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June 27, 2025 • 34 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Michael massive ordnance penetrator. Doesn't that sound like something you'd
go to the Rocky Mountains and Men's claimic to get. Uh, yeah,
you must be new here. I think we made that
joke on Monday the MOPS. I see ordnance penetrator. I'm

(00:23):
trying to clean out some of my pos, so let's
do that before we get to some of the more
in depth stories. So, a twenty four year old kid
from an illegal alien from Venezuela, Anthony Emmanuel Labrador Sierra,
Anthony Emmanuel Labrador Sierra Dog the lab has been indicted

(00:48):
by a federal grand jury on four counts, including possession
of a firearm by an alien unlawfully in the United
States and making false statements. Wait wait a minute, how
how does a illegal alien acquire a gun? Oh? And
making false statement? Well, I guess they went to federal boulevard.
I don't know. Labrador Sierra had posed as a sixteen

(01:12):
year old to attend high school in Perrysburg, Ohio, until
his arrest last month. The Department of Justice says that
he submitted false information to USCIS, that's the US Citizenship
and Immigration Services because he was trying to claim Remember,
they had the tip ary protective status for Venezuelan's Haitians,

(01:34):
and I think it was Nicker Rogmins, I don't remember.
And he wanted employment authorization documents. He did this back
in twenty twenty four and twenty twenty five. Then he
false fighted information on the federal forms to purchase a
Taurus G three C nine millimeters semi automatic, which he
was prohibited from owning as an illegal alien. They discovered

(01:56):
that Labrador Sierra, who enrolled in high school as a
sixteen year old unaccompanied minor, was actually a twenty four
year old man. How did he do that? Well? He
used fraudulent documents to enrow and to even participate in
activities including junior varsity soccer and swimming. How did he

(02:17):
get here? I want to know how he I mean
physically physically, How did this twenty four year old kid
get here? And then once he got here? I mean,
I you know, with all due respect, any twenty twenty
four year olds that you might have in your home,
or they might be listening to this program, or that
I might personally know, with all due respect all my
twenty four year old friends, I just want to say,

(02:37):
I'm not really sure you could make it from Caracas
to El Paso, unless you could make it from Caracas
out of the country. But somehow this kid did it.
The school district confirmed that Librador Sierra. Then that sound
like a call sign. This is Librador Sierra two five
ninety seven November ninety five, two seven, turning adding three zero.

(03:00):
I don't know. Obtained a Satan issue driver's license, got
a Social Security number during his time at Perrysburg High School,
according to Doge and Elon Musk. Where is Elon? We're
gonna talk about maybe Elon later today, If not, well
to get to it tomorrow. Millions of non citizens received

(03:23):
social Security numbers last year. How did he get, where
did he get? What was the process by which did it?
Now it's fraudulent, But I'm not quite sure from the
story whether it's fraudulent because it's a fake Social Security
number using a valid number, or considering how inept you know,

(03:43):
the Social Security Administration could be, or is it could
be a invalid number that they failed to catch or
that they finally caught. But did they catch it when
he applied to go buy a gun? Or how did
that happen? He had been granted a guardianship to a

(04:04):
Perrysburg family who somehow, I don't know how, but they
later discovered this true age and they're the ones that
reported it to authorities. So but for the guardianship, which
I and again this is what drives me nuts about
the media, and I guess it's because I want to
know the details. So the kid somehow gets the temporary

(04:27):
protected status, makes it out of Caracas, gets to this
country somehow a judge that you just don't get a guardianship.
A guardianship is just something that you go to Walmart
and on Aisle twelve, you go down far enough, and
usually guardianships are they're not at eye level because they're
not really all that popular. But you look down below

(04:49):
where you have to actually bend over a little bit,
and you can pick out some guardianships and put them
in your cart and take them out to the self checkout.
You don't need a bag for a guardianship because you
can just carry in your hand and you carry that
and you got your guardianship. How did this kid get
a guardianship? Because he had to go in front of
a judge. So a judge doesn't question anything like how

(05:11):
did you get a social Security number? How did you
get here? How old are you really? Do you have
a birth certificate? Do you have anything? DHS revealed that
he overstate a visa after arriving in the United States
in twenty nineteen, six years ago. How did all this start?

