1 00:00:00,720 --> 00:00:04,560 Speaker 1: So over the past couple shows that I've done by myself, 2 00:00:04,640 --> 00:00:07,400 Speaker 1: my solo shows, I've been really focused on some of 3 00:00:07,440 --> 00:00:11,000 Speaker 1: the turmoil that's taking place in terms of the riots, 4 00:00:11,119 --> 00:00:16,680 Speaker 1: the challenges that we're facing with these kind of radical 5 00:00:16,680 --> 00:00:22,759 Speaker 1: ideologies and this large substantial population of illegal immigrants into 6 00:00:22,760 --> 00:00:25,959 Speaker 1: the country and the impact that that's taking place. Now, 7 00:00:26,480 --> 00:00:29,440 Speaker 1: we all know that one of the main things that 8 00:00:29,640 --> 00:00:33,440 Speaker 1: Trump ran on was shutting down the border, and there 9 00:00:33,520 --> 00:00:36,120 Speaker 1: is no doubt that we have seen that he has 10 00:00:36,240 --> 00:00:41,599 Speaker 1: militarized the border. Border crossings are down like eighty something percent, 11 00:00:42,280 --> 00:00:47,159 Speaker 1: and we've just entered into this place like, okay, we stifled, 12 00:00:47,200 --> 00:00:51,840 Speaker 1: we stopped the flow, the endless flow of illegal immigration 13 00:00:51,960 --> 00:00:54,760 Speaker 1: that we all saw over the last you know, four 14 00:00:54,840 --> 00:00:59,240 Speaker 1: plus years, and even you know, prior to Trump's first 15 00:01:00,080 --> 00:01:05,479 Speaker 1: uh administration and through the Abomba administrations, this massive influx, 16 00:01:06,040 --> 00:01:10,360 Speaker 1: you know, and if if, if if any any person 17 00:01:10,440 --> 00:01:14,160 Speaker 1: with it common sense can recognize that the Democratic Party 18 00:01:14,319 --> 00:01:17,959 Speaker 1: initially realized they said, listen, you know, our base and 19 00:01:18,000 --> 00:01:21,319 Speaker 1: our coalition of groups are starting to really kind of 20 00:01:21,360 --> 00:01:25,800 Speaker 1: polarize with each other. The ideological aspects of these groups 21 00:01:25,800 --> 00:01:28,880 Speaker 1: are are not so much in line and being able 22 00:01:28,880 --> 00:01:31,600 Speaker 1: to keep them together is more difficult. And I have 23 00:01:31,840 --> 00:01:34,839 Speaker 1: also believe that you know, over long periods of time, 24 00:01:34,880 --> 00:01:39,240 Speaker 1: with any one particular party in power, the natural backlash 25 00:01:39,319 --> 00:01:40,880 Speaker 1: is a rise in. 26 00:01:40,840 --> 00:01:41,479 Speaker 2: The other party. 27 00:01:41,520 --> 00:01:45,199 Speaker 1: And I certainly believed that we saw a significant rise 28 00:01:45,280 --> 00:01:49,120 Speaker 1: in that conservative traditional mindset right to get back to 29 00:01:49,200 --> 00:01:56,320 Speaker 1: the core ideologies of conservativism. And and I think you know, 30 00:01:56,400 --> 00:02:01,040 Speaker 1: what we're seeing now is the results of those years 31 00:02:01,080 --> 00:02:05,360 Speaker 1: and years of years of mass immigration. So how can 32 00:02:05,400 --> 00:02:09,520 Speaker 1: we better understand the position we're in. Is again, one 33 00:02:09,520 --> 00:02:11,320 Speaker 1: of the main things that we want to do in 34 00:02:11,560 --> 00:02:13,800 Speaker 1: the features that we want to offer you on this 35 00:02:13,880 --> 00:02:16,760 Speaker 1: show is to be able to consolidate all this information 36 00:02:17,240 --> 00:02:18,520 Speaker 1: and help make sense of it. 37 00:02:18,639 --> 00:02:20,440 Speaker 2: And that's what we're going to do, all right. 38 00:02:20,800 --> 00:02:24,600 Speaker 1: So first, let's just get into a historical evaluation of. 39 00:02:26,400 --> 00:02:28,080 Speaker 2: America and Mexico. 40 00:02:28,240 --> 00:02:32,080 Speaker 1: Now, you have to understand that prior to Mexico being 41 00:02:33,320 --> 00:02:40,119 Speaker 1: a Mexican independent state, right, Mexico was a Spanish colony. 42 00:02:40,560 --> 00:02:44,600 Speaker 1: So when they talk to us and say, you know, hey, 43 00:02:45,360 --> 00:02:50,400 Speaker 1: we're on stolen land, don't forget the Spaniards, the ones 44 00:02:50,440 --> 00:02:53,600 Speaker 1: who stole it from Native American first, and then you 45 00:02:53,639 --> 00:02:57,519 Speaker 1: had Mexican independence, and then they took it from the Spaniards, 46 00:02:57,520 --> 00:03:02,320 Speaker 1: and as a result of our manifest destiny, we ended 47 00:03:02,400 --> 00:03:05,480 Speaker 1: up taking it back right. You know, the first part 48 00:03:05,480 --> 00:03:10,520 Speaker 1: of this was in Mexico with Texas, right, and you 49 00:03:10,600 --> 00:03:15,160 Speaker 1: had you know the famous Alamo, the Texas Revolution, if 50 00:03:15,200 --> 00:03:18,480 Speaker 1: you will, which was from eighteen thirty five to eighteen 51 00:03:18,560 --> 00:03:22,800 Speaker 1: thirty six, and where we had Anglo settlers, a rebel 52 00:03:22,919 --> 00:03:27,200 Speaker 1: against the Tejanos under Mexican rules, sparked by Santa Anna's 53 00:03:27,280 --> 00:03:31,720 Speaker 1: repeal of the eighteen twenty four Constitution and attempts to 54 00:03:32,240 --> 00:03:37,960 Speaker 1: enforce centralized control clee here of key events included the 55 00:03:37,960 --> 00:03:41,440 Speaker 1: Battle of Gonzales and the Siege of Alamo in March 56 00:03:41,600 --> 00:03:43,560 Speaker 1: of eighteen thirty six, now. 57 00:03:43,360 --> 00:03:44,400 Speaker 2: Remembered of the Alamo. 58 00:03:44,840 --> 00:03:46,520 Speaker 1: You know what I always love is when I do 59 00:03:46,640 --> 00:03:48,640 Speaker 1: go down to Texas and I have the opportunity to go. 60 00:03:48,680 --> 00:03:51,160 Speaker 1: I love going to see that and thinking about what 61 00:03:51,200 --> 00:03:53,480 Speaker 1: it was like for those hundred plus men to face 62 00:03:53,560 --> 00:03:58,080 Speaker 1: three thousand Mexican troops and man, they held their own. 63 00:03:57,920 --> 00:04:00,400 Speaker 2: Like true Texas champ man. 64 00:04:00,440 --> 00:04:02,960 Speaker 1: And you know, I always think of myself as a 65 00:04:03,040 --> 00:04:06,760 Speaker 1: wanna be text and hafter the time I spent you know, 66 00:04:07,360 --> 00:04:10,720 Speaker 1: with Marcus down there doing the Team Never Quit podcasts 67 00:04:10,720 --> 00:04:13,280 Speaker 1: and all my Texas brethren out there, I love you guys. 68 00:04:14,520 --> 00:04:17,880 Speaker 1: You know, in Texas declared independence after that March of 69 00:04:18,200 --> 00:04:23,440 Speaker 1: eighteen thirty six. Now, you know, the Texas annexation was 70 00:04:23,440 --> 00:04:26,600 Speaker 1: a very think you know, unique at time in American 71 00:04:26,800 --> 00:04:30,479 Speaker 1: expansionist history. And they had this independence for about a 72 00:04:30,560 --> 00:04:33,719 Speaker 1: decade and then finally, you know, we were able to 73 00:04:34,400 --> 00:04:37,280 Speaker 1: you know, bring Texas into the fold as you know, 74 00:04:37,320 --> 00:04:39,880 Speaker 1: and they were a slave state and that caught it 75 00:04:39,920 --> 00:04:42,920 Speaker 1: caused a bunch of controversy, but we brought them in 76 00:04:42,960 --> 00:04:49,640 Speaker 1: and and actually added a tremendous size advancement to American 77 00:04:51,760 --> 00:04:55,280 Speaker 1: colonies and what that looked like and what America the 78 00:04:55,400 --> 00:04:59,320 Speaker 1: your size of it. You know, what was interesting is 79 00:04:59,360 --> 00:05:02,720 Speaker 1: that Andrew Jackson and Martin van Buren, you know, they 80 00:05:02,800 --> 00:05:06,120 Speaker 1: kind of pushed pushed the issue down the road until 81 00:05:06,560 --> 00:05:10,880 Speaker 1: Polk came into power as president and then was admitted 82 00:05:10,920 --> 00:05:16,520 Speaker 1: as the twenty eighth state on December ninth, eighteen forty five. Now, 83 00:05:16,600 --> 00:05:20,080 Speaker 1: you know, some of those political drivers certainly manifest destiny 84 00:05:20,960 --> 00:05:23,919 Speaker 1: that you know, the US believed that North America was 85 00:05:24,000 --> 00:05:28,560 Speaker 1: primarily you know, it owned it it was part of 86 00:05:28,600 --> 00:05:36,080 Speaker 1: its uh, it's it's overall political and ideological components right 87 00:05:36,120 --> 00:05:39,960 Speaker 1: the entire area, you know, and I think a Mexican 88 00:05:40,000 --> 00:05:48,680 Speaker 1: American revolution relations had deteriorated, especially because of Texas's revolt 89 00:05:48,720 --> 00:05:53,120 Speaker 1: against Mexican and you know, I think it there was 90 00:05:53,160 --> 00:05:57,159 Speaker 1: no stopping us from deciding, hey, we want California to 91 00:05:58,320 --> 00:06:00,800 Speaker 1: you know what was interesting, California was also a part 92 00:06:00,839 --> 00:06:05,520 Speaker 1: of Spanish colon colonies with a very large, very limited 93 00:06:05,600 --> 00:06:10,000 Speaker 1: number of Mexican people that had existed in that area, 94 00:06:10,240 --> 00:06:12,040 Speaker 1: whether it was mission work or whatever. 95 00:06:12,640 --> 00:06:15,520 Speaker 2: You know. You know, as we began to really. 96 00:06:17,200 --> 00:06:23,680 Speaker 1: You know, send settlers west into California, you know, the 97 00:06:24,160 --> 00:06:29,400 Speaker 1: California Trail. By the eighteen forties, hundreds of Americans were 98 00:06:29,440 --> 00:06:34,560 Speaker 1: living in Mexico or in California and maintaining their US loyalties. 99 00:06:35,720 --> 00:06:35,960 Speaker 2: You know. 100 00:06:36,600 --> 00:06:38,560 Speaker 1: One of the things that you had to realize is 101 00:06:38,560 --> 00:06:42,400 Speaker 1: that as we began to settle in California, we began 102 00:06:42,440 --> 00:06:44,800 Speaker 1: to see all these benefits, whether it was having a 103 00:06:44,800 --> 00:06:48,680 Speaker 1: seafaring port in San Francisco so we could trade across 104 00:06:48,720 --> 00:06:49,400 Speaker 1: the Pacific. 105 00:06:50,400 --> 00:06:51,680 Speaker 2: And then certainly the. 106 00:06:51,680 --> 00:07:00,000 Speaker 1: Gold Rush absolutely helped Americans kind of flood into those areas. 107 00:07:00,200 --> 00:07:03,680 Speaker 1: I think it was something like three hundred thousand settlers 108 00:07:03,680 --> 00:07:07,680 Speaker 1: moved out to California during the California gold Rush. But 109 00:07:07,760 --> 00:07:10,840 Speaker 1: it wasn't until the Mexican American War of eighteen forty 110 00:07:10,840 --> 00:07:14,920 Speaker 1: sixty eighteen forty eight, which was essentially led by John C. 111 00:07:15,120 --> 00:07:20,760 Speaker 1: Fremont and staged the Bear Flag Revolt in June of 112 00:07:20,840 --> 00:07:27,239 Speaker 1: eighteen forty six. You know, it was really important because 113 00:07:27,240 --> 00:07:31,120 Speaker 1: we were like, hey, California's viable interest to our national security, 114 00:07:31,120 --> 00:07:34,160 Speaker 1: to our national expansion, to all the different types of 115 00:07:34,200 --> 00:07:37,880 Speaker 1: things that were going to benefit us from a financial perspective. 