seven is in Colorado. I mean, you
never can tell with area codes anymore, but I'm gonna
make that assumption because I want to comment about something
that Goober zero four seven seven says.

Speaker 3 (00:43):
They right.

Speaker 4 (00:43):
I think we are in the middle of a societal shift.
Local governments are starting to fail. You're seeing school closures
because of lack of enrollment due to homeschooling, and you're
starting to see more and more people learn how to
become self sufficient by raising their own gardens, raising their
own food, or buying food from local farmers. It's a
very interesting time. Yes, indeed, it is a very interesting time.

(01:09):
But your perspective might be a little skewed if you
actually still live in Colorado. I do believe that there
is a societal shift going on, but I don't necessarily
believe that local governments are failing. I think local governments
are having to learn to shift to the economic realities

(01:33):
that we're facing. They're learning basic econ one oh one.
Go back to the one of the very first stories
I did beginning in this program about Seattle and how
Seattle's payroll what payroll taxes some sort of The acronym
was pet. So they had this payroll tax and it's
on businesses of a certain sized number of employees. Blah blah,

(01:54):
blah blah. And the mayor of Seattle is all in
the ditherer because their estimate fell fit fifty million dollars
short of what they're respecting. So now they've got a
fifty million dollar budget short shortfall that they have to
try to fill. That is government suddenly facing the basic

(02:15):
laws supplying demand. Basic econ one oh one. You price
something out of the market, people no longer buy your product.
The product here happens to be local government services. And
if you tax the crap out of somebody, they're going
to go to someplace else. Where it's less taxing or

(02:36):
to zero four seven Seven's point, you're seeing school closures
because of lack of enrollment due to homeschooling. I think
that's only partially true. I think there's something larger going
on too.

Speaker 2 (02:51):
One.

Speaker 4 (02:51):
I think it's just basic demographics. I think, uh, you know,
baby Boomers had a lot of kids, and then you
start looking at Millennium and Gen Z and Gen xers
and whatever the next group is called, and they're not
having nearly as many kids. So all of this building
to accommodate those generations that had lots of children, those

(03:13):
schools can longer be filled. But there's another factor besides demographics.
I guess it's still demographics, but it's a different kind.
People are leaving. You would not, well, you would believe
the number of text messages or emails or even friends
that I know that are leaving Colorado. Why are they

(03:36):
leaving Colorado because it's too damn expensive? How many stories
have I brought you just this week about we're number
one in terms of inflation, We're number one in terms
of costs of housing, food, everything else. We are private.
We're worse than California were in some cases we're equal to,
but in some cases we're worse than California, So people

(03:58):
are voting with their pocketbooks.

Speaker 2 (04:01):
At least we got bike lanes, and we got.

Speaker 4 (04:03):
Bike Thank god we got bike lanes, because I bet,
I bet right now on Broadway there's a total of
zero bikes in a bike lane. But by golly, we
got the bike lanes. And I'm not I don't think
I'll get to the story today. But the Common Sense
Institute has done a study showing that most of the
taxes that we pay federal, state, and local that are

(04:26):
designated supposedly for roads, bridges, highways, that sort of construction,
guess what is not actually going to that. So we
have some of the crappiest roads in the entire country,
and people are fed up with it. I get every
single day. I get fed up with the crappy roads
that I travel on going to and from work or
to meetings or going out to dinner or whatever I'm

(04:47):
going to. I mean, even even when Tamra starts bitching
about roads and highways, uh, because she doesn't care about
that crap. Suddenly she's like, oh, uh, the road so bad? Well,
do you really want me to tell you why because
of a stupid, dumb ass state we live in, run
by a bunch of Marxists and a dumb ass governor

(05:09):
that could care less. All he cares about is himself,
the wolves, and keeping his husband happy. That's all he
cares about. Oh and may be being president one day.
He still has the wet dreams some day he's going
to be president. Over my dead body. I'll do everything
I can to prevent that from happening. So schools, yes,
are seen declining enrollment. I think part of it is

(05:30):
because of homeschooling. Schools have shot themselves in the foot
and people are moving and saying, you know what, I'm
not going to subject my children to you know, classrooms
that are full of half the kids can't speak English.
The other half are disciplinary problems, and the other half
see we have three halves. I can't do math, and
the other half are kids that are being required to

(05:52):
be mainstreamed even though they have mental issues, they got
disciplinary issues, they got emotional issues, but we said put
them in the croom. I mean, it's really just stupid
stuff like that. And if you have a child that's
emotionally disturbed, this being mainstream and you think that's an
awful thing to say. Well, I'm sorry, but that's what
I believe. If your child has emotional problems, I don't

(06:12):
think they ought to be in the classroom. I think
they ought to be in a separate classroom, and they
ought to be. But all we've got to mainstream. We
got to put them in with everybody else. Why so
we can bring down the standard and the level of
learning for everybody to accommodate your child that has a
learning disability or an emotional problem. It's insane what we do.

