Heroes in Business - Top Three Emergent Issues for Inflation, Homelessness and Crime
Episode Date: February 22, 2022Dr. Sarah Sun Liew for congress US senator (CA), interview with Eric about Dr. Sarah's Top three emergent Issues for inflation, homelessness and crime in this episode of America today and The World.&n...bsp;
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi, everyone. Thank you for, you know, watching, supporting Dr. Sarah Yusho to this American world.
And then as well as Dr. Sarah for U.S. Senate.
Today, I have a special guest to invite, you know, Eric Stamps, who is a political, you know, consultant.
He is really devoted his life to serve candidates. So we had many
claims in California and homeless problem in California and the inflations. So he and
me, we're going to have each communication together. So first, I want to introduce Eric Stamps. Could you introduce
yourself just a little bit? Yeah, whatever.
Oh, of course. Thank you so much for having me. It's great to be here and do this show.
So I'm Eric Stamps. I'm a political consultant that I'm working with many candidates and
committees all across the United States, focused on economic issues,
labor issues, and also just issues dealing with the economy.
So what I'm passionate about is just trying to help great people get elected to government
all across the country.
And that's, of course, why I have support for Dr. Sarah Yu.
And having to be doing this interview today and of course talk about all
these really important topics that are affecting Americans and people all over the world.
We have five questions. So, you know, Eric is going to ask me and then I will answer those
questions. So we have, you know, in the chat room already had, you know, the questions.
So, you know, you can ask me to, I can answer that. Yeah.
Oh, of course. So I just want to start out with, of course, everyone knows that California is a very, you know,
one of the largest states in the country also has a large GDP throughout the
world. But of course, lots of different problems are happening in California.
So what are your main priorities and main issues that you think that needs to be solved
in California?
I think California has a lot of serious issues.
You know, this is a top three emergency issues we need to solve.
I think that issue is inflation.
Everyone needs inflation effectively.
Daily supplies, daily food, those inflations, they go up.
We have to pay some more dollars.
So I think that is now most people's concern.
Second, you know, homeless issues is so serious, you know, that's
why I want to talk about those issues, homeless issues too, because
since homeless issues is a long time,
same things, even we put in so many budget there,
you know, spending $3 million, but still, you know,
in the same problem.
So I'm gonna talk about those issue too.
And first, the third issue is we have a crime issues.
It's a more crime, ladies co-ops,
we need a really hard solution to those crime depend on the police and a more secure business.
You know, we're going to have a lot of things to do in California emergency issues with those three top issues.
Yeah. Yeah. So you said that inflation is number one.
I just want to run down some numbers real quick that I got just from today.
So inflation, of course, overall is up by 7.5% on the month. But when you break it down to
different categories, gas is up 20%. Used cars is up 40.5%. It's almost cheaper to get a new car
than a used car these days. Electricity is up almost 11%. groceries of course they're up the shales are
there and they're up four percent so um you know how do you plan to solve the inflation crisis
once you uh when you race and get to dc what's the things is first because those inflation
costs where is the you know the the inflations cause, you know, we need to find out those
cause. I think first of all, you know, we have cause that are labor shortage. So we're not
creation jobs that much. Now it's COVID during COVID, more lost, you know, people jobs, more
closed business. So those factors factors that make everything increase.
The price, you know, index price, consumer index price, product index price, it's co-op.
So I think the first thing is we have the creation jobs and then make more like business open and then available to, you know, example, food chain supplies that, you know,
people that product cost to go up because they cannot find our workers.
No more workers labor wages go up product, you know,
the product production is cost to go up.
So that's why consumer end up or the consumer have to pay for us
everything. So that is really a burden
on everyone. So the main things we have to really, labor markets really have to be, you
know, labor powers needed to come back to before COVID. So, grant, fund, statuses, all those spending money, they have a short
term, they can survive, but that cause also inflation.
So government is spending lots and lots of money.
They print lots and lots of money.
And then we have to really burn our 80% money to burn
really to solve those inflation because dollar value is going down. And as well as you mentioned,
we go to the market. Now it's like we have to pay so many inflation price have to pay that are, you know, $100. We have like 10 bags now is
$100, only five bags. So we have daily cost, you know, daily cost to do the service and products,
you know, we pay for that. So that is all really considerations we really go for.