116 00:07:37,920 --> 00:07:42,080 Speaker 1: And so, you know, US forces ultimately secured the control 117 00:07:42,120 --> 00:07:47,000 Speaker 1: of California and signed by January of eighteen forty seven, 118 00:07:47,120 --> 00:07:49,480 Speaker 1: signed the Treaty of Calahuenga. 119 00:07:50,160 --> 00:07:53,560 Speaker 2: Is that how I say it, Jordi Calahuenga. 120 00:07:52,760 --> 00:07:54,560 Speaker 3: Dude, I got no clue on that one. 121 00:07:55,720 --> 00:07:59,160 Speaker 1: And then it was the Treaty of Guadalupe Hildago in 122 00:07:59,280 --> 00:08:04,200 Speaker 1: eighteen forty eight, you know, in the Mexican American War ended. 123 00:08:04,640 --> 00:08:07,160 Speaker 1: Now here's a kicker, and this is a lot of 124 00:08:07,200 --> 00:08:10,240 Speaker 1: what you're seeing in some of these you know reporters. 125 00:08:10,320 --> 00:08:12,440 Speaker 1: Nick Shirley, I think is the best guy on the 126 00:08:12,440 --> 00:08:16,200 Speaker 1: ground doing incredible reporting to these protests that had been 127 00:08:16,200 --> 00:08:18,760 Speaker 1: going on in LA and going on. 128 00:08:19,200 --> 00:08:21,680 Speaker 2: You know, and I really believe that. 129 00:08:23,040 --> 00:08:27,400 Speaker 1: You know this, Mexico lost fifty five percent of its 130 00:08:27,480 --> 00:08:33,560 Speaker 1: land mass, So fifty over half of Mexican territories were 131 00:08:33,920 --> 00:08:38,800 Speaker 1: seceded or taken or conquered, or however you want to 132 00:08:39,120 --> 00:08:43,079 Speaker 1: rationalize this. Now, Again, I always try and point out 133 00:08:43,160 --> 00:08:48,000 Speaker 1: that human history, to the victor's the spoils and to 134 00:08:48,080 --> 00:08:51,240 Speaker 1: those who've lost their land. Man, there's nothing more unfair 135 00:08:51,320 --> 00:08:54,440 Speaker 1: than that. But that's just kind of the way things work. 136 00:08:55,280 --> 00:08:57,520 Speaker 1: I wish it wasn't that. I wish there was a 137 00:08:57,520 --> 00:09:02,880 Speaker 1: lot more of fair disputes. Now, you also got to 138 00:09:02,920 --> 00:09:05,600 Speaker 1: know that the president of Mexico at the time did 139 00:09:05,679 --> 00:09:09,760 Speaker 1: take fifteen million dollars from the US, and we canceled 140 00:09:09,800 --> 00:09:11,480 Speaker 1: a bunch of it, we took over a bunch of 141 00:09:11,480 --> 00:09:14,360 Speaker 1: its debt, and and so they didn't go a way 142 00:09:14,400 --> 00:09:18,240 Speaker 1: empty empty handed, for sure. But you know, that is 143 00:09:18,559 --> 00:09:22,080 Speaker 1: a component of what you're hearing in the riots and 144 00:09:22,120 --> 00:09:24,160 Speaker 1: what you certainly have heard from a lot of the 145 00:09:24,800 --> 00:09:30,319 Speaker 1: ideological people that are supporting these riots. You know, California 146 00:09:30,440 --> 00:09:35,839 Speaker 1: statehood was a pretty phenomenal thing really kind of exploded 147 00:09:35,920 --> 00:09:40,320 Speaker 1: that that, you know, head west, go west, young man, 148 00:09:40,400 --> 00:09:44,679 Speaker 1: or Horatio Alger's famous quote, I think I just butchered that, 149 00:09:44,800 --> 00:09:47,800 Speaker 1: by the way, Jeordie, you know, and the idea of 150 00:09:47,800 --> 00:09:49,199 Speaker 1: that manifest destiny. 151 00:09:50,080 --> 00:09:51,680 Speaker 2: Now, the interesting California came in. 152 00:09:51,720 --> 00:09:54,240 Speaker 1: They were non slave state, and so that created some 153 00:09:54,360 --> 00:09:59,120 Speaker 1: more tension that ultimately led into the the division of 154 00:09:59,400 --> 00:10:02,720 Speaker 1: the United States the Civil War. But gaining Texas in 155 00:10:02,840 --> 00:10:08,960 Speaker 1: California was a massive part of America and our ability 156 00:10:09,000 --> 00:10:12,600 Speaker 1: to become what we are today. And so you know, 157 00:10:12,720 --> 00:10:18,720 Speaker 1: those two annexations represent really the greatest land mass capture 158 00:10:18,840 --> 00:10:21,559 Speaker 1: that the United States has ever or has ever has 159 00:10:21,600 --> 00:10:22,360 Speaker 1: ever dealt with. 160 00:10:22,600 --> 00:10:25,080 Speaker 2: Now, why do I tell you that. 161 00:10:24,960 --> 00:10:30,320 Speaker 1: Because it's critical for you to really begin to understand. 162 00:10:31,040 --> 00:10:36,000 Speaker 1: You know that a lot of a lot of the 163 00:10:36,120 --> 00:10:41,680 Speaker 1: ideas behind the border is relative to you know, finding 164 00:10:43,240 --> 00:10:47,000 Speaker 1: the land of the free and the home of the brave. 165 00:10:47,040 --> 00:10:51,640 Speaker 1: It's it's the American dream which draws people into our country. Right. 166 00:10:52,360 --> 00:10:54,600 Speaker 1: We used to say, you know, whether I was at 167 00:10:54,800 --> 00:10:58,120 Speaker 1: you know, in the soft community or in the intelligence community. Man, 168 00:10:58,200 --> 00:11:01,880 Speaker 1: everybody wants that shiny blue past. And why do they 169 00:11:02,160 --> 00:11:07,160 Speaker 1: Because you know, it's quantifiably proven that your ability to 170 00:11:07,240 --> 00:11:12,079 Speaker 1: have a brighter future in America is unlike almost any 171 00:11:12,120 --> 00:11:14,760 Speaker 1: other place in the world. Now, all these people out 172 00:11:14,760 --> 00:11:17,800 Speaker 1: there that are socialists, you know, they want to take 173 00:11:17,800 --> 00:11:21,880 Speaker 1: the pepsi chan challenge and say, well, socialism is much more, 174 00:11:24,400 --> 00:11:28,000 Speaker 1: much better than capitalism, and you know, you always say well, 175 00:11:28,760 --> 00:11:32,280 Speaker 1: and I actually I saw someone interviewed on the street 176 00:11:33,360 --> 00:11:36,440 Speaker 1: and they said, well, you know, what are you looking for? 177 00:11:36,600 --> 00:11:38,520 Speaker 1: And they're like, well, we want to burn the whole 178 00:11:38,559 --> 00:11:42,400 Speaker 1: thing down. We want socialism in America. Socialism works. In 179 00:11:42,440 --> 00:11:45,240 Speaker 1: the interview or like always says well, can you give 180 00:11:45,280 --> 00:11:50,920 Speaker 1: me an example where socialism has worked, and the guy repeated, well, 181 00:11:51,440 --> 00:11:56,559 Speaker 1: in the first four years of the Bolshevik Revolution, socialism 182 00:11:56,880 --> 00:11:58,360 Speaker 1: was fantastic and at work. 183 00:11:59,480 --> 00:12:01,480 Speaker 2: And then there was always the proverbial, but. 184 00:12:03,240 --> 00:12:06,200 Speaker 1: Then it didn't right to the tune of sixty five 185 00:12:06,280 --> 00:12:09,640 Speaker 1: million people. Now you can take a step back, and 186 00:12:10,360 --> 00:12:14,200 Speaker 1: you can go and you can look at what's essentially 187 00:12:14,240 --> 00:12:21,320 Speaker 1: been happening I think throughout South and Central America right 188 00:12:21,400 --> 00:12:25,720 Speaker 1: with a few exceptions. Obviously El Salvador is you know, 189 00:12:26,400 --> 00:12:29,960 Speaker 1: you know that guy's running that place. He's all about capitalism. 190 00:12:30,000 --> 00:12:32,640 Speaker 1: He understands rule of law and order. You know, there 191 00:12:32,640 --> 00:12:35,520 Speaker 1: are some people that do suggest that they did empty 192 00:12:35,559 --> 00:12:38,520 Speaker 1: out their jails and they're saying asylums and got rid 193 00:12:38,559 --> 00:12:42,920 Speaker 1: of all their nasty people. Or once he started putting 194 00:12:42,920 --> 00:12:47,319 Speaker 1: all these gang members in jail and force, I'd want 195 00:12:47,320 --> 00:12:49,080 Speaker 1: to leave there too if I was a bad guy, 196 00:12:49,200 --> 00:12:53,640 Speaker 1: for sure. And then there's Paraguay, right, my good friend 197 00:12:53,679 --> 00:12:58,079 Speaker 1: and pretty high up at the agency who is in 198 00:12:58,120 --> 00:13:05,160 Speaker 1: the know. And Paraguay's a democratically leaning a country that 199 00:13:05,280 --> 00:13:08,920 Speaker 1: really needs our support right now in a whole wave 200 00:13:09,160 --> 00:13:14,240 Speaker 1: of socialistic countries just overriding and overwhelming Central South America. 201 00:13:14,400 --> 00:13:17,360 Speaker 1: I mean, look at Venezuela. Venezuela was one of the 202 00:13:17,400 --> 00:13:21,760 Speaker 1: wealthiest nations in the Americas, in both North America and 203 00:13:21,800 --> 00:13:26,199 Speaker 1: South America. They implemented socialism. Now they've got a dictator 204 00:13:26,240 --> 00:13:34,680 Speaker 1: who just recently just completely throughout the elections imprisoned people 205 00:13:34,720 --> 00:13:37,679 Speaker 1: that was up against him. We saw that take place 206 00:13:37,760 --> 00:13:43,000 Speaker 1: with Lula in Brazil. We saw that take place in Colombia. 207 00:13:43,080 --> 00:13:46,240 Speaker 1: We've seen it now in Mexico. There's a socialist president 208 00:13:46,320 --> 00:13:53,960 Speaker 1: in Mexico and we just saw her on TV or 209 00:13:54,559 --> 00:13:57,600 Speaker 1: the internet just two days ago. At a few days 210 00:13:57,600 --> 00:14:06,280 Speaker 1: ago advocating for the mobilization and the pushback against the 211 00:14:06,440 --> 00:14:11,400 Speaker 1: overreach of the American government and ice informant of illegal immigrants, 212 00:14:11,880 --> 00:14:13,480 Speaker 1: you know. And then you had another person who was 213 00:14:13,520 --> 00:14:17,960 Speaker 1: the head of the Mexican State Senate, also advocating, holding 214 00:14:18,040 --> 00:14:22,040 Speaker 1: up an actual map, an eighteen twelve map, saying this 215 00:14:22,120 --> 00:14:28,240 Speaker 1: is what was stolen from us. So there is, without 216 00:14:28,240 --> 00:14:34,520 Speaker 1: a doubt, a political influence that has overwhelmed Central South America, 217 00:14:36,160 --> 00:14:45,239 Speaker 1: and that influence is caused a tremendous amount of immigration 218 00:14:45,680 --> 00:14:49,360 Speaker 1: or migration, if you will, because if you type in 219 00:14:49,480 --> 00:14:53,080 Speaker 1: immigration challenges or whatever, a lot of the stuff that 220 00:14:53,120 --> 00:14:57,440 Speaker 1: comes up, they won't even respond. It's migration, it's asylum seekers, 221 00:14:57,840 --> 00:15:02,080 Speaker 1: it's political asylum seekers, all of this. And I think, 222 00:15:02,240 --> 00:15:07,200 Speaker 1: you know, once you evaluate the ideologies of these countries 223 00:15:07,320 --> 00:15:13,400 Speaker 1: and what has taken place, there's no doubt that people 224 00:15:13,440 --> 00:15:17,600 Speaker 1: that are living under pretty oppressive regimes no matter where 225 00:15:17,640 --> 00:15:23,720 Speaker 1: they are, whether it's Haiti, whether it's Venezuela, Columbia, Brazil, 226 00:15:24,400 --> 00:15:30,120 Speaker 1: you know, wherever. At Mexico itself, with the cartel influence 227 00:15:30,200 --> 00:15:33,360 Speaker 1: and violence, you know, and and and you know, that's 228 00:15:33,440 --> 00:15:37,600 Speaker 1: a whole other aspect of this that is substantial as 229 00:15:37,600 --> 00:15:40,640 Speaker 1: well too, and I'll talk about that at the end. 230 00:15:43,080 --> 00:15:43,880 Speaker 2: So what do you have. 231 00:15:44,080 --> 00:15:50,000 Speaker 1: You have this recipe that just you know, explodes this thing. 