(06:32):
So yeah, people are taking their kids out of school too.
And then in terms of food, yes, food costs are absurd,
absolutely absurd, whether that's buying at a grocery store, a
farmer's market, or eating out, whatever it is. Food costs
are absolutely ridiculous. And Trump's got to get busy on that.

(06:56):
And one way to do it is to start reducing
the cost of energy, which is on its way down.
But all of that, I've asked dragon because Kathleen Chandler,
one of my friends over at the Independence Institute, is
having one of her local government classes. So whatever the

(07:17):
reason is for local government failing or decreasing, minimizing downsizing,
whatever the word might be. This is an opportunity for
you to learn how to get involved in local government.
As I've always preached, that's as if not more important
than who you vote to be a Congressman or a

(07:37):
senator or to be governor. And if you get involved
at the local level, there may be some point in
time where you decide, well, I'm you know what, I'm
pretty good at this. Maybe I'll run for state rep.
And you happen to be a conservative. Next thing, you know,
we've changed the Colorado Paula Bureau from dominated by Democrats

(07:59):
to dominated by conservatives. And it all started because you
went to a local government class. So I took the
PDF that Kathleen sent me and I texted it over
to Dragon, and Dragon when he finally finishes eating his
breakfast and he finally wakes up from the heat, he
will put it up on the website. Michael says, go
here dot com.

Speaker 2 (08:18):
Michael says, go where dot com?

Speaker 4 (08:20):
Here where h E R E not h E A R.
Michael says, go here dot com. I have I have
to I have to explain explain it that way to
the non English speaking and the slow learners in our class,
and of course, actually, uh, the third half of our

(08:40):
class is made up of emotionally disturbed people, so I
have to spell it out for them too. I think
most of this audience is mostly disturbed. You know why,
because you're you're dragon. I'm sorry, I've got to shut
the door. Can can you vam for a moment?

Speaker 5 (08:57):
I can't I count because you're in distress. This isn't right.
I don't I'm not a fan of this. And my
door's opening. You don't hear me complain about then?

Speaker 3 (09:08):
Is it always that noisy out there? Why is there
something going on?

Speaker 5 (09:11):
My door is normally shut too. But Mark Major's here
for some reason doing something, so well, he must have.

Speaker 3 (09:16):
He must have, like his groupies.

Speaker 2 (09:17):
Out there, some extra commotion.

Speaker 3 (09:19):
Yeah, yeah, oh my god. Read it's absurd.

Speaker 4 (09:23):
CBS News has done a little journalism.

Speaker 3 (09:27):
Take a deep.

Speaker 4 (09:28):
Breath, I know they They have found out that Massachusetts
has been releasing illegal aliens who have been charged with
violent crimes, including child rape. They've been releasing them on
uh low bail without allowing Immigrations and Customs and Enforcement

(09:48):
ICE the opportunity to intervene. So here are the details.
This just pisses me off the note. I'm sure it's
going on in Colorado. Two, So maybe we can get
CBS news to come and do you know a bunch
you investigate Colorado? An illegal from Guatemala charged with three counts,

(10:13):
three counts of aggravated child rape doesn't get much more
disgusting than that. That's where, you know. I just read
a story. I don't remember the details.

Speaker 2 (10:25):
That's a taxpayer relief shot.

Speaker 3 (10:27):
I would celebrate, damn you, that's exactly.

Speaker 2 (10:30):
Where if you don't get to it fast enough.

Speaker 4 (10:32):
That would have been a taxpayer relief shot. But I
did read a story about a guy in Florida who
I think it was either attempted murder. I don't think
it was with the gun. I think he beat the
snot out of somebody who was molesting his either son
or daughter at school and just found guilty of battery

(10:55):
or manslaughter or something.

Speaker 3 (10:57):
I don't know what it was.

Speaker 4 (10:58):
But let's go back to Boston. So an illegal alien
from Guatemala is charged with three counts of aggravated child rape,
three counts.

