Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Had disagreement within the party. You had some holdouts in
the House, and President Trump really really pushed it through
one big, beautiful bill. It sounds beautiful, and it certainly
sounds big, and that's probably why he said he had
some reservations, like to welcome to the show, the man
you just heard right there, doctor Victor Davis Hantsen, sir, welcome,
thanks for being here, Thank you for having me reservations.
(00:25):
Are you a little congressmanship roy ish on it? I
think he was one of those I remember that was
a hold out. What would you have liked had seen
happen if you were King Hansen?
Speaker 2 (00:38):
Well, I think they don't give us any They don't
give us any statistics about the deficit, and they're cutting some,
but they're adding some, and it looks like it's neutral,
and that the theory is that the tax cuts and
the foreign investment will grow the economy, so the five
(01:00):
trillion dollars a present federal revenue will grow. But I
would have liked to see a little bit more cuts.
I wouldn't have liked to see a little bit more
cuts to the effect of shutting down the government. Practically,
I think at this point you have to pass the bill.
But I just I think Goes said one hundred and
sixty billion dollars, and it looks like the revenues if
(01:24):
from Paris, if he gets a trillion dollars over the decade,
it's still only one hundred billion a year in extra revenue.
I just don't see the map how it works out.
And if he runs a two trillion dollar deficit, I
think it's going to hurt him.
Speaker 1 (01:40):
Now, let me ask you. You know the tax cuts
that are not that are going to be extended from
twenty seventeen as well, And I've heard doctor Hanson there's
the Green New Deal, Build Back Better Biden. It's not
any less of a budget than the Biden administration. And
my question yesterday to Congressman McLintock was and basically he's like,
(02:02):
you got to give and take a little bit. But
I'm like, we have the White House to send at
the House, why can't we extend the tax cuts and
then go do all those other cuts from the waist
from the previous administration that we really worked hard to
get them elected to go in there and do.
Speaker 2 (02:19):
Yeah. I think the answer is that a lot of
these congressmen like the money that's coming into the district
from inflation reduction op and build that better the subsidies
for green Angie and medicaid and things like that. So
I don't I just don't. I wish they would, but
I just don't see anybody with a pointer in a
(02:41):
chart saying this is the budget currently, we're going to
run two trillion dollars. Here's the cuts, and here's the
increases in the budget, and here is what the final
bottom line is where they're going to be, you know,
five hundred billion in the red a trillion. I haven't
seen anybody said say they're going to get close to
(03:02):
about the budget. Remember when those started, we were told
that they could get between a trillion and two trillion
dollar cuts. They may get five hundred billion, bright we're
going up to one hundred and seventy billion right now, so.
Speaker 1 (03:14):
They're kind of getting used to that money. And that
kind of backs up something that I read Senator Ron
Johnson put out about it. He was talking about pre
COVID and then after COVID much of the blame of
the spending. He said, the lockdowns are over. It shouldn't
justify this level of government spending. But as humans. It's
human nature to get used to I guess having the money,
(03:35):
like you said, to bring back to the districts, because
we realize that a lot of the districts, a lot
of that state money's going away as well.
Speaker 2 (03:44):
Yeah, and you know, a lot of the extra tax
cuts and I don't know how big they're going to be,
we are not told. But if they really do get
no tax on tips and no tax on Social Security
recipients and no tax on he's talked about some classes
of fresh responders, I don't know what that adds up to.
(04:05):
But I'm not sure that other than increasing consumer spending
that's going to have the same bang for the buck.
If you cut depreciate, accelerate depreciation tables or things like that,
that's yeared toward investment. And then we don't know how
much of the eight to ten trillion dollars that his
(04:28):
pledge is actually going to show up, and when it's
going to show up, and where it's going to show up,
and how it's going to show up. So it's all
it could be very good. It's just it's all up
in the air, and I don't think anybody wants to
put anything down on paper. But at thirty seven trillion
dollars in three billion a day in interest, you can
(04:49):
see and Trump keeps talking about can get down from
four point five percent fabrate to three. Maybe then he
can save a billion dollars a day in interest. That's
you know, a third of a trillion dollars a year.
