Digital Social Hour - This City Has Only 2 Cops For 100,000 People (SHOCKING) | Brandon Tatum DSH #1079

Episode Date: January 9, 2025

This city has only 2 cops for 100,000 people! 😱 Former police officer Tia reveals shocking truths about understaffed departments and the real consequences for public safety. 🚨   Tune in for eye...-opening stories from the frontlines of law enforcement. You'll hear about: • Horrific crime scenes cops face 🚔 • Why your 911 call might go unanswered for hours 📞 • The truth behind manipulated crime statistics 📊 • How illegal immigration impacts policing 🗽   Don't miss out on this gripping conversation packed with valuable insights! Watch now and subscribe for more insider secrets on the Digital Social Hour with Sean Kelly. 🎙️   Join the debate on police funding, crime reporting, and the challenges facing our law enforcement. This episode will change how you think about public safety in your city! 🏙️   Hit that subscribe button and stay tuned for more eye-opening stories that expose the realities behind the headlines. 🚀 #DigitalSocialHour #LawEnforcement #PublicSafety   #news #policedepartmenttransparency #policemanpowerproblems #publicsafetyconcerns #podcast   CHAPTERS: 00:00 - Intro 00:27 - Graphic Crime Scenes 02:48 - Mental Health Support for Police 03:40 - Overworked Police Officers 06:00 - Police Department Operations 08:40 - FBI Crime Statistics Controversy 12:43 - Police Handling of Illegal Immigration 16:34 - Nick Fuentes Doxxing Incident 18:34 - Campus Debate Dynamics 22:18 - The Painful Truth 26:20 - Congressional Gridlock Issues 28:06 - Brandon's Future Plans   APPLY TO BE ON THE PODCAST: https://www.digitalsocialhour.com/application BUSINESS INQUIRIES/SPONSORS: jenna@digitalsocialhour.com   GUEST: Brandon Tatum https://www.instagram.com/theofficertatum https://linktr.ee/theofficertatum   SPONSORS: Prolon: http://prolonlife.com/DSH   LISTEN ON: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/digital-social-hour/id1676846015 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5Jn7LXarRlI8Hc0GtTn759 Sean Kelly Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/seanmikekelly/

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Starting point is 00:01:49 BED-MGM operates pursuant to an operating agreement with iGaming Ontario. They make it look like they care about police officers and they act like they're doing something for police officers to the public at large because most people don't call 911. So most people are out here saying, oh, look what they're doing. They're doing it. But when you do call, like you experienced, you get terrible service. And it's not because the cops are terrible.
Starting point is 00:02:11 It's because they don't have the manpower. And you, a cop calling sick, somebody gets hurt. You're done. Tia's back. Free Pete. Oh yeah, man. I'm excited every time I come on this show. Oh yeah, dude. We got to wrap up on those police stories.
Starting point is 00:02:27 You got some crazy ones on the last one. Man, this guy's seen some stuff. Yeah, yeah. Dude, what else you seen? Well, you know what? I can say maybe some of the other crazy stories were a little more graphic. I think I told you about... Did I tell you about the guy on the freeway? The bee heading? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:02:44 Yeah. He lost his head. I gotta think of some other ones man. Maybe I'll think of them as we go but I've seen a lot of crazy stuff and I heard of a lot of crazy stuff. Well I'll tell you one that I heard of. Okay. I wasn't there to experience this one but one of the guys that I work with told me a story about a lady who had passed away and she had passed away I I don't know. Maybe like she was gone for about a month or so. Nobody knew she was in there. She fell in between the crease of the bed and the wall.
Starting point is 00:03:12 And when he went to grab her to pick her out of the side of the wall, I mean, like a chicken wing, the bone, I mean, the meat muscle, everything came off the arm. Wow. That is not so the body must have been there for a month. It was, it was there for, it was probably over a month. It was horrible. The worst one that I saw was a guy, unfortunately he was stepping over,
Starting point is 00:03:32 you could tell he was stepping over his table to try to step over the table to get on the couch. And he must have had a heart attack right there. One leg on the table, one leg on the floor, face in the couch and he was green. He had a blister on his floor, face in the couch. And he was green. He had a blister on his back that was about this big. Smelled horrific. And the craziest part of this is that when we tried to extract him from the couch,
Starting point is 00:03:55 because we had to get his body up, his face was still stuck to the pillow and the face came off onto the pillow. So all his skin had decayed onto that pillow. And when we pulled it off, it pulled his face off with the pillow. So all his skin had decayed onto that pillow. And when we pulled it off, it pulled his face off with the pillow. And the bodies are heavier when they're dead and they shit themselves. They're big load. And like with that guy, he had, I found out that blood and urine don't mix. So he was bleeding obviously because he was sitting there. He was pooling blood and urine.
