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November 28, 2025 33 mins

Guest Host Brian Mudd

 

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Welcome to today's edition of The Klay, Travis and Buck
Sexton Show.

Speaker 2 (00:04):
Find Van Trump announcing he will permanently ban migration from
the Third World to allow the US system to fully recover.
This comes after twenty year old National Guard specialist Sarah
Beckstrom died Thursday after being shot by an Afghan national.

Speaker 1 (00:17):
Near the White House.

Speaker 2 (00:19):
Twenty four year old staff Sergeant Andrew Wolfe, who was
also attacked, is currently fighting for his life. Suspect is
in custody after being shot by another service member.

Speaker 3 (00:29):
That is Fox's Ashley Stromeyer. Not what I wanted to
be talking about today, Not how I hoped we would
start the show today. Probably not how you wanted to
spend your Black Friday or Thanksgiving weekend. But here we
are because we're still paying the price for Joe Biden
having been president of the United States. It's an unfortunate thing,

(00:53):
sins of the past. But it's not all bad news,
and so we're gonna walk you through this, and we're
going to get to some potentially great news, like, for example,
Trump Care, which is what I have been advocating for
essentially my entire life.

Speaker 1 (01:09):
And about you.

Speaker 3 (01:10):
Now you're going hold on this not Clay, This is
not Buck, it is not This is Brian Mudd. I'm
the host of the Brian Mud Show and I am
hubbed out of my home station w JNO and West
Palm Beach, just a few miles from the President mar Lango.
It is always an honor and a pleasure truly to

(01:31):
have these opportunities with you, and really thank you for
taking little time out of your Black Friday, your Thanksgiving
weekend to spend with the show.

Speaker 1 (01:39):
So as always I want to make it worth your while.

Speaker 3 (01:41):
So you'll hear me say, there are two sides of
stories and one side of facts, and the fact of
the matter is I did have a wonderful Thanksgiving with
my family and friends as well, including our friend Eileen,
who heads up the local Saint fancent de Paul at
her church, and just a wonderful human being, reminder of
all the good things that can be this time of

(02:03):
year and all throughout the course of this year.

Speaker 1 (02:04):
And so do wish the same for you and your family.

Speaker 3 (02:07):
But obviously for two service members from West Virginia and Washington,
DC just before Thanksgiving.

Speaker 1 (02:16):
Yeah, anything but anything but.

Speaker 3 (02:19):
A wonderful Thanksgiving, certainly not what they expected to see
either having just been sworn in and Islamic terrorists from Afghanistan.
The fun thing is now that we are hearing was vetted.
We're hearing that, okay, so, and the collapse of Afghanistan,
the debacle, the embarrassment that was Biden allowing everything that

(02:41):
transpired back in August of twenty twenty one to take place.
That confirmed to the rest of the world that we
are that week with Joe Biden as president, every single
aspect of all of that weakness that continues to be
manifested this day. It continues to serve as a reminder

(03:01):
of the importance to stand by and think those who
serve in all the armed forces, right down to those
in law enforcement as well. During this holiday season, those
who put on the badge, they leave their families to
go to work, never knowing what the heck might happen next.
So yeah, service as that kind of reminder too. When

(03:22):
I was taking a look at how I wanted to
address this today, I thought back to the feelings I
had immediately following the collapse in Afghanistan and what it
was that I covered on that particular day. And the

(03:42):
fact of the matter is that It's as true today
as it was then. I'm gonna walk you through it.
So we are still paying the price for Joe Biden.
Joe Biden has been wrong on nearly every major foreign
policy and national security issue of the past decades, a

(04:02):
streak that remained intact throughout his entire presidency. Those were
the words of Obama's Secretary of Defense, Robert Gates. I
remember that right during the Obama administration, ended up writing
a book, ended up talking about just how Joe Biden
was absolutely wrong on every major foreign policy decision. And

(04:27):
my thought in the immediate aftermath of the collapse in
Afghanistan was that, you know what really should not be
surprised here? Is there any surprise the only Obama cabinet
member that was opposed to the raid that took out
Osama bin Laden suddenly going to start making better foreign
policy decisions or any kind of decisions period. And so

(04:50):
in the wake of the tearror attack, they left thirteen
American soldiers dead, as we had our plane that was
evacuating with all kinds of I'm.