That would go a long way. But I don't know
if the Said's going to do that not when you
have a big deficit.
Speaker 1 (05:09):
When we have that deficit, it's almost like we're talking
about monopoly money, isn't it. It's so out of control.
Uh my guess is doctor Victor Davis Hanson? Uh, doctor Hanson,
have you ever in your life? I haven't heard a
report where they say doctor phill in the blanket Walter
Reed gave the president a clean bill of health? Where
we went really could they be lying?
Speaker 2 (05:31):
Have you?
Speaker 1 (05:31):
Have you ever had that thought? I had? Now I
know JFK. We found out later had a lot of
He had to have a lot of charge.
Speaker 2 (05:38):
Addison's disease, which is pretty serious. He's on predosone and
FDR had we know now as blood. Fetcher was about
one eighty over one hundred, and he had comic science
and learn before he had the stroke, probably had an
melanoma too, and that was all hidden.
Speaker 1 (06:00):
Well. President Reagan was a lot closer to death than.
Speaker 2 (06:02):
We were ever told, much closer. I think it a
quarter inch. The bullet missed the the main artery in
the order, and then we've had problems with going back
to Glover Cleveland. But I don't think we've had any
in the modern are and the modern air. I mean,
people talk about Reagan this and that maybe he was
(06:24):
using a staff out of the assassination, but I don't
think anybody believes that you get systemic metastasized state cancer
in a year or six months. It's something that has
been going on for four or five years. And he
said things too. He joked, you know, he said, would
you accept the vice presidency? That was way back in
(06:46):
twenty twelve, and he said, unless I have prostate cancer.
And then he said another time, we all of us
who have cancer. And then they asked him what he
meant and he didn't say anything, and his aide said, well,
he's talking about skin cancer, and they said, well, remove
the skin cancer. But he says he has cancer. So
(07:09):
there were Freudian slips the last four to six years.
That should have made people suspicious.
Speaker 1 (07:14):
Well we were, I mean, we all knew his cognitive skills.
But for a president get a clean bill of health,
what do you even know? The law like, they have
rights as humans as well, you know, should if the
president has cancer and is fighting it and can keep working,
should we be told? I feel like we should. Is
there any law that you know of?
Speaker 2 (07:38):
No, it's just the twenty fifth Amendment says when the
cabinet is made aware of the president's stability, then they're
polled and if there's a majority, then they refer that
recommendation to the House to vote on removing the president.
But it seemed like when Donald Trump was Donald Trump,
(07:59):
he wasn't the bility, He was just stne Trump. They
felt that they were going to make a case against him,
so they bought the Yale psychiatrist Dandy Lee to the Senate.
She telediagnosed doone Coumker's mentally unfit and recommended an intervention.
And then Rod Rosestein and move the interim Attorney General,
(08:21):
the interm FBI Andrew McKay. They talked about doing a
wire and crapping Trump so they could get him on
pay very different than her tape of Biden, which, when
there's no evidence of Trump was debilitated that they were
going to try to do anything they could remove him
on health grounds in a backfire because that forced him
(08:42):
to take the Montreal cognitive assessment. He did very well
on us. But Biden, you know, people ask him to
take that cognitive task and I can tell you that
I'm seventy one and I have not had a Neurologists
say to me, you're home free. You never have to
(09:05):
have a PSA. I just don't think that happens.
Speaker 1 (09:08):
Yeah, that was some of the media trying to normalize that.
Speaker 2 (09:11):
Yeah, No, I don't think not, especially if you were
the president on the stage. So he had PSA tests,
dozens of them when he was under treatment, and they
need to get doctor O'Connor and put him under oath
and say did you or did you not ever order
a PSAHS and he will say yes, because he says no,
he's completely ruined as a position. And I think he'll
(09:34):
say that we did for diagnosics. I just don't think
they reported it. They never reported it.
Speaker 1 (09:41):
Well, so we'll put that investigation on the tarmac, as
I call it, right, We got a lot of investigations
out there waiting to take off. My guest doctor Victor
Davis Hants and doctor Hanson in closing hero and ask,
are you at Stanford right now? By chance? No, I'm
in Telma, Okay. The Stanford Review dot org s investigation
uncovering Chinese academic espionage at Stanford. They're claiming they got
(10:05):
some Chinese spies there.
