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November 20, 2024 • 35 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Riverside County Sheriff, chat Bianco Sheriff, Welcome.

Speaker 2 (00:04):
Well, thank you, glad to be here again.

Speaker 1 (00:06):
It was do you remember the moment was a little
build up. You might have decided, you know what I'm
gonna I'm gonna go for Trump, but I'll just be
quiet in the voting booth or however we do it
these days in California. But do you remember what was
it a court case? What was it something? What was
it that where you broke.

Speaker 2 (00:24):
You know? It was what seriously broke me? Is I mean?
I was always supporting Trump, and I would have voted
for him no matter what, especially because of the choice
at the time. I actually I don't remember if it
was Biden or not, or if they had already changed.
I think it was so Biden, but it was he
had been convicted, and so I'd spent the last five
years in Sacramento with you know, realizing that they have

(00:48):
a love affair with felons. They we are all the
rest of Californians are sacrificed for felons in Sacramento. And
so after Trump was convicted, I I listened to the
governor and he gave a little speech and then I
was reading one of his posts. I was stuck at
a train waiting for a train to go, and he

(01:09):
was talking about Sellon and Fellon and all of these
very liberal outlets. Everybody was using the word fellon, and
I'm like, wait a minute, they love Sellon's. Now all
of a sudden, a fellon is bad and that's what
put me over the edge.

Speaker 1 (01:22):
Wow, well, I'm glad you came over the edge we have.
I can't thirteen days ago, I had such a I
don't know, a pit gut feeling that it was I
guess I didn't believe Trump that let's make it too
big to rig I just thought that it would be rigged.
And I was all trying to prepare myself for Kamala

(01:42):
and Tim Walls. But man, I was so happy on
election night and continued to be here as well. Now, yeah,
let's talk about what happened here in California. Share Prop
thirty six. You went around the state. You were out
here campaigning to get that pass. Explain what Prop thirty
six did and how it revealed some some I'm a
Prop forty seven, right.

Speaker 2 (02:02):
It's only some. As we all know, Prop forty seven
is that it was the beginning of the end of
public safety in California. What brought us to where we
are today with the massive homeless problem, the drug induced
psychosis problem that we have with them, the theft problems,
and just drugs in general, the drug crimes in general
that truly drive the theft crimes. So Prop thirty six

(02:24):
addressed those three issues, the increase in theft, the increase
in homeless and the increase in drug addiction. And before
Prop forty seven, we had tools that we could use
to get people help, and those were all taken away
with Prop forty seven. So Prop thirty six was a
way of taking a little bite at forty at Prop
forty seven and getting some things righted so we can

(02:48):
start making a little bit of headway in the horrible
situation we have with public safety in California. So we'll
now be able to charge people with felonies for theft,
and they will have the judges will have the option
of sentencing them to prison. We will be able to
force people into rehab or they're going to have to
do jail time in prison time, and it's we will

(03:11):
now be able to get people help rather than just
let them, you know, rot in their own skin, addicted
to drugs out on the streets. So it's this isn't
going to be the fixed all but this certainly was
a big bite at the apple for us turning the
corner on public safety in California.

Speaker 1 (03:30):
Sheriff I talked to our police chiefs here, Sheriff John
Zanoni here, and the frustration of law enforcement though the
revolving jail cell doors. I mean, for what law enforcement does.
Put your life on the line, it's your career. You
put all your time and energy into it. The families
have to also suffer with the kind of schedule and
what's called from law enforcement these days. But the frustration

(03:53):
element of arresting people, putting your life on the line,
and then the state allowing them back out, I Sheriff
I would look at it like I broadcast every day.
Then I find out that only twenty five percent or
fifteen percent of it made it out, I'd be like,
then why am I doing this? How do you keep
your head on straight? How do you keep your officers,
your deputies their heads on straight? With that frustration?