232 00:15:50,040 --> 00:15:52,880 Speaker 1: You have a US government saying, you know, by the 233 00:15:52,880 --> 00:15:57,600 Speaker 1: people in power, hey we want you here to the 234 00:15:57,640 --> 00:16:01,200 Speaker 1: tune where my orch is, and the Obimen administration basically 235 00:16:01,560 --> 00:16:07,120 Speaker 1: just suspended all immigration laws and said doors open, come 236 00:16:07,160 --> 00:16:07,520 Speaker 1: on in. 237 00:16:07,720 --> 00:16:10,360 Speaker 2: We want you to the tune. 238 00:16:10,680 --> 00:16:13,760 Speaker 1: I mean, some people say it's ten to eleven million, 239 00:16:13,920 --> 00:16:17,120 Speaker 1: some people say it's twenty to twenty three million. I mean, 240 00:16:17,160 --> 00:16:19,720 Speaker 1: I don't think we can even fathom the amount of 241 00:16:19,760 --> 00:16:25,800 Speaker 1: those numbers, JORDI. Would you look up numbers of people 242 00:16:25,960 --> 00:16:29,680 Speaker 1: that we were able to register starting twenty twenty to 243 00:16:29,800 --> 00:16:33,720 Speaker 1: twenty twenty four and then god aways it to and let. 244 00:16:33,520 --> 00:16:36,160 Speaker 2: Me know when you get that. Yep, thank you brother. 245 00:16:36,440 --> 00:16:41,640 Speaker 1: All right, So you have radical ideologies overwhelming Central South America, 246 00:16:41,880 --> 00:16:44,040 Speaker 1: people fleeing, wanted to get away. You have the US 247 00:16:44,160 --> 00:16:47,480 Speaker 1: government saying, hey, come on in, we want you because 248 00:16:48,040 --> 00:16:53,600 Speaker 1: we need you as our new electorate. We added you 249 00:16:53,640 --> 00:16:56,840 Speaker 1: into the consensus, so we're going to get more seats 250 00:16:56,840 --> 00:16:59,800 Speaker 1: in the House, right, But really, the voting base and 251 00:17:00,200 --> 00:17:02,360 Speaker 1: all you want to you really want to understand that is, 252 00:17:02,880 --> 00:17:07,800 Speaker 1: look at the states that received the greatest amount of immigration. 253 00:17:08,240 --> 00:17:11,160 Speaker 1: My favorite one throughout the whole thing was when DeSantis 254 00:17:11,200 --> 00:17:15,919 Speaker 1: and Abbott started busting these immigrants to blue states. And 255 00:17:15,960 --> 00:17:19,000 Speaker 1: my favorite, hands down was when they sent all those 256 00:17:19,800 --> 00:17:24,160 Speaker 1: immigrants or illegal immigrants up to what was it Martha's 257 00:17:24,240 --> 00:17:28,240 Speaker 1: Vineyard and the whole town revolted, and. 258 00:17:28,600 --> 00:17:31,320 Speaker 2: You know, yeah, we want immigrants. 259 00:17:31,359 --> 00:17:34,080 Speaker 1: It's what the backbone of America was built on, you know, 260 00:17:34,200 --> 00:17:36,280 Speaker 1: and all this stuff. And then as long as they're 261 00:17:36,320 --> 00:17:39,440 Speaker 1: not in our in our in our areas to devalue 262 00:17:39,440 --> 00:17:44,120 Speaker 1: our home prices, right, yeah, you know, it's it's it's unbelievable. 263 00:17:44,359 --> 00:17:47,080 Speaker 4: Got those numbers if you want them, Yeah, what are they? Yeah, 264 00:17:47,160 --> 00:17:51,320 Speaker 4: So it looks like it's a reasonable estimate. It's hard 265 00:17:51,359 --> 00:17:55,600 Speaker 4: to know exactly, but twelve to thirteen million migrants between 266 00:17:55,640 --> 00:17:59,080 Speaker 4: twenty twenty to twenty four, twenty twenty four, and in 267 00:17:59,160 --> 00:18:05,760 Speaker 4: terms of god ways, looks like they're saying about one 268 00:18:05,800 --> 00:18:09,520 Speaker 4: and a half one point one point six million or so. 269 00:18:10,600 --> 00:18:13,520 Speaker 1: One point six million got away. So well, let's call it. 270 00:18:13,960 --> 00:18:18,560 Speaker 1: Let's call it twelve to fifteen million human beings easily Okay, 271 00:18:19,160 --> 00:18:24,280 Speaker 1: So when you have that level of people that are 272 00:18:24,480 --> 00:18:30,200 Speaker 1: coming in to the country, let's just let's just put 273 00:18:30,240 --> 00:18:34,600 Speaker 1: the national security part over here, right, Let's just put 274 00:18:34,640 --> 00:18:39,000 Speaker 1: that how many you know, Chinese uh people, you know, 275 00:18:39,760 --> 00:18:43,040 Speaker 1: adult military age males that we saw. 276 00:18:43,359 --> 00:18:46,720 Speaker 2: Let's put the Hamas groups that have come out, the 277 00:18:46,800 --> 00:18:48,240 Speaker 2: Hesbolag groups. 278 00:18:47,920 --> 00:18:52,919 Speaker 1: The ISIS groups, the the Taliban groups, the uh you know, 279 00:18:53,119 --> 00:18:58,200 Speaker 1: the whoever else whatever your flavor of terrorists or or 280 00:18:58,400 --> 00:19:03,840 Speaker 1: or criminal in a Agua, the Venezuelan gangs MS thirteen. 281 00:19:03,920 --> 00:19:08,600 Speaker 1: Let's just put that large clump of people, and everybody's like, well, man, 282 00:19:08,640 --> 00:19:13,399 Speaker 1: they're the overwhelming majority are peaceful people. I'll give you that, 283 00:19:13,960 --> 00:19:16,879 Speaker 1: and let's just call let's just say let's just say 284 00:19:16,960 --> 00:19:21,520 Speaker 1: ten percent. Jordy, you're the mathematician, bro, what's ten percent 285 00:19:21,920 --> 00:19:23,399 Speaker 1: of twelve million. 286 00:19:24,720 --> 00:19:27,240 Speaker 3: Well, one hundred and twenty thousand, So. 287 00:19:27,920 --> 00:19:28,520 Speaker 2: Let's let's go. 288 00:19:28,680 --> 00:19:32,920 Speaker 1: Let's just say maybe one hundred and twenty thousand. Sorry, sorry, 289 00:19:32,960 --> 00:19:37,560 Speaker 1: that's one percent. Yeah, so let's just say one percent. Yeah, 290 00:19:37,640 --> 00:19:43,840 Speaker 1: one hundred twenty thousand people that are terrorists, criminals, psychopaths, 291 00:19:44,800 --> 00:19:52,200 Speaker 1: you know, murderers, rapists, child traffickers are in the country, 292 00:19:52,359 --> 00:19:54,000 Speaker 1: like that's okay with you. 293 00:19:54,119 --> 00:19:55,800 Speaker 3: I guess that's an army. 294 00:19:56,000 --> 00:19:57,600 Speaker 2: That's an army of people. 295 00:19:57,720 --> 00:19:59,080 Speaker 1: Right. All you got to do is look at the 296 00:19:59,119 --> 00:20:03,639 Speaker 1: boombay in look at October seventh in Israel. You know, 297 00:20:03,680 --> 00:20:07,320 Speaker 1: it doesn't take that many people to completely disrupt and 298 00:20:07,440 --> 00:20:13,600 Speaker 1: destroy local cities, towns, municipalities. Put the government you know, 299 00:20:13,680 --> 00:20:17,399 Speaker 1: on high alert, put people you know live in constant fear. 300 00:20:19,080 --> 00:20:21,760 Speaker 2: And that's that's something you have to allow. 301 00:20:21,520 --> 00:20:25,600 Speaker 1: To to percolate in your mind as you're assessing all 302 00:20:25,720 --> 00:20:29,800 Speaker 1: of these things. Now, Listen, if you got heartstrings for 303 00:20:30,000 --> 00:20:34,679 Speaker 1: you know, those young kids, then why are you not 304 00:20:35,000 --> 00:20:39,160 Speaker 1: calling your senator and congressman right now about the three 305 00:20:39,240 --> 00:20:42,639 Speaker 1: hundred and forty thousand missing children that have come in 306 00:20:42,720 --> 00:20:46,679 Speaker 1: under that time. Now, we all saw the kids in 307 00:20:46,720 --> 00:20:49,800 Speaker 1: cages under the Obama administration. We saw aoc to going 308 00:20:49,840 --> 00:20:53,040 Speaker 1: down and cry in front of the detention centers. But 309 00:20:53,119 --> 00:20:56,359 Speaker 1: nobody's crying for the three hundred and forty thousand missing 310 00:20:56,480 --> 00:20:59,199 Speaker 1: children right now. And what have happened to Have they 311 00:20:59,280 --> 00:21:02,720 Speaker 1: been trafficked? Are they sex slaves? Are they dead? You know, 312 00:21:03,119 --> 00:21:07,520 Speaker 1: they've been sacrificed for their organs to be sold overseas. 313 00:21:08,240 --> 00:21:11,160 Speaker 1: And this is all real stuff taking place? Where are 314 00:21:11,200 --> 00:21:11,920 Speaker 1: those children? 315 00:21:13,080 --> 00:21:13,440 Speaker 2: All right? 316 00:21:13,520 --> 00:21:15,760 Speaker 1: So when you start to think about all this, what 317 00:21:16,000 --> 00:21:19,639 Speaker 1: emerges from these and this is where the things start 318 00:21:19,680 --> 00:21:24,320 Speaker 1: becoming diabolical? 319 00:21:25,680 --> 00:21:27,760 Speaker 2: What's up everybody? Sorry again for the interruption. 320 00:21:27,920 --> 00:21:31,359 Speaker 1: I just want to tell you about this incredible five 321 00:21:31,520 --> 00:21:34,840 Speaker 1: day challenge that we're offering on David Rutherford dot com 322 00:21:34,960 --> 00:21:37,639 Speaker 1: or in the link in the description. And what this 323 00:21:37,840 --> 00:21:41,680 Speaker 1: is is this is your Embrace Fear five day Challenge. Now, 324 00:21:41,800 --> 00:21:45,679 Speaker 1: over the past thirty years, I've spent a tremendous amount 325 00:21:45,680 --> 00:21:48,879 Speaker 1: of time developing what I call the Frog Logic concepts. 326 00:21:48,920 --> 00:21:51,879 Speaker 1: I teach people to embrace their fears, to forge their 327 00:21:51,920 --> 00:21:54,399 Speaker 1: self confidence, how to live a team life, and to 328 00:21:54,600 --> 00:21:57,840 Speaker 1: ultimately live with purpose. So what we want to introduce 329 00:21:57,880 --> 00:22:01,240 Speaker 1: you to is how to get going in these ideas. 