That inflation is, you know, my policy is, you know,
we can bring more unskilled workers from foreign countries
and then open more immigration portal.
And because now food chain product supply is so low.
That's why the price go up.
And semiconductor, they cannot make up, you know,
their higher price.
We cannot even buy, even used to cut is more expensive
because there is people, not enough workers.
So my policy is creation, you know, jobs from here,
it's really unskilled workers,
all of us, right, unskilled workers that immigrants,
you know, we can give them more chorus,
they coming to, you know,
then we can go down those inflations, even short term.
1970, you know, that time Jimmy Carter has many problems with inflation. His
policies really was put on. And the next president, Donald Reagan, Donald Reagan was really fighting for the inflation, his economic growth.
So Donald Reagan's policy, I am supportive.
So we need to go back to Donald Reagan's policy because he solved those inflation that time. As well as those are Donald Reagan's policy
is adopted by Donald Trump, you know,
before, you know, the Biden administration
and Donald Trump was really focused on those,
you know, the Legans, you know,
Donald Legans policy.
That's why we doesn't have inflation that time.
So I'm going to, as a senator,
because we have the right policy is feasible
because this is, we have a policy player, three part.
One is government bodies who made a policy registration
as well as we have a civil society and then we have a market.
So even we made such great policy,
it does not imply at the markets,
this is not really feasible.
Even we have a politically feasible,
it's really good, sounds good policy,
but it's not implied at the market.
Those policies will die. So now most political policies we have
are politically not supported by parties,
only democratic or only republican.
So we have to have bipartisan agreement policy
made as well as those policy technically collectors, you know, because many, many policies we did not like technically collectors because they did not know about really where is caused this problem, where is we needed to solve. So all the government, they're spending $3 million. What happened is all the
taxpayers cost. Later on, we have to pay by inflation. We have to pay more taxes.
So this is very important at this point, the inflation because of palace makers and registry makers, they needed to now is really,
really nearly our leaderships to,
they need to looking for those codes,
where is the code?
So prices have to be,
deducted as soon as possible.
So price go up up like 1970 is, you know, now is,
you said it's 7.5%, you know, the inflation, we have to pay, if we pay $1 last year, we have to
pay $1.75 that because inflation. So this isn't really, you know, we are normal, like ordinary people.
We cannot really control those economic America,
but who are policymakers, they can do.
So I think, you know, if I go to the United States,
because I went to Harvard Law School and Harvard Business School,
Harvard Education School, as well as Harvard Kennedy School,
government.
So I learned how to make the policy,
how can imply those policy, and through the markets,
we have technical collectors.
So those are things I can, we need really power
over the leadership of this country.
We are concerning inflation rate is CPI, you know, consumer price index.
PPI is product price index.
So now the CPI is, you know, 5.25.
And then PPI is products 24% go up.
And then PPI is products 24% go up.
So this is really people's burden.
You know, they don't want to buy home anymore.
Meaning, you know, although, you know, construction jobs is, you know, lost labor's power.
They're shut down.
So, you know, that car dealers is normal inventories.
There's semiconductor, normal made cars.
So this is all coming because of decision makers who are political, you know, the party, the government, the studio, know that before this happened. They know if they spend that much money for the COVID, we spending money, COVID, you know, $3 billion, but, you know,
the Biden administration, 10%, only spending 90%
is not good to the really COVID.
Just they don't really, they don't really focus
on those, you know, that's why this happening.
So they need to really
re-expand
everyday's product and service.
If we go to the
car, fix the car,
and we get the services,
now it's higher,
higher service.
Only good for the inflation is
lenders, because
inflation goes up and the lender get a more
interest rates i think the you know that uh bring also you know people discourage it for the by the
house you know everything is expensive you know business expenses i'm not really supporting
entrepreneur this inflation is a cost to business because those business learning is, you know,
even we have secure those business,
like putting the alarms, videos, and then security guys.
Everything is, we are burdened more like cost
because we have to more pay.
Then it end up, you know, what happened?
Business closed because they don't have enough cash flow
because of, you know, those oil spending.
