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May 25, 2025 91 mins
Today I had a great interview with Cash Loren about Trump, the big beautiful bill, and the state of public education. Check out the Cash Loren show here

https://podcasts.apple.com/us/...

Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/fire--6486198/support.
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
All right, go ahead, Well, welcome to the Fire Podcast. Today,
I have a very special guest with me, Cash Lauren.
He is the host of the Cash Lauren Show. Great show,
by the way, and so I want to talk about

(00:21):
mainly Trump's progress, his Big Beautiful Bill. I want to
talk about the border, some and and Israel. So those
are kind of the main topics, and of course we
can kind of straight away from those if we you know,
if we're having another great conversation, you know what I mean.

Speaker 2 (00:41):
So I'm excited for the show man.

Speaker 3 (00:45):
Yeah, I appreciate you inviting me on. It's great to
be here and speak with you. There's always a lot
going on in our world, so really look forward to
talking about all of it that's happening today.

Speaker 1 (00:57):
Yeah, I know, Big Beautiful Bill does have.

Speaker 2 (01:06):
It's got a lot.

Speaker 1 (01:07):
Of great things, a few things that I that I
was critical of until I really I've really kind of
researched it earlier today a lot more than I have.
And it appears that Trump is actually trying to Trump

(01:28):
is trying to make it to where he doesn't need
to ask Democrats for money for the border or for
the military. He's trying to just put it all into
one big package, which I think is an incredible idea
because you never know what's going to happen in the midterms.

(01:48):
I mean, you never know what type of fraud there's
going to be, Especially in the midterms when people don't
really vote, you don't have the same type of turnout
as a presidential election, makes it a lot easier to rig.

Speaker 3 (02:04):
Right, Yeah, the midterms can always be very sketchy, and
usually the midterms for the sitting president are bad generally
the other side being seats. This midterms may be different.
We had a pretty big loss in Wisconsin and the
Supreme Court. I don't think that's quitt hit people how
badly because they're going to try to rig those districts

(02:27):
to give the Democrats more seats now that they have
one they've taken over the Wisconsin Scotis. But this time
around is very different than most midterms have a raffle one.
You have the Democrats are incredibly unpopular and they're taking
the worst position possible on everything just about. They're on

(02:47):
the twenty side of the twenty eighty issue on every
issue that I could speak of. In addition to that,
unlike in twenty and twenty two. Here are coming up
to L twenty six. The Republicans actually have a very
good pathway to seats unlike that's why two.

Speaker 1 (03:05):
Yeah, especially because there has been documents that have been
have been showing like there are illegals who are voting.
There are illegals on tape admitting it that they vote
and that they're not citizens. So if we get a
lot of those people out, I think the midterms and

(03:28):
twenty twenty eight will look a lot different. I am
very impressed with the way that ICE is kind of
moving really really fast, not only to get illegals out,
but also to secure the border.

Speaker 2 (03:49):
I mean, what.

Speaker 1 (03:51):
People came in? Nine people were missed. That they missed
nine people. And uh, how much was it under Joe Biden?
Probably one hundred thousand each month each quarter he led
in a bunch of illegal aliens.

Speaker 3 (04:12):
This is really the fight of our of our times,
the securing our border. No country can surrive an open border.
That that's just a fact. And so the question then becomes,
you know what can we do about it? And and
Donald Trump was doing all the right things curing the border,
and we're out funding that laws. And Biden was trying
to talk about how they needed a new border bill

(04:33):
to cure a border when we already had the laws,
and it turned out that we didn't need a new president.
And then that the most ironic part of all that
was that was actually what finally collapsed his entire campaign,
and when he got bullied into debating Trump, the big
my day pale, and then Trump did make his day
and Biden in that weird rants just the vorder, you know,

(04:59):
and get out the new and then Trump and Trump
which I don't know what he said. I don't think
he knows what he said. And then Trump just demolish him.
And that was the point where all the Normans they
finally realized just how much the fake news and bid
him in mind for them. And that was the point
when Donald Trump won the present seat.

Speaker 1 (05:22):
Know how bad Biden sounded, like if you go on
if you maybe you won't hear it from the television,
but if you go and listen to it, like on
a phone, you have that phone real close to your ear,
you can kind of hear him like throughout the entire debate,
just going like it sounds like you're dying, like out

(05:45):
of breath or something like these.

Speaker 3 (05:49):
I would love to know if we ever find out
when you did that make my day, pal, I would
really love to know how many takes that took.

Speaker 2 (05:59):
Yeah, and you can kind of tell.

Speaker 1 (06:01):
You can kind of tell, even by listening to the
audio that there was a bunch of takes, because you
can't when you edit something and then you and then
you put the rest of what you were saying added
to it. It's not that it sounds bad, it's just

(06:22):
that it's a noticeable sound I mean to me, because
I mean, I can't see, but I can hear a
lot better, and I can hear the difference, like it's like, Hey,
this is Joe Biden take two. I want to ask
you how to you know what I mean? Just I'm

(06:43):
sure that there was at least thirty takes.

Speaker 3 (06:47):
It wouldn't surprise me at all because there's always those
voice reflections and you being blind, right, I think that
is probably true for you, is that since you've lost
one of your senses, your other sensors then become in
heightened because you rely on them more. And there's a
natural like voice reflection that people have throughout the day,
and so if you're talking at one hour, I've noticed

(07:09):
this too. Then I go through I talk at a
different hour. My voice actually sounds different. And so as
you do, different takes your voice reflection. It doesn't sound
a continuous which I believe is what you're saying.

Speaker 1 (07:19):
Yeah, yeah, you're right, And and you can hear just
in the in the voice itself that does it's not.
It doesn't sound continuous. It sounds like there's a break in.

Speaker 3 (07:29):
There, right. And then the volumes, the picts, the tone
is all different too. It's not just like there was.

Speaker 1 (07:35):
A pops Yeah, yeah, you're right, you're right about that.

Speaker 3 (07:42):
Day.

Speaker 2 (07:44):
Yeah, Trump makes day he I mean. And in the
end we found out that you know, the auto pen
was the president.

Speaker 3 (07:55):
Who do you think was operating the autopan? A Well,
hold on, I'll let you think about that for a second.
Let's explain just case people don't know what we're talking about. So,
an autopan is a subject with something that signs for you,
and authors would use them, presidents use them, all kinds
of people use them to quickly sign sign things. And

(08:17):
the autopan itself is not the issue here, right because
people use them all the time. It's not a legal
talk time. The issue isn't the outopen. The issue is
who was operating the outo pan Because Joe Biden was
elected to President of the United States, and if he
wasn't the president, someone else is making decisions and sign
this autopan without his premission or authority. That's where the

(08:39):
issue comes in. That's where the conspiracy comes from, not
from the autopatry.

Speaker 1 (08:45):
Exactly who was operating that? Was it Jill Was it
Barack Obama? Was it Ron Claim?

Speaker 3 (08:55):
Was it Blinking? Was it afters? I mean, was it
combo of all of them?

Speaker 1 (09:01):
I mean, was it Kamala Harris? No, No, she's too dumb.

Speaker 3 (09:08):
She would just cackle wilding in the back of her vodka.

Speaker 1 (09:15):
And Nancy, Her and Nancy Pelosi were probably drinking buddies
up on the Capitol.

Speaker 3 (09:20):
They're probably over the White House's stock yep.

Speaker 1 (09:27):
And don't discount Nancy Pelosi's seven million dollar fridge or
what was it like a It was a It wasn't
seven million. It was a very expensive fridge.

Speaker 3 (09:41):
The very she had like a fridge of blue that
was only for ice cream. It was a freezer essentially
that she paid a bunch of money for just ice
cream in it.

Speaker 1 (09:49):
Yeah, she's like, no, it's de pandemic. I'm going to
show eat a lot of ice cream.

Speaker 2 (09:57):
This is chocolate, this is.

Speaker 3 (10:01):
And I am the body and I like ice cream too,
and I like sniff hair and his future good.

Speaker 2 (10:10):
Uh man.

Speaker 1 (10:15):
I mean Nancy Pelosi, she talks like she has no.

Speaker 3 (10:19):
Teeth years and years of drinking. I mean, she's an alcoholic.
You can you can see it. You can see. I mean,
I don't think she ever publicly admitted that, but you can.
You can look at when you've been around people have
been alcoholic for a very long time. There's a certain
way that they carry themselves that you can see. That's
what's been done to their body for a very long time,

(10:40):
and that's closely kind of has all those mannerisms. So
maybe she has none. She isn't, but it certainly suggests.

Speaker 1 (10:47):
Yeah, and yeah, like the it's just the way she talks.
It sounds like she doesn't have any teeth.

Speaker 3 (10:56):
Mm hmmm.

Speaker 1 (10:57):
It sounds like you're like pressing your pressing your tongue against.

Speaker 2 (11:01):
Your guns, correct.

Speaker 1 (11:04):
Rather than like, rather than kind of using your teeth
to talk. That's I mean, that's how most people do talk.
But what do you think I'm just curious. So do
you think that there will ever be real justice for
these people? Anthony Fauci, Joe Biden, the person who operated

(11:30):
the auto pen. Do you think there's anyone who will
who will be prosecuted for that.