Speaker 1 (05:05):
Sure they were vetted.

Speaker 3 (05:06):
They were all really just vetted Afghans, just like the
Islamic terrorists that had been vetted we're hearing now by
the Biden administration.

Speaker 1 (05:14):
So you should feel good about all that.

Speaker 3 (05:16):
He just lost his mind, is what we're hearing now.
But as we lost those thirteen service members in Afghanistan
during the final collapse, now we're taking a look at
a loss of a fourteen, God willing, it won't be fifteen.
Joe Biden killed thirteen members of our military on that day.

(05:38):
He killed one this far out of office, and how
many Americans, independent of the vetted Afghan refugees, continue to
pay the price by his hip and porter policies every
single day. So yeah, one of the things that came
to mind back in August of twenty twenty one, when

(06:02):
this all took places, I was thinking, no, what we
started hearing about things like the Taliban again. And one
of the questions I posed that day to my audience
was when was the last time you thought about the Taliban?
It was it like fifteen or twenty years ago. When
was the last time you heard about al Qaida? It
would have been when Osama bin Laden was taken out

(06:24):
and back in twenty twenty one, that was over a
decade ago. And I also asked the question about prior
to that particular week in August of twenty twenty one,
when was the last time that you were worried about ISIS.
It had been about four years when Trump finished bombing
the blank out of them. Remember how prisident Trump back

(06:45):
in the twenty sixteen campaign ran on bombing the blank
out of ISIS.

Speaker 1 (06:49):
They had their caliphate.

Speaker 3 (06:50):
You know, you had Obama, he called on the Muslim
brotherhood to rise up, and they're like.

Speaker 1 (06:54):
Okay, great, we're going to do that.

Speaker 3 (06:55):
And so you had all the Islamic terrorists around the world,
like sweet got back in the president the United States.

Speaker 1 (07:01):
We're going to go out there, We're going to do
our thing.

Speaker 3 (07:03):
They did, And so Trump runs on, Okay, We're going
to bomb the blank out of them, and gets into office.

Speaker 1 (07:09):
He bombs the blank out of ISIS. They went away.

Speaker 3 (07:11):
All this stuff was not an issue during the entirety
of the Trump administration, but then Biden.

Speaker 1 (07:19):
But then Biden.

Speaker 3 (07:22):
So yeah, Biden was wrong on nearly every major foreign
policy and national security issue of his entire life, which
was in politics. But the difference was versus when Robert
Gates first made that statement. As we saw during the
entirety of his four years. He didn't have somebody who

(07:45):
could overwrite his bad decisions. He just went ahead and
steered all of those bad decisions. And so every single
day that Joe Biden was President of the United States,
it made the United States less safe for that matter,
and made the entire world less safe. And it's what
happens when you put your trust in the wrong people.

(08:09):
It's what happens when you make bad decisions, and there
are consequences that you have to pay for them. And
it's got to be a learning opportunity that never stops.
As we take a look towards next year's midterm elections,
for anybody who's like, ah, you know, I just don't know.
I mean, we might need Democrats back in pact, How

(08:33):
could you take a chance going back to what has
been that you continue to pay a price for every
single day that you're less safe for and your family's
less safe for every single day.

Speaker 4 (08:43):
You know.