330 00:22:01,280 --> 00:22:04,480 Speaker 1: And so we've got this incredible five day Embrace Fear 331 00:22:04,600 --> 00:22:07,439 Speaker 1: Challenge Again, the link is in the description. In this 332 00:22:08,200 --> 00:22:10,960 Speaker 1: there's five missions, five to one per day that's going 333 00:22:11,040 --> 00:22:13,320 Speaker 1: to ask you to do all different types of things, 334 00:22:13,400 --> 00:22:16,679 Speaker 1: which is, identify the fears which are running your life 335 00:22:16,760 --> 00:22:20,119 Speaker 1: except the hard truth of where you are, rechain your mindset, 336 00:22:20,720 --> 00:22:23,600 Speaker 1: to test your limits, and then to forge your courage 337 00:22:23,640 --> 00:22:28,359 Speaker 1: to live with purpose. These involve both physical and emotional 338 00:22:28,400 --> 00:22:31,200 Speaker 1: and mental aspects in terms of journaling. But I'm telling 339 00:22:31,240 --> 00:22:33,919 Speaker 1: you it's going to kick start your mind as you 340 00:22:34,040 --> 00:22:36,399 Speaker 1: begin to think about the number one emotion out of 341 00:22:36,440 --> 00:22:40,440 Speaker 1: our eight core motions that impedes us from our successes, 342 00:22:40,560 --> 00:22:43,520 Speaker 1: and that's fear. And trust me when I tell you 343 00:22:44,040 --> 00:22:46,840 Speaker 1: I've spent a lot of my life being afraid of things. 344 00:22:47,359 --> 00:22:49,760 Speaker 1: When you're jumping out of a perfectly good airplane in 345 00:22:49,760 --> 00:22:51,879 Speaker 1: the middle of the night, chasing two ducks into the 346 00:22:51,920 --> 00:22:54,959 Speaker 1: middle of the ocean, you better believe you're scared. And 347 00:22:55,040 --> 00:22:58,320 Speaker 1: this is the ideas that emerged out of my understanding 348 00:22:58,320 --> 00:23:01,280 Speaker 1: of fear that I hope you can understand too, that 349 00:23:01,320 --> 00:23:04,280 Speaker 1: will end up helping you be able to find your 350 00:23:04,359 --> 00:23:07,879 Speaker 1: purpose in life. So here's the kicker. This is a 351 00:23:08,080 --> 00:23:10,480 Speaker 1: free challenge. You don't have to pay for it, you 352 00:23:10,520 --> 00:23:13,160 Speaker 1: don't have to buy it, you don't have to dow anything. 353 00:23:13,359 --> 00:23:15,560 Speaker 1: All you got to do is sign up, take the 354 00:23:15,680 --> 00:23:18,840 Speaker 1: challenge and get your life back on track being able 355 00:23:18,880 --> 00:23:21,760 Speaker 1: to embrace that fear in order for you to find 356 00:23:21,840 --> 00:23:22,960 Speaker 1: purpose in life. 357 00:23:23,119 --> 00:23:25,080 Speaker 2: All right, enjoy who yuh. 358 00:23:26,440 --> 00:23:28,440 Speaker 1: So? What did I where you go when you start 359 00:23:28,480 --> 00:23:33,359 Speaker 1: to examine all this, you immediately go to the NGOs, 360 00:23:33,480 --> 00:23:39,359 Speaker 1: the non governmental organizations that helped facilitate this because this 361 00:23:39,440 --> 00:23:43,639 Speaker 1: is a machine. This became an absolute machine. Now why 362 00:23:44,119 --> 00:23:49,320 Speaker 1: because you're talking about billions and billions of dollars that 363 00:23:49,560 --> 00:23:56,640 Speaker 1: funded this operation, both externally and internally. So what were 364 00:23:56,640 --> 00:24:01,440 Speaker 1: some of the biggies in terms of migratation or in quotation, 365 00:24:01,760 --> 00:24:06,760 Speaker 1: refugee support. You had the United Nations Refugee Agency, the 366 00:24:06,880 --> 00:24:11,840 Speaker 1: u n HRC, You had the International Organization for Migration, 367 00:24:12,040 --> 00:24:17,639 Speaker 1: the IM, the IOM, the International Committee for of the 368 00:24:17,680 --> 00:24:27,320 Speaker 1: Red Cross, the ICRC, and you had highest right and. 369 00:24:25,160 --> 00:24:29,080 Speaker 4: And basically these NGOs are just the face, the pretty 370 00:24:29,119 --> 00:24:33,440 Speaker 4: face that they put on top of these of their plans. 371 00:24:33,880 --> 00:24:35,560 Speaker 2: That's right, right, that's right. 372 00:24:35,440 --> 00:24:38,880 Speaker 4: Because you don't have to tear down the country budget line. 373 00:24:39,240 --> 00:24:40,720 Speaker 4: You know a lot of the budget. 374 00:24:40,960 --> 00:24:43,040 Speaker 2: One hundred percent, one hundred percent. 375 00:24:43,720 --> 00:24:45,600 Speaker 1: And you know the other thing too, is when you 376 00:24:45,640 --> 00:24:50,920 Speaker 1: do look at what these NGOs provide. They provide legitimate services, right, 377 00:24:51,000 --> 00:24:56,840 Speaker 1: They provide water, they provide tents, they provide internet access, 378 00:24:56,880 --> 00:25:02,720 Speaker 1: they provide some kind of debit call, they provide shelters, 379 00:25:02,800 --> 00:25:07,480 Speaker 1: they provide food, They provide protection in some cases. But 380 00:25:08,040 --> 00:25:12,960 Speaker 1: what all four that's for the mass migration into the 381 00:25:13,080 --> 00:25:18,160 Speaker 1: United States, right for what reason? So Highest is, you know, 382 00:25:19,800 --> 00:25:24,080 Speaker 1: is the Hebrew Immigration Aid Society, and you know their 383 00:25:24,160 --> 00:25:28,680 Speaker 1: role in migration operates in countries like Panama, Columbia, Mexico, 384 00:25:29,160 --> 00:25:32,280 Speaker 1: offering to sports and migrants and refugees traveling through Central 385 00:25:32,320 --> 00:25:37,119 Speaker 1: South America. And their work includes and provides legal assistance, 386 00:25:37,240 --> 00:25:41,639 Speaker 1: humanitarian areas, food shelter, medical care, and guidance on the 387 00:25:41,680 --> 00:25:45,600 Speaker 1: asylum process in regions like the Darien Gap, a dangerous 388 00:25:45,640 --> 00:25:49,879 Speaker 1: migration route right now. Highest receives its funding from a 389 00:25:49,960 --> 00:25:53,560 Speaker 1: bunch of difference, you know, private donations, government grants, that 390 00:25:53,600 --> 00:25:54,040 Speaker 1: whole thing. 391 00:25:54,160 --> 00:25:56,159 Speaker 2: So here you go, ready for this. 392 00:25:56,320 --> 00:26:02,560 Speaker 1: So from twenty twenty one to twenty twenty four, Highest 393 00:26:02,640 --> 00:26:07,720 Speaker 1: received two one hundred and seventy four point six million 394 00:26:07,800 --> 00:26:13,560 Speaker 1: dollars in federal grants to support this cause eighty seven 395 00:26:13,600 --> 00:26:17,879 Speaker 1: point seventy seven million per year. And this was during 396 00:26:18,040 --> 00:26:22,200 Speaker 1: Alexander Meorkis's tenure at this DHS secretary. It's also known 397 00:26:22,520 --> 00:26:25,639 Speaker 1: that he was also the head of Highest prior to 398 00:26:25,720 --> 00:26:31,720 Speaker 1: coming in as the head of HHS. All right, So, 399 00:26:31,920 --> 00:26:35,800 Speaker 1: like I said in twenty twenty three received eighty seven 400 00:26:35,920 --> 00:26:42,879 Speaker 1: million in taxpayer funds. Some posts alleged that highest was 401 00:26:42,920 --> 00:26:47,000 Speaker 1: a part of a broader one point four billion funded 402 00:26:47,040 --> 00:26:53,920 Speaker 1: by who you guessed it, USAID, right and USAID as 403 00:26:53,960 --> 00:26:58,400 Speaker 1: now we found out from Mike Bens and DOGE was 404 00:26:58,920 --> 00:27:02,679 Speaker 1: basically funding all different types of illicit programs as a 405 00:27:02,720 --> 00:27:07,080 Speaker 1: cutout for the Central Intelligence Agency in the intelligence community. 406 00:27:07,560 --> 00:27:07,879 Speaker 2: Right. 407 00:27:07,960 --> 00:27:11,080 Speaker 1: And so when you understand the work they did over 408 00:27:11,480 --> 00:27:17,120 Speaker 1: seas with judicial reform, right, changing the influence of local judges, 409 00:27:17,160 --> 00:27:21,920 Speaker 1: getting judges in office, or outright funding color revolutions, funding 410 00:27:22,240 --> 00:27:28,760 Speaker 1: media campaigns, funding immigration changes or challenges to certain areas, 411 00:27:29,160 --> 00:27:31,840 Speaker 1: you start to understand, well, well they're not just it's 412 00:27:31,880 --> 00:27:34,280 Speaker 1: not a us AID organization. 413 00:27:34,600 --> 00:27:36,679 Speaker 2: They're a political influence organization. 414 00:27:38,880 --> 00:27:44,080 Speaker 1: You know, total revenue approximately one hundred and thirty five million, 415 00:27:44,880 --> 00:27:48,920 Speaker 1: sixty percent of their total revenue comes from government aid 416 00:27:48,960 --> 00:27:49,560 Speaker 1: and funding. 417 00:27:49,680 --> 00:27:52,720 Speaker 2: All Right, So that's that's them. 418 00:27:52,840 --> 00:27:56,840 Speaker 1: How about the un HRC, right, the United Nations High 419 00:27:56,840 --> 00:28:00,199 Speaker 1: Commission for Refugees, And again when you look at what 420 00:28:00,240 --> 00:28:04,919 Speaker 1: their mission statement is and it looks awesome, right, you know, 421 00:28:05,040 --> 00:28:09,240 Speaker 1: here's what it is. Their focus is on protecting and 422 00:28:09,320 --> 00:28:15,280 Speaker 1: assisting refugees, asylum seekers, internally displaced persons IDPs, stateless people 423 00:28:15,359 --> 00:28:19,160 Speaker 1: in Central South America primarily through humanitarian aid, legal support, 424 00:28:19,640 --> 00:28:25,879 Speaker 1: and integration programs. Why the un HRC does not explicitly 425 00:28:25,920 --> 00:28:29,840 Speaker 1: allocate funds for migrant support a distinct category in their 426 00:28:29,880 --> 00:28:35,560 Speaker 1: programs in the America support forcibly displaced populations, So forcibly 427 00:28:35,760 --> 00:28:41,120 Speaker 1: displace populations. Now, when you get into what asylum actually 428 00:28:41,360 --> 00:28:44,720 Speaker 1: is and what it means, holy cow, talk about gray 429 00:28:44,800 --> 00:28:51,360 Speaker 1: area and definitions. It's pretty substantial, right, hey, jeordie, Will 430 00:28:51,360 --> 00:28:56,360 Speaker 1: you try and pull up the definition of an asylum 431 00:28:56,520 --> 00:29:01,080 Speaker 1: seeking person by standards of ha, yes, and see if 432 00:29:01,120 --> 00:29:03,080 Speaker 1: you can look up the standards prior to the Trump 433 00:29:03,120 --> 00:29:04,360 Speaker 1: administration coming in. 434 00:29:04,480 --> 00:29:08,160 Speaker 2: Yep, thank you sir. All right, all right. 435 00:29:08,360 --> 00:29:12,560 Speaker 1: Spending in Central South America, all right, total expenditure in 436 00:29:12,640 --> 00:29:18,080 Speaker 1: the Americas in twenty twenty three was approximately three hundred 437 00:29:18,280 --> 00:29:22,560 Speaker 1: and fifty five million dollars. 