Speaker 3 (11:41):
There's some days I think we'll get some justice. Every
day I nearly won't get full justice. The chances that
Fauci actually get the prisons, it was certainly hopeful because
he belonged to prison. But the moment that I saw
Brandon Gino and Catch Mitel when air on Fox, and
they both looked scooped and during their interview, and they

(12:03):
said that they believe that Epstein hung himself committed suicide
after they've had the exact opposite feeling for all this time.
And I was watching their facial expressions, and I don't
know what happened behind closed doors, but my confidence in
the big names get it convicted or even arrested went
way down. Why is Adam Shift not in prison right now?

(12:28):
I mean Cash Cantel is the leader of the FBI.
He called the biggest criminal in two hundred years, So
what are they waiting for? And we can talk about
how deeper deep state is, But I just I don't
really know the end of my answer. I hope at
some point, I hope ther Gina Damnagino mede it when
he said, we didn't come here, you know, to to

(12:48):
join the deep state. I still have faith. I think
that they're facing much deeper deep state than even they
realized how bad it was. And I think we get
into the FTY lists and all that stuff too. I
don't know if we were actually a Fauchi, were at
ever end up in prison. I find that hard to believe,

(13:10):
but I haven't been enough to bake yet.

Speaker 2 (13:13):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (13:14):
Like I mean, Fauci is a criminal, and Bill Bill Gates,
one of them, is one of the biggest criminals.

Speaker 2 (13:22):
In the world.

Speaker 1 (13:23):
I mean the reason that I started really fighting against
the globalists is because I found out about his depopulation agenda.
I found out about what he does with vaccines and mosquitos,
and I mean every country he tries to help, they

(13:44):
always end up.

Speaker 2 (13:45):
Sicker and more and closer to dying rather.

Speaker 1 (13:50):
Than you know, being healed or being saved with Bill
Gates's vaccine.

Speaker 3 (13:59):
Yeah, the same global and this this guy is a
computer scientist. I mean he programs computers and then all
of a sudden, everybody is pretending that he's somehow this
pop scientific mind in the world. And what happened to
trust him the experts. I guess if you have an
endgame villain telling you, you know what they want to hear,
then all of a sudden, science goes out the window.

Speaker 2 (14:21):
Exactly.

Speaker 1 (14:26):
And I've seen I've seen video clips of Bill Gates
just saying, just off the wall ship.

Speaker 2 (14:38):
He'll sit.

Speaker 1 (14:39):
One time he was speaking in an audit auditorium and
he was saying, malaria spreads through mosquitos, and he had
like a container of mosquitos or something like that, and
he's like, let's upen this up and let these room
around the room and let's see how everyone feels, or
something like that. Like just he's I get that crooked,

(15:02):
dark evil type of.

Speaker 2 (15:06):
Energy from him.

Speaker 1 (15:08):
I can tell that he he pretends to be like
this blue old nerd who invented Microsoft. And you know,
he pretends that he was poor his entire life and
what when in reality, his father I believe, was in
charge of a depopulation organization before him, which I mean,

(15:34):
I want to give this information to the audience. The
Bill and Melinda Gates foundation is a false name. It
is it's not the full name. It is the Bill
and Melinda Gates Foundation for Population Control. So they are
trying to kill us.

Speaker 2 (15:54):
That is.

Speaker 1 (15:56):
If that won't wake you up, nothing will.

Speaker 3 (16:01):
I mean, he even sits like a super villain. And
we're an audio only but I can show you clips
how even how he sits. I mean, this is like
your Yeah, I just picture I hear a video game
in that the the mask goes back, you gets to
the end and there's Bill Gates sitting there laughing at you.
He finally got there and then jumps into his big
robot suit and tries to finish you off so he

(16:21):
can finish the world off. He is a supervillain.

Speaker 1 (16:24):
I want to picture that. I'm gonna I'm gonna put
that as the cover art of the of the of
this episode.

Speaker 3 (16:33):
You know, he could be like the pixel Bill Gates,
you know, and he jumps in that like a big
old like metroid outfit or something, and all of a sudden,
you shooting missiles at you all because you wanted to
save people from his mosquitoes.

Speaker 1 (16:49):
Yeah, And Alex Jones was talking about that and he
Bill Gates was engineering some type of mosquito to give
you vaccine, to hold the vaccine, so that all you
have to do to get a vaccine is get bit
by a mosquito. But what happens when the anti vaxxers
are on a registered list and someone says, all right,

(17:10):
well we'll send it. We'll just send a couple of
these assholes out here to get this guy vaccinated.

Speaker 3 (17:19):
Mm hmm.

Speaker 1 (17:20):
So there's no there's no personal choice or personal freedom
with that. And then and I'm against that.

Speaker 3 (17:28):
U you think everybody loves freedom would be against something
like that. The whole point is choose right if you
want to get vaccinated or not. And these these people
are trying to say, you know, we're just gonna make
that decision for you. If you aren't willing to do
it right, we'll find another way, either in the mosquitoes
or there's other that try to put it in the meat,
or whether the case may be. And this is not
what you know. This is everything that's against what America

(17:50):
stands for.

Speaker 2 (17:53):
Exactly.

Speaker 1 (17:54):
It sands for communism, It stands for beating back to
the American spirit, beating back the tithe of the American spirit,
and just demoralizing us and killing us and taking away
our choices, which I don't understand. Like liberals are so

(18:17):
uh they call themselves pro choice, yet they insisted and
insisted upon these horrible vaccine mandates. I think that's horrible,
Like it's hypocritical. I mean, I don't mind if you're
a pro choice. I mean I think.

Speaker 2 (18:39):
In certain situations you should.

Speaker 1 (18:42):
Yeah, I mean you should have the choice, but not
when your kid is uh what was it? You're not
when you're nine months pregnant and about to get birth,
Like that's that is that has past the line for me.
I'd say six months is the line at the very least.

Speaker 3 (19:04):
Let me ask you, when do you think life begins?

Speaker 2 (19:10):
I am not I'm not quite sure.

Speaker 1 (19:12):
I mean, there's no I mean that because at first, uh,
it's not it's not a it's not a child. That's
an embryo, I guess, and that grows into a child.
But I think that if you, I mean, I think
that if you know that you're pregnant, then you and

(19:33):
you want to make that choice, you make that choice
right away rather than waiting until uh late term or
six months or however long you are waiting. You shouldn't
it shouldn't be that long, but I mean six months.
Six months is the absolute line, you know what I mean.

Speaker 3 (19:55):
So for you of a pregnant will came in and
she was six months pregnant and won an abortion, on
your mind, that would be okay.

Speaker 1 (20:07):
No, I think that's the deadline. I think that's the
absolute deadline. I mean, I think, like maybe you could
negotiate for something a little bit more along the lines
of like four or five months or whatever, but I
mean six months. It's absolutely ridiculous, That's what I'm thinking,
because because the studies that I've seen show that a

(20:29):
baby can feel the pain of an abortion at six months.

Speaker 2 (20:37):
Okay, that's what certain studies said. So so.

Speaker 1 (20:41):
At that point you are pregnant, you are aware that
you are, and at that point it's way too late,
you know what I mean. And I'm just I'm just
trying to I'm just trying to say, that's the absolute deadline.
And I would I would be for it'd before, like
a deadline of three or four months, but six is

(21:06):
the farthest.

Speaker 3 (21:08):
I will go, Okay, what do you think, Well, I
think life begins a conception, and so you have the
sperm meet Sagg and boom, there's life right at that
very moment, and so the abortion is zero. Every every
successful abortion ends with the with the loss of an
innocent life, and the innocent life gets no say in it.

(21:31):
And so I think abortion, at the end of the
day is being drunk on the blood of the innocent.
And so if someone gets pregnant and they have a
child that they didn't carry, that child to turn whether
they know they're pregnant or not, in my mind is irrelevant.
And there's plenty of other ways not to get pregnant likenot,
to have sex, or to use other protections that can help.

(21:54):
But at the end of the day, there's always out
risk and if you don't become pregnant. So for me,
it's a conception there there is no there's no exceptions
for abortion at all in any case, just because it's
just like we don't make any exceptions for murder. I
meancause that's essentially what an abortion is. Well not essentially,
that is what abortion is, is your ending life of

(22:17):
an instant child.

Speaker 1 (22:19):
Well, the only the only exception to murder that I
that I that I really really believe in is like
self defense, you know.

Speaker 3 (22:27):
What I mean?

Speaker 1 (22:28):
Because that you you know, someone comes in your house,
threatens to kill you, you treat them in the head or whatever.

Speaker 2 (22:35):
That I think that is okay.

