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December 4, 2024 • 32 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
They're at the Trump rollaby talking about Act Blue, and
it looks like they're in trouble. You know, the little
three digits on the back of your credit card that
proves that it's you. That's the proof proof that it's you.
If you don't have that, it's really hard to track
back who the donor is. So that's what the congressman
was talking about in Trump introducing him of one of
the biggest stories of the campaign. Did you ever stop

(00:22):
though and think how so many we were? What led
to believe working class Americans came out of the pocket
to the tune of one point four billion dollars in
the matter of a few months over the Kamalist summer
campaign of joy. How ridiculous is it to think that

(00:44):
she actually raised that much and it came from average
people across America? Hogwash? Act Blues the Democrat Party's main
fundraising arm and David Strong, you can go read this.
It's hotair dot com. That's where where I saw this story,

(01:05):
hotair dot com. David Strom and it's called ActBlue in trouble.
And he educated me in this article to the term smurfing.
Smurfing that's a method of laundering illegal campaign contributions through
straw donors. It's a way to break up all the
contributions that exceed the limits and the smaller donations to

(01:29):
go around any kind of body looking into it.

Speaker 2 (01:31):
Right.

Speaker 1 (01:32):
A Wisconsin judge has approved a subpoena against Acblue, saying quote,
something is not right after hearing evidence that Actblues using
the names of unsuspecting people to launder dark money to
Democrat campaigns. Journalists have been tracking down these individuals and
their identities that have been used to launder Texas donor.

(01:55):
A lady named Janie Bosco of Horseshoe Bay, Texas. She
was one of the un authorized donations and the Attorney
general offices investigating. She said, I'm not rich. I don't
give that kind of money they had heard down as
sixteen thousand dollars donated. So you go, you just pick
enough names and people like we contributions like that. Several

(02:15):
Attorney generals from Republican states have opened up investigations and
they found out that a Republican in Wisconsin, they used
his identity to launder money to Kamala. Yeah, Republican, even
if it was a Democrat, and they didn't know about it.
It's illegal, right act bleu these campaign stuff, and you

(02:39):
just can't say it's only Democrats. You know what happens
all throughout politics. But this is the biggest of the
Democrat Party, very much part of that one point four
billion dollars. Trump praised three hundred and twenty something million dollars.
She got one point four billion. Guys, there weren't enough
people in America. Go obviously we just saw during this

(03:03):
economy that she was part of helping create. You think
they got enough extra money sitting around working class Americans
to come out to the two to one point four
billion dollars. That's stunning and such a little time. Okay,
stop it. You're just anything that Democrats do. You Republicans
just come back and make a big deal about it

(03:25):
on your talk shows, and it's the economy stupid. James
Carville James Carville, Democrat strategist. Trump's a Hitler kind of guy,
suggesting an audit of the Harris campaign. He wants to
figure out who exactly benefited. But I don't know if
an audit would just show the spending, but we need

(03:45):
to find out the money raised and what that's what
these attorney generals the Republican States are doing right. They
can get stuff done now. They can call up Ring Ring, FBI, Hey, cash, Betel,
how you doing, hey good? How you doing? Governor right?
Where the money come from? Where are the real don't
who put this money through? And let me replay. Then

(04:07):
you heard a little bit about this. Now, this is
what Trump was talking about out on the campaign trail.
So they've known about it for quite a while.

Speaker 3 (04:14):
Here, I'm afraid the fakers. He'll probably all turn off
the cameras now. But I say, could you just give
just a little prelude because it's I think it's going
to be one of the biggest stories in a long time.
Even if they don't want to cover it, they'll be
forced to cover it. So I'd like to ask Congressman
Brian's style to come up place.

Speaker 1 (04:32):
When he's the one that came up and talked about it.
How they're not using the CVV number, the security number
on the back of the card for processing credit cards
that would allow for a fake, fraudulent well not fake,
but a fraudulent contribution. It keeps a card disassociated from
an individual. Yeah, a donor. Can you use a gift

(04:54):
card with no name attached, and then input the name
of anybody as the donor. Who's this director Ryan Nigel
that gave eighteen thousand dollars? Well, just run it through.
Man the IEM Wisconsin. His name was Mark Block, Republican
unwitting donor to Kamala. I mean, now is the time
to shut this down, right, shut it down. Trump blamed