438 00:29:23,160 --> 00:29:24,360 Speaker 2: Let me repeat my last. 439 00:29:25,040 --> 00:29:30,720 Speaker 1: Their spending in the Americas was three hundred and fifty 440 00:29:30,760 --> 00:29:35,240 Speaker 1: five million dollars, right against the regional budget of eight 441 00:29:35,320 --> 00:29:38,440 Speaker 1: hundred and twenty seven million. And they had some funding 442 00:29:38,480 --> 00:29:41,880 Speaker 1: gaps for sure, but they were able to you know 443 00:29:42,280 --> 00:29:47,719 Speaker 1: meet those needs. All right, let's see spending. The spending 444 00:29:47,760 --> 00:29:53,280 Speaker 1: covered twenty three million forcibly displaced people in their needs 445 00:29:53,320 --> 00:29:59,640 Speaker 1: protecting across the region, driven by displacement in Venezuela, Colombia, Haiti, 446 00:30:00,160 --> 00:30:04,560 Speaker 1: Central America, Mexico and Nicaragra. So let's look at that number. 447 00:30:05,920 --> 00:30:11,280 Speaker 1: Twenty's that's from the UN HRC. Twenty three million displaced people. 448 00:30:12,280 --> 00:30:17,880 Speaker 1: So you're telling me that twenty they were able to aggregate, interview, 449 00:30:18,120 --> 00:30:22,800 Speaker 1: and and log in that twenty three million people met 450 00:30:22,840 --> 00:30:29,400 Speaker 1: their criteria for refugees. I'm calling bullshit on that. It 451 00:30:29,560 --> 00:30:31,680 Speaker 1: just is what it is. You're not going to fudge 452 00:30:31,720 --> 00:30:34,600 Speaker 1: these numbers. And the reason they fudge these numbers is 453 00:30:34,640 --> 00:30:37,000 Speaker 1: so they can get money from the IMF, they can 454 00:30:37,000 --> 00:30:39,720 Speaker 1: get money from federal grants, they can get money from 455 00:30:39,800 --> 00:30:43,560 Speaker 1: UN grants. Which, by the way, did you find those 456 00:30:43,600 --> 00:30:44,960 Speaker 1: that number, Jordy. 457 00:30:44,800 --> 00:30:47,480 Speaker 3: Oh, I found the definitions the definition. 458 00:30:47,520 --> 00:30:49,320 Speaker 1: Give me that real quick book and then and then 459 00:30:49,360 --> 00:30:50,840 Speaker 1: we'll go in another one I need your help with. 460 00:30:51,000 --> 00:30:53,720 Speaker 4: Yeah, so it looks like the definition hasn't changed much, 461 00:30:53,800 --> 00:30:56,320 Speaker 4: but it doesn't matter because the way it's applied and 462 00:30:56,360 --> 00:30:59,560 Speaker 4: the legal reasons of who can be an asylum did 463 00:30:59,640 --> 00:31:02,200 Speaker 4: change a lot, and that's where they snuck it in. 464 00:31:02,560 --> 00:31:02,800 Speaker 3: Right. 465 00:31:02,880 --> 00:31:07,160 Speaker 4: So the definition looks like it's, according to HHS, a 466 00:31:07,240 --> 00:31:10,880 Speaker 4: person who has fled their country and is seeking protection 467 00:31:11,000 --> 00:31:15,680 Speaker 4: from persecution or serious human rights violations in another country. 468 00:31:16,280 --> 00:31:16,520 Speaker 1: Right. 469 00:31:17,200 --> 00:31:20,960 Speaker 4: So they have not yet legally been recognized as a refugee, 470 00:31:21,000 --> 00:31:24,080 Speaker 4: but they're in the process of applying for asylum at 471 00:31:24,080 --> 00:31:27,360 Speaker 4: the US port of entry or from another country. Now, 472 00:31:27,520 --> 00:31:30,440 Speaker 4: the big thing that happened is there's been changes in 473 00:31:30,480 --> 00:31:34,680 Speaker 4: that since Trump's first term. So while the core definition 474 00:31:34,720 --> 00:31:38,600 Speaker 4: hasn't changed, Trump era policy shifts impacted who could claim 475 00:31:38,640 --> 00:31:43,880 Speaker 4: asylum and how their claims are processed. So, in June 476 00:31:44,040 --> 00:31:49,160 Speaker 4: of twenty eighteen, Attorney General Sessions ruled domestic violence or 477 00:31:49,240 --> 00:31:53,280 Speaker 4: gang based persecution did not qualify as a form of 478 00:31:53,400 --> 00:31:56,720 Speaker 4: persecution under asylum law. So you can't claim asylum because 479 00:31:56,760 --> 00:31:57,160 Speaker 4: of that. 480 00:31:57,600 --> 00:32:02,000 Speaker 2: We have no Jeff Sessions. Yeah you got the boot. 481 00:32:02,080 --> 00:32:02,640 Speaker 3: Yeah you did. 482 00:32:03,240 --> 00:32:05,840 Speaker 4: And then there was the remain in Mexico policy, So 483 00:32:05,960 --> 00:32:08,240 Speaker 4: even if they did claim it, they remained in Mexico. 484 00:32:08,440 --> 00:32:08,640 Speaker 3: Right. 485 00:32:09,080 --> 00:32:09,320 Speaker 2: Yeah. 486 00:32:09,360 --> 00:32:14,040 Speaker 4: Now, the big change was under Biden, these rules were 487 00:32:14,080 --> 00:32:18,920 Speaker 4: basically just scrapped. And so now even though the definition 488 00:32:18,960 --> 00:32:22,680 Speaker 4: hasn't changed. Now, it's basically you can be an asylum 489 00:32:22,680 --> 00:32:25,400 Speaker 4: seeker for literally any reason and wait here. 490 00:32:27,440 --> 00:32:31,680 Speaker 1: So think about the number twenty three million people meet 491 00:32:31,680 --> 00:32:37,480 Speaker 1: the criteria for the unhrc as forcibly displaced under those 492 00:32:37,560 --> 00:32:42,680 Speaker 1: asylum rules. Right, So oppression, how vague can that be? 493 00:32:43,760 --> 00:32:47,080 Speaker 1: Domestic violence? I mean you talk about how rampant that 494 00:32:47,200 --> 00:32:50,520 Speaker 1: is and impoverished areas all over the world, including the 495 00:32:50,680 --> 00:32:55,320 Speaker 1: United States. Right, you talk about oppression. I mean that's 496 00:32:55,400 --> 00:32:58,680 Speaker 1: like fighting terrorism. I mean, in my mind, that's the 497 00:32:58,720 --> 00:33:03,160 Speaker 1: same concept. You throw out some ambiguous word that has 498 00:33:03,440 --> 00:33:07,360 Speaker 1: an unlimited scope of perspective and and and it just 499 00:33:07,520 --> 00:33:11,480 Speaker 1: opens the door for everybody and anybody to meet that criteria. 500 00:33:11,520 --> 00:33:12,960 Speaker 2: And that's what happened. 501 00:33:13,160 --> 00:33:15,560 Speaker 3: Seeking protection from persecution. 502 00:33:16,160 --> 00:33:19,240 Speaker 1: Dude, I see protection from persecution in my own mind 503 00:33:19,240 --> 00:33:23,360 Speaker 1: every goddamn day. Excuse my French, but it's like, holy cow, 504 00:33:23,520 --> 00:33:29,360 Speaker 1: I mean this, They've created a a a mega industry. 505 00:33:30,080 --> 00:33:34,360 Speaker 1: We're talking billions of billions of dollars that not only 506 00:33:34,440 --> 00:33:38,160 Speaker 1: served two different masters of low wage or you know, 507 00:33:38,400 --> 00:33:42,560 Speaker 1: like if I'm a corporation like Walmart or wherever, or 508 00:33:42,720 --> 00:33:45,200 Speaker 1: or any unions, and that's that's crazy. I just talked 509 00:33:45,240 --> 00:33:49,040 Speaker 1: to somebody this morning whose father grew up in the 510 00:33:49,120 --> 00:33:53,000 Speaker 1: unions in New Jersey, and he was telling me that 511 00:33:53,320 --> 00:33:56,720 Speaker 1: even his son could not get hired on the docks 512 00:33:57,160 --> 00:34:01,680 Speaker 1: because they're only taking undocumented work now. So the people 513 00:34:01,680 --> 00:34:04,640 Speaker 1: who once traditionally were protected by the unions are no 514 00:34:04,720 --> 00:34:08,240 Speaker 1: longer being displaced by these illegal immigrants. 515 00:34:08,800 --> 00:34:10,040 Speaker 3: Have a union, what's the point? 516 00:34:10,560 --> 00:34:14,279 Speaker 1: Well, you know, I have a union. Unions not only 517 00:34:14,320 --> 00:34:20,960 Speaker 1: support a particular political party and a voting block. So 518 00:34:21,040 --> 00:34:27,799 Speaker 1: if you can somehow create some type of political loophole 519 00:34:28,200 --> 00:34:32,720 Speaker 1: where you can have undocumented workers work under the union pretense, 520 00:34:32,760 --> 00:34:36,040 Speaker 1: which are protected jobs in certain states, now it not 521 00:34:36,120 --> 00:34:38,680 Speaker 1: only protects them under these assailant rules, but protects them 522 00:34:38,719 --> 00:34:41,600 Speaker 1: under these worker laws that they're protected under the unions, 523 00:34:41,600 --> 00:34:44,120 Speaker 1: and you can only use the unions on the jobs 524 00:34:44,120 --> 00:34:48,359 Speaker 1: for certain political whatever. It's pretty smart, it's ingenious when 525 00:34:48,400 --> 00:34:50,920 Speaker 1: you think about it. All. Right now, let me just 526 00:34:50,960 --> 00:34:56,360 Speaker 1: get into this now. The u n HI, HRC, HCR. Sorry, 527 00:34:56,719 --> 00:35:01,520 Speaker 1: they had all different types of programs, right, They had 528 00:35:01,640 --> 00:35:05,239 Speaker 1: the Regional Refugee and Migrant Response Plan. 529 00:35:06,360 --> 00:35:07,359 Speaker 2: They had. 530 00:35:09,680 --> 00:35:13,080 Speaker 1: These other programs that were medical and nature legal in nature. 531 00:35:16,760 --> 00:35:18,840 Speaker 2: You know, think about this too. Some of their funding. 532 00:35:18,840 --> 00:35:20,879 Speaker 1: Out of the three hundred and fifty five million dollars spent, 533 00:35:20,960 --> 00:35:25,400 Speaker 1: a significant portion went to local partners. That's fifty seven 534 00:35:25,480 --> 00:35:30,960 Speaker 1: percent of global partner funding to local responders. Okay, so 535 00:35:31,239 --> 00:35:33,880 Speaker 1: let's say I'm running, you know, a part of the 536 00:35:34,000 --> 00:35:37,919 Speaker 1: un HRC, and I come into a particular town that's 537 00:35:37,960 --> 00:35:43,160 Speaker 1: being flooded with all these these illegal immigrants or these 538 00:35:43,200 --> 00:35:46,920 Speaker 1: asylum seekers or whatever, and it's destroying my town or whatever. 539 00:35:47,200 --> 00:35:50,879 Speaker 1: And I say, hey, listen, here's three million dollars, which 540 00:35:50,960 --> 00:35:55,600 Speaker 1: is twenty times their annual budget for that municipality. If 541 00:35:55,640 --> 00:35:58,240 Speaker 1: you if you allow me to conduct business in your 542 00:35:58,239 --> 00:35:59,440 Speaker 1: in your town, what do. 543 00:35:59,360 --> 00:36:00,600 Speaker 2: You think is gonna have up in there? 544 00:36:01,680 --> 00:36:05,600 Speaker 1: So again you think about it, I mean, are are 545 00:36:05,640 --> 00:36:09,080 Speaker 1: you going to spend five million dollars on waters or 546 00:36:09,120 --> 00:36:10,000 Speaker 1: where does that money? 547 00:36:10,000 --> 00:36:11,960 Speaker 2: Listen. I've run contracts overseas. 