Speaker 2 (04:15):
Yeah, it's definitely tough, and morale is something that we
always have to work on. But in the end, My
message to all of my guys and gals that are
out here in deputy sheriff uniforms here in Riverside County
is that we can't worry about what happens in court,
or what happens with our jails, or what happens in Sacramento.
We have a constituency of residents here in Riverside County

(04:39):
that we are sworn to protect. We are sworn to
get their property back. We're sworn to rescue them from
harm and keep the people that are doing harm to
them away from them. And so that's all we can do.
If we have to do it every day for the
same person, then that's our job. We'll keep doing it

(04:59):
and we'll we'll do everything we can to keep our
head above water. But we can't let outside horrible decisions
and horrible lawmaking affect how we do our job. And
really we're going to just keep doing it to the
best of our ability. Make this a safe place to
live and have your kids and send them to school

(05:20):
and open your business. It's not easy. It surely isn't easy,
but it's a every day it's it's a fight the
morale problem and just keep them keep them moving forward
and doing the best they can.

Speaker 1 (05:31):
My guess is Riverside County Sheriff Chad Bianco Sheriff, I
would say most law enforcement. And I even just write
a quote from Fresno County Sheriff John Soononi's stating, Hey,
if you're here illegal, you can still call us. We
want to rest you. They want them to report crimes.
I hear a lot from law enforcement in California that
you know, a lot of the times that you get

(05:51):
a lot of illegal alien crime is illegal on other
illegal alien crime because they feel like they might not
call law enforcement. I say all that to say this,
will your message now changed with the deportation potential on
the horizon here? And how will sheriffs and police chiefs well,
I guess well, you have to make a choice to

(06:12):
go with state law or possibly some federal laws with
ice and if the National Guard, if this deportation of
criminal illegal aliens goes down, do you see yourself between
a rock and a hard place or do you see
that happening?

Speaker 2 (06:25):
I said, I don't, No, you know, I don't. And
what I am going to be on my mission now
is to writing another wrong that was done many many
years ago when we voted, we didn't vote. The state
made the law SB fifty four, which made California a
sanctuary state. That made it illegal for me to cooperate

(06:48):
with the federal government. So it's still illegal for me
to cooperate federal government. We won't do that. But one
of the big laws that they used in passing that
was that it prevented law enforcement from rounding up all
these illegal aliens and people that were here illegally and
deporting them. Well, the truth of the matter is is
that has never happened ever. Local law enforcement has never

(07:12):
been an agent for immigration enforcement. That has always been
the job of the federal government. And we were too
busy to worry about immigration problems. And the truly you
mentioned it a minute ago. The people that are here
illegal that may come over here for a better life

(07:33):
for their family, they're hard workers, they're doing everything they
can to for a better life. They're easy victims by now.
These criminals that are coming over and they didn't come
here to make a better life for themselves. They came
here because it was easy pickens. And there's more to steal,
there's more to there's more harm to do. While they're
in this country, and what Prop forty seven, I'm sorry,

(07:55):
what ab SB fifty four did the sanctuary state. It
prevented us from getting rid of the people that are
here only to commit crimes. And so if I have
somebody that's committing crimes against our populace in my jail,
I should be able to call Ice and say, hey,
I have an illegal person here. They're a criminal, they've

(08:16):
been convicted of whatever crime, their sentence is almost done,
Come get them and deport them. But I can't do
that because of sanctuary state laws. And so local law
enforcement has never been an agent of immigration, and I
can't see us ever being an agent of immigration in
the future because we're too busy doing other things. The
federal government, we just need them to come in and

(08:37):
start doing it, because they haven't been doing that for
four years. And I think that once this all happens,
we are going to be really pushing for reforms of
SB fifty four with this sanctuary law, because there is
absolutely no one in their right mind that can say
with any bit of legitimacy that criminals, illegal criminals deserve

(08:58):
to be in this country. Every single one of them
should be deported and every single person other than the
people in Sacramento would tell us that. And so we
need to work on fixing the sanctuary state law of
what was SB fifty four and get that fixed so
we can deport criminals who are here illegally and victimize
the rest of us. And they that's a gimme, they

(09:19):
should be deported.