Speaker 2 (05:34):
Was?

Speaker 1 (05:34):
What was the tipping point for this? He was arrested
during a traffic stop on I seventy five. He now
faces a significant prison time if convicted of the charges
brought against him, which raises the point this driving me
nuts about them. I mean, there's all the questions about
the who wo Reben? And why? About how did he
get to this country? How did he get a guardianship?

(05:55):
What was the social Security number? Was it the purchase
of a gun? Why was he going to purchase of
a gun? And if he had a guardianship? Was he
sneaking me out of the house? And he's twenty four
years old? And I know there's a difference between I mean,
I'm not sure I could tell the difference between some
twenty four year olds and sixteen year olds. But somehow,
these this couple that took him in as you know,
their wards, somehow they finally figured out, oh you're twenty

(06:19):
four years old, but he faces significant prison time if
convicted of the charges brought against him. Now, so far,
he's had a guardianship, so that means that he's probably
in I wouldn't necessarily call it foster care, but it
could be some kind of situation where the guardians are

(06:39):
getting some sort of government subsidy to take care of
this kid a twenty four. He's not a miner. He's
actually twenty four years old. So there's that cost that
if he had a Social Security number, he's probably getting
he's you know, on Medicaid, or he's getting some sort
of health benefits. Then he went to school, so you know,
taxpayers were paying for him to get educated playing on

(07:00):
the soccer team, So you know, there's probably some local
plumbing outfit or you know, American financing or somebody is
paying to provide the jerseys for the soccer team because
the school district doesn't have enough money because they're spending
money and all the wrong stuff like everybody else is.
So he's been getting all of these benefits illegally, unlawfully,

(07:22):
and now he faces prison time if convicted significant, according
to the story, significant prison time. I know what that
means for me, significant prison time is about thirty minutes,
but for him it might be I want to know
three years, which raises the question do you want to
pay for that? See? I think this is where we're
screwing up. I mean, this is one of the plays

(07:44):
where we're screwing up. I think what we really do
with him is once he's found guilty, now make sure
the judge is not going to let him, you know,
absconde back through the back door like that Michigan judge
did and let him escape and you know, and whatever.
But bring him in to a courtroom, give him this
due process on the criminal charges. And then if he

(08:05):
is convicted, which he should be. But if he is convicted,
by the way, he probably have a taxpayer funded public
defender too. So once he gets convicted, why send him
to prison. Well, he'll get three hots in a cot,
all paid for again by taxpayers. Aren't you tired? Aren't
you kind of tired of this? Are aren't you really

(08:26):
sick of it? So? I got my final forms in
the mail a couple of days ago. So now I've
got to sit down and sit down and get all
my my tax returns done for last year. Which I
really kind of dread because I just I know I'm
going to owe money this year, and I'm just like,
wait a minute. Somebody had said something yesterday about they're
not getting their money's worth on taxes. Well, you know,
I'm not getting my money's worth on taxes either. And

(08:48):
what I don't want to do is pay for this
yahoo to sit here in a prison and then think
about I mean, let let's let's take this the second
and third level. The first level is he got into
the country illegally, he got all these taxpayer benefits. The
second level is he finally got caught. He's going to

(09:09):
go to a trial. They'll either do a plea bargain
or he'll go to a trial. He'll be he'll be
convicted in all likelihood. And then the third level is
he goes to prison. My question is why I don't
want him in prison. First of all, he's twenty four
years old, so he's you know, speaking of well, mops. No,

(09:31):
I won't even go back to Caracas. I won't even
go back to Venezuela. I don't want him here. Yeah,
I know he's a criminal, So are you more concerned
about the criminal paying his dues for all the things
that he did that but for the fact that we
allowed him into the country under the Temporary Protected Status program.
He shouldn't be here in the first place, which you

