Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:02):
Hi, So this is my last video. It's Monday, September
twenty second. Sorry I sound like this. I've been crying
all morning, just so excited to leave this place and
be raptured. My family and I we've just like called
that a school cloud out of work. We're just waiting around.
We're all too nervous to even go number two because
(00:23):
you know, you just don't know when it's going to happen,
so we don't want to be on the toilet. That
would be pretty silly. If you're seeing this and you're
still here, I'm so sorry that you.
Speaker 2 (00:31):
Didn't make it. You know, you can try.
Speaker 1 (00:36):
You can try, for Jesus, I can try to convince
them to come back for you if you decide to
be saved.
Speaker 2 (00:42):
But yeah, I don't know.
Speaker 1 (00:45):
At least you're here getting to do all the sins
that you wanted to do and be naughty with your
fellow sinners.
Speaker 2 (00:53):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (00:55):
Maybe you can make the best out of it, but yeah, goodbye.
Speaker 3 (01:01):
A college campus, conservative activist Charlie Kirk gunned down in
front of a crowd at Utah Valley University, the state's
governor calling it a political assassination.
Speaker 4 (01:13):
Everyone's just psych scared, like it's traumatizing.
Speaker 5 (01:16):
And I watched a fountain of blood come out of
the side of his neck like a water fountain, and
it was surreal.
Speaker 6 (01:22):
I saw that he was shot in the neck and
that he was working blood everywhere.
Speaker 7 (01:26):
Witnesses describing the horrifying shooting death in broad Daylight today
of conservative activist Charlie Kirk on a college campus in Utah,
the latest act of political violence in America.
Speaker 8 (01:40):
So I've been waiting for this meeting for twenty years actually,
and it's not that everything's one hundred percent understood or known,
but I think we've made a lot of strides. I
wish it was not a long time ago. Today we're
delighted to be joined by America's top medical and public
with health professionals as we announced historic steps to confront
(02:03):
the crisis of autism.
Speaker 2 (02:06):
Horrible, horrible crisis.
Speaker 9 (02:09):
I want to thank the man who brought this issue
to the forefront of American politics along with me, and
we actually met in my office.
Speaker 2 (02:20):
Is it like twenty years ago? Bobby?
Speaker 10 (02:23):
Thanks, Hello, neighbors, lovers, friends and leftovers. I'm Danielli Scrima
and this is Broad's next door grab your tailanol and
cue the Twilight Zone theme song as we discuss how bizarre, weird,
and often horrifying the month of September has been. Today
(02:47):
we'll be getting a broader understanding of the rapture that wasn't,
the Charlie Kirk assassination, the thailanol causing autism claims, and
troops coming to Portland, as well as some personal updates
and insanity for me. So stay tuned, unlocked this door
with the key of imagination of it.
Speaker 9 (03:09):
Beyond it is another dimension, a dimension of zone, a
dimension of sight, a dimension of mind.
Speaker 2 (03:17):
You're moving into a land of both shadow and substance
of things and ideas. You've just crossed over into the
Twilight Zone.
Speaker 10 (03:26):
Hi, Hello, how is everyone? Do you feel like you're
in the Twilight Zone or does any of this feel normal?
Speaker 11 (03:34):
Yet?
Speaker 10 (03:35):
It still doesn't feel normal to me, And I think
that's probably a good thing, But god, September has been
a weird, weird month. I just got back from Kansas City,
where I went to go see my ex boyfriend and
had like this amazing week there and totally fell in
(03:56):
love with the place, which plot twist was not expecting.
But it's like a whole real city that like, they
have this cute little streetcar, there's all these museums. I
just like imagined cornfields, even though it's Kansas City, Missouri,
not Kansas City, Kansas. Spent some time there too, and
(04:17):
did go to a cider mill, but I was expecting,
like not a real place, so I actually really I
really liked it though. I had a really good time.
I came back last week because I had a jury
a grand jury duty summons, so it was like two
(04:39):
days to get out of that and will When I
came back, I learned that the rapture was supposed to happen.
Another one, my personal favorite rapture of my lifetime. It's
probably a tie between Y two K.
Speaker 11 (04:56):
And twenty twelve.
Speaker 10 (04:58):
Twenty twelve was like a pretty good one, a pretty
good one, this one. I hadn't heard anything about it
until last week, maybe a little bit, maybe a few
days before, and then my whole TikTok feed somehow just
turned into rapture talk. So it seems we've averted the
(05:19):
rapture or that only like five people were taken, hard
to say at this point.
Speaker 11 (05:24):
It started with this.
