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Episode 1: The Return of the Texoma Trio - Back and Better Than Ever!
Episode 112th February 2024 • Get It Right, Texoma! • Mike, Trey, and Terry
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Texoma Trio Podcast Episode 1 Show Notes

Welcome Back!

- Introductions of Mike, Trey, and Terry

- Overview of their backgrounds in radio and podcasting

- Excitement to launch their new podcasting venture

Local Politics Update

- Details on upcoming town halls with State Rep. James Frank

- Encouragement for listeners to get involved locally

Border Security is a Hot Topic

- Discussion of the border crisis and Texas' role in securing the border

- Debate around impeachment of Secretary Mayorkas

Next Episode Preview

- Trey will share his theory tying homelessness and immigration

- Listeners invited to provide feedback on the discussion

Be sure to follow us on social media @TexomaTrioPodcast and subscribe so you don't miss any future episodes. Thanks for tuning in!

Transcripts

Speaker:

You make this rather snappy one too, I have something really heavy to do before 10 o'clock.

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All right guys, well welcome to our brand new podcast. It's kind of new. It's not totally new to us

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because we've all done this before with all of you. But welcome, we're back and we are ready to

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launch a brand new, I don't know what you call it, a season of podcasting.

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It's just to do era. I mean, think about it because the broadcast radio era is over.

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Many people have listened to Mike on NewsTalk1290 here in Wichita Falls for many years.

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Mike is no longer in the air. Terry and I joined him for many years. I actually had shows on

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NewsTalk1290 for about 15 years. And then the three of us have been together for quite a while.

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So anyhow, that era is over. So we're moving to streaming. Go indigital, but we've done some of this

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before. Yeah, yeah. So yeah, it's nothing new to any of us. We're no strangers to any of this.

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So we got a few things we want to talk about on this show. A few things we want to address with you.

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And we're going to kind of kick it off this morning. Well, what do we, I try to kind of get an

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outline for us of what we're going to talk about today a little bit. Yeah, actually,

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look real quickly. Listen, in case we have new listeners or watchers or whatever it is, viewers,

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listen, introduce ourselves real quick, just real quickly and kind of just talk about what we're

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playing on. We can do that. Okay, we could do that. So see, I just kind of assume everybody knows who

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we are. Yeah, we're famous. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I know the back on. We're out. We're better as long as we

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are. Not not everybody's been at the post office to see your picture on the wall there. That's true.

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All right. August I'll start. Okay. So I'm Mike Hendren 22 year broadcast veteran and radio

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and now diving into the world of podcasting full time and have been born raised in Wichita,

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Falls, Texas, Wichita County resident, my whole life, licensed real estate agent, and pretty much

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anything for a buck kind of a kind of a serious entrepreneur. Yeah, he's got his hands on a lot of

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things. Yeah. I do. What do we see? Yeah. That sounds creepy when you say. Yeah. It depends on

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whose pants you're in. So. Oh, okay. So anyway, anyway, you're turn. You dare you. Okay. I'm

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turning. You're the man in the middle. Yeah. I'm Terry McAdams. I'm with Mac Tech Solutions.

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So my business I've had since 1996, even while I was still in the Air Force active duty here at

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Shepherd Air Force Base arrived here in 95 took the business part time anyway and the evenings

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in the weekends 1996. I just found out that people wanted me to help them with their computers in

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the evenings and the weekends. And so I did that. And then I retired in 2004 took the business full time

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and just over the years just been in a two or three locate well three look four. Well, actually,

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it depends on which one, but three or four major locations and we were here in finishing touch

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plaza now. And we are an Apple dealer, but we help out our customers. And but the thing with

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how I met Mike was through the radio station. Obviously, I hooked up with the sales

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hooked up. Well, is that will? Anyway, I salesperson from the radio station got an idea and

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it was a tech tip thing got on the radio when it was the the rise and shine show that he was the

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producer and co host and all that. And so then it then evolved into hanging out with him once a week.

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You know, and so that's really kind of there. And I think I try to bring a tech perspective on a lot

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of topics and things here and I might have an opinion or two on other stuff. I want to.