Speaker 3 (22:38):
Well yeah, because I'm not saying you can't defend yourself
like you stand there and you just let them do
harm to you. That's in my mind, that's not murder.
That's self defense. That's different. That's that's you defending your
right to live and your right to your property. That's
not the same thing as like walking down the street
and just cutting a gun and a random person you
pulling the trigger. Right, It's very different scenas. And so

(23:01):
that's I think where we come out with the abortion
US not abortion is that you know, is that they
made decision to have sex. They then well even if
they didn't make the decisions they have sex to say
they were raped or something, but either way, they got pregnant.
At that point, that is a brand new life with
neat unique mena and UH will become a unique human being.

(23:22):
That there is no one before or after they will
be exactly the same, and that we are all created
in the image of God. And so at any point
during that point, if you're in that child's life, in
my mind that's murdered. That's very different than someone cleaning
your home to do harm with you and you having
the right to within yourself and your health.

Speaker 1 (23:39):
What do you think about the uh villain? I believe
Texas and Florida is a heartbeat.

Speaker 2 (23:45):
Bill six weeks.

Speaker 3 (23:47):
I think it's not far enough. I'm trying to be
very clear. Uh so life again. Yeah, I think it's
doesn't go far enough. I get life a conception, though,
I would like to see where there's absolutely no abortion
with whoever, because abortion is murder. The only exceptions would
ever be in the same exception, even with the most

(24:08):
strictest states, is to save the life of the mother,
there's gonna be they have to make a decision like
either the mother is gonna die or or not, and
then the mother makes they make decisions in the mother's life. Ah,
you have to the mother's choice. And unless, of course
they're unconscious and they're just like you would if your
if your CPR, your first responder, that if they're unable

(24:30):
to respond to you, but then you know that informission,
because then the doctors will save the mother's life that
they can, even it causes the end of the life
of their child.

Speaker 1 (24:38):
Yeah, and I think it's absolutely ridiculous.

Speaker 2 (24:42):
I don't know if you've.

Speaker 1 (24:43):
Ever seen it, but there are videos of like women
who are just celebrating and glorifying their abortion m like that.

Speaker 2 (24:52):
I mean, I think that is pure evil.

Speaker 3 (24:54):
It's satanic, it really is.

Speaker 1 (24:58):
Not only are you having an abortion, but then you're
going on uh freaking TikTok or Instagram or wherever you're
going on too, and you're posting a video of you're
just jumping up and down, clapping your hands and celebrating.

Speaker 2 (25:13):
Having having an abortion.

Speaker 1 (25:14):
Like that's that's ridiculous.

Speaker 3 (25:19):
Temple and running innocent blood down and you know, juning
on some kind of ecstasy. It really is. It's truly
evil and demanded. In my mind, and you see someone
celebrating that kind of darkness, I have nothing in common.

Speaker 1 (25:35):
With them exactly. I mean, something is wrong with that person.
They're mentally ill. I mean, I think the same way
of trends. A lot of trends people they think that
there's something that they're not mentally mentally ill, just as
the people who are celebrating abortion are mentally ill.

Speaker 3 (25:57):
Yeah, I'm with you. I mean, men can never be
women and men women can never be meant anything else
is to deny realogy. You're a science denier.

Speaker 2 (26:06):
These and these people are fools.

Speaker 1 (26:08):
Two men can have a baby, really, I mean, explain
the biology, Explain how that happens. You cannot do it.

Speaker 3 (26:19):
No, absolutely not. But of course if you try to
say something at that corner left and then you're a
racist and you're a big and your homophobia transphert you
might will might nash extreme maga revolt kids right and
all this slater. They try to get you to shut
up when facts getting the way their narrative.

Speaker 1 (26:32):
Yeah, I'd like at this point it's bullshit, Like I
don't care.

Speaker 2 (26:38):
I don't like. I don't care.

Speaker 1 (26:39):
You can call me a racist, you can call me
a sexist, homophobe, transphobe. I might even be a transphobe,
to be honest with you. But I mean, because I
think it's a mental disorder. I mean, I even it's funny.
I had an episode on my podcast called transgenderism is
a mental Disorder, and I was just I was I

(27:00):
was trying to make a point, but I was trying
to like provoke a bunch of stupid liberals, and so
I put as the artwork a burning Pride flag with
an X, and I got a bunch of hate on it.
It was it was funny.

Speaker 3 (27:15):
That's really good.

Speaker 2 (27:20):
His tenderism is a mental disorder, it really is.

Speaker 3 (27:23):
There's something wrong with somebody if they legituinely think that
they're a man that can become a woman. This is
why we build mental times. Is it take there and
remove them from sonmiety?

Speaker 2 (27:36):
I mean what if?

Speaker 4 (27:38):
I mean.

Speaker 1 (27:40):
Exactly like JB. Vance On Rogan made a really good point.
He said, my kid's four years old. He says he
wants to be a dinosaur.

Speaker 2 (27:50):
Should I get.

Speaker 1 (27:51):
Him surgery to make him look like a dinosaur?

Speaker 3 (27:57):
No, of course not. And don't know to say, you
have a boy, right and the boy decides if he
wants to play the dollhouse, it's four years old. What
do you do? You don't You don't chop off his wiener?
You know, you just let them play the dollhouse. And
they grow up and they're just a child using your imagination.
And you think, how like, how many like tomboys out
there now that grew up to be women that would

(28:17):
have their entire lives destroyed. It's the left of you
in the hold of them.

Speaker 2 (28:23):
Exactly.

Speaker 1 (28:24):
I mean, it's not a problem to be a tomboy,
but it's a problem for you to think that you're
something when you're not.

Speaker 3 (28:35):
Yeah, I can't agree. I mean whatever, if they want
to go and hang out with the boys, classical, maybe
the boy things. They were agreeing, there's nothing wrong with that.
Anyone is wrong, and it's some four year old boy
decided that they want to play with a dollhouse to
dress up barbies or something. I mean, I might think
that's kind of weird, but I'm not gonna change their
sex over it. You know, you just let them play that,

(28:55):
and then you let them they just kind of lose you.
I'm point ninercent of the time. They just grow out
of it, and then later on you can use it
to help them. Uh, you know, stay in line? Is
you better? You know, you better do your homework. I'll
show your girlfriend on those lines. I got the old
photo books, buddy.

Speaker 2 (29:16):
You better do your homeworker. I'm gonna show your girlfriend
you on Facebook.

Speaker 3 (29:21):
I'll do it.

Speaker 2 (29:22):
I saved you. I saved all your dollar, all your
dollar houses, all your barbies.

Speaker 3 (29:29):
I have evidence value to your math homework. But no,
I mean jokes aside. It's just something that you know,
kids have this certain innocence to them, and they have
this kind of imagination that's virtually real for them, and
they don't have the mental capacity to make the connections

(29:50):
that we make. And so when they if you have
a kid to do something that's not traditionally what a
kid you do, as far as playing with the office
sex as toys, they're not thinking that they're actually a
woman that are actually a male. They're just a kid
that's playing the plays and they're Are you, as the
adult you need to say out of this. There's there's no

(30:10):
such thing as a transgender child child. There's just mentally
ill adults should be nowhere in your children.

Speaker 2 (30:19):
Exactly.

Speaker 1 (30:19):
I mean, I don't know if you've been on X
and seeing libs of TikTok. She posts a bunch of
videos of just insane teachers who are just saying, oh,
I can't have my pride flag or I can't teach
without my pride.

Speaker 3 (30:36):
Flag, right, I mean, okay, they I agree with you.
Goodbye goodbye.

Speaker 1 (30:47):
Yeah, I mean no no compensation, no thirty days, nothing,
no two weeks notice nothing.

Speaker 2 (30:55):
Yeah, you're gone.

Speaker 3 (30:57):
You're not You're not there to raise little marks the activists.
You're there to teach ABC's and one two threes, and
if you can't do that, then there's no reason if
you'd be a teacher. This is a part why we
need to get rid of public schools and we need
to replace in the school choice and put all the
power back into parents.

Speaker 2 (31:15):
So would school choice be free for everyone?

Speaker 3 (31:19):
Well, so essentially the idea of school choice is when
you say a word free, that's really a loaded word,
because nothing's really free. Someone has to pay for it.
But essentially what it would do is it would take
the money out of the bureaucrat's hands, so they wouldn't
decide where I gets budgeted. They put it back into
the parents' hands. And so the parents essentially have a

(31:41):
coupon I don't know, say twenty thousand dollars right, just
to be a round number, and then every parent has
twenty thousand dollars that they invest in the school. And
then the schools compete for the parents and for the children,
so they offer the classes and then the parents say, hey,
I align the school and so I want my child
to go there. And then you give essential the school

(32:01):
that voucher to teach your kid. And and so I
think that is the best way to end all this
Marxist activism that's happening in the public education system because
most parents, I don't think want anything to do with this,
but they have no way out. Yeah, you know, And
but this is the way to get them out. Is
if you want to b mL flag in your classroom, fine,

(32:23):
you know, you can have a BML flag in your classroom.
And if a parent is fine with that, then they
can similicate to that school. But the parents that aren't
will pull their kids out and then put them in
to another school. So then if you can have a
BML flag, then why can't this other school have a
cross and the parents that are Christians and then they
can send their kids for the Christian school. The war
an ABC's would do threes and the crisis King.

