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November 8, 2025 135 mins
On this episode of BZ's Berserk Bobcat Saloon Radio Show: The esteemed Ralph J Chittams Sr on: "What's It REALLY Like Living and Working in DC?" PLUS: • Demorats: who truly gerrymanders? • Actual FBI accomplishments? • The LA naked land grab continues? • Gavin Newsom fleeces taxpayers again? AND: • Much more buttery political goodness! • Happy Stories! 🎙️ New to streaming or looking to level up? Check out StreamYard and get $10 discount! 😍 https://streamyard.com/pal/d/57680291...

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“The speech is free — the booze is not.”
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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:02):
The free.

Speaker 2 (01:08):
You're listening to Late nine Radio on the SHR Media
Network cushion. There will be mature themes explored and potentially
adult language used. If Conservatorian words, phrases, certain concepts, or
rhetoric offends you, tune out now.

Speaker 3 (01:24):
I have come here to chew the bubblegum and chick
asks the all lot of public. It would be helpful
if I turn on my mic. Ladies and gentlemen, boys
and girls, children of all ages, Welcome to bz's berserve,

(01:45):
Bobcatsle and the radio show where I am broadcasting from
North iaho in an actual free state. It is August
the twelfth. I had to look August the twelfth, Tuesday night,
the year of our Lord, twenty twenty five, and I
welcome you to the saloon.

Speaker 4 (02:02):
I happen to be this guy.

Speaker 3 (02:04):
I am your conservative sure book who is guiding you
through the mailstrom of demo rat leftists and globalist lies, chaosis,
heat and betrayal and so Essertially, what you're going to
hear for the next two hours consists of my opinion
and my opinion only. But wait, what wait, there's more,
and also that of my guests tonight and who e

(02:28):
have I got a great guest for you tonight. What
am I doing? I'm doing the job that the American
media maget's fundamentally mote. I am changing America, one leftist
diaper at a time. We don't water our drinks, just
like we don't water our conversations. We are still serving

(02:48):
stiff drinks and the saloon along with facts, history, logic, rationality, proportion, clarity, context, tradition,
and common sense for people like you, watch the show
and we talk about essentially everything, politics, religion, crime, economics, race, sex, science, law, everything.

(03:10):
Nothing is Philpote here in the saloon, not a thing
at all. We talk about it all except the speech
is free, but the booze customarily is not. Remember this
is important. Free beer tomorrow in the saloon. You should

(03:31):
be here, most deaf and so I'm streaming on a
whole bunch of places right now. I've got people already
making comments here. Canada Heavy Hall is weighing in. Hello
to Canada, Heavy Hall. And also Oi Oi Oi Oi Oi,
the unpleasant blind guy, What up Canada?

Speaker 5 (03:52):
What up?

Speaker 3 (03:53):
Carrots? And Mission ready Men is here Earl Jackson from
Mission Ready Men, and you can watch him every twoday
and Thursday morning on Mission Ready Men at let me
see if I get this right nine am Pacific, eleven
Central and noon Eastern for Mission Ready Men and also

(04:15):
Canada Heavy hol The Sky, the Sky and Biggie. Welcome
everybody here, Thanks for being here. Now I have a
great gentleman who is I haven't spoken to in quite
some time, and this happens to be Ralph J. Chittham's senior. Now, Ralph,

(04:37):
I'm just going to be blunt. Ralph is an old
hand at being on radio shows. And perhaps you may
be asking to yourself self, why would that be, Well,
there's a really good reason. Let me go back just
a little bit. I once again have the honor of
talking to Ralph J. Chidam Senor. A lot of people

(04:59):
haven't seen him. He may be new to some, but
he's been. And I counted, Ralph, you may be shaken
to your core, to your very roots, but I counted
you have been on this show twelve time. Twelve times.
This time makes the thirteenth good or bad, Lucky thirteen
lucky thirteen. So Ralph used to have his own show

(05:24):
right here at the SHR Media Network a few years ago.
And so Ralph happens to be my a number one
go to guy when I want to talk about common sense,
when I want to talk about conservatives, when I want
to talk about religion, and another important topic that we're

(05:45):
going to talk about tonight. In fact, the last time
I had you on was twenty twenty one, and this
was before I moved from California. On We Spell It
with a K, where I held a round table discussion,
if you recall, with three other pastors on the topic
of sort of the general state of religion today. And

(06:07):
one of the things that I included was the big
overarching question is is man inherently or fundamentally good? Well, folks,
with Ralph and three other pastors on, would you believe?
That show ran a full three hours and everyone weighed
in it was a great, a great, great show. Now,

(06:28):
if you want to watch some of the or look
at some of the articles that I post tonight or
the videos that I refer to, you can go to
the shr Media, the Bez's Berserk, Bobcats Loon Rumble channel,
and if you go to that tonight's show, you will
see all the show links in there, and I will
also display for everybody to watch that great show with

(06:52):
four pastors and Ralph chitdams.

Speaker 4 (06:55):
It was.

Speaker 3 (06:55):
It was three hours and it went like boom by
a boom by to boom and it was really quick.
It was a great show, and Ralph, I hope it's
not going to surprise you when I say something similar
to you know, I'd like to reprise that show again,
but I have some other people that I'd like to

(07:18):
bring in, so I'm just kind of curious if you
may perhaps be up for that. I am not sure, however,
let's do it.

Speaker 4 (07:26):
Come on, I'm up for a challenge.

Speaker 3 (07:28):
Okay. This was also back in the day when I
had no video, I didn't know how to run anything,
and I was lucky. I was so incredibly lucky to
be able to figure out on a phone, one phone,
how to hook four conversations up through this phone for me,

(07:52):
a techno ledite who is clearly technically challenged. OMG, that
was difficult, but my god, I managed to off. It
was absolutely astounding. It was great. The other thing that
I want to go into and then I'll have Ralph
kind of give his CV if you will, so to speak,
a cosmic bard. Welcome to the chat Chatter Roomibus that's

(08:17):
the technical term right now. And I got this from
a website, and I think this summer rises you pretty well.
And then at the conclusion of this, you kind of
tell me and kind of fill in for me if
you would pretty please some of the sum things that

(08:39):
I'm obviously going to leave out now. You were born
and raised in New York City. You came to Washington,
d c. In nineteen seventy eight to attend Howard University,
where you graduated having a Bachelor of Arts degree in
political science. So in nineteen eighty three you married your
college sweetheart, Patricia, and this union has been blessed with

(09:00):
four children, one daughter in law, one son in law,
and two beautiful granddaughters. And you are a pastor. So
you are Pastor Chittams. You've been preaching the Gospel of
Jesus Christ since nineteen ninety eight. You've earned a Master
of Arts in Biblical Studies from Maple Springs Baptist Bible
College and Seminary. And you have a Masters of Divinity

(09:24):
degree from the Liberty Baptist Theological Seminary. And you are this.
I read this and I thought, okay, I got to
see some of this. I did not know, or I
did not remember. You're also a classically trained pianist and organist.
But that's sort of just a fraction of your story.
So Ralph, can you kind of fill folks in please?

Speaker 4 (09:46):
Okay, well, let me fill in some of the bio stuff.
I don't want all my kids mad at me. All
of my children are married, and I am now up
to my wife and I are now up to five grandchildren.
Five grandchildren. Yes, yeah, no, Like you said, my undergraduate

(10:12):
degree is in political science, and then I have the
two master's degrees, you know, in religion. And another good
friend of ours, Lonnie Poindexter, yep, he how he describes
me is he says, I live in the intersection of
faith and public policy, okay, and a good one to

(10:35):
be in, exactly, And so I think that's pretty accurate.

Speaker 6 (10:39):
Well.

Speaker 3 (10:39):
The other thing is that a long time ago, back
when I was working and I was in homicide, there
was a guy who was a reserve on the Sheriff's
department where I worked. And this guy ended up being
he graduated from the military. He was a colonel, a reservist,

(11:02):
a reservist with the Sheriff's department. He also was a doctor,
and he was also a pathologist and so unfortunately I
can't remember the guys the guy's name now, but when
I had my homicide scenes, he was the only path
that was interested in coming out and looking at my

(11:25):
homicide scenes. And after a while I had to call him, dude,
you are an absolute underachiever. And Ralph Jidams, you are
an absolute underachiever. I wish someday you'd have some darn
to compliment accomplishments to yourself. So my gosh, so let's
started at the start. Oh, I forgot to put this

(11:46):
up here, Uno momento. This this outs you kind of
a little bit. This is from a video that you have,
and let's listen.

Speaker 4 (11:56):
So the first question is, Ralph, I live in the swamp.
I live in Washington, d C. About a mile from
the capitol.

Speaker 3 (12:07):
That's all we need to know. And that's why you're
here tonight. And so my first question is that seems
to be a clue. Are you still in DC? Are
you a resident of DC?

Speaker 4 (12:19):
Please say yes, I still live in that same house.

Speaker 3 (12:22):
Do you okay? All right, beautiful, this is the issue
du joure of the day right now. What's going on
in DC? And There is another gentleman who we both
know and love, and I would have asked him to
be on the show tonight as well, except he has

(12:44):
had some issues, and that's Ken McClinton. But in sort
of an unfortunate way, I will be referring to Ken
McClinton and his family a little bit later on in
the show because he was affected personally directly by being
in DC. And so I hope that tonight you can

(13:07):
confirm for me all the horrible things that are spouted
by Republicans and conservatives and President Trump and those rotten
Trump followers that are absolutely they're false, they're wrong, they're
treasonis they're anti freedom, Marxist, misleading and heretical, or do

(13:29):
I have it all wrong? Sort of?

Speaker 4 (13:32):
Oh, it's all wrong. Everything that President Trump is doing
right now in the District of Columbia is legal, it's constitutional,
and it is in fact supported by the DC Holme
Rule Charter, specifically Section seven forty. He is not doing

(13:53):
anything outside of his congressional not congressional, but constitutional authority
as the chief executive of the United States of America.

Speaker 3 (14:05):
Okay, so it kind of started with this. Let me
put this up on the stage. This is from Breitbart
Trump placing DC Metro Police Department under direct federal control
and activating the National Guard. This was back on August eleventh,
and actually I think it was a day before that.
And this has thrown everyone, not exactly everyone up up

(14:32):
in arms, topsy turvy upside down. How dare he do
something similar to that? And yet you said, wait a minute,
this appears to be something that is in fact lawful,
and you actually quoted a section about that being lawful.

(14:54):
And this is during the show tonight, and Ralph with
you can be on for about an hour or so
if that's okay, that's fine, Okay, super I've got so
much stuff that I would love, love nerve you to
comment on. A lot of this stuff is videos. A

(15:15):
lot of the couple of the things are overlays like
graphics to show people. One of the first ones is
this here is And I'm sorry, I apologize upfront. Any
time that I hear the name Bowser, I can't help
but think of the of the Warner Brothers sad floppy

(15:36):
Dog from the nineteen sixties that was called Bowser. But
this is what she had to say. Trump will neutralize
Antifa and destroy deep state infrastructure before them. Unhappy Washington,
DC Mayor Bowser calls Trump's step for a takeover of
DC police unsettling and unpressed.

Speaker 7 (16:00):
And while this.

Speaker 8 (16:01):
Action today is unsettingly and unprecedented, I can't say that,
given some of the rhetoric of the past, that we're
totally surprised. I can say to d C residents that
we will continue to operate our government in a way
that makes you proud.