Speaker 10 (05:26):
Preacher from South Africa who shared his revelation that happened
to him in twenty eighteen.
Speaker 12 (05:35):
Jesus physically appeared in front of me you and told
me on the twenty third and the twenty fourth of
the Feast of Trumpets, Oh, in September twenty twenty five,
I will come to take my church.
Speaker 11 (05:51):
So that was a brother Joshua.
Speaker 10 (05:53):
And for those of you who were unfamiliar with the rapture,
it's like loosely taken the Book of Revelations in the Bible,
and for some Christians it is the belief that she
not only does Jesus come back and take them all
up to heaven, but also that like this three years
(06:15):
of darkness falls, like multiple plagues happen, there's basically hell
on earth for those of us left behind. So we
saw things like people selling their cars, quitting their jobs,
trying to find care for their animals for when they
were gone. A lot of the action, the reactions were
(06:37):
so extreme.
Speaker 13 (06:40):
No longer going to need it because he is about
to be rappters, So we posted a video of his
car getting towed away because he does not have a
use for it anymore.
Speaker 14 (06:49):
But she's gonna go.
Speaker 12 (06:50):
I won't need her beyond September because I'm going home.
Speaker 13 (06:55):
And that one actually made me really sad, because there
is really sad.
Speaker 11 (06:59):
I truly believe this to.
Speaker 13 (07:00):
The core of their being, that they are no longer
going to need their possessions after September twenty third.
Speaker 10 (07:06):
Because this is Jubilee, Dawn's on TikTok and she made
some compilations of the rapture videos.
Speaker 13 (07:14):
Some of these people have been listening to online Christian
personalities or their pastors telling them that the rapture is coming,
and they are making life altering decisions based on these predictions.
Speaker 11 (07:25):
This is a message for an extraterrestrial listen.
Speaker 6 (07:27):
On the twenty third, a bunch of Christians think that
the rapture.
Speaker 13 (07:30):
Is going to happen, and you have the unique opportunity
to do something hile areus that day.
Speaker 15 (07:34):
So okay, So the rapture is supposed to happen tomorrow.
Speaker 2 (07:37):
And if you don't know what that means, that means that.
Speaker 15 (07:39):
People are faithful and who love Jesus are going to
ascend into the air and go to Heaven, and everyone
else is going to be left down here to their
own devices.
Speaker 2 (07:48):
And I have two things to say to that.
Speaker 15 (07:50):
Number one, there's some really good therapists on psychology today
who specialize in religious psychosis. And number two, I'll see
you at work on Wednesday the following day, and I
won't bring it up, will act like it never happened.
That's how good of a friend I am, and such
a good.
Speaker 10 (08:05):
Coworker I am.
Speaker 11 (08:06):
I am not that good of a friend.
Speaker 10 (08:08):
Unfortunately, I was rooting for these people though, honestly, like
take them like fine.
Speaker 11 (08:14):
Got flowed into flowed into.
Speaker 10 (08:17):
The air, and it's fine at this point, go for it.
Whatever makes you happy. Some of the videos were sad,
some were shockingly condescending. Some had instructions for the rest
of us who were going to be left behind.
Speaker 5 (08:32):
I got these at the Dollar Tree. I just wrote
these on here like little notes.
Speaker 10 (08:40):
I also a bunch of Bibles.
Speaker 2 (08:43):
Some scriptures.
Speaker 1 (08:45):
There's the scriptures for you.
Speaker 5 (08:47):
And I wrote this in every single one of the books.
So hopefully these books end up in the hands of
people who will need them.
Speaker 10 (09:00):
Let's see a few more videos or listen to a
few more clips of Rapture the Rapture in Coming. This
is supposed to be a video episode. I set up
my whole studio and I cannot figure out how to film.
I downloaded Riverside. I need I need help, I need
help with the visual elements. So we're still audio only
(09:21):
at the moment, hopeful for October, though, Hey.
Speaker 14 (09:26):
Hey, you do you see what's happening. It's time. It's
time to make your decision.
Speaker 13 (09:32):
Are you going to follow Jesus and get on the
party bus out of this hell hole?
Speaker 14 (09:38):
Or are you gonna stay here living it up all
the way to actual hell? Because I know, my God, Jesus.
Speaker 10 (09:48):
I mean, I think it's hell already, honey, Like I
don't want to bum you out, but I'm sure you're
you're pretty bummed out now that you did not get raptured.
But it kind of it kind of like hell already.
We have like a general hell vibe going around.