Speaker 3 (11:08):
What do you think?

Speaker 4 (11:10):
Do you think there should be bail first? I don't
think there should be bail. I don't think it's cruel
and unusual punishment to hold someone who's charged with I
know he's innocent until proven guilty, but this is clearly
because it's three counts, he's clearly a danger to society.
He was released on seventy five hundred dollars bail. If

(11:32):
you put up a surety bond, it cost him seven
hundred and fifty dollars. Now I don't know this for
a fact, but let me just make a statement.

Speaker 5 (11:40):
Well, let's face it, Michael, it's not like he was
stealing a car or anything, because after you steal the
third or fourth car, then they really go after you.

Speaker 4 (11:47):
Well you know that's that's actually a good point. So
we'll just move on from this one because it's just
child rape. Seventy five hundred dollars bail. If you go
to a bondsman, uh, probably seven hundred and fifty dollars
ten percent. Then another Guatemala was charged with aggravated child rape,
but only one charge and also seventy five hundred dollars bail.

(12:11):
But now if you do a combo you see, if
you do a combination crime, you get a better deal.
And maybe it also depends on the country because this
dirt Bay came not from Guatemala, but came from Hondura.
He was charged with attempted rape and armed robbery, so

(12:32):
he's a twofer. He was let go with zero bail.
Zero not a zilch. Two child rate suspects in Wooster
County were released on five hundred dollars bail. Five hundred

(12:55):
dollars bail. Now, to make matters worse, immigrants and Customs
enforcement had issued detainers in these first three cases I mentioned,
but those detainers were completely ignored by Massachusetts.

Speaker 3 (13:10):
Here's the law.

Speaker 4 (13:13):
According to a twenty seventeen court ruling, Massachusetts prohibits holding
individuals solely on ice detainers, and when judges set bail,
they cannot. They are prohibited from using the defendant's immigration
status as a factor. Now you and I, as American citizens,

(13:40):
get charged with any of these crimes, one of the
factors that will go into consideration, in addition to our
previous criminal history, will be our ties to the community.
My lawyer will argue, well, your honor, mister Brown works

(14:00):
full time and in addition to his full time job,
also has ownership in a private business in Colorado, and
he also is an author and a speaker, and he's
got speaking engagements, and he has ties to the community.
One of his children lives here, in fact, is employed

(14:24):
as a doctor. His wife is a school counselor. They
have ties. They own homes, they own property, they have
ties to the community. And he's an American citizen. By
the way, he holds an American he holds a US passport.
All of those are factors that a judge will take

(14:45):
into consideration. If I'm charged as a crime and they're
considering whether not to release me on bail or how
much that bail will be in Massachusetts, that is verboten.
You cannot consider that at all. Now think about what
the questions would be. So, what are your clients ties

(15:08):
to the community. Well, he's here illegally. He's actually a
citizen of a foreign country in Central America, Guatemala or Honduras.
He doesn't have a job. He's got If he has
family here, we have been able to locate them, So

(15:30):
we're not sure he has family. Well, does your client
own property? Does he rent an apartment of condo? Does
he own a house? Know your honor, he's homeless. He
stays in the shelter. There are zero ties to the community.
So the seventy five hundred dollars bail should have probably

(15:51):
have been about seven hundred and fifty thousand dollars bail.
How much would you want to bail? I know what
you're thinking, but I want I want a numerical number.
If your child was subjected to aggravated child rape, what
would you want the bail to be? Seventy five hundred

(16:11):
dollars seventy death, seven hundred and fifty thousand sea, I
know what people, seven point five million.

Speaker 3 (16:19):
How much do you want it to be?

Speaker 4 (16:22):
Yeah, you want the chance to kill them first? Exactly
here the good news, there is good news. I gotta
give you some good news here. This month, Ice and
the FEDS apprehended not these three, but three, actually those five,

(16:42):
three hundred and seventy illegals in Massachusetts during an operation
targeting organized crimes, gangs, and other what I would consider
to be egregious offenders. And of course the last word
goes to borders are Tom Homan, whose last month took
aim at the police commissioner Michael Cox for at leasing
them in the community.

Speaker 3 (17:00):
Quote, you're not a police commissioner. Take that badge off
your chest. Put it in the desk board.

Speaker 1 (17:11):
He's right, hey, Mike. Of course people are having less
kids in Coloradoid costs more than thirty thousand dollars to
raise one kid, and nowadays both parents have to work

(17:32):
to afford the same standard of living you did thirty
forty years ago.