Speaker 9 (16:22):
So let me ask you, Ralph has has Mayor Bowser
made you proud of the way that she's been operating
d C government now for load those many years.

Speaker 4 (16:39):
Overall, I give her a feeling grade overall. Now, I
just want to back up and say something a little humorous. Sure,
when I hear Bowser, I think of the game Donkey Kong. Oh, okay,
all right, because because because the main bad guy was
this huge monkey named Bowser. I'm not saying she's a monkey.
So all you races out, they just calm down and

(17:01):
sit down and shut.

Speaker 3 (17:02):
Up there, don't be stupid, right.

Speaker 4 (17:08):
But no, no, overall I give her a failing grade.
Crime in DC. You know that they want to say
that crime is going down. Okay, great, so crime may
have gone down a little bit, But what does that
mean when you still have people getting shot and killed

(17:29):
and beaten up and assaulted and raped and walking out
of Here's a prime example of what's going on here
in DC. This nineteen year old in DC was put
on trial for being in possession of an illegal handgun.

(17:52):
He got on the metro bus in DC shot a
man in the chest on the bus. Now to me,
that sounds like a tempted murder. This case got to
Janine Piro as the US Attorney General because he was

(18:14):
nineteen years old. She tried the case. He was convicted.
But in DC, the city council passed the law that
if you are convicted of a crime and you are
under the age of twenty five, the judges have complete

(18:38):
authority to do whatever it is they want to do
with you in their courtroom. And this judge let this
nineteen year old who shot a man in the chest
on the metro bus with an illegally possessed handgun. She

(18:59):
let him walk out of the courtroom with no jail
time and told him to go to college.

Speaker 3 (19:09):
But when you hear things like that, people in other cities,
other towns, maybe other counties or whatnot. The first thing
they think, and I would believe rightly so is including myself,
is okay? How is that being taken? How is that
being digested by the people that actually live in DC? Limits?

(19:34):
Is that something that's popular? Is it something that people
find heinous? Is it something that mostly people ignore because
they mostly don't care? I mean, how are people supposed
to process this kind of thing thinking or do they
think thinking that you know, that could have happened to

(19:54):
me on that transportation.

Speaker 4 (19:58):
Well, in DC, we have two groups of people who
support this type of foolishness. There are two groups of
people who support this type of foolishness where most of
the common sense DC residents, Democrats and Republicans alike, are
outraged by this. But these two groups that we have

(20:20):
in DC, I describe them this way. We have this
area in Washington, d C. That I refer to as
Upper Caucasia, and this is where all the liberal white
Karens live. And you know they're the ones that you
know black. They treat black people as infants, and you know,
we're not responsible and we can't be held responsible and

(20:44):
we need programs and you can't lock up the poor
black children. You know, they're poor and they're impoverished, and
they can't do any better, and so they support this
type of foolishness. That's the first group. The second group
that we have that support this foolishness is our generational
curse of single mothers here in the District of Columbia

(21:07):
who have been producing these miscreants for the past forty years.
And their favorite phrase is my baby didn't do nothing.
So no matter what these and they call them kids
at twenty five, no matter what these kids do, there's
always an excuse. It's the white man's fault. They're in poverty,

(21:29):
they can't do any better. How do you expect them
to get closed for school? They have to steal. And
so you have these two groups of people who have
the access to the microphone and get these idiots elected.
On the DC. We have the most I don't even
call them progressive politicians on the DC council. We have

(21:53):
the most regressive politicians on the city council who pass
stupid legend like this one that allowed this nineteen year
old to damn near kill somebody and walk out of
the courtroom free as a bird.

Speaker 3 (22:10):
But it seems to be a huge conflict. Ralph Chettam's
because okay, you've got the white cockazoids. And I worked
for in the FBI for at the WMFO, and so
for a while I was posted in Washington, and Washington,
as you will know, obviously is one of the most crazy,

(22:32):
schizoid nutso towns. Because one of the first things I
learned is, okay, I had to when I first got there,
I had to see some of the sites and whatnot.
One of the first things I found was that, okay,
just behind the Supreme Court, about a block away east,

(22:53):
if I recall, is everyone's protected in the Supreme Court.
Each building has its own set of police in their
own department. Essentially a block east of there is abject poverty,
like you wouldn't believe everything changes as though they've just
beamed in from someplace other than DC.

Speaker 10 (23:17):
It is a.

Speaker 3 (23:18):
Schitzo, weird town and it seems to be you know,
it's like, isn't it easy for the Karens to say that,
because my guess is they're not living in the areas
that are subject to that crime a couple of minutes.

Speaker 4 (23:36):
No, not to the same extent, absolutely not. No, there's
crime in their community, but it's nothing close to what
other areas of the city are dealing with. It's not
even close now. But to your point about I first
came to Washington, d C. To visit in nineteen seventy six. Okay,

(23:58):
you know the centennial, the whole nine yards. So I came.
I was born and raised in New York, so I
forget who sponsored the bus trip, but there was a
bus strip from New York to come down here to Washington,
d C. Let me tell you, I don't know what
route that bus took when it came into DC, but

(24:22):
from the time it crossed the border into the District
of Columbia until we got downtown to eleventh and f
Street northwest, I did not see a single black community
because they know how to take people around this city

(24:43):
to hide underbelly of Washington, d C. So that the
tourists don't see it. But what's happening now is the
criminal element is now invading the National Mall, and it's
invading other parts of the city where usually they did
not go. And so now you're seeing, you know, the

(25:07):
assaults like of that gentleman who were you know, I
forget his real name, but the one who worked at
those who's referred to with big walls. Right, you know,
things are not happening in other parts of the city
where it typically didn't happen, and people are now going,
wait a minute, they're not supposed to be coming over here.

(25:28):
Why aren't I staying in their neighborhoods.

Speaker 3 (25:33):
Well, the meaning meaning well first number one, first Bellboe
night for being accurate. Number two avoidance of Oh, there
are no problems here in DC. And number three it's
a crazy town. The crime primordially has always existed. I
think it peaked if I looked at some charts, and

(25:54):
I think I have some a little bit later, right
around COVID, right around woh nineteen twenty twenty one, twenty two.

Speaker 4 (26:03):
Yeah, there was a spike after there was a spike
just after the COVID.

Speaker 3 (26:07):
We're pretty darn high. But it's like, you know, the
problem has always been present. It's just that you weren't
there to open your eyes to see what existed essentially
all along. And the conflict that I find somebody somewhere

(26:28):
has to have a huge issue trying to reconcile is
the parents of the suspects versus the mothers and the
fathers of the victims, that that has to be a

(26:49):
continuous clash of minds and philosophies. How does DC manage
to live with that huge schizom within itself?

Speaker 4 (27:03):
It exists because, like I said, you have one group
of people who view black people as infantile who can't
do any better, and then you have the second group
of people who view black people as victims of white
supremacy and racism. And so when you have a president

(27:25):
like Donald Trump who steps in and federalizes the Metropolitan
Police Department, which he clearly has the authority to do,
and then also wants to bring in the National Guard,
which he also clearly has the authority to do, and
has written him into the District of Columbia. Even though
he is going to make the lives of citizens safer,

(27:49):
their hatred of Donald Trump supersedes their own safety.

Speaker 3 (27:58):
I gotta play this, then, I want you. I want
your input on this. This is I'm guessing. I don't
know for sure, and that's the reason you're here. I
can't say for certain. You're in it. You see it,
You've been witnessed to it for decades. Here's a guy
that's on I think it was what MSNBC and this

(28:18):
is what he says. He fears everything but getting mugged
in DC. DC's fine.

Speaker 11 (28:25):
I think it's really important to be clear about what
is going on here. And a relatively small crime problem
is being used for specific authoritarian purposes.

Speaker 5 (28:38):
That we know and understand.

Speaker 11 (28:39):
So let's be clear about DC does have a really one,
really big crime problem, which was the January sixth insurrection.

Speaker 3 (28:46):
Incited by the current of course PSI in the United States.

Speaker 11 (28:49):
And his first act in coming back was pardoning all
the people who tried to overturn constitutional.

Speaker 3 (28:56):
Okay, false, he didn't pardon all the people with a lie.
That's republic I'm sorry, Ralph, go ahead.

Speaker 4 (29:04):
No, he's a flat out liar. It was not an insurrection.
And now let's let let we need to clear up
something else right here and right now, please for for
for your listeners who may not know, the President of
the United States doesn't matter whether it was Trump, Biden, Obama, Bush, Clint,

(29:28):
it doesn't matter who it is. The President of the
United States of America does not have the authority to
deploy the National Guard on the grounds of the United
States Capital. He does not have that authority that authority

(29:49):
rests with the Speaker of the House, working in conjunction
with the Capitol Hill Police and the Mayor of the
District of Columbia. Now, the President does have the authority
to mobilize the National Guard within the territorial confines of

(30:14):
the District of Columbia in general, but not on the
grounds of Capitol Hill. Now, going back to January sixth,
President Trump reached out to the Mayor and Pelosi two
to three days prior, telling them that he was more

(30:36):
than willing to send the National Guard. All they had
to do was make the request which was required for
him to send the National Guard. They did not do it.
So the fact that the National Guard was not on
Capitol Hill was not the fault of Donald Trump. It

(30:59):
was the fault of Nancy Pelosi and Muriel Bowser.

Speaker 3 (31:06):
And that's interesting, okay, because don't think that I don't
have some information about that, and don't think that I'm
not here to ring Ralph J. Schiham Senior out completely
tonight with regard to what he's seeing in DC. We're
going to have to take a break. We'll be right
back after these announcements. I want to continue with these
videos it's a target rich atmosphere. I've got so much

(31:30):
to go over. And again my thanks to Ralph for
being here tonight, and we'll be right back.

Speaker 5 (31:37):
Conservative Media done right.

Speaker 4 (31:40):
You're listening to the shr.

Speaker 12 (31:43):
Media Network mission log intrigues. I mean, let's face it,
who's even counting anymore? The Lost wonder is officially off
course chasing road rocket launches, fringe science, and things that
probably viiholate causality, burns fuel, ends time, or make scientists
very uncomfortable. Yeah, I'm probably going to talk about it

(32:06):
every other Sunday on KLRN Radio, a Lost Wonderer because
space doesn't come with a roadmap.

Speaker 5 (32:12):
And honestly, I wouldn't follow if it did.

Speaker 13 (32:18):
Hello, I'm Matt, a student at Hillsdale College. Here's Hillsdale
President Larry Arne. On the continuing relevance of the Constitution.

Speaker 14 (32:26):
Many argue today that the Constitution is outdated because it
addresses problems peculiar to the eighteenth century. Some parts of
the Constitution do read rather quaintly. Consider the adjunction that
gives titles of nobility in Article one, Section nine of
the Constitution. But is that so outdated? The purpose of
the injunction is to prevent the government granting special privileges

(32:46):
to some for partisan reasons. This strikes at the heart
of the rule of law. The cony capitalism so common
today is a place where the government bestows favors and
tax dollars on some businesses to give them a leg
up over others. This is exactly the seeing the Constitution
was meant to prohibit. The Constitution is not so outdated
after all.

Speaker 13 (33:06):
This Constitution Minute was brought to you by Hillsdale College.
To join the national conversation on the Constitution, go to
Constitutionminutes dot com.