Starting point is 00:04:22 Yeah. And so all over the floor to get to his body, you have to step in blood and urine. Oh my God. It was horrific, man. And they pop too because they get bloated. Yeah. And if you, if they're old enough and their skin is very thin, if you go to move them the wrong way, you can bust the skin and then they fluid.
Starting point is 00:04:40 Oh my gosh. Absolutely horrific. So cops don't get paid enough. Yeah. Just so you know. What's the mental support that is provided to police officers when they do stuff like this? In Tucson, we had a really good support system. The only objection is officers objecting to it, right? If they feel like it's stigmatized to go get help.
Starting point is 00:04:58 Yeah. But anytime you're in a critical incident, whether it's a shooting and a shooting, you have to take time off. Yeah. They make you take time off. That's why when you see shootings online and they say the cops on administrative leave. Administrative leave doesn't mean that you're guilty. Administrative leave is a process in which you can go home and kind of recover from a traumatic incident. So that was standardized and then on our department anytime you had any conflict whatsoever, anytime any day
Starting point is 00:05:24 you could call the mental health line and they were specifically hired to help And then on our department, anytime you had any conflict whatsoever, anytime, any day, you could call the mental health line and they were specifically hired to help police officers. So at any point you can go to counseling about anything, personal life or professional life. Yeah. How overworked were you? Because when I called the cops in LA, they wouldn't come for eight hours. Oh yeah.
Starting point is 00:05:39 It's insane. It's insane. What happens is police officers are so underfunded, understaffed that if you don't call for absolute emergency they're not gonna, they can't show up. When I would go to work, I work 21 to 07 which is 9 to 7 in the morning. When I would go to work we would have 40 calls holding for service on our board. 40. And that's grandma that's been waiting 10 hours after somebody burglarized her house.
Starting point is 00:06:10 And what happens is we build it builds up. We only go to level one level twos. And that's me, the person with a gun, a shooting, a fatality and things like that. So when you in a busy city and you're understaffed, that's what happens. And it's unfortunate because before I left the police department, we had a young lady that got raped. Yeah. And she waited for seven hours. What? Cops still didn't show up. Her dad drove from San Diego to come get her. And we hadn't showed up yet. And he just took her back home to San Diego.
Starting point is 00:06:38 Holy. Didn't even meet with officers about the report. Damn. So it got horrific in Tucson, Arizona at one point when I was there. You think that's been fixed by now? No. No. They're still got it.
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Starting point is 00:09:45 Use the code DSH at ProlonLife.com slash DSH. They make it look like they care about police officers and they act like they're doing something for police officers to the public at large, because most people don't call 911. Right. So most people are out here saying, oh, look what they're doing. They're doing it. But when you do call, like you experienced, you get terrible service. And it's not because the cops are terrible, it's because they don't have the manpower.
Starting point is 00:10:09 And a cop calling sick, somebody gets hurt, you're done. We would go to work, and the people in Tucson probably would not like to know that this is true, but every person who pays taxes should be asking their police officers, who's on duty? I need an audit of who's on duty at what time frame. I will go on from 21 to 07. We had a swing shift from 17 to 03.
Starting point is 00:10:33 So from five to three o'clock in the morning. And then we came on from nine to seven in the morning. Yeah, there were times where we deployed two officers to cover from three o'clock in the morning to seven in the morning. Two officers in the entire west side of Tucson. Wow. If something happened, you're screwed and you better hope the two officers are good. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:10:54 Because you're going to get a rookie and somebody else is going to be screwed. So the public should be aware of how policing really is going in their city. Yeah, some cities do well, but this is the cities that are not performing well. What's the process if someone's living in a city and they want to audit their local police if they're being efficient? Well, you can have a four year request.