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But I don't know if that that probably does hopefully does a pretty good little quick and dirty. But

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if you want to know more, you can go to our website. Obviously and read up on. You can find us out later

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as we go. Absolutely. Yeah, just be sure. So Rala be careful with you to come up and you Google

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search. Terry McAdams. Yeah. Yeah. Just never know. Let's know. My name is Trey Serala. My business is

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Eddie Hills fun cycles been here in the power sports business in which to offer since

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1966. I haven't been in the power sports business since 1966 since I was only born in 1971. But I

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grew up here. I've been there since 1992. So this is going on my 33rd year, I guess in one location.

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Former school board member W F ISD for 12 years currently the president of the Texas Motorcycle

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dealer Association. Yeah. Very involved with charities and that sort of thing. But the main business

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is my main business is power sports motorcycles ATV side by side and that sort of thing. And like

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said before, I've actually been on the radio on a couple of stations here in which to falls

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always on a part time never on a real thing just had shows here and there. But I've been on the

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radio with Mike for almost 15 years straight in one form or other, not nearly as much as he has not

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on but just once a week or once every two weeks or a couple of times a week or what what not.

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And another thing that Trey has done too is you have you've also done sports play by play. Yes.

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I still are high school alma mater, the Hershey Huskies. And possibly even maybe doing some more of that

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down the line. Yeah. I've enjoyed doing that. That's kind of one of my hobbies is doing high school

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football broadcast play by play or streaming and there's going to be two high schools here in

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town next year going from three to two and I don't know if I'll continue doing that but I enjoy

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doing it and may end up doing that again as well. So we might be talking about a little bit of that

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and some opportunities to get your name or your word out there during high school football.

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Yeah. And I think he glossed over one part that he was the president of the school board for

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a period of his tenure on the school board. Yeah. A couple of years. Yeah. So that, yeah. But I don't

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want you to get away with that. Definitely. Definitely. Definitely got a lot of a little bit of political

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experience here with with Trey's. He brings a he brings that perspective to it for sure.

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Well, I do want to mention so our local state representative James Frank got some town halls coming

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up. Yes. Very near future. Trey's got some information on that. Yeah. And when are those coming up?

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Well, I don't have the rundown of it. Really you could go on James Frank. He has a newsletter,

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which by the way, if you live in this area, it's a good idea to get signed up with James Frank's

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newsletter. It's pretty informative. Yeah. Comes out. I think once a week during legislative session

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and once every two or three weeks when it's not legislative session, I'm not sure if you go to the

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website or you could contact the local office and they can let you know when the town halls are.

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I did attend the first one. It was in Clay County. Got a couple of tips.

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Number one, don't dominate the damn thing. We had two people there who probably took up. We were

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there probably an hour and a half. Yeah. And I would say that there are two individuals that took up

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probably an hour of that or 45 minutes. It was ridiculous. You know, I understand everybody's

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passionate. And by the way, what you don't understand is I'm just as passionate about my stuff as you are

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about your stuff. Okay. But I'm also considerate of other people and understand that just because

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my issue is big to me, it's not big to everybody else. And you have people that just want to keep on

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and on. And especially when he gets very specific and they want to talk about their individual thing,

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James Frank is a state representative for, you know, I don't know how many people he represents. 150,000

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people are something like that. And some thousands. I believe it's a lot of 50. I think that's what he said.

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It's right. I think it's I think he talked about. I think what they do is every 10 years, they have a

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census and they take 150,000 people and they break up their state ribbeds. I think those numbers are

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right. Whether it's something close to that. So understand his area encompasses 150,000 people

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spending a whole bunch of time on your specific thing in a town hall setting when there's other people

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there who are there to listen and speak and like that is it's really inconsiderate. So that's just

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that's just a little tip from Trey when you're doing something like that. Don't try to dominate the

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conversation. And you're going to have a more effect. You're going to be more effective if you narrow

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that down to your top issue. And and and and and and and and and it have to kind of see where there