(05:19):
his twenty twenty loss on the mail in ballots, and
I find this fascinating in this whole last year, everything
that's happened. I mean, when we think back, we thought,
really we thought twenty twenty three was crazy, and this
is just I mean think of the assassination attempts and
Joe Biden and the debate and come on the scene

(05:40):
and all everything that's happened. But one thing big that
happened was Trump's stance on hey, no vote on the
day of these mail in ballots, how they cheat? And
he was saying that in January. By April he was
telling everybody to mail it in, right, the early mailing,
and early on Trump had you know, a lot of people,

(06:04):
including myself. I don't listen to everything he says, but
I go along with him. He's a smart man and
he kind of wired us like the distrusts right, no
same day voting, Right, that's how you get crooked elections
if you don't have that right. But in April he
texted out absentee voting, early voting, election day voting, are

(06:24):
all good Republicans supposed to make a plan, register and vote. Well,
Republicans did it early this year. And one of the
things that I realized about that was Fresno County GOP
chair list Colstot talking about how they keep contacting people
and contacting people, and these candidates contact people up until

(06:46):
it's your checked office. Oh they've already voted. We don't
need to get a hold of him anymore. All the emails,
all the text messages, all the flyers that are sent out.
So the early voting that gives them more time to
spend money and resources on getting other people out to
the polls. And the campaign early voting had volunteers. It

(07:10):
was called Trump Force forty seven and they found out
across all fifty states and knocked on millions of doors
and one of the big things organization. And I met
a few men roughly around my age who have said
they got kids now in their twenties that are working
at Turning Point USA. They're always so proud and rightfully

(07:31):
so to say that, right, Charlie Kirk and the youth
vote and all of this Turning Point action. They had
a field army. They paid thousands of door knockers in
these swing states, and the emphasis was on early voting
and if you wanted to cast your ballot in person,
they were even like, we'll drive you to the polls.

(07:52):
It was a lot of organization and Turning Point USA
were there in Pennsylvania. They had seventy five PAGs efforts
to focus on Pennsylvania and their claiming they generated as
many as fifty thousand new Republican votes and they included
a few thousand Amish. They went out into the Amish
communities to these rural communities. See, we think everybody think, oh, California, Hollywood,

(08:16):
San Francisco. They don't always think rural communities. You know,
you think Philadelphia, Pittsburgh. Right, there's a lot of farming
out there, man. And they got a lot of people
that they got out and got them registered, and they
made sure that they came in and actually voted. They
were mayors of their territories that they canvas Allah Power

(08:37):
Talk Precinct President program, you know the president of your precinct. Yes. Indeed,
they also branched out across Arizona, Michigan, Nevada, and Wisconsin,
and Turning Point Action helped. They say, according to their
internal numbers, no less than three hundred thousand voters cast
their vote. And they also were in North Carolina. They

(09:00):
hired sixteen hundred staff. And they said they kept drilling
in two numbers. This is from Charlie Kirk's Turning Point
two numbers seven and nine. And you're like, seven and nine, okay,
why would they drill those numbers in the campaign people?
They said, between seven and nine times the seventy times
a single low propensity voter on average must be contacted

(09:24):
before they'll return a mail in ballot. They actually they
call it seven and nine and they call it targeted harassment.
Would you leave me alone? No, man, go back on
the ninth time, go back all right here, here, here, here,
here you go heead out here all right. They said.

(09:46):
The group made more than eleven million phone calls shy
a four million text in the four target states, and
they knocked on nearly two million doors. Wow, that's that's
what you call grassroot effort out there, and it makes
me think of that person to person contact being so important.
That's why Brettefeld walked the whole time. Nick Richardson did

(10:11):
a whole lot of walking. He had he had his
campaign people standing on the corners, and I would see
him on the weekends. I'm not on those streets during
the week that much, but I would see him out
there on the weekends. That's grassroots meeting peep ball and
I got to see in my life. And this was
pre social media. And I might have told this before,
but uh, running out of storage. But the rap groups

(10:37):
like bone Thugs and we would take them to barbershops
in Baltimore and DC and in like in North Carolina
and Charlotte and Winston Salem. You just walk in a
barbershop like wow, that human to human contact. That that's
so to make To shake one hand as a politician

(10:58):
and have that person go I never heard about you
and have a you know, a quick you know, thirty
second just means so much more than one hundred likes
on social media, It really does. And turning point getting
out like that and a lot of other organizations and
here locally, we turned Presnol County back red everybody that