(09:53):
know that's that's been revoked by Trump, so you know,
get the hell out of here. I just think that
what we ought to do is in fact, one thing.
If I just wanted to be helpful right now, why
don't you go to the prisons and find every illegal
alien that's been convicted of any crime whatsoever. I don't
care how minor it is. But if you're in the
county jail, or you're in a state prison, or you're

(10:16):
in a federal prison somewhere, you've had your due process,
you've been convicted of a crime. Let's pack you up,
put you on a plane, you know what was the
con Air or whatever it was, and let's fly them
back somewhere. Take them to where were we sending them
to Ethiopia or someplace in Africa. I forget what the
country was, but let's just send them back because I

(10:37):
don't want to pay for them anymore. And we have,
you know, overpopulation and in prison, so let's clean that up.

Speaker 3 (10:44):
Then.

Speaker 1 (10:44):
Speaking of homeland, security researchers at the Henry Jackson Society
are now warning that Iranian operatives could seek to target
American colleges and retaliation for our strikes on the Islamic Republicans,
Islamic Republicans, the Islamic Republic, the Islamic Republics nuclear facilities.

(11:08):
They honestly believe that sleeper sales who have entered the
country as foreign students could potentially execute a terror attack
or other politically motivated act. Now before, don't you miss
going to the airport and hearing the Department of Homeland
Security currently has the threat level at orange and you

(11:29):
go orange. Well, I was kind of hoping for, you know,
chartreuse today. I was kind of hoping for a little
you know, in honor of the Rockies hiring the son
of the president to run the organization. Which, how's that
going to work out? Why don't we just have the
color purple? You know, everybody looks, oh, there's a movie

(11:50):
right there, the color purple. Well, just have purple. I
I don't think I do I believe terror sales are here. Yes,
do I believe they're going to do something? No? The
reason I don't, I don't I think we ought to be,
you know, watchful. I think we ought to be vigilant.
I think that the FBI and DHS ought to be

(12:12):
watching out for the terror cells. But I really don't
think that after dropping the bombs, you know, flying how
many seven B twos into Iranian airspace which is completely
controlled by the Israelis right now, do you think they're
actually going to activate sleeper cells. This is one of
those things where I tend to believe, based on my

(12:36):
experience post nine to eleven, that everybody is so afraid
of something happening that they don't want to get caught
with their pants now, so regardless of the likelihood that
something may or may not happen, Let's issue bulletins. Let's
issue the National Terrorism Advisory System bulletin and highlight an

(13:00):
elevated threat of domestic terrorism posed by both Iranian backgroups
and of course, domestic attackers. The bulletin says the likelihood
of violent extremists in the homeland independently mobilizing to violence
in response to the conflict would likely increase of Iranian
leadership issued a religious ruling calling for retaliatory violence against
targets in the homeland. I don't think it's going to happen.

(13:24):
And I think part of this is CYA so that
if something does happen, you know, the iototally came out
of his bunker just long enough to appear on television
very very shortly. You know, well, you know we we
we shot some rockets in the Cutter, So all of
you out there that are thinking that you start a revolution, Nope,
we're so in charge. We lobbed some rockets. Of course,

(13:46):
we told Cutter that we were going to do it
before they lobbed them, so that they could, you know,
we could evacuate the bases and get the Patriot bunkers
ready to take them outs. And we did all of that.
I say all of that because I just don't think
they're in a position to activate cells because they've now
seen what Trump will do. Imagine what Trump would do

(14:07):
if a couple of cells were activated in oh, I
don't know, Denver, Los Angeles, Chicago, New York, and they
exploded some IEDs or they tried to, you know, do
some mass shootings in a mall or something. You think
Trump dropped f bombs on television, He'll drop a whole

(14:28):
pound of whoop ass on the Iranians, and they wish
they hadn't done it. Immigrations and Customs enforcement have previously
arrested eleven Iranian illegal aliens, including a former sniper, all
and they say as an effort to preempt a possible
insider attack. Wait a minute, you arrested eleven Iranian illegal aliens,

(14:55):
including a former sniper. I thought that's what we were
supposed to be doing anyway, arresting illegal aliens and giving
him out of the country. However, this group warns that
open border policies under the Biden Harris government have made
it difficult to track foreign operatives. We're still reliving and
still suffering the consequences of four years of Joe Biden.

