Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
Hey, if you enjoy the Walton Johnson Show like we do,
then you might also enjoy the Pursuit of Happiness show
in the afternoon with oh Kenny Webster there.
Speaker 2 (00:10):
And as a matter of fact, I think, do we
have a clip?
Speaker 1 (00:13):
Can we play a clip? All right? So they just
did this study on Burger King. Turn that down, thank you.
They just did a study. They determined Burger King has
the cheapest coffee in America, I mean, the most value
right now. There is a catch to get it, you
(00:33):
have to go to Burger King. I don't know if
I'd want to do that. Didn't Burger King have a
scandal a while back where they had horse meat instead
of beef and everybody was really mad about that. But
if you think about it, it's like they accidentally gave
you a leaner, healthier meat, you know what I mean? Hi, everybody,
thanks for getting connected. We are live on the radio
right now, but we're also live on social media and you,
(00:55):
as you could probably guess, I often do these live
streams on social media when I have a guest in studio,
and I know I do have a guest in studio,
mister Joseph Trimmer, get that mic a little closer to
your face there, young man. How are you doing, my brother, I.
Speaker 2 (01:06):
Am doing well. Thank you for having me on. I
have a lot of important issues to talk to you
and your audience about.
Speaker 1 (01:14):
I can't wait to hear about them. Joseph, you do
something really interesting. I admire this. You are. First of all,
you're affiliated with Texas Scorecard, so you're in good company.
We have a lot of people from I mean, Brandon
and Michael do the show every week, Michael, Quinn, Solomon
and I do a week in review every Friday. You
work at what I think is one of the most
important news outlets in the country, in the very least
in the state of Texas, and you do something pretty
(01:35):
bold and brave. You go out and go undercover. Undercover
journalism to me is fascinating because you're you know, I've
been punched before, yeah, for going out and doing interviewing
people at protest and stuff like that. It's not hard
to believe that this mouth got me punched. But you know,
but for somebody like you, you actually seem like a
really nice guy. And I'm just going to climb out
(01:56):
on a limb here and guess that going undercover and
doing journalism. It's probably one of the more dangerous things
you've done in your life. You don't strike me as
a guy that used to be a criminal or a
drug dealer or anything like that.
Speaker 2 (02:06):
Nothing like that. But I've certainly lived a fascinating life.
I'll say that, how old are you? I am thirty six.
Speaker 1 (02:12):
And how'd you get into this line of work?
Speaker 2 (02:14):
So my background is in the business world. I was
a chief operating officer of a company called bomb Tech.
I worked for Amazon for Lime Scooters. I was a
city launcher, launching scooters in Mexico City and in Cancun.
Speaker 1 (02:32):
And you mean those scooters you see laying around on
the street.
Speaker 2 (02:35):
Yeah, I was a tech bro like launching scooters all
over Mexico because I speak Spanish, and so.
Speaker 1 (02:43):
You know what, I've always wondered about that. When you're
in downtown Washington, d C, Fort Worth, whatever, you see
the scooters laying around because they ran out of batteries,
isn't it like? Don't homeless people steal that stuff and
throw it in a river? I assume they must.
Speaker 2 (02:56):
Well, I can share with you, Mike, I only operated
internationally in Mexico City, and I can tell you we
had a lot of scooters stolen in Mexico City.
Speaker 1 (03:06):
Shockingly, there was crime in Mexico.
Speaker 2 (03:08):
Huh oh yeah. It was, you know, a wild time
in twenty nineteen when venture capital was flowing by the
billions and billions of dollars. It was really more about
how many cities can we launch because we had a
competitor that was also getting massive funding, and so we
were everywhere. Ultimately, a lot of the cities closed down,
(03:28):
the markets shut down, and only the profitable markets remained
for those companies.
Speaker 1 (03:34):
All right, So at some point you decided to leave
the tech world and become a journalist. You're a conservative,
you're a journalist. Yep, that is. Those two things don't often.
I mean now it's becoming more common, obviously because of
things like Brightbart in the Daily Caller and Fox News.
But there was a time when almost no journalist were conservative.
Speaker 2 (03:51):
Well, let me share something with you. I am one
of those people that I didn't start as a conservative
or a Republican. In fact, it's been a long journey
for me. I used to believe a lot of dumb
things that I learned in college, and you know, as
I grew up and had real jobs and responsibilities. I
(04:12):
found out that I had been lied to my whole life.
And uh, then you know, once I started having a
relationship with the Lord, uh, everything became much more clear.