(11:19):
was involved here with getting out and stepping up to
the plate man knowing that there was a ninety nine
mile on hour fastball coming in and you got around
on that, drove it into the corner, did a Pete
Rose slide in the third base, got up, dust it off,
saw it was a bad throw, and you ran home
and scored. I just saw a picture of Pete Rose

(11:39):
like nineteen seventy three. Just I mean a level as
an ironing board, like two feet off the ground, about
five feet away from third base doing his classic Superman
slide in right. That's how hard some people actually worked
and got out there and got it done and found
a lot of first time voters as well. And boy,

(12:01):
the winnings just keeps on happening. It really does, and
it feels good. If we can't have heg Seth as
the defense secretary, then we'll get Ron Desanta. See there's
a bench, there's a bench sitting there. But you know
the trump dance, everybody does it to Ymca and two.

(12:22):
The song finally made it to number one on Billboard
after forty five years and held on for two weeks.
Victor Willis, he's the black dude and village people, the cop,
you know, the motorcycle looking cop. Or he was a
motorcycle cop right. He's a co founder and singer. He
issued a lengthy statement on Facebook Sunday explaining that he's
perfectly fine with Trump playing the song YMCA at his rallies,

(12:46):
and he said he's pushing back against mainstream media labeling
the hit tune a gay anthem. He said, since twenty twenty,
I got a thousand complaints about Trump's use of YMCA,
I decide to ask the President ident to stop using
it because his use had become a nuisance to me. However,
the use continued because the campaign knew they had attained

(13:08):
a political use license from BMI, and absent that license
being terminated, they had every right to continue using YMCA,
and they did. The motorcycle cop at YMCA. Co founder
mister Victor Willis said he asked BMI and his partners

(13:29):
in France to withhold from withdrawing the campaign's use for
YMCA because he said we greatly benefited. He said it
was stuck in number two on the chart prior to
the President's use. He made it number one on the
chart after forty five years, and he said it's generated
several million dollars. We think the President elect and he's

(13:50):
we're glad that we allowed him continue to play the song.
And he pushed back about calling that a gay anthem.
Here's his quote on that. Right, that's what I always thought, right,
and there were some gay guys in the Village People.
But he said, there's not a lot of talk, especially
the late that WYMCA is somehow gay anthem. As I
said numerous times in the past, that is a false

(14:13):
assumption based on the fact that my writing partner was
gay and some not all, of Village People were gay,
and that the first Village People album was totally about
gay life. He said, get your minds out of the gutter.
Well that you can't say that today that oh, that's
that's homophobic, right, Yeah, the gutter. Wait, because you're gay,

(14:34):
you're in the gutter. Come on, Victor, come on. He
said the MC the YMCA was apparently being used as
some sort of gay hangout, and he said nothing about
being at the Y being a hangout for gays when
I wrote the lyrics, never once stated he said the

(14:54):
Y was known for swimming, basketball, track, cheap food, and
cheap rooms. And when I say hang out with with
all the boys, he said in the seventies that was
black slaying for black guys hanging out together for sports
or gambling or whatever. There's nothing gay about.

Speaker 2 (15:08):
This is the Treportary Show on the Valley's Power Talk.

Speaker 1 (15:13):
They got a Congress and Jared Moscowitz, Democrat of Florida's
going to join the House of Representatives Doze Caucus. He's
actually this. Democrats advocated for taking this secret service from
under the Department of Homeland Security, and that's something that
some Republicans had floated a few months ago. He said,

(15:34):
he wants to streamline the government process and reduce ineffected
government spending, and it should not be a partisan issue.
That's right. Well, we don't ever divvy up the national
debt Dewey by Republican. Now, it's all of us get
in there and save some money. It's are you even

(15:56):
talking about Department of Homeland Security going away? Well, you
can't do that part of the American gover It's only
been around since two thousand and three. We got along
with it before then. Why not eliminate it altogether? Because
ever since we got homeland security, our homeland has become
less secure. No, we don't need it. We don't need it.