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may be a benefit to other people, not just yourself. Well, and also what happens is look it's like

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anything else. I might be on board with you for the first 10 minutes. Yeah. But by the next 10 minutes,

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I'm kind of getting off board with you. I may agree in principle what you're doing, but I don't like

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you anymore. Yeah. Or you know, I'm saying or or I don't like your delivery anymore. And I'm looking

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at you as a narcissist suddenly you're looking for my favorite because you're right because you're

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trying to dominate the conversation. So you know, that's just a tip. But I would recommend people

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go to these town halls. You need to get involved locally. I mean, beat the drum about this. We we love to

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talk about the White House. We love to talk about Congress. We love to talk about national issues.

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Sure. National issues. Now, the border is a really big difference right now. This is affecting

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everybody. It covers two areas. It covers us directly because we're Texans. And secondly, it's a national

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issue. So that's and it's sucking a lot of resources. That's the biggest thing. Sure. So for the most

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part, national issues don't matter as much as local issues do for your day to day basis. Most of your

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taxing has come from local local. And your state representatives, your county officials, your city

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officials, your school board officials. Don't forget on that when you talk about taxes of your property

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taxes, the number one component of your property taxes is school district. That's right. So be

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involved in who's who's setting your tax rate at the school board level. Yeah. Definitely. Definitely.

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That's about two cents. It looks like his next town halls are coming up in Motley and Coddle County

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on the 20th of February. That's out west. That's out west. Motley County Courthouse 10am.

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In Coddle County, the city County library in Paducah on the 20th at noon that day. And then on

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Thursday, the 22nd, he'll be in Wichita and Archer counties 10am at the Grove in Burt Burnett,

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130 PM at the Electra Memorial Hospital Education Center at 130 PM on the 22nd and 4 PM

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at the Community Center in Holliday on the 22nd and Archer County. So and for those of you that

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are watching or listening to No Labor right here, which is not Archer County or like.

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And Clay neighbors. It's actually three. There's three counties that converge right here at Wichita

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Falls, right south of Wichita Falls, Clay County, Archer County, Wichita County. Right. Terry and I both

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live in Clay County. You have a Wichita Falls address, don't you? I do too. We both pay. Henry,

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we live in Clay County. We pay Henry at a school district tax. No, no, I'm, uh, Patroia.

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Patroia. Okay. You play Patroia. I pay Henry at it, which are both in Clay County, but we both

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have Wichita Falls addresses. That's right. And it's counterstrips. And that's the zip code. I'm

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76305. I'm 763010. Right. But 305 is this huge that covers the north of the base as well as

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west of town as well. So I'm sorry, east of town. But by the way, Motley County didn't sound like a

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place that they just beat the hell out of each other. But if you don't know when most of these counties

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abnames, Motley was one of the original founders of the state of Texas. Yeah. So if you'll hear

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some of these counties that you're like, well, where did they come up with that name? And it doesn't

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sound familiar. There's a great museum in Washington on the process. If you ever get a chance that talks

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about the, the years that Texas was a country. Right. And it focuses just on those years from the

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battle at St. Sino. Yes. You know, where where Texas and officially became its own entity country.

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With Mexico's surrender to when Texas was annexed by the United States. Yep. And that whole that

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that museum focuses on those time. And Motley was one of the original founding people that signed

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the Texas Declaration of Independence and all that sort of thing. Yeah.

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Well, and you mentioned the border tray and it's worth mentioning that we

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here in Texas, we've got the biggest portion of the international border. Mexico stretches from

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basically Brownsville all the way out to El Paso. And we have the biggest challenges in terms of

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the physical control of that border because the federal government's not doing their job. They're

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not taking care of it. And we're having to do it ourselves. And we have this, you know, this

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ongoing battle now between our state and our governor and our legislature and the federal government

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and the current administration that's doing absolutely zero. And we have this, this constant now

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expense, if you will, of protecting this border. It has already cost Texans billions of dollars

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to keep this border as secure as we can to the, to the greatest degree that we can.

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Given limitations as well. Well, the physical limitations, logistical limitations, legal limitations.