Speaker 5 (33:17):
Hey fellas, are you Mission Ready?

Speaker 15 (33:19):
You need to check out Mission Ready Men via Earl
Biggie Jackson on Tuesdays and Thursdays nine am Pacific, eleven
am Central, and noon Eastern. It's a show that equips
you to navigate our society's challenges from a Biblical perspective
with courage and conviction. Students of Mission Ready Men, as
we examine our culture through the prism of Biblical troops,

(33:41):
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prepare to step out, stand out, and step into your
role as a man as ordained by God. That's Mission
Ready Men hosted by Earl Jackson on the SHR Media
Network and get mission ready.

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Speaker 17 (34:46):
You're listening to the SHL Media Network.

Speaker 3 (34:49):
I'm busy, I'm back. Thanks for listening. Tonight you're in
the saloon dizs Perserved Podcasts Radio show, and tonight we
have the distinct privilege of talking to Ralph Jhidam, who
is a pastor, a strong conservative voice and a resident
of d C who sees every day what is happening

(35:11):
in the District of Columbia in front of his face
at home at work every day, which is why I've
got Ralph here. And instead of lead listening to all
the specious crap that passes for facts these days, I thought, hey,
get Ralph number one, A number one guy number two

(35:33):
lives right there, So let's have some truth tonight, which
is why I brought in Ralph. And again, thank you
so kindly for being here tonight, Ralph. I want to
play the rest of this to kind of indicate to people,
this is, this is what sadly a lot of folks
are thinking right now. Oh, this is Oh, the DC

(35:53):
doesn't need any ad.

Speaker 5 (35:54):
Words in Washington, DC.

Speaker 11 (35:56):
When I go to DC, I'm not afraid of losing
my wallet so much as I'm afraid of losing my vote.
I'm not afraid of losing my wallet so much as
I'm afraid that my children's freedom to breathe will be stolen.
In a world where climate change policy is non existent,
I'm afraid that the future of middle class people.

Speaker 3 (36:15):
Will Okay, stop, I've had enough of that crap climate change, Ralph,
don't you I don't understand why you don't understand DC
is all about climate change. It's not about what you
think it is. It's about purple skies and little pink
ponies and all that kind of stuff. Or am I
just way wrong? Ralph? Please?

Speaker 4 (36:37):
Everything in DC is driven by money. But I want
to deal with this silverhead moron that you had just
a few minutes ago. He says that he doesn't worry about,
you know, walking around the streets of d C. Let
me tell you a fact. I live in d C.

(37:00):
I am a legal gun owner in DC. I have
a concealed carry permit in DC. And the only time
I'll leave my house without my gun is when I
get up at seven o'clock in the morning and I
need to run to the supermarket because I don't have
eggs for breakfast. But if I'm out in the street
anytime after twelve noon, I'm carrying my gun with me,

(37:25):
because that is how you never know when something is
going to just pop off. In DC. I was out
for dinner with a friend of mine a little no
maybe about a year or so ago, and we're crossing
the street and this whole group of miscreants is out
there riding these motorcycles and ATVs. You know, they none

(37:49):
of them have licenses, None of them have insurance. They're
popping wheelies up the street, making themselves anisance and a danger,
and one of them threw something and hit me in
the chest. I wasn't doing anything but standing there waiting
to cross the street. I didn't say anything to them,
I didn't do anything to them. But simply because they

(38:13):
have no respect for life, liberty or anything, they thought
it would be cute to throw something at me. Suppose
it hadn't hit me in the chest and hit me
in the face. Now they're very lucky that night I
didn't have my gun because I might have shot his
butt right off his ATV. But this guy's saying that
he doesn't worry about anything when he comes to DC.

(38:34):
That's because he's an ostrich and he's walking around with
his head in the sand, and so when he gets
knocked upside the head, he won't see it coming. And
that woman that's sitting on the panel with him, Simone Sanders,
who used to work for Bernie Sanders. She's just as
useless and just as stupid, because she says she's more

(38:55):
afraid of walking the streets now in Washington, DC as
a black woman because the police department have been federalized,
and the National Guard is here then she was before
there was an increased police presence and all the miscreants
were running wild in the streets.

Speaker 3 (39:15):
How do you rationalize that? I mean, how do you
put up with that? How does how can DC continue?

Speaker 8 (39:23):
Now?

Speaker 3 (39:24):
I think it does.

Speaker 4 (39:25):
It doesn't continue. D C is doesn't continue because we
have an electorate here in d C that is so
ignorant that they keep putting people in office because they
have a D in front of their name, even though
every policy that they propose is antithical to their benefit.

(39:48):
But because it's a D, that person gets elected. The
first Attorney General that we had here in DC was
a guy named Carl Racine. He was an absolute freaking disaster.
The guy that we have in here now, Schwab, Brian Schwab,
he's another one. All he wants to do is sing Kumbaya,

(40:11):
pat these criminals on the head, let them out the
front door, tell him that life will be better. Just
be a good boy, Pinocchio, you're a good boy. And
then not supposed to solve all the problems. And then
we have this string of regressive democrats on the city
Council who come in and pass these stupid laws that

(40:33):
let judges bypass sentencing restrictions and let nineteen year olds
who shoot people walk out of the courtroom free and clear.
But but I, as a legal gun owner, if I
am just in possession of a magazine that holds more

(40:55):
than ten rounds, I am a felon, and they will
put me in jail for three years and make me
pay a twelve five hundred dollar fine. But he can
shoot somebody and walk out the courthouse.

Speaker 3 (41:09):
It's insanity, writ large. I can't think of any other
way to put it. Mission ready man Earl Jackson, who
is a friend of Sean Lewis and they both used
to work together back east in police, said, I used
to live in DC. I hated it. I had some
cops arrest somebody on the hood of my car one night.
Someone got shot and I came out the next morning
there were bloodstains on my car. And he says this

(41:31):
is around the time that Mary and Barry got caught
on camera smoking crack, which is amusing, but not so
as an aside. I said, I wanted to do this,
and I think I owe ken this, and I would
have liked to have had him here tonight. Too, perhaps
explain in depth. A very good friend of ours, Ken McClinton,

(41:56):
who also had a show on the SHR Media network
and then went off to his own network to ECN.
He had his stepdaughter, twenty seven year old Scharnee Milton,
who was a reporter in DC. She was shot and
killed in twenty fifteen while returning home from a journalist assignment.

(42:20):
This is a quote from one of the articles, and
you mentioned this just now in twenty twenty five. From
twenty fifteen, ten years later, still going on. The DC
police said Milton was shot to death May twenty seventh,
twenty fifteen, by a gunman among ATV writers who were
shooting at another group of writers on good Hope Road

(42:43):
near Naylor Road, southeast. She was making a bus transfer
and going home after covering a Neighborhood Advisory Commission meeting
at Eastern Market. This is a quote. Two gang members
were beefing and one of them held Charnee as she
was crossing as a human shield, and the other shotter
point blank, said Ken McClinton, Milton's stepfather. The other dropped

(43:07):
her to the cold ground. Ye as of today, the
case is cold. It's beyond cold. It's freezing, it's frigid.
Nothing was done, nothing is being done. Her case just
that year in twenty fifteen, was one of sixty unsolved

(43:28):
homicides from DC in twenty fifteen. It and so it goes,
and so it continues. We spoke before the show, and
I wanted to read this. This is about another resident.
I can refer to the name or not, but this

(43:49):
individual said, you know, I try not to post political
stuff on my page. This is from Facebook. Most of
the time, I just lurk. But I am tired. I
am tired of individuals who seem to only see the
world through the prism of race. When you're looking for
specific behaviors, guess what you will find it. I refuse

(44:09):
to see the world that way, and I am exhausted
by those who do. I see the ugly site of
d C and Baltimore through my work. I see what
people do to one each other, to one another. I
see what statistics fail to catch. This is reality. And
I also deal in facts, cold hard facts. I encourage
people to try it. Sometime they may learn something fact.

(44:30):
This is something that you had already mentioned under the
Home Rule Act of nineteen seventy three. Section seventy forty
and related provisions. Washington, d C remains a federal district.
DC is not a state, never will be a state.
It would take an Act of Congress literally to change it,
and that won't happen. Read the Federalist papers sometime therefore,

(44:51):
that means Congress and by extension, the President retains ultimate
authority over certain functions, including public safety. Like it or not,
the President has the legal power to direct MPD. That's
the Metro Police Department in DC under federal oversight. That's
not opinion, that's law, that's fact. In fact, she said,

(45:13):
when I served as an advisory neighborhood commissioner, my life
was threatened repeatedly. MPDS strongly encouraged me to get a
concealed carry permit because drug dealers put a credible target
on my back. I fought against prostitution, drug dealing, public drinking, urination,
other open air crimes in my community. Where were you

(45:35):
all then? Where were you when I posted photographic evidence
of the siege in my community? Many of you told
me to quote get a life or quote leave them alone.
They weren't hurting anyone. How many of you would be
okay with someone slashing your tires, peeing against your car,

(45:55):
your house, or open sex acts. How many of you
came and invited them to behave life that where you lived?
Exactly none of you. Where were you when the children
that folks are so concerned about murdered, beat, raped, or
robbed and killed others, Or when fourteen year olds ran

(46:16):
carjacking crews, or when a fifteen year old shot and
killed another team for a pair of shoes, or when
a nineteen year old walked out of a courtroom after
murdering somebody with an illegal gun. Hey, sounds very similar
to what you just said, Ralph. These aren't hypotheticals. These
are DC h highlight headlines. They're facts. So let's talk

(46:36):
about Let's have an honest discussion about the so called
crime stats. They've been cooked, they've been downgraded, they've been reclassified,
they've been buried under bureaucratic definitions to make the city
look safer. Then it is. Anybody who lives in the
hardest hit neighborhoods around DC knows the truth. Residents live
under siege. Anybody who knows a member of MPD knows

(46:59):
they will tell the truth in private conversations but definitely
not in public. This isn't about political party, or race
or economic class. Safety doesn't have any color, no income bracket,
no political boundary. It's about the basic human right to
walk down your own street without fear being the next victim.
So before you politicize this move or posture about the children,

(47:24):
ask yourself. Is being safe in your own neighborhood a
righte roof defending, no matter who holds the authority to
do it? Personally? I think it is.

Speaker 4 (47:33):
Absolutely.

Speaker 3 (47:34):
I couldn't agree more. Visit this upon say Nantucket, Martha's Vineyard.
Visit this about any leftist enclave in Maryland surrounding DC.
How long would they put up with that? Ralph Chitdams.

Speaker 4 (47:55):
Well, we know how long they put up with it
in Martha's vineyard because three days after they a whole
bunch of illegals up in Martha's vineyard, the good white
folk up in Martha's Vineyard ran them all up out
of there, didn't they.

Speaker 3 (48:06):
Isn't that amazing? And you know funny thing is, Ralph,
That's when I got kicked off of Twitter back when
it was Twitter, because I said, huh, imagine that all
these loving leftists are not so bueno when crime and
illegal invaders are visited above upon them, boom off, done right.