(16:16):
I mean we could stand a little bit a lot
of fat trimmed away. In Washington, d C. Eliminating entire
agencies that have been good thing to do. Saw somebody
talking about cutting everything, and they gave a quote from
the words of the late Perry Goldwater. The Arizonaan said,

(16:39):
I have little interest in streamline in the government are
making it more efficient, for I intend to reduce its size.
I do not undertake to promote welfare. For I propose
to extend freedom. My aim is to not pass laws,
but to repeal them. Yeah, California legislature, we'll talk about

(17:01):
it next year. But five thousand laws a year, what's
going on? That's so stupid beyond almost as dumb as
the state lawmaker in New York calling for a coalition
of northeastern Northeastern states to succeed from the Union and
join Canada because Trump's coming back to the White House.

(17:23):
You know, New York, Massachusetts, Vermont, in Connecticut talking about
how they could join Canada. That's the craziest of the
craziest of the craziest that I've seen, right, Yeah, the
we know Trump though, Joy Reid she didn't get the
Canadian joke at all. No, but if they want to

(17:45):
go to Canada, these states, let them go. I'm sure
some of the New Yorkers might have a problem with that, right, Yeah,
the the sold out rally at Madison Square Gardens, some
of those people might have an issue with that, I
would think, right, But listen, enjoy read about Trump making
the joke about Trudeau could be governor of Canada when

(18:06):
we make on the fifty first state.

Speaker 4 (18:08):
Demanding Hamas released all hostages being held in Gaza before
his inauguration or there will be quote all hell to
pay in the Middle East, even reportedly threatening Canada, according
to Fox, when Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau went Tomorrow
Lago this weekend to try to talk Trump out of
his twenty five percent tariff threat, Trump apparently suggested that

(18:30):
if Canada can't handle the tariffs that would violate the
NAFTA upgrade Trump himself signed into law the USMCA, they
should just become the fifty first state. Just become this
fifty first state instead and allow Trudeau to be reduced
to Governor of the state.

Speaker 2 (18:47):
The assistant Trevor Carrey show on the Valley's Power Talk.

Speaker 1 (18:51):
And yeah, this was back what I remember when the
kids were little. You go through and almost like a
bunch of kids. Even a twenty dollars bill, you could
get out the door with a drive through with a
two grown ups and kids. How could that happen? You're well,
I guess you forgot what twenty years ago was. And

(19:12):
this didn't change for a long time either. These prices
did not. And let's see a double double. How much
you think in twenty four, twenty years ago a double
double was in and out it was two dollars and
sixty cents. A cheeseburger was a buck seventy, A hamburger
a buck forty five, fries or a dollar five they

(19:34):
were probably eighty nine cents in two thousand and one.
Shakes a dollar forty five, milk seventy cents, coffee seventy cents,
and SODA's were a small ninety five cents up to
an extra large out of buck forty nine. Yeah, I
swear the day's Democrat challenger Adam Gray, has slipped the

(19:57):
thirteenth district in the nation's five house race. Boy, they
got it in before the it was a month. Look
at that right on the December fourth, Well, how did
that happened? One hundred and eighty seven vote difference incumbent
Republican John Dorte one hundred and eighty seven votes. Now

(20:18):
are those people voting or are those one hundred and
eighty seven ballots? Well, we got ballots everywhere, so I
guess you in a month you might be able to
find enough to catch up and then enough to go
over the line. See see what the system creates situations
like going, this doesn't seem fair. Sorry, you didn't sign
your ballot, We throw it out. Sorry, it doesn't even

(20:43):
look like your name at all. We're throwing it out.
You know what, here's something that they should do. They
should give them. If they didn't sign it, we throw
it out. If it's a signature thing, maybe somebody did
do that. How many votes would that actually be and

(21:03):
how long would that take? I'll say, if it doesn't
look right and it's even questionable, and political consultant taut
Cloud said, you literally almost have to have instead of
your name like an ax there. If it looks even close,
he goes they just they run them, they run them through.
So no, it should not take a month, It should
not even take I say we give it forty eight

(21:26):
hours in case of any kind that's the limit that
you have. We're going to know within forty eight hours.
Here it should be the night of the election. But
it is California. We're not as smart as everybody else,
so we need to factor that in with this here,
So forty eight hours because one hundred and eighty seven vote.
Can you imagine if this race was the final deciding

(21:47):
race for the House, who won the control of the House.
The Democrats are Republicans, and it came down to one
hundred and eighty seven votes here in the valley, well,
it got pretty close to that. The Fresno b one
as far as a Loerra did a fair opinion piece
on two of the valley's first time representatives to the