Speaker 2 (10:09):
Yeah, that's a chronic problem. Four years ago they had
a People's Liberation Army person on the faculty, a diusity
faculty member, until they caught her. And then they had
accepted some fifty million dollars over the years and Communist
China University hadn't been't report it. They've had problems with
(10:30):
they've been overcharging about fifty two percent on federal grants.
That's going to call them about one hundred and eighty
million a year to go back down because the required
fifteen percent overcharge a surcharge. And in addition to that,
they're under the gun because they've been bragging in the
sense that they put it on their website that they
only let in nine percent white males, that's thirty three
(10:54):
thirty five percent of the population. But they were only
letting them nine because of their DEI. So the Trump
administration is going at that. And then they've had a
lot of violence. The Middle East students trashed the President's office,
they vandalize the Sandstone colonnades, they tore down Jewish posters,
they camped out for four months and they didn't do anything.
(11:17):
So the Trump administration is looking at all of that.
They denied free speech rights. They call them auxiliary like
prison of state, but they're basically separate graduations, preditated on
race ceremonies. They have them houses that are segregated, so
they have a lot of exposure. And they've got a
pretty good president. He's a new president, but he's desperate
(11:41):
because all these universities were these big endowments. Everybody says, well,
they got thirty five billion dollars endowment, but by Harbard,
it's all targeted money. It's targeted to particular professor's endowments,
particular program. But the general fund relies on, you know,
only about half of the interest on the endowment and
(12:03):
the rest of annual giving. And Stanford is way down
on annual giving, especially after they hijacked the lecture by
a double judge at the law school basically chased him
out of the law school, called him all sorts of
names that they hope his daughter was right. The student
said that, and after that the law alumni just stopped giving.
(12:24):
So all of them are in big trouble and they
should be a little wiser, be more transparent, cut a
deal with the comp administration because they have a lot
of exposure that the public doesn't know about, and when
they find out, they'll be a very unsympathetic to them.
Speaker 1 (12:39):
Well, I knew you were the man to ask about
that story, doctor Hanson. Thank you, Thank you for your time.
We always appreciate it, sir, thank you for having me.
You bet your doctor, Victor Davis Hanson. Ladies and gentlemen,
this is the Trevor Charry Show on the Valley's Power
Talk Obama. They're talking about did he wish he could
(12:59):
run for a term? And guys, this is kind of
creepy these next two pieces of audio that I'm going
to put it into your ear, into your brain and
tell me if your soul goes man, they were kind
of predicted, not kind of, they did predict it. Listen
to Obama talking about how he could handle a third term.
He doesn't wan have to be on Air Force one.
(13:20):
He doesn't want the motorcades. He doesn't want all the
pomp and circumstances and pictures and shaking hands and all
that that goes on would be in the president of
the United States. But you know, giving some slippers.
Speaker 3 (13:32):
And knowing what you know, now, do you wish like
you had a second a third term? And I used
to say, you know what if if I could make
an arrangement where I had a stand in, a frontman
or a front woman, and they had an earpiece in
and I was just in my basement in my sweats,
(13:54):
looking through the stuff, and then I could sort of
deliver the lines, but somebody else was doing all the
talking and ceremony.
Speaker 2 (14:03):
I'd be fine with that.
Speaker 1 (14:05):
You know where I'm gonna go with that, don't you?
Speaker 2 (14:08):
No?
Speaker 1 (14:08):
Yeah, I am no, Yes, it was you. This was
back in twenty fifteen from the Washington Times. Vice President
Joseph var Biden said he would develop prostate cancer or
something if he had a fundamental disagreement with President Obama
was forced to resign from his post. You will leave
(14:29):
the Washington Times.
Speaker 4 (14:30):
And I, like I told Barrock here it is if
I reach something where there's a fundamental disagreement we have
based on a moral principle, I'll develop some disease and
say I.
Speaker 1 (14:42):
Have to resign. They both predicted the future, didn't they
kind of odd? Correct, it appears diversity, equity and inclusion.
It's still in the United States Secret Service going on.