Speaker 4 (17:38):
And somebody asks on the text line, which I think
is an excellent question. Let me pull it up. Uh
where'd it go? Two of them?

Speaker 6 (17:53):
Uh?

Speaker 4 (17:54):
Twelve forty seven is the first one, Mike. So at
what point does it become detrimental to a person's financial
future retirement plans piggybank to keep bleeding money here in
Colorado versus moving somewhere else that the cost of living
isn't as expensive.

Speaker 3 (18:12):
I struggle with that all the time. I do.

Speaker 4 (18:19):
I'm I'm at a position and don't read anything into
this because I'm not planning on going anywhere, but I
do think about it. I'm I'm I'm in a spot
in my life where fortunately I don't need to work financially.
I don't need to work, I think mentally I do.

Speaker 3 (18:39):
I don't. I just don't think that I can retire
and not do anything. I've got. I've got to be doing.

Speaker 4 (18:48):
Something, and it does cross my mind at times, like
what the hell am I doing here? Hill's bells. I
could just go back to Oklahoma and live damn cheaply
in Oklahoma. I could go to the indisposed location in
New Mexico and leave live holy cal You wouldn't believe

(19:09):
how much cheap it would be in New Mexico. But
I feel trapped here in the sense that for my
mental sanity, I've got to keep working. I love what
I'm doing. I like the income. It helps me sustain

(19:30):
that standard of living while living in this craphole state.
So it's it's really kind of like being stuck in
a ghetto, so to speak. So I think it's a
legitimate question that people need to ask themselves, and I'm
just admitting that I've certainly asked myself that question too.
And then forty one twenty two rites forty one twenty

(19:52):
two here with the Colorado area code as well. I'm
a fourth generation Colorado Navy, but I could not take
the Democrat stupid craft in the rising cost of living anymore.
So I left a year ago. I took my two
hundred and fifty thousand dollars income elsewhere, so it goes
further and I can retire in a few years. All

(20:12):
I can say is FJP huh something about Jared Polis.

Speaker 2 (20:23):
But fire file.

Speaker 4 (20:25):
Fire, Yeah, that would be yeah, fire fire because I
can't I can't. I can't possibly think of another F
word that would go in front of Jared Polis and
all those in the Polet Bureau. Thank you for using
the word Polet Bureau. I greatly appreciate that. And then
that kind of ties in to this story to show

(20:45):
you how stupid we are. According to Katie Vru, we've
already had you know that we had a wolf that
was one of our wolves. By the way, let's not
forget those are taxpayer wolves. By golly, we paid for them.
And I don't like the fact that one of them
wandered off into Wyoming and got killed by the Wildlife

(21:08):
Services in Wyoming.

Speaker 2 (21:09):
Why the heck didn't they stay put?

Speaker 4 (21:11):
Why didn't they stay put? And why didn't the Wyoming
Wildlife Services pick it up, put in the back of
the pick them up truck and bring it back to Colorado.
They got a passport, they can bring it across the
state line. Killed one of our wolves, by golly, I
want my money back at least when I call it. Yeah,
I'll get to the I'm bearing the lead in this

(21:32):
story because of the way it's reported. You know, we
we've we've got colors on these wolves, right, we got
GPS trackers. Well maybe maybe they What was that story
we did Dragon where they were buying somebody was buying
air tags. Who the hell's buying the air tags and getting.

Speaker 2 (21:52):
The police department giving them away to Denver? Wasn't car crime? Yeah,
there are car thefts.

Speaker 4 (21:57):
So I wonder how much they paid for the GPS
trackers for the wolves. At least one of Colorado's gray wolves.
In March, that's this month, you dummies entered a new
Denver area County and new watersheds in northern Park County,
some of the closest areas to the Denver metro that

(22:18):
they have tracked since their initial reintroduction. And then you
go down here to the rest of the story. The
map shows, so let's see, they're tracking them on a
map colored gray wolf activity recorded by colorad Parks and
Wildlife from February twenty five to March twenty five. The

(22:40):
Park County watersheds that wolves have now entered include US
two eighty five and Bailey, and the Clear Creek County
watersheds including Interstate seventy on the western side of the county,
as well as Birthed Pass and Empire. Then they add

(23:00):
this sentence, which is where I went ballistic. The Park
County watersheds the wolves have entered, including US Highway to
eighty five and Bailey, the Clear Creek County watersheds, including

(23:21):
I seventy on the western side of the county, as
well as on Birthed passing Empire. Then they write that
does not necessarily mean the wolves were in any of
these towns or areas specifically, what does that mean?