548 00:36:12,040 --> 00:36:15,080 Speaker 1: I ran a building contract and when I was at 549 00:36:15,120 --> 00:36:20,160 Speaker 1: Blackwater over in Afghanistan, our job was to my job 550 00:36:20,239 --> 00:36:23,000 Speaker 1: was to design and build these training facilities and two 551 00:36:23,239 --> 00:36:26,760 Speaker 1: spots in Afghanistan, and we had to work with Afghan 552 00:36:26,840 --> 00:36:33,320 Speaker 1: building companies and Afghan municipalities are government leaders and I 553 00:36:33,320 --> 00:36:36,640 Speaker 1: would say roughly eighty five percent of the money that 554 00:36:36,680 --> 00:36:39,520 Speaker 1: we were getting through our contract from the US government 555 00:36:40,000 --> 00:36:43,920 Speaker 1: was going to pay off these these these government people 556 00:36:44,000 --> 00:36:46,520 Speaker 1: and all this stuff. And I kept bringing up like, hey, 557 00:36:46,560 --> 00:36:48,799 Speaker 1: this is this is BS. Why are we doing this. 558 00:36:49,520 --> 00:36:52,680 Speaker 1: That's just how it's done. That's just how it's done. 559 00:36:53,400 --> 00:36:55,160 Speaker 1: And I'm sure if you were to go in and 560 00:36:55,560 --> 00:36:58,719 Speaker 1: talk to these officials at these international aid oils, this 561 00:36:58,760 --> 00:37:02,080 Speaker 1: is how it's done. This is how it's done. So people, 562 00:37:02,200 --> 00:37:07,560 Speaker 1: not only are we funding our own immigration wave or 563 00:37:07,680 --> 00:37:10,760 Speaker 1: of overriding and assistance, but we're also paying people off 564 00:37:11,280 --> 00:37:14,720 Speaker 1: all over the these countries in Veneicpipaltis, all over Central 565 00:37:14,760 --> 00:37:15,440 Speaker 1: South America. 566 00:37:16,239 --> 00:37:20,919 Speaker 2: All right, Umm, let's go to the next one. Next one, 567 00:37:21,480 --> 00:37:22,440 Speaker 2: let me just summarize this. 568 00:37:22,560 --> 00:37:26,479 Speaker 1: So in twenty twenty three, the UNHRC approximately three hundred 569 00:37:26,480 --> 00:37:29,960 Speaker 1: and fifty five million million in Central South America refugee 570 00:37:30,000 --> 00:37:33,359 Speaker 1: with a twenty twenty four budget of eight hundred and 571 00:37:33,360 --> 00:37:37,000 Speaker 1: thirty four they did come up short on that. The 572 00:37:37,120 --> 00:37:42,080 Speaker 1: u NRC contributing to the one point four billion dollar 573 00:37:42,640 --> 00:37:46,680 Speaker 1: r MRP and those funds support humanitarian aid for the 574 00:37:47,120 --> 00:37:50,920 Speaker 1: integrate the integration for and then this one adds it 575 00:37:51,000 --> 00:37:56,200 Speaker 1: up twenty three to twenty five million displaced people, primarily Venezuelans, 576 00:37:56,239 --> 00:37:58,680 Speaker 1: Haitians and Central Americans. 577 00:37:59,320 --> 00:38:01,319 Speaker 2: All right, How. 578 00:38:01,280 --> 00:38:04,959 Speaker 1: About the International Committee for the Red Cross the ICRC, 579 00:38:05,760 --> 00:38:09,920 Speaker 1: all right, ICRC Global and regional spending context. 580 00:38:10,040 --> 00:38:13,160 Speaker 2: Global budget was two point twenty eight. 581 00:38:14,640 --> 00:38:19,360 Speaker 1: Billion dollars, right for what they do, approximately. 582 00:38:20,239 --> 00:38:22,359 Speaker 2: Two point six seven. 583 00:38:24,040 --> 00:38:27,600 Speaker 1: Concerned over operates, one hundred companies addressing arm conflict. 584 00:38:28,040 --> 00:38:28,399 Speaker 2: All right. 585 00:38:28,920 --> 00:38:33,840 Speaker 1: The America's budget, all right was one hundred and fifty 586 00:38:33,880 --> 00:38:40,440 Speaker 1: three point seven million dollars, approximately one hundred and eighty 587 00:38:40,920 --> 00:38:53,600 Speaker 1: and US dollars migration focus all right, all right, total 588 00:38:53,719 --> 00:38:58,440 Speaker 1: estimated spending combined Central South America, the ICRC's annual spending 589 00:38:58,440 --> 00:39:02,600 Speaker 1: on migration support twenty twenty three at twenty nine to 590 00:39:02,640 --> 00:39:06,560 Speaker 1: fifty million, and the range accounts for Central America nine 591 00:39:06,560 --> 00:39:09,920 Speaker 1: to twenty million, South America twenty to thirty million. 592 00:39:11,560 --> 00:39:13,480 Speaker 2: But I don't you know what I love Jeordy two 593 00:39:13,560 --> 00:39:14,000 Speaker 2: about this? 594 00:39:14,400 --> 00:39:20,319 Speaker 1: Was that is the spectrum right, nine to twenty million. 595 00:39:20,360 --> 00:39:26,239 Speaker 2: Right, dude, twenty to thirty million. D How difficult is 596 00:39:26,280 --> 00:39:30,800 Speaker 2: it to have a budget? How difficult? It is pretty hard? 597 00:39:31,160 --> 00:39:33,720 Speaker 1: Well, you go back and you look at Los Angeles. 598 00:39:33,760 --> 00:39:36,640 Speaker 1: I mean It's not just these international aide organizations. It's 599 00:39:36,920 --> 00:39:40,000 Speaker 1: a look at Los Angeles County budget, right you look 600 00:39:40,000 --> 00:39:44,560 Speaker 1: at let's look at the homeless shelter, the homeless programs. 601 00:39:44,960 --> 00:39:47,000 Speaker 2: Where did all that money go? Where are the receipts 602 00:39:47,040 --> 00:39:47,920 Speaker 2: on that? Well? 603 00:39:47,920 --> 00:39:50,480 Speaker 4: How do you have a budget when you have an 604 00:39:50,719 --> 00:39:55,000 Speaker 4: unknown amount of people that you're going to be dealing with, Like, literally, 605 00:39:55,400 --> 00:39:58,040 Speaker 4: I can't even blame them. How do you even have one? 606 00:39:58,360 --> 00:39:58,840 Speaker 2: You don't. 607 00:39:59,320 --> 00:40:01,680 Speaker 1: What you have is you have a scam. You have 608 00:40:01,760 --> 00:40:05,880 Speaker 1: a grift at the highest possible level. You pull on 609 00:40:06,000 --> 00:40:08,759 Speaker 1: people's heartstrings, you tell them that we're taking care of 610 00:40:08,840 --> 00:40:12,360 Speaker 1: twenty five million displaced people in the world. And listen 611 00:40:13,120 --> 00:40:15,880 Speaker 1: before you get all spun up. If you're, again, you know, 612 00:40:16,000 --> 00:40:18,440 Speaker 1: on the other side, ideological than I am. 613 00:40:18,760 --> 00:40:20,600 Speaker 2: The reality is is, you. 614 00:40:20,560 --> 00:40:23,640 Speaker 1: Know, we've done our fair share and displaced refugees and 615 00:40:23,680 --> 00:40:24,720 Speaker 1: people around the world. 616 00:40:24,719 --> 00:40:26,720 Speaker 2: I get it, I've seen it right. 617 00:40:27,480 --> 00:40:32,200 Speaker 1: But the reality is is people are fleeing these countries 618 00:40:32,560 --> 00:40:36,399 Speaker 1: that you know you can go in and yes there's 619 00:40:36,480 --> 00:40:40,680 Speaker 1: violence and there's oppression, but they're they're coming here because 620 00:40:41,400 --> 00:40:45,480 Speaker 1: you know, there's opportunities unlike any other place, and and 621 00:40:46,080 --> 00:40:48,520 Speaker 1: all you have to do is say whatever, Now, if 622 00:40:48,560 --> 00:40:52,279 Speaker 1: you're an NGO and you can go out and you 623 00:40:52,320 --> 00:40:57,840 Speaker 1: can you can source twenty thirty to fifty million dollars 624 00:40:57,880 --> 00:40:59,800 Speaker 1: and have a little bit of fudge wiggle room in 625 00:40:59,840 --> 00:41:01,000 Speaker 1: your nonprofit? 626 00:41:01,719 --> 00:41:04,440 Speaker 2: What do you think is gonna happen? Hey, what do 627 00:41:04,480 --> 00:41:05,480 Speaker 2: you think is gonna happen? 628 00:41:05,719 --> 00:41:07,520 Speaker 3: You're gonna go for the biggest number possible. 629 00:41:07,800 --> 00:41:11,319 Speaker 1: Well, and how many of these organizations are actually contributing 630 00:41:11,480 --> 00:41:16,719 Speaker 1: and working with the criminal organizations that are funding the 631 00:41:16,760 --> 00:41:20,560 Speaker 1: actual human trafficking part? I mean, there's an argument to 632 00:41:20,600 --> 00:41:24,120 Speaker 1: be made for sure that they're doing the same thing. 633 00:41:25,000 --> 00:41:30,200 Speaker 1: They're trafficking human beings. Right now, again, I know that 634 00:41:30,239 --> 00:41:34,040 Speaker 1: I'll spend up Now. Now here's the kicker. All right, 635 00:41:34,120 --> 00:41:35,120 Speaker 1: are you ready for this one? 636 00:41:35,160 --> 00:41:35,600 Speaker 2: Geordie? 637 00:41:35,640 --> 00:41:37,080 Speaker 3: This was my thing? Now, dude, I'm not. 638 00:41:37,200 --> 00:41:44,600 Speaker 1: This is ridiculous. Okay, here we go. Dude, I don't 639 00:41:44,600 --> 00:41:48,520 Speaker 1: even know how to even begin to wrap my mind 640 00:41:48,560 --> 00:41:51,200 Speaker 1: around this one. This one was staggering when I found this. 641 00:41:51,280 --> 00:41:52,399 Speaker 3: All Right, there we go. 642 00:41:52,680 --> 00:41:56,719 Speaker 1: So how does the US federal government what role do 643 00:41:56,800 --> 00:41:57,640 Speaker 1: they play in this? 644 00:42:03,000 --> 00:42:05,560 Speaker 2: Okay, thank you so much for listening today. 645 00:42:05,719 --> 00:42:07,880 Speaker 1: Pardon the interruption, but I just got to give a 646 00:42:07,920 --> 00:42:11,600 Speaker 1: shout out to one of our big sponsors here, and 647 00:42:11,640 --> 00:42:15,480 Speaker 1: this comes from my good friend Alex, you know, who 648 00:42:15,560 --> 00:42:19,080 Speaker 1: has a family owned business called Firecracker Farm. When I 649 00:42:19,120 --> 00:42:22,400 Speaker 1: talk about family business, and I've worked with thousands of 650 00:42:22,440 --> 00:42:27,000 Speaker 1: family businesses across the country for the last twenty years 651 00:42:27,000 --> 00:42:28,919 Speaker 1: of public speaking, you know. 652 00:42:28,960 --> 00:42:30,720 Speaker 2: It's when I meet them and I know. 653 00:42:30,680 --> 00:42:33,360 Speaker 1: That this business is going to succeed, and it's successful 654 00:42:33,400 --> 00:42:36,000 Speaker 1: because it's a business that's that's a part of love 655 00:42:36,080 --> 00:42:38,840 Speaker 1: and their family and how they support each other. This 656 00:42:39,040 --> 00:42:41,920 Speaker 1: is that place, you know. I've been up. I've been 657 00:42:41,920 --> 00:42:44,480 Speaker 1: to their farm. I watch how they raise their peppers 658 00:42:44,480 --> 00:42:47,560 Speaker 1: with love. I watch how they process them in this 659 00:42:48,000 --> 00:42:50,400 Speaker 1: thing they call the Three Kings, and how they infuse 660 00:42:50,440 --> 00:42:54,200 Speaker 1: them into this these this beautiful salt, this spicy salt 661 00:42:54,239 --> 00:42:56,840 Speaker 1: that enhances your food. I put it on my eggs 662 00:42:56,920 --> 00:42:59,200 Speaker 1: every single morning. I put it on my steak, I 663 00:42:59,239 --> 00:43:01,600 Speaker 1: put it on my pro team. It's in these cool 664 00:43:01,680 --> 00:43:04,720 Speaker 1: salt shakers. But you know, more so that the product 665 00:43:04,800 --> 00:43:08,120 Speaker 1: is impeccable' I've even been able to phase out ultra 666 00:43:08,160 --> 00:43:12,799 Speaker 1: process sauces hot sauces, and I'm now I'm using this 667 00:43:12,960 --> 00:43:15,719 Speaker 1: spicy salt but the thing I know is just how 668 00:43:15,800 --> 00:43:19,400 Speaker 1: much Alex loves doing this, how much his family loves 669 00:43:19,440 --> 00:43:22,560 Speaker 1: to support them, and really the quality of the product 670 00:43:22,640 --> 00:43:26,000 Speaker 1: sou If you believe me and you trust what I'm 671 00:43:26,040 --> 00:43:31,400 Speaker 1: telling you, please visit Firecracker dot Farm and if you 672 00:43:31,480 --> 00:43:34,600 Speaker 1: want a discount, you can type in the discount code 673 00:43:34,880 --> 00:43:38,520 Speaker 1: rut r ut Romeo uniform tangle one five to get 674 00:43:38,560 --> 00:43:42,640 Speaker 1: your discount. Again, a family owned business that's incredible, h 675 00:43:42,840 --> 00:43:45,919 Speaker 1: You will love their product. I promise you that's Firecracker 676 00:43:45,960 --> 00:43:51,880 Speaker 1: dot Farm. What role is the government that your hard 677 00:43:51,960 --> 00:43:56,200 Speaker 1: earned tax dollars, the ones that you're grinding out day 678 00:43:56,280 --> 00:44:00,080 Speaker 1: in and day out, that you're going to work, but 679 00:44:00,160 --> 00:44:02,840 Speaker 1: you're trying to put food on your table with crazy 680 00:44:02,840 --> 00:44:07,080 Speaker 1: inflation because of reckless spending from both sides of the aisle. 