Speaker 4 (48:26):
And and also in the in the in DC are
our police districts. It's set up as districts, and we
have seven districts spread out over eight wards. And in
the third district, one of the officers in the third
district is currently on a paid suspension because he was

(48:49):
cooking the crime numbers so that it would appear that
there were less violent crimes and felonies occurring, so that
the mayor and the council could look good, and so
they could say that, yeah, there's been this reduction in crime.
But he's cooking the books. And then down at the

(49:12):
courthouse they're playing games with reclassifying crimes and criminals so
that they don't get reported as felonies, and so that
DC can lie and say that the crime rate is
going down.

Speaker 3 (49:27):
And imagine that, Ralph Chitthams, would you be surprised if
I had that story up there? It is right now
buttressing the fact that Ralph just the story Ralph just
told This is from for Washington, DC police commander. This
isn't a line level officer, this isn't a sergeant. He
was a DC police commander suspended and accused of changing

(49:50):
crime statistics. Let me make this mention. Well, first, let
me go over the story a little bit. He's under
investigation for allegedly making changes to crime stats. The MPD
confirmed Commander Michael Pullman placed on paid administrative leave in
mid May. That happened just a week after he filed
an Equal employment Opportunity to complain against an Assistant chief

(50:11):
and the Police Union acou's the Department of deliberately falsifying
crime data, and the union claims police supervisors in the
department manipulate crime data to make it appear violent crime
has fallen considerably compared to last year. If I could
make an observation pretty please with you right now, Ralph Chitthams,

(50:32):
I happened to watch there was a show on HBO
I think way back in two thousand and four, and
it was called The Wire and it was from a
book called Homicide by David Simon. David Simon wrote the book.
I read it when I was in homicide. It was
a great book. Now he's pretty hard left as a

(50:53):
matter of fact, But the funny thing is he also
was a major writer for that series on HBO The
Wire and said something similar to even back then, there
was a scene where people are saying, you know, in
CompStat basically all the commanders of the districts, they cook
the books. They've been cooking the books. Then they're cooking
the books now, and they likely will be cooking the

(51:15):
books in the future. So when everybody says, oh, the truth,
the truth, let's know about Oh, the stats are proper. Really, really,
you're going to go there, The stats are right, the
stats are proper. Let's look at some stats. Here's this
from Carolyn Levin Levitt Make DC Safe Again twenty twenty four.
Murder rate. Well, Washington, DC has twenty seven point five

(51:42):
to four per one hundred thousand. Now, for those of
you who are in spreaker or on podcast and can't
watch and see the graphic that I've got up there
right now, I'll read it for you. At the top
is Washington, d C. For the highest murder rate under
that is Bogatah, Colombia fifteen point one, Mexico City ten

(52:04):
point six Mexico City. Wait a minute, the capital of
all the damn cartels in Mexico, Islamabad, has nine point
two per one hundred thousand. Lima, Ottawa, Paris, Havana, Delhi, London,

(52:28):
Madrid all have a lesser murder rate per per one
hundred thousand than DC. Let's go into this too, inside
DC crime. There's the source down at the bottom. Rochester
Institute of Technology Center for Public Safety Initiatives. DC had
the fourth highest homicide rate in the United States in

(52:49):
twenty twenty four, with a rate of twenty seven point
three homicides per one hundred thousand people. That's odd. I've
just showed you that DC's homicide rate is almost six
times higher the New York City's rate of four point
seven homicides per one hundred thousand people. I just happen
to know this. DC has a population of seven hundred

(53:10):
and four thousand. New York City has a population of
eight point four million. Equals what the hell. DC's homicide
rate is four times higher than LA's rate of seven
point one homicides per one hundred thousand people. DC's homicide
rate more than doubles Newark's rate of twelve point two

(53:31):
homicides per one hundred thousand people. DC also beat out Atlanta, Chicago, Compton,
and Oakland, but Okay, no problem. Everybody's safe, right, There
is no issue with that? Or is that? Is there?
Is that just a line of crap? Are the books cooked?

(53:54):
Ralph Chitthams? Can well, let me ask a basic question.
I worked in forty four one years in law enforcement.
Could could we count on DC to be what? Can
we ever? Could we ever count on the probity of
Washington Metro's police department? Ever? Just a question for you, sir.

Speaker 4 (54:16):
Well, definitely not. Now I want to I want to
go back to the story about the commander in the
third District. Now, understand what he was doing. He wasn't
doing in secret. He wasn't doing it behind closed doors.
He wasn't doing it, you know, at the midnight hour

(54:36):
in a dark room with only a desk lamp. Everybody
knew what he was doing. The reason why he's getting
jammed up now is because he and his girlfriend or wife,
oh god, while the complaint with the with human resources
regarding some disparate treatment regarding how she he was being treated,

(55:02):
and so to shut him up and to get him
in line, they used what they had on him for
years to discredit him and to shut him up. So
he's not an anomaly. They're using him as a saprificial

(55:23):
lamb to tell everybody else shut up, go along, to
get along, or we are going to take the dirty
linen that we have on you for the past however
many years we have it, and we are going to
crucify you with it.

Speaker 3 (55:40):
We'll rub you out with it. Because if it's common
knowledge and you go, you push back just the slightest
against the flow, we will find something, you know, closet
meet skeletons, and then they open the door that should
be that should come as no shock whatsoever.

Speaker 4 (55:58):
There's this what I affectionately refer to as the Mutual
Black Male Society of America that operates within the District
of Columbia and the Mutual Black Male Society of America.
It exists in the Senate, it exists in the House,

(56:20):
it exists within the district government, it exists within the
lobbying community. And what it is is everybody has dirt
on everybody else. But if you keep your mouth shut
about me, I'll keep my mouth shut about you, and
then we can stay in power. And then we can

(56:43):
play the other favorite game in DC called the k
Street Shuffle, which is when your party is in power,
you are on Capitol Hill. But when your party is
not in power, then you move over to K Street
and you get all the lobbying jobs. And then when
your party gets back in power, you leave K Street.

(57:04):
The party that lost power goes back to K Street
and all they do is swap chairs on the Titanic
because they all have dirt on each other and they're
making each other rich.

Speaker 3 (57:17):
So, those who aren't familiar with K Street, when you
make a reference to K Street, what do you mean.

Speaker 4 (57:23):
It's it's where a lot of the lobbying firms are.
You know, the companies that get paid, you know, five
million dollars to lobby Capitol Hill so that you know
they can get their drug approved, which has been proved
to kill people like redem Zevir. So K Streeter is
where you make your money as a lobbyist. K Street

(57:45):
is where people with security clearances go after they leave
the government and sell out for millions of dollars because
they because they have access to the military industrial complex.
K Streeter where you go to make millions when you're
not in government, and then when your party wins, then

(58:06):
you leave K Street. You get back into the government
and then the losing party it's their turn to make
the money on K Street as lobbyists.

Speaker 3 (58:16):
So essentially it's a circular it's a circular robbery squad.

Speaker 4 (58:24):
Absolutely, and at that level there's no such thing as
a Democrat or Republican because it's all about the Benjamins.

Speaker 3 (58:33):
I got three more minutes before the top of the
hour break. I think I got enough time to put
this in here. Here is such a weird thing. Here
is an ABC News newsreader saying and conflicting with the
standard wrote, which is, oh, DC's fine, DC's safe. Well,

(58:58):
apparently not. Let's listen. I think this is about maybe
a minute or long or so. Let's listen.

Speaker 18 (59:04):
We've been talking so much about the numbers, and yeah,
usually that's how you play Devil's advocate, as you talk about, oh, well,
stat's say crime is down. However, I can tell you
firsthand here in downtown DC where we work, right here
around our bureau, just in the past six months, you know,
there were two people shot. One person died literally two
blocks down here from the bureau. It was within the

(59:26):
last two years that I actually was jumped walking just
two blocks down from here, and then just this morning,
one of my coworkers said her car was stolen a
block away from the bureau. So we can talk about
the numbers going down, but crime is happening every single
day because we're all experiencing at firsthand while working and

(59:49):
living down here.

Speaker 3 (59:51):
Imagine that someone who has been personally victimized believes that
they have an actual claim in making a contact station
about what's going on in DC, I said, I'll leave this,
I'll mention this, and then we'll come back. Hey, first
things first, Ralph, are you are you okay coming back

(01:00:12):
after the top of the hour break? Sure? Okay, great, outstanding.
I said this a long time ago. This is one
of the few times I actually got sent to IA
and I had a little teta te with an assistant
district attorney where I was working at the time, and

(01:00:33):
I said, this is personal. You don't take it personally.
I understand that that's part and parcel of your job.
But the other thing is, every once in a while
you need to look between the multisladic nuances that all
you see happen to be on your desk and realize

(01:00:54):
that crime is intensely personal. And trust me, it would
be even more personal, if more Ada's if more district attorneys,
if more city councilmen, if more politicians, if more people
that were involved in local government, if more people that

(01:01:15):
were part of agencies, if more chiefs, if more sheriffs,
if more judges got raped, sodomized or cut stabbed by crime.
Trust me, if those things happened, Oh my god, everyone's

(01:01:39):
everyone's viewpoint would change, guaranteed. Here's your letter, here's your
days off. I'll be right Backative Media done right.

Speaker 5 (01:01:53):
To the SHM Media Network.

Speaker 19 (01:01:59):
In a world where leftists are running out of metal
for the safety pins of their soothing red diapers, one
man stands alone, attempting to fundamentally change America, one leftist
diaper at a time. BZ, your conservative Shirpa, is guiding
you through the mailstream of democrat leftists and globalist lies, chaos, deceit,
and betrayal. Listen to BZ Saloon on selecting exclusive Tuesday

(01:02:22):
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Speaker 5 (01:02:36):
Be there Aloha.

Speaker 20 (01:02:41):
Hello friends, you have a moment so that we may
discuss our Lord and Savior Minichi. No, seriously, I'm just kidding.

Speaker 4 (01:02:47):
Hi.

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Speaker 6 (01:03:35):
It's Sean from the Edge of Liberty just like the Bidens,
I too am moving, only in my case it's days
and times.

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That's right.

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You can now find The Edge Liberty Monday at eight
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That is Monday and Wednesday, eight pm Pacific eleven on
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(01:04:31):
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Speaker 17 (01:06:00):
You're listening to the SHL Media Network.

Speaker 3 (01:06:04):
It's the first hour. The first hour has gone away.
It's gone gonna be returned, never to return, never to return.
Accept that I will post the show in about two
hours after the ending of this show, and you can
watch and listen on the podcast if you want. I
get a lot of people watching live, and I get

(01:06:26):
a lot of people watching on the podcast as well.
And the other thing. Let me put this down here
for for just a moment, Tito, little moment, Tito, if
you would please look down below, I'd like to point
this out to you, and that is we broke five
hundred YouTube subscribers about a couple of months ago. If

(01:06:47):
I'm not mistaken, the shr media YouTube channel, and we
are two count two count them, two subscribers away from
six hundred subscribers. Hey, if you're watching right now tonight
or listening in podcasts, subscribe. That could be you. You

(01:07:08):
might be the sixth hundredth subscriber to the shr media
YouTube channel. So let's continue now if we could please
with Ralph Chittams, who is my guest tonight, And that's
because A he's a good guy. B he's a good guy.
C he's a good guy. D all of the above.
And he lives in DC. So he's been regaling us

(01:07:31):
with various tales of truth and not circumstances regarding DC.
If I might be so bold as to put this up,
things have changed, Ralph Chittams. This is back in twenty
twenty three, US Attorney for DC declined to prosecute sixty

(01:07:54):
seven percent of arrests in DC as the nation's capital
suffered a crime spike, Chicago and Philadelphia declined to prosecute
just fourteen percent and four percent of arrests. So I
have to ask, maybe you've said this before, what's the

(01:08:16):
difference between I don't know, Chicago, Philadelphia and DC. What
do we chalk that up to? What's the difference? Okay, first,
I get it, you have to make an arrest, sure
that's on the Metro Metro Police Department. But then they
do and then you got to prosecute. But what is

(01:08:39):
up with failure to prosecute?