(15:18):
They add that the Uranian influence might extend to US
campus protests through Iranians on student visas. They're out there
pushing anti Israelian, anti American sentiment. Really, they warn't quote,
Iram will be seeking to flex by activating sleeper sales
in the US, Britain, Europe, or even Asia. It's about
conducting surveillance and then targeting either community centers or policy officials.

(15:41):
I just I hope I'm wrong. I mean, I don't
hope I'm wrong. I hope I'm right that this is
simply not going to happen. But if it does happen,
I think there will be there will be a huge
can of whoop pass that they're going to have to pay. Now.
The ceasefire that's been broken by Trump, that's holding new
holding so far between Israel and Iran, I think is

(16:04):
in part because of pressure from Trump, particularly on the Israelis.
So while the activation of the sleeper sales is a
possible response to the US intervention in the conflict, I
think the Uranian regime may just kind of content itself
with its failed and largely symbolic retaliatory missile strike against

(16:25):
this base and cutter to keep the peace. I really
don't think they're going to do much of anything else. Then,
I have a story that I've gott I haven't gotten
into it about color Colorado yet, but Secretary of State
Marco Rubio has announced new sanctions aimed at combating the
flow of fentanyl into the United States. He announced it yesterday,

(16:48):
action spanning across the entire country and the border. Today's action,
he says, expands upon existing tools to deter and dismantle
the flow of fentanyl and other illicit drugs from entering
the United States and farming US citizens. State Department spokesman
Timmy Pigot explained that sanctions will not only prevent them

(17:09):
from entering the United States, but also serve as a
determ for continued illicit activities. Rubio emphasized the urgency of
addressing the federal crisis, noting that overdoses remain the leading
cause of death for Americans aged eighteen to forty four.
You know who that hurts the most, The leading cause

(17:32):
of death for Americans aged eighteen to forty four, The
Brady Center against Gun Violence. All the anti gunners out there,
they're but hurt the most. We wanted guns to be
the leading cause of death. Now, sorry, kiddos, it's the
federal crisis. Apparently, more than forty percent of Americans reportedly

(17:56):
know somebody who has died from an opioid overdose. I do,
but it happened like ten years ago.

Speaker 2 (18:08):
The Denver Post is asking readers, how do you think
Mayor Mikey has performed in his first two years in office.
Maybe if you have some time today, you should reach
out to answer the questions.

Speaker 1 (18:23):
That would require a subscription to the Denver Post, which
I simply do not have, and I'm not going to
engage in said transaction. So and do you first think
about this? So the Denver Post, predominantly subscribed to by

(18:47):
liberal Denver Rights, are going to be asked, how Mayor
Mike Johnston is doing and do you trust the Denver
Post to accurately report the results of an unscientific pull
that there can of their readers. So call me, color
me skeptical on that one zero four seven seven, Mike?

