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August 27, 2025 36 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Is kilmar A breaka Garcia, the beautiful Maryland father, the
MS thirteen trafficker what his wife called the authorities multiple
times over domestic abuse. Is Garcia anything like Sam Salm Bapor,
the Epismo manager. Absolutely not No. And I've stated many

(00:21):
times on this show there are many people that have
come into this country illegally that they got great hearts.
I say, you can trust them with your forgit ATM
pin code. You could drop the kids off. They would
take care of them as complete strangers. They would treat
them just like their own kids and protect them. So
we got some really good people that have broken the law,
and we got people that have broken the law that

(00:43):
are demons, and everybody in between. Now, as I've followed
this story here the last few days, it seems like
he was brought here at three years old. Now he
has been more than sixty three days in counting inside
an iced attention. And this ass to do with paperwork

(01:03):
and his green card and what a lot of people
would talk about would be technical issues. Congressman Consta joined
and tried to take a trip down to the facility
in Bakersfield, and he said they would not let me
see him. I was frustrated. We've been making arrangement for
two weeks now. This guy Sam, I guess most people

(01:27):
call him Palm, came to the United States at three
years old. Recently filed paperwork to reinstate his Green card.
His record mostly clean. ABC thirty dot com set exception
of a non aggravated burglary over twenty years ago when
he was eighteen, which is currently not considered a deportable felony.

(01:48):
So here's what Salem had to say. Say. What kind
of policies or rules do they have that I can't
see a congressman that is willing to see me. I
don't understand why. It doesn't add up in my mind.
It sound like someone just came from president to see me.
They're visiting hours for that. My attorney showed up with
they have let me see him, So why not the
congressman and his team? He got two city council members

(02:10):
back in up Perea in Carbasi now calling for Salm
to be released. Palm quoted here at your Central Valley
dot com. This is the Pismo manager. He said, I'm
praying to God when they look at this he administrations
and understands. Hey, this guy has really rehabilitated himself. He's
not who he used to be. He's one of one
hundred fighting for the American Dream. Council member of Perea

(02:34):
said no family should be separated, especially for someone that
may have committed a crime twenty years ago but has
since made up for that. He served his time, he
learned his lesson should be just for everything he's done
to contribute to our society. Since then, he's been the
manager of Pismo's North Presno for about ten years. He
said his family came from Iran persecution from his family
when he was a child. He was given a green

(02:55):
card as a team as a young adult. He served
time though for that burglary, and because of the record,
he started the process to get his green card again.
I guess maybe he's thinking, there's so many more people
in front of me, they're going to be coming after
and they won't coming after me. I wonder how many

(03:15):
people feel that way in America right now, because they're working,
they're paying taxes, they have a job. But still, man,
that's a monkey on your back, it really is. He said.
I want people to understand immigration's very complicated process. There's
difficult protocols and procedures that we can't say, like, hey,
just send this guy back to his country. He said,

(03:37):
it's more complicated than that. Well, immigration, I guess if
you do it the right way, it might not be
just an afternoon a sip and iced tea, laying down,
eating funions on the couch could be a little complicated
compared to most of the things we do. But it's
still the process and you gotta follow it. If Americans

(03:59):
get pulled over, oh I let my license expire. If
the cop wants to do it, he can go ahead
and have the car towed. Oh I don't have my
insurance with me. Oh I didn't have insurance. They could. Hey,
we go through these things too now, Solom said, And
I've never met the guy. I don't even think I've

(04:20):
been to the restaurant. I've heard about it. Very nice place,
I guess. Director Ryan Nigel saying, a very nice man.
He went to school with him. Interesting. Interesting, They saying
he could have a hearing coming up in September, and
he hopes to use the court letters or recommendations for

(04:40):
hopefully the judge. He said. If he's not released in September,
there's a chance he can still have to spend another
ninety days in custody waiting for a decision. Now, right now,
where America stands, is that where I want my tax
paying money to go and fight? No, I've written, don't
see that's Is he in violation? Yeah? Yeah? Should he