So, you know, this inflation should have solved
as soon as possible, you know, because of, you know,
now everything is crisis.
Supply chain is crisis.
We need worker.
The solution is we need worker.
But the policymakers, they do not know about really this is a problem by the workers.
But they know the problem, but they don't know how to get the workers.
But my life is always had, you know, profit and non-profit.
Always train workers. Always creation jobs. my life is always had a you know profit and non-profit always trained workers always creation
jobs always helping you know startup companies who creation jobs so i think if i become senator i
know what exactly we needed to do for the inflations you know we have to support the business owners can sell, you know, their product low because all the consumer pay higher price and they don't have cash.
They go to the homeless.
They because they don't have food.
Now they steal the food.
So this is all the inflation is make our country poverty.
So we have to really, really work on it.
So we have, I mentioned that very good policy
for Donald Trump as well as the Lakers.
So we are gonna study more the policy
and then I'll go to support California.
Right, and you mentioned something that was important about this needs bipartisan support because, of course, the way that the makeup on the House and Senate is right now,
the way political polarization is in this country,
when it comes to inflation, it's affecting everybody, no matter who you vote for.
So we certainly need a bipartisan approach coming towards that.
And also, I think that your experience as a business person can definitely offer some expertise and advice to those who don't know about really the way that the economy works and about hiring and labor, labor costs
and all those issues.
Now, you mentioned about how inflation, it can, of course, you know, people having such
tight budgets as it is already with wages and with jobs and whatnot.
If people can't, you know, have to pay more on groceries and other services, that means that they're probably going to be not able to pay their mortgage or pay their rent.
And then what happens next?
Homelessness.
So you mentioned that, you know, homelessness issues is also one of your biggest topics of concern.
I'd like to know your policy about how to tackle the homelessness crisis in California.
tackle the homelessness crisis in California?
My homeless policy is, you know, I want to really share my life story too, because when I came in the United States around 1995 and 1996, you know, that time I was really surprised,
you know, I went to the Megalopag in Los Angeles. You know, there is all people come to me and then, you know, there is drug sellers.
You know, there is like many homeless.
I was, you know, being devoted on Sabbath or, you know, Sunday after my own education pastor, Sunday school director.
And after that, after my job finished, I go to the Megara Farm,
the homeless missions, you know, one of my friend pastors too. I went there, you know,
there is a, you know, suddenly we give a lunch box to them, suddenly like almost 300 homeless
coming all over the place, those 3 p.m. know so so i see that you know i'm very surprised
when i came to america i was dreams america is a real riches really had a beautiful you know
things everything but when i came just one or two weeks i find out it's American homeless serious. But those homeless crime America
is still same thing. It's more worse
than that time. So
now this, you know, today
it's like 600,000
America in 2020
no homes.
So this is really
big problems
you know, to America.
So everyone know about homeless issues, how crisis,
but I want to, you know, things is something,
my policy, I want an introduction
because we have shortage time, right?
So, you know, the things is we have to understand
the human beings because, you know,
example, you go to the uh travels you know you packing your
baggage right so you put in the old like uh wash tools like all the uh combing uh you know hair
all the teeth breast as well as you bring the clothings and you bring some money over food
so same thing like we need everywhere we go.
We need even home everywhere we go.
Human beings need, you know,
those basic food and clothing and dwelling.
But the homeless people is very difficult situations,
you know, because they don't have even those small
like necessities as human beings.
So we have to understand those homeless needed first.
That is my policy.
We have to really need to, because it's a population of the homeless,
we have to think different ways.
Because every policy we made is everything the same equal homeless same
level of homeless treat but my policy is i have abc a a category of homeless is able to work
b category of homeless is be able to work you know become able to work c is cannot able to work, you know, become able to work. C is cannot able to work. Like examples,
there is a homeless populations, you know, it's not like everyone is not unable to,
everyone is unable to, you know, make a job because 20% is a homeless is a mental disorder,
16% homeless, a clinical substance abuse. So another 64% homeless is chronic substance abuse.
So another 64% the homeless is still can work, right?
So I want to calculate,
analyze those three categories.
First, able to work means,
you know, people can able to work a lot of way.
They scalable.