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Legal limitations that we're apparently now basically just going to screw the legal limitations.

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And we're, but we, you know, we have limited resources. You know, we've only got, we've only

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got so many people we can put down there. We're actually, and this has been going on for a couple

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of years now, we are reallocating resources. We are moving people in the Texas DPS,

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Texas Game Wardens, moving them out of their counties where they normally were and sending them to the

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border and refocusing their efforts on the border. Right. And that's, that's affecting our local

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areas where they're coming from. That's right. Leaving a gap of coverage, if you will, from a law enforcement

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perspective. And then, and then you're also affecting their families. You're deploying, it's like

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a military deployment almost now. Pretty much. I don't know what all the legal ramifications of

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someone trying to decline that if they didn't want to go, but I know I'm quite sure most of them are

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all for helping out. But then for them to have to go down there for, you know, months and a couple

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of years on end, you know, that's kind of crazy. What I have been told guys by people that I've been

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communicating with that are part of the DPS or other organizations that are working down there.

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Very few people that have been asked to go there and work the border have said no. Very few have

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declined. Well, they might not really have much of a choice. I mean, I don't say that. It's not

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a military. You're not going to throw you in prison, but you may lose your job. Yeah. But may use

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your career. But very few people I'm told have said no. Right. Most people understand

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that how important this job is. The fact that we don't have the feds doing their job that they

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normally would be doing to protect this should be doing. And by the way, we need to, we need to make

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this very clear. I don't think there's anybody that is that is be smirching the name of the Border

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Patrol agents. I don't think most of the Border Patrol agents, if you look at the Border,

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National Border Patrol agent association and all of them, all their representatives, they're saying

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constantly, this is not a Border Patrol agent issue. This is my orcus Biden, the very, very

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pinnacle of the Border Patrol. That's who's causing this problem. Speaking of of May orcus,

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the US House of Representatives were set to vote on, or they did vote on his impeachment. That vote

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was defeated by three Republicans who joined Democrats and voting against or voted no on the

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May orcus impeachment. Those representatives were Tom McClinic from California, Ken Buck Republican

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from Colorado, and Mike Gallagher Republican from Wisconsin. The one that bothers me is Ken Buck,

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because he's got a cool name. I mean, does that sound like a guy that would vote against impeachment?

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That sounds like a guy that would come in and try to kick your ass. Ken Buck, Ken Buck.

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Almost like a professional wrestler. Yeah, he's going to go to the border with a nice,

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well, big knives in his teeth and stop the immigrants. Their argument against voting for the

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impeachment was is that they didn't feel that May orcus had at this point done anything that

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reached the level of impeachment. Their fear here was is that we were setting the bar too low.

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And not, yeah. So, so, so, wait a minute. So,

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May orcus, obviously, Derrick Lutcher, the duty that we have, a hard, raw data to point to,

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because the amount of of Godaways and the amount of illegal immigration that's happened during,

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during his watch and with his policies, that is too low a bar. But yet, you're going to impeach a

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sit a former president for an insurrection that was never charged with insurrection. It was never

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proven, never charged in a court of law. Yeah, what a bar. Yeah. Right. Well, and here's another

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interesting take on this. And something that I had to kind of, I probably didn't have to deal with it

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as much as maybe some of the higher ranking officers and things. But if, in this case, if you're,

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I mean, they're the, who's their boss? Who's May orcus boss? I'm assuming Biden. Yeah. Right.

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Right. Because it was the part of the chair or the, or was it department chair now? But the head

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of the departments, he's a secretary or secretary. There you go. Secretary for the president.

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And so the president obviously is laying this agenda out and laying down the way they want things

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to go. Somebody out. Somebody in his, somebody who's running the show. But here's the thing though.

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They took a, an oath of that office to abide by the Constitution. That, and so that's where we,

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as a military member, we actually have an obligation to decline illegal orders. Exactly.