(19:07):
Have they changed the terror level color chart? If not,
We're fine, nothing's going to happen. Or did everybody forget
about that thing? You've forgotten about it, haven't you? Everybody's
forgotten about the chart? And what I always found interesting
about the chart? When I'll never I will never forget

(19:29):
the meeting that we were in when part of this
was Tom Ridge's staff. So the secretary, the deputy secretary,
and then four of us as the undersecretaries all go
into this meeting and we sit down and the question
before us was, or the question that we had posed

(19:50):
to the staff was how do we convey to the
public that what's the threat level? And of course several
of us, not just me, but several of us had
the question, why do we need to convey to the
public what the threat level is? Because what are we

(20:14):
asking the public to do? Are we asking you to
put on your tactical gear? Are we asking you to
hunker down at home not go to work? What about,
precisely are we asking you to do? And so they came,
you know, they came back to us with this idea
of this color coded scheme. You know, you had threat

(20:38):
the threat level at red, which meant that it's imminent
or it's occurring. Well, if you're in the locale where
the terror attack is curring occurring, do you really need
that do you? It's it's kind of like with with
the weather. You get a tornado watch, so you know

(20:59):
that you know there's a potential a tornado, and if
you're paying any attention to the weather at all, then
you know that, oh, the tornado is now actually occurring
because if you're out on the farm, you see it,
hear it coming. Now, if you're in an urban area,
maybe you know you need to be told. Gary England,

(21:20):
who used to be a media relished in Oklahoma City,
He was the first to really use radar to the
point that he was able to pinpoint precisely where it was.
If you're between thirty second and forty fifth you know
street between Broadway and Main Street or whatever, that's where
it's going to hit and you need to run for
shelter right now. But I was always fascinated with the terrorism. Well, okay,

(21:44):
so they just blew up the mall. Now do you
turn it red or do you turn it red? You
have let's just say you have actionable intelligence that says
the mall is going to be blown up at eleven
o'clock this morning. Well, what would you do if you
had that actionable intelligence? And by actionable intelligence, I mean

(22:07):
you have enough intel, human intelligence, signal intelligence, you know,
boots on the ground, everything, and you know there's an
attack about to occur. Well, wouldn't you go evacuate the mall?
So what do you run through the mall? Code red?
Code red? No, you just evacuate the mall and get

(22:27):
everybody out, Tell everybody leave, leave the parking lot, get
as far away as possible, and you take care of them.
And then they had these different other colors. And one
question that I had was, and I forget it was
like green, yellow, orange something, and then red. I don't
remember all the colors. May I'm sure one of you do,
or so, I'm sure somebody of you will tell me

(22:48):
what they were. But I was right there and I
don't remember because I never cared to begin with. They
The question that I asked was, if we ever go
from let's say between whatever it was orange something and
then red, if we go to that level, they got
to hear it, is it? Red? Was severe?

Speaker 3 (23:09):
Yeah, Orange is high, yellow is elevated, Blue is guarded,
and green is low.

Speaker 1 (23:17):
So it was it was red, orange, and yellow. Yes,
So the threat level was always yellow. At the airport
threat level is yellow. So my question was, if we
go to orange, which is elevated? Is that what you said?
Yellow is elevated? Okay? Orange is high high highs. So
if we ever go to high, what politician, what Secretary

(23:38):
of Homeland Security? Because it was really up to you
had to inform. The rule internally in DHS was you
had to inform the president that you were going to
change the threat level, either up or down. You had
to inform the president. President obviously is the commander in
chief had the veto power and could say no, don't
do it, or do to it. In fact, the president could,

(24:00):
based on his PDB, say listen, we want you to
raise the threat level. But my question was this, if
we ever went from yellow to orange, who would ever
want to reduce it back to yellow? Because if something happened,
then whoever has said, hey, let's take it back down
to yellow, and then something happens, Oh well, there'd be

(24:22):
holy hell to pay for that. Then have you ever
thought about this? Where did you hear about the threat level?
Where at the airport? What percentage of the population ever
spends any part of their day three hundred and at
that time, let's just say three hundred and twenty five

(24:43):
million Americans. So how many people three twenty five million
Americans spend any part of their day at an airport. Well,
you have the flying public. So when you check in
or you're transiting at a you know, at a layover,
going from you know, Denver to Chicago to you know, Tokyo,
wherever it might be, you'll you might hear it in

(25:05):
a couple of airports, or if you're a worker, you'll
hear it, and pretty soon it becomes the same kind
of noise like a car alarm. It's just background noise
and nobody's paying attention to it. And every time I
would hear it, I would be like, and what do
you want me to do? The threat level? The current
threat level is yellow? Okay, Well, am I supposed to

(25:27):
stop and pee my pants? Am I supposed to go
to the bathroom and hunker down like in the tornado
shelter areas? What am I supposed to do? It was
the stupidest thing. You wouldn't walk into a grocery store.
It wasn't like when you walk into King Supers and
you go, you know, do you still have the turnstiles
that you're King stoopers dragging? No, we still have these

(25:50):
stupid turnstiles.