Speaker 14 (10:04):
Wants you on that party bus. He is waiting for
the last of you to get on the party bus
so we can take us all.
Speaker 13 (10:12):
To Heaven to protect us from what is about.
Speaker 14 (10:15):
To take place on the entire earth. He died on
the cross, He willingly gave his life because he loves you.
He does not want to spend eternity without you.
Speaker 16 (10:27):
He wants you now and forever, so reach out to him,
take that step of faith.
Speaker 11 (10:35):
But some people are not letting go.
Speaker 10 (10:37):
Even though the dates of September twenty third and twenty
fourth at the very reputable.
Speaker 11 (10:45):
Joshua Pasture Joshua.
Speaker 10 (10:48):
Told us was going down, some people are still hopeful
and are like the rapture is still on. It just
wasn't during the Feast of Trumpets.
Speaker 2 (11:00):
So I have to tell you, I'll be honest.
Speaker 17 (11:03):
After the twenty third and the twenty fourth of September
past I was confused. I still believed that Jesus was
coming and that he.
Speaker 3 (11:11):
Was on his way, but I felt like there.
Speaker 11 (11:14):
Was some type of delay.
Speaker 17 (11:15):
Something had happened.
Speaker 11 (11:16):
Right traffic trap.
Speaker 17 (11:19):
That you know, all these confirmations tens of thousands of
people could all be wrong, and that.
Speaker 11 (11:25):
It's never happened before it happened.
Speaker 17 (11:28):
And so a video popped up on my phone from
another Christian who was seeking God and asking for answers
just like I was. As he fasted, the Holy Spirit
revealed the Julian calendar to him. In October of fifteen
eighty two, the calendar was changed from Julian to Gregorian.
Speaker 10 (11:49):
The calendar Julian calendar a lot of times in the
last two thousand years, babe.
Speaker 17 (11:54):
So today is September twenty seventh on the Gregorian calendar,
but it's only September or fourteenth on the Julian calendar.
So I started to think, Okay, this would explain, right,
why Jesus didn't come on September twenty or third or
twenty fourth. It's because he when he was on the earth,
(12:16):
the Julian calendar was the calendar they followed.
Speaker 10 (12:19):
So he is going you don't think the son of
God would like get an update on the dates like that.
Speaker 11 (12:26):
He wouldn't be able.
Speaker 10 (12:27):
To figure it out, like just just saying, I thought
they'll Jesus was pretty uh informed, and.
Speaker 17 (12:36):
To come back on the Feast of Trumpets on the
Julian calendar, which happens to be October sixth and seventh
on our Gregorian calendar. These will be the Feast of
Trumpet dates, and he will come to.
Speaker 11 (12:47):
Get his bride bride. Just a quick history.
Speaker 16 (12:53):
Lesson, right, all filled on the Julian calendar, okay, And
we know that they were passover on leaven bread, first
fruits and Pentecosts.
Speaker 17 (13:03):
Those were our spring ones and they were fulfilled on
the Julian calendar. The fall ones have not been fulfilled yet,
so that is the Fista Trumpets, Day of Atonement, and
the Tabernacles. So if Jesus fulfilled the first four on
the Julian calendar, he is going to fulfill the last
three on the Julian calendar.
Speaker 11 (13:24):
We know this because we know that he does not.
Speaker 10 (13:26):
Change and so and so, I mean, dude did get
his birthday changed from April to December, so I suppose
anything is possible. And if this woman is correct, the
Raptor will be October sixth to seventh, so there's there's
still time. And September generally did have like this end
(13:50):
of days feel, including a lot of compare people making
comparisons of Charlie Kirk and Jesus, which I would have
never never saw coming. But a few weeks ago Charlie
Kirk was assassinated. Going to tread very carefully about the
(14:12):
way I speak here, and the reaction to it is
you would have thought that he was the president, like
you would have thought that this was JFK. Jimmy Kimmel
Ray made remarks and he got his show temporarily canceled.
So many people canceled their Hulu and Disney subscriptions that
(14:34):
the company lost like five billion dollars or something like that,
and the show was able to come back. And his
remarks were more a critique of Trump than they were
of Charlie Kirk. This really got people up up in arms.
I mean, I think that we can use our general
(14:54):
strike and boycott capabilities for much bigger things then late
night TV. But I understand that anything feels like that,
feels like a step on freedom of speech, is very
sensitive for people. I think that's been happening for a
very long time, as anyone who has spoken about Gaza
(15:18):
will know. But so there's this assassin, this young kid Tyler,
and then these text messages released by the FBI, and
that is like the weirdest. The weirdest part for me
was reading those text messages. They were like, hello, my love,
it's me, your your roommate, it was I.