Speaker 3 (08:43):
I into my thoughts in that particular day, just in
the aftermath of the fall of Afghanistan in twenty twenty one,
by saying, my expectations for the Biden administration weren't low
at that point. I was genuinely the most concerned for
our country that'd been in my lifetime. But already by
that point his first year in August, just a matter

(09:06):
of months, he managed to prove to be far worse
than I had even a vision that he would be.
You know, one of the things he said in the
immediate aftermath of the fall of Afghanistan in August of
twenty twenty one, he said, we will hunt down everyone
who perpetrated the attack. You know that we never got anybody,

(09:30):
none of the terrorists responsible for taking out those thirteen
service members, not one of them. Now, due to the
Trump administration, we can have confidence that for our vetted,
so called vetted Afghan terrorist who just took a fourteenth

(09:54):
service member's life in Washington, DC, that there will be
accountability to leave it to Biden to import the tear
into our country. You know, one of the things I
thought in that moment is that if Biden when he
said we will hunt down everyone who perpetrated the attack,
that he never did. If you were going to address

(10:16):
everyone responsible for that attack, he's you have started by resigning,
because nobody was more responsible than him. And so from
our southern border to Afghanistan, the country in the world,
was a less safe place because Joe Biden was president
of the United States. You know, he wasn't competent enough
to be president of the HOA, let alone the United States,

(10:38):
but he was because speaking of vetting, he had a
dishonest news media back then that didn't and you had
too many Americans that take our freedom in safety for granted.
And this is one of the lessons to move forward,
is that you can't take our freedom in our safety
for granted. You know, back in the twenty twenty cycle,
you had the people that'd be.

Speaker 1 (10:58):
Like tweets, give me Joe Biden, and that.

Speaker 3 (11:02):
Would be like a guy that was probably somewhere on
the homosexual alphabet, but he'd be a ooh mean Trump Orangeman,
give me Joe Biden. Even that person's less safe and
has been less safe every single day because Biden was
president of the United States.

Speaker 1 (11:18):
And you take a look at what's.

Speaker 3 (11:19):
Going on right now as we're dealing with the aftermath
in DC, as President Trump is working on peace with
Russian Ukraine. It was that whole event in Afghanistan that
laid the groundwork for all this mess because that was
the go ahead to Putin to yeah, you know what,

(11:41):
let's go ahead and invade Ukraine. And remember Biden leading
up to the Russian invasion of Ukraine is We're.

Speaker 1 (11:47):
Gonna be super tough.

Speaker 3 (11:48):
Putin's not gonna do it because we got sanctions and tough, tough,
tough talk, and Putin's laughing.

Speaker 1 (11:56):
It was a fade complete.

Speaker 3 (12:00):
Because he showed everything in that moment about how weak
we were as a country with that man as president
and with the left in general in charge. And so
you see on so many different fronts, all the different
things we are competing with, from the southern border and
the deportation situation, the crimes that we continued to combat,

(12:20):
all the frustrations and challenges of ice every single day,
the need to try to reach peace with Russia and Ukraine,
this situation with these service members in DC. So much
of this all goes back to that one particular moment
in August, along with Biden's four years of open border policies.
But that was really the Floodgate moment where everybody, every

(12:42):
bad actor, knew that there was no credibility left within
the United States. They knew that it was open season.
All they needed to do was get here. All they
need would need to do is do something like hop
on a refugee plane from Afghanistan or get to the
southern border and go a.

Speaker 1 (13:01):
Ssay this where I say, as Salem.

Speaker 3 (13:04):
And Border Patrol agent beaten down by life from the
Biden administration and go, oh yeah, it's another magic a
word person, here's brochure, or pick out your four or
five star resort.

Speaker 1 (13:15):
You know, we'll and just take you straight there.

Speaker 3 (13:19):
No expense of the American taxpayer be spared and making
you comfortable in our country. All that stuff that we
are continuing to combat. So that's the bad news. We
do have some better news about some of this. But
first I'll want to walk you through the crime that
is committed by the so called vetted people, by the

(13:40):
asylum seekers, by the people that the Biden administration let in,
but also what we're seeing as the Trump administration has
been successfully combating this.

Speaker 1 (13:47):
That's coming up next. I'm Brian mudd In for Claim Buck.

Speaker 5 (13:58):
We are upgrading the initial charges of assault to murder
in the first degree, and we are hoping that the
more information we can get and the more investigation that
is going on twenty four to seven now round the
clock in Washington, the more we will find.