And uh, you know, the Holy Spirit makes things extremely clear,
and so I you know, I could not be anything
(04:33):
other than somebody that's a conservative in my in my
two day and.
Speaker 1 (04:37):
That interesting for me. It was college in college. I remember,
I'm not shockingly a guy that worked in radio was
a DJ in college and I got booked to DJ
at the Jewish student Union. It wasn't a fraternity, but
it was like a house where the students went and
through parties. And I remember walking into the building and
there were Palestinian activists out front. And it's one thing
to protest, but these guys were just clearly yelling ant
(05:00):
hi Semitic slurs. And to me, up until this point,
the only Jewish kids I knew were like my friends
I watched South Park with, so I never really heard
anyone that just hated Jews. And I remember thinking as
I walked in, I don't know what I am, but
I'm not those guys. And then from there it brought
me to libertarianism and conservativism and the red pill moment
usually happens is the point of the story, not because
(05:21):
of what you are, but you realize it's what you're not,
you know what I mean. It's like, I'm not a communist.
Ironically libertarianism. Although we get accused of being fascists and
authoritarians on the right all the time, we're the more
liberty minded people. It's the people on the left that
are more authoritarian.
Speaker 2 (05:38):
That's that's true.
Speaker 1 (05:40):
Anyways, So I don't want to waste a lot of
time here because we're gonna run out of time. At
some point, you start working a Texas Scorecard and you
discover in your coverage of Southeast Texas your job at Texas.
Speaker 2 (05:50):
Scorecard, specifically, my job for what I was hired at
Scorecard is I am the city local journalist in Houston
CU Houston Harris County. That's my official position.
Speaker 1 (06:03):
And you recently went viral for what I think is
a fascinating reason. You went undercover with a bunch of
liberal activists, essentially people that were involved in some pretty violent,
dangerous stuff, for alluding to the fact that they want
something violent and dangerous to happen. Yeah, it is a
group of You didn't describe them as Antifa, you describe
(06:24):
them as what what's the group called?
Speaker 2 (06:26):
Yeah, this is specifically the Party for Socialism and Liberation
that I caught on this undercover footage. There's a lot
to know about them, and there's been now multiple great
articles written about this video and going into it. I
don't know if you want to get into it. It's
not as interesting because this is not the only group.
(06:47):
There's many leftist, far left groups in Houston right now
doing things like this. And the worst part of it
is that you're helping fund this with your tax dollars
as a tax Barnharris County.
Speaker 1 (07:01):
Yeah, it's kind of amazing too, because it looks an
awful lot like what just happened up in Dallas Fort Worth.
You have all these people on the far left, they're
basically communists, whether they know it or not. A socialist
is just somebody who's too stupid to know that they're
a communist. And these guys planned and tried to execute
an attack on an ice facility. People got hurt, people
got arrested.
Speaker 2 (07:23):
This year alone, there's been attacks on two different facilities
in the state of Texas. Armed attacks in one case,
the you know, it was a group of a large group,
I think it was ten people through firecrackers at an
ice facility, trying to lure officers out and then actually
open fire on them. So when you see people saying
(07:47):
things like what's on this video and not a month ago,
you know this other thing happened in Texas, the citizens
need to be aware.
Speaker 1 (07:58):
Yeah, okay, So we've got this video playing right now.
For those of you listening on the radio, you can't
see it, but so we'll have to describe it to you.
You're wearing a camera, a hidden cameras and so in
the video, you're where exactly where is this?
Speaker 2 (08:13):
This is at a Unitarian church here in Houston.
Speaker 1 (08:17):
Okay, And how did you get invited to this? How
did you find out about it?
Speaker 2 (08:21):
Trade secrets? Okay, just kidding. Well, let me tell you
exactly what happened, Okay, if you want. So what happened
was that I've been covering the protest in Houston, this
anti ice protest in Houston, writing about it and making
public facing videos. You know where I'm recording and they
know I'm recording them at the protests surrounded by police,
(08:42):
and at the latest protest at the cour Civic Immigration Center.
The Party for Socialism and Liberation had their main organizer
in Houston shouting at the crowd that he was building
a network to target ice officers and chase them. I'm
out of Houston neighborhoods in front of the police. It's
(09:03):
not like they didn't know about this. And then they
asked people to sign up for a QR code to
join the group, and I did, and so then I
went to their first meeting with undercover cameras, and I
have pre existing relationships with other groups that do undercover work.
And so what's happening now in Harris County that I
(09:27):
live here is that you know, if you're doing things
like this, you can certainly expect, you know that somebody
out there is going to record you if you're in public,
and you should maybe reconsider targeting federal officers in Texas
here in Houston, because we're not going to allow that
to continue.
Speaker 1 (09:48):
All right. So this video is a little longer than
eight minutes long, and you know, why don't you just
give us the cliff notes here? What were some of
the things you caught these people saying on hidden camera?
Speaker 2 (09:57):
Cliff notes version one quote was something similar and now
I could be paraphrasing because I'm working off of my memory.
Speaker 1 (10:04):
That's okay, Yeah, purportedly allegedly so for.
Speaker 2 (10:07):
Sure, but it is on video. And what he said
is that their friend organization with the PSL in Ventura, California,
formed a similar group, after which they were modeling the
group in Houston. And then he said that this is
(10:27):
a group that you might remember a couple of weeks ago. Yeah,
there was a pot farm that was with kids on
it in California.
Speaker 1 (10:36):
Ract Yeah, they had children there and there was pretty violent,
got crazy, but kids working illegally.
Speaker 2 (10:41):
I didn't realize how violence it was. So the reason
it was violent is according to this man, his you know,
friendly organization out there that they're trying to copy here
in Houston, battled ice agents at the pot farm and
according to him, actually prevented you know, multiple illegal aliens
(11:02):
from being arrested, which is something that I did not
know from the authorities. And I don't know if it's
true or not. He could just be boasting, but that
is what he said. Uh. And he said that the
reason they couldn't save all of the illegal aliens is
because they were not armed with the appropriate weapons for that.
Speaker 1 (11:20):
Okay, So I where did he go on what would
what would be the appropriate weapons to go out and
fight government agents exactly?
Speaker 2 (11:27):
Well, he didn't elaborate that, but he he did get
into and his associate there another organizer that female you know,
say that you know, they're seeking to establish a range
of tactics here in Houston, involving things such as de
arresting people. And for and for context, de arresting people
(11:52):
means that you physically prevent an arrest by mass by
a mass p people, you know, pushing against, maybe shoving,
that type of thing. That's how it's been described to
me when I was talking to the timcast crew that
(12:13):
that's what that strategy means for the arresting.
Speaker 1 (12:15):
I love, man, it's a fascinating story. I want to
hear about what happened after. You want to undercover with
these guys and what you're planning to do next. Stick around, folks,
We're going to take a quick break. If you are
watching us live streaming right now on social media, we're
not going anywhere. We'll be back in seconds. If you're
listening on the radio, support some of these great advertisers
and don't go anywhere they see. Whenever you lose sight
(12:36):
of the enemy, look behind you. Yeah, that's a bad
paranoia right there. Probably brought on by a bong ripper too,
Kenny Webster's pursuit of happiness. All right, So the big
news this week in pop culture Taylor Swift is releasing
her twelfth studio album. No word yet on when she's
(12:56):
going to release Travis Kelcey nobody knows Travis Kelsey's dating.
Taylor Swift feels normal here now with a response eleven
previous boyfriends. I gotta think it's speaking of normal. Yeah,
isn't it weird too? How these pop culture icons Taylor
Swift and they always choose the wrong side, don't they.
Taylor Swift would probably look at the work that Joseph
Trimmer just did here, and he would say, Hey, Joseph,
(13:18):
why are you marginalizing all these minorities? You must be
some kind of a white supremacist. How long have you
been a neo Nazi?
Speaker 2 (13:25):
For Joseph, Well, let me tell you something, because this
is a common question, and not only that people you
know say, hey, aren't you Mexican or something?
Speaker 1 (13:38):
So you should be like, no, you should be like, no,
I'm African American.
Speaker 2 (13:43):
I'm a Mexican American, you know, from Mexican heritage. My
family immigrated legally into the United States a long time ago.
Speaker 1 (13:51):
And then mine too, they're from Italy. Yeah.
Speaker 2 (13:54):
It is a you know, a huge it's a huge
insult to people that put in the work to I'm
legally into this country to then just cross the river
and then get you know, your rent paid for and
get your food paid for, and get your doctors paid
for and get you know, cash assistance and etcetera, etcetera,
(14:15):
by the billions and billions and billions of dollars. And
you know what, Americans are struggling out there, and it's
not fair, and it's not fair for legal immigrants. And
you know, let me tell you a very personal story,
if that's okay, Yeah, please do. My my mother, uh
murdered my dad when I was eight years old. My god,
(14:35):
my dad was who put in the work to be
a US citizen. Okay, he he did the right things
and the only thing that he left me was my
life and that I was a US citizen. I'm actually
a dual citizen with Mexico because my mom was a
Green card holder is she's in prison right now, and
so I take this very personally for somebody who you
(14:59):
know is here only because somebody put in that work.
It is extremely offensive and disgusting that our government would
let cheaters get into the front of the line. That's
not how it works. It never has worked like that,
and it's not okay.
Speaker 1 (15:13):
Joseph, so that how old are you when that happened
to you? I was eight years old. You were eight?
So what'd you do? Did you go live with family?
Where did you go after that?
Speaker 2 (15:20):
I bounced around friends of the family all over. I
have a really interesting upbringing because as a result of
not having my parents, I lived in Baltimore and Los
Angeles and Chicago, and I lived in Mexico for a
few years. As a kid, I was on the run
with my mom in Mexico for a couple of years.
Speaker 1 (15:41):
When you did you know you were on the run
because you're eight?
Speaker 2 (15:46):
I mean, you know when the first thing, when that
first happened, I got really close to my mom and
my family on my dad's side was always kind of
confused by that. But it's just I loved my mom,
and you know, I couldn't judge her and I one
time saw some I saw my dad hit my mom
(16:07):
one time and I called the police hunt him when
I was like five, and so I can't really judge.
And you know, my mom does have a lot of issues.
She is. I think she's probably a sociopath based on
the type of things that she did, drugs and prostitution,
things like that. And so, in a very weird way,
(16:32):
God saved me by this happening because I didn't grow
up in that environment. I had people that cared about me,
my grandma, my uncles, and the Lord was there for
me the entire time. And so that's kind of the
background and why I care about this issue.
Speaker 1 (16:51):
Okay, so I am from Chicago. I don't know if
you know that about me. Do you know what part
of Chicago you were in? I'm just curious.
Speaker 2 (16:57):
Yeah, this is when I was first starting college. I
was going to Illinois Institute of Technology.
Speaker 1 (17:04):
Yeah, I t I know it. Well, Yeah, the near
south Side. Yeah.
Speaker 2 (17:07):
Wow, outside, like right in the middle of the ghetto
is where we were. I don't remember much about it
was so long ago, but I remember just just just
I always knew that if I don't build something on
my own that I have nothing to fall back on,
and so just this idea of anything as possible is
(17:28):
something that I was excited for. But then I went
into the corporate world, and I'm just so happy to
have arrived at journalism, which I think is my calling
from God.
Speaker 1 (17:38):
How did you get connected with Michael Quinn Sullivan and
the team at Texas Scorecard? I mean that's they're not
in Houston, And also how did you end up in
Houston if you don't mind me asking.
Speaker 2 (17:48):
Well, I was working for I was a chief operating
officer for a company in Louisiana, and we reached a
point where I couldn't really help them anymore because we
were pivoting the company into financial services, which required somebody
with a backgroun in banking, which I didn't have. So I, uh,
(18:09):
just you know, that relationship ended in the most positive
way possible, you know, I I agreed with everything, and uh,
the Lord gave me instantly. I've been wanting to move
back to Texas because I was leaving in New Orleans,
which is hell.
Speaker 1 (18:27):
Well, apparently now they're cleaning it up. They're getting rid
of the homeless people. They said the murder rates now
to fifty year low, not shockingly because Maga Republican Jeff
Landry sent the Louisiana State Troopers in to police the
streets of the big city.
Speaker 2 (18:40):
Does that out really, I didn't know that.
Speaker 1 (18:41):
Yeah, that's all very recent stuff. He cleaned up the city.
I mean I was just there. I couldn't believe how
much a chargeack.
Speaker 2 (18:46):
One lady got carjacked and she held onto the steering.
Speaker 1 (18:52):
She got her she died, I think, And yeah, it
ripped her arm off. Yeah, that was a few years ago.
I was living there.
Speaker 2 (19:00):
It was That's when I started caring for the first time,
because I was scared. It's just not a it wasn't
a good place to live.
Speaker 1 (19:07):
Bond reform they called. They called it liberty. We're gonna
let all the criminals out of jail. That was a
previously released criminal. That story is unbelievable. We're on the
radio in New Orleans and our listeners were really mad
about that. Yeah.
Speaker 2 (19:18):
Oh well, shout out to uh bomb Tech then and
Richie Bambi out there.
Speaker 1 (19:23):
So, Joseph, how often you talk to your mom? I mean,
are you in communication with her? Where is she right now?
Speaker 2 (19:28):
She's in prison in Gatesville, Texas.
Speaker 1 (19:30):
Okay, so she's I've been to that prison she got
I went. I went there and I interviewed what's her name,
Donna Goodo. I don't think you'd probably know who that is,
but she's she's a famous criminal who went viral. On
the end.
Speaker 2 (19:39):
They put some I don't know how they determined that,
but the lady that killed Selena was there too. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (19:48):
Anyway, it's near Temple Colleen, right, I don't know, right,
central Texassville.
Speaker 2 (19:53):
Sure, right, Yeah. So as a teenager, I stopped talking
to her. I got angry at God and at her
and just became an atheist liberal, you know type just
I was just going in the wrong path, and the
Lord saved me. But I'm as I mature and get older,
(20:14):
I just realized I need to follow the Ten Commandments
and really honor her. And she's in a place and
this is something that I've never written about, but the
conditions and some of these Texas prisons are really horrific.
You don't want to live there. Obviously, it's a punishment,
but you know, she has no air conditioning and it
(20:36):
gets extremely hot in the summer, and it's just brutal
and so she got sentenced to ninety nine years and
her parole dates coming up in like three years now,
and so probably will hire lawyers to try to assist
her because it's I feel like, she says she found
the Lord, and I'm no one to judge, and if
I have the means, I'm gonna get her a lawyer.
Speaker 1 (20:58):
Do you want her to get out? Yes?
Speaker 2 (21:00):
Oh yeah, yeah, I think I think she's had this conversion.
I think the Lord has saved her. And also she's
going to get deported immediately, so it's not like she's
a threat to the United States.
Speaker 1 (21:11):
Where would they send her to Mexico? I say, right, wow, Joseph,
your story is fascinating. I mean, I'm a fan of
the website obviously, Michael and Brand and her friends.
Speaker 2 (21:20):
Oh I didn't even get to how I know him?
Speaker 1 (21:23):
Yeah, yeah, no you didn't. How do you know, Joseph?
How do you know Michael quin Sol? How did you
end up at Texas coorecard dot com. We're running out
of time, by the way.
Speaker 2 (21:29):
Yeah, I started doing just because I had a calling
for it, independent reporting. I went undercover and exposed the
children camps here in Texas. There's a whole bunch of them,
these missing kid camps. And then I was freaking out
about that, and I prayed to the Lord, there's a
(21:52):
whole thing. My grandma was dying, and I went back
to see my grandma and the last thing she said
is you need to come back to church. And so
she died and I took that seriously. I came back
to Catholic church. I'm a Catholic.
Speaker 1 (22:03):
I'm a Catholic too. Where do you go?
Speaker 2 (22:05):
I am still looking for the right parish. I'm kind
of testing. I like, I like the co Cathedral. It's
it's pretty cool.
Speaker 1 (22:11):
I go to Saint Michael.
Speaker 2 (22:12):
It's right down the street from There's one in the
Woodlands that I really liked. I think it's fored like
Saint Simon. I live up there. Okay, so uh basically,
I after the camps, I was at church for the
first time and I had confessed myself, and I took
the Eucharist for the first time in a long time,
(22:33):
and I just felt the Holy Spirit just burn inside
me like once. The Eucharist wasn't like in my mouth.
It felt like fire and electricity and just like a
wake up call. And I asked the Lord to help
me spread the message about these children that were being
trafficked in Texas. And so then the next day or so,
(22:57):
I met Ben Ben Berkwam. The Lord brought somebody who
could help me. He introduced me to Ben Berkham. We
went live on TV on Bannon Show and then Steah Yeah.
And then then the Governor Abbott banned uh CBP from
Shelby Park UH and the Holy Spirit told me you
(23:18):
need to be there, and so I went to Shelby
Park that immediately after the governor did that, and caught
the National Guard handing illegal aliens to CBP despite what
the governor was saying. And then I went back on
Steve Bannon Show and I asked Ben, like, I really
like this is all political theater anyway, it doesn't matter.
(23:39):
We really should talk about the camps. And Ben was like,
just do what's in your heart. And so I went
on Bannon Show. He thought I was going to talk
about Shelby Park and I was like, nah, let's talk
about these I just went undercover and found out there's
hundreds of thousands of kids being handed to poorly vetted
sponsors in Texas. And that report when extremely viral and
(24:02):
somehow nothing was done, and then six months later, three
hundred thousand kids are declared missing by the federal government.
Speaker 1 (24:09):
My God, Joseph's I don't think it's a coincidence. There
are no coincidences. You were supposed to meet Michael quinn Sullivan.