Speaker 2 (32:45):
Exactly.

Speaker 1 (32:46):
And it's I think that's an actual real free market
capitalist solution. I mean, it's actually making schools strive to
be better rather than them just saying all right, well,
the government sends US one hundred and fifty thousand dollars

(33:08):
for this amount of kids, so we're just gonna we're
gonna teach them we're just gonna keep expecting that money
and then we'll allow our teachers to be freaking lunatics.

Speaker 3 (33:20):
Well it's even worse than that. So you have to
like the Department Education, and they said they did take
a state and they say, you know, so we'll give
you one hundred and fifty million dollars. But in order
to have this one hundred fifty million dollars, you have
to agree to teach. You have to agreed to teach
ctr or you have to gree to teach you DEI
in your schools because we think it's important the diversity, equity, inclusion.

(33:45):
And so then the schools then say, well, we want
this money. So then they put it into their programs.
And now as a parent, what do you do? You
you really can't do anything. And so that that's where
you take the power away from these uneleged beercraft, put
it in the hands of teacher, because then the beercraft
don't decide where the money goes. It's the parents. They say,

(34:06):
you don't find we're gonna pull out the school until
they take whatever their cutter. We're using the twenty thousand,
one hundred nine and they put it into a school
they agree with. And what you'll see, I think is
a lot of parents will do that and all of
a sudden, all that money's gone, and it's in the schools.
They're aligned with the parents with the children to teach,
which is learn, which is really what should have been
been in the first place.

Speaker 2 (34:28):
Exactly.

Speaker 1 (34:29):
We also need to do something about our college system too,
because I mean, kids don't need to I mean, eighteen
year olds and and above don't don't need an education
that costs seventy five dollars seventy five thousand dollars just

(34:54):
for them to learn, say African studies or transgender studies
or whatever.

Speaker 2 (35:01):
I mean. Kids need to go.

Speaker 1 (35:03):
Kids need to go to college for things like engineering
or to be a doctor, to be a lawyer. And
I mean, I'm.

Speaker 3 (35:13):
Sorry I said I didn' even argue to get that.
I think out of college by ninety niner of it
is completely worthless. And you don't need most of us
to get these career useless jobs. Let's say you need
to say for teaching. Is we just talked about, right,
If they pay you based off your education level, and
so they'll say, for example, you get a master's, you
get more money, but what do you need a master

(35:35):
for to teach kindergarten first grade Sate states all the
way up to like golf, you don't. And so most
jobs you can go through and you can learn much
less on the general education forum and then learn the
pacifics in whatever field that you're going into, which is
why we need more trade for example. So there are
certain jobs that need further education, as you started to

(35:58):
talk about, like engineering, doctors, lawyers, and that kind of
stuff you typically need a college education for. And but
most like what you said, but college doesn't teach any
of that because you and you have all these required
classes that have absolutely nothing to do with what you're
trying to go into. And so one solution I think
they're trying to work on with these these trade skills

(36:22):
and combined with further education, is why not have a
lot more of it in the field. But why not
have a college kid wants to be a doctor, why
not have them working in the doctor's office with the
doctor if be of much more traditional kind of journeyman
style learning, because the vast majority of doctors, they're family doctors, right,
They're they're solvent colds, they're doing minor prescriptions, they're they're

(36:46):
fixing bones, they're not doing like heart and brain surgery
and the very specialties. And then after that then you
have to be able to pass I think standardize kind
of testing, which is all. You want your doctor to
be knowledgeable, right, so they know what they're doing and
that they can pass certain tests, because it does take

(37:08):
an incredible amount of intelligence to be a doctor and
in all the years of hard and uh study. But
you what I'm trying to say on their side, you
don't want to be wasted on crap. They don't need
to know like you said, African studies or or whatever
other crap. Yeah. So I think really the more we
can get away from the from our current education system,
they put it more into practical uses through like the

(37:31):
parentcy siding what the kids learn under the basics and
media of reading, writing, you know, math, science, and then
the children as they grow and they figure out which
field they want to be in, going into very specific
into those fields rather than these standard college educations that
they're really just bringing these Marxist activists useless people. They're

(37:52):
not really breeding people who are ready to be the
best of.

Speaker 2 (37:56):
The best exactly.

Speaker 1 (37:58):
And I think I think high school should be a
lot like should kind of serve as college in a
way because you can teach people the things that they
need to learn rather than you know, I mean I too.
I had to take a complex algebra and I was

(38:24):
I was like, when am I ever going to use this? Nope,
but I haven't used it yet.

Speaker 3 (38:33):
Right, And those kind of stuff they can just be
put back. And if there's some field you're going into
that you need to know, like if that mathematics stay
you want to do rockets or something right where you
actually need to do complex calculations, and then that can
be part of that field. But why are you making
every single high school student go through this crap? I
agree with you. I think one the earlier grade that

(38:55):
we have now one through six or one through five
or whatever, you know, kindergarten, whatever you're the is is
those I think should really be the vast majority of
the time just playing with other kids. Yeah, especially be recessed.
You go in there and you learn how to be
around other kids, You learn how to communicate, and then
you learn how data kind of life skills, and then

(39:17):
you learn some maybe season one you're freeze while you're there,
and then you kind of graduate and then you start
to pick your field, and then your field gets very
specific in teaching you for whatever degree that you want
to go into.

Speaker 2 (39:31):
Exactly.

Speaker 1 (39:33):
I mean because a lot of times, you know, if
some if someone was in if a kid was interested
in something like some people would be interested in science,
some reading, they would be very engaged and get you know,
for example, I was really good at history and reading.

Speaker 2 (39:53):
I'd get like a ninety eight ninety.

Speaker 1 (39:55):
Seven percent in English and history, but I barely passed
the math class. And it's it's a little bit different
being blind and doing math as well. So that's kind
of that's part of the reason why. But a lot
of kids just fall asleep and don't retain that information.

Speaker 3 (40:14):
Mm yeah, I mean all of you, right, listen to
the show. How many of you, probably all of you
graduated high school, of vast majority of you, how much
have you use in school in your daily lives? Probably
less than one percent would be my guess. Exactly, So
why are we spending all this money as a society

(40:37):
on these public schools? They've been a complete and utter
failure in every way measurable, and as the biocracy has grown,
your habits is not only that, but then they start
to spend more and more money, not on the kids,
but more and more on the up end of the
bureaucracy that's up above it. Like you're talking about education,
eighty ninety percent spent on useless beer crafts, and none

(40:58):
of it trickles back down to the kids. That's why
we need you're in a public education and give the
money back to the parents, because you're going through let's
day and you have twenty thousand dollars, only four hundred
dollars that is actually going to your kids education? Who
would go for that if they had the actual choice?
So that that is ultimately our ultimate fight is to

(41:18):
give put power back in the parents.

Speaker 2 (41:22):
Exactly, they wasted a lot of money.

Speaker 1 (41:24):
I mean I went to the school for the Blonde.
They wasted a lot of money.

Speaker 2 (41:27):
They had.

Speaker 1 (41:30):
So for a while they had a principal, an elementary principle,
and because it was a it was it was a
school in a different town, so it was like kind
of a boarding school for everybody, and they had a
behavioral specialist or whatever, and like, wouldn't the principal wouldn't

(41:55):
most principles just be able to do that them else?
Like especially since there wasn't that many kids. Anyway, you
can do the behavior type of behavior correction type of thing.
I mean, that's what most high school and even middle
school principals will do.

Speaker 2 (42:14):
They'll be a.

Speaker 1 (42:16):
Big part of the disciplinary, the disciplinary type of things.

Speaker 3 (42:28):
Yeah, I again, I think you and I are really
agreeing on this. The public education is a huge problem,
and the solution is to put power back in the parents.

Speaker 1 (42:38):
You are correct, man, Yeah you might. Yeah, you need
a principal maybe for like a thousand and fifteen hundred kids,
vice principal or whatever, or principal's assistant, but you don't
need an entire board of people who for who are

(43:00):
delegated for like behavior type of matters or I mean,
you don't need all this crap that a lot of
the a lot.

Speaker 2 (43:11):
Of the schools put money into.

Speaker 1 (43:14):
It's just to fill their own staff's pockets, a lot
of it. And then and then the people who are
actually doing their jobs don't get hardly any money and
get terminated.

Speaker 3 (43:28):
Yeah, we call those career useless people. Right to sit
there and they get they get all the tax dollars wasted,
but they get to put them in their pocket because
they have a fancy degree, and uh so that these
beer crafts. That's how they need more beer craft It's
it's absolute corruption.

Speaker 1 (43:44):
I have a fonds of degree. I must be respected.
Like that's how they like. They talk like their upper class,
like British people like, not not necessarily their voice, but
just the pompousness, the way that they expect you to
bow before their degree. Like like they'd say, I've got

(44:11):
a master's degree in teaching. They'd say, they'd say something
like that, like the King of England would say, I
am the King of England. You know what I mean,
Like they just bow down, respect me, respect my title,
respect my degree.

Speaker 2 (44:28):
When a lot of.