Starting point is 00:11:14 You can request data, you can request case reports and different things like that. Got it. And they have to disclose certain things to you. Now I'm not familiar because I've never done it. I don't know what the police department can actually withhold from your knowledge. But the police department and dealings and all of this is public record.
Starting point is 00:11:29 Their budget is public record. The way they spend is all public record. So you can request the public records of what the police department is doing, and that's quasi an audit. If you want to get a one to one experience on the police department, you can do a ride along. So you can go in, sign up, as long as you're not a felon. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:11:46 I wouldn't sign up if you got warrants, because they will let you do the ride-along and then arrest you, right? They will. They will. They'll let you go in there. Hey, how you doing? I'll put your hands behind your back. So make sure you're clean before you go in there. But then you'll be able to ride with a police officer for an entire shift, and you'll be able to see firsthand radio calls, calls for service, how they deal with the public, how many officers are out there or not out there, how violent your city is. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:12:12 Because most people don't know how violent their city is because you don't experience. Right. But people are getting raped. People are getting, I mean, you name it. These things are happening to people on a day to day basis. And the people who know about it are the police officers, right? And not necessarily the citizens who are asleep at night when all this stuff is going on. Do you get a lot of angry police officers messaging you when the FBI lied about the crime statistics?
Starting point is 00:12:34 Yeah, not a lot hit me up, but a lot of people, I'm assuming, were upset about it. Yeah. One reason is because the administration is in office right now. Thank God that they're not going to continue. But they did it for political purposes. It wasn't an accident. It's not like they accidentally got the wrong stats. Right.
Starting point is 00:12:52 They knew, and I honestly believe they coordinated with certain jurisdictions to not report the stats. So they can, they can say crime is down. Everything is better. When the people did not feel that people knew that the crime was up. You could feel it. The migrants and all this stuff, the illegal aliens, people can feel it. So then when the report came out, Donald Trump was right in the debate that he had mentioned it, then people can feel, you know, they kind of align with what they really were experiencing.
Starting point is 00:13:18 Yeah. And that is that the crime was out of control. And crime stats are often manipulated because crime happens and if you don't report it, it didn't happen. Oh, true. So a lot of people who get their car broken into, they're like, I'm not going to wait 10 hours for a cop to get here, man. I just take that as a loss. Yeah, your car still got broken into, but that doesn't show up in the stats. Good point. People that get abused, people that get in assaults, shootouts,
Starting point is 00:13:46 nobody's snitching. No victim, no. Especially in certain neighborhoods, they're not snitching. They ain't snitching. So there were shootings, but it's not reported. And so that's why the stats can be sort of misleading. And departments and city council members,
Starting point is 00:14:01 they know how to manipulate the stats to get the results that they want, which are, you know, in my opinion should be criminal. Right. That's a good point, though. So the stats aren't as bad as what they actually are, is what you're saying. Yeah, either or, right? Sometimes they're better. Sometimes the stats display something that's worse because it's not in context. And then there's cases where it shows as if it's better, but it's much worse. It's a much bigger problem, especially the way they reclassify.
Starting point is 00:14:26 They used to have race on the classification. I don't know how they do it now. I don't know how they count it now, but I know how they do it. It used to be white, black, Asian, Hispanic. Now it's non-white Hispanic or non-white, non-Hispanic or blackwhite non-Hispanic or black non-Hispanic. And so I don't know what concoction that they're putting together that can say what they wanted to say because they can say a person is white Hispanic or a person is white non-Hispanic.
Starting point is 00:14:58 What does that even mean? Right. And they can put numbers. If you ever look at statistical data and you see the other section, that's the ambiguous nature of the way they calculate the numbers. So they'll have a white section, a black section, a Hispanic, you always got to look at the other.
Starting point is 00:15:16 And that other could be indicative of an overinflated number of one of those groups that they did not calculate properly because they do not want it to show up. You look at crime statistics, just say aggravated assault. You see black, white, you see other. You look at crime statistics with gun violence, you'll see handguns, AR-15s, and then you go down the list, it's other weapons. They have a way of manipulating the way they count the stats to make other the overflow of the numbers so they can fix these numbers that you pay attention to.