(05:06):
have done it the right way? Yeah? Did he sneak
in here and hide and steal a social security No?
He came here as a child. It's his only memory.
I have a softer spot in my heart for those
individuals that he wasn't their fault. The parents did the
situation where they should have followed through. It sound like

(05:26):
they did it legally. He was here, they knew who
they were, they were vetted, their names were in a system.
His family did that correctly. They did not sneak in.
He just didn't follow through on what he should have done.
And of course the crime twenty years ago. Now we

(05:47):
have the individuals on the other end of the spectrum. Now,
I don't know what was in the illegal alien's heart.
Seeing from India that was driving the truck with a
driver's license from California, his commercial driver's license to drive
a big rig got in California, made the illegal U

(06:07):
turn killed three people. Do you know ABC, CBS and
NBC have had yet to air a single second on that. Nah,
they didn't. And now they've arrested his brother, he was
also in the truck. They had video of this, and
they made it seem a lot of people said, Oh,
he's acting like he doesn't even care. I don't know
if he knew what even happened. An investigation by Transportation

(06:32):
Secretary Duffy told exactly how it happened. He got a license,
originally a commercial driver's license up in Washington, and then
in July twenty twenty four, California issued him a limited
term CDL. He was even pulled over in New Mexico
back in July of this year. New Mexico State Police

(06:52):
for speeding't given a ticket, but they did not conduct
an English language proficiency assessment like they're supposed to be doing,
like the President Sharpie told them to do. They let
him keep on driving, and you know, he didn't speak
English and he gets in this deadly crash in Florida.
After that crash, he was given an English language proficiency
assessment by Department of Transportation. He answered two of twelve

(07:17):
verbal questions. And could only identify one of four traffic signs.
We've been We've talked about this on numerous times, how
dangerous that would be. Put me behind the wheel. Let
me go driving around peaking. I'm gonna get in some as.
I'm gonna do something wrong seeing cross the border. In

(07:42):
twenty eighteen, was arrested by border patrol but released into
the nation out of fear of returning to India. Well
that was during Trump's time. That was Trump one point zero.
Maybe it was down and everybody was looking at AOC
crying and they just let him in. That day, Florida announced, Man,
I hate humidity, I hate bugs, I hate creepy crawley things.

(08:07):
But this state is just implementing so many things that
are desirable. And at Christmas, I like a little chance
of some coolness and cloudy and maybe some moisture. I'm
not saying a white Christmas. We don't get that out here,
but a change in season. But Florida announced under their
new immigration enforcement program that the truck way stations they're

(08:29):
gonna be used as ice checkpoints. You knows someonhy don't
you do that out here? Why don't we do that
down in when you're coming through down in blythe from
Arizona to California. Where they got there's a good ice checkpoint.
Florida Attorney General James Opemeyer talking about the accident with
the semi truck, he said, now we're gonna find out.

(08:51):
We're gonna make sure this is not happening. If you're
an illegal, you can't get a driver's license in Florida,
and the uh, the Attorney General said. And if you're
tooting along inner truck and you whip out a California
watching a New Jersey license, those licenses are no good
in Florida. Okay, Well, I guess we'll wait for Friday

(09:13):
to see what happens. To kill mar Orbrego Garcia. That
judge temporary temporarily blocked the president from deporting the MS
thirteen gang member if out of lawsuit he doesn't want
to go to Uganda. Now he's saying he's fearing you
Ganda for his life in Uganda. Well, I don't know what,
gang member, Maybe you should have thought about that. See

(09:35):
so many thought they've been here for so long that
it's not gonna happen, not gonna get caught. And then
you hear an administration surge, we love you, free healthcare.
That just adds on to your yes, your confidence. I
get to be here forever. A grand jury in Tennessee

(09:58):
indicted him for transporting a lee within the United States.
This guy has been and who knows what else he's
done since he's been here. But isn't it really just icky, sick,
disgusting that they would turn it into like he's a
good guy and the Trump administration's violating his rights. It's
just to make America look horrible. Money wires from the

(10:22):
United States to Mexico have hit their overs between twenty
thirteen and twenty twenty four. Of the money that came
from America to Mexico tripled. In twenty thirteen, it was
twenty three billion. By twenty twenty four, it was sixty
four billion dollars. That's money that was earned in the

(10:46):
US that goes right out of our economy right back
to Mexico. And it tripled in eleven years. And that's
just Mexico. Think of all the other countries where money
is sent back. Well, I wonder why all this is happening.