Speaker 4 (01:08:43):
The prosecutors in DC are more concerned about their conviction
rates than they are about trying criminals. If they are
not guaranteed a conviction, they are not going to pro
secute the case. They will either plead it down to

(01:09:03):
nothing or not prosecuted and let the person walk completely
free because they're more concerned with their success rate in
prosecution than actually representing the people and protecting the people
from these miscreants.

Speaker 3 (01:09:25):
That's you know, Okay. I discover myself more and more
gobsmacked by the things that are occurring these days for
which I have something similar to you know, I'm left
without words, and these days I am more and more

(01:09:46):
left without words. Here's an article from the Washington Reporter,
scoop thank God President Trump's historic takeover of DC's safety
is praised by residents. One female He'll staffer the Hill
who pays three thousand dollars a month for rent in

(01:10:07):
Navy Yard. Now separate here just for a second, Ralph Chudams,
can you tell us what or where Navy Yard is
and kind of the background of that area.

Speaker 4 (01:10:18):
Navy Yard is an up and coming area in the
district of Columbia with a lot of young professionals, a
lot of way over priced condos. It's the area close
to where the Nationals baseball team has their stadium, and

(01:10:46):
it has become a terrizone. A terrizone because you have
these gangs of teenagers that go into that Navy Yard
community and literally terrorize the residents.

Speaker 3 (01:11:05):
Anyway. She says she pays three thousand bucks a month
for a rent in Navy Yard. Told the reporter that
she quote saw someone get arrested the other day in
my lobby at five point thirty pm. Somebody else got
shot in marth March and the blood puddle was left
overnight and everybody saw it. In the main lobby for
the first time in years. Trump's announcement has many in
the city feeling hopeful. One GOP veteran told the reporter

(01:11:28):
that he felt safe walking around his neighborhood where he
and his wife were nearly shot, and broad daylight for
the first time in three years. And this is the
kind of stuff that, of course the American media maggots
are not going to tell you. They're not going to
write about this. You will not see this broadcast in
the American media maggots and trumpeted loud and clear at
great length on ABC, CBS, NBC, MSNBCCNBC, CNN, blah blah blah,

(01:11:54):
blah blah blah blah. No, because it's the truth.

Speaker 4 (01:12:00):
It's all true. And when we talk about crime, let's
understand we're not just talking about violent crime. There is
a Harris Teeters supermarket in Navy Yard. In this upscale community,
they had to implement gheto security measures. You can't come

(01:12:23):
in the store with your own shopping bags over a
certain size, and you have to show your receipt when
you leave the store to make sure you didn't steal anything.
So there's this whole subculture of lawlessness inside the District
of Columbia. You know, you have to the people, you know,

(01:12:46):
gang rushing, you know, the Lululemons and the other stores
and walking out with thousands of dollars worth of merchandise,
and the store clerks have been told don't intervene, don't
stop them, leave them alone, let them take it. And
so there's this whole culture of lawlessness that exists within

(01:13:07):
the District of Columbia, in part because everybody knows that
if you're under twenty four years old, nothing is going
to happen to you.

Speaker 3 (01:13:25):
Here's Carolyn Levitt, and I still I hope you're not shocked.
Ralph Chittams, who we're speaking to right now, I hope
you're not shocked that I have a lot more to
talk about. Here's Carolyn Levitt. Let's hear what she has
to say. And then directly beneath her, I'd like to
see if I could show this map, but first Carolyn.

Speaker 22 (01:13:47):
Approximately eight hundred and fifty officers and agents were surged
across the city. They made a total of twenty three arrests,
including multiple other contacts last night. These arrests consisted of homicide,
firearms offences, possession with intent to distribute narcotics, fair evasion,
lude acts, stocking, possession of a high capacity magazine, fleeing

(01:14:11):
to elude in a vehicle, no permits, driving under the influence,
reckless driving, and a bench warrant. Approximately.

Speaker 3 (01:14:19):
So that's just over the past couple of hours or so.
Let me say, if you get this map in right now,
there we go. Good. You can actually see it. You're
to date carjacking offence heat map. So I can only
assume that where it's red, carjackings are over the top.

(01:14:43):
There's no crime in DC. There's no crying in baseball,
and there's no crime in DC. And it would appear
to me that that indicates yeah, not quite so much.
So if you would, I don't know if you can
see the little teeny cursor right here, Ralph chitthams this
red area that I'm circling right around here, where where's that?

Speaker 4 (01:15:08):
If you can see that, okay, that's that's in and
around honestly the White House, Okay, that's that's downtown DC.

Speaker 3 (01:15:18):
Okay, And then it looks like we've got a bunch
of stuff that's occurring down on the lower square this
area right in here, that.

Speaker 4 (01:15:28):
That that that's predominantly Wards seven and eight, the two
poorest wards in the city, that where most of the
crime occurs.

Speaker 3 (01:15:39):
Okay, so that would make sense. But now, as you've indicated,
it's spilling this way sort of a northwest area, correct
if you would, And so it's not it's everybody's concern now.

Speaker 4 (01:15:57):
But now zoom into that again. Okay, Now if you
look where you see on the left hand side, you
see Friendship Heights.

Speaker 3 (01:16:06):
Village right het uh huh.

Speaker 4 (01:16:09):
See that's Upper Caucasia. How much how many carjackings did
you see?

Speaker 3 (01:16:17):
An upper don't see? And I see a little blinky,
a little blinky circle of orange like righty here. Other
than that, Nope, nope, nope. All the red is way
down here. Ye, then you go way down here.

Speaker 4 (01:16:33):
That that drives the point I made earlier in your show.

Speaker 3 (01:16:37):
Well, and again another reason that I am ever so
glad that I had you on tonight. And here's another
positive thing. DC mayor leaders, Police union react to Trump's
takeover of MPD. You know what Bowser is gonna say, However,
the DC Police Union, the DC Police Union, representing over

(01:17:02):
three thousand officers of the Metropolitan Police Department MPD today
acknowledges and supports the President's announcement this morning to assume
temporary control of the MPD in response to the escalating
crime crisis in Washington, DC. The Union agrees at crime
is spiraling out of control and immediate action is necessary
to restore public safety. So, you know, if the coppers

(01:17:25):
on the line are saying it, something tells me that
they're a lot more believable than the commanders and the
captains and the supervisors and the police chief, which I
believe is her herself Or am I way wrong on that,
Ralph Chitdams.

Speaker 4 (01:17:43):
No. Honestly, most of the police officers, the rank and file,
the blue shirts, are good people. They want to protect,
they want to serve, but they have been hamstrung by
the politicians who have told them that they can't do

(01:18:06):
their jobs. And if they do do their jobs, the
likelihood that they are going to be suspended or fired
or fined is very very likely. So they go out
on patrol and they see something, they know better than

(01:18:28):
to intervene because the bleeding heart liberals are going to cry,
you didn't have to do that to him. He just
stole a candy bar, you know. He just broke a
window of a car. You didn't have to do that
to him. And so the police usefully, a lot of

(01:18:50):
them see the crime and don't even bother making the
arrest because they know all the time, energy and paperwork
that they're going want to put in to process this
person is going to be for naught because by the
time they aint dries on their paperwork, that person will

(01:19:11):
have already been released from the system, probably without bail,
and will be committing another crime in less than twenty
four hours.

Speaker 3 (01:19:21):
So it's like, okay, similar to what's the point? What
is the point of putting in all this work and
not seeing results? And that also extends out towards in
terms of law enforcement. It used to be the cops
were fighting officer survival, in other words, will I survive

(01:19:41):
the call to which I'm being assigned? Now they have
to worry about career survival. So if you have to
write for career survival, you know, and you realize that,
you know, in the political climate in which you currently work,
you're essentially one bad call away from suspension, or from

(01:20:01):
a civil suit, or from criminal prosecution. Then what am
I knocking myself out for?

Speaker 4 (01:20:08):
Right?

Speaker 3 (01:20:09):
That'd have to be a valid question this. I'm going
to play something, and this is one of those videos
where I have to say, after hearing this, after listening
to this, even I am stupid or for having heard this.
Here's somebody that said, I shake my head, what the hell,

(01:20:34):
Let's just play it. You tell me if this is
weapons grade, stupid or not. During the discussion, residents did
not hold back voicing their frustrations.

Speaker 5 (01:20:45):
Am I playing the system money? Questioning why kids are
being held accountable?

Speaker 23 (01:20:51):
We as a city and a community need to be
much more focused on prevention and surrounding young people and
their families with resources if we want to be safer
in the long run. We cannot prosecute and arrest our
way out of it.

Speaker 3 (01:21:06):
We cannot prosecute and arrest our way out of this.
Excuse me, did anybody ask you to do that? And
the answer I believe is I don't know. Ralph, help me,
help me here, Ralph, please throw me a lifeline. Please.

Speaker 4 (01:21:25):
Well, I mean he is correct, and the fact that
we are not going to be able to arrest and
incarcerate our way out of it, well, let's be very clear.
There are some people who need to go to jail.
Oh god, yes, period, end of discussion. Hard stop. There
are some people who need to be taken out of society,

(01:21:48):
put behind bars and locked away for the betterment of society.
They refuse to do that. They refuse to do it,
and I'm sorry, but sometimes you have to make an
example out of a few people to get the other
folks to act right.

Speaker 3 (01:22:12):
Nailed it, and you're right, what that guy said was
partially right. You can't arrest everybody. But on the other hand,
they're willfully sticking their heads in the proverbial sand in
terms of well, I guess there's nothing else, really much
we can do except maybe use kind words at them,
and at the very worst, maybe we'll will resort to sarcasm,

(01:22:36):
harsh sarcasm that will make everyone come around. No, it
won't right.

Speaker 4 (01:22:41):
We're going to give them. We're going to create more
basketball courts so they can play basketball. You know, we're
going to have more. If I hear anybody say the
word program one more time, I swear I am going
to scream we don't need program. Is what we need
are parents who take responsibility for their freaking children. Raise

(01:23:06):
your kids, teach them respect, teach them, you know, I
remember when I was growing up, I was told that
my last name meant something. That when I went out
in public, the name Chitthams, you're representing your family, You're
representing your name. Your name means something. These kids aren't

(01:23:27):
taught that. These kids are taught that they're victims and
if somebody has something that they don't have, it's the
white man's fault and they have and they're within their
rights to go take it.

Speaker 3 (01:23:38):
Well, it's funny you should mention that because it is
the white man's fault.

Speaker 24 (01:23:42):
One of the things that we have seen over and
over from the President from his team, you know, Stephen
Miller saying.

Speaker 5 (01:23:48):
It's like Baghdad in Ethiopia.

Speaker 24 (01:23:50):
They seem to hold their harshest criticism some times for
cities that are majority black and brown.