Speaker 11 (15:40):
I did it.
Speaker 10 (15:42):
I engraved some bullets and then left in my vehicle.
I need to go back for my rifle. I don't
know what my old man will think of me. So
there's been a lot of conspiracy theories swirling around that
and just general overall insanity, insanity, in my opinion over
(16:06):
the whole thing. But every time it feels like things
can't get any more insane than they do, then we
have the tie and all announcements or as Trump pronounced it,
I see, did met them, meph Fin.
Speaker 8 (16:23):
We actually met in my office. Is it like twenty
years ago, Bobby? It's probably twenty years ago in New York.
Speaker 6 (16:31):
I was a.
Speaker 8 (16:31):
Developer, as you probably heard, and I always had very
strong feelings about autism and how it happened and where
it came from. And he and I, I don't know
the word got out, and I wouldn't say that people
were very understanding of where we were. But it's turning
out that we understood a lot more than a lot
of people who studied it. We think, and I say
(16:56):
we think because I don't think they were really letting
the public know what they know. Thanks as well to
the Director of the National Institute of Health, doctor j Badicharia,
FDA Commissioner doctor Martin mccairry.
Speaker 2 (17:09):
These are great people.
Speaker 8 (17:11):
Administrator of the Centers for Medicine and Medicaid Services doctor Memodas,
and Acting Assistant Secretary of HHS, doctor Dorothy I think.
Speaker 2 (17:21):
So thank you all. Thank you, Dorothy very much.
Speaker 8 (17:25):
The meteoric rise in autism is among the most alarming
public health developments in history.
Speaker 2 (17:31):
There's never been anything like this.
Speaker 8 (17:35):
Just a few decades ago, one in ten thousand children
had autism.
Speaker 2 (17:39):
So that's not a long time.
Speaker 8 (17:41):
And I've always heard, you know, they sell a few,
but I think it's a lot less.
Speaker 2 (17:46):
Time than that.
Speaker 8 (17:48):
It used to be one in twenty thousand, then one
in ten thousand.
Speaker 2 (17:52):
I have to speak there, and I would say that's.
Speaker 8 (17:54):
Probably eighteen years ago, and now it's one in thirty one.
But in some areas it's much worse than that, if
you can believe it. One in thirty one, and I
gave numbers yesterday for boys it's one in twelve. I
still that's in California where they have a for some reason,
a more severe problem.
Speaker 2 (18:13):
But whether it's one.
Speaker 11 (18:14):
In twelve, I feel like they take in twenty.
Speaker 8 (18:17):
Thousand, then one in ten thousand, and now we're at
the level of one in twelve in some cases for boys,
one in thirty one overall. So since two thousand, autism
race of surge by much.
Speaker 2 (18:30):
More than four hundred percent.
Speaker 8 (18:32):
Instead of attacking those who ask questions, everyone should be
grateful for those who are trying to get the answers
to this complex situation. And the first day all of
these great doctors behind me were there.
Speaker 2 (18:44):
I told them, this is what we got it. We
have to find out.
Speaker 10 (18:46):
Do you think the brainworm Kennedy's brainworm in his head
told him about this, because I kind of do.
Speaker 8 (18:55):
Because when you go from twenty thousand to ten thousand
and then you go to.
Speaker 2 (19:01):
You know, there's something artificial. They're taking something.
Speaker 8 (19:04):
And by the way, I think I could say that
there are certain groups of people that don't take vaccines
and don't take any pills, that have no autism, that
have no autism.
Speaker 2 (19:13):
Does that tell you something that's.
Speaker 10 (19:15):
Currently What about the people who didn't take any vaccines
or pills because they were on the whole vaccines and
big Pharma causes autism? Train allah, Jenny McCarthy, and that
didn't do anything.
Speaker 2 (19:32):
Is that a correct statement? By the way, No, there
are some studies that suggest that. Yeah, with the Amish,
for example, the Amish, Yeah, virtually. I no, I heard none.
She Bobby wants to be very careful with Weddy.
Speaker 10 (19:46):
I mean, anyone who's building a barn and breaking baking
their own bread.
Speaker 11 (19:53):
Let's not push it.
Speaker 2 (19:54):
Come on, does any shit? But I'm not so careful
with what I say.
Speaker 8 (19:57):
But you have certain groups, the Amish as an example,
they have essentially no autism first effective immediately, the FDA
will be notifying physicians at the use of I said, well,
let's see how we say that.
Speaker 2 (20:12):
I said, menifin.