So that eight categories, we can give jobs.
And then we can, you know,
our policies have to make a job creation,
those people who can able to also preventions
have to focus because many policy,
they are not focused in prevention.
My policy is focused on prevention.
So we have, my policies that are entrepreneurial job creation support centers.
People, A-class people can go there before they become homeless and they can submit those applications.
You know, I don't have jobs. I might get a job six months. I will be homeless.
And then, you know, there is many, many entrepreneurs looking for job seekers, but they cannot find out. They can submit application to
an entrepreneur support center program, and then they can get out those prevention
homeless program, those applications, many, many lists that they have. They can hire them
right away. We can prevention those jobs. As well as those ACARE were able to jobs people,
we can, you know, government needed to find out jobs for them.
More like EDD service, more like workforce service.
We have to support them, you know, and then more like nonprofits.
They can support those who are, you know, contribution community for the training,
job creations.
We have to fund those.
Then we can really support those able to work because many, you know, in Korea towns, in
Los Angeles, I heard, you know, those stories that homeless become homeless.
Who are Yale University?
He was, you know, Wall Street, really was the number one, you know, stockbrokers.
He became homeless because of his friend.
He invest a long place and his friend movie, make movie he lost everything he end up he go to
the homeless so he can be able to work right he can be able to work again because he has
experience even um many professional jobs people stay still when i go out i meet uh santa monica
and then you know b then Venice and then downtown.
I met the homeless.
They are really strong.
Their ethics, still even their homeless,
their strong ethics.
They want to go jobs.
They want to looking for job.
But problem is we need really creation jobs through them.
So a second, they can go right away.
So that, that means we, if we give them, you know,
those job place, they cannot become homeless.
We can prevention, even they are homeless,
we can find out to do the together.
Before homeless or after homeless who get able to work,
we can get creation jobs through
entrepreneurs.
So, of course, we need the entrepreneur support together and nonprofits together working through
the program.
And second, the big care goal is become able to work.
So that means they're not unskilled workers.
They don't have any skills.
But we can, you know, make them to six months training,
you know, if they're looking for professional jobs, they, we can do like one year. But who's
going to pay for that, right? Because, you know, those people really needed to, you know, those
homeless be cared for with a little bit extra care care because they need a house to stay until, you know,
they go to the school, right? They needed to, I think those be cared for, we needed to really
support their relatives or any, you know, shelter program, any entrepreneur, they're looking for a lump sum, you know, group of workers,
construction jobs and factory and simple, you know, jobs, we can put them there.
And then, you know, six months intern program together.
So they can go to the nighttime to study and daytime, they can work at the same time as intern.
study at daytime, they can work at the same time as intern.
And those entrepreneurs do not need to pay because they hire homeless. So it's their decision to
but this is now easy decision to them to hire
homeless because they're homeless. They think like not
secure, not safety because maybe a disease or maybe, you know,
so many environment we have, but those entrepreneurs giving opportunity
to those homeless, they did a great decision.
So we can six months or one year,
you know, pre-labors for them.
And then, you know, the homeless,
they will have a house from, you know, the employee or like shelter or any non-profit who support
those homeless in the house programs. Another thing is the homeless family. Because many, many
people become homeless because they are dependent
their family like example one of homeless he was dependent on his mother but his mother died he
end up you know no one support him he become like homeless the divorce and the poor clothes and
business calls so those things also we need to really consider to preventions, you know, homeless,
as well as, you know, I think dwelling of those homeless during those six months, one year,
family need support. Maybe if, you know, relatives or families, they come back to their
family member who are homeless and they can come back to their family members
who are homeless and they can come back to home,
we can tax credit because we're spending, you know,
one homeless per year, $60,000 per one homeless.
We are spending, you know, billion, billion dollars
to homeless programs still the homeless rate is go up never
down so we need a you know family responsibility because in a lot of lots of homeless husband
not respond to wife wife is not respond to husband you know parents not respond uh you know
their kids you know that you know uh children are not respond their parents kids. Children not respond to their parents.
So we have the basic education to people,
avoid those prevention, homeless,
and then also go back to the,
we have to increase, go back to the home.
That is a big catalog of people we can offer.