(22:07):
State Assembly, because when I saw the headline of Central
Valley's newest Assembly members are young, Republican and hopeful, I went, wow, one,
that's refreshing. Let's go see how he rips on him
here or something right? He didn't. He talked about David
Togapa twenty eight and Alexandra Mesito at thirty. Of course,
Tonga paw in here. He started his campaign I think

(22:30):
what four years ago. Yeah, he's been out working it
for a long time, walking around in here on this
microphone any opportunity that he was given and asking. There
were some times he's like, hey, I got something I
want to say. I was like, come on in, man.
He's an aggressive guy and that's what it's going to take.
Miss Mesito came in I think once or maybe we

(22:51):
had her on the phone also as well, but she
did come in. I remember she came in. They're going
to be the youngest members of the State Assembly. Miss
Mesito is thirty, mister Tonga Pa twenty eight. And they
were sworn into office Monday with twenty three new colleagues
up there. So yeah, they talked about a little bit
about their backgrounds and all this, and he even wrote

(23:12):
their young but that doesn't mean they lack experience when
it comes to politics. I thought, okay, fair, maybe we're
seeing a Washington Post turnaround. At the Fresne b Mamon
McClatchy said, guys, this is not working. We can't keep
doing this right, something positive, find some all right, I'll
find these two young people. All right, Yeah, that looks good.
That's exactly what we're looking for here. Let's the valley

(23:33):
term presno County turn back red. We got to get
some good red stories up right, and this is a
good one. They said they don't like experience. Messito a
CEO of the environmental consulting company. She's appeared before state
agencies and commissions, the lobby on behalf of ag Taga
PAS served as chief of staff to Nathan Magzig until
noon Monday. That's the President County Board of Supervisors. They said.

(23:56):
Here's what they wrote. They said, in talking with the
frozene B Editory Board, we both expressed a willingness for
a bipartisan approach. They said. Democrats hold a sixty twenty advantage,
so they'll have their work cutout to push their priorities.
And well, good man, I'm glad they got elected. Now
they become just like any other elected person. We're going
to see how they vote and we'll judge them on that.

(24:19):
Good people can vote wrong ways, as I've found out
over the years, and especially with the influence of not
knowing the field right. That's the hardest time to stand
up on your principles. Is when you're brand new to
something right, you don't know the lay of the lay
of the land. But I'm sure they will make us

(24:40):
all proud here in the valley. I was talking about
five thousand bills in its state legislature. Cowmatters dot org
had that headline. They said, five thousand bills is too many.
I was like, I can't even believe that we got
five hundred. Well, I guess they have to justify their
ex resistance. Have you ever worked for a manager or

(25:02):
a boss that just makes you fill out TPS reports
to just to justify their existence?

Speaker 2 (25:09):
Right?

Speaker 1 (25:09):
There are those managers and bosses that lead you, know,
that inspire you to do things, and those that like
manage you. I'm gonna give you so like, I guess
they feel like, well, I've been elected to create laws
and bills. Hope and pray that I will, But today
I'm still just a bill. Five thousand is too many.

(25:31):
Assembly Speaker Robert Reeves lowered the numbers that they're allowed
to introduce. Oh good, we're going in a right direction.
They're going to reduce the number of bills a member
of the state Assembly and sin it can introduce each
to your session from fifty that used to be the limit.
You could only do fifty, so like Tonga Paw could
get up there and do only fifty bills in a

(25:51):
two year session. It's now down to thirty five in
the Assembly and from forty to thirty five in the Senate.
That is too many. Need one individual doing twenty five
bills a year to come out to fifty in a
two year session. Not even thirty five over those two years. No,

(26:12):
uh huh, I say that you for each year give
them I don't know five, pick the five that are
the most important. I don't know, haven't sat one of
those roundtable discussion meetings. But five thousand little too much.
We don't need our life changing that much.

Speaker 4 (26:30):
Now.

Speaker 1 (26:30):
If there were five thousand bills to correct this state,
I'd be like, turn it into fifty thousand if you
need to correct this state. But they that's not what
they do. These are Democrat bills, almost all of them.
You wonder why the state is in such demise? Well,
could it be we have five thousand bills every two years?

(26:52):
Coming forward? My buddy that started a successful business even
though the state didn't want him to, He said, it's
like they all the regulations and the rules. It's like
they make it as difficult for you as you can
to start a business. So I guess that's what rules create.
I guess rules create a U Haul's phone ringing off

(27:15):
the hook, that's what rules create. They said. Nineteen of
the forty senators hit or went over the bill limit?
How do you even go over the bill limit? In
the Assembly, twenty four of the eighty hit their cap
or went over. These these are people that just I
guess bill power hungry. And all the legislatures introduced eight

(27:39):
and twenty one bills and two thousand, two hundred and
fifty two went to Governor Gavin Newsom. Why why.