I thought they cleaned up all that Secret Service guys
(15:04):
partying in the Marriott and wrecking hotel rooms and prostitutes
and out of the country acting a fool, And thought
all that got got cleaned up and especially nipped down
right when you know, after Butler and after we got
a new administration end, Well, you know what any organization
(15:27):
you're we expect better. But I guess DEI is still alive.
And well, there's two female US Secret Service uniform and
division officers got into a physical fight outside Barack Obama's
DC residents at two thirty am on Wednesday night. Unclear
if anybody was injured or discipline over the fight. You
(15:50):
want to talk about lack of professionalism on display, the
dumbing down of America. The woman officer who made the
call that I'm about to play you was upset that
her shift replacement was late. Give me a supervisor down
(16:22):
here immediately before I whipped this girl's peep You heard it, Yeah,
professional professional dame right there. Huh, it's not the first time.
And am I picking on ladies here? No, I'm just
(16:42):
the presenter of the news. Last year, a female Secret
Service agent aside to Kamala Kamala Harris, Tamalama Harris, got
into a physical fight with other agents out at joints,
joint base enters that that made the big news. Sheind
of freaked out, kind of had a melt down. When
(17:03):
you're throwing minstrel pads at other agents. That smeltdown, Get
the gun away, get the kind of way. And yeah,
I'll go back to July thirteenth and Butler, what do
we do? What do we do? Those are the first
words out of the Secret Service agents that were surrounding
President Trump that day. I don't have the audio handy,
(17:25):
but I've played it numerous times. Oh what do we do?
Speaker 2 (17:33):
What do we do?
Speaker 1 (17:35):
That was the blonde woman right there? And is there
a place for her in the Secret Service somewhere? But
not right up there? Protecting the quarterback again again with
this it's just not right. I mean, I don't care
if a a Samoan dude that could just knock anybody down,
(17:56):
but he's five foot eight. He doesn't need to be
up there protecting the president of the United States of America.
You need to be I think it should be mandatory
that the agents surrounding the president. It depends on the agents,
depend on the height of the president. If George Ducaccus
(18:16):
had won back what was that eighty eight that blonde
woman is to height them to caucus? Obama was tall.
Trump's tall. You need to have Secret Service agents that
are tall, erb because guess what they do. They block
the president. That iconic image of President Trump's fist in there.
(18:39):
He's probably glad she was short, because it was tall.
It would have blocked his face. It was made for
a great photo, but you saw that was an open shot.
If there had been another shooter, they're up there to surround,
but they did. They jumped on him after she said
what do we do? What do we do?
Speaker 2 (18:53):
Hey?
Speaker 1 (18:54):
And listen that lady that threw her life out there
and jumped on him. They didn't know how many more
machine guns or grenades or whatever. I am applauding her
her dedication. I am doing that, but I'm saying uh
huh no. And everybody made fun of the other female
agents around the SUV that couldn't holster their their guns.
(19:19):
They could probably shoot better than maybe probably the best
shooter here in the valley that's non military, you know,
some just normal citizen here. They could but under pressure.
You saw that reaction. Now, are there guys that do that?
If they if there was a guy that was doing
all that and freaking out and didn't know what, yeah,
fire him too. We need the best of the best.
(19:41):
But this is uncalled for. I hope that since this
is all out in the media here that she she
should lose her job for that. Yeah, you're not on
the street corner, You're not thirteen. Act like a grown up. Please.
(20:03):
This is the tremortary show. Condom Valley's Power Talk. Okay,
my mommy dad went back to Tennessee and they lived
in Arizona, in California and all over the place. Well,
but now they're back, and the tornado talk is last
few months has been probably thirty eight point seven percent
(20:25):
of our conversations over what's been happening in phone calls
and watching Ryan y'all on YouTube, and boy he's good
with pinpointing down and letting people know off Google Maps, Hey,
what's out it's funnel clouds heading over the dire market
at this moment, you know, he scales it down to
bowling alleys and churches, landmarks that that people know. And
(20:47):
in their small town there, they don't have a basement.