Speaker 3 (23:42):
Dragon?

Speaker 4 (23:43):
They just told us where they tracked them, but then
say that that does not mean the wolves were in
any of those towns or areas specifically, to your GPS
trackers lie to you.

Speaker 3 (24:03):
Or do you lie to.

Speaker 1 (24:07):
Us?

Speaker 5 (24:08):
I know that you can buy uh like conservation type
stuff where you can buy a little bracelet that tracks
like elephants and rhinos and polar bears and whales and
things of that nature.

Speaker 2 (24:18):
And I know that with those they be like.

Speaker 3 (24:21):
A wild elephant.

Speaker 2 (24:22):
Yeah, yeah, I got one from missus Redbard. She absolutely
loves tracking her elephant.

Speaker 3 (24:27):
Has she named her elephant?

Speaker 2 (24:28):
I think it comes with a name.

Speaker 3 (24:30):
Oh, but have a photo of her elephant?

Speaker 2 (24:33):
I'm not sure about that. With that?

Speaker 4 (24:36):
Is she cohabitating with this elephant? Are you? Are you
sure about this? She says this.

Speaker 2 (24:42):
Let me just turn his microp so I can finish
what we're talking about here.

Speaker 4 (24:44):
So he said, she says, it's an elephant, and you
buy it.

Speaker 3 (24:49):
She's really trying to track her boyfriend. Don't you know
what's going on here?

Speaker 5 (24:52):
But the tracking data that is given to the purchaser,
that tracking data is you know, three weeks to a
month old, so that you don't know where that elephant
is right now to save them from poachers.

Speaker 4 (25:05):
But you know where the elephant has been correct. Well,
what they're saying maybe.

Speaker 5 (25:10):
Something similar to that, where it's like they don't have
current tracking information, but they can say, hey, it was
in Thortant yesterday.

Speaker 3 (25:17):
Do you have me to pull that out and read
it to you again, just just trying.

Speaker 2 (25:20):
To give some kind of explanation that.

Speaker 4 (25:22):
You're trying to No, it's not an explanent. You're trying
to rationalize the bull crap sentence that they stuck into
that story. Yeah, okay, all right, as long as you
as tho as you recognize it's not a explanation, it's
a rationalization, is what you're doing. You're trying to rationalize it,
just like you're trying to rationalize that missus Redbeard is
actually tracking an elephant and not you know.

Speaker 3 (25:44):
Joe Smith somewhere, the pool boy, the Amazon.

Speaker 4 (25:51):
Boy that delivers the stuff to the house. So let's
talk about Tesla's for a moment. You know, take aback
before all, before all the violence occurred, they were the epitome.
How many times did I, like, you know, I've mentioned
I don't recall any specifically, but I've mentioned, you know,
different license plates that I've seen on different teslas, kind

(26:12):
of in your face license plates like you know, no
gas or saving the environment, whatever kind of crap they
might put on a license plate. What's all virtue signaling?
Tesla's were about virtue signaling. You know, I know, I don't,
I don't know to buy gas and you do. And
then the problem is Musk then became associated with Trump.

(26:33):
But I think even worse than becoming associated with Trump,
he became associated with trying to reduce government waste rodden abuse.
So then the leftist went into full bore uh vandalism.

Speaker 2 (26:47):
We mode real quick. I just want to jump here
in the reminder, but I.

Speaker 5 (26:50):
Think it was Colbert who said, Uh, I don't care
how much gas is going to be I drive a Tesla.

Speaker 4 (26:56):
Yes, exactly, such virtue se So then we get we
get the vandalize vandalism campaign going.

Speaker 3 (27:05):
Uh.

Speaker 4 (27:06):
Dealerships, charging stations, parking garages, collision centers are all over
the and it's all over the country.

Speaker 3 (27:11):
It's everywhere everywhere you go.