Speaker 1 (44:30):
Times it's just indoctrination and they're just wasting. They become
morons and they waste money and fill their own pockets
and and administration as well.

Speaker 3 (44:45):
Experts say the science said, I mean, we're getting so
sick of hearing it over and over and over again.

Speaker 2 (44:53):
I mean, who made you an expert? Not you or something,
but who.

Speaker 1 (44:58):
Made you a freaking expert? Barack Obama found.

Speaker 2 (45:03):
You, Biden?

Speaker 1 (45:04):
Who determines who the experts are?

Speaker 3 (45:11):
Yeah, that's exactly right. I mean we're just we're seeing
the same choir here. I think it's an issue that
as a society we really need to change, and Trump
is working very hard to do so with defending They're
trying to get rid of the Department of Education, returning
everything back to the States, and then fighting against judicial

(45:32):
cuz trying to take away his executive authority as president.

Speaker 2 (45:35):
Exactly.

Speaker 1 (45:38):
So now I want to move on a little bit
back towards the Big Beautiful Bill, because we didn't I
didn't talk about my favorite addition, my favorite addition to
the Big Beautiful Bill, one hundred and seventy five billion
dollars of border security of funding to ICE agents.

Speaker 3 (46:04):
Do you see why the Democrats are saw against something
like that, can't you? I mean that they want I
think they have our country abated. They created entirely new
voting block. If they can't not support the boards you
said they did for the last four years when they
lied about their border bill, and they had when really
we didn't need a border bill, really we needed a

(46:25):
new president, and now we need the money to help
support the laws that are already.

Speaker 1 (46:29):
Influenced exactly we've got I mean, hopefully that means we
can build the wall, hire more agents, give them better technology.
I mean, did you see the video of the ICE
agent super patient with the dude. He's like, I know

(46:49):
that you're I know that you're not here legally, give
me proof. Otherwise, dude, were just standing in the car.
I'm gonna have to break down. I don't want to
have to break this window. Get out of the car,
or I'll have to pull you out of it, warned
the dude, warned the dude, and then freaking broke the
window and dragged him out.

Speaker 3 (47:13):
I did not do that particular video. You see plenty
of like that. I mean, the police officer told you
to do something. Obey the police officer and have your
day in courts.

Speaker 2 (47:24):
That's how you avoid getting killed.

Speaker 1 (47:27):
I mean, all these people complaining about, you know, all
black people getting killed by the police, those are people
who are not obeying their instructions.

Speaker 3 (47:40):
And it's the smallest percentage. It's the one they ignore
that they first out what you're talking about, Black communities were,
according to the n FBI, people are murdered by other
black people. It's not police officers. Yet news only talks
about the one percent, and then they'll leave out the
details that they were existing racks or that they were

(48:03):
turn of police officers.

Speaker 1 (48:04):
Really case maybe justified, Yeah, exactly, And I know I
know that there are there are definitely a few bad apples,
but that is as as again again you said what

(48:26):
the one percent of one, There.

Speaker 2 (48:31):
Are not very many bad cops. There are a lot.

Speaker 1 (48:35):
There are a lot of people who are just trying
to protect the protect their community, protect their city or
their town and the rest of and and some and
some of them are some of them can be corrupt,
some of them can be trigger happy, but that is

(48:58):
a very very low number.

Speaker 3 (49:01):
But those are either the ones that make the news
or they'll hide the facts to make it look like
it's those when they it was just this offer doing
the job. You're right, and the vast majority of people
are just want to serve and protect.

Speaker 2 (49:16):
Exactly. And that's how ICE agents are as well.

Speaker 3 (49:21):
Hey, you see a video that came out this weekend.
This was ICE agents. They were What they're doing now
is they're going in these immigration courts. You were wrestling
illegal aliens. So they have them deported and now these
judges are trying to stop it from happening. So there's
one where the ICE stations win and arrest twenty something,
I think illegal immigrants, and this lawyer was like chasing

(49:45):
them down, going to court, trying to have the judge
right in order to stop the arrest right then and there.
And they're changing, like we have a notice in the
judge and you can't arrest this person. The ICE agents
are like pissed off the illegal. Judge doesn't get to
decide which laws are and I'm not going to enforce,
so they just ignore this lawyer. They chased him down

(50:08):
the hallway trying to stop them from arresting the aliens.
Is completely insane.

Speaker 1 (50:18):
What a piece of shit he's That is crazy. That
is insane. I mean, they Democrats will really go to
bat for their new voter base, but they won't try
to retain the American voters. I mean, when was the
last time that a Democrat really offered prosperity to the

(50:41):
American people. All they have offered is identity politics and
broken promises. I mean, yeah, of course Biden. Biden says
that he's going to do a healthcare program of where
people can people can have a public option. He didn't

(51:01):
do that. He promised fifteen dollars minimum wage, he didn't
do that. So he made a lot of promises to
the Black Lives Matter people, and he broke them all.
He didn't, he didn't, he didn't keep any promises to
the Black Lives Matter people. And cancer, I mean, yeah,

(51:25):
he was gonna cure cancer. I mean, you know what,
I would give Biden credit if he cured cancer, you
know that, Like, I would give him credit because cancer
is is a horrible disease that cost a lot of
money to treat and causes a lot of physical and
mental pain. So I would give President Biden credit if

(51:51):
he ever cured cancer. But of course he's not gonna
do that.

Speaker 2 (51:59):
I mean, can.

Speaker 1 (52:00):
Liberals say the same, Like if Trump cured cancer.

Speaker 3 (52:04):
I can tell you what that'd be right now, if
Charlett said Trump actually cured cancer about the New York Times,
Trump cures cancer. But how does this disproportionately affect the
people of color? This is why it's racist?

Speaker 1 (52:24):
The white people according to Trump, according to the new
cancer bill or whatever, Trump has promised to help the
white people first and help people of color last.

Speaker 3 (52:39):
Yeah, there's disportionately helps white people and it doesn't take
an effect the people of color.

Speaker 1 (52:45):
Trump Democrats were saying that COVID was disproportionately affecting black people.
And you know, in people of color, it's always every
single time, it's a freaking virus. It doesn't care what

(53:07):
your damn skin color is. I mean, it infected wonderful
Joe Biden, and in fact, and and uh, I know
it infected him real bad. He when he announced that
he had COVID, he sounded he sounded like it. I mean,

(53:30):
and I'm being sarcastic about poor port Joe Biden, but
I mean, the media just pretends that something that doesn't
care about race is somehow racist. I mean, you ask
a liberal a question that has nothing to do with race,
and they will bring race into it.

Speaker 3 (53:53):
It's their entire worldview. Everything for them comes down to race,
because that's how they gained power.

Speaker 2 (53:58):
Exactly.

Speaker 3 (53:59):
They separate people by race, and then they somehow make
it like they're the ones they're gonna come in and
make it right or they're gonna make it just. But
none of it ever existed. I think Margaret Freeman does
it perfectly. They just stopped talking about it. But they
can't because they the Democrats. They are villains, and villains
need victims. And so the way that Democrats do This

(54:22):
is that they try to steparate people by race, thus
creating victims, and then they pretend that they're going to
solve the problem, but really they're the villains that were
separating people in the first place.

Speaker 1 (54:35):
Exactly, they're trying to divide us. It's one nation under God.
It's not one race. It's not two races and three
sub races and three and three different genders. It's I mean,
they're trying to pretend they're trying to rewrite history and

(54:57):
say that our founding fathers were racist, even though they
wrote in the Declaration of Independence all men are created equally.

Speaker 2 (55:21):
It's not always about race like.

Speaker 3 (55:23):
No, And that's your Democrats, because if if these problems
actually got solved, right, if there actually wasn't racism quote unquote,
then what would anybody need the Democrats for. Do you
wonder why Democrats never actually solve problems? This is the
reason why. Because they actually solve the problems, Well, then
you realize you don't need them anymore. And so they
need perpetual problems to run against that they can't solve.

(55:48):
Because they do, then they lose other power.

Speaker 2 (55:52):
Yeah, they lose all their voters. I mean.

Speaker 1 (55:56):
Black people and nothing against them, but uh, Democrats have
had very focused messaging towards black people for a while
where they said, like Democrats Republicans are gonna take away
your money, They're gonna take away your food stamps, They're
gonna take away your medicaid or whatever. And in some

(56:21):
cases we should with I mean, especially with illegal aliens.
With illegal aliens, we should get them off of medicaids
or security and even private insurance. We should make them pay.
We should make them pay full price if they're if
they're staying here, make make them pay full price for

(56:42):
medications and hospital days. They'll go right back to Mexico.

Speaker 3 (56:49):
Hey, what do you think about that Trump's administration with
his departments, is he's trying to encourage self deportation through
things like free flight and cash to deport.

Speaker 1 (57:05):
I you know what, I don't like the cat I
don't like giving them cash. But at the same time,
it's an incentive, an incentive so our guys don't have
to go and look for him. But I do I
do like that so that you can you can either

(57:29):
go peacefully or you or you will be deported. You'll
never be allowed back in and we might even break
your car window if you don't get out of the
damn car and.