Speaker 1 (09:20):
Sheriff Bianco, Riverside Counties, My guest, Sheriff, I foresee an
issue here because borders are Tom Homan has said that
they want police to work with them, and you said
you don't want, you know, immigration problems. It's a federal issue.
But we have millions now that have poured across and
we have no idea. They're unvetted, they are committing crimes.

(09:42):
We just don't know it here. So how how can
you is it? I guess you've already made the decision.
It's going to be if you, if a push comes
to shove, you won't cooperate with the federal government because
it s to be fifty four and you're under that
law until that law changes. Did I hear you right?

Speaker 2 (10:00):
Not necessarily. I'm not necessarily saying that because I mean,
I guess in the end it's a misdemeanor. And if
I'm convicted of a misdemeanor, you know, I guess you
can send me to my own jail. They'll treat me
well here. But with what we have and where we
are in the state of California, with crime, we can't.

(10:22):
We can't leave crime real crime and go start rounding
up people that we believe aren't here legally. That's that's
a you have to look at it like that. It's
an impossibility. I respect Tom. I think Tom's going to
do a fantastic job for this country with the people
that are here. But if I had an unlimited amount

(10:47):
of resources of deputies that were just sitting around with
nothing to do, then of course we would help the
government do their job. But we are struggling to take
care of our residents based on California laws in califor
your crimes and the criminals that we have here. What
we would really like is all of these criminals that
we're arresting to have Ice come and get them and

(11:08):
take them away from us, get them out of our country.
Let us worry about crime. They can worry about helping
us get those criminals. Not only are they here, illegally.
I get that whole part. But now they're victimizing the
rest of us and they're committing crimes against us. Those
need to go out fast. And what should happen is
all of law enforcement should cooperate with those types of instances.

(11:32):
But the regular person that's here, grandma sitting in her home,
that's been here fifteen years or even five years, that's
doing absolutely nothing wrong. We're not going to go raid
her house. Local law enforcement is not going to go
raid her house and send her home. That's actually ridiculous
to kind of even think that we would do that.
What law enforcement wants is help with crime, with the

(11:55):
actual criminals that are victimizing us every single day. It's
going to be an interesting four years. But the easy,
low hanging fruit is Tom needs to worry about getting
rid of all of these, you know, rapists and murderers.

Speaker 1 (12:11):
And and it sounds like it sounds like he is.
I haven't heard him say he's going to go after
the grandma's but I think to say the word grandma's
a little kind of makeing it sound a little too simple.
I mean, we pay thirty two billion dollars a year
in California for legal aliens twenty thousand dollars a year
for kids in school. There are a lot of quote
non criminals other than violating our immigration law, which makes

(12:33):
them a criminal here. But that population, I think the
sentiment of our society today is we're tired of paying
for it.

Speaker 2 (12:42):
So it is. It is an issue.

Speaker 1 (12:44):
It's an issue.

Speaker 2 (12:45):
It is an issue. I have a solution if we
stop paying for it, which which is what we should
exactly do. Maybe they if there was no incentive to
be here, maybe they wouldn't.

Speaker 1 (12:55):
Be here self depart if the magnets were taken away,
that draws them here because Sheriff I said many times,
if I'm down in Honduras or Venezuela making nineteen dollars
a week, I'll probably sneak me in under a pile
of donkeys, and hey, if I could come here to
America because it's like a free lottery that you don't
even have to pay a dollar to even get a ticket.

Speaker 2 (13:14):
It's so right, and then have a free ride. And
then the downside of that is if you do that,
you have to know and realize that if you get caught,
you're going back. Yeah, and that has to be the reality.

Speaker 1 (13:28):
I just I'm foreseeing a future here where we're going
to have law enforcement, police chiefs and sheriffs like yourself
that are going to be up against which choice do
I make here the state law that I'm under jurisdiction
of or the federal law. That'd be a sad day
in America. But I kind of see it coming. I do. Yeah,
you may be right, yeah, maybe right. Hey, are you

(13:50):
running for governor? You're running for governor? I saw that
UC Berkeley, Paul, You're at thirteen percent or at twelve percent?
Here Katie Porter at thirteen And they're even talking about
Kamala running. If she runs, you got to run.