A lot of people don't. You would think almost every
southern home. But I guess it's you know, mold and
all of that. It's also not as conducive a lot
of water, a lot of moisture. So the town has
at the elementary school there safe room, tornado place to
(21:07):
go to, and the town siren goes off and we're
back there for my dad's birthday party Saturday. It was
right at noon. I can remember it because I ran
in said, hey, the tornado thing. They're like, they're testing it.
So they were testing it Saturday at noon. Everybody knows that.
And my thought was, what if a tornado's happening at
(21:27):
eleven fifty eight or twelve oh two, maybe it has
a different tone. I don't know. I didn't ask that
follow up question, but it's important to have tornado sirens
going off. It's like a carbon monoxide detector. It lets
you know death is on the way. Tornadoes are death.
(21:50):
One moment, you're in a bathtub with Cout's cushions over you.
The next moment, you're still breathing, you're still looking, you're
still looking around, You're screaming at the top of your lungs.
You can't even hear it in your head, the wind
that's picked you up in your mouth, two hundred and
three hundred and four hundred in the air, swirling around
to be thrown and then split in half or I
(22:14):
guess it could also if your brace row, well, it
could probably rip your skull off your body. Yeah, it's
kind of dangerous. So if you are the Saint Louis
Tornado Commissioner, you got one job to do. Flip on
the siren switch just like sound. Then you got one
(22:40):
job to do. Make sure it doesn't feedback, and make
sure BA can hear them, and make sure it's at
a good level. Well that's three things, but the one
thing is make the sound good. Sarah They them Russell
They was promoted to commissioner in Maya twenty twenty one.
(23:01):
I mean usenter proper pronouns. Guys. They was promoted in
me twenty one. They joined in twenty ten. It's a
special responsible republic information community out restraining all that you se,
Saint Louis Tornado Commissioner. That's a big job, guys. Thousands
of home were damaged, five people died, tens of thousands
(23:23):
without power. Her name is Sarah Russell. They's name is
Sarah Russell. Here's what they had to say. And the
question was were you like in the office when the
storm was happening.
Speaker 5 (23:39):
Our full staff was working on Friday in the office.
We were in the fifteen twenty Market Street building for
at the time of the storm. We were conducting a
workshop with other partners, but we were working the storm
in that capacity.
Speaker 1 (23:56):
You were conducting a workshop during the storm. I don't
know in your text in your pager. Isn't the kind
of thing to let you know what table's ready at
a restaurant that's sitting in your pocket, that's connected to
the natural Weather service? You feel that they go off,
(24:17):
you look, oh, stop the workshop. We were collaging things together,
but put the glue down. We got to get to work.
Speaker 5 (24:25):
Our full staff was working on Friday in the office.
We were in the fifteen twenty Market Street building for
at the time of the storm. We were conducting a
workshop with other partners, but we were working the storm
in that capacity.
Speaker 1 (24:42):
All Right, we've all been caught in something that we
really don't know what to say. We know we were wrong.
Some quicker than others. Go all right, I'm done. Okay,
it was me. I messed up. Go ahead, fire me
and some of us keep going through and we've all
done it, going through the road decks of excuses and sorry, Lord,
(25:03):
probably some lies mixed in there with those excuses of
why we didn't do our job. Sarah Russell had some excuses.
It wasn't good enough for Mayor Spencer. She suspended. Oh no,
now she was suspended. Now she was fired. Okay, she
(25:24):
was fired for not turning on the tornado sireens guys. Yes,
if the Saint Let's tornado commissioner was not fired after
not turning on the tornado sirens after five people died,
it almost I don't know how criminal does this get.
It's like if you work for the Department of Transportation
and you don't put up bridge out or put some
barrier across five people go off the bridge and die.
(25:47):
They weren't warned they would. People would be saying at
least manslaughter. But here's here's some reasons why they said
that they I guess, going through the card files real
quick at a press conference, I gotta come up with
something here.
Speaker 5 (26:05):
This is still a twenty five year old siren system.
Parts are still difficult and expensive to come by, and certainly,
you know, depending on what we find when we're out there,
we may not have the parts in town. They may
have to source them from a little bit farther away.
But as fast as we can, we're looking at, you know,
potentially getting another siren brought in, but that would have
(26:26):
to be driven in from another state.