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For instance. And so it's not about, that's the whole thing about this is that it's not, it's like a

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police officer also has, they are supposed to, if they're able to take someone's rights away,

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or they're able to do things like, you know, as far as a military member in theory, you could go

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rape and pillage a, a village. But if there's no strategic value, no, no true war benefit to,

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to, to, to defeat the enemy, then that is against the law. I mean, you've broken the law.

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Well, if so, that's why you've got to follow the law, even if you're given an illegal order. That's

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a hard thing. Well, you think, perfect example. When you said police, that's a, that's a good one.

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For a police officer, you have commanders. If, if you're a police officer and you're a rest of

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suspect, and you take them in and the chief of police says, put a bullet in his brain right now.

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And you do it. You, you're both a trouble. Yeah. You're not just bad. You're both in trouble.

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Right. You know, you've committed murder. Right. And just similar, like you said in the military,

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if, if a, if a commander tells you to go bomb a village, and it's, and it's a village of a bunch of

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innocent people and a, and a, and a, a bomber, a bomber, or the airplane, the pilot says, no,

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I'm not doing that. You know, they can bring them up on charges, but he ultimately will win,

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because he, if he could prove and say, wait a minute. You told me to bomb a village of 20,

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you know, unarmed people or something like that. So, yeah, exactly. You're perfectly right about that.

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So you don't have to follow a direct order if it's contrary to the law. Right. Exactly.

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Somebody can't, and could tell you, somebody cannot compel you to break the law. They can't do it in

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contract. They can't compel you to break the law. Nope. And then, and, and he has an obligation to

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refuse that order. He then, and, and in the case, he has to, he may get asked to resign. And that,

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you just, that's just the unfortunate. It's a very, right. And there, and that's a political aspect of,

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of our government. And that's just the way it is. Well, the good news is you're allowed to resign

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instead of somebody like, like, like, like, like, Russia or something like that, where you just

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disappear. That's right. If you disagree with Putin. That's right. Yeah. You're absolutely right.

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This is a, it's ridiculous that they, that these Republicans decided not to go through impeachment.

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Look, we all know that the Senate probably would not convict him. Oh, yeah, yeah. I was. And I'm not

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big on wasting time and things like that. But there are some times you have to make a statement.

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Right. And this, this is one of them. So, well, and that, and that absolutely sent, would send a message

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impeaching him, would absolutely send a message. Um, this whole situation with the border, it's,

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the thing is a dumpster fire. And it has been now for three years. And you look at the numbers. You

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know, you had the president out there saying that, you know, the whole border issues, all Donald

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Trump's fault. Look at the numbers between 2020 and 2023 and how those, those numbers of people

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crossing the border illegally, the number of Godaways, the people, and you look at,

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matter of fact, I shared a video the other day that somebody had posted. Um, there's,

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there's, there's, there are Chinese nationals crossing the world. People from Russia. Yeah.

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Oh, right. Those Chinese nationals, they were, they were carrying like good luggage. Yeah. And

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dress well. All of these people are well dressed. They're clearly not starving. They're well-fed.

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They're clean. They don't look like they've been walking through the desert for four or five days.

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You know, trying to, trying to reach the border. That's a perfect example. We, I was at the,

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speaking, let's go back to the local. There was a candidate form. We have a, our Senate District

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30. Yeah. Our current Senate, State Senator Drew Springer is going to retire after his term is up,

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which basically he's, he's still in office for the rest of this year. But so there, there are

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several people that are running for his position. I think there's seven. I believe that's right.

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There's, yeah, at the candidate, there's four Republicans and three Democrats at this candidate

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form that was held at Midwestern State University here in town. Yeah. Two of the Democrats were there

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and all four of the Republicans. One of the Democrats, and this guy, actually, I told him afterwards,

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I said, I'd like to come to your church and just listen to you preach. He's a, he's a, a bar,

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been a barber for 51 years and a preacher for like 32 years. And he's a really great pastor. I

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don't agree with him at all on his assessment of things, but he speaks well. And I mean, he speaks

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with, with conviction the way he's, he's inspiring to listen to. But he made a comment and he was talking

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about somebody brought about the border. And he talked about this whole thing about this guy walked