Speaker 6 (14:16):
Out that pointing the terror death of Sarah Beckstrom, she
of the West Virginia National Guard, having only just been
sworn in to protect DC.

Speaker 3 (14:32):
You hear US Attorney Jeanine Piro talking about the upgraded
charges now as we pray for the other man in
critical condition, and you take a look at why this
has taken place because Joe Biden was President of the
United States.

Speaker 1 (14:53):
It's as simple as that. And when you take a.

Speaker 3 (14:55):
Look at how much more crime we ended up suffering
during the Binding administration, it was profound. When you take
a look at the crimes committed by non citizens, this
of course a crime by a non citizen. What we
saw was a staggering increase where the average non citizen

(15:18):
during the Bind administration nine times more likely to commit
a crime than you. The average natural born American citizen
nine hundred and fourteen percent more likely to commit a crime.

Speaker 1 (15:33):
Remember the old thing always used.

Speaker 3 (15:34):
To being, well, they're just warming, fluffy people who want
to pick grapes and want to pick oranges, and they
mean no harm, and they're less they're actually less likely
to commit a crime than you. Not so much nine
hundred and fourteen percent more likely to commit a crime
than you.

Speaker 1 (15:54):
Wasn't just any kind of crime either.

Speaker 3 (15:57):
When you take a look at the types of offenses,
assive increases straight across the board. Sexual offenses up nearly twofold,
illegal drugs fivefold, assault, battery, domestic violence sixfold.

Speaker 1 (16:14):
How about this homicide?

Speaker 3 (16:15):
Manslaughter nearly ten times is likely to kill somebody as you,
just like what we saw in DC. And so it
is a truly sad and tragic situation that yet again
we are paying for because Joe Biden was President of
the United States. But thankfully we are going to combat this.
We are combating this, and I'll share some of that information.
Why is it going to check in with our White

(16:36):
House correspondent John Decker, next Bry Mudd and for Clay
and Buck.

Speaker 7 (16:47):
There Vestrom of West Virginia, one of the guards, vend
that we're talking about highly respected, young, magnificent person, started
service in June of twenty twenty three, outstanding in every way.
She's just passed away.

Speaker 3 (17:10):
It's when President Trump announced the loss of Sarah, of course,
part of the attack in DCE, after two West Virginia
guardsmen that were attacked and this tear attack by this
Afghan refugee who hearing has been vetted, was vetted by
the Biden administration. You have Andrew Woolf, the other guardsmen

(17:34):
and remaining in critical condition joining us talk about this
and more. Is iHeartRadio's White House correspondent and also the
host of the White House Briefing Room with John Decker podcast,
our own John Decker. John, it is great to talk
with you. I'm sorry that it's about under these circumstances.

(17:54):
I know this isn't what anyone, including the President, hoped
to be talking about every Thanksgiving weekend.

Speaker 8 (18:00):
Well, that's right. I was out there on the streets
of Washington, d C. When this occurred. I reported for
hours on end in the aftermath of this horrific shooting
that happened just two blocks from the White House. The
perimeter was set up such that Brian, you could not
get within two blocks of the White House in the

(18:22):
aftermath of this horrific shooting, which took place on Wednesday.
And so my thoughts, my heart, my prayers go out
to those two families, one dealing with a tremendous loss,
the other one obviously so concerned about their loved one
who remains in critical condition.

Speaker 3 (18:40):
John, the response by the administration isn't to back down,
it's to bring in even more reinforcements in terms of
guardsmen in d C. What are you hearing about this
and also you know just some of your experience with
the guardsmen and women that have been serving in DC
for some time now.

Speaker 8 (18:58):
Well, as you know, Brian, I work at the White
House there. Literally every day I go into the White
House complex and report from there, and on the streets
around Washington, d C, downtown Washington, d C. Every day
I'll see a group of guardsmen that are just walking
around showing their presence. So it's something that I've gotten

(19:22):
used to, and I think others that live with or
work within blocks of the White House also have gotten
used to as well. To what you asked me about,
that's right, the President announcing that five hundred additional guardsmen
will be brought into the nation's capital that will be
within days. That will augment what's already there, and that

(19:42):
sends an important message, you know, I think that the
President wants to make Washington, d C.