Speaker 4 (27:14):
There was the one guy that took the tesla, played
off the back of us or the insigny off the
back of a cyber truck and put on black stickers
that said Toyota. Uh halse This is from Fox News.
Has Minority leader HACKEM. Jeffries, Democrat New York and former
Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Democrat California refused to condemn the violence

(27:38):
against Tesla when confronted on Capitol Hill. Jeffries was against
alleged domestic terrorism when it was featured in a fictional
white supremacists narrative. Jeffrey said this in twenty twenty two.
We have to act decisively to address the poison of

(27:59):
white supremacy and domestic terrorism in America. It's a poison,
it's a cancer. It's destroying our society. It should not
be a partisan issue. It's not a Democrat issue or
a Republican issue. Dealing with the crisis of violent white supremacy.
That is an American issue. And that Pelosi applauded that,

(28:19):
and went on to say this, She applauded her Democratic colleagues.
This is in twenty eighteen, for quote, refusing to accept
the House republicans continued failure to investigate domestic terrorism. Now,
Fox News Digital asked thirteen Democrats who sponsored legislation to

(28:44):
combat domestic terrorism earlier a couple of years ago, if
they agreed that these attacks are domestic terrorism and if
the government should target the people vandalizing teslas.

Speaker 3 (28:55):
Not one single.

Speaker 4 (28:57):
Lawmaker responded to the inquirer. Then, when Trump proposed extending
prison terms for anti Tesla terrorists who are duly with
due process convicted of vandalizing Teslas, Maxine Waters chimed in

(29:18):
and said, no, what we ought to be doing is
throwing Trump in prison. Now do you ever wonder who's.

Speaker 3 (29:31):
Funding these things? You ever wonder about that thing.

Speaker 6 (29:35):
Tyke, come on and Brownie and Dragon from the three
oh seven. Yeah, up here, we know how to deal
with wolves, except for in the area around Yellowstone and
Grandee Town National Parks.

Speaker 3 (29:48):
We can shoot them on site. We don't need wildlife
officials to step in.

Speaker 6 (29:53):
Have a great day.

Speaker 3 (29:55):
They screw you.

Speaker 4 (29:58):
Yeah, you're little sick of people, you know, bragging about
their individual rights and individual liberties and individual freedoms living
in you know.

Speaker 2 (30:07):
Because fweedom, fweedom.

Speaker 3 (30:09):
That's why fweedom. I love fweedom. I live in the
free Stay of Colorado.

Speaker 4 (30:17):
Uh So, Musk goes out and blames George Soros, the
billionaire democrat megadonor, and he also blames Reid Hoffman, who's
the founder of LinkedIn, and a bunch of others. He
had a whole list of people he blames, says that
they're bank rolling all these protests. The FBI did indeed
identify an anti Musk website that was registered ten days

(30:42):
ago in March seventeenth. It featured an interactive map with
a Molotov cocktail cursor of Tesla owners' names, addresses, phone numbers,
and emails where Tesla superchargers were all the Tesla dealership locations,
and then the addresses of individuals of they could find
not everybody, but a lot of individuals that are associated

(31:04):
with those the Department of Government Efficiency. Now, unlike the
phantom menace of the white supremacists that Hakeem Jeffries and
Nancy Pelosi were very quick to condemn when asked, Oh
but wait a minute, look at this. Here is a website.

(31:26):
Now I don't know what's happened to the website, since
I havn't gone to check, but it would seem to
me that the FBI Cybersecurity Division ought to be able
to track the oranges of that website, Who hosts it,
who was the person that set it up? What was
that person's IP address? You could, you know, even probably

(31:50):
somehow break through a VPN and find out who where
when the fi w's how got set up. But whether
you want to label it domestic terrorism or not, I
happen to think that technically it meets the definition of
domestic terrorism. It's violence conducted in pursuit of a political ideology.

(32:14):
It's violence conducted attempting to change public policy. Except what's
so ironic about it is they're not advocating, you know,
policies to mitigate the effects of climate change. They're not
advocating policies that would you know, try to convince you

(32:37):
of climate change. They're actually protesting the disclosure of waste
fraud and abuse. And not just by the Environmental Protection Agency,
which would you think would be their main goal, but
almost any organization. Remember the fat ass we put up
on the website yesterday driving is atv in Well, it

(33:00):
turns out that they have arrested that guy in Texas
and it wasn't just that one that you see in
the video. He's been charged with vandalizing multiple teslas with
his four wheeler. He's charged with at least one count
of fellow the criminal mischief and failure to identify and
it's probably going to face additional charges too. This is

(33:26):
what local law You know, it's funny that local law
enforcement will go do that, but local law enforcement won't
cooperate with h child rapists, aggravated child rape, sexual assault,
but they won't cooperate with those when it comes to
illegal aliens. I don't understand a tesla is more important

(33:51):
than a child.

Speaker 3 (33:55):
Kind of screwed up on. Yeah, we're kind of screwed up.
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