Starting point is 00:15:49 Yeah. So do you think the other should be removed from every poll? I think that they should if they keep other there, they should be they should have an asterisk next to what is other. When you're talking about race, what is another? Is that a person that did not identify or is that a person that identifies something that's not in your box, but if you knew what they identified as, like if you saw the actual form, you could predict that they may be a part of the black race, white race, or Hispanic race. So what are you calculating in the other section is what I think that they should put on there. If not, they need to get rid of it. 100%. Some people are probably just filling it out because they don't want to tell what they are to.
Starting point is 00:16:25 100%. You put, they write in something. I mean, so. It's wild. How are police officers supposed to be handling the illegals? Like if they want to arrest an illegal person, like what's the process with that? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:16:38 In some of these liberal cities, and it happened to me in Tucson with SB 1070, what happens is the way it's supposed to work is that there's federal crimes, local law enforcement should abide by assisting to detain people who commit federal crimes, right? Robbing the bank is a federal crime. It's not a local crime. It's not a city code violation. It's a federal crime. Local law enforcement are involved in arresting, detaining until FBI comes and does the full investigation. We do it in that sense.
Starting point is 00:17:11 If somebody commits an internet crime, internet crimes are federal because it's across jurisdictions. We still detain a person, we still take them into custody, and we notify federal authorities to come and finish the investigation. That's the way it should occur with illegal aliens. If you encounter a person who's undocumented or illegally in this country, we should detain them and let Border Patrol ICE come and finish the investigation. But what's happening is that because of political reasons and the sanctuary status of some of these cities, they're telling police officers
Starting point is 00:17:41 you can't do anything about their status. You can't ask them. You can't do anything. If you get them and their only crime is being illegal, you can't do anything about their status. You can't ask them. You can't do anything. If you get them and their only crime has been illegal, you got to release them. Wow. And so if we had just changed that, we would see so many more arrests made and less crime by illegal aliens. And many of these people will be deported.
Starting point is 00:18:02 There's over 1.4 million or so people with deportation orders. And that means that when Trump gets in the office he says he's gonna deport they're gonna start with them. But it's almost impossible to do that if you don't have local law enforcement support. So the left by and large they're disempowering police officers to actively go after people who should be held accountable on a federal level. Yeah. Are you worried that with these deportations, it could get ugly, they could fight back with violence? I don't think so. You think they'll go? I think there's a big delineation between illegal criminals and mama and them just trying to get a, you
Starting point is 00:18:42 know, have a better life. Yeah. People who are heavily involved in criminal activity are separate, in my opinion, from those people. Right. So once we go after them, these people are habitually committing crimes. These people have criminal records. We could go after them methodically and arrest them and deport them in a very easy way. And I would argue that's a minority of the illegal.
Starting point is 00:19:07 I mean, of people that are in this country illegally is the criminal element. So I don't think you're going to see a big backlash. The people, if they're honest and they tell the truth that we're not going to deport every single person that's here illegally, they will be excited that you're getting rid of people who don't want to be here, who's committed crimes and embarrassed in the reputation of people who just want to to be here, who's committing crimes and embarrassing the reputation of people who just want to have a better life. Agreed.
Starting point is 00:19:27 Yeah, I think that distinction is important, right? You don't want to group everyone into one category. Man, being conservative, sometimes conservatives go a little bit overboard with this. You shouldn't come in our country illegally, but at some point we have to differentiate between the two. There's people here that just want to have access to the American dream like anybody else.
Starting point is 00:19:44 They either got tricked or lied to on how to get here And that's why they came illegally instead of through a port of entry But if given the opportunity and we didn't have so many illegal people coming in this country They probably would have an opportunity Given the fact that we do allow the most immigrants in our country to any country in the world every year over a million So I think that those good, hardworking people would have an opportunity to be citizens if we wouldn't let these criminals
Starting point is 00:20:09 and all these other people coming into our country. I really think we do need to make that distinction though because you're beginning to create a broad brush and alienate certain people that are actually benefiting America to a certain degree. Agreed. Did you see what happened to Nick Flentes yesterday? No, I didn't.