Speaker 3 (25:52):
They're they're the safeway across the street, they've got them,
but not not our King Supers.

Speaker 1 (25:56):
And one of those four is that to keep people
from just taking their carts just without going.

Speaker 3 (26:00):
Through in So I don't I don't know.

Speaker 1 (26:03):
Yeah, I haven't quite figured it out. But anyway, did
you ever walk into the grocery store and you know
check or hear uh today's special for black eyed peas
on Aisle twelve? And oh, by the way, the threat
level in the store is orange because you know, I
would say, if we had a criminal threat level, we'd

(26:26):
be it red. And everywhere across the country it be red.
No matter where you went to the grocery store, you
went to the movie theater, you went to downtown Denver,
wherever you went, it would be read by the way Dragon.
Yesterday I had I had a lunch beating downtown after
the show, and so I kind of drove round down
town a little bit, just you know, for the front
of it. Yeah, how well, you know, I had a

(26:46):
shotgun out one window and just a handgun out the
other window. I was driving with my knees just to
go through. It was pretty wild.

Speaker 3 (26:53):
It's some how many people pooping?

Speaker 1 (26:55):
Did you see? I did. I was disappointed. I didn't
see anybody pooping, But there were there were a lot
of beggars. There were a lot of people, you know,
looking for handouts. There. There was one guy walking that
you know how they you know, the the cool kids
where their jeans down below their butt crack. Well, there
was one guy that, let's just say that, I don't

(27:15):
know that he knew how far down was cool and
how far down was obscene because it was huh.

Speaker 3 (27:24):
Roughly around the knees.

Speaker 1 (27:25):
No, just let's just say just just enough that almost
nine of the butt crack was was visible. Nice. The
thing that disappointed me was I couldn't I couldn't grab
my phone quick enough to get to the camera to
get a photo. I know. I was actually attempted to

(27:47):
drive around the block and see if I can still
get any but there's too much construction. I just like that.
I'm not going to do it. So if you ever
that that's what we should all do, we should have
Do you think we get anybody to come down to
uh Denver and do a like a meet and greet downtown?
We can all go to Tupelow hunting and have some
fried chicken or something. I don't know. Oh, this must

(28:10):
be from la Is from Alexa. She's all pissed off
about the whole talk back about the Denver Post. You
can post a comment on x to the Denver Post.
So far one hundred and nineteen comments. She's apparently has
emailed us the postal next so that Dragon can put
it up so that people when they go to the
page can see it and leave their own comments. Okay, well, Dragon,

(28:31):
there you have the instructions from Today's associate producer Alexa
telling you what you need to do. I'm on it,
all right, We'll be right back, Michael.

Speaker 2 (28:40):
I wouldn't confess to loally that you were driving around
with your phone out.

Speaker 1 (28:44):
You might just get a ticket. Not the guy with
the pants hanging out, or the person next pooping, or
maybe the person doing the drugs. But boy, I bet
you you would get a ticket. Absolutely. I would have
gotten the ticket. It wouldn't be the guy out pooping
or dropping his pants. It would have been for holding
my phone up. Michael at fifty five ninety, I'm a
frequent traveler. I don't remember the last time I heard

(29:06):
the threat level at the airport says. Because it's no
longer there, it's gone. I don't know whether to give
credit to Obama or Trump one point zero, but it's
been gone for several years now. If it's there, the
threat level announcements or signings, I'm just numb to it. Well,
you're not numb to it. It's actually gone now. I