681 00:44:07,840 --> 00:44:09,400 Speaker 2: That you're going to work. 682 00:44:09,200 --> 00:44:12,320 Speaker 1: And you're way from your kids for fifty sixty hours 683 00:44:12,360 --> 00:44:14,160 Speaker 1: a week because you had to get a second job, 684 00:44:14,560 --> 00:44:17,480 Speaker 1: because your wife works, because your kids all work, and 685 00:44:17,560 --> 00:44:21,839 Speaker 1: everybody's in this hillacious grind because there's no way to 686 00:44:21,880 --> 00:44:24,799 Speaker 1: afford a cost of living, there's no way to buy 687 00:44:24,840 --> 00:44:27,719 Speaker 1: your own home. You know, coming out of college, you 688 00:44:27,719 --> 00:44:30,279 Speaker 1: know you're in debt up to your eyeballs. Insurance you 689 00:44:30,320 --> 00:44:33,960 Speaker 1: can't afford, but yet you're hard earned tax dollars that 690 00:44:34,000 --> 00:44:37,320 Speaker 1: if you don't pay, Guess where you're going to jail? 691 00:44:38,440 --> 00:44:40,719 Speaker 1: Guess where those tax dollars have been going? 692 00:44:41,000 --> 00:44:42,520 Speaker 3: Can I guess where? 693 00:44:42,560 --> 00:44:44,240 Speaker 2: Do you? What's your guess, Jeordian? 694 00:44:44,520 --> 00:44:48,120 Speaker 4: I'm sure they go towards building a very protected and 695 00:44:48,200 --> 00:44:53,440 Speaker 4: well run border and help fund a very smooth, fast, safe, 696 00:44:54,080 --> 00:44:57,160 Speaker 4: and legal immigration system that for people to come into 697 00:44:57,160 --> 00:45:02,920 Speaker 4: the US. I'm thinking that's what it's going towards. 698 00:45:03,320 --> 00:45:06,680 Speaker 2: All right, all right, Okay, here you go. 699 00:45:06,960 --> 00:45:13,040 Speaker 1: Funding is spread across multiple agencies. Okay, all right, primarily 700 00:45:13,080 --> 00:45:16,600 Speaker 1: the Department of Homeland Security, the Department of Health and 701 00:45:16,680 --> 00:45:22,320 Speaker 1: Human Services, right, the Department of State, like the Shelter 702 00:45:22,480 --> 00:45:26,880 Speaker 1: and Services Program, the Emergency Food and Shelter Program, the 703 00:45:26,960 --> 00:45:32,280 Speaker 1: Migration and Refugee Assistance Program FEMA, and several others. 704 00:45:32,840 --> 00:45:35,640 Speaker 2: All right, here's what we're gonna do. 705 00:45:37,360 --> 00:45:41,120 Speaker 1: All right, Let's just talk about one under Department of 706 00:45:41,120 --> 00:45:47,600 Speaker 1: Homeland Security, and that's the Shelter and Services Program. All right, 707 00:45:47,680 --> 00:45:53,280 Speaker 1: twenty twenty three? How much total? Give me a guess, 708 00:45:53,560 --> 00:45:58,480 Speaker 1: Jordy for Shelter and Services? Yeah, shelter and Services program. 709 00:45:58,600 --> 00:45:59,960 Speaker 3: I mean, I like shelters and services. 710 00:46:00,880 --> 00:46:03,440 Speaker 1: Let's see, why wouldn't you love to stay in a 711 00:46:03,440 --> 00:46:05,719 Speaker 1: five star hotel in New York City or. 712 00:46:05,880 --> 00:46:06,560 Speaker 3: La or here. 713 00:46:06,640 --> 00:46:09,080 Speaker 4: The Roosevelt dude almost stayed there last time I went there. 714 00:46:09,120 --> 00:46:14,040 Speaker 4: It sounds like real fun. Twenty million. 715 00:46:16,280 --> 00:46:23,480 Speaker 1: You got to get those numbers up, my fresh. 716 00:46:21,080 --> 00:46:25,600 Speaker 2: Let's push to get those numbers up. Bro? All right, 717 00:46:25,600 --> 00:46:26,560 Speaker 2: what do you think it is? 718 00:46:27,040 --> 00:46:31,680 Speaker 3: Two hundred million, bro ten ext it brother. 719 00:46:32,440 --> 00:46:37,359 Speaker 1: Seven hundred and seventy million dollars dude total, including two 720 00:46:37,480 --> 00:46:41,600 Speaker 1: hundred and ninety million in June, seventy seven million in August, 721 00:46:42,000 --> 00:46:48,759 Speaker 1: over four hundred million via the EFSP, dash h three 722 00:46:48,840 --> 00:46:51,319 Speaker 1: hundred and thirty two point five million in May of 723 00:46:51,600 --> 00:46:55,400 Speaker 1: twenty twenty three, seventy five million in December. 724 00:46:54,960 --> 00:46:56,479 Speaker 2: Of twenty twenty two. 725 00:46:57,320 --> 00:46:59,960 Speaker 3: Some nice shelters and services right there, bro. 726 00:47:00,360 --> 00:47:02,360 Speaker 2: Don't even holy I'm just I don't even know. 727 00:47:02,400 --> 00:47:07,680 Speaker 1: All right, how about the Office of Refuge and Resettlement 728 00:47:07,719 --> 00:47:09,120 Speaker 1: the r R. 729 00:47:09,239 --> 00:47:10,319 Speaker 2: What do you think? What do you want to take 730 00:47:10,320 --> 00:47:11,200 Speaker 2: a shot at this one? 731 00:47:12,120 --> 00:47:14,719 Speaker 4: Let's see, Well, they're not building shelters, so I'm gonna 732 00:47:14,760 --> 00:47:16,840 Speaker 4: say only four hundred million. 733 00:47:17,360 --> 00:47:19,680 Speaker 1: Well, I love it. I love that you went down right. 734 00:47:19,760 --> 00:47:23,520 Speaker 1: They're not involved in shelters or anything. Okay, this is 735 00:47:23,520 --> 00:47:26,719 Speaker 1: the Department of Health and Human Services, right hass that's 736 00:47:26,760 --> 00:47:29,080 Speaker 1: supposed to be taking care of the health and human 737 00:47:29,160 --> 00:47:32,680 Speaker 1: services of American population and public us. 738 00:47:33,120 --> 00:47:35,160 Speaker 2: Right yep, all right? 739 00:47:37,280 --> 00:47:44,920 Speaker 1: From twenty twenty to twenty twenty four, twenty two point 740 00:47:44,960 --> 00:47:54,439 Speaker 1: six billion dollars of your money, your money, twenty two 741 00:47:54,440 --> 00:47:56,960 Speaker 1: point six billion, and that's from the New York Post 742 00:47:57,000 --> 00:48:00,719 Speaker 1: and by open the books as sources, and you can 743 00:48:01,000 --> 00:48:06,440 Speaker 1: rock all this stuff you want, right right on Migro, 744 00:48:06,640 --> 00:48:10,560 Speaker 1: escalating from two point four billion in twenty twenty one 745 00:48:11,080 --> 00:48:14,160 Speaker 1: to ten billion in twenty twenty three. 746 00:48:14,560 --> 00:48:16,200 Speaker 2: This includes costs, righty. 747 00:48:16,280 --> 00:48:19,880 Speaker 1: This is the one that makes me so frigging angry 748 00:48:20,360 --> 00:48:28,000 Speaker 1: I can't even see straight. This includes costs for unincompanied 749 00:48:28,160 --> 00:48:34,040 Speaker 1: bless you. This includes costs for unaccompanied children resettlement and 750 00:48:34,120 --> 00:48:39,360 Speaker 1: services like cars, home loans, and startups. All right, so 751 00:48:39,760 --> 00:48:43,160 Speaker 1: we were missing three hundred and forty thousand kids, and 752 00:48:43,239 --> 00:48:46,319 Speaker 1: but yet we're giving them ten billion and twenty three 753 00:48:46,960 --> 00:48:53,080 Speaker 1: for their their car services, home loans, and for startups. 754 00:48:54,560 --> 00:48:59,000 Speaker 1: All right, where's the accounting on that? Jeordie there's no accounting, dude, 755 00:48:59,080 --> 00:49:02,160 Speaker 1: there's no accounting. That's what my point of all this are. 756 00:49:02,600 --> 00:49:05,440 Speaker 1: You want to know why people are rioting in the streets. 757 00:49:05,480 --> 00:49:08,359 Speaker 1: You want to know why programs like the. 758 00:49:08,480 --> 00:49:11,239 Speaker 2: Ford uh uh. 759 00:49:10,480 --> 00:49:13,640 Speaker 1: And Rockefeller Foundations and the Bill and the Linda Gates 760 00:49:13,680 --> 00:49:18,560 Speaker 1: Foundations and the Open Society that that piece of ship 761 00:49:18,680 --> 00:49:23,280 Speaker 1: George Soros. You want to know why it's so much money? 762 00:49:23,480 --> 00:49:28,080 Speaker 1: Is it why there's so much chaos? It's because it's massive, 763 00:49:28,160 --> 00:49:34,480 Speaker 1: big business. These NGOs are literally be funded, being funded 764 00:49:34,480 --> 00:49:38,880 Speaker 1: by your tax dollars. And I go back to the 765 00:49:38,960 --> 00:49:41,680 Speaker 1: episode I did you know a few shows go about 766 00:49:41,680 --> 00:49:44,640 Speaker 1: the big beautiful Bill and guess what all that funding? 767 00:49:44,760 --> 00:49:46,839 Speaker 1: It didn't come out, It didn't go a There were 768 00:49:46,880 --> 00:49:48,840 Speaker 1: little cuts here and there, but it's still in there. 769 00:49:53,000 --> 00:49:55,359 Speaker 1: Let me just read a couple more, Jordi, and then 770 00:49:55,440 --> 00:49:56,640 Speaker 1: I'm gonna wrap this up. 771 00:49:57,480 --> 00:49:59,160 Speaker 2: It's crazy, all right. 772 00:50:01,160 --> 00:50:04,560 Speaker 1: Federal grants and direct funding from migration operations from twenty 773 00:50:04,560 --> 00:50:08,000 Speaker 1: to twenty twenty five total and estimated, are you ready 774 00:50:08,440 --> 00:50:11,760 Speaker 1: to make you sick? Forty two point five to forty 775 00:50:11,800 --> 00:50:19,280 Speaker 1: seven point five billion dollars. 776 00:50:18,280 --> 00:50:20,439 Speaker 2: To all these Homeland. 777 00:50:21,520 --> 00:50:25,560 Speaker 1: Department of Homeland or all their little programs. 778 00:50:26,960 --> 00:50:37,600 Speaker 2: I just so let me recap. You've got a industry. 779 00:50:37,960 --> 00:50:40,160 Speaker 2: I'm not multi, no multi. 