Speaker 8 (20:15):
Acetaminifin, I said, okay, which is basically commonly known as
thailand all during pregnancy can be associated with a very
increased risk of autism.
Speaker 2 (20:29):
So taking thailanol is not good. All right, I'll say it.
It's not good.
Speaker 8 (20:38):
For this reason, they are strongly recommending that women limit
tiler all use during pregnancy unless medically necessary. That's, for instance,
the cases of extremely.
Speaker 10 (20:48):
High fever, unlike before where they were like take it
as a pre natal vitamin. I truly don't know. I
don't know who wrote this speech for him. I don't
know how they came to this conclusion.
Speaker 8 (21:03):
Then you feel you can't tough it out, you can't
do it. I guess there's that. It's a small number
of cases, I think, But if you can't tough it out,
if you can't do it, that's what you're gonna have
to do, you'll take a tail and all, but it'll
be very sparingly. It can be something that's very dangerous
to the woman's health. In other words, a fever that's
(21:24):
very very dangerous, and ideally a doctor's decision because I
think you shouldn't take it, and you shouldn't take it
during the entire pregnancy. They may tell you that toward
the end of the pregnancy you shouldn't take it during
the entire and you shouldn't give.
Speaker 2 (21:36):
The child to tilan all.
Speaker 8 (21:37):
Every time he goes he's born, and he goes and
has a shot, you shouldn't give a.
Speaker 2 (21:41):
Titlan all to that child.
Speaker 8 (21:43):
All pregnant women should talk to their doctors for more
information about limiting the use of this medication. Well pregnant,
So ideally you don't take it at all, but if
you have to, if you can't tough it out, if it's.
Speaker 2 (21:53):
A problem, you're going to end up doing it.
Speaker 8 (21:56):
The other thing that I can tell you that I'll
say that they will maybe say a little bit later date,
but I think when you go for the shot, you
do it over a five time period, take it over
five times or four times, but you take it in
smaller doses.
Speaker 10 (22:10):
And is he talking about vaccines now or is he
talking about some kind initive taile andol in injection.
Speaker 11 (22:17):
I really, I can't even follow.
Speaker 8 (22:20):
Spread it out over a period of years, and they
pump so much stuff into those beautiful little babies.
Speaker 2 (22:26):
It's a disgrace. I don't see it. I don't. I
think it has I think it's very bad. They're pumping.
It looks like they're pumping into a horse. You have
a little child.
Speaker 8 (22:35):
A little fragile, all of his children that of eighty
different vaccines, I guess eighty different blends, and they pump
it in. So ideally a woman won't take kyl and
on and on the vaccines.
Speaker 2 (22:50):
It would be good.
Speaker 8 (22:50):
Instead of one visit where they pump the baby loaded
up with stuff, you'll do it over.
Speaker 2 (22:55):
A period of four times or five times. I was.
Speaker 8 (22:58):
I mean, I've been so into this issue for some
years just because I couldn't understand how how a thing
like this could happen. And you know, it's artificially induced.
It's not like something that when you go from.
Speaker 10 (23:07):
All of those it's not natural, like measles, mumps, rubella.
When polio was eradicated, I mean, you know.
Speaker 8 (23:17):
Healthy babies to a point where I don't even know
structurally if a country can afford it.
Speaker 2 (23:23):
And that's the least of the problems.
Speaker 8 (23:24):
To have families destroyed over this, it's just so so terrible.
Speaker 2 (23:28):
I also, uh, and.
Speaker 8 (23:29):
We've already done this. We want no mercury in the vaccine.
We want no aluminum in the vaccine.
Speaker 2 (23:36):
The MMR I think.
Speaker 8 (23:37):
Should be taken separately. This is based on what I
feel mumps, measles, and the three should be taken separately.
And it seems to be that when you mix them
there could be a problem, So there's no downside in
taking them separately. In fact, they think it's better, so
let it be separate. Who is that is already? Because
(24:00):
when that got mixed in, I guess they made it.
Speaker 2 (24:02):
For for a while, it really was bad.
Speaker 8 (24:04):
So they make chicken pox individually, they're okay.
Speaker 2 (24:07):
When you mix them something maybe happens. So there's nope.
Speaker 10 (24:10):
I had the chicken box vaccine as a teenager and
then again as an adult because I never.
Speaker 11 (24:16):
Got the chicken pox.
Speaker 10 (24:17):
I also had measles mumps through Bella vaccine because I
wanted to go to school.
Speaker 2 (24:24):
Oh downside in doing it.