Speaker 2 (14:01):
Come on, well, you know, if she runs, I will.
I'd run in a heartbeat. I would. It wouldn't even
be a question. I wouldn't have to go through all
the other hoops that were that were going through trying
to make a decision, because that would be an absolute
disaster for this state. That would be the end all. Yeah,
well exactly. And you know, right now we're looking at

(14:22):
the whole results of what you know, there's still counting ballots.
We're going to look at the whole electorate of what
happened in California and make sure that we have a
path to victory, because I got to be honest with you,
I've got a great job here as the sheriff of
Riverside County and to to have to upend what we
have here and and instill a little chaos and the
things that we've got going on here to make a

(14:44):
two year run for governor, that that is going to
be an uphill battle. Rightfully, a Republican in the state,
I've got a lot of I got a lot of
things that have to line up together. So we're still
working hard at it and we'll be making the decision soon,
you know what.

Speaker 1 (15:00):
Sheriff, thank you for your time. And in closing, I
want to say when Sheriff Mike Boudreau Tillarry County was
running for Congress there and he ended up not winning
the primary there, I felt good that we had a
solid man in the county, the number one lawman. So
your positions as sheriffs have so much influence. But if
you ran for governor, you'd have a microphone here if

(15:20):
you decide.

Speaker 2 (15:21):
All right, very good, I appreciate.

Speaker 1 (15:23):
It, Sheriffianco, Thank you, sir, and We're gonna make America
great again. Appreciate you.

Speaker 2 (15:29):
Yes, we are, thank you.

Speaker 1 (15:30):
There it is, he said, He's on the team. Back
in the summer. Riverside County Sheriff Chad Bianco, good lawman.

Speaker 3 (15:38):
This is the Trevor Cherry Show on the Valley's Power Talk.

Speaker 1 (15:43):
Is Kamala gonna run?

Speaker 2 (15:44):
Right?

Speaker 1 (15:45):
Well, she's still too depressed. I can't believe the money
that that woman spent in such a short time period.
I even heard that she told her campaign staff she's
gonna pay him till the end of the year and
she can't. Twenty million dollar in debt, ended up paying
OPRA a two point five million, not a million, right. Oh,
it was to her organization, not to not to Oprah. Okay,

(16:10):
I got that one right. All the private jets right,
the Green New Deal girl up there, right, just jet
and all the private jets. And I understand in a
presidential campaign that I wouldn't expect them to be, you know,
in the B unit on Southwest Airlines going around. I
understand that, right. I'm not even against against some of

(16:31):
these preachers that preach on a Sunday in New York
and then down in Atlanta and they're moving around.

Speaker 4 (16:37):
Right.

Speaker 1 (16:38):
People always say why do you need a jet? Right,
It's like, well, there are some people that do need jets.

Speaker 2 (16:44):
If I had a.

Speaker 1 (16:44):
Lot enough money to not have to fly commercial, I
would not. You wouldn't guilt me out for getting on
a private jet. No, it's like, you know, guilting somebody
out because somebody can come pick them up in a
town car or limits or something. Right, that's called capitalism.
That means that you've that you've made it right. Imagine

(17:07):
landing and having it. You walk down the steps and
there's a car on the tarmac for you. Hey, let's
get her done. Nothing wrong with that one. You're right there.
But Kamala wasted so much money. Now we had a
let's see, here's a little quote from Homeland Security Secretary
of may Orcus. He was asked whether the Biden administration

(17:27):
should have done anything differently on the border. Now here's
what he actually said. We have actually built an architecture
now that is proving tremendously successful. The oddacity of spending
that much money, in the audacity of making comments like
that January is if the twenty first is at there,

(17:50):
twentieth inauguration day, somewhere around there can't come quick enough.
They cannot come quick enough. No, Trump wants to revive
his border policies, and yes, I do think it's going
to be a showdown between a lot of law enforcement
that will say, no, I'm gonna go with the Feds
and I'm going to turn them over to Ice and
I'm gonna violate SB fifty four here in California that unfortunately,