Speaker 3 (57:41):
We according to them, it's apartment of Homo security. It
takes seventeen thousand dollars to deport someone that doesn't want
to go. So they're offering a one thousand dollars inside the
app to leave on their own.

Speaker 1 (57:56):
Oh that that's awesome. I might even pretend to be
an illegal alien. No, I'm just kidding. No, but one
thousand dollars rather than seventeen thousand dollars. So now that
you put it into perspective, it makes a lot more sense.

Speaker 3 (58:16):
Yeah, Like I know our side of defense are my side.
It's kind of has very mixed fillers bock. I think
they shouldn't get anything. They should just kick them out.
And well, okay, but encouraging somebody to do it is
not necessarily a bad thing in my mind. Like, if
this gets them to go on their own, you get
around all these judges, you get around all the problems.

(58:36):
They just they just go right and they click a
button on the app, they get on the bus to
get on the plane. They leave, and then you give
them much they promised, and now they're out of your country.
And then you get the initial saving and have to
deport them. Plus you get all the savings in the
future of not paying for soci security, Medicaid and all
the other tax dollars but they never should have had

(58:57):
in the first place.

Speaker 1 (59:00):
Actly, free phones, free hotels, that's what That's what a
lot of these illegal aliens have been given.

Speaker 3 (59:14):
You're exactly right. I mean this also I getting exposed,
especially with a FEMA had no money for North Carolina
because they're using it one of the transport of legal
aliens all over the country, and then pay for like
you said, hotels, food and all kinds of other stuff
that they that instead of you should.

Speaker 1 (59:29):
Just to cure a boarding kick them out.

Speaker 2 (59:33):
Exactly.

Speaker 1 (59:37):
So, how many illegals do you think are actually in
this country? I mean the estimate is twenty million? What
is your estimate? I mean, because I think there's probably
a lot more.

Speaker 3 (59:49):
Yeah, I think twenty millions, probably on the lower side.
I don't know, I probably a lot, I would imagine.
What's really scary about is you start to think about voting,
especially when many elections are won by thousands, sometimes hundreds.
Presidential luncher might be one by seventy thousand votes, and

(01:00:11):
so if you have, you know, let's say twenty million
illegal ellions, right, and let's say only one percent of
those get away voting illegally, So then you're about twenty million,
two millions, yet two hundred thousand votes that should never
be cast on a presidential election that is run by
seventy thousand. I mean that starts to get really scary.

Speaker 1 (01:00:34):
Yeah, exactly, I mean it does get scary, and especially
I think my number would my guess would probably be
around thirty five million.

Speaker 2 (01:00:47):
That would be my guess.

Speaker 3 (01:00:52):
I mean I could see that. I don't really know
what it is. I don't really know how I'd get
to the number. I think that's why it's so hesitant
to give one is I don't have a way to
You can't measure it other than what we're being told
through the government, through the new game.

Speaker 1 (01:01:05):
I'm giving you my gut instinct. I'm giving you my
gut instinct on how how many people I've seen, like
I've seen a whole bunch of them cloud up the hospitals.

Speaker 2 (01:01:18):
You don't.

Speaker 1 (01:01:18):
I mean I went to one of the biggest hospitals
in my area. You hardly heard anybody speaking English, but
you heard somebody speaking Spanish, and I told my girlfriend,
I was like, if I hear one of these, one
more of these pieces of crap, I'm gonna shout, go
back to your goddamn country.

Speaker 3 (01:01:40):
English should be a requirement to be assistant.

Speaker 2 (01:01:45):
Yes, it should be.

Speaker 1 (01:01:46):
It should be a requirement for you to know English fluently.

Speaker 3 (01:01:53):
I agree with you because I bought that club because
Trump just an executive order. I saw this where he's
requiring truck travers to have to be able to speak
to reading English, and that makes prebaty sense to me.
So for those that don't know some of the background
before this, I was a truck driver. I was for
fourteen years. I had over a million mile under my
belt before I switched over to this, And you want

(01:02:15):
to not believe how much I saw half on the
road and people that couldn't speak English. She had no
clue what they were doing, driving like crazy maniacs.

Speaker 1 (01:02:22):
It really.

Speaker 3 (01:02:25):
Not just in trucking, but I think it needs to
go further. Why are you able to take like a
driver's actions class in Spanish when all the roadsides are
in English?

Speaker 1 (01:02:34):
As one example, Yes, so you don't know where you're going,
you don't know how fast to go, so you're just
driving like crazy, going over the speed limit probably. And
I was in a lift with one of with one
of the illegals, and the dude spoke not even one

(01:02:58):
like of English and couldn't tell us where we were,
how far we were, So we kept looking it up
and the dude was going in circles honking at people,
driving like a maniac. I mean, these people are crazy.
A lot of them are criminals, a lot of them
come from mental asylums. So I'm very passionate about the border.

Speaker 3 (01:03:28):
Do you agree with the administration that if anyone that
comes in this country leader should be reported, no matter.

Speaker 2 (01:03:33):
What, no matter what.

Speaker 1 (01:03:35):
I mean, I think we should put a limit on
asylum claims as well.

Speaker 3 (01:03:47):
Yeah, I think I'm with you. I think initially, if
you come in this country illegally, you need to get
out and then needed to come knack in this country legally.
But once we have that problem solved, I also believe
that we need to go back and we need to
look at how we breed people in this country legally,
because I think that needs a lot of reform as well.

(01:04:07):
But first you have to stop the bleeding. First, you
have to kill the border to report whatst not happen.
Now we can go back, we can look at for
immigration and see how we can update and fix it.

Speaker 1 (01:04:21):
Yeah, I mean so maybe instead of having three thousand
federal judges who are you know, whose sole job is
to get President Trump, maybe we could use those judges
to speed through claims, like not speed through them, but
go through them a little bit faster so that it

(01:04:44):
doesn't take ten years for good people to come over here.
But not saying that we want to speed them along
and have, you know, make it take maybe a month
or whatever. No, that's entirely too fast. You can't do
a background check, you can't do civics tests, you can't

(01:05:05):
do the you know, especially like learning English. That takes
a lot of time. So I do understand the ten
year process, and maybe we can make it a little
bit faster. But maybe before, maybe before we do that,
we take care of our own citizens and make sure
that there aren't any homeless veterans on the street.

Speaker 3 (01:05:28):
Yeah, so give it. You say you can't take care
of veterans that you can give you know, billions of
dollars for legal immigrants.

Speaker 2 (01:05:35):
And you know one.

Speaker 3 (01:05:37):
Thing you did about that too, is like you may
in Mexico, for example, if you stay in your country,
and how about you learn English there? I mean, we
have the internet, right, but why not learn English there?
And then when you learn English and he's not working over.

Speaker 1 (01:05:50):
Here exactly that they have, they have no excuses. I mean,
if I go to Mexico, wouldn't I be required to
learn Spanish?

Speaker 2 (01:06:06):
I mean, yes, go ahead, no, you go ahead.

Speaker 3 (01:06:20):
I just had my my neighbor. They came back from
Italy as they're they're national born there, they're not US things.
They want to retire back in Italy, and so she's
going through to get I asked, I don't understand the
full system over there, but she has to get all
the paperwork to move back there with her and her
husband and get a couple of sisings again. So she

(01:06:43):
was there for I think eight months to get all
this to happen. But while she's doing all that, the
thing is like everyone over there is Italian, and so
there's almost no English unless less from throwing from the US,
and so you kind of go to basically the tourist areas.
And so she said, of speaking much better Italian, but
you do that to function over there, And I think

(01:07:05):
that'll the insane thing here. You want to come here,
you need to adopt our way of life. You know,
our flag is the United States flat. We speak English,
so you need to learn those You need to learn
our constitution. If you're gonna come here and you're gonna
shot like free Paliforian for example, you know, go back
to Palestine. We don't need you here.

Speaker 2 (01:07:24):
Exactly.

Speaker 1 (01:07:25):
I mean, what are those people contributing to society? Protesting
isn't a career. Protesting doesn't I mean, shouting from the rooftops.
Isn't getting people's food made, or getting their laundry made, or.

Speaker 2 (01:07:45):
Doing whatever illegals do.

Speaker 1 (01:07:50):
I mean, and I'm I'm a little bit pissed about
the outsourcing of jobs. So like say you go to
Verizon or any of the may any of the major
phone carriers, and you want to get your service set up,
or you want to get help with your existing service.

Speaker 4 (01:08:07):
You call them, and then when they answered, it's like, ha, no,
this is this is what I send qustomer support. I
am Lenny, how can I help you?

Speaker 2 (01:08:20):
They don't speak.

Speaker 1 (01:08:21):
Any English and they don't know how to freaking help you.

Speaker 3 (01:08:30):
It's really frustrating. Yeah, Ah said and then I agree
if it's something that part of bringing I think bringing
manufacturing back here to the United States is gonna be
a huge part in helping with all that.

Speaker 1 (01:08:44):
Yeah, I mean I could do customer support.

Speaker 3 (01:08:49):
I can at least speak English and that.

