Morning Wire - Insider Exposes California’s Collapse
Episode Date: July 19, 2025California resident Dr. Houman Hemmati reveals the deepening crises in public safety, affordability, and governance in his state. Plus, why he believes the state’s battle with the Trump administrati...on may push it to the brink. Get the facts first on Morning Wire. - - - Privacy Policy: https://www.dailywire.com/privacy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
60% of the vans on Amazon
from a vendor independent
like Sac Magic.
Hello, here Camille of Sack Magic.
Our compresses, show of fraud
are fabriced in Quebec,
and our presence on Amazon
enlarge our clientele
to world entire.
Trouve of little enterprises
like on our own.com.
California is escalating its resistance
against the Trump administration
on everything from ice operations
to women's sports,
all while facing growing crises
in the areas of security and affordability.
In this episode,
we take a deep dive on the problem
plaguing the deep blue golden state and how its ongoing battle with the federal government is impacting
Californians. I'm Daily Wire Executive Editor John Bickley with Georgia Howe. It's Saturday, July 19th,
and this is a weekend edition of Morning Wire. A portion of this interview aired earlier this week.
Joining us now to discuss is board-certified MD and California political commentator Humann Hamadi.
Humann, thanks so much for coming on. It's a pleasure.
Look, your state has effectively declared war on the Trump administration.
on a number of issues, all while facing what I think it's fair to call crises in L.A. and other
cities. What are the most pressing issues right now in California? If we have three hours,
I would list for you all the pressing issues in California right now. The problem is we have
so many, and so many of them are manufactured by the state and county and local governments in L.A.
But if I had to think of the very highest ones, we have the public safety issues, and then we also have
the affordability issues. And on the public safety front, we still have exceedingly high crime
and homelessness. I was a victim of crime just last night in my house. Part of the house was vandalized.
We caught it on camera. This is how LA has become. And on top of that, on the affordability front,
we have energy prices, electricity, gasoline that are sky high, highest in the nation, going through
the roof and with no end in sight, water rates that are very high, insurance rates that are sky high,
if you can even afford to get home insurance or car insurance,
it's getting really crazy at this point.
People cannot survive in this state.
And every one of these crises is something that's either preventable,
predictable, or manufactured by the administration.
Now, we've seen most recently the battle with the Trump administration over ICE raids.
This has definitely taken the sort of lion's share of the media coverage.
We have Trump actually giving ICE a green light to respond to.
He calls them the thud.
attacking agents using whatever means is necessary.
That's from Trump.
How are city and state officials responding to this escalation of violence against ICE?
Look, when you look at Los Angeles City, L.A. County, much of the state overall,
you have city leaders like, you know, Mayor Karen Bass.
You've even got Gavin Newsom.
You've got vice mayor of a tiny town called Cudahy who are openly calling for people to resist
ice and they're using vilifying terms, fighting terms. The vice mayor of Cudahey actually asked for
gang members to come out and fