Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:04):
It's the Opperman Report. Join Digital Forensic Investigator in PI
at Opperman for an in depth discussion of conspiracy theories,
strategy of New World Order resistance, hi profile court cases
in the news, and interviews with expert guests and authors
on these topics and more. It's the Opperman Report and
(00:28):
now here is Investigator at Opperman.
Speaker 2 (00:38):
Okay, welcome to the Opperman Report. I am your host,
Private Investigator at Opperman, and this show was brought to
you by email revealer dot com. You go to email
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treat yourself or someone you love to a sweet and
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dot com if you do a search on iHeart or
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little interview with phoebe Beside this week. We'll spend about
a half hour talking about all the different as of
chocolate products and that they have there at the piscoco
(02:33):
dot com website. Uh, fascinating stuff, a lot more than
I expected. All kinds of even like barbecue ribs, you know,
with a cocoa sauce, barbecue sauce. Fascinating stuff. Okay, I
wonder how the audio is because it doesn't seem like
the okay, look good, old check out here, testing testing, testing, testing, okay,
(03:01):
all right, almost didn't make it to the air today, guys.
Right before it was going on in the air, I
opened up the window here and a little piece of
pollen got my eye and my gud that the pollen
is so bad here. Sometimes at the beginning of the spring,
it's really intense. Sometimes you can't even drive. You gotta
pull over to the side of the road. Social media,
(03:23):
you have these hard contact lenses. Oh. One more thing too,
a little bit of programming notes. Normally we have after
tonight's show, we play Pierce Redmond. But I don't think
I'm gonna be playing it tonight. He didn't have a
new show. I was gonna play a repeat, but then
I figured, let me just go to bed. Tomorrow five
(03:45):
pm Pacific Standard time, we have a gentleman on the show.
Did a film about the Satanic ritual abuse and that
case about the the Little Blue House with the don
and the Curca family there, you know, Donna Cirica. So
(04:06):
we're gonna be doing a whole thing about that tomorrow
five paym Pacific Standard time. I'm also gonna be taping
with Captain Cruncher. You heard me talking about that earlier
tonight when I was on the phone with the Sean Duff.
So a lot of good stuff coming up. I'm gonna
be talking of Bob Crane's son. Also to that show
about the little girl down the well. I gotta work
on that too, Baby Jessica who fell down the well.
(04:30):
I could either get her father or the author of
a book. I'm also doing a show about that case
the Toy Box and Truth of Consequences New Mexico. That
case stayed with this guy. This guy is a real
character man, and his daughter was involved. They were kidnapping
these young girls and torturing him in his box and
videotaping it. Intense, intense. Tonight's show was supposed to be
(04:55):
called Trump and Sharpton because I was going to do
a whole show about the friendship and the business connections
between Donald Trump and Al Sharpton. But I got sidetracked
this week by a couple of things. Uh. First of all,
Vick's been with me. Victoria's my daughter and her mother
(05:16):
went on vacation to Hawaii, and so Vick was whip
me for like two and a half weeks. Man, it
was quite some time. And we just got into this
routine or some nice you know, hanging out with your
daughter every day. And Thursday morning I found out she says, well, Dad,
you know, my moms picking me up from school today.
(05:38):
And I says, WHOA you kidding me? She'll be back
tomorrow night. It's sound like, you know, it's gonna be it,
but it just we're just so sad. When she left
the house that morning, was just so sad. And uh,
you know, I've been describing lately about how I feel
like I have some PTSD that I've been suffering from
emotional trauma from a lot of these shows I do
(05:58):
and from a lot of the work that I do.
And I had an incident this week that I'm going
to be talking about tonight where I met this delightful
young woman. But in the course of our discussions and
her describing her life to me, she's the poor kid
(06:19):
has been through so much trauma in her life and
so much abuse and really, uh no opportunity in life,
and so you know, that just was really intense. On Wednesday,
I was just sitting there listening to her story for
about a good hour and a half and really drained
the life out of me. And then Thursday morning finding
(06:40):
out Victoria ha to deal because they're almost the same age.
You know, this girl's nineteen years old but towards sixteen,
gonna be seventeen September, you know, and you can't help
but make that kind of comparison when you're a father,
you know. So I changed the focus of the show
(07:00):
to cover some different things, and the name of the
show is the Value of Life. You know. I've spent
the majority of my adult life trying to communicate, and
(07:22):
I write these reports, these investigative reports, you know, because
my professional life, I'm a private investigator, digital forensic investigator
with the objective I like to take a witness's statement
and to reduce that statement in those facts down to
a report that can be understood by a lawyer or
a judge or a jury. Or take evidence from a
(07:47):
hard drive or a cell phone and reduce it to
a report that could be understood. You know. Back in
the old days, I can remember, I'm back before you
had all kind of these computers and stuff like that.
We would make these exhibits like a chart or you know,
after Ito, My god, it was so such such homemade
type stuff compared to what you can do now. But
with the goal is to take the facts and to
(08:10):
present it to people correctly, you know, with with respect
for the integrity of those facts. And I think I've
excelled at this. And I've been a frequent guest on
radio and TV. I wrote a book, I've been written
about in books, So you can imagine my frustration when
(08:36):
I try to present something to this audience and I
just feel like it's, you know, I'm just wasting my breath,
like it just goes in one ear and goes out
the other. And you know, people will say to me,
you know, things like, well, you hate you just hate Trump,
(08:56):
so everything you say about them is a lie, you know.
And I would really defy anybody to find anything I've
ever reported about Trump that's a lie, you know. I
think I'm very careful about this kind of stuff. Or
people who can somehow listen to what I say and
(09:16):
listen to what I talk about and say that I'm
a Democrat or that I support Hillary or Obama, you know, so,
or even worse, when people say to me, you know,
well ed if you would change your mind about Trump,
(09:41):
you would have more subscribers, you know, or I'm not
going to subscribe to the member section because well you
don't support my candidate Trump, you know, like, to me,
that is so abhorrent. First of all, you think that
you could pay me with six dollars a month over
sixty five dollars a year, you know, to get me
(10:03):
to change what I'm reporting to you, And but then
it's insulting to me. But on the other hand, it's
just so sad that you would want me to lie
to you, and that you're offered to pay me money
for me to lie to you. You know, I would
(10:31):
love to one day be able to on the air live.
Maybe I'll just record this stuff and that'll play after
I die or whatever, after I'm gone. There's a lot
of what I do here is I'm not a lot
of what I'm doing here is I'm reporting for history.
(10:52):
Hopefully that some day someone listen doesn't understand what I'm
trying to say, that someone will come back and look
at this, because I'm giving you a lot of stuff.
But one day I wish I could just come to
you and tell you the things I've been involved in
this this past year and some of the things I've
worked on this past year, some things I've been I've
done this past year. That how what has brought me
(11:16):
to the conclusions that I come to that I speak
to you on the air. Okay, many reasons why I cannot. Hey,
(11:40):
there was a a new videotape came out this week
and the Mike Brown case in Ferguson, Missouri. And you
might recall at the time that young man was shut
down in the street down there, and the whole neighborhood
saw him lying in the street all day, and the
(12:02):
whole neighborhood came out and stood in the street and
cried out loud and wailed at this young man that
the whole neighborhood knew. And they wouldn't even let the
mother come on with a blanket and cover up the body.
And then the police came with dogs and he drove
through memorials. There was that a cannibal, moral cops his
strover through it, you know. And then the uproar and
(12:28):
all the politics get involved, and Reverend Old comes down
and hijacks the whole thing, and he wants to get
the FBI involved, and the deterrment of justice. The Attorney General. Well,
who's running at now, Reverend Now, you know, I guess
that's just an accident. It was a coincidence that this
FBI agent asset wants to spends up the past ten
(12:53):
years trying to turn every kind of police investigation and
every kind of police the department over to the FBI.
And now who's running FBI? Now, who's running Department of Justice?
But I guess that was a long accident. But they
came out with her new tape. You know. The story
that they put out all that time was that, well,
(13:17):
look here's this video. He's he did a strong arm
robbery in his candy store here, and then this this cop,
Darren whatever, the officer Darren there got the call and
he stopped him over. That turns out that's all crap now,
because we got the video and the incident happened the
day before at the candy store, and at the time
(13:41):
people saw it that he had different footwear on his feet.
There was a different four in a video than was
on the dead body in the street, and so people
came to the conclusion, what must be a false flag, okay,
in order to cause a race riote. They came up
with that theory, not the simple theory that the cops
are just covering up and making up a phony story.
(14:02):
I'm gonna be going into more detail on this because
I'm trying to get this guy, Jason Pollock on the show.
It just seems to be an incredible hothead. Mhm. But
if we look at the entirety of that case where
(14:23):
you have Michael Brown, they dockted up this video, They
doctored up this whole story about this this theft prior
to the cops stopping him. You got that his buddy
was with him the whole time, and it's a shooting
of police shooting. They don't even take a statement from
the buddy that night, and the buddy goes on TV says, yah,
they he had his hands up when they shut him. Now,
the buddy changed his whole story out of fear. Probably
(14:46):
you got the I've looked at the the exhibits, the
uh why, I like, I'm doing the maps. I don't
want I want to call it where they have where
the show came are, and many of them are right
over the dead body, not in the car for a
(15:07):
struggle over a gun. Then you have the grand jury
relies on this crazy witness who they knew was crazy,
who claimed that she was down there in that neighborhood
because she hates black people and wanted to drive around
and trying and her hatred of black people, and she
(15:28):
was a witnessed the whole day. They knew it was crap.
And then you got this guy, this officer, after interview him,
after all of this, and he comes out with all
these racist statements. The case is open and shut. And
people want to think that, well, the Justice Department was
all controlled by the blacks and Al Sharpton was running
the investigation. Well look at now, look look now we
(15:52):
got Sessions running Department of Justice. So Al Sharpton put
all his civil rights cases into the hands of Sessions.
I did a show one night called The Village two seven,
(16:16):
and this is where I talk about when I was
driving the car service on Staten Island and I got
into a little fight with those kids and they came
back with a gun and they shot my windows out
and stuff like that. They tried to run me off
the road. And back at that time when I was
driving for the car service every now and then once
(16:41):
twice a week, you'd get in the car. These old people,
they were like shut ins, you know, and they would
go into their doctor's appointment almost entirely. The only time
they left their house, like in six months or whatever,
was to go to their doctor appointment. And you know,
I'd pull up and he seemed struggling to get out
the front door. I jump out of the car to
(17:01):
help him get to the car, and stuff like that,
because I got a soft spot for these old ladies.
And you know, I'm a real secret because these old
ladies did. And then you know, they get in the
car and they haven't talked to anybody in months, so
they start talking to you tong you. You know, I'm
very polite and personal. People like to talk to me.
(17:22):
And then you know they like me so much they
would ask the dispatcher for the same driver to take
them back home, and to take them. Oh, you know,
it reminded me too about this one time too real quick.
Where in the Staten Island Mall, there was used to
be this place called the R. J. Peters where they
sold muffins and bagels and coffee and stuff like that, right,
and fancy teas and things. And one day I see
(17:44):
this old lady walking out of there, trying to dragging
his big giant garbage bag out of there, and I said,
he let me help you with that, and it turned
out she's bringing it to the homeless shelter, and then
she somehow hijacks me that. Now it's my job. But
I got to stop there every and I pick up
the bag of donuts and drive it all the way
over to this homo shelter every night because I'm saw
(18:04):
I'm gonna push over when it comes to these old ladies.
So I never knew this kind of thing existed, these
shut INDs, until I was driving at car service. And
that's what you got to understand about this meals on
wheels program. Okay, And it's not just meals on wheels
(18:32):
too that's being cut. It's after school food programs. And also,
two guys, these legal aid programs are being shut down too.
So when you're getting screwed over in the court and
you can go down and get advice from these lawyers
and stuff like that, and sometimes they'll take your case
pro bono, that's all gonna get shut off. That's all
part of this funding package. So, according to the Trump regime,
(19:01):
meals on Wheels doesn't work. It's a program that doesn't work,
I guess because you feed these people and they just
get hungry again. So it's a failure. Because some of
these people you feed them, they want another meal the
same day. They want to two three meals a day.
These people are outrageous want it to be fed. But
you got to understand the reason behind Meals on Wheels.
(19:22):
It's not just that these people are poor and they
need a meal. For those people that you a food
stamp card, an EBT card, and they can make it
out of their apartment. They can get out of their bed,
they can get to their front door. They can get
to the supermarket, buy some groceries, get it back, maybe
take a cab or whatever, you know, Or they get
(19:43):
their grocery and they can get to their stove and
cook some food. The Meals on Wheels people, our people
can't get to the store there. They're bedridden, they're in wheelchairs.
They can barely make it. Some of these people, you know,
I hope you understand what this program is. Many of
(20:04):
these people can't get to their door to open the door.
The Meals on Wheels volunteers have a key to their
door to get in to let themselves in. Okay, And
for many of these people, this is the only human
contact that they have is with the Meals on Wheels volunteers.
(20:26):
Those are the only people that they talk to. Found
out today that half a million of them are are veterans.
The idea that it's even thinkable that we're going to
(20:49):
look around and see where do we want to save money,
where do we want to cut back, and say, well,
let's take it from that little old lady who can't
get from her bed to the stove because her life
has no value. Her life does not have as much
value as as someone else who I don't even know
(21:12):
who to describe at the moment, but but that these
people's lives have less value than maybe my life or
your life. And I know, you know this came out.
(21:38):
I think it was yesterday the day before, and when
I was watching him, when my mouth open, because I
watch all these press conferences, you know, the daily briefings.
If they're not televised, I watch them on YouTube. You
can catch them live on YouTube. And so it hits
(22:02):
the airwaves and the Twitter verse and the Facebook, and
my god, Trump wants to cut out the program meals
on wheels, and then people start making excuses for this,
you know, like somehow it's justifiable. I can understand a
(22:35):
person who is maybe unhappy with their lot in life
and they want more. You're a hard working person. You
don't have to see money taking out of your taxes, and
you want more for yourself and your family. So do
I Okay, I want more for myself and my family.
(22:56):
Let me tell you this week, I got to send
two thousand dollar was worth of the work I've done
for clients to collection agencies. If collection ager to go
back and collect this money, and these people on me,
Now that's two thousand dollars and I'm billing them. If
I would have built these people with the time and
work I really put into their cases, it's like ten
thousand dollars worth of work, and in karma value, it's
(23:21):
it's like fifty thousand dollars worth of work. Well, I
want to two thousand bucks, say, you know, so, when
I want more in life, right for myself and my family,
of course I work for it. I work hard for it,
you know. But I don't look around and say, well,
(23:43):
let me take from the person it's weakest from the
you know, take take from them. If anything, I'm going
to look to the one percent the richly said, well,
let me take from them. Okay, because they're they're getting
all their money from us. Take back some of the
money we're giving them. Why is it okay to subsidize
(24:05):
the six members of the Walton family through taxes, food
stamps and all this, But we're instead of taking back
something from them a penny, We're gonna take from the
meals on wheels people and take from them because in
some cock eyed, crazy universe, those six members of the
(24:27):
Walton family, their lives have more value than the five
hundred thousand veterans who can't get out of their bed
to get to their stove and stand up over their
stove long up to boil an egg, and they need
meals on wheels to come to their home. Okay, I'm
gonna take a commercial break and we'll be right back
(24:48):
after this. And now a word from our sponsors. Did
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(25:58):
a producer here at the Opperat and he's just come
out with a new book, Children of the Beast Alistair
Crowley's Shadow over Humanity. Now, he just sent me a
copy of this book. Oh boy, it's my twinch is thick.
And there's a chapter on just about everybody in this
book that you can imagine Beatles and Jack Parsons, everybody's
(26:28):
in here. It's incredible and I definitely recommend this book.
There's a bunch of pictures in here too, of all
these people in a different chapters, and information uh antson
LeVay and people I've never heard of too. It's a
whole bunch of here. J C. JFC Fuller, I don't
know who he is, but it's great stuff by our
(26:49):
producer here, William Ramsey. So check out Children of the
Beast Alistair Crowley's Shadow Over Humanity. You can find it
on Amazon dot com or you could find it in
the Opperman Report dot com bookstore. We have an urgent bulletin.
(27:12):
It seems that the group straw Man is still on
the loose. It has been confirmed that straw Man are Canadian, okay,
and that's authorities are asking people to stay indoors, lock
your doors and windows until this group can be dealt with.
You could find more information about this group, this group
(27:34):
of Canadians at Strawmanmusic dot com. You can have your
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(29:00):
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affordable prices to sponsor Oppermanreport dot com. Get a copy
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How to become a successful private investigator by Ed Opperman.
(29:42):
And this book has been updated a little bit from
the previous book that we had that was available to
our wonderful listeners. Okay, welcome back to the Opperaman Report.
I'm your host private investigator at Opperman. If you like
the show and you want to keep hearing these shows,
(30:03):
I got to tell you check out to Operamanreport dot
com our members section. I'll let you know a little secret.
Last night the internet got shut off and I had
to do one of those, So it was it was
a check my phone to pay me the internet built
so we could do todays show. It's supposed to interview
(30:23):
somebody this morning. They bailed on me, so I had
to have the internet back on by eleven am. So
I didn't know those check by phones in the middle
of the night to get the internet back on. But
if you want to keep hearing these shows, there's three
ways we can go about this. One of you can
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(30:44):
become a monthly or a yearly or a quarterly member.
It's six bucks for a month, it's twenty bucks for
a quarter and seventy five for a year. If you
can pay me direct through PayPal at Opperman Report at
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you a thirteen months for like sixty five, or half
(31:05):
a month or six months for thirty five. That's one
way to support the show. You become a member. There's
extra content there, extra shows, all that kind of stuff.
Another way is become a sponsor like pscoco dot com.
Phoebe Sade sponsors the show. She gets show plugged selves chocolate.
Everybody's happy, nobody gets hurt.
Speaker 3 (31:27):
Right.
Speaker 2 (31:27):
Another way you can make a donation. Just make a
donation an operaman report at gmail dot com. We got
a donation today from Jan. I think it was Jan
from the chat room. Thank you so much. Jan. Oh
we can look at it right now and see it. Well,
click ones here, I'll tell you who was little donation.
(31:52):
Yes from Jan, Thank you so much. She has some
kind of a business. Oh what is it? Okay, let
me move on. Okay, So sponsor member donation all I
greatly appreciated. So the second part of this week that
(32:17):
caused me trauma. You know, I gotta tell you, man,
you know I think about these people, these meals on
wheels people that it is sitting there and no one
to talk to and the doorbell ring and it's the
happiest moment of their day. And President mister Trump wants
to take that away from I don't know, man, for
some reason, I feel that it affects me. What I'm
(32:37):
gonna do is too, by the way, because I am
a rec lately. I gotta tell you is I'm gonna
do that thing that the ten day silent meditation retreat
that wonder Hussy Sarah Jane Woodhold talked about on the show.
I'm gonna take some time out and go do that
and try that for a while. Ten days. So I
(32:59):
get a all this week from work and I have
to make contact with this these some people. And I
just got a couple of names right and email addresses,
cell phone numbers. Make contact with these people and go
take a statement. Okay, I'm on it. Don't worry. But
this is not as easy as it sounds, because you know,
(33:21):
you contact someone up and I say, I want to
meet with you and take a statement from you. Well,
who are you? You know, what's this about? Are we
in trouble? You know? The whole thing goes on, Lucky
for me, I'm sort of a well known guy. I
could send him a couple of links and says, no,
this is who I am. Is you gonna listen this
case I've worked on. It's my bio. You're home, you know.
(33:42):
And then they look at my name and I say, oh,
they listen to interviews I've done, and said, so this
is young. It's a young couple twenty years old and
nineteen years old. Hey, and finally we range we're gonna
(34:04):
meet at a fast food restaurant because they're staying at
this this budget sweets. Okay, if you don't know what
budget sweets is, it's a it's you know that guy
Bob Bigelow you always hear about on art Bell runs
the Big Lower Aerospace Museum here and he dated Linda
Moultonhile it's a local billionaire. You hear about this guy, Oh,
(34:26):
local billionaire. This guy's a slum lord okay, that owns
these weekly share rentals that for a little tiny room
he's charging like eleven hundred bucks, you know, for people
who can't either rent an apartment, they don't have their
act together. They just got out of jail, you know,
whe they're on drugs or something, you know, or people
(34:48):
are people on the balls of their ass. And for
a room he could be charging four hundred a month.
For he's charging like two fifty a week to seventy five. Outrageous.
But people are broken. They got no choice. These are
the kind of places you gotta live in. So they
(35:10):
got no car. This couple, the guy works at a
convenience store, and she's not unemployed. It's trying to get work,
trying to get something to do. So I we agree, okay,
we're gonna meet her a fast food place. So she
has to walk to this place to get to the
place to meet me. So for me, it's just another day,
(35:30):
you know, you know, I'm hung over it, let's you know,
I don't want damn better. It was like Monday morning
or something like that. I gotta get down there, you know.
But for her, it was a big deal in her
life to meet this famous private investigator. So, you know,
I walk into the little fast food place and she's
all dressed up and wearing her like Sunday clothes, and
(35:54):
we start chatting. You know, Okay, let me buy a
cup of coffee. Let's talk about what we gotta do
and such a wonderful person with a good heart. But
you know, you can kind of I was talking on
the show earlier about when I go into that room
full little rocks and the crystals and stuff like that
(36:16):
and feel the energy. You know, when I meet people,
I can pretty much size them up pretty quickly. You know.
I just have a knack for that kind of thing.
I always have. And I could kind of tell this
was a good person but had a rough life of
a respectful, I mean honest, you know, decent person. And
(36:37):
she was even like apologizing to me because she didn't
have nice shoes on, because she was wearing like a
bare sneak as it didn't fit, and her nails weren't done.
Oh I haven't got my nails done so long. Oh
my god. Like she's all self conscious about these stupid
little things, like I'm gonna be sitting there judging her.
And this is a kid not much older than my
own daughter. My daughter's gonna be seventeen years old. It
goes nineteen living in some fleabag motel in Las Vegas,
(37:07):
all her money to going out to Bob Bigelow because
the two of them together, their whole paycheck goes to
pay this stupid rent. They can't even afford a car,
gas to get to work, kids riding his bike to work.
(37:29):
It doesn't take long. And I don't want to be
sound insulting to sum up that this is a person
that has no clue, no clue in life, no clue
(37:51):
of the possibilities life has to off for you. No
driver's license, no food stamps, no car, living in a
whe rental that could They can get kicked out in
a week if they if they don't have two seventy five,
If they don't have two seventy you're out, you know.
(38:11):
So there's at least to a one pay check away
from living on the street. Grew up in foster care,
telling me about growing up with her family or parents,
chasing each other around with guns, having a grabber little sister,
little brother, and running to the neighbors and hide, calling
(38:33):
the police, talking about suicide attempts at the age of
nine years old, domestic violence, drugs, all that stuff, you know.
(38:59):
And in what the six hours I've spent with these
two this week, I just talking to them. I've given
them more advice and more guidance and more direction in
their life than the entire sum total of their life.
You can add up all the parents, the force to care,
(39:22):
the teachers, the churches, the what else is it's called
case workers. Add it all up, man, Okay, And talking
to these cads, I don't know one's told them a
damn thing about life. And these are these lives have value.
(39:49):
These are good people that want the same things you
and I want out of life. They just never got
a break the luck of birth. Earth that one person,
Ivanka Trump can be born into the Trump family. Okay,
and here's another girl, just as equally as beautiful, just
(40:10):
as equally as smart and capable, but born into a dump,
born into a life of no guidance, no parenting, no nurturing,
no teachers that cared, no schools, no churches that cared.
(40:34):
And when we just throw them away because because there
is something that tells us that these lives have no value,
there's some excuse we can make in our heads that
we can just walk right past these kind of people.
Are we were? I was even saying, a guy goes
hiking out of Red Rock, right, and he doesn't he
(40:57):
gets lost. They're out there with helicopters and dogs and
search teams a million dollars that spent the finest guy
got dying right in front of the ENDMO.
Speaker 3 (41:06):
Because there's something in this system, because guys like Bob
Bigelow need people like this, They need people in the
condition that they're in okay to exploit them okay.
Speaker 2 (41:21):
And maybe he's not. There's there's other these you know,
little fleet bag weekly rental places, but this is a
chain of them here. Man, he's Budget Sweets and he's
Segal Sweets, and they prey on poor people. I'm working,
struggling kids who should be in college. This is when
they their brains can absorb the most and they can
make something out themselves. But for some reason, something one
(41:49):
human life lost at Red Rock is worth a million
dollars to go find. But there's other human life that
are They're a valueless they have no value for some reason.
I don't know who decides and how this comes because
the system. Let me tell you something, I am so
pissed off this week, man, and not even pissed off,
I'm just freaking disgusted because the thing is is that
(42:16):
the system is designed to create people like this to
be exploited, and to be exploited to the point where
you got a beautiful kid like this and she has
to think in her head just in order to survive,
should I exchange my flesh for housing and food and money?
(42:41):
Where are we we live worse than animals, that we
could just treat other people this way. And you know
this is gonna sound controversial, you know, but my whole life,
(43:07):
you know, I've always thought, well, your abortion is wrong.
We shouldn't abort little babies. Of course, not everybody loves
little babies, you know. But I also said, well, you know,
I'm not gonna pass laws. I'm like, I don't believe
the church should be involved in having opinions on them. Whatever.
But that's a whole nother story for another day. But
(43:27):
I am almost to thinking that we would be better
off just exterminating people like this in genocide. I'm turning
into a Nazi that we should that it's more humane
if we're gonna raise up people like this and throw
(43:49):
them out into the street like wolves, and then have
a system where God forbid, they get caught up in
the jail system and the prison system and now they're
locked away like an animal and torture and abuse and
in some ways it's more humane. Just kill these people.
Speaker 4 (44:08):
But I'm asleep, but no, But it's an industry because
when we need to house them in Bob Bigelow's motel room,
and then we need to give them tickets and they
ain't get them in a system, man, and then throw
them the print.
Speaker 2 (44:22):
What the hell's going on here? You know? So many times,
you know, I do these shows and I tell these
(44:43):
stories because there's like a marl at the end, there's
a maral of the story at the end. The only
thing I could tell you the marralless stories that the
you know, I talk to these kids and they guy
whole and they have love. They love each other, and
I can tell you that, and they have hope for
(45:06):
the future. Put honestly, what is the value of human life?
(45:27):
You know? And like I said, the show was originally
going to be titled Trump and Sharpton, and I'm going
to do a whole show, and I got a whole
bunch of notes on it. But the theory was is
that they're both con men, you know, and they've both
been friends and working together and partners. And you can
(45:49):
look up the pictures on Google images. They still been
friends for forty years. But they're both so sharp and
they know that they're based that the average Sharpton hates
Trump and the average Trump fan hates Sharpton. So they
can't really, right now go in public and demonstrate their
their real friendship and their real alliance and allegiance to
(46:11):
each other. They both had the same campaign manager. But
I just know that I have a whole thing I'm
going together on the other it's gonna blow your mind.
But it's the same con game by these two that
they're they're aware of it enough that they're not gonna
(46:31):
let you know that they're friends, because your head will
explode because the people who hate Trump love Sharpton, the
people who love Sharpton hate Trump, and vice versa. Of
none of what I'm saying right And it's that same game,
that same con game where people are taking advantage of
(46:52):
the naive and the gullible beneath them, both of them equally.
That is, take an advantage of this poor young couple
and it wants to take the food out of the
mouth that he's shuttings and could stand by and watch
(47:16):
Mike Brown dead in the street and then make up
a story about what happened to cover it up anyway.
So that's about it for me tonight. Okay, I'm exhausted again,
and if anybody listened to the end, thank you.
Speaker 4 (47:37):
You know,