780 00:50:40,320 --> 00:50:44,160 Speaker 1: I mean these industries are bigger than most of our 781 00:50:44,360 --> 00:50:48,080 Speaker 1: biggest companies in the United States, which are the most 782 00:50:48,120 --> 00:50:52,320 Speaker 1: successful companies in the world. Are dwarfing their budgets and 783 00:50:52,440 --> 00:50:57,040 Speaker 1: what they're spending in these random areas by funding all 784 00:50:57,080 --> 00:51:02,600 Speaker 1: these different programs out there through these ng If you 785 00:51:02,680 --> 00:51:04,759 Speaker 1: really want to do a deep dive on this, I 786 00:51:04,800 --> 00:51:08,279 Speaker 1: recommend you go look up on X this a guy 787 00:51:08,400 --> 00:51:11,560 Speaker 1: named Mike Benz. He is by far doing the deepest 788 00:51:11,600 --> 00:51:15,000 Speaker 1: dive on where this money is actually going. The other 789 00:51:15,160 --> 00:51:19,319 Speaker 1: is a person called the Data Republican. She's a phenomenal 790 00:51:19,400 --> 00:51:23,800 Speaker 1: analyst and researcher. She's incredible to She's exposing all kinds 791 00:51:23,800 --> 00:51:27,000 Speaker 1: of this fundy in real time on X. Go see them, 792 00:51:27,600 --> 00:51:31,040 Speaker 1: go follow them if you want to continued going down 793 00:51:31,040 --> 00:51:35,480 Speaker 1: this rabbit hole. So as these people are trying to 794 00:51:35,520 --> 00:51:39,000 Speaker 1: pull on your heartstrings or the heart strings around, they're 795 00:51:39,040 --> 00:51:43,600 Speaker 1: trying to get you to realize, yeah, and listen again. 796 00:51:44,080 --> 00:51:45,680 Speaker 2: I just got to restate this. 797 00:51:47,120 --> 00:51:50,000 Speaker 1: If you live in a place where you're being physically 798 00:51:50,120 --> 00:51:54,000 Speaker 1: tortured or persecuted and there's a government coming at you 799 00:51:54,040 --> 00:51:58,080 Speaker 1: and imprising you and forcing you out of your homes, 800 00:51:58,600 --> 00:51:59,680 Speaker 1: taking over your. 801 00:51:59,600 --> 00:52:02,279 Speaker 2: Land and all that. Yeah, I get it, man, I'm 802 00:52:02,320 --> 00:52:04,080 Speaker 2: all about it. I'm all about that. 803 00:52:05,320 --> 00:52:10,719 Speaker 1: But this, this is an international grift to the likes 804 00:52:10,760 --> 00:52:14,000 Speaker 1: of and how much money do we not know about? 805 00:52:14,320 --> 00:52:18,160 Speaker 1: Because every time I went through went to these places 806 00:52:18,200 --> 00:52:20,600 Speaker 1: and to these sorcers to look at none of their 807 00:52:20,640 --> 00:52:23,239 Speaker 1: books were clear. They don't open their books up so 808 00:52:23,280 --> 00:52:26,600 Speaker 1: we can go in and evaluate these nonprofits, these NGOs. 809 00:52:26,640 --> 00:52:28,080 Speaker 2: Some of them do, some of them don't. 810 00:52:28,239 --> 00:52:31,360 Speaker 1: I mean how there were even Catholic organizations and Christian 811 00:52:31,480 --> 00:52:34,600 Speaker 1: organizations and Protestant there was one in Texas that went 812 00:52:34,640 --> 00:52:38,400 Speaker 1: from forty seven million to two hundred and forty million 813 00:52:38,440 --> 00:52:46,200 Speaker 1: dollars in federal grants. Now, listen, I'm a Christian, and 814 00:52:46,239 --> 00:52:48,839 Speaker 1: I believe in loving my neighbor, but not to the 815 00:52:48,880 --> 00:52:54,960 Speaker 1: detriment of my actual neighbor, not to the detriment of 816 00:52:55,000 --> 00:52:58,839 Speaker 1: my kid's future. By putting us into astronomical debt and 817 00:52:58,880 --> 00:53:02,319 Speaker 1: flooding our streets with even at one one hundred and 818 00:53:02,320 --> 00:53:08,080 Speaker 1: twenty thousand hardened criminals and terrorists and rapists and murderers, 819 00:53:09,680 --> 00:53:15,239 Speaker 1: it's just not okay. We need substantial reform on how 820 00:53:15,280 --> 00:53:19,000 Speaker 1: the immigration system works. We need to get many of 821 00:53:19,040 --> 00:53:23,080 Speaker 1: these radical people out. We need to check big business, 822 00:53:23,360 --> 00:53:27,239 Speaker 1: and we certainly need to defund these NGOs, including the 823 00:53:27,360 --> 00:53:31,600 Speaker 1: international NGOs that don't seem to have a problem, by 824 00:53:31,680 --> 00:53:40,080 Speaker 1: completely destroying the fabric of how our system in America works. Now, 825 00:53:40,480 --> 00:53:53,480 Speaker 1: you know, I just we're in a predicament. We're in 826 00:53:53,480 --> 00:53:55,960 Speaker 1: a pinch now, and that's where we're at, and so 827 00:53:57,080 --> 00:53:59,160 Speaker 1: now is not the time to check out. 828 00:53:59,200 --> 00:54:03,200 Speaker 2: Please. I know you're overwhelmed. I'm overwhelmed. 829 00:54:03,560 --> 00:54:06,080 Speaker 1: And I live and breathe and smell and eat this 830 00:54:06,200 --> 00:54:08,759 Speaker 1: stuff day in and day out. And you could ask 831 00:54:08,800 --> 00:54:11,759 Speaker 1: my poor wife and my poor children. Man, I'm the 832 00:54:11,800 --> 00:54:14,560 Speaker 1: one at the breakfast table when they're getting ready to 833 00:54:14,600 --> 00:54:16,880 Speaker 1: go to school, or you know, they're sitting around at 834 00:54:16,880 --> 00:54:19,320 Speaker 1: dinner and I'm like, do you know what's taking place? 835 00:54:19,360 --> 00:54:21,440 Speaker 1: Do you know how much these engine And they're like, 836 00:54:21,560 --> 00:54:22,799 Speaker 1: please stop right. 837 00:54:23,239 --> 00:54:25,480 Speaker 2: I get it. I know it's overwhelming. 838 00:54:26,960 --> 00:54:30,120 Speaker 1: But if you want your country and you want the 839 00:54:30,200 --> 00:54:33,000 Speaker 1: thing that you believe in, the thing that you from 840 00:54:33,040 --> 00:54:34,960 Speaker 1: when you were a kid, that you really believe in, 841 00:54:34,960 --> 00:54:38,239 Speaker 1: that America is the land of opportunity. Then you need 842 00:54:38,280 --> 00:54:41,359 Speaker 1: to recognize that there is an ideology that has been 843 00:54:42,040 --> 00:54:46,520 Speaker 1: infiltrated into our American social structure and social scene. Whether 844 00:54:46,560 --> 00:54:51,160 Speaker 1: it was emerged out of the colleges and universities that 845 00:54:51,200 --> 00:54:54,560 Speaker 1: have been promoting socialism at the highest levels for the 846 00:54:54,640 --> 00:55:00,520 Speaker 1: last sixty years, right, Or it's the massive wave of 847 00:55:00,960 --> 00:55:03,680 Speaker 1: people for coming from other countries around the world that 848 00:55:03,760 --> 00:55:06,520 Speaker 1: choose not to assimilate and want to force us and 849 00:55:06,600 --> 00:55:10,640 Speaker 1: our weak, you know, our compassion into us assimilating and 850 00:55:10,680 --> 00:55:13,520 Speaker 1: giving them what they want for free. Or it's a 851 00:55:13,560 --> 00:55:16,839 Speaker 1: political ideology in our own country that want to over 852 00:55:17,000 --> 00:55:20,680 Speaker 1: that wants to overwhelm the electorate and destroy the very 853 00:55:20,760 --> 00:55:24,240 Speaker 1: checks and balances that have kept this system in place 854 00:55:24,320 --> 00:55:27,920 Speaker 1: for two hundred and fifty years, as well as this 855 00:55:28,360 --> 00:55:31,440 Speaker 1: criminal element that just wants to make money off the 856 00:55:31,520 --> 00:55:33,560 Speaker 1: misery and suffering of other people. 857 00:55:36,160 --> 00:55:38,239 Speaker 2: It's time to get motivated. 858 00:55:39,000 --> 00:55:42,640 Speaker 1: It's time to ask your local meness, go to your 859 00:55:42,680 --> 00:55:46,920 Speaker 1: town hall meetings, call your local state congressman or state senators. 860 00:55:46,960 --> 00:55:50,080 Speaker 2: What are you going to do? And more than ever, 861 00:55:50,680 --> 00:55:52,680 Speaker 2: get on the email. 862 00:55:52,800 --> 00:55:54,640 Speaker 1: Or you know what all you got to do is 863 00:55:54,960 --> 00:55:57,320 Speaker 1: go into groc and give a press. 864 00:55:57,360 --> 00:55:57,920 Speaker 2: Hey, GROC. 865 00:55:58,239 --> 00:56:01,040 Speaker 1: I want you to write a demanding letter of my 866 00:56:01,520 --> 00:56:04,799 Speaker 1: local representative up in Washington, d C. Or send it 867 00:56:04,840 --> 00:56:06,960 Speaker 1: to here, and I want you to write this big, 868 00:56:07,000 --> 00:56:12,160 Speaker 1: beautiful letter demanding that all this be stopped and reformed 869 00:56:12,160 --> 00:56:14,400 Speaker 1: and all this. And then you go to your little 870 00:56:14,640 --> 00:56:17,400 Speaker 1: printer in your house and you print out, you know, 871 00:56:17,960 --> 00:56:21,000 Speaker 1: three hundred and sixty five of those right, Get three 872 00:56:21,080 --> 00:56:25,440 Speaker 1: hundred and sixty five letter you know, envelopes, you know, 873 00:56:25,520 --> 00:56:28,800 Speaker 1: get a little stamper, had a stamp of the address 874 00:56:28,800 --> 00:56:32,279 Speaker 1: of your local commercemen. And have your kids, you know, 875 00:56:32,440 --> 00:56:34,799 Speaker 1: sit there, fold them, put them in the. 876 00:56:36,360 --> 00:56:36,799 Speaker 2: Stamp it. 877 00:56:37,000 --> 00:56:39,480 Speaker 1: Put a letter, you know, a little stamp because the 878 00:56:39,520 --> 00:56:42,400 Speaker 1: snail mail still works, they still have it. Put it 879 00:56:42,440 --> 00:56:44,680 Speaker 1: in the mail every single day for three hundred and 880 00:56:44,719 --> 00:56:52,360 Speaker 1: sixty five days, and demand change, because I'm telling you, 881 00:56:52,360 --> 00:56:55,840 Speaker 1: you know, if you don't believe that we are the 882 00:56:55,960 --> 00:57:00,600 Speaker 1: last shining light on the hill, then you have your 883 00:57:00,600 --> 00:57:01,480 Speaker 1: head in the sand. 884 00:57:01,600 --> 00:57:02,520 Speaker 2: And I'm begging you. 885 00:57:02,960 --> 00:57:06,360 Speaker 1: I'm begging you, come up, come out, stand up, Be 886 00:57:06,560 --> 00:57:10,719 Speaker 1: proud to be an American citizen, Be proud to represent 887 00:57:10,800 --> 00:57:13,719 Speaker 1: what we represent, but more so the people who have 888 00:57:13,800 --> 00:57:18,640 Speaker 1: come before, what they fought and died for And that's 889 00:57:18,680 --> 00:57:22,000 Speaker 1: a system that functions for you, that doesn't steal your 890 00:57:22,040 --> 00:57:26,960 Speaker 1: taxpayer money, that doesn't make your life harder, doesn't give 891 00:57:27,000 --> 00:57:29,560 Speaker 1: what you worked forward for free to these people who 892 00:57:29,600 --> 00:57:32,840 Speaker 1: are here illegally and don't want to contribute to our society. 893 00:57:33,880 --> 00:57:37,440 Speaker 1: Stand up and fight for what you know is right. 894 00:57:37,760 --> 00:57:42,680 Speaker 1: Who Yah