Speaker 1 (19:48):
The nation's capital, a safe place to.

Speaker 8 (19:52):
Live, a safe place to work, and what happened on
Wednesday was just I think a shock to everybody because
there has been no incidents of violence against any members
of the National Guard. Thence the President declared that national
emergency in mid August bringing in the National Guard into Washington,

(20:13):
D C. Nothing until what happened on Wednesday, with this
terrible incident that happened at seventeenth and I Street. Again,
it's just two blocks from where I enter the White
House every day.

Speaker 3 (20:29):
It's probably the end for Clay and Buck. We are
joined by White House Correspondent John Decker, and he is
iHeartRadio's White House correspondent, also the only member of the
White House Press Corps who's an attorney, also celebrating in
his thirtieth anniversary as well as a White House correspondent.
Had a remarkable run, John, in terms of the impact

(20:54):
in the Capitol, what does this look like going forward
at this point.

Speaker 8 (21:00):
Well, what it looks like is I think the Guard
that will be brought in, those five hundred additional members
coming in from other states, augmenting what is already there,
will have a greater presence in Washington, D C. And
we know that the President has spoken about bringing the
Guard into other major urban areas as well. He's mentioned

(21:24):
Chicago for instance, is one of those places.

Speaker 1 (21:27):
Baltimore another place.

Speaker 8 (21:29):
But right now, I think the president's focus is on Washington,
d C. The place where he lives, the place where
he works, the place where he says Washington, d C.
Has become a safer place to live and work. It
has been, you know, just based upon the statistics. And
this I think is the reason why what happened on

(21:49):
Wednesday is such a tremendous shock that this could happen
in broad daylight while people were just out for their
lunch break. And think about, you know, happening the day
before Thanksgiving as well, Brian. I mean, people's focus is certainly,
you know, looking ahead, looking to head to spending the
holiday with friends and loved ones family. Certainly not what

(22:13):
I think anybody would have expected on the day before Thanksgiving.

Speaker 1 (22:19):
John.

Speaker 3 (22:19):
A lot that is being dug into, obviously, about these suspects,
about the attacker, About the man referred to as a
terrorist from Afghanistan, said to have worked with American intelligence agencies,
said to have been vetted by the Biden administration. What
do you know about this individual and what have you

(22:39):
learned as this has unfolded.

Speaker 8 (22:43):
Well, what we've learned, and what I've learned is that
this individual did indeed work with the CIA in Afghanistan
during the course of the war, and obviously was on
a flight to flee Afghanistan in the fall of Afghanistan
in President Biden's first year in office.

Speaker 1 (23:05):
I don't know, Brian, have you seen a.

Speaker 8 (23:08):
Picture of this individual other than sort of the file
photos of this picture.

Speaker 1 (23:13):
I'm curious. No, I have not.

Speaker 8 (23:16):
I have. The reason I asked that is, I have
a very good friend of mine who is a White
House photographer, managed to be right there in the immediate
aftermath of this shooting. And I'll give you my description
of this person. He is someone who has a very
large stomach.

Speaker 1 (23:37):
He's got a.

Speaker 8 (23:37):
Very full beard, fuller than what you've seen in those
file photos. And you know, he just ethnically looks Afghan
as well. So this is someone that would stand out
on a city street. And of course we know that
the type of weapon he used was an and that

(24:02):
is what you know. I was struck by was just
how he looked after he was detained by police, was
on the ground. That's the photograph that I've seen that
I don't think has been made public, and if it
has been made public, they typically pixelate, you know, the
face and other.

Speaker 1 (24:21):
Aspects of the photograph.