(29:28):
do pay attention to the fire danger signs when I
go hike, as those do actually change according to conditions. Yes,
I would say pay attention to those signs, and he
wants to know if there is going to do a meetup,
shouldn't it be at Crumble Cookie. Well, absolutely should be
at Crumble Cookie. So I followed the associate producer's advice

(29:49):
and I opened up the email. The Denver Post posted
at six twenty one yesterday. The Denver Post is looking
at Mayor Mike Johnston's perform. It says he marks his
first two years in office. We want to hear how
the Denver Mayor's decisions and policies have impacted you. These
are freaking hilarious. The first comment I see is from

(30:13):
my retin, a doctor, who writes, the crime and homelessness
are out of control. So I just avoid going downtown
if at all possible, and due to taxes, I prefer
to shop in the burbs. Business Tactical reposts a video
from Do Better Denver and says, so colorful, so vibrant.

(30:39):
Let's see there was a Some of these are really good.
If his goal is to crush small business, increase commercial vacancies,
and generally downgrade the standard of living off colfax, then
ten out of ten baby, ten out of ten. Uh,

(31:01):
Denver is a failed city. People are fleeing. Massive amounts
of money are spent on non citizens. At the same time,
the city services employees are cutting laid back, massive crime,
rampant homelessness, drug abuse, car theft, robberies, murders, or daily occurrences. Wow,
colorful comic Colorado sounds like a wonderful place to go.
And then skysurfer rights, We'll have to expand this one.

(31:23):
They're on the tirade. Let's see most intersections. Tell me
if this isn't true. Most intersections have homeless with signs
and shopping cars full of crap. If they're not homeless,
they're selling you flowers or trying to wash your windows.
Just like in non tourist areas of Mexico. Crime is
up with the increasing costs of valuing the illegal immigrants

(31:46):
over the taxpayer. We have massive cuts and city services,
including the police department. Businesses are fleeing downtown Broncos. Are
you next. Housing is at a standstill, public schools have
become among the wokest and worst nation, and the city
is proudly obstructing the federal government from enforcing immigration laws.
In other words, Denver is becoming just another failed blue city,

(32:11):
complete with drug addicts and thesis on the sidewalks, relaxing
with whiskey. That's what we should be doing right now,
says Well. The mayor has managed to help get people stabbed,
bankrupted businesses, and cause what is effectively an evacuation of
downtown office space. So I'd say he's an extremely s

(32:33):
word mayor who should have never been elected office and
has zero idea what he's doing. See this is where
I disagree with all of you about this. I think
that people like Mike Johnston know precisely what they're doing.
They want the failed cities. Now. I know it's it's
hard for any rational person to comprehend and understand that,

(32:57):
but that's the fail that's the that's the inherent problem
with Marxism, the inherent problem with progressivism. They want things
destroyed because only by I mean, create the problem and
then offer yourself as you're the solution to the problem.

(33:18):
You have to reelect me because look how bad things are.
I'm the only person that can fix things. And because
we have so many uneducated, low educated, poorly educated, just
absolutely stupid people out there, they think to themselves because
they see a really nice you know, he's got his
big cloffed hair, and he's out there with his open
shirt and just you know, his sleeves are rolled up

(33:39):
and he's just out there campaigny like, oh man, I'm
walking the streets. He just needs to put on his
tennis shoes like Mayor what's his name always wore the
tennis shoes. If you just wear sneakers, he might get,
you know, re elected again. Let's see, this is so true.
How many restaurants have closed and businesses have left during

(34:02):
his tenure sounds like something a news agency should look into.
Do you know that the one place where I find
a lot of actual journalism about how bad the restaurant
business is and how businesses downtown are suffering. Of all places, Westward. Yeah,

(34:24):
not to diminish that Denver is a but Addie Calhoun
and Westward often talk a lot about how they're destroying businesses.
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