Speaker 2 (27:49):
Okay?

Speaker 1 (27:49):
I promised as promised the left loon lunatic that I'm
following recently and have for a while. But I'm really
focusing on on Joy read on MSNBC because she's the
one I think really does need some help. It's not
normal and that's why I am playing it. And Ben
burkwaum I go back to how he caught her on

(28:10):
the streets of DC and she was all smiling. He
put the microphone up and said, Hi, Joy, is that
cultural appropriation your hair color because she's has blonde hair
sometimes when she's not shaving it off to protest Trump.

Speaker 4 (28:24):
We are seeing a global trend of the far right surgeing.
It isn't just happening here. Let's bring you back to
the US and to our local gangster, Donald Trump. He's
not even president yet.

Speaker 2 (28:35):
This is the Trevor Carry Show on the Valley's Power Talk.

Speaker 1 (28:40):
Years old, I could ride over to my friend Russell
in Memphis, right and not today. I wouldn't let a
kid right across the city of Memphis. But it really
depends where you grew up and all of that. But roaming, man,
that was what you did. That wasn't just like something
that was life. Victually in the summer, you would wake

(29:01):
up in the morning, you'd meet up with some friends.
Sometimes it might be pre planned, sometime it might be
just impromptu. Remember the days when nobody could Remember those days,
you'd have to play with your little brother or something.
Nobody could come out and play, either out of town
or in trouble or somewhere doctor's appointment. Like those days,

(29:22):
you'd have to be creative, really creative, right, But yeah,
we could roam around, and today you can get in trouble.
A forty one year old mom was handcuffed putting the
back of a cruiser taking to jail for letting a
ten year old son walk a mile from home. And
you're going, okay, is this New Jersey? New York?

Speaker 4 (29:42):
What?

Speaker 1 (29:42):
What state did this? This is down a little place
called Mineral Bluff, Georgia, a town of three hundred and
seventy people. And I wouldn't let a ten year old
walk down streets in New York City or Philadelphia or
the Tenderloin District out in a little country town like that.
It would depend on the maturity of the kid. But

(30:02):
that didn't I wouldn't like driving down the road in
Mineral Bluff, Georgia and go, hey, let's call that in.
Somebody did. The mother was running off for a doctor appointment.
She couldn't find your ten year old. She lives on
sixteen acres. The boy's grandfather lives there. All relatives are nearby.

(30:22):
She thought he's in the woods playing somewhere. But what
he did, he didn't tell the grandfather. And he walked
a mile into town to a dollar general and a
woman saw him walking alone. I'm concerned, you see Okay,
I'm gonna call the police. Maybe it was a sweet lady.
I'm sure that she didn't have bad intentions in her heart.
But mind your own business, lady. He's ten now, it's

(30:44):
not like he's three or four. So anyhow, got home
and the mom said she had a call from the
police the sheriff, and the sheriff said he could have
been run over or kidnapped, anything could have happened there.
So she scolded her son, thought it was the end
of the incident, and then later that evening she was handcuffed,
put in the back of a cruiser, mugshot fingerprints taken.

(31:06):
She said she could not believe it. Couldn't believe it.
So a safety plan was proposed to her by Georgia's
Division of Family and Child Services, and it included a
GPS tracking app on her son's phone that she had
to put on there. The assistant district attorney suggested that
she signs a safety plan and the criminal charges would

(31:26):
be dropped. And you know what, she said, Nope, nope,
not signing it, not going to sign it. So now
she could face a thousand dollars fine and a year
in jail. The attorney looked up the statistics and said, statistically,

(31:47):
you would have to keep your child outside unsupervised for
seven hundred and fifty thousand years for them to be
snatched by a stranger. But of course all parents realize
that there's a lot of what they call them helicopter
parents over them all the time. I'm right, and I
guess you've got some more roamors or free range parents
as they call them, right, But I you know, to

(32:08):
call police. I think that was okay, that's okay. But
what the police did afterwards way over the line right
in that and that's something. And that's down in Georgia, right,
I mean, you would think that might be in some
really up to
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