Speaker 8 (24:26):
It's not like, oh, if you do it bad things, No,
it's only good side and it may not have that
much of an impact, but it may.
Speaker 2 (24:31):
Have a big impact. So let those be taken separately.
Speaker 8 (24:34):
And then hepatitis B is sexually transmitted. There's no reason
to give a baby that's almost just born hepatitis.
Speaker 10 (24:44):
This goes on for another forty five minutes and I
cannot handle it, but it is all available online. I'm
this version I'm streaming is from the Associated Press and
tail and all isn't wasn't enough, wasn't enough for Trump.
It was like not a big enough like Charlie Kirk
and tilinall were not a big enough thing for him
(25:04):
to hold on to for the month of September.
Speaker 11 (25:06):
He needed more.
Speaker 10 (25:07):
So he got on truth social and if you listened
to my episode Portland, Hell or Home about Trump's initial remarks,
he goes even further with sending into troops into Portland.
So he gets on his own social media app very
very normal for a present and to have apparently, And
(25:29):
on the twenty seventh, he writes, at the request of
Secretary of Homeland Security Christy Nome, I am directing Secretary
of war not a thing. Pete heg seth to provide
all necessary troops to protect war ravaged Portland and any
of our ice facilities under siege from attack by Antifa
(25:51):
and other domestic terrorists. I'm also asthorizing full force if necessary.
Thank you for your attention to this matter.
Speaker 18 (26:02):
Tonight, a Department of Homeland Security truck arrived in Portland, Oregon,
after President Trump ordered federal troops to the city. Oregon's
Democratic governor says there is no national security threat there.
Speaker 2 (26:12):
The city's mayor says.
Speaker 18 (26:13):
Federal intervention is not needed, but earlier this month, the President.
Speaker 2 (26:16):
Threatened to send troops to Chicago. He has not done
so there.
Speaker 18 (26:19):
He also signed an executive order placing National Guard troops
in Memphis with the cooperation of the state's GOP leadership.
Speaker 6 (26:27):
As governor and attorney general have announced that President Trump
is deploying Oregon National Guard troops into Portland. Now, they
filed a lawsuit to try to stop it. The Trump
administration says Title ten of the United States Code provides
the legal framework for the president to deploy National Guard
troops and reserve members. It's also the same code the
President invoked in California in June and in Washington, d C.
Speaker 2 (26:45):
Last month.
Speaker 6 (26:45):
Oregon's attorney general says his office has filed a lawsuit
against the Trump administration in an attempt to block the deployment.
This all started with a post on social on Saturday,
with President Trump directing the Secretary of War to send
troops to quote protect war rubbish, Portland and any of
our facilities under siege from attack by Antief and other
domestic terrorists. The President authorized full force if necessary, but
(27:06):
did not elaborate on what that meant. One hundreds gathered
at Portland's Ice facility to protest the Trump administration's immigration policy.
Sometimes Mackenzie Richmond joins US Live this morning at Mackenzie,
We know there was some trouble overnight. It's much calmer
usually in the morning.
Speaker 2 (27:18):
What can you tell us?
Speaker 4 (27:20):
It is a much calmer, quieter morning here outside of
Portland's Ice facility, just off of McAdam Avenue than it
was here last night when we saw hundreds of protesters.
So again a very different scene from yesterday. Now this morning,
we've learned more about the two arrests. Portland police made
a seventeen year old from the walk He was taken
into custody around nine to thirty last night for assault,
and then just about a half an hour later, officers
(27:42):
made a targeted arrest. Thirty eight year old Nathan McFarlane
of Portland was booked for assault as well. Now, these
arrests followed a brief confrontation between anti ice demonstrators and
a smaller group of counter protesters. Portland police say no
force was used by their officers during either of these arrests.
Police are also investigating a property crime reported during last
night's demonstration.
Speaker 2 (28:03):
Now at its.
Speaker 4 (28:03):
Peak, a crowd of about two hundred to three hundred
protesters packed the area, all calling forward and to federal
immigration enforcement.
Speaker 2 (28:10):
In the city of Portland.
Speaker 4 (28:11):
Officers also say at one point, protesters surrounded a car trying.
Speaker 2 (28:14):
To exit the facility.
Speaker 4 (28:16):
Tensions are flared as federal officers push protesters back, and
the officers even had to deploy pepper spray at.
Speaker 14 (28:22):
One point to keep the gates out.
Speaker 4 (28:23):
Here with all of the Portland Police say they do
not engage in immigration enforcement, but are responsible for maintaining
public safety and enforcing state laws. So again, dramatic moments overnight,
but back out here live this morning.