(11:06):
Why is it dropping the lowest in thirteen years? Well,
a lot of people are lying low, probably become a
little bit more frugal, not sending as much back fear
out of being deported. Well, here's what I would suggest.
Take the government's offer and go at home. Then you

(11:26):
get a thousand dollars and that's nothing. You were making
that tax free in three days here, okay, anyhow, one
thousand dollars is going to be sent back home and
then get wine. Do it right, get that monkey off
your back. It's a lot better to live that way
many of us, right. I think back in the day,

(11:48):
younger days, I will say that bill collector calling just
call and call and call, and you just had a
home phone. They couldn't get ahold of you. There was
no email or what. You don't have to worry about
a letter for two weeks. But it would always be
but when you would pick it up, handle it, pay it.
Ah just that small. I can imagine what it would

(12:10):
feel like to have that huge monkey on your back
like that. Yeah, it might take you a few years.
I don't know how long those years would be, but
I can tell you right now, if you get caught,
you're probably not going to be able to come back.
Kilmar Abrega. Garcia held a press conference in Spanish. Dude

(12:33):
has been here since twenty eleven and he still can't
speak English. Stop being rough on the Maryland man. He's
a soft spoken family man of faith. Yeah, okay, you
can get see insperience at over in yaganda. We'll see
what happens by the end of the week. John Nolty
at Breitbart said, talking about the English issue, he said,
it's one thing for someone to come here from another

(12:54):
country as an adult and have trouble picking up the language.
I'll do you get the harder it is to learn
new things a new language. Garcia arrived at age sixteen.
That's not a learning issue. That's a refusal to assimilate
what we have here is another case of democrats in
the regime media deliberately choosing toxic icons to keep us divided.

(13:15):
Trayvon Martin, Michael Brown. I was ferguson George Floyd and
he says, and now this guy, you know it as
an attorney stated, I remember this guy has been accused
of wife beater, gangbanger, what human trafficker? I think there

(13:36):
was some child porn in there too. There was His
attorney says that her client. His attorney says, my client
will require many years of therapy to move past what
he suffered. I think his family suffered immeasurably. I think
it will take many years therapy for him moved past
what he suffered. He suffered hardship, physical harm. While they're

(14:01):
in ol Salvador. Wha, wha. Imagine if Kamala Harris or
the President Tim Wallas or that they pick up his
therapy bill. When't they You know they would they would
do that. Democrats and all the media. They're gonna make
sure they turn this man into a martyr. They're just
using the George Floyd thing again. And you know what,

(14:24):
any other Reagan I don't know, but any other Republican
president would have run away from this fight. They would
have found a way to surrender. Whin' they not President Trump.

Speaker 2 (14:36):
This is the tremor carry show. Condom Valley's Power Talk.
Doctor Kerry's on the scene. Here's how I'm gonna help you.
Let me see all right, say ah, let me see
all right, go urinate. I won't look all right, walk away.
Let me look you're dehydrated. I love study findes dot Org.

(15:03):
If you're ever born with scrolling on site.

Speaker 1 (15:06):
Study finds dot org i read water essential for staying healthy.
New research shows how much water you drinking day effects
how your body reacts to stress. They did all their experiments.

(15:27):
They said adults who typically drink less than a liter
and a half a fluid per day had a much
bigger spike in the stress hormone cortisol compared to those
who drink closer to four leaders. Four leader for Americans sake,
that's two two leaders of pepsi bottles of water. That
that's a part time job. I would I couldn't do

(15:48):
a job. I'd be going to the bathroom so much
I have my I guess this is a half gallon
let me see, doesn't have the I drink. I try
and do to a day to see it starts at
nine am and by noon I'm supposed to be down
at the bottom and then back up from one until five.
I get to see it like you drink it. It
shows you the time of the day where you should be.