Speaker 1 (01:08:54):
I mean and you and you know about text so
you could probably you could probably you could probably do
better than these Indians or Arabs or whatever they are.

Speaker 3 (01:09:11):
But hey, have you ever tried to use like like
rock or something that the support well for ROC, well,
just any AI in general, like wherever one you prefer, wellhy.

Speaker 1 (01:09:29):
Don't ever call them because I'm like, Okay, I don't
know how to do this, can you help me? I
will call for things like, Hi, my service isn't working.
Is there anything that you can do to make it better?
And they sent me an LTE extender those like two
hundred and.

Speaker 2 (01:09:47):
Fifty bucks for free.

Speaker 1 (01:09:50):
Well that's nice, so like those and or I'll call
like I called Walmart customer service and I asked him,
I'd like, you guys didn't send me the code to
the locker, the storage locker that you put my package in.
How the hell am I supposed to get my damn packaged?
But they're like they're.

Speaker 2 (01:10:11):
Foreigners who didn't know how to help.

Speaker 1 (01:10:15):
So I'd understand maybe if they were good, like if
they knew what they were doing, but a lot of
them really don't.

Speaker 2 (01:10:22):
A lot of them are just slow.

Speaker 1 (01:10:23):
Just please wanted for a moment, Like I had one
lady I was asking her. I asked her a question.
I asked her, when would my when we're when would
my LTE.

Speaker 2 (01:10:33):
Extender be here? Because it was it was taking a while.

Speaker 1 (01:10:37):
It took her thirty minutes to find it, and even
then she didn't like she didn't know like exactly what
was going on. So I was like, all right, no,
you need to pass me on to somebody else because
you're clearly not doing the job right.

Speaker 3 (01:10:55):
Yeah. As all as really frustrating. You get these people
and you know they don't know they're doing they're trying
to figure it out or where is they're reading off
a script right when you ask me a question like okay,
hold on, you know, like beep beepepo put me into
their computer and then it comes back with this rewritten
out and now they're reading it. Sir, have you tried
turning it off and on again?

Speaker 1 (01:11:16):
Oh? Yeah, I got the damnse I got that. I
was like, yes, I tried. Like they kept reading on
from this list. Have you tried to turn the phone
on and off again? Have you tried saying networks? I
was like, yes, I did all that, and I was
just like I talked to I yelled over him. I
was like, yes, I did.

Speaker 3 (01:11:37):
I went through a hell like this with Apple actually
where I had my iPhone was having a problem where
it was losing connection on Wi Fi. Even on Wi
Fi would just stop working ship and I went through
almost six months of hell where because the way they're
separated now, I was like, we're gonna try to work
with somebody, and then each supervisor got a unique list,
but you couldn't get back in connection with them, and

(01:11:59):
so I'd go through and then they all these stupid steps,
and then the stuper steps have to go to the engineers.
But I couldn't talk directly engineers because Apple just decided
that you can't. And then you they say, okay, wait
two weeks. When you wait two weeks, I couldn't get
back a hold of anybody. It's like call off the
customer service. Well, then the cut stories like we have
to put you to a new supervisor. The new supervisor

(01:12:20):
would have actually get on. The new supervisor had, like brickally,
no knowledge of what would happened for us. They have
to go through the whole list again, do all these
other diagnokets in the back engineers. And this went almost
six months before I finally got somebody to say, Okay,
you have a problem, we'll send you a new phone.
I couldn't. I don't even know how to describe the

(01:12:42):
amount of frustration I had going through that.

Speaker 1 (01:12:46):
That's insane. I would be pissed. I mean because when
I get the now like because I get really pissed.
I get really pissed in those situations. Now, when when
I hear somebody I don't know she's got, I will
say you, I don't really understand you. Can you get

(01:13:06):
me to somebody else?

Speaker 2 (01:13:09):
Like just right away.

Speaker 1 (01:13:10):
I'm not even gonna I'm not even gonna let them
try to waste my time. I'm just gonna say I
just I'm always gonna say, now, can I get to
somebody else? And then one time the dude was like, no,
you have to hang up. And it was like a horrible,
weird automated system that I had that I had to
get through. So I was like, all right, you'll do.

Speaker 3 (01:13:31):
Yeah, it's kind of trying to get the head off
the snake right right before before you even get tangled.

Speaker 1 (01:13:36):
Yeah, that's the I mean, because now I'm past the
point of not trying to be rude. Now at this point,
I I'm getting pissed just thinking about it.

Speaker 3 (01:13:50):
Yeah, I don't believe you. I think we all kind
of feel the same frustration.

Speaker 1 (01:13:55):
Yeah, I mean Trump really has to do something about it,
to say like, hey, if you're an American company and
you're outsourcing your jobs to people in India, then we
are going to put We're gonna hit you hard with
the twenty five percent terraff.

Speaker 3 (01:14:14):
It really is bringing back everything back to America is
the greatest way. I think It's solved so many problems
that are facing today as they go towards this organization.
And that means in this country.

Speaker 1 (01:14:26):
Anymore exactly and everything, everything that we have is made
in China, and even if it's not made in China,
it certainly damn sure isn't made in the US. So

(01:14:49):
I want to see made in America again. I want
to see our people prospering rather than just trying to
carve out a living.

Speaker 3 (01:15:04):
Countool is the way you do. And that's why Trump
was back in the prison's office and why these judges
are working so hard to try to stop them.

Speaker 2 (01:15:12):
I mean, what the hell do we need three thousand
federal judges for.

Speaker 3 (01:15:18):
To stop Trump from doing the will of the American people?

Speaker 2 (01:15:24):
Exactly?

Speaker 1 (01:15:25):
So what's the reason and what's the reason we can't
fire them?

Speaker 3 (01:15:30):
You bring up some great points, and uh, really it's
just the will to do it. We are. Congress is
just effectless, weak, pathetic Mine is the end of the day.

Speaker 1 (01:15:44):
Well, if I you know what, if I were the president,
would I would go to the I would go to
the judges and not say, fair warning, you guys, by
the end of this term are all getting fired. And
then I'd go to Congress and I'd say, all right,
if you guys aren't going to fire these people, and
if you're not going to make a real change, well
then in two years I'm going to have all of

(01:16:05):
your asses primaried by better pro America people. That is,
I mean, this is the fight of our country. This
is almost this is almost the second American Revolution, and

(01:16:30):
it's and I would say it was it's even more deadlier.
It's even more deadly because the Globeless have nukes. They
have entire control of the European Union, so they can say,
send some nukes to Russia and then Russia attacks them,

(01:16:51):
and of course then NATO jumps in, which basically means
US and I think we need to get out of NATO.
I think it's incredibly dangerous, especially with nukes.

Speaker 3 (01:17:10):
It's hard to argue who more against the American interest
in China or the European Union. They just are both competing.

Speaker 1 (01:17:20):
Yeah, hand and hand, they are both horrible. I mean
the U, the U, the EU is really bad with
free speech. Like there are people in the United Kingdom
who get arrested just for posting that the Muslim illegal
aliens are the cause of the rising crime rate and

(01:17:44):
the rising amounts of rapes and murders.

Speaker 3 (01:17:50):
More and rest. Yeah, you can make a memmy that
they don't like prison house.

Speaker 2 (01:17:58):
Exactly.

Speaker 1 (01:18:07):
So I mean, is there another way that we can
also like because we can really really I don't think
that we can really trust Joe Biden or the Democrats, right, So,

(01:18:30):
I mean, once once Trump's term is over, say timpon
Tim becomes the president. God forbid, he would let all
of these illegal aliens back into this country and we
would be afflicted with the same exact problem. That's why
I thought it might be easier on us to just

(01:18:55):
handle the I hate to say it. I hate to
say it because it's so violent and it's not it's
not a good thing, but it's almost necessary to take
them down before they come back to this country again
and hurt more people for another four to eight years. Like.

(01:19:18):
I don't know if that's too dark. I don't know
if that's too like. But the thing is, it's just
that illegal aliens have caused us so much harm.

Speaker 2 (01:19:30):
Like they've.

Speaker 1 (01:19:34):
Create a source of cheap labor for our companies, and
they don't pass down those costs to us. They don't
pass down those savings to us. Instead, any chance they get,
they will increase the price based on inflation.

Speaker 3 (01:19:54):
We are we got some really big problems that have
to get solved in uh again. Yeah, going beyond Trump's
second term, what does that look like? I think twenty
twenty six, the midterms are gonna tell us a lot
about how this all plays out. And then towards twenty
twenty eight is if the Democrats, I think they continue

(01:20:17):
to show how unpopular they are. I mean, we could
have like a JD Vance for the next eight years
would be a great example. I think the runner front
runner by far.

Speaker 1 (01:20:27):
Yeah, I was even I was even just about to
ask you who do you like? Who are your like
top three or five people who you think could really
do the job.

Speaker 3 (01:20:40):
That's a really tough question because there's until we see
when we get close and then look who the available
people are. Because is there another like Trump style person
out there that's not in the race right now? That's
kind of a billionaire populace who wants to take the
reins again. But I think as far as like in

(01:21:02):
the market right now, I think jd Vance is probably
by far the number one. I don't think there's there's
year number two.