Speaker 14 (28:35):
Things are quiet.
Speaker 4 (28:36):
There are several signs left over from last night, but
no protesters at this moment. Of course, will continue to
keep you updated with the latest as this morning continues.
Speaker 18 (28:43):
But for now reporting live.
Speaker 11 (28:44):
I'm Mackenzie Richmond.
Speaker 6 (28:45):
For the Day organ.
Speaker 10 (28:48):
So I have a feeling all of this will just
get worse. I mean, the National Guard will probably be
calmer than the Ice agents, but it's always the authorities
who stoke violence. If you protest it in twenty twenty
or whatever in your life, you know this.
Speaker 11 (29:09):
They are the.
Speaker 10 (29:10):
Ones who become violent in twenty twenty. I mean, how
many people lost eyes. How many journalists lost eyes from
rubber bullets. It was like a dozen. Someone had to
start like their whole own practice of doing pro bono
prosthetic eyes because it was such a such a huge thing.
(29:33):
I mean, the violence that comes from these protests comes
from the people who are supposed to quel violence. So
I don't know. I don't think it's going to be good.
I think they're going to have people there specifically to
incite violence, and like who are not anti fascists, who
(29:55):
are extremely right wing, and I just think this is
going to.
Speaker 11 (30:03):
Be a nightmare.
Speaker 10 (30:04):
A lot of my friends are much more hopeful than
I am and think that everything will just be peaceful.
Speaker 11 (30:10):
But I mean, I don't know. I don't know.
Speaker 10 (30:14):
And in the last few months, I've spent more time
outside of Portland than in Portland. I've been here a
long time now. I originally came out here in twenty ten.
I started visiting in two thousand and nine. Here are
some of my patterns that repeat themselves for me and
my own personal twilight zone was dating a guy who
(30:36):
lived out here. Came out in two thousand and nine,
spent a week here the first time, and was living
in New York City.
Speaker 11 (30:45):
At the time.
Speaker 10 (30:45):
I was living in Brooklyn, and I was like, Oh,
Portland kind of like my.
Speaker 11 (30:49):
Kansas City revelation.
Speaker 10 (30:50):
It was like, a Portland is kind of a real
place too. It has all these food carts and restaurants
and its whole own little scene. And then in twenty
ten I ended up moving here. In twenty fifteen, I
left for three years because I had a new boyfriend
and he was from where I grew up in Clearwater, Florida,
(31:14):
and I had just turned thirty and we decided to
move back to be closer to our family, we broke up.
Turns out I could not handle living in Florida. I
just have such a hard time being in the place
where I was a teenager. It just brings out like
(31:35):
this side of me where I want to rebel against everything.
And in twenty eighteen, I packed up my dog Sawyer
God rest his soul, and moved back to Portland. So
I've been here again since twenty eighteen, so I've lived
here for like twelve out of the last fifteen years.
(31:56):
Now I have Kansas City on the brain, which is
just so random to me. And it's landlocked and it's
in Missouri.
Speaker 11 (32:04):
So we'll see how it goes.
Speaker 10 (32:05):
I'm actually going back in a few weeks, so I'll
be there for Halloween and be hanging out.
Speaker 11 (32:13):
I'm so ready for October.
Speaker 10 (32:15):
I keep telling myself the rest of the year is
going to be everything that the beginning of the year wasn't.
Speaker 11 (32:22):
But these are also the things I do.
Speaker 10 (32:24):
I kind of just start to idealize weird things like
fall and people and repeating patterns and fresh starts, and
this idea that, well, what if I live in a
new place for my forties.
Speaker 11 (32:38):
What would that be like?
Speaker 10 (32:40):
And decorating a house and making new friends, and none
of these things are inherently bad. They may seem kind
of hard, but for me, there's always just been this
appeal of being new and starting over and doing everything
again for the first time. In one way, it makes
(33:01):
me feel really fortunate, like I've gotten to live all
of these multiple mini lives and that that makes life
feel so much fuller. And in another way, it makes
me feel kind of sad because I'm like, I feel
like I don't really have roots anywhere. I feel like
there was my Ohio era, and then Florida era, and
(33:21):
then there was even North Carolina, then there was Portland,
and it just it feels it feels weird sometimes, like
I do get jealous of my friends that never left
Florida and it was always their place, or my family
that never left Ohio and Cleveland always got to be
their place, and they just feel such loyalty to where
(33:44):
they're they're from, like it's sports, and I've never felt
that way about anywhere.