(16:10):
And if I'm a few hours behind, I'll just it's
so easy with a bottle to suck it down like that.
So yeah, I feel I'm not drinking four leads A day,
I'm probably getting a gallon in with that, or right,
a half No it's not a hope, No, it's not
probably a half gallon. I don't know. I drink a
lot and I drink my zero zero zero canned waters.

(16:32):
Probably have four or five of those a day. That's
a twelve ounce scant. So yeah, let's squeeze my arm.
Look at that. Yeah, water drips out, but I'm not
doing four anyhow. Let's move with this. Cortisol, mainstress chemical
helps us deal with challenges in the short term, but
when it stays too high for too long, they say
it wears us down. And they say hydration is a

(16:54):
big thing, they said, being hot dehydrated like feeling thirsty
or tired, or headache, they said. But inside the body,
water balance is tied to hormones that do more than
just keep fluids in check. One of them it helps
the body save water when you're running low, but also
has a side effect. It tells your body stress system

(17:14):
to release more cortisol. So when you're under hydrated, the
very system that responds to stress gets triggered more easily,
and it leaves you open to a bigger hormonal surge
when you get stress, a challenge comes to you. So
they did the low fluid intake group and the high

(17:36):
fluid intake group for a week. They tracked exactly how
much they drank. They confirmed hydration status with urine test,
and then they gave them the stress test. They did
social stress test. They did a stressful session, and then
afterwards they collected their salava and they were able to

(17:56):
track the cortisol. Heart rate monitors were set up. They
measured anxiety and physical arousal, and they said, on the surface,
both groups kind of reacted the same way. You know,
their heart might get going and they might feel more
anxious when they took the social stress test, But when
they looked into the body by getting in there and

(18:17):
analyzing the salava to try and get the cortisol levels,
they said the hormones told a different story. The people
that had low drinking water, their cortisol spiked stayed high
even though the successful task had ended. In the high
water intake group, the cortisol barely rose above the baseline.

(18:41):
So the low water drinkers had a fifty five percent
bigger cortisol jump. Now it's not always bad in short bursts,
they say it helped sharpen focus helps you respond to challenges,
but when it stays too high thanks to some stress
in there, can lead to poor sleep. And they said

(19:03):
it all adds up interesting the things that they find.
They found that participants with darker urine had stronger cortisol
responses than those with light urine. They said, if your
urine early in the morning is dark yellow, you could
be priming yourself for a sharper stress surge when it

(19:26):
comes along. So don't don't. Well, I know women can't
see it as easily as guys can, but guys, I'll
talk to the guys. I don't even to talk to
women about this stuff. You got your own doctor. Guys,
slam that water when you're standing there wizzing in the toilet.
To look down. It does not need to look highlighter.

(19:48):
It doesn't need to look like a pumpkin color. No,
you wanted to look a little fresca, a little Fresco light,
little light. Sorry, Fresca. Didn't mean to put your product
next to that visual there. And again they're saying how
much water is enough? They said two and a half
leaders per day for men and two leaders for women.
So that's a well, that's a two leader and then

(20:11):
half of another leader. I look at it like that
the soda bottles at the store. That's that's quite a
But actually, if you know, it's just developing a habit
of drinking it, that's all that it is. It's all
that it is. I remember a kid used to play
in Memphis in our neighborhood. You know, kids would come
in your house in the summer. He always said, I

(20:32):
don't like water. I always thought because he's trying to
get kool aid or trying to get a soda or something.
But I knew somebody in Colorado that said they didn't
like the taste of water. You're not a big fan
of the taste of water. Well, you like the taste
of water when it's mixed in with that Doctor Pepper,
don't you. Water is an ingredient. It is the first

(20:54):
one in Doctor Pepper. So drink two and a half
liters a day and you will not be stress director,
right Nigel, So says Doctor Carey.

Speaker 2 (21:03):
The assistant Trevor Cherry show on The Valley's Power Talk.