Speaker 1 (01:21:11):
I think the person who's really shown a lot of value,
and some conservatives won't like me for saying this, but
he's proved to be a great Secretary of State, Marco Rubio,
and I think he really speaks to a lot of
Latino and Latina people who are actually legal people who

(01:21:34):
have you know, parents who came here legally and worked
really hard to give them a good life. I think
he has a really inspiring story that can really move
a lot of Latino or I should say, like.

Speaker 2 (01:21:52):
Latin X latin X.

Speaker 1 (01:21:58):
People to vote for him. I also think Trump Junior
might be a good.

Speaker 2 (01:22:05):
Candidate.

Speaker 1 (01:22:08):
Matt Gates, even though he does have the phony sex
charges on him, not charges, but investigations on him. I
think he would be a great candidate. And I think, uh,
I think Charlie Kirk really needs to get involved in
politics as well. I mean, in running for office.

Speaker 3 (01:22:31):
That's an issue one right there. He's always kind of
stayed out the sidelines and uh done the recruiting and
the voting and the young vote. I don't know if
Charlie Kirk has any interest running for office, but if
he did that that would be somebody that could be
issued to look at.

Speaker 1 (01:22:49):
Yeah, I mean, and I think there are people who
are very very well informed who could take the torch
as well.

Speaker 2 (01:22:58):
Roger Stone.

Speaker 1 (01:23:02):
Roger Stone would be a big part of the next administration,
I would think. And I think Alex Jones is really
he's really something because he can predict like what's gonna happen,
Like he can say, in three years, they're going to
release a global pandemic, or do you know what I mean,

(01:23:24):
Like he'll just say things that like you'd think, oh, they're.

Speaker 2 (01:23:28):
Never gonna happen.

Speaker 1 (01:23:29):
It's not gonna you.

Speaker 2 (01:23:30):
Know what I mean. But day in the past nine eleven, the.

Speaker 1 (01:23:33):
Dude predicted nine to eleven. I think that he would
be important to have in the next administration just to
keep just to keep the people who are who are
in the next administration going the right way, rather than
having some traders, having some rhinos in that in that

(01:23:59):
next administration. I think Alex Jones could be a huge help.
What do you what do you think.

Speaker 3 (01:24:11):
He would be? Like now, it's Jones would be so controversial.
I don't know if he could pull the middle if
you need to to win a presidential election. I think
that would be very hesitant.

Speaker 1 (01:24:22):
Not in the election, but I'm saying, I'm saying he
would be incredible as like a cabinet as someone in
the cabinet or a close advisor, because we need people
who know what's what in this in the next administration
rather than having some rather than putting in another what's

(01:24:46):
his name? What what's the guy's name? The guy who
was the Secretary of Defense.

Speaker 2 (01:24:53):
I believe.

Speaker 1 (01:24:55):
In Trump's first administration he was really bad.

Speaker 3 (01:24:58):
Oh.

Speaker 2 (01:24:58):
The Attorney General, he was really bad. Oh.

Speaker 1 (01:25:03):
Bar Anthony Barr refused to investigate election integrity. Ah, It's
did a bunch of different horrible things. John Bolton did
a lot of horrible things. So, I mean Trump's learning,
but that won't help in four years when J. G.

(01:25:25):
Vance takes the torch or somebody else at knowing you
know who who will who will be a good fit
in the Trump in the next administration, if you get
what I'm saying.

Speaker 2 (01:25:42):
I mean, I'm.

Speaker 1 (01:25:44):
Surprised, Like I was. I was against Rubio being Secretary
of State at first, but he has proved to be incredible.

Speaker 3 (01:25:56):
I've been really impressed with some of those clips so far.
So other than that, you have anything else before we
wrap up?

Speaker 1 (01:26:07):
So I'm just curious. The first the first Trump tax bill,
the first Trump tax cut really really boosted our economy.
I mean, they created a bunch of jobs and it
was it was just incredible. Right, So do you think

(01:26:30):
this second tax cut will have the same effect? And
do you think it might get us out of this
inflationary black hole that we've spiral into.

Speaker 3 (01:26:44):
Well, we see a lot of what happens, what actually
gets put into law. Is is running it really hard
to get past our own party, let alone the Democrats.
But at the end of the day, the question is
really what can we get put into law? Also, yes,
if Trump's if Trump can get what he wants done. Yeah,

(01:27:04):
the what we're gonna see how into our economy I
think is something like men, you are alive before, it's
not seen before. We can't get it, get it through
this corrupt Congress. That's what we're garely wait for them.
They can't even get like the Dodge cuts through. You know,
it's incredibly popular with the American people. I hate Rhinos
more than Democrats by far.

Speaker 1 (01:27:25):
Yeah, because they they seem to be the biggest traders,
because they pretend that they're on your side, they're America first,
and then just stab you in the back. I mean,
wasn't Mike walt one of those.

Speaker 2 (01:27:44):
It was just.

Speaker 1 (01:27:48):
Basically Rhino betraying the Trump administration. I think he's the
one who leaked the signal chats.

Speaker 3 (01:27:58):
Or are you talking under p Higgs chat? Right? The signals?

Speaker 1 (01:28:02):
Yeah, but I believe Mike Waltz was the one who
leaked them.

Speaker 3 (01:28:09):
Right, who Well, it was Goldberg who leaked it. But
you said, like Waltz put Goldberg in, it was the
one that put the Goldberg on the computer. That.

Speaker 2 (01:28:20):
Yeah, that's what I'm saying.

Speaker 1 (01:28:21):
Yeah, that's what I'm saying.

Speaker 2 (01:28:22):
I apologize.

Speaker 3 (01:28:24):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, But.

Speaker 1 (01:28:28):
Even even with some traders, we are still seeing massive
decreases in like gas prices, and even with tariffs, Democrats
said that it would be the worst thing since the
nineteen twenty nine depression, and yet it seems to have
also cut costs in certain areas. So I'm just tired

(01:28:51):
of Democrats being so buld about lying to us. They
have got to stop lying to us, and and if
they don't stop lying to their own voters, they're going
to have much worse than a twenty seven percent approval
rating to deal with. I mean Democrat, the Democratic Party

(01:29:13):
itself has a lower approval rating than Joe Biden. So
just think about that. Like, people hate the toxicity, people
hate the critical race theory. And so what I'm I'm

(01:29:34):
talking about a brand new shift to a better world,
to make America greade again, where our vets are fed,
where our vets aren't homeless, where we can't where we
can take care of our own people before we have
to take care of, you know, the people in Ukraine

(01:29:55):
or the illegal aliens.

Speaker 3 (01:29:58):
Has a big part of American first message is something
that we agree with a lot.

Speaker 2 (01:30:04):
Yeah, and we are fighting for a better world.

Speaker 1 (01:30:07):
We're not fighting for a racist world where the KKK rules,
or we're not fighting for Nazism. We are fighting for
a better world for everyone who is in America because
we need to take care of ourselves first. You think
about it like you take care of your family first

(01:30:28):
before you take care of your neighbor.

Speaker 3 (01:30:34):
Yeah. I think about an hour and a half. I
think we wrap up about pretty quick.

Speaker 1 (01:30:41):
Oh, I apologize. I was just kind of I was
just I was just kind of trying to trying to
lay down the final message that we are trying to
bring about a better world. It's not a it's not
a utopia. Everything's not going to be perfect, but it's
going to be a lot better than it was. Just

(01:31:03):
real quick, Cash, would you mind telling everyone where they
can find your show?

Speaker 3 (01:31:09):
My show is rand now mine, it's your Friday at
ap of Eastern. It's at the main places on X
But they were on the internet at the Cash Lawn show.

Speaker 1 (01:31:18):
Hell yeah, and you can and you can also find
it on Apple podcasts.

Speaker 3 (01:31:25):
Yeah, all the pod chasers. Yeah, there's there.

Speaker 2 (01:31:28):
Awesome man.

Speaker 1 (01:31:29):
Thank you so much for coming onto the show. We
appreciate you and we'll see you later.

Speaker 3 (01:31:34):
Yeah, thank you for having me on. Got a great
conversation and I will continue to fight and put America first.
So God bless YouTube.

Speaker 2 (01:31:42):
Man.
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On Purpose with Jay Shetty

On Purpose with Jay Shetty

I’m Jay Shetty host of On Purpose the worlds #1 Mental Health podcast and I’m so grateful you found us. I started this podcast 5 years ago to invite you into conversations and workshops that are designed to help make you happier, healthier and more healed. I believe that when you (yes you) feel seen, heard and understood you’re able to deal with relationship struggles, work challenges and life’s ups and downs with more ease and grace. I interview experts, celebrities, thought leaders and athletes so that we can grow our mindset, build better habits and uncover a side of them we’ve never seen before. New episodes every Monday and Friday. Your support means the world to me and I don’t take it for granted — click the follow button and leave a review to help us spread the love with On Purpose. I can’t wait for you to listen to your first or 500th episode!

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