Speaker 11 (33:49):
Probably the closest.
Speaker 10 (33:51):
I felt that way was when I was living in
New York, just because being a New Yorker felt like
such a thing and a right of pass it and
I thought I would never leave. That was one place
where I really thought I would.
Speaker 11 (34:04):
Never leave until I did.
Speaker 10 (34:06):
And New York is just it can be so easy,
but it can also be so difficult.
Speaker 11 (34:12):
It just can be so expensive.
Speaker 10 (34:14):
You're very much in a city, there's so many people.
When my anxiety would get bad there, it would get
worse than it was anywhere else. And I do feel
a Portland loyalty too. I do feel a Portland loyalty.
When stuff like this starts happening, like troops coming in
and this city literally being under siege, I feel defensive.
(34:37):
It makes me feel weird about leaving during this time.
But then I also just have this stupid obsession with
starting again, I guess, or trying again or doing something
new or getting a redo. Do you ever feel like that?
(34:58):
How long have you lived where you are? Do you
ever want to leave? Or does it feel good to
be there? I mean, for a while I was sure
I was going to leave the country, but my parents
won't leave the country, and I just they're older and
I don't want to be that far away from them.
I literally was like, let's move back to Italy. Another
(35:19):
another era that happened, But I don't know October is
coming up. I want to do like all the cheesy
Halloween stuff. I'll be in Kansas City for Halloween and
like a couple weeks beforehand, and I don't know, I
might go see my parents for Thanksgiving to I need
(35:45):
to get like an Airlines reward credit card or something.
I've seriously just been living out of a suitcase for
like since June.
Speaker 11 (35:56):
But I just and I know, and I just did.
Speaker 10 (35:58):
All this stuff to have the Broads next Adore Studio,
which I don't even love recording it. I liked recording
in my room more and having everything in the same
room more. But this room is so cute. It is
like extremely adorable and so me and it does have
a good vibe to it. But at the same time,
like just nothing has a good vibe right now, everything
(36:19):
is making me anxious, like everything in the world. I
actually kind of felt jealous of those Rapture people who
were so sure they were just gonna get sucked up
into the sky. And I can't believe this year is
almost over. I literally can't believe it. I just don't
know what happened with twenty twenty five. I mean, I
released a ton of episodes. This year, I switched to
(36:41):
the four or five episodes a week schedule, so I
feel like I was.
Speaker 11 (36:46):
Really super super into that.
Speaker 10 (36:49):
But just is this the whole part of when you
get older and the days are slow and then the
years are fast, and then the years just get faster
because there's more of them. It's just been such a
weird year though. It's been a really weird year, so
I really want the last three months to count. As
far as upcoming episodes go. October is gonna be all
(37:12):
scary stuff, So if you don't like that stuff, I'll
try and kind of vary, like what kind of scary
we have, like some supernatural, some aliens, some true crime,
since everything is horrifying all the time, but we're definitely
going with a spooky theme for the whole month.
Speaker 11 (37:29):
One thing I would love is.
Speaker 10 (37:30):
If you told me your own scary stories. You can
either send me a voice note online on social media,
or you can email me at Daniellascrima at gmail dot
com or broad'sneckt Door at gmail dot com, or message
me on social media.
Speaker 11 (37:47):
But I'd love to.
Speaker 10 (37:48):
Hear any of your weird glitch in the Matrix stories,
Gohost stories, haunted places from when you where you grew up.
I'd love to do some episodes just sharing listener stories,
so make sure to write me because I feel like
that would be just an extra fun thing to have
(38:10):
for the month. Also, if you have episode and episode ideas,
because I'm gonna need a lot of them to fill
out the month, and that's gonna be that's gonna be
it for today. I hope your September your Bad Decisions
Month wasn't bad over at all, but it did just
(38:32):
feel like the Twilight Zone to me the entire entire month.
But I'll be back with you tomorrow and we'll have
some scary stories. We'll have some spooky, some spooky stuff.
So until then, thank you so much for listening to
(38:55):
another episode of Broad's Next Door. If you enjoy this
show or these episodes, please make sure to like, rate, review,
subscribe all the things that I often forget to say.
You can find me on social media at Daniella, Screama
and Broad's Next a Door on all of the things.
(39:16):
You can send me messages, you can send me emails.
I love hearing from you. Send me your scary stuff,
Send me your scary stuff. Do it, do it okay,
I will see you tomorrow.
Speaker 19 (39:28):
Bye.
Speaker 11 (39:47):
I think that's going to come out.
Speaker 10 (39:53):
I think that's gonna come out.