Speaker 1 (26:28):
Okay, sounds like some of the lady bosses from the
Palistates fire, doesn't it. Department of Water and Power, It's
what it reminds me, reminds me of Samway King Valley
Sun says California Democrats. They're considering a new tax. Good,
all right, we need that. It's very California of them.
Wait to stay true to fashion, to pay for health
(26:51):
insurance for veterans living on the streets, all right, way
to go, look at them stepping up to the plate
letting it for illegal aliens. Okay, we knew, come on, sorry,
shouldn't have done that to you. Senator Lena Gonzalez, Democrat
from Long Beach that a new tax should be considered.
(27:12):
They haven't put anything for it, but when they start,
you know, when Scott Wiener started talking about, Hey guys,
I got an idea, let's can out transgender kids in Louisiana.
Get him out here and make it be. You know,
when they start talking about it, it becomes something. So
Lena was sitting around going, you know what, this is
a pallet. News One's done here. What we're going to do.
We're going to tax. That's how they do it. We
(27:37):
got a three point four billion dollar we don't have
it medical funding. Hey, Feds, can you help us pay
for the illegals. I know we're suing you and all.
What we need some more money. Newsom froze it, froze
them out. Oh look at Newsome throwing down the freeze
gauntlet on illegals getting new ones, new ones, now, new ones.
(28:00):
We've already snuck in before he threw down the freeze gauntlet.
You're just gonna have to pay one hundred dollars a month.
Watch now they'll protest that, they'll protest that. The Democratic
Legislate Native Latino Caucus, they all got together. Protests Newsome,
(28:21):
not enough money for illegals. You got Thattius Miller at
the Fresne b there's been a sharp rise in ice
transfers by Fresnel sheriff. What we know, boy, wait to
be on the beaten path. Boy, that's some good investigative
for importing there. Thaddeus got to make sure that we're
not turning criminals over. Sheriff Johnson and he said, in
(28:44):
all one hundred and two transfers in twenty twenty four,
their accused of felonies included fifty two alleged crimes against people,
four hundred and eighty one property, six drug related crimes,
and three sex crimes. Why does Sheriff John Senoni have
to do this well, because in twenty seventeen Senate Bill
(29:06):
fifty four, known as the Truth Act, you got to
be you have to be covered up. You got to
make sure. They got to make sure everything everything. The
sheriff has criticized California law SB fifty four talking about
the lack of communication with ice Sheriff Sononi said, it's
a public safety issue, and I totally forgot about it
(29:30):
the other day when Sheriff Chaddionco was in here Riverside
County sheriff running for governor that Sheriff John Sononi endorsed him.
I meant to state that during our visit there and
totally forgot about it. That's why I'm saying it right now.
He said, it's not about politics, it's about public safety.
They're booked, they've been held in Preslo County Jail on
(29:53):
serious felonies. Now. Supervisor Luis Schandez was interviewed by Daddius
that he is right said. He said he wanted the
county's message to be balanced, seeing immigrants who commit crime
small percentage of the overall population.
Speaker 2 (30:12):
That is.
Speaker 1 (30:12):
Did you ask him for his the chart on that
or some numbers on that, or some stats on that,
and if he said that he has them, he'll get
back to you. Wait, they don't exist, we don't keep
them in California. So if you want to say the
(30:33):
vast majority, you're saying fifty one percent. Now, the vast
majority would be what seventy five three quarters? I might
agree with that. Yeah, other than the crime are breaking
in other than the crime of you know, identity to
(30:53):
you know, those kinds of things, but a crime against people,
you know, stealing, hurting some you know all that. I
might agree that, Yeah, okay, all right, I'll say, Majordy
come here to work. And he also said, they come
here to work and raise a family. See there, right there,
(31:14):
there's a problem and bring their family cost twenty thousand
dollars per kid for school. I think Supervisor Luis Chavez
would admit it. Supervisor, come on again. He used to,
come on, we've invited you. Come on, let's talk about this.
Come sit down over here, and let let's talk about this.
You have to know that when you say they come
here to work and raise a family, that those kids
(31:35):
in the school that takes money away from our citizens' education.