Starting point is 00:20:25 You didn't see this? No. Man, someone pulled up to his house with a gun. Really? Yeah. The guy ended up dying. The police shot him. Oh, that's crazy.
Starting point is 00:20:33 Yeah, because he got doxxed. Yeah. So his address got leaked by some hater. Scary time. Well, good that the cops were there to support him. I'm not a big Nick Fuentes fan, but I don't think people should be doxxed and killed because of their political beliefs. You're free to say whatever you want.
Starting point is 00:20:48 Nick Fuentes says all kinds of stuff I don't agree with, but he can say what he wants. I don't care. If I care enough, then I should combat what he says in debate. I don't believe in that counseling, council culture, or whatever the case may be, which I think that has happened to Nick Fuentes. Now, in a private setting, you know, if you're a company, which I think that has happened to Nick Fuentes. Now, in a private setting, you know, if you're a company, you don't want any association with him that's different. Right. But on the public sphere, on social media, Nick Fuentes should be able to say whatever he want to say and represent whatever he wants. I don't care if he's racist or not. Yeah. I don't care if he say he don't want no black people on planet Earth. That's fine. You should be able to say that. Yeah. But in an intellectual debate, I should be able to challenge you that way instead of wanting you to get counseled.
Starting point is 00:21:25 So I'm glad that he didn't get killed over something like this. He didn't get killed, but the guy killed two people and two dogs on the way to his house. I didn't hear about that. Yeah, this happened yesterday. So this guy was just shooting people down the street or did people related to Nick? He killed two people in a separate incident
Starting point is 00:21:41 and then went to Nick's house. So this guy was on a rampage. Yeah, but he was targeting Nick. That's crazy. I don't know. Were there any people associated with Nick? No, I think there were just two people, but he killed two of his neighbor dogs when he was running away. So two innocent dogs died.
Starting point is 00:21:56 Well, yeah, that's very sad that somebody got killed. I'm glad that Nick didn't. Unfortunately, these other people got who got it on his video on the front door. That's insane, dude. I didn't even see that. Scary, man. I might have the video on the on the front door. That's insane, dude. I didn't even see that scary man. I might have the report on that. Yeah. Yeah. Looking at that, man. That's not cool, though. That's a whole nother level. A whole nother level, man. And I'm glad that the cops got to that guy.
Starting point is 00:22:13 Yeah, because not trying to be. You deserve what you get if you go to try to kill somebody. Yeah. So him losing his life at the hands of the police officers. That's what you get. Absolutely. You've been doing any debates lately? No, I've been on campus a little bit, you know, for turning point USA who runs this whole thing. Yeah. I go to campus every now and again, and they're, they're fun. Which campus did you go to recently?
Starting point is 00:22:34 Washington, University of Washington. Are you seeing them get better as you've been going to more and more the students? No. Oh, I love the honesty. Oh, honestly, they crazy and crazy, man. Well, it depends on what city you go to. Right. Yeah. Go Seattle. They're nuts, man.
Starting point is 00:22:50 I mean, I wear the Trump hat because I want to spark discussion. Yeah. Most universities, like when I went to Rucker, that's where I like, Rucker's. Yeah. I went to Rucker in Jersey. They were OK. Mixed mixed feelings. I forget the other place that I went. Memphis, University of Memphis. People didn't say nothing to me. I get to my booth, people come and debate. In Washington, the moment I get out of the car somebody said El Donald Trump stuck a middle finger up at me. They were every single person you pass is looking at you like, I can't believe he has a Trump hat on and he's black.
Starting point is 00:23:25 I mean, I feel the hatred in Seattle more than anywhere else in the country. So it's different. The group of people that come to these debates are a mixed bag, right? You have the supporters of Turning Point that know that they love to hear it. But then you have people who are crazy,
Starting point is 00:23:45 but you have people who are crazy enough to ask a question. And that's the difference. So I think that the campus is probably far worse than what we get with somebody knowing that it's there and having enough courage to actually put themselves in front of a camera and ask the questions. Right. I didn't know Seattle was that bad.
Starting point is 00:24:00 Damn, I was never there. It's the same. And at certain places you go in the country and you can feel it in the air that they're just soy drinking, just crazy people that just are so intolerant. If somebody had a Kamala hat, I don't like Kamala hats whatsoever.