Speaker 1 (21:07):
Uh legal to give away beer, I probably is. I
know we used to be able to do that. I'm
sure we can put a piece of pizza in your mouth. Yeah,
hah uh huh corn dog hole for a pizza. Yeah,
I like that.

Speaker 2 (21:21):
I like that.

Speaker 1 (21:22):
What's corn dog hole? It's cornhole, but since it's for
the dogs, we call it corn dog hole. On Friday
out there, we had people win in four packs to
the home opener last week. We were out at the
sports station. We're gonna be out every Friday before pres
and say football games. It's false so it's gonna be
good to get back, get back out and get the
old tour. But all they they stole the catalytic converter. Okay,

(21:47):
well we'll have to find a new one for the
tour bus. There the major attack on the value of life,
and there was a major one today at the Minnesota
Catholic School shooting. We'll talk more about that coming up
at five. But a little further north than they're up
in Canada, they're beginning to euthanize disabled citizens. Liberal government

(22:10):
up there. They have euthanasia laws, but they're wanting to
expand it. So what we're going to have the state
now discriminate against people with disabilities. I already knew the
time is going to become or they're going to say
value of life. They've already devalued it at the start,
and when you get to the end, well, she's this
age and has this, we'd rather put the money towards

(22:33):
the twenty five year old woman that's going to be
around and she needs the healthcare to you know, contribute
to society. That woman's on her way out. So she's
already disabled. Let's just so I lay grain 's euthanized already.
In Canada, ninety percent of babies diagnosed with Down syndrome

(22:54):
are aborted before birth. You have Europe, was it. I
don't want to slam. I don't want to great a
country by not remembering it. But there's a European country
that applauded the fact that they they got rid of
Down syndrome. No, they didn't find a cure for it
in you to row, they just supported the babies that
died that were going to be born with Down syndrome.

(23:18):
And it's not just Down syndrome, other disabled children. I
will never forget third child la am neosy and thesis,
if I'm remembering correctly, sitting in there where they go
in and look at the baby with the ultrasound and
all that, and you sit down and you have a
little conversation with the doctor and the nurse, and that
nurse saying, well, we have seen in this there's possibility

(23:39):
for Down syndrome is up there, and we would like
to discuss options. Ah, you stop it, I told her,
don't you even I know where you're going. But our
baby was not born with Down syndrome. But I went
through months there thinking and I come to terms. Man,
I was just gonna have a buddy for life as
long as I was around. And you probably have to

(24:02):
depending on the degree of it. But isn't that's sick
that that's what they're talking about here in America. Pure
of Labor Stats show that one point one million more
Americans have become disabled in just the past three months.
Month of July added two hundred and thirty four thousand
disabled Americas, making it the current high, the third new

(24:24):
high in a row since February of twenty twenty one.
What happened around then, Oh, we had people volunteering for
to be a lab rats, mr naa vaccine. Since then,

(24:44):
additional five point eight nine million Americans have answered yes
to the Labor Stats survey of question on disability. That
is an almost twenty percent, nineteen point six percent increase
in reported disabilities over just four point five years. Guy's
twenty percent jump in four years. Should that not be

(25:05):
kind of front page news at least some news? Why
is nobody talking about that? mRNA, We don't. Oh, you're right,
we wouldn't want to bring that up, right well. Director
of National Intelligence Tulca Gabbadg's bringing it up. She confirmed
investigation open into what I'm just retirement. Yeah, Fauci, your perjury,

(25:29):
you're all in gain of function. Fauci remember Han, Senator
Ran Paul members Han, So does Tulci Gabbard. There, Fuci
Man when this comes up, I still I get livid
about it? How are government? How are media coordinated to

(25:50):
lie to us about reality? Think of all the millions
of lives that they lit on fire that we don't
even know how burned earned So many people were I
can't pretend like the lockdowns are still in the past,
even though they were. I can't do that diary they

(26:11):
were overreaction was not based on science. It was based
on bad science and even worse control. And Mike, you're
talking about is the people that implemented this and stood down,
stood down, A lot of them still in control. Who's
our county doctor, the interim guy. Why nobody else wants
a gig doctor vol rah vo rah. You were wrong,

(26:34):
bro wrong, flat out wrong. All you politicians, city council members, mayors,
everybody that will We need pluxiglass, We need six foot distancing. Oh,
there's a COVID risk of kids.