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3200 miles, walked 3200 miles and all he wanted was a job. All he wanted was a job. I agree that that

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happens. Sure. But that's not the majority. No. And by the way, what about the people that already

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live here who are part of our American system who already paid taxes? What about them getting

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those jobs? And I hear this crap about people do these jobs that Americans won't do. Americans,

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who do you think built this country? Americans won't do it for free. No. And by the way, this is why I've

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been saying for years, for years, the people we have to go after to stop this illegal immigration

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crap is the employers. You go in, you have a debt, you verify a system, but not only that,

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we catch you as an employer, hiring somebody illegally, you go to prison. You lose your business,

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you lose everything. You go to prison. That's right. Okay. If you do that, that will stop this because

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though there are people won't risk. Some people will, but let them go to prison. Most people that

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have a business will not risk. Oh yeah. Because Terry, would you, would you risk your livelihood and

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your freedom to, to try to save a few bucks? No. No. You can't, you have to look at risk reward.

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Okay. The rewards of these people that are, the illegal immigrants are, there's, they have no

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risk. They come in. What's the worst thing happening? They get deported, deported back to where they

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were from. So there's almost zero risk. The reward is they might get to come to America, live in

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America, disappear into America, can get a job in America. Yeah. It's all laid out. Well, by the,

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the actions of our president have created this demand of people saying, oh, it's a magnet. Go up

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there and yeah, it's a magnet and they're going up there. They're coming here. Well, and this is crazy.

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What I want to know is why we don't have everybody in the media, jump it up and down, screaming and

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shouting, demanding answers as to why we have people literally being flown from the other side of

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the planet to either, they're either being flown into Central America and then transported into

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Mexico or they're being flown directly into Mexico. Obviously, the cartels have some sort of a

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role in getting these people close enough to the border that they can then walk into the USA.

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Who's financing this? Some what somebody, some entities, some country, someone somewhere is financing

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these flights. These people are not getting, they're not, you know, you should have another raft from

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Africa or China. Pretty damn. A homemade raft. Pretty sure. So I have a question. Although Gilligan's

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island, you know, they were stranded on that island for what, 37 years and had the exact same

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close the whole time and look great. I was wondering how the Harlem Globetrotter showed up there and

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then got off the island and Gilligan and then could get off the island. I'm just, I'm telling you.

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And by the way, let me just settle the debate right now. Ginger, Mary Ann. Mary Ann. Mary Ann,

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all the way there you go. All the way there you go. Okay. You are sick. So real quick question. Okay.

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And what are the numbers? What are the numbers of people that we've allowed under the Biden

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administration to come into the United States? If you look it up, it says a shit load, I think.

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Okay. Basically what the number is. Okay. Well, I need a, just a lot. I mean, is it million?

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Millions? We're in the millions. Okay. So let's say it's a million. I don't, whatever it is.

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If 1% and I don't, I don't know if that's even a real number, but let's just throw out 1% of a million.

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What is 1% of a million? So a million? A hundred thousand. Ten thousand. How many people did it take

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to do to pull off 9/11? 19. 19. Okay. 19 high jackers were involved and probably at least another

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dozen people in the planning. Let's say a hundred people. But let's say a hundred people. Even a hundred

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people. If, if of a million people, so 0.01% of that. So 10, yeah. That, you know of all those people

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that the numbers are overwhelmingly and as far as odds as somebody getting through that are coming

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or being routed through and coming up and walking and that's their mission and their terrorists.

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That is crazy. Or even, even if you're just going to say, let's take the terrorism out, but are just

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criminals. Oh, yeah. There's a percentage of people that are already criminals no matter where

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you're from, including America. There's a percentage of people that are already criminals,

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especially if you go into people that are desperate, that are poor and stuff like that. Those

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numbers go up exponentially. So just say we let in 10,000 more criminals. We already have

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plenty of criminals of our own. Now we have more criminals. Here's a number. Let me throw a number

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at you. This is based on the Judiciary Committee's report on the number of illegals that have entered

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the US during the first 26 months of Biden's presidency, DHS released at least 2,148,738

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illegal aliens into the United States. Again, this is going to a Judiciary Committee.