Starting point is 00:24:18 I've never seen a Kamala hat. But if somebody wore it, I don't care. I wouldn't stick the middle finger up at you. I saw a lady today driving slow in the dog on HOV lane, which drives me crazy. I wish that I could run them off the road. And she had a Kamala Harris thing on. I'm like, oh yeah, typical.
Starting point is 00:24:35 But I'm not going to stick your finger in somebody or cuss somebody out or get mad at somebody. They're not invited to my dinner in my house. I will never do that. I couldn't care less. You can believe who you want to believe. If you're that silly to follow her, then that's on you. I'm not going to my dinner in my house. I will never do that. I couldn't care less. You can believe who you want to believe. If you're that silly to follow her, then that's on you. I'm not going to hurt anybody.
Starting point is 00:24:49 They don't feel the same about us. They would kill me if they could. Many of them will try to fight me, but look at me. I don't think they really want to do that. They don't want the smoke. They don't want that smoke, but they'll fight somebody else. I see them flipping tables over at turning point, throwing water on people.
Starting point is 00:25:03 I've seen that, yeah. It won't happen while I'm there, but that's how they do it. Yeah. Do you think a part of that is they're being programmed to believe that way? 100%, man. They get indoctrinated with hatred and they become entitled to where I'm more virtuous than the next person because I do these things that I've been indoctrinated to do. And it creates hatred. And I'll say this, the unguideliness of many of these people, not every, not,
Starting point is 00:25:29 not everybody is bad. They don't believe in God, but I'm saying just the unguideliness of so many people caused them to hate other people more so than saying I'm tolerant. I love you. Although we disagree because MAGA supporters and stuff, they're not racist Nazis and stuff that they say they are, but it's the intolerance and unguideliness that's in their heart that makes them feel that they hate you. And also when you have a good argument and you can articulate yourself kind of like a
Starting point is 00:25:55 child when a child can communicate, they're not as vitriolic. But when they feel suppressed and they can't find the words, they throw a tantrum. And that's what people on the left do many of the times. They can't beat you with an argument because they know their argument is wrong and they haven't thought it through. Yeah. And the embarrassment that they feel and they can't fight you any other way. So they rather just lash out.
Starting point is 00:26:17 Facts. Usually when they're projecting hate, they're dealing with some internal stuff. What happens, it hurts. The truth will hurt you because they have to contend with, is my whole life a lie? You go and tell a person, you say, America's not racist, and that's been their worldview. Then they have to say, is my mama a liar?
Starting point is 00:26:36 My daddy a liar? My professor, I love a liar? Have I been lying to other people? I've been pitching this agenda. I can't accept it. I can't accept it. You a liar. You a sellout to your people.
Starting point is 00:26:46 So instead of them internalizing and saying, maybe just maybe this guy got a point, they have to lash out. But when they get to the level of maturity, enough to say, let me think about it, I think that's when many people begin to be more conservative. You saw that this election. I've never seen so many people flip in one election.
Starting point is 00:27:03 Or 100%. And it's because you can only get exposed to the truth so much and deny it before it becomes so apparent that you cannot deny it. Yeah. Right? You can deny it when it's just on paper. You can deny it when it's a federal election. You can't deny it when your paycheck is looking skinny. Right.
Starting point is 00:27:20 When you can't go to the grocery store and you're like, I got to choose between getting meat and cheese or just cheese by itself. You know, you can't go to the grocery store, you're like, I gotta choose between getting meat and cheese or just cheese by itself. You know, you can't deny that. And once you get to that point and it start affecting you personally, people begin to wake up. Absolutely.
Starting point is 00:27:34 And you saw that and they weren't addressing it the other side. Right. They skipped over the whole conversation about inflation and economics. They thought they can win on emotionalism, not logic. I'll tell you, you can only go so far before logic begin to kick in.
Starting point is 00:27:46 You can always make that emotional appeal. Oh, the white men is against you. Oh, black people feel they start invoking historical segregation and slavery in the black people and that makes them upset. You can't do that cultural stuff or the emotional stuff only for so long before people begin to say, that's not what I really see. That's not what I really feel. And that's not what's most important to me. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:28:09 I think the black men shifted the most straight out of the boats. And I'm still quasi disappointed that it wasn't a greater number. Yeah. It was 70 percent. Something like that. Yeah. Something like that. I mean, we're still disproportionate and unbalanced. Every other group has a balance, Hispanics, white, Asian.