Speaker 2 (26:47):
Wrong, wrong and wrong.

Speaker 1 (26:51):
Smeared. Anybody that told the truth. No, the more fearful
you were, the more seriously you took COVID. That's what
they wanted, right, So many kids had to suffer. Let's
talk about the kids, man, millions. Just think of poor
kids left alone, miss years of school. Once back in school,

(27:14):
they're masked up, eat lunch outside in the cold. Let
me remind you of that. Nobody got nobody got in
trouble for that. And you think they're not going to
try it again in your lifetime. At some point, they
didn't build that system, they didn't implement that. They didn't
have everybody on Q at the same time. We're all
in this together, and unprecedented times and unprecedented times and

(27:35):
unprecedented times they had them all the commercials ready to row.
How did that happen? And I hate to say it,
but I will. Oh there's some smart youngins there are
I've no met some. Yes there are, but they're fewer
and fewer and fewer and fewer today. Young people. Their

(27:55):
level of knowledge, their skills, especially like with US history,
that's gonna be a national problem in the decades to come. Yes,
it is, guarantee it, guarantee it. Over in Europe, they
didn't do the school lockdowns that they did for a
little bit. They realized it was a mistake. Man. In
May of twenty twenty, when we were just starting the lockdowns,

(28:17):
all the education ministers in the European Union all got
together on a conference call, not in person, and they
reopened their schools. America, especially here in California, kids locked
out of school for what was at the twenty nineteen
twenty twenty school year. In the twenty twenty one school year,

(28:37):
even disrupted schooling the year after that. What was the
difference between Europe and the United States? We know it
say it together. Class Trump derangement syndrome, That's what it was.
I saw NewsBusters dot Org Media Research Council. They said

(28:59):
the news areticles and TV segments. US media gave ninety
percent negative coverage to the idea of school reopening. The
New York Times twenty twenty Georgia's experiment and human sacrifice
opening school for kids the Atlantic. Here's their headline, Trump

(29:20):
cares more about the stock market than humans. Oh, I
remember it all. You're killing grandma if you don't take
the experiment. And then Biden came along his strategy of mandates,
convinced people a lot of people wouldn't got it, and
then like four months later, nope, nope, you didn't have
to do that. He didn't have that authority, he didn't

(29:41):
have that control, he didn't have that power. In twenty
twenty one alone, the Biden administration spent nearly a billion
dollars on campaigns supporting the mr NA injection. It was
the most expensive pharmaceutical advertising campaign in history. So do
you think with that one billion dollars, that's a lot

(30:02):
of money and ad revenue. You think those same companies
that are taking that money for that are going to
allow their news departments to tell you the truth and
what's wrong with it. No. I was never told once
by iHeart what to say or not to say, I
thank them for that freedom. We still don't know where

(30:26):
in the body the mRNA winds up. We still don't
know how long it stays in the body. We still
don't know how many of those other kind of proteins
that were unintended to be mixed in there, how they're created.
This is what happens when you test a vaccine for
a decade. You figure all that out before you go

(30:47):
out to Joe and jose and tell them to roll
up their sleeves. They didn't do that, did they think
of all the people banned from school and church and
social gatherings and didn't get to go into the hospitals.
I still want people to be in trouble for this.
I know it's way out on the tarmac waiting to
take off, but it was good to hear Tulsea Gabbert,

(31:07):
Director National Intelligence say they're investigating Fauci. Senator Rampaul was
right all along. And if you were on the side
that got beaten down by it, by you ignorant fool,
you're killing grandma? What's wrong with you? Wheezy? And they
make comments like that, I think was that Kimmel, You

(31:29):
were right? You were correct? And I bet not many
people in your life, family circle, people that ostracize you. No,
you can't come over to and and nuts. You are
not injected, well I'll just have things skipped. Yes you will,
and Christmas as well. We do not want you around,

(31:50):
you embecile, inject yourself with bleach. Do what Trump says.
We're listening to the truth. No fos, you were all wrong.
All the suffering in one way or another still continues
to this day, the effects of it do. And I'm
still mad that it was completely unnecessary, and the evidence

(32:12):
was availably before it all began, and our local government
and our local media they coordinated man to lie to us.