Three catalog of people cannot work at all
because they have a mental disorder.
They have a chronic substance abuse
or they have a problem.
Those are 36% homeless, those catalog.
We are treat the same thing, ABC,
same like policy, same treat.
Everyone they treat is
medical is first.
But the people does not think about
medical is first because A or B
catalog people, they don't need medical.
But our policy is always
say medical is first.
And then second, the
long policy that because they
think is
housing is first.
Because people go to their housing, but, you know, still they don't have jobs.
How are we going to support them?
President George Bush's policy was, you know, homeless policy was first.
Housing. Yeah, right.
He was a big advocate for homeowners, especially in the minority community. Now that we're getting close to running out of time a little bit, but I definitely want to, I was going to say, you be some sort of public-private partnership to be able to get the young houses and homes to be able to get the skills and get the jobs.
It's also going to be on the part of the entrepreneurs and some of the folks that,
you know, they own homes and apartments and whatnot to be able to work with nonprofits
and entrepreneurs and the people to be able to give them some affordable housing they can actually
stay in. But that's certainly, you know the the housing cost part is certainly one of the biggest
major hurdles so while you have somebody homeless and and also the condition of some of the shelters
sometimes there's a reason why some folks may decide they don't even want to go to a shelter
because they actually feel safer on the street or in their car than they do actually going
to the home shelter. You know the George Bush administration, they really find out those
housing is the first things they can solve a homeless problem but the homeless problem is not solved. We're giving housing, but still, you know, a large problem.
After they go to the housing, they still need treatment,
a lot of things to spend.
It's a lot of spending.
If we do housing first,
meaning because we have to make affordable housing,
and then, you know, but those have time, take time to make affordable housing. And then, you know, but those have a time,
take time to build affordable housing.
As you said, the CELTA program,
the CELTA program is also, you know,
they are, you know, cultural or their environment,
you know, they don't like to be there.
So many, you know, homeless people,
they don't like to be there.
So we need to like focus focus on or not you know housing
housing is like a last one because they need a treat and then they need um you know they need
really important employment and then you know that is a housing but now is every money go to
the housing the most most money uh you know go to the abundance go to the housing. The most money go to the funders, go to the housing. That is really
a large problem. So housing is so important, but we should really, American Rescue Plan Act 2021,
act 2021 so you know the 300 billions rescue uh bungees uh will go will really solve a problem uh you know homeless but still homeless is always there the bungees 300 350 billions rescue funds
is really really big money to you know but the homeless rate is still not changing.
So we have to spend real, those American Rescue Plan Act 2020, those are, they are issuing
7,000 emergency housing vouchers, but still, you know, we're spending one homeless $50,000 and $60,000 per year.
How many homeless do we have?
A lot of homeless in California.
All the, you know, taxpayers' cost.
Homeless not pay nothing, nothing, even one cent.
We have to, you know, taxpayers have to, you know, pay for their treatment,
their, you know, employment, their housings, you know.
All the deliberation of their service, their product, you know.
Those are all the things, you know, we're spending those $350 billion.
Where is money coming?
That is for taxpayers' money.
So we need to really solve this problem.
Even they have a housing,
without jobs, they can't survive.
Even they have a treatment,
you know, they healthy,
they get a housing without jobs.
So we have the entrepreneur support.
Who gonna creation jobs,
start a business, and entrepreneurs.
So I've been like 28 years entrepreneur and nonprofit CEO,
job creation, always starting startup business.
I think everything is really important.
Everything because they lost jobs, become homeless. That is number one cause.
So we have to solve those problems.
Right. And of course, we definitely want to solve it because oftentimes when someone gets in a really desperate situation, they might start looking towards a life of crime.
So quickly, you said that crime is also a top emergency in California.
Can you tell us some of your policies and solutions to solve it?
in California? Can you tell us some of your policies and solutions to solve it? So my climate issues now is California and America, especially California, New York's
climate is 750% climate is go ups. As well as, you know, Santa Monica, Venice in California,
As well as, you know, Santa Monica, Venice in California, South California, and Los Angeles.
Homeless crimes go up so many.
So, and then, you know, also we always talking about debunked police matter.