Speaker 2 (24:15):
That's how he followed me from that story, so I
DMed him.
Speaker 1 (24:17):
Yeah, and you were supposed to meet you were supposed
to meet Bannon. I don't believe in coincidences. There's too many.
I mean, the weirdest, strangest, most surreal moments of my
life were it was always just a random series of
coincidences that led me right to where I needed to
believe be right at this exact specific moment. Yeah, And
when that, whenever that happens, I realized these weren't coincidences.
There's a hand guiding us. There's a divine force.
Speaker 2 (24:39):
That I've been able to get so in tune with
that as I get closer to God, that I can
say that every report that you've shown was fully informed
by the Holy Spirit who told me you need to
be here at this time, talk to this person, say
this things. This is what they're gonna say, And I
(25:00):
do it and that's the result, Joseph.
Speaker 1 (25:03):
I knew you'd be an interesting guest to talk to today.
This has totally exceeded my expectations. I did not expect
any of those stories. It's fascinating. You got to write more.
I mean you already do. You're a journalist covering this stuff.
What's next for you?
Speaker 2 (25:15):
Well, I don't think I can fully announce because it's
undercover journalism here. No, I'm okay with people knowing that
I'm undercover. It's like expect me.
Speaker 1 (25:24):
But I love that.
Speaker 2 (25:25):
The problem not the problem. The opportunity is that there's
a potential partnership in the works now that I won't
mention names.
Speaker 1 (25:33):
But working on a deal for your career, well.
Speaker 2 (25:36):
Uh, it's what scorecards. Scorecard is likely to make a
deal with another organization that will Now this undercover stuff
that you saw me post, there's a reason why I
was allowed to post that in the first place. And
from now on, I think that Harris County citizens will
be much more informed about what's happening here. You're not
(25:57):
gonna get this from your mainstream me. For the most part,
I don't think they'll even cover my videos or really,
you'd be sorry about it.
Speaker 1 (26:06):
I don't know, you'd be Sometimes we make them. Yesterday,
the Houston Chronicle published one of my op eds. It
went viral for that they it did so well they
published they made a video to talk about my article.
Speaker 2 (26:16):
I have noticed that that the there's this editor from
from the Houston Chronicle that is, you know, doing he's
platforming conservatives.
Speaker 1 (26:27):
Evan Mens Yeah, yeah, I haven't sat in the cherry
was here a couple of weeks ago.
Speaker 2 (26:30):
Yeah, I don't know anything about him other that I
see him. It appears that he's really doing it. It's
a strategy, in my opinion by the Houston Chronicle because
they've been completely embarrassed. They shared an article about how
Mariachi's were scared in Houston because of ice. So please, okay,
He's like.
Speaker 1 (26:49):
It's a big news outlet. I've learned to be more
objective that just because somebody at a news outlet has
an opinion I don't agree with it, doesn't mean everybody
there does. But of course, if you go back and
look at my body of work, for you, I criticized
the Houston Chronicle and this week they published an article
of mine and I had some people call me a hypocrite.
But the reason I criticized them is because I didn't
think people on our side were being represented in their
(27:11):
outped department. We got to wrap this up because we're
running out of time. Joe, you, Joseph, You're a smart dude,
and I am really impressed by you. I hope you'll
come back and do another interview with us as you.
Speaker 2 (27:19):
Continue your work. Yeah, I will listen. I'll probably have
a report that's like this at least once a month, potentially.
I if I were to really focus on this, this
could be a weekly thing. Really, there's so much in
Harrison County and these people are so dumb that they're
just asking to be exposed.
Speaker 1 (27:38):
We would like to cover it on this radio show.
I hope we can be a part of it for you.
I'm Kenny Webster. That's Joseph Tremer. Y'all should follow him
on x You guys should go to texascorecard dot com
and you should get subscribed. It's cheap, free to cost
less than a Houston Chronicle subscription. Yeah, no paywall. Texascorecard
dot com. It's one of the best emails I get
every day. It's a short, concise email that get it's
(28:00):
it's like getting a newspaper. It links you to all
the latest stories. If you're interested in Texas news or
news from around the golf coast, the Texas scorecard dot
com website is a fantastic resource for that I got around.
That's Joseph Trimmer. I love you all. We'll be back
bright early tomorrow morning for more of what you bought
a radio for. I have a great day. You are
(28:24):
listening to the Pursuit of Happiness Radio. Tell the government
to kiss your ass when you listen to this show.