Asmongold TV - Alligator Alcatraz is real.. | Asmongold TV
Episode Date: June 28, 2025Alligator Alcatraz is real.. Asmongold show for all of his stream highlights, competitions, reactions & more. ---------- ------------ Keywords: online gaming, gaming news, pc gaming, reaction videos..., gaming reactions Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
So are they calling it, or is the government calling it Alligator Alcatraz or is this like just a media thing?
All right.
Meantime, a new migrant detention center is getting a lot of attention.
It's a migrant detention center.
And it's in Florida.
The attention is thanks to its very unique security system.
This 30 square mile area is completely surrounded by the Everglades, presents a efficient, low-cost opportunity to build a temporary detention.
attention facility because you don't need to invest that much in the perimeter.
People get out, there's not much waiting for them other than alligators and python.
Nowhere to go.
Nowhere to hide.
It's called alligator alcatraz.
Oh my God.
I love it.
That's the most forward of shit?
Yeah.
This is brilliant.
I love it.
Make moats great again?
Yeah.
Oh my.
And so they're going to put all the migrants in.
Okay.
It's expected to be operational by next month.
So joining me now is the next month.
A man who came up with this idea is Florida Attorney General James Uthmeyer.
Mr. Attorney General, thanks for being with us here today.
I think before I get into the specifics and details,
which I have a lot of curiosities about Alcatraz, alligator Alcatraz.
How did this happen?
Where did the inspiration come from to convert this spot in the Everglades?
Sure.
Well, it came from a video game, right?
leadership. Florida's become pretty good at responding to states of emergency. And that's really what the
illegal immigration crisis is. Just last week, we pulled MS-13 members off the streets in Orlando.
The week before it was criminal, alien, human traffickers and sex predators.
That's good. We stand by President Trump, and we're going to do everything we can to support that
administration in their efforts. So are they going to put in, like, bonus alligators? Like, that's what
I'm kind of curious about. Are they going to be, like, bonus ones? Are they just going to have, is it just,
is it like one of the things that's just going to work itself out?
Thank God they're protecting American families.
But our success in arrests is filling up the jails quickly.
So we need additional detention space.
And this location is ideal because of its surrounding area.
It's a low cost, already developed 30-square-mile area,
surrounded by the Everglades.
So Alligator Alcatraz has a nice ring to it,
and we're going to get it up and running as soon as possible.
I cannot believe this is real.
Well, it's Florida, so I can.
But at the same time, this is, again, this is amazing.
We have such a great excess of alligators.
You're right.
Yeah.
We got to do something with them, right?
The number of migrant detentions, I believe,
at the start of this administration with something like 39,000,
it's currently up to 56,000.
There's a stated goal of arrest roughly 3,000 illegal immigrants a day.
So you're responding to a need, to a demand.
to a demand for more detention centers, more space.
Let's talk about alligator Alcatraz.
How much Everglades surrounds this would-be prison?
You're talking about minimal security and natural barriers and elements.
Help me understand.
Like, how far to civilization?
Yeah, it's miles and miles once you get down there.
I think we should have a system where, like, if you're an illegal alien and you get out
and you get all the way through the Everglades, you see.
survive the entire way and you make your way back over to Tampa or Orlando, Florida,
I think we should just give them citizenship. I do. I think at that point, you've earned it.
Yeah. Yeah, that's it. You immediately get citizenship.
This is right. Smack dab in the middle. I was built back in the 60s and 70s with the idea
to be a large airport. There's an 11,000 foot runway, which will enable large planes. Nobody can interfere.
to come in and out that can carry
a hundreds and hundreds of people as we are
working to detain and deport them out of
this country. There'll be some
light infrastructure. We'll have a perimeter,
but at the end of the day, Mother Nature
presents the ultimate perimeter
and it's why this is the great spot
for a detention facility.
Okay, miles and miles. I feel like they
need to have like one more thing.
Like you've got the pythons, you've got
obviously like all the other, you know, venomous
snakes, you've got the alligators.
They need to have like, if they could
like genetically engineer like a miniature velociraptors or something that a panthers.
I really like the sound of panthers.
Florida Panthers.
That's a big one.
Snapping turtles?
Ooh.
I don't know if they could do hippos.
Hippos would be like the, those would be like the, you know, like in Eldon Ring,
Night Rain where like there's like the really, really hard like field bosses.
that would be like the hippos.
Swamp and alligators and pythons and other natural barriers.
What does that mean for security should you build it?
Do you need less in the form of guards?
Do you need a less secure, less robust perimeter?
They have guards.
They just don't pay them.
You obviously need a less robust perimeter given the natural surroundings.
There will certainly be additional.
We're going to have staffed guards.
The governor is called in the National Guard,
the Florida National Guard,
with other staff will support.
We're also looking at other locations,
at least a couple other throughout the state.
We want to get 5,000 beds up and running by next month
so that we can properly support the Department of Homeland Security
in their mission.
And I've got to tell you, you know, Secretary Nome had a great idea
looking at the tens or hundreds of millions
that the Biden administration was spending
to put immigrants up in fancy hotels.
That funding is being redirected towards these facilities
towards the deportations.