So, and then, you know, I want to talk about my, you know, story about crime, I had an experience. First, when I came in America, I had a director of California, Mirage Cosmetics. I go to all over South California, North California,
put in the nail polish and lipstick, a big display you know, you know, display still there in the, you know,
the well-green or late eight. So, and small business. So one day I went down to Inglewood
area. I'm really surprised, you know, when I driving my behind, you know, passenger seat,
you know, passenger seat, left hand passenger seat window is broken.
So I stopped my car, came out from car and I'm asking what's happened here?
The people said to me, someone wants to kill you. You know, this is true.
Every Friday people had a gang. They shot the guns.
But nobody come here, stop this crime.
This is since many, many years.
You are lucky.
You save your, you are lucky people
because most people, they are dead here.
So, but still claim is there.
I have those experience.
Another experience I have,
I learning credit card processing company,
those are street,
my client who,
you know,
very, very working hard
and he opened the sushi restaurant.
We had like a team to sales team, team to technology team. So we heard from
those, we need to close those accounts because one day someone bring the gun and kill those
client. So client, he was working hard. No innocent persons. Someone bring guns and then
kill those business owners. I have those experience. And another of my experiences,
I'm working as pastor at the church. So when I came in America, I had a counseling people,
counseling people drug addictions and then they did the the i was counseling one they did the
korean ladies that are about ages 50 she was a younger age like before even teenager because she adopted from korea uh from the america uh open from. So she was going to a young age, go to the, working at a bar
at the New Yorks. And then one day, you know, the, you know, someone, you know, bring the gun
and then the person who follow her, she take a train, follow her, and in front of her house or nearby house is a dark place.
Putting the gun on her head, raped her. She had those experience. After that, she cannot live
normal life. I was counseling because I was pastor. And maybe a few months, three months,
we have program to, you know, had a volunteer work,
those center, you know, coming, those kind of people.
So this is, you know, in my life,
I had so many experience through other people's, you know,
claim in California.
This is really a big issues.
So my policy now is many, many people,
they are even claim that those people who are,
the law is, like even,
I go out, I talk to business owners.
They call police.
They are really not coming on time.
People are stealing their product. And then people even kill them.
Many, many in South California, there is all of the use in a broken window.
And people like, you know, had a gun and shot the gun, business owners.
So my policy is to make secure those business place, you know, and we have those different power, police power, you know, as well as low enforcement. As well as security guys.
We have a store, security guys, secure those store.
But the problem is in California,
they don't need that much giving training for the security guys.
We need to have more strict security guys can able to have you know have some kind of secure those uh you know the place only
guys power is only had something happen look at the product and look at the uh look at those
something happening report not like the police not like the law enforcement yeah right and from
from my knowledge when i when i was uh living for a while in California, you could actually
get those security licenses in like two hours.
You really didn't need like much training.
And of course, like all a security person could do is really like look and call the
police if something happened.
So if I become senator, that's a good point. You know, we have more in business, maybe have funded those security programs that are able to hire more security.
Because now, as you said, two weeks, they can get that.
They don't have power.
As well as most security had four jobs, you know.
They don't survive through
one job,
three jobs,
they have
another job,
another job,
so they
don't really
something
happening
crime,
they don't
want to
like action,
they cannot
like action
police,
they cannot
like action,
you know,
law enforcement.
They can only
just stand up, you know, just look at them, maybe, you know, law enforcement. They can only just stand up, you know,
just look at them, maybe,
you know, call police or
report, you know, as well
as they don't get that much
funding. They don't want to do,
you know, they don't
want to do really voluntarily
involving those crime
situations. We need
more support for support business,
those security program government able to fund
to those business like, you know, many traffics,
you know, big malls.
There we only see one security guys, you know,
or even no security guys.
So the consumer client really had a risk
go to the business place.
So we needed those more training security guys,
more authority security guys,
and more salary paid to,
they can really probably be security,
but they don't.
So that's another thing is even a business owner
called the police, the person is even,
there is a lot of, you know, burglary.
And, you know, so they broken all the windows
and they take all the product, you know,
but, you know, they find and, you know, the police,
they are not, the person, they are not going to jail because they are not prosecute those people.