Speaker 5 (01:23:57):
Do you see that on What do you think that means?
I think that.

Speaker 8 (01:24:04):
I have been dealing kind of with this issue for
a number of years is kind of easy fodder on
the campaign trail.

Speaker 3 (01:24:13):
Okay, stop just for a second here. The issue at
hand is not Atlanta or Portland or Seattle or Los
Angeles or San Francisco or Chicago. The issue at hand
is DC and when you have this kind of crap

(01:24:35):
happening in the nation's capital, and you may as well
take your hand and just slap the hell out of
President Donald John Trump omb orange man bad, the guy
with the dead orange cat on his head, Because you're
doing this directly in front of him. He is taking
it as an affront. He's here, the capital is here,

(01:24:56):
the building is here, the seat of government is here,
our incredible memorials are here. All of the things that
hold this nation good and true that people would love
to visit. He's standing up for, which also includes all
the people in d C. But doing that because all

(01:25:18):
of this stuff is happening right in front of his face.
Ralph Jittams, Is he supposed to just ignore that?

Speaker 4 (01:25:28):
No, he's not supposed to ignore it, you know. And
and again they want to talk about, you know, people
only want to talk about, you know, crime in black communities. Okay,
the city's with the highest white population in the United States,
highly of Florida ninety two percent, Lincoln, Nebraska eighty eight percent, Boise,

(01:25:50):
Idaho eighty seven percent, Gilbert, Arizona eighty seven percent, Laredo,
Texas eighty seven percent. Spoke in Washington eighty five percent,
Corpus Christi, Texas eight a Pasto, Texas eighty percent. Do
you want to know where those cities fall on the
list of most crime written cities in the United States?

Speaker 3 (01:26:09):
Not like you've done your homework or anything.

Speaker 4 (01:26:12):
Not one of them is in the top fifty.

Speaker 3 (01:26:17):
So wait, we're told, she says, Ralph Chitthams. She says,
it's racism.

Speaker 4 (01:26:26):
No, it's a fact. Unfortunately, the cities with the highest
concentration of minority residents are the ones with the highest
crime rates. That's not racism, that's fact. Now, if you
want to change the dynamic, then then people need to

(01:26:47):
train their kids and the adults need to learn how
to get some act right.

Speaker 3 (01:26:55):
Sadly, that's not purchasable at the supermarket. But I know
exactly what you mean, absolutely, you know it's it's again
a matter of and God, Ralph, I said this in
the seventies when I was a I worked the street.

(01:27:17):
I worked for the FEDS for a while, decided I
didn't like the FED structure or the FED thing. I
was a reserve for a department in California and then
got picked up full time. But I said then, and
I said, now you know what we're going to have
to do one of two things. If we're going to
survive as a as a society, we're going to have

(01:27:37):
to abandon a generation in order to rebuild the other.
So we either abandon the newest, younger generation, or we're
going to have to abandon the parents one of the
two because every call, and I taught this to all
of my trainees, every call to which you are assigned

(01:27:58):
and sent, it all has to mean something or it
all means nothing. And our being here is absolutely pointless.
And I said, what we need to do is we
need to focus on the future because what you've had
for altogether way too many years is children raising children,

(01:28:23):
and then the results should essentially be not We shouldn't
be shocked. We shouldn't be shocked. Ralph Chitthams, Let's see, see.

Speaker 4 (01:28:34):
Here's another stat that people don't really want to talk about,
because this drives the point home. The poorest wards in
the District of Columbia Awards seven and eight, Okay, in Washington, DC,
since two thousand and nine. Since two thousand and nine,

(01:28:57):
those two wards have not seen the single motherhood birth
rate drop below seventy percent. Since two thousand and nine.
So seven out of ten babies born in Ward seven

(01:29:19):
and Ward eight since two thousand and nine are born
to single parent households. And that's as far back as
I could grab a quit stat But here's the bigger issue.
In Ward seven and Ward eight, in these poor black communities,
these girls are having babies at fifteen. Their mama is

(01:29:41):
now thirty, the grandmama is forty five, the great grandmama sixty.
And ain't none of them ever been married, and they
has never been a man in the house. And they've
been living in generational Section eight, getting snapped benefits and
welfare for the past forty years. So when you're raising

(01:30:04):
children in that environment, you're raising the girls to emulate
their mamas and their aunties and their grandmamas, and you're
raising the boys to be nothing but a bunch of
hyper emotional, testosterone laden punks who have no self control.
And then you wonder why Inner City America is in

(01:30:28):
the shape that it's in right now.

Speaker 3 (01:30:30):
And you've taken like you say, Larry Elder has said,
any number of people have said, when you remove the
father from the equation, you're damaging all of society. I'm busy.
I will be right back after this. Please don't go away.

Speaker 5 (01:30:52):
Conservative Media done right. You're listening to the SHR Media Network.

Speaker 25 (01:31:03):
Listen in to the Reaver of common Sense, where we
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(01:31:26):
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Speaker 4 (01:31:42):
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Speaker 26 (01:32:26):
Are you looking for bold and honest conversation about the
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Speaker 3 (01:32:32):
Will let me welcome you to Unleashed.

Speaker 26 (01:32:34):
One on one with Jeremy Hansen, where we take you
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Speaker 4 (01:32:45):
It's raw. Were you in unfiltered?

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If feel ready for truth with a punch, pull up
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(01:33:12):
unleashed one on one with Jeremy.

Speaker 3 (01:33:25):
Freedom.

Speaker 27 (01:33:27):
One nation in all of human history was built on
that bedrock hours, a republic of the people, by the people,
and for the people. Self government requires freedom, just as
freedom requires an individual willingness to self government. Freedom has

(01:33:53):
made America exceptional, but it can only last as long
as you and I seek the good as expressed by
the laws of nature and Nature's God. It can only
last if you and I choose to act as people
of character. Forging character has been the pursuit of Hillsdale

(01:34:15):
College since eighteen forty four.

Speaker 17 (01:34:24):
You're listening to to the SHR Media network.

Speaker 5 (01:34:27):
I'm busy.

Speaker 3 (01:34:28):
It's the final half hour drink up Shriners because the
saloon is not far it's about this far from closing,
so last call for alcohol.

Speaker 4 (01:34:39):
Again.

Speaker 3 (01:34:40):
We are I have not checked, but we are two
subscribers away from reaching six hundred subscribers on the SHR
media YouTube channel. You yes, you. I'm looking directly at
you there. You sir, you ma'am. You could be one
of the two people who push us to six hundred

(01:35:03):
and over the top for six hundred subscribers. How incredible
would that be? And to that I also reply, I
think it's see where is this shoot now? I can't
find it. It doesn't matter this guy once again, My producer,

(01:35:25):
Merlin Kueffel, took a day off and he said, hey,
can I have Tuesday night off? And I said something
really important and he said yes, I have to. I
need the night off. So he's not here. I'm running
the board by myself. This is Ralph Chitthams. He is

(01:35:47):
also here. Ralph has been all night. He's been the
very kind gentleman that we know him to be. I
want to run some articles. If I could buy you, Ralph,
one of them. It should not surprise you, sir. One
of them we've seen before and is really important and
is really really critical. Let's let's put this one up first.
It's from Fox News. This should shock nobody. DC paid

(01:36:11):
protester requests surge four hundred percent amid Trump's federal takeover
of city police. CEO says vast majority of political event
attendees in Washington are paid in some way. Wait a minute,
there are we saying that these are not spontaneous and grassroots,

(01:36:33):
just immediate protests that just are generated because of the
will of the people and they need to find a
way to express themselves. And that's apparently all bull I guess,
Ralph Hitdams.

Speaker 4 (01:36:46):
No, these are all organized protests. Look all you have
to do if you want to figure out if a
protest is generic or if it's organized, is look at
the signs that the people are carrying when they hit
the streets. The signs that they're carrying now about Donald

(01:37:09):
Trump and the federalizing of MPD. They all have the
same stylized lettering, they all have the same verbiage, they
all are on the same type of paper. They are
all using the same type of polls for support. These
have been mass produced. This is not a generic DC

(01:37:36):
resident driven protests in opposition to Donald Trump. This is
a politically motivated attempt to discredit and honestly continue the
efforts that they tried to do in his first term
to drive him out of office. They're already talking about

(01:38:00):
more impeachments.

Speaker 3 (01:38:02):
Yeah, that's that's very true.

Speaker 4 (01:38:04):
So no, this isn't generic. This is this is this
is George Soro's organized nonsense. See and also see this
is why it was so important for us AID to
be taken down, because USAID was getting billions of dollars
from the United States government, and what they were doing

(01:38:26):
is they were taking that money and funneling it to
nonprofits and NGOs, ninety nine percent of them progressive Democrat leaning,
and then they were taking those government funds which were
supposed to be used for humanitarian purposes and using them
for political purposes. But nobody had to report how the

(01:38:49):
money was being used. Because once USAID gave it to
the NGO and the nonprofit, it became a huge slush
fund that they could use support Democrat policies, politicians and policies.

Speaker 3 (01:39:05):
Let me put this back up on the stage, well,
not back up in the stage, up the stage, up
on the stage tonight for the first time. And you've
seen this material before, folks, haven't you. So I'll read
this for the people that are listening in podcasts they
don't have they can't see the article, So I'll read

(01:39:25):
it to you, and then I'll give you the date
and the topic and the information. This is from the Guardian.
This is an article that happens to be from the
twenty eighth of April twenty fifteen. Wow, ten years ago.
It happened ten years ago. I wonder, well, let's read
the top of the lead troops roll into Baltimore as

(01:39:50):
Obama urges us to start soul searching city poised for
military and forced lockdown to prevent further rioting. Obama admits
there are some police who weren't doing the right thing.
The city of Baltimore was poised for military enforced lockdown
on Tuesday. This is again I refer back into In

(01:40:12):
twenty fifteen, in an effort to prevent another night of
writing over the death of a young black man, as President,
Obama urged the US to begin soul searching over its
growing crisis in race and policing. But this was okay,
this was fine. Yep, it was a lockdown, but it
was by Barack Hussein Obama, and everyone was saying that, oh,

(01:40:35):
well wait, why isn't Why aren't these people the stassy,
the Nazis, the fascists. So what you're saying is, essentially, folks,
it's okay when Obama does it, but it's not okay
when Obama considers the welfare of citizens in Baltimore. That's fine,

(01:40:58):
that's okay, they're just riots, come on, move on. But
once omb does it, it's bad. He's a fascist, he's
a dictator, he's a wanna be king. As has been
said on any number of times, how do we reconcile

(01:41:20):
all of this? It's just so silly and stupid and fattening.

Speaker 4 (01:41:24):
Ralph Chitthams, Honest, what we do is we don't duck
and we don't run from the fight. You know, if
somebody tells me Donald Trump is a racist, I just
have a few questions for them. You know, was Donald
Trump erasist when the NAACP gave him the Lifetime Achievement Award?
What was Donald Trump a rasis when he financed Jesse

(01:41:49):
Jackson's first run for president? What was Donald Trump a
racist when Al Sharpen and Jesse Jackson made pilgrimages to
him year after year to help fund they're fake religious organizations?
Was Donald Trump a racist when he took care of
Jennifer Hudson's family when her mother was murdered? Was Donald

(01:42:09):
Trump a racist when when all of these things happened?
When did he become Tell me exactly when did Donald
Trump become a racist? And then they're going to try
to say, well the Central Park five, Okay, Well, the
judge and the prosecutors in that case were Democrats. You
haven't called them racist? Were they racist? See? We we

(01:42:34):
don't run, we don't duck. We stand there and we
take a punch and then we throw some punches, and
we throw our punches with ill intent.