(18:13):
you're gonna have law enforcement that's going to be between
what they call a rock and a hard place. I
guess right here it's going to be because Newsom's gonna
Trump proof California and he's actually stated, you're not going
to get our immigrants. Well, of course we're not gonna
get immigrants that that means they immigrated here legally. There
will be illegal aliens that will be and they're preparing

(18:37):
to round up people living in the United States and
they're actually talking about building detention camps and expediting removal
processes that are going on. And oh you you just
wait for Joy Reid and the presento B to get
a picture of this, and they're gonna be told you
told you he was a fascist, right, Yeah, he's not

(18:58):
given them due process hearings. Right, He's going to reassign
other agents and deputize local police officers. This is going
to happen. You are going to have cities that are
fed up with the crime, that are fed up with
the issues that are caused by not vetting people properly
finding out are they a criminal or not. Do you
know how many how much crime goes unreported?

Speaker 2 (19:21):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (19:21):
You call nine one one that didn't go in the
crime stats. It has to be an official report filled out.
And you even have major metropolitan areas that aren't even
reporting to the FBI crime stats. The FBI quietly released
oops updated figures that show that no crime, violent crime
is not on the decline, it's going up, just like

(19:45):
our power bills in California.

Speaker 2 (19:47):
Right.

Speaker 1 (19:49):
Trump told a crowd during the campaign he said, I'm
going to follow the Eisenhier model. We're going to carry
out the largest domestic deportation operation in American history. He
even talked about the foreign students that were in all
the pro Hamas anti Israel protests, talking about their visas
being canceled. That should have already happened. He's even talking
about birthright citizenship anchor babies. That's racist to talk about

(20:14):
there as much of a citizens as you or I are.
They that's what they'll that's what they'll say, right. But
our founding fathers said that if you are an ambassador
from Russia or the UK or any other country around
the world, and you're in America and you have a baby,
it's not a citizen. They they never once even thought

(20:39):
we would be as crazy as we are today to go, well, okay,
we get that, you know, if you're an ambassador and
you're over here and you have a baby. But if
you break in illegally and you happen to be in
Denny's during the the effacing there of the of the cervix,
and the woman goes into the restroom or has it
at a houtwhere wherever she has the baby, that then

(21:02):
that is a US citizen. And Trump has talked about
that and he's going to crack down on it. And
that has been a debate that's gone around now for
well probably about one hundred years. He was in the
eighteen seventies eighteen eighties when the law went into effect.
But he's going to do a crackdown and he doesn't
want it to be tied up in court. He's going

(21:23):
to invoke the Alien's Enemy Act of seventeen ninety eight,
and he's going to get rid of the drug cartels
and the criminal gangs, and it allows for deportation of
people from countries which the United States is at war with.
Think of the flood of the drugs coming across the border.
It was over one hundred thousand Americans eighteen to thirty
four that died from opioid overdoses and everything with that. Well,

(21:48):
has any country around the world killed one hundred thousand
Americans this year now, but the drug war has.

Speaker 3 (21:55):
We're at war.

Speaker 1 (21:55):
They've invaded the United States. Yes, they didn't think about
that in seventeen ninety eight, but they knew that there
was such a thing called an alien enemy that ever
might be in the United States and we could actually
deport them. Borders are Tom Holman vowed to crack down.
According to a report New York Post, they said ICE

(22:16):
agents are ready to pack up their desk and start
marching orders. They're going to flood sanctuary cities with officers,
and it is going to be a standdown here in California.
That's my prediction, and we'll see how it all works out, though.

Speaker 3 (22:30):
They assistant Trevor Jerry Show Londo Valley's Powers.

Speaker 1 (22:34):
Dog showdown out West, because we're going to have a
borders are that's going to be coming in with federal
agents and you're going to have local law enforcement that
as we heard Sheriff Chad Bianco say, they're at the
top of the hour, they're going to be on the
jurisdics and of SB fifty four, sanctuary state of California,
the borders are. Tom Holman was on Donald Trump Junior's

(22:54):
podcast and he's asking what he was going to do
in the first second that.