We have to prosecute those people go to the jail, but because in government, California
and many, many states, because they don't have enough jail systems to everyone put there,
some states, like 1,000 less, something lost, you know, they are not frustrated.
They are not go to jail.
Even they don't.
But example is someone who are still product.
That is large cost.
We have the, you know, jail cost, court cost, police time cost,
and then all the things are from those citizens' pay tax. Everything we mentioned today,
claims, homelessness, that's all the money from those who pay taxes.
That is a regular claim, but a homeless claim.
Once people want to go to many homeless, they intentionally do a claim because they don't want to stay on the street.
So they do a claim, maybe stealing or a small mine claim or a big claim.
Now it's all over the place in TV.
You know, even two days ago, I see the TV in New York Street, even in a Korean ambassador, you know, the person who no one knows who is the homeless.
They don't know him. He doesn't know him.
Even ambassadors, Korean ambassadors,
because he looks like Chinese or looks like Korean,
like Asians claim.
So those homeless claim is so serious in California
and all over the place.
If those homeless go to the jail,
because they don't have money,
they are stealing food.
So then the police come in
and then they arrest you, right?
And then they go to the court
and they go to the police
and go to the jails.
Per year, it's $50,000 up to $100,000 per person's cost for bringing
those jail systems, putting the homeless.
So this is really where we need spending money.
We have to secure our own life.
Also, school needs to be secured.
to secure our own life. Also, school needs to secure,
mostly in our school, our next generations.
They are starting at our school during day times,
but after they have finished school,
like 3 and 6 p.m., more juvenile climbs there
because of not enough street guide at the, you know, schools,
not enough afternoon school program.
They can hold them.
You know, every children is behind,
as well as, you know, secure for the college, you know.
We have to really, college students,
everywhere we have TV from Texas, Seattle, Washington.
Every place
is acclaimed.
At the church, even church worship time,
you know, like
pastors, senior pastors
kidnap
and then killed.
And then many people bring the church
by arms.
So we have really, really secure ourselves.
I'm a Republican.
Republicans support those firearms and have the firearms protect ourselves. As well as our systems, those I already mentioned, those security guys need more powerful, more secure business schools.
And then that problem is because of there.
I think we need to really solve those.
One of the solving problem is, you know, tax money saving those crime.
We have to use security guides.
You know, we have to put the bundles, security guides bundles.
You know, we have the special training schools for government learning for security guides,
helping police, you know, police man is shortage. Police
depended on police
because the police
and we have to have more police
academy. You know, we have to more
like benefit from police.
We have to support local police
station. You know, we are really
not grateful to their service
because many people, we
pay tax. They have to do no way i think that
if i be senator i'm going to program those supporting police maybe we can give a tax
deductions you know reporting our programs or send it to their you know kids to police
to their kids to police academic schools.
We need more police and more police to be proud of themselves in a higher way because the police is people killed and murdered
and so many things happen in the world now, but we don't really give that much to many bonds
for them.
They need the best health support as Polish.
They are healthy, we can be healthy too.
So I think our will support those,
through those.
And then also most important things that we have to,
we have to find out examples. You know,
we have so many examples through policies,
failed policy or success policy. Like I mentioned, 1990 Jimmy Carter's
inflation and
next president
Donald Reagan
solved those problems with good
policy. He found out
how to do it,
how to find out problems,
how to solve those problems,
how to make policy.
The most
important is the leadership,
is the scoring innovation leadership.
So, you know, we need to know the politics leaders.
Now they have policy, they have example,
but they don't have, you know, scoring innovation skill
to those policies.
So we need those kind of
leaderships i think i can do it you know i have a business background i have a you know regard
background real estate background all the pro you know i have like um you know went to law school
business school and accounting economic you know educations every uh issues you know, education, every issue, you know, I started up even since 2019,
I was running candidate office 2019 Congress, and for election 2020, March 3rd. So, you know, since that, I went to Harvard and studied almost 2019, 20, 21, 20 to four years in the labor and water business school, Pintech, and even, you know, MIT artificial intelligence and older robotics,
all the things I learning, you know,
because of I'm not kindly just sit down political,
you know, candidate who are just looking
for the next level of position or, you know,
looking for, you know know the paid and loyal and then power authority i'm not
you know i'm a pastor in all my life since 19 years old you know this is a my client you know
i serve uh 28 years fintech company real estate company legal legal service company. You know, I have a service mind, you know.