Speaker 3 (01:42:51):
Here's something that during a break, I'm shocked that I've
been able to run a show so far because I'm
primorily a technol ledite and moron. But while you were
speaking not long ago, I was searching for a quote
from Larry Elder. I'll tell you a brief story about
Larry Elder. We met Larry Elder at SHR when we

(01:43:15):
were at Freedom Fest in twenty seventeen, and Larry Elder
was kind enough to come and actually sit at the
table with us and have a discussion. We interviewed him
for just about a full darn hour. A super guy,
and I had no idea up until that point really

(01:43:35):
who Larry Elder was. But Freedom Fest is a conference
for libertarians, and I wasn't sure that he was a libertarian.
But we started to talk to him and we found out. Man,
I want to tell you, this guy is sharp and
thinks on his feet. So having said that, let me

(01:43:57):
go to this. I was looking for this quote and
I'd like your input or your thoughts on this. Ralph
Hitdams and I found it. Larry Elders said, and this
is direct, directly attributed to himself. The formula for achieving
middle class success for anyone is simple. Finish high school,

(01:44:20):
don't have a child before the age of twenty, and
get married before having the child. What could be simpler,
more logical and yet so difficult apparently than.

Speaker 4 (01:44:34):
That nothing, because that's it in a nutshell. Graduate from
high school, go to college, or get a trade because
lord knows we need tradesmen in this country. Oh boy,
don't have children out of wedlock, get married and then

(01:44:57):
have children. That is the key to opening the door
to a middle class lifestyle in the United States of America.
And it is not race dependent.

Speaker 3 (01:45:13):
It's open to anyone.

Speaker 4 (01:45:16):
Everyone, every one.

Speaker 3 (01:45:19):
Paint job immaterial, yeah, absolutely immaterial, immaterial. And and now
Ralph Chitdams see you open the door earlier in the
first hour. So I'm going to walk through it right
now because that's who you are. You bring good stuff up,
and I have to admit it. Let's let's put this
up on the stage. Well, would it shocked or surprise

(01:45:42):
anyone to know that Nancy Pelosi X speaker said something really,
really stupid and the person who was best situated to
reply logically and with facts responded. So August eleventh, that's
just yesterday, Speaker Pelosi said from her ex platform. Donald

(01:46:10):
Trump delayed deploying the National Guard on January sixth, when
our capital was under violent attack and lives were at stake.
Now he's activating the DC Guard to distract from his
incompetent mishandling of tariffs, healthcare, education, and immigration, just to
name a few blunders. Well, first is I know how,

(01:46:34):
But I'm gonna ask you the question anyway, Ralph Chitdams.
How do people get away with this? How does she
get away with this? It's such a continuing false narrative,
an abjectly massive lie where the only response is one

(01:46:56):
that I found right here. I'm gonna put this up.
Oh lee gee, look who it is. It's Chief Stephen
sund who was the Capitol Police chief on January sixth,
and officially his statement goes exactly like this, in response

(01:47:17):
to Pelosi, ma'am, it is long pastime to be honest
with the American people. On January third, I requested National
Guard assistants, but your sergeant at arms denied it. Under
federal law to USC Section nineteen seventy, I was prohibited

(01:47:38):
from calling them in without specific approval. That same day,
Carol Corbin at the Pentagon offered National Guard support, but
I was forced to decline because I lacked the chief
of police of the Capital State Police. I lacked the
legal authority. On January sixth, when the Capital was under attack,

(01:48:02):
and despite my repeated calls, your sergeant at arms again
denied my urgent requests for over seventy agonizing minutes running
it up the chain for your approval. When I needed assistance,
it was denied. Yet when it suited you, you ordered

(01:48:23):
fencing topped with concertina wire and surrounded the Capitol with
thousands of armed National Guard troops. Do what I say
is is the reversal theory. What Ralph Chitthams, what possibly
would have occurred were the reverse true when let's say

(01:48:46):
Johnson as speaker, if it was perceived that the White
House or the Capitol was under assault, and Johnson said, no, nope,
I will not defend this building. I refuse, Well, I
can't send in national troops. The capital state police chief

(01:49:06):
would have said at the time, until you approve, No,
I am not. What would have happened under that scenario,
Ralph Chitdams.

Speaker 4 (01:49:16):
The Democrats would have gotten tortured in Pitchfork's and marched
on the Capitol and try to lynch him the But
what the Democrats have done in this country since Trump's
first term is created such hatred for Donald Trump. That

(01:49:37):
they have created a body politic that is willing to
suspend all logic and reason and live in a constant
state of hatred for a man, regardless of what it
is he says or what he does, and they will

(01:49:59):
believe any lie that is told that makes him look bad.

Speaker 3 (01:50:06):
It's it's absolutely incredible. And again, I want to go
back to some stats. I'm not sure I covered them
all before, but I'm on a different profile right now,
on a different page. Facts about DC homicide rate is
six times higher than New York City. DC has a
population of seven hundred and two thousand. New York City

(01:50:28):
has a population of eight point four million. The homicide
numbers are sixteen times higher in DC than Havana. DC
carjackings are up five hundred and forty seven percent from
twenty eighteen to twenty twenty three. That's post uhan nineteen
ninety percent. Sit down, folks, if you're ready for this,

(01:50:50):
because this is going to link directly to what Ralph
said about juveniles. Ninety plus percent of DC carjackings are
committed by juveniles with an average age of fifteen. DC
Metro Police has already been caught skewing crime statistics, and
what they do is this. I discovered DC Metro police

(01:51:14):
would report a crime involving a gun or a knife
as a felony assault because the FBI Uniform Crime Code
system doesn't record felony assaults, but it records guns and
it records knives. So you have to go out of

(01:51:36):
your way to do this to be this deceptive. Let
me go back to when I was a cop on
the street with a couple of sheriff's departments, when we
were working paper. On the flip side of the title
agent crime was what was called the Universal Crime Code,
and you'd flip the page over and you would have

(01:51:58):
to code the crime that occurred in the report that
you're taking as to what crime it was, and that
information was shipped over to records, and those records were
shipped over to d C, to the FBI. And it's
gigo all along. It's always been gigo. Garbage in, garbage out.

(01:52:19):
If your garbage, If your stats are skewed like DC does,
that's garbage. And one of the I took a stat
class in college a long time ago, and stats can
be manipulated and massaged to say essentially anything and everything

(01:52:39):
that you could possibly want this. I find amusing. Also,
I'm gonna put this up. Washington Post had a great article. Right,
The Washington Post says d C is safe. But the
person that the Washington Post used to consult, well, let

(01:53:04):
me just read this. A Washington Post article published Sunday
described DC as a safe city, even as one of
its sources declined to be named due to concerns of
personal safety. Equals, what the hell this? This is a quote?
This is a safe city. But overhearing and witnessing gang
threats and then watching the camera footage of the thuggery

(01:53:27):
is disturbing, said one resident quoted in the Post article.
The resident, per the Post, was speaking, I'm I'll talk
to you on the condition of anonymity over concerns of
personal safety. Mm hmm, Ralph JITs, you can't write this,

(01:53:47):
that's itself.

Speaker 4 (01:53:49):
Yeah. Absolutely, But welcome to people who have to be
schizophrenic in order to justify the lack of reason.

Speaker 3 (01:54:02):
It's nutty. I'm running out of time. We got seven
more minutes before the end of the show, so I
want to put this up here right now. Let me
see if I can there we go. Now, this is
a guy named Scott Jennings, and he dropped a little
bit of a bombshell about watching a murder in Union Station,
and he kind of obliterates that, Well, you know, DC's

(01:54:25):
stay is really safe, So there it is. And then
he kind of said, well, I don't know, let's.

Speaker 28 (01:54:36):
Listen, but there's an obvious difference between DC and any
other city in America. You know, a few months ago,
I was in Union Station and saw a body hit
the floor at the bottom of the escalator in Union
Station because there was a murder right in front of
me up on the second floor.

Speaker 3 (01:54:49):
I was going to get a tie.

Speaker 28 (01:54:51):
And I heard the shots and saw the body hit
the floor. So I've been listening all day long to
people trying to make some argument that Washington, DC is
a safe place. It's not a safe place. And we
can argue about statistics and numbers. There's a police commander
right now on suspension because there's some allegation that the
statistics have been altered. But we can argue about that.

Speaker 3 (01:55:10):
All day long.

Speaker 10 (01:55:11):
Nobody in their right mind who lives there or visits
there on a regular basis would tell you that Washington,
DC is safe, and everybody who goes there knows it,
but there's an obvious difference between DC is Washington.

Speaker 3 (01:55:22):
Let's go to the bottom, the fundamental bottom of it all.
And that's one of the main reasons that I had
you here tonight. Hey, Ralph Chittams. Is Washington DC safe fundamentally?

Speaker 4 (01:55:38):
No? No, But let's be honest, No urban city in
America is safe. None. All you have to do is
to make one wrong turn around, one wrong corner in
one wrong neighborhood, and your life could be over. Does

(01:56:01):
that sound safe to you?

Speaker 3 (01:56:03):
It's not to me. Let me point this up. Put
this up also summary table. You know they're talking about
effects on crime statistics. Well, one factor is high non
prosecution rates. What that means is the rests don't translate
to reported crime reductions. And then what happens if you
downgrade incident. Serious crimes are minimized in official counts, incompleted results,

(01:56:27):
in incomplete FBI reporting. And they're supposed to be the
ones that are the collectors of all the information so
that they produce a report at the end of the
year gaps to start broader trend analysis, and of course
unelected prosecutors, less local accountability on reporting and justice and
one final point. Yes, it's entirely plausible for crime to

(01:56:54):
appear to decline in DC due to how cases are prosecuted, reported,
or downgraded, even if the actual level of criminal activity
doesn't match the mirrored drop. That said, noticeable reductions in
violent crime, like a thirty five percent drop in twenty
twenty four also reflect targeted enforcement strategies. So two things,

(01:57:19):
let me point out two things can be correct at once.
And Ralph Hitdam's any particular thoughts on.

Speaker 4 (01:57:27):
That, sir, Yeah, And that little stat about having unelected prosecutors, Well,
in DC, we have elected prosecutors. The problem with DC
is DC is a one party, corrupt Democrat town, and
so the only people that are going to be elected
are the the leftist, regressive Democrat prosecutors who aren't going

(01:57:49):
to prosecute the crimes. So having elected prosecutors doesn't mean
a damn thing if you are living in a corrupt
one party town. That is, I'm going to elect a
certain type of person. Honestly, in DC, we need to
go back to unelected prosecutors and let them be appointed

(01:58:12):
for now by Donald Trump.

Speaker 3 (01:58:18):
So sort of in passing to wrap this up, and
obviously I'll let you make the last presentation in the
wrap up. In your opinion, would it take a lot
of money to correct what you've been Well, let me
ask you this before I proceed any further. How long

(01:58:38):
have you been living in DC.