Can we meet halfway and go let the dad of
that family come here and then, like I say, go
to Oregon and do apples come here to make the
money and is taxed and then he goes back home.
That's how they used to do it back in the
day before we had all these issues. It just seems
(31:58):
like they had it right back then. He said, I
think we also want to send the message that people
that just come here to work, we're not going to
be asking their documentation status. That's a federal government's job,
not a local job. That people that just come here
to work see enough of that. Now they've broken the law,
(32:22):
let's come up with some kind of maybe some new plan. No,
I don't know if that's going to happen, because we've
been flooded, as President Trump says, with twenty one million.
I'm going to say out of those twenty one million
that I'm questionable over half of them because they emptied
out a lot of prisons in those countries. Guys, you
(32:46):
know that the Democrat congresswoman that busted into the ice facilities,
she's been charged federal crime. She appeared before a judge,
and the ten inmates who escaped for from New Orleans.
They've caught some how many I'll tell you next the
Assistent Trevor Cherry show on The Valley's Power Talk mcrack.
(33:08):
Congresswoman Lamonica McIvor. She appeared before a judge yesterday. She
stormed Ice. So it was that week and a half
ago whatever, almost two weeks ago tomorrow. Yes, she was
released and did not have to post bail. The judge
ordered the congresswoman to surrender firearms that she cannot travel
outside of the US. Well, what's a Democrat do after that?
(33:32):
Of course they fundraised off the charges. She's asking for
money now to fight back against the Trump attack. Kind
of serious. She faces eight years in prison, two hundred
and fifty thousand dollars fine. The Ice body cam footage,
I mean verbally abusing. She should be at the least
censored in Congress, taking off any committee, anything like that.
(33:53):
But she was shown physically assaulting federal agents, laying hands
on them, yelling out, I'll touch whoever I want. Mother beep,
she shouted out loud, and then said the charges are
purely political. Ice is getting rid of people like this.
Convicted of Sery series Scott Jennings.
Speaker 5 (34:15):
I don't see that the Trump administration says is appropriate.
Potentially could be death, I mean.
Speaker 1 (34:20):
Right, I'll read it.
Speaker 2 (34:21):
Sex offenders, kidnapping, murder in the first degree, battery, larceny,
cocaine possession, murder. Robert do you child sex.
Speaker 1 (34:29):
Abuse, sex assault with a mental illness. That Sudan is
too good for these people, and I'm not sure any
other country would take them, tell them about their home country.
I'm not sure they'll take them. Would you take that
person while you know that, you know that, I don't
care what'll be not them.
Speaker 2 (34:45):
These are heinous, violent criminals and they do not need
to be here.
Speaker 1 (34:50):
That's all I know. I wonder if anybody said that
to President Trump around the table, he might say, hey, seth,
look into that. You know the lines that you clip
on like the military stoners, you jump out poof it opens,
you know how you see all the soldiers coming out,
one at a time at a time, at a time,
at a time at a time. There you go, put
five hundred bucks in their pocket. Hey, howdy else? Whoa
(35:11):
give him a backup? Shoot? Just in case? You know,
we don't want anybody getting hurt here. The fifth to
ten inmates escaped that fled that New Orleans jail been recaptured,
so they got half of them. Old Corey. They got Corey.
He's only accused of killing somebody during a car burglary
in twenty twenty four. I'm sure he's had enough time
to be rehabilitated since then. They got out Friday night.
(35:33):
I don't know if you saw that footage they crawled
through a hole hidden behind a toilet. They then ran out,
jumped up, scaled the op the jails, bar bar fence,
ran across the highway into a neighborhood. Then they changed clothes.
Five other inmates still at large. Sterling thirty three year
(35:54):
old Sterling. He's a maintenance worker there. Old Sterling Williams
the Orleans pear Sheriff's Office. He was arrested starting ten counts.
He helped him escape, but he said an inmate threatened
to shake him if he refused to help with the escape.
Some tells me Sterlin had that story ready to go
(36:18):
right there. There's nothing really inmates can give you monetarily,
even drug wise, anything like any kind of payment that
we make somebody go, you know what, Yeah, that's worth it.
I'll do that, He's insistent. Trevor Kerry show London Valley's
Power Dog