Speaker 3 (22:58):
He's in inauguration day.

Speaker 5 (23:00):
One second in how much will you be able to
improve the life of everyday Americans?

Speaker 4 (23:06):
They got three words for him, dock andall dock Ina Hall,
you're going to see you're shock country back. And look,
like I said before, it isn't just about the deportation
of operation, isn't just about saving the children any about
securing the border.

Speaker 6 (23:21):
What's the result? Less overdose deaths, less sex trafficking, and
for God's sakes, one of the worst crimes around, less
migrants dying. Under this administration, over four thousand aliens had
died a crossing that border a historic record. When President
Trump again had immigraced on ninety percent, had that border
shut down, he saved thousands of lives. So less Aliens die,

(23:44):
less Americans die. Wages will increase because you don't have
all that illegal labor working for pennies on a dollar
up here, s tex trafficking throwing vastly increase. This country
is gonna be alien crime, alien crime. You're gonna see
that reduced significantly. As far as trenda ou MS thirteen
and know thise to you, my game's bigger than your game,

(24:05):
and we're gonna take you out too.

Speaker 1 (24:07):
What about the three hundred and thirty thousand kids that
have disappeared unaccompanied alien children spread out across America? Law
enforcement under SB fifty four. Are you gonna say no
to the FEDS when they're saying they're gonna do a
workplace raid because of trafficking? Do you see the showdown
that's possibly coming? All right, fresnob dot com. What do

(24:31):
Harris voters blame for Trump's victory? First of all, how
about Kamala and Tim Walls. If you can't figure it out,
fresnom b, there you go, that's who you blame for
Trump's victory. Right, And Trump ran a stellar campaign. He
made a stellar choice for vice president with Jade Vance.
They said about a quarter of Kamalo's voters blamed Joe Biden. Oh, okay,

(24:52):
it's Joe's fault. I don't know. Did anybody watch Kamala campaign.
Couldn't answer a simple question like interim f u SD
superintendent mistery her Right, they can't answer simple questions, right,
So who do they blame? Twenty four percent? Let's see
a majority of voters fifty three percent blame neither. They

(25:12):
said it was a bad year for Democrats. Well you, okay,
who are the Democrats? Blame them? They said, they asked
the respondence to what they believe to vote be the
most important factor in the outcome? Forty percent said inflation,
in the state of the economy, eleven percent, immigration, nine

(25:33):
percent cited misinformation. Wow, yeah, they can't figure all this
out yet, can they? No, we're not going to continue
to waste money. Pavek Ramaswami, talking about how he's going
to get in there and fix the District of Columbia, says, we.

Speaker 5 (25:51):
Want to go right in through executive action, to do.
The failures of the executive branch that need to be addressed,
because the dirty little secret right now, Maria is the
people we elect to run the government, they're not the
ones who actually run the government. It's the unelected bureaucrats
in the administrative state that was created through executive action.
It's going to be fixed through executive action. Think about
the Supreme Court's environment over the last several years, they've

(26:13):
held that many of those regulations are unconstitutional at a
large scale. Rescind those regulations, pull those rigs back, and
then that gives us the industrial logic to then downsize
the size of that administrative state. And the beauty of
all of this is that can be achieved just through
executive action without Congress.

Speaker 1 (26:30):
What about all the waste of the bureaucratic state. Are
you going to see a lawn musk and Vivek Ramaswami
out there with their hard hats on and the big
fake scissors with the ribbon and cutting things that open
up and spend more of our money with the government.
I love this next line from Ramaswami.

Speaker 5 (26:50):
Here, Look, we're not going to be cutting ribbons, We're
going to be cutting costs. And so those recommendations are
going to be on a real time basis. But I
do want to take a big step back and understand
for people to understan and the scope of this problem.
Over half a trillion dollars that spent every year right
now was not even authorized by Congress in the first place.