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And that's released. This made people want caught and released. Yeah. This doesn't count. This

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is not taken into account the Godaways, the people that totally escaped, totally escaped the

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DHS apprehension. The committee found that only 5,993 of those encountered at the southern border

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were placed in removal proceedings. And by the way, it's worth mentioning when you talk about the

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removal proceedings. So among these 5,000, nearly 6,000 people, some of these people have been

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given a court date. Some of those court dates are 15 to 18 years away. Years? Years away.

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Not much. I know we're going to have to wind this down. We talked about trying to get down to 30

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minutes. Yeah. On our next episode, I have a theory about homelessness and that sort of thing.

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And it ties into this. And so on our next episode, I want to explore that. You guys might say I'm

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full of shit, but let's be fair. And I think both of you better route, but Mike and I have been around

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a year alone time. How many times have I come up with a theory, Mike? And within five years,

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it's I called it. It comes in the news. It finally gets.

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It has a better track record than Puxitani Phil could ever hope for.

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I'm not nearly as cute as before. Yeah. Before he sees his shadow, y'all better get it in

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mom's job. Well, if I want to add to the a couple quick things on that thought. So first of all,

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the Democrats are the liberals that are for making this easier to people for people to get into the

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country like they have been. So they they have very little to lose. Yeah. Because our Congress

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is what what the drunken sailor spending like a drunken sailor, whatever the term is crazy.

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And and we're taking money. So we have our veterans and things. I think we'd all like to think

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that our veterans and even if it's not just our veterans, our own people, regardless of their

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situation, and you tell them how homelessness and all that. And so if we're going to take all this

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money and we're going to throw it at a we'd like to put it towards those kind of programs. And I

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think we'd all agree that there's there's a certain investment we need to do in that. Absolutely.

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But they don't it. So what they're saying is is well, you're taking money away from veterans. And

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this and that you could be spending that well, no, what they're doing is just expanding the debt.

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And they're just pushing kicking the can down the road, right? But where they really are taking

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things, the resources, they're taking places. There's there's like New York City, Chicago,

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and things like that. There's kids that don't have who they don't have after school programs.

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Right. Because of physical locations. That's not has to do with money. That's not pretty money.

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That's in the short term. People can't play their kids. Can you imagine how pissed off you'd be if

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you were in Americans' and Pedro taxes? And your kid that you had an after school program,

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someplace for your kid. And by the way, most of these are poor kids. You know, the wealthy kids

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or the upper middle class kids that live out of the suburbs and forget color. I'm tired of this

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shit. I'm gonna say it. We're not on the radio. I'm tired of this shit about color. And that's

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nothing with color. It's have and have nots. I recognize this for I've been saying this for years and

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years about when I was on the school board watching test scores and achievement scores and that sort

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of stuff. It has nothing to do with color. It has to do with poor and not poor. There's plenty of

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white people that fail because they're because they're poor and they don't have the resources or the

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home life. Okay. So it's not a color thing. But what I'm saying is most of the effects these poor

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kids a lot of more people of color. But there's plenty of white kids again. They just don't make the

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news because they're after school programs. I can't do those. There are there are parks that they

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play. They're sports on their soccer and their football and all that. They can't do those because

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the illegal immigrants are taking up those spaces and the city's letting them do it. I'm telling you

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it's bullshit. So we need to we need we can explore that and we need to explore that in depth.

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I think on our next show we'll do that. Join us for our next episode of this podcast coming up very

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soon. Look for us every a new release every Monday Wednesday Friday. That's the plan. We'll have a

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new podcast every Monday Wednesday and Friday. You'll be able to find us on YouTube. You'll be able

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to find us on Spotify. Apple podcast. So that what we're going to and we're going to and we'd like to

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get feedback too. Yeah. So please let us know your thoughts and things you'd like us to cover and

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all of that. Yeah. Yeah. You know. Am I pretty enough? Yeah. Yeah. Let me know. We'll see you next time.

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