Starting point is 00:28:31 It's like 40, 48, 51, somebody there, somewhere around there. I mean, black people are still 90 some percent Democrat women. And then the men kind of moved a little bit. But I will say it's not indicative of the black community in totality because not everybody votes. The problem is probably 60% of black people ain't even voting anyway. So you can argue that maybe 60% of black people,
Starting point is 00:28:54 out of the 60%, maybe majority of them are conservative. They just don't vote. So once we get people more active, we'll be able to see a more raw number. And I'm hoping that black people wake up because if they don't, and I think I said this on our last thing, they will be extinct politically.
Starting point is 00:29:09 Once illegal aliens come in this country and they get amnesty or they get citizenship, their population number is gonna supersede black people by far. Black people historically have been the majority minority, meaning we've been the most important minority group in the country. Now we're gonna move below Hispanic and you could vote a hundred percent for
Starting point is 00:29:29 your candidate of your choice but you're not gonna never win an election yeah last question you think Mike Johnson will be able to come back from this who? Congressman Johnson from the omnibus thing yeah I don't know man I I would have to be on Capitol Hill and sit in these meetings to get a real glimpse of what's really going on, right? Because we get all the noise from here. Right. They loved him. They hated him last week, you know? And so you're like, is he doing wrong? Is he doing right? What is the real pressure that Congress is feeling? It seems very clear to me that we
Starting point is 00:30:00 should not spend more money. We should not shut the government down. But why do Republicans and Democrats get into this gridlock position all the time? So what I would say is I don't want to jump the gun and be like, oh yeah, we're gonna counsel him. And they never do. Because they were trying to not have him as a speaker of the house anyway,
Starting point is 00:30:19 but then he's in now and they love them, right? At first, I don't think he was very popular, but now Trump loves him and everybody else. I think in order for a person to understand fully, you can have an opinion, you can have a feeling about it. In order to understand fully, you have to be in Congress yourself and experience what those conversations are,
Starting point is 00:30:36 experience what's really on the line, experience can you really come to a happy medium or will they never? Yeah, I like that take because some people will see a clip of someone from a podcast and then judge them based off that 20 second clip. And I learned that being a police officer. People say, oh the cops should have did this and this and that. I'm like, if you actually was a cop for a day you will understand that all of this that you're saying makes absolutely no sense.
Starting point is 00:30:58 That's not how this works. And I think that I'm just as ignorant in Congress. Yeah. I think a certain way, but I'm like, maybe I'm flawed in this. At least you have that awareness, because there'll be a video of a cop arresting someone, and then that cop will get a ton of heat on social media. But you don't know the full story leading up to what happened. Right. Listen, man, I'm telling you, people don't even know the beginning of it.
Starting point is 00:31:22 The way the calls come out, the way now we're dispatched, dispatched calls, all of that is so many things happening to lead to what you see in that video. There's training protocol, there's all of this stuff happens. 5,000 things happened before this short video. And I bet it's the same in Congress. There's 5,000 conversations that are happening. There's the government shutdown or not before we get to Mike Johnson criticism.
Starting point is 00:31:49 Yeah. So I think that it's good to have an opinion, but we have to understand it. We're probably very novice and understanding this in totality. Absolutely. What do you got next? What campuses are you hitting and what else are you working on? Well, I'm not sure. So wherever they send me, I'm a go and I'm a turn up the campus. And when I say tear it up, I'm gonna give good dialogue and challenge people on the way they think. So I speak tomorrow at 1 20 here. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:32:11 It's always fun. I try to be excited. I try to be motivational. I don't really care too much about politics. There's 50,000 people are going to talk to them about politics. I want to talk to them about their relationship with God and inspire them to be better people individually and be able to be better people individually and be able to change the country moving forward.
Starting point is 00:32:26 So I'm just trying to go where God called me, man, and just do the best that I can. So that's my next step is that. Thanks for coming on again, dude. That was fun. My pleasure, John. Thank you. See you guys. Get ready for Las Vegas style action
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