Speaker 1 (27:08):
Hmm, look at that. Who's doing it then, unelected bureaucrats
that are still there every administration change. That's what we
talked about about cleaning out the swamp. You have to
have the right tools and the people that Trump is
surrounding himself now he understands what tools he needs to

(27:30):
get in there and clean out that swamp. Right last time,
as I always say, he was giving a roll of
paper towels and told to go down the basement. It's
flooded and there's alligators. Clean it out, right with a
roll of paper towels. No, Now he has machinery, He
has alligator catchers, he has water suckers. Right, he has

(27:52):
air freshener. People. Let's get in there and get her done.
But are we going to have the protests on the
streets and the deportations. Oh if you thought they had
a hissy fit about kids in cages when they would
separate families and have to store the children somewhere, right,
wait until they got kids in the back of National

(28:13):
Guard trucks. Well, what what are these elected officials around America?
Which side are they going to go on? New York
City Mayor Eric Adams, he was on the view and
they asked him, will you work with Trump about these deportations?

Speaker 7 (28:29):
Kind of side of that coin, though, You've got Trump
who says that part of his plan is to send
troops into the States and into the cities to conduct
these mass deportations. Would you let him come into New
York City? What's your scenario? What are your plans if
he tries to do that in New York City.

Speaker 8 (28:45):
We have sat down just scenario plannings on all of
these issues, and they are a lot of laws, a lot
of requirements. What we must do is to be prepared
to address the issues as they come in front of us.

Speaker 2 (28:58):
Our team has been there, all right.

Speaker 1 (29:00):
Don't be Kamala Harris quit with the word salids say
are you going to work with Trump?

Speaker 2 (29:04):
Trump?

Speaker 1 (29:04):
Are you talking about? Your team has been there? Keep going.

Speaker 8 (29:06):
We looked at all of these issues and all the
conversations that are taking place. The operational lies of the
theories that people want to do is different from the
actualization of it. Again, people conflate sanctuary cities with the
migrant and the asylum issue. That's not the same thing
people who are parolled into the country.

Speaker 1 (29:25):
It's not the same thing sanctuary cities and the migrants
or the illegal issue. That's why they're there because you're
a sanctuary city and pay for them to live there,
literally give them money and put them in nice hotels.
He won't answer the question. He he's got a little
kamala going on here with that response.

Speaker 8 (29:43):
Doesn't he the sanctuary cities is stating to those who
are here that you have the right to access the
services of this city because that's how we treat people
in New York City.

Speaker 1 (29:55):
Doesn't sound like he's learned his lesson, or maybe he
didn't want to be I don't know, scolded by the women.

Speaker 3 (30:00):
The View.

Speaker 1 (30:02):
New York Posts said that ABC News brass are in
panic mode. They're hunting for conservative voices to balance the
anti Trump rhetoric on the view, do you really think
they're gonna bring in anybody like come on, no, if
anybody was good enough, they'd be in the Trump administration.
They're gonna be doing something else. See, I don't know
who would want to walk out on that stage with

(30:22):
that COVID of which is out there. Ooh, can you
imagine that? You would have to almost have the Trump personality. Yeah,
you'd have to be a female with a Trump personality
to go out there on the view, or a man
that's gender fluid that you know, he could go. Scott
Jennings in a dress, put him out there. That's Whoopi Goldberg,
Joy behar Sonny hosting, Sarah Haynes, Anna Navarro, Alyssa Griffin.

(30:48):
They're all Trump bashers. They all endorse Comma. They're so
out of touch with America right. They see Trump and
anybody that supports him as Nazis, as barely human. I
hope they I hope they learned it. They they moved
even further right of Chay Gavarro, their comedy socialist Marxists,

(31:11):
and you're gonna start seeing cuts. They don't have the audience.
CNN is gonna fire hundreds of staff members and they're
even talking about some of the major personalities on there.
The Scott Jennings should have his own show. He probably will. Uh,
here's some of the salaries that I saw. What do
you think Anderson Cooper makes?