This is my after service because I'm just learning business,
be quiet, all things.
But we're going to, in Bible said, go to the extra miles.
If there's someone asking five miles, go to 10 miles, you know.
As you know, I'm a candidate of U.S. Senator,
now today, many
political leaders, we don't have trust people because
there is different way to approach
what they say A and they do B.
But to me, I'm one of you.
I'm one of you because I'm a business owner.
I'm an educator.
I'm a wife.
I'm a spiritual mother.
I am just one of you.
I can be voice of you.
So that's my main point.
I want to tell the board.
Yeah.
Yeah, we certainly have a lot of accomplishments
and have a very broad and diverse background
that can certainly help serve this country well.
So, you know, we've talked about a lot today,
inflation, talked about the homeless crisis,
talked about crime in California,
and a lot of your policies and your background.
Where can people find more information about your campaign?
How can they support you?
You know, the campaign is not just learning by myself.
This is your issue.
This is your issue. This is my issue. So first of all, you know, we have June 7th.
It's voting date.
The most important people, they can select their readers, you know, who really had a good message, who are really good voice to, you know, really.
to really, we can make everyone same policy,
but you gotta have to see who can really imply at the markets,
who can able to accomplish those policies.
So we have many candidates running US Senate tab,
now different background, different, you know, experience.
So, you know, I am, you know, I think one thing at this point, you know,
COVID-19 businesses need more support.
Next generation education need more support.
And then, you know, more secure.
Homeless need, you need to solve the problem
because I'm a pastor
my own life also serve homeless
many years you know
and then so I'm
the business
successful business woman next generation
you know
educator and also first
immigration now California
need immigration voice
so I think everything is I'm a very feasible to sound, you know, good candidate.
So I just want you guys to visit my website, www.drsarahuforcongress.com.
And as well as I have several campaign websites that will be posting
more and then as well as
you know
when you go to the website the bottom of
there Facebook, LinkedIn
Twitter
many YouTube channel
watching this you need to know
you know
you need to know who you know, you need to know, you know, who is the candidate,
what candidate thinking. So I need your support to my campaign, to, you know, your voice, you know,
I am representing your voice to go to the, you know, senator become called senator i become your ears i become your mouth
i become your eyes i become your hands so you have to really choose your hands your eyes your lips
your ears to who can really best uh represent for use best service guarantee because all positions in senator you give
authority the authority had a service but different persons different services so i can
really uh this is a senator uh i became senate i can really give best service
give best service for among many other senators, also many candidates. So both for me and possibly donation my campaign and $20, $10, $500, $2,000, whatever maximum amount, donation. Because last because last my election, I never asking donation because now we have emergency.
So if, for example, you have emergency family members
who are COVID, you don't have money to go to send him
to the hospital.
You call everywhere to, I need money to send my mother to, you know, to the healing those COVID.
Same thing.
Now is a political, you know, those positions is emergency.
Everywhere emergency.
Inflations, crimes, homeless, you know.
This is really, you know, probably we have emergency issues.
So, you know, I can be your voice.
I can be your voice.
I can be, I know your pain and I know you are suffering because of those crimes, because of those inflation, because of those illness. So please donations, you know, that it will help to,
I can go out, you know, spread my message.
I can advertise, I can send a prayer.
I can helping, you know, people's those town meetings.
So I want to be really voice of you.
So, you know, and also pray for today's government.
Pray for America. Pray for the president. Pray for other senators or Congress, House
representatives. They need more of your prayer to support as well as include the candidates. They are unable to fight without your
praise, without your voice, because California needs to go back to really biblical values.
I'm a pastor. I think I can make next generations, you know, go back to biblical value.
And then, you know, this state needed to really fix it, really change it.
So you need readers who can be your voice. I think I can do it.
All right. Well, it's certainly a major case
and the voters certainly have a good candidate to choose from
this coming up primary, which is gonna happen in June.
Dr. Sehryu, thank you so much.
Thank you so much for coming to my show
and the interview together, you know, thank you.