And we're going to get to that.
But it's a different kind of hotel.
It reminds me of something out of a movie.
It might be a specific movie.
I can't remember, but you fellows are welcome to escape if you like.
If you can get past the guards, if you can get past the perimeter,
you have to then get past everything that lies in your way.
I think that they have to record it.
They can record it and then run all the advertising on the show
and then take the advertising to pay for the prison.
And then if somebody actually escapes, they get to get their citizenship.
Nature. In this case, Alligator Alcatraz.
This is a really good idea.
Thank you for being with us.
I really like this idea.
Thank you for having me.
Hey,
Oh, my God.
This can't be real.
It is.
This is actually like this is, it responds to growing backlash.
Wait, back.
Oh, what is this?
Hose Mad again?
Now there's growing backlash over a migrant detention facility being built.
What?
Some fat Karen is complaining?
Who cares?
Deep in the Everglades.
It's being called Alligator Alcatraz.
Tonight we're digging deeper into the plans in place for this controversial location.
as Governor DeSantis weighs in on the project.
Local towns, Glennon Milberg is live from Ochoopee with the very least.
Click in there, yeah.
Nicole, as controversial as this whole thing has become,
the logistics here are very formula, very familiar.
Remember when after the hurricane people...
Who says it's controversial?
Where are they?
...place have big tent cities kind of like that.
The COVID hospitals, the field hospitals during the pandemic,
kind of like that.
the pace that we have seen trucks and materials go in and out of here all day.
Even now after hours, this is happening very, very quickly.
Midpoint Tamiami Trail at the edge of Big Cyprus National Preserve.
Florida's familiar logistics of temporary mass housing well underway.
Though now, they're like building them a rust base out there.
Or mass migrant detention.
The training and transition airport.
run by Miami-Dade County, though surrounded by environmentally sensitive land, open and operational for decades.
This thing's been used a bunch of times over many, many years, and so the impact will be zero.
The biggest opposition, aside from the politics of detaining migrants at all, is about the environment.
What a slap in a face this is to the indigenous tribes.
Especially from those who live out.
Only Everglades, no prisons. Keep the land sacred.
It's all the usual suspects.
If we wanted to be economically, you know, sustainable and conscious,
we would be talking about annexing this land into the National Preserve.
If we really want to do that, we would make them,
we would force the migrants into forced labor,
and we would make them do, like, make t-shirts and basketball shoes.
That's the real galaxy brain mindset that we need to have.
Plans are to keep migrant housing
You can't be serious?
Yeah, absolutely, I'm serious.
If it was up to me, that's why I'd immediately make them do that.
Yeah, if we could make money off of it, I'd do it for sure.
Slavery?
Well, it's optional.
It's opt-in slavery, right?
I mean, they're like, this disturbing.
What do you mean, make of?
Yeah, of course.
Yeah.
For sure, absolutely.
Not supposed to be here.
They knew they're not.
They know they're not supposed to be here.
Don't act like, oh, wow.
Like, oh, how could this happen to me?
You did it.
That's how it happened to you.
They opted in.
...to the already developed portions of the property.
Temporary air condition structures, detailed hurricane evacuation plans.
We get our first look at the logistics for containing and porting away waste,
a recycling program for trash, and stocking potable water.
We'll probably also do something similar.
up at Camp Blanding, which is that we're our National Guard headquarters to train there.
We have some capacity there.
The state is opening detention space under the same emergency orders that paved the way for
migrant transports from the southern border to Martha's Vineyard three years ago.
It is an active airport.
Yeah, they just sent a bunch of those migrants over to Martha's Vineyard because all those
people were talking about how great the migrants were.
They sent them over there totally shut down the entire fucking area.
A county little recourse over state control of its airport in Collier County.
This is the blueprint for the aforementioned FEMA camps in Project 2025.
Well, I mean, President Obama was supposed because he's an atheist, Muslim, gay, transsexual, Kenyan Satanist, communist was going to put everybody who was,
who loved Jesus in the FEMA camps.
And so it was actually his idea.
And if you've been plugged into news,
you know plans to do this are not new whatsoever.
The governor has been planning to open detention facilities
for migrants for months, possibly even years when this is going on.
So we got the first look at the cost.
It'll probably be about half a billion dollars all told statewide
for some of five thousand temporary beds,
including here,
including camp landing and possibly elsewhere.
I'm Glennon Milberg live in Ochoopee today.
Yeah.
Local 10 News.
Bro.
She's going to, yeah, no, they got to get them to work.
And they keep saying migrants.
I think they mean, illegal migrants.
Well, I mean, they're not going to just take people that are just here legally
and then just put them in a camp.
That's probably not what's going to happen.
We're not going to do that for another five years.
But, you know, then we might start doing that once we get rid of the illegal ones.
But, yeah, it's 100K-K-poor migrant.
Exactly, right? Money will spend. Well, I mean, there's obviously going to be like a rotation, right? But like in general, that's a great investment. Sure. Why don't they have illegal immigrants build the camp? I don't know. That's a good idea. Probably because they can't, they don't want them to drive the trucks, you know, or something like that. No, this is a brilliant idea. I think this is amazing. And I, this is great.