Speaker 4 (01:58:41):
I've been living in DC since nineteen seventy eight except
for ten months.

Speaker 3 (01:58:47):
So in that amount of time, my guess is you've
seen everything, and you know all that has happened in DC.

Speaker 4 (01:59:00):
I've seen a lot of it.

Speaker 3 (01:59:02):
So welf Chittams. Would it take just an amount of
money that is so staggering that it can't even be
considered to cure the ills of DC? Or in truth,
would it take a lot of money at all?

Speaker 4 (01:59:21):
No, we already have enough money in the budget where
we could deal with all of these issues. The problem
is the money needs to be reprogrammed and put into
places where it's actually going to do some good. We
need to stop funneling these fake nonprofits whose only goal

(01:59:41):
is to feed the executive director because she typically doesn't
have any marketable skills and couldn't feed herself if she
wasn't getting a handout from the district government to run
some fake nonprofit that doesn't have to prove any results
and doesn't have to even give a matrix. No, there
are some things that we need to do in DC.

(02:00:03):
One of the things we need to do is we
need to bring back vocational education in DC. Absolutely, we
need to bring back the system that produces middle class
stability and middle class wealth. We need plumbers, we need electricians,
we need pipefitters, we need iron workers. We need these

(02:00:26):
type of people that with a high school diploma and
a Journeyman card, they can make one hundred thousand dollars
a year and get married and have children and raise
them up properly. We don't need any more money. There's
enough money in the DC budget right now to fix
every problem that DC has. It just needs to be

(02:00:47):
reprogrammed and put someplace where it's actually going to be
doing some good and not used to pay off some
political operative.

Speaker 3 (02:00:56):
So I guess the bottom line the most pertinent question
is at this point is can it be done? Can
DC be helped? Will it respond? Can it be cleaned up?
Ralph Chittams.

Speaker 4 (02:01:14):
Unfortunately, I don't think so. I honestly don't think so,
simply because DC is just so entrenched in its democrat
identity and victimhood mentality that honestly, I don't. I do

(02:01:36):
not see the bright future for the difficult of Columbia.
I don't. I'm sorry, I just don't.

Speaker 10 (02:01:46):
Wow.

Speaker 3 (02:01:46):
Okay, folks, if you don't think this was two hours
of unadulterated truth, I simply don't know what to tell you.
But I will say this, folks, that was the incredible
Ralph Jay Chitdam's senior and I'm not going to let
him get away tonight without asking a really important question

(02:02:08):
which he may or may not appreciate. I'm not sure
at this point. But again, thank you being here direct
from DC, and it's an honor to have had you
on the show again tonight, particularly considering and I say
every time that it's really really late on the East
Coast right now, like, for example, it's one o one,

(02:02:32):
it's tomorrow on the East coast where Ralph is right now.
So again, sir, always a pleasure to have you here.
And then here comes the question, and that is this
voices like yours belong on SHR any possibility of bringing

(02:02:57):
your show back, sir, because you're was fabulous. I know
life gets in the way. I get it. I grocked
that concept, but I I. Every time I talk to you,
I'm always gonna ask you this, what's the chance may be?
Kind of sort of?

Speaker 4 (02:03:17):
I have been considering it. So there is a possibility.

Speaker 3 (02:03:21):
Okay, wait, wait, wait, I have to reach for this.
And to that I respond, you heard it here first.
It's not an impossibility. The chance exists. So I speak
translative kinds of things. So so you're saying you're coming

(02:03:42):
right back, then is that what you're saying?

Speaker 4 (02:03:44):
No, No, something naggling and you know some some things.
But I have considered bringing the show back simply because
I do think that a that an unabashed conservative voice
from urban America is missing from the current marketplace exactly.

Speaker 3 (02:04:08):
That's and see SAHR was ahead of its time in
terms of we had a whole bunch of cool dudes
on at one point. We had Ken McClinton, We had
Ralph Chitthams, we had Lonnie Poindexter. I may be missing somebody,
I don't think so at this point, but these are
all valid, wonderful, excellent, exquisite conservative voices who were saying,

(02:04:34):
and SAHR has always said, well, don't give a crap
about your paint job. We just want to know if
you love America, love God, and are our conservative. If so,
give us we want you in the mix right here,
and that, of course is why we'd love to have
you back.

Speaker 4 (02:04:54):
Well. I love the invitation. I can honestly say I
can't think of another show that I come on that's
as much fun as yours. And that's why anytime you
extend the invitation, I always graciously accept.

Speaker 3 (02:05:11):
Okay. I do that to my wife sometimes, or she
does that to me. It's the standard. She'll say something
and I'll say okay, as in you really are you
really saying that? Because that may come back Just remember

(02:05:31):
so Ralph Chittams, Okay, So thank you sir, God bless
you again. You're one in a million, a great voice.
Oh oh oh oh before I go, and you know,

(02:05:55):
I'm sorry for being so rude and not asking you
this earlier. Are there any points and either say a
website or social media or anything that you that you'd
like to point people towards, either about you or causes
in which you believe anything like that, Any website social
media that you'd like to mention before we take off.

Speaker 4 (02:06:17):
Uh No, honestly, I'm I'm pretty active on Facebook I'm
under my own name, so you know they can reach out.
I'm usually starting trouble over there, and you know, ticking
off liberals and making their heads explode. Well one thing,
well you did mention I am a pastor and I

(02:06:38):
in the next hopefully a couple of weeks, I do
have a book that's coming out.

Speaker 3 (02:06:44):
Oh cool, Can you tell me the title or is
that verboten?

Speaker 4 (02:06:47):
You know on the time of the books book is
going to be Lessons from a Shepherd Boy. And what
what we do in this book is we look at
the life of David before he became king, when he
was just a little shepherd boy, hanging out taking care
of his father's flock until just before he becomes king,

(02:07:07):
and looking at all of his trials and struggles and
gleaning the lessons that all of us can take from
the lives of a shepherd boy. So once we get
that's it's in final review now the editors are taking
a look at it. And once that's I'm finalized, I
will definitely let you know, and we can let your

(02:07:29):
viewers know that they that it's ready, and hopefully they'll
go out and they'll support it.

Speaker 5 (02:07:34):
Excellent.

Speaker 3 (02:07:35):
I gotta have you back for that. So that's that's
an excellent point in the future. And obviously, Ralph, any
any any every time that you would like to come
on for any reason whatsoever, if you got something to say, uh,
here's your venue to say it right here, and again,
thank you ever so kindly sir for being here.

Speaker 4 (02:07:55):
Tonight, very welcome.

Speaker 3 (02:07:57):
Have a great night you too, Thank you. Take care
of God bless us and be safe.

Speaker 10 (02:08:00):
Sir.

Speaker 3 (02:08:02):
Wait, let's do that there. I am so Ralph, what
an incredible guy he said. Now you heard it here first.
You heard it here first, because I can see Ralph
is still there in the background, and I can see
Ralph is smiling. So I just want to readm and

(02:08:23):
he's yeah, he's really smiling now I can see him.
Don't think I can see you, mister. But hey, when
his book comes out, I want to have him back.
And I want to continue to emphasize the offer anytime
you want to come back for any any reason whatsoever,
you will always have a home and a venue right here.

(02:08:45):
And we would we hope, Ralph Chittams, that we would
be the first place to which you would say, if, if,
and when you're ready. That the SHR media network has
a place just for you. So that that was Do

(02:09:06):
you see now, folks, why I go to Ralph? Do
you see now why he is the go to guy
for all the things that I mentioned at the very
beginning of the show, right, And so.

Speaker 5 (02:09:25):
It is the end.

Speaker 3 (02:09:28):
Ladies and gentlemen, boys and girls, children of all ages.
Thanks for listening to b Z's Berzert Bobcat Saloon Radio
show live and direct right here on the SHR Media Network.
It will be conducted by k l r N Rick
Robinson's k l r N sometime in the in the future,
not sure exactly when. And thank you for watching live.

(02:09:51):
Thanks to everybody for watching in the podcast. Thanks to
all the critteran that we're in chat tonight. Takumarrow always
appreciated when you appear up. You are wonderful people and
vertical bipeds and I can't say anything more than nothing better,

(02:10:12):
nothing better about you than that, except promotional consideration is
by the Lockheed Martin Skunkworks and also sure an electro
voice Michael Phones the mixer oracus that make my mixer.
And also thanks for promotional consideration by the Pratt and
Whitney Engine Company producing a thrust you can trust Tiara's

(02:10:37):
and I've got a new one. Tonight. Tiaras are by
my little Pony and I will be concerting with my
Casey one three five Kello one refueling team in less
than ten minutes. Everybody, goodbye, God bless, be safe. I

(02:10:57):
mean you okay, you not fam good that everyone? Good night, Mama,
God I, Daddy, good night, Showdren, good night, good night, Elizabeth.

Speaker 16 (02:11:07):
Nightgown boy, good night, Timbob, night, Jimbob, good.

Speaker 10 (02:11:11):
Night, Jimba.

Speaker 4 (02:11:14):
What's going on?

Speaker 19 (02:11:15):
I was a snip?

Speaker 4 (02:11:16):
What's everybody doing?

Speaker 14 (02:11:18):
Good night?

Speaker 15 (02:11:28):
And good luck?

Speaker 3 (02:11:36):
Hey, maybe you shot? You thought the show was over?
What if the show isn't over? What if I play
some more comments? God bless Ralph Busy and chat n
c X. He's here tonight, thank you. She was on
the network. Busy left her out. Damn it. It's true.

(02:11:59):
Guilty guilty, Sean says, I will punish him off the
air for the oversight, and c X thought, well, that's
pretty funny. Makes me want to settle up again just
to get Ralph back on. And also, good night, David,

(02:12:20):
good night, Chet, good night to everybody. Hey, while I
have you here, i'd like to tell you this Today's Tuesday.
Now unless oh the Phantom came back in. Unless I'm mistaken,
I could be. My guess is my supposition is that

(02:12:44):
Tomorrow night at eight pm Pacific at ten pm Central
and eleven pm Eastern my hours. Just on Tomorrow night,
Wednesday night, Sean will be bringing his show back. So
what I'm saying to you now is, oh my god,

(02:13:07):
I'm back. How did that happen? How did that happen?
So hey, watch the show, watch Seawan's show. I will
be back Thursday night, but also on Thursday. Let me
go back up here again because I need to mention
this Thursday night is going to be excuse me, Thursday

(02:13:32):
morning will be Mission Ready Men in the morning. Now
he changed it. Let me see if I can put
up I'm looking for a comment here before he went away.
Usually Earl Jackson, who does Mission Ready Men, he leaves

(02:13:57):
after about the first hour because he gets up really
really early. Okay, And his show will be on Thursday
morning at nine am Pacific and eleven pm Central and

(02:14:19):
Nunish kind of sort of maybe Nunish, mostly Nunish on Eastern.
So I just want to remind everybody on that and
then my Thursday night show. Everything is going to change
between now and Thursday Night. So how do I know
what's going to be on? Well, I'm looking over here
and there are a whole bunch of tabs that I

(02:14:39):
haven't even touched yet, So probably some of those will
be on the show. But who knows what kind of
weird things are going to be happening in the interim.
What if they happen, you can bet that SHR will
carry it two subscriptions of six hundred. I'm counting on you. Everybody,

(02:15:04):
Take care, be safe, good night,
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