Speaker 2 (31:27):
Here?

Speaker 1 (31:29):
How many? Oh twenty million? Did you see this or
did you know that?

Speaker 2 (31:33):
Oh?

Speaker 1 (31:33):
He already knew it. Then Aaron Burnett made six million.
Caitlin Collins, she's a little newer to the game, makes
three million. Chris Wallace, he resigned. He's going to go
try try podcasting. And they're ratings. MSNBC and CNN have
just fallen off the cliff, right, But now you got
up Mika and Joe going down to visit Trump. What

(31:56):
did you hear? Yes, Morning Breath went down to visit
Trump at mar A Largo. They took a knee, they
poled their head. Please forgive us King Trump. I'll play
you the audio next.

Speaker 3 (32:06):
This is the Trevor Terry Show on the Valley's Coward Talk.

Speaker 1 (32:10):
They're only scary to people like you because we're gonna
get in and clean out the swamp with these nominations. Yes,
Morning Breath and his Illuminati spawn wife, Joe and Mika
got on a plane went down to mar A Lago.
Now you got the MSNBC, the staff, the production teams,
they're all in a tizzy, and rightfully so think about it.

(32:33):
Think right now, if somebody had told you somebody was
so bad your neighbor was Adolf Hitler, that he was
a racist, a homophobe, all these anti American, Russian asset
and then they're over, they're barbecuing, right, you'd be like,
stop it.

Speaker 2 (32:47):
You weren't telling me the true.

Speaker 9 (32:48):
Joe and I went to mar A Lago to meet
personally with President elect Trump. It was the first time
we have seen him in seven years.

Speaker 10 (32:59):
Talked about a lot of issues, including abortion, mass deportation,
threats of political retribution against political opponents and media outlets.
We talked about that a good bit and that's going
to come as no surprise to anybody who watches this show,
has watched it over the past year or over the
past decade, that we didn't see eye to eye on

(33:21):
a lot of issues, and we told him so.

Speaker 9 (33:24):
What we did agree on was to restar our communications.

Speaker 1 (33:27):
We're going to talk to Hitler, We're going to find
out how he's going to be sending people to the
gas chambers. We're going to stay in contact with him.

Speaker 9 (33:33):
For those asking why we would go speak to the
President elect during such fraught times, especially between US, I
guess I would ask back, why wouldn't.

Speaker 1 (33:44):
We because you said he's Hitler, stop it share? Would
you put them in perspective?

Speaker 2 (33:49):
Please?

Speaker 10 (33:49):
Since the day our founding fathers signed the Declaration of Independence,
our country has been run almost exclusively by old white men.

Speaker 1 (33:57):
Okay, there you go, there's some honesty from the left finally,
right John Jones winning the UFC battle. Trump was there,
Rfk was there, Alamn Musk was there. Even I saw
Eric Trump was there. Even Speaker Johnson got to go
hang out with the cool guys. Tulsi was there, saw her, right.
But this is awesome, man, God working through cage fighting.

Speaker 11 (34:22):
Well, everybody's cheering and so happy. I want to acknowledge
Jesus Christ.

Speaker 1 (34:28):
Do mister Jones.

Speaker 11 (34:31):
I'll tell you what, man, I cannot take credit for
a gift like this. Man, I really owe it all
to him. And I know that there's millions of people
around the world watching right now. And I just want
to let you guys know that Jesus loves you so much.
That's all I'll say about that.

Speaker 1 (34:43):
Wow, man, look at that things are changed. And if
I told you, let's say three years ago. Trump's gonna
win the presidency, elamn Musk, Tulci, Gabbard and RFK Junior
are going to be there with him, and John Jones
is going to be thinking Jesus on the States. You'd
be like, well, oh yeah, Trump uh got shot in
the face and almost got him a second tank. You'd

(35:05):
be like, what in the world happened? Well, God's in control.
And I would have had to say that even if
Kamala had won the

Speaker 3 (35:12):
Assistant Trevor Kerry show on The Valley's Power Dog
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