Speaker 8 (24:23):
So that's what I saw on Wednesday late afternoon when
a White House photographer showed me what he was able
to snap being right there on the scene in the
immediate aftermath of this shooting.

Speaker 3 (24:34):
Well thanks the question, So is there more to the story.
Why hasn't been this been disseminated? Is this something that
media outlets are spiking or is this protocol at this
stage in the investigation.

Speaker 7 (24:47):
I do not know.

Speaker 8 (24:48):
To me, that's newsworthy, that is newsworthy to see that.
There's to me, again, no reason to pixelate the photograph
of the suspect who clearly was the person involved in
this shooting. There's nothing to be concerned about. I say
that as a First Amendment lawyer. There's nothing to be
concerned about in terms of legal consequences for any type

(25:12):
of news organization that wished to publish this photograph. So
that's the reason why I asked that question. Whether the
photograph that I have seen, you know, on his camera
that he took, is something that has been out there
beyond what I saw late Wednesday afternoon.

Speaker 3 (25:30):
Yeah, I would say that's a significant part of the
story at this point. And you then wonder, John, Okay,
so the circumstances under which he came to the United States.
We're hearing that Adhering worked with intelligence agencies, and we
know that there are a bunch of people that were
on that plane out of Afghanistan that all kinds of

(25:52):
question marks can go up about independent of all the
people that you know just were claiming to be asylum
seekers during the administration. So is this the only individual
we have to worry about here? What are your thoughts
about this?

Speaker 8 (26:07):
Well, I think that's.

Speaker 1 (26:08):
The job of all of those law.

Speaker 8 (26:10):
Enforcement agencies to make certain that this is just an
isolated incident. And I think that they have to determine
whether this person was quote unquote Brian a bad person
when he left Afghanistan initially, or whether he was radicalized
while here in the United States. That is also something

(26:32):
which I'm sure law enforcement is looking into. But what
it does for those Afghans who did indeed help the
US military and were brought here because they would certainly
be targeted by the Taliban. It's one of those instances Brian,
where one individual paints a broad brush on every Afghan

(26:56):
that was able to get out of Afghanistan during the
fall of Cobble, during the fall of that country, it
paints them all with this broad brush because of this
person that did this terrible act. On Wednesday afternoon.

Speaker 3 (27:11):
IHeartRadio White House correspondent John Decker. John, thank you so
much for taking the time to join us to cover
this during this Thanksgiving weekend.

Speaker 1 (27:19):
Best to you and your family.

Speaker 8 (27:22):
Always great to be with you, Brian, Thanks a lot,
best to you as well, have a good rest of
your Thanksgiving weekend, and the best of everyone out there
listening as well.

Speaker 1 (27:31):
Sure enough, all right, and let's go to the phones
real quick.

Speaker 3 (27:34):
There's a caller, Chris, who I think has a really
good point, and it's related.

Speaker 1 (27:40):
To what I was talking.

Speaker 3 (27:42):
About a little bit earlier and where I want to
go here. In just a moment, I got a lot
of information.

Speaker 1 (27:48):
Chris. Welcome to the show.

Speaker 4 (27:50):
Thank you, Yeah.

Speaker 1 (27:53):
Net go ahead.

Speaker 4 (27:53):
Served in the military. I was senior six. They should
have had a few more senior pe because I was
trained in reading body language. And this guy was dressed
in what I would call the kind of clothing that
sets off an alarm, you know, because I was in
a country where we had people trying to bring bombs.

Speaker 3 (28:13):
In and so, Chris, you think that there should have
been alarm bells going off at the appearance of this individual.

Speaker 4 (28:23):
Yes. Yeah, he was dressed in traditional clothing. That's unusual
even in that time of the year. But I was,
like I said, I was fifty eight years old in
a war zone.

Speaker 3 (28:34):
Well, appreciate your service. I understand you have a point
about deportations as well.

Speaker 4 (28:42):
A lot of people came in this country illegitimately, and
they said over twelve to fourteen thousand no one terrorists
were brought in in the southern border. I'm sorry they
should all go home and come back the right way.
My mother's people were Armenian and Christian Arab and we
got here because of a genocide.