Speaker 2 (32:22):
This is the trepor Chary Show on the Fallacy's Power.

Speaker 1 (32:26):
Talk and Crap Pizza. That's paulm and Knees right across
from GB three. We'll have your presidence say Bulldog football
tickets to go away home opener Saturn Day, Paul Leffler,
He'll be in tomorrow at three point thirty. We'll be
talking about the upcoming game. Not a good opener, but
the go play anybody, anywhere, anyplace, anytime kind of thing.
You take on some bigger teams sometimes and yeah, that happens.

(32:49):
It's not always go to Purdue and win the first game.
But when that happens, boy, that momentum kicks in, isn't it.
We'll have Paul on to mart three thirty and Athletic
director class. He's going to join us on the show
at five point thirty tomorrow, so looking forward to that.
And at five o'clock AJ RUNSOMNY a Black Tail Merchant
Association running for city council. The city's trying to go

(33:11):
after now these business owners that have put boards up
so that the transient people that are are the burglars
that are breaking the glass man. Now they're coming after
the owners instead of clean Anniehow we'll talk about it
with AJ coming up. The shooting up in Minnesota at
the Catholic two little kids at Mass in the pews

(33:34):
at church praying. We know they're in heaven. Now, that's
one thing it doesn't console. Pray for the comfort of
the family. That's the number one thing that we can
do that loss and pray for those that are now
still struggling in the hospital. Four kids had to have surgery.
What happened, Well, this guy that in the year twenty

(33:57):
twenty as a teenage. You're the Minnesota let him change
his name to a girl name students de Range. I've
seen the video. I played the audio in the three
o'clock hour Demons in him. It sounded like all the
voice changes back and forth from talking somewhat normal to
a high pitched sound to a real is yeah, kind

(34:21):
of like you know, exorcist sound. He hated Christians, he
hated Jesus Hitt target practice. He had on the target
board out there Jesus's face with the crown of thorns
around them. He went to the school in the past,
and his mom actually worked at the school. She's retired,
and they're saying here lit.

Speaker 3 (34:41):
It also appears that the mother of the gunman was
a former employee of annunciation of the school who had
retired a couple of years back. And so initially authorities
had said there was no clear connection between the gunmen
and the school itself. Now it appears as though the

(35:02):
mother of the gunmen does have a connection with that school.

Speaker 1 (35:06):
And we've seen a connection with something else with schools,
the mentally insane transgenders are shot up, a lot of them,
and don't you bring that up. That's bringing Paul no
it's going to the root cause of it. Mayor Fry
of Minneapolis.

Speaker 4 (35:23):
I have heard about a whole lot of hate that's
being directed.

Speaker 1 (35:26):
It's not hate man at our trans community. Stop it,
Shut up you.

Speaker 4 (35:31):
Anybody who is using this as an using this as
an opportunity to villainize our trans community or any other
community out there, has lost their sense of common humanity.
We should not be operating out of a place of
hate for anyone.

Speaker 1 (35:51):
Stop it. Boy. I saw where pop star Tisha came
out as omni sexual. Omni sexual guys. This is a
warpism that has gotten in and not that every single
person out there that doesn't think they're in the right
body is going to go kill little kids praying. But

(36:15):
there are a lot of people that are praying on
little kids that are transvestites. Boy George, bless his heart,
common common, common, common comic commue leon. He said, lgbt
q IA identity politics has not helped anybody. He said,

(36:35):
people in groups are not all exactly alike. We're not
a thing. He said. Uh, he got himself in a
bit of trouble with that community when he said leave
your pronouns at the door. See he's a gay guy
from the nineties. He gets it.

Speaker 2 (36:52):
He's the insistent Trevor Jerry show monda valley's power dog.
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