Speaker 3 (28:59):
Chris, thanks for the call, and I got a lot
of information about the deportation situation because one of the
big deals in terms of trying to clean up the
Biden mess I talked about the collapse of Afghanistan and
the implications from our southern border to putin with Russia,
to the bad actors around the world that knew you

(29:20):
know what, it's open season on our targets. It's the
reason why Hamas went after Israel. You know that wouldn't
have happened either if Trump had been president, but also
what we are currently combating. So taking a look at
how much crime has been coming down since we have
been working on deportations and where we stand with deportations.

Speaker 1 (29:39):
I'm going to pick up there next. I'm Brian mudd
In for Claim Buck. Every one of those people need
to go somewhere. They don't need to be in the
United States. If it's going back to Afghanistan, so be it.

Speaker 3 (29:58):
A Congressman Byron Donald's talking about the attack in DC.
But it's true of all of these bogus refugees, bogus
asylum seekers that took advantage of the Biden administration. Brian
mut In for Clay and Buck and mentioned that during
the four years of the Biden administration, we saw the

(30:20):
world's bad actors take advantage of us.

Speaker 1 (30:22):
Right.

Speaker 3 (30:22):
We know this specifically, the average non citizen, the average
Magic Award person, person who would go to the southern
border or wherever and say it's segdum and then just
get the open season pass into the United States. And
often a lot of aid, including from NGOs along the way.

Speaker 1 (30:42):
So they were nine times.

Speaker 3 (30:45):
More likely to commit a crime than you, or made
nine times more. You still have the left that will
repeat the lies that oh no, oh no, they are
less likely to.

Speaker 1 (30:53):
Commit a crime than you are made.

Speaker 3 (30:56):
They just want to pick vegetables the jobs that Americans
still want to do, which is bs as well, but
that's a whole other topic. What we have seen since
the Trump administration not only cracked down on border policies.

Speaker 1 (31:11):
You have fewer than ninety nine.

Speaker 3 (31:15):
Percent, you know, that's the We've had a tocon of
greater than ninety nine percent. Those who have been getting
through most months, nobody gets through. You certainly don't have
asylum seekers being flown into the United States. But what
we've seen through the Trump administration strong policies, a lot
of people that have been leaving the United States, the deportations,

(31:36):
which is critical for so many reasons. But the most
effective way that the Trump administration has engaged in deportation
so far been through those who have taken a look
at a lot of the detention facilities and gone, you
know what, I don't think I want to go there,
so I think I'll just go ahead and leave on
my own. So according to the latest information from the

(31:58):
Department of Homeland Security, over two million illegal aliens have
been deported this year, and most of them by choice.
So if you take a look how many have ice
actually detained, put in detention facilities and then eventually on
planes to wherever, it's been about five hundred and twenty
seven thousand. But we have over one point six million

(32:19):
self deportations that have taken place, and so very important
crack down on any of the border abuse. And effectively,
what we see in real time is that about as
many illegal aliens as came into the United States during
Biden's last year have exited it so far this year.
So that's an important piece of the puzzle. About eight

(32:41):
thousand few are illegal immigrants per.

Speaker 1 (32:45):
Day in the United States.

Speaker 3 (32:46):
And what's happened to look at this crime has been
following homicides down by twenty percent since Trump became president,
robbery's property crime down fourteen percent, violent crime in general
down eleven percent.

Speaker 1 (32:58):
It's almost like it's related. So the good.

Speaker 3 (33:01):
News is the Trump administration's policies, while they can't catch
everything that the Biden administration screwed us with or did
to us. We are steadily making progress, and a lot
of it is coming from people that don't want to
be going to the detention facilities. So when the left
demonizes them and they want to talk about how awful
it is there, now let them it's actually okay.

Speaker 1 (33:23):
Coming up, we're going to take a look at some
of the other

Speaker 3 (33:26):
Mess that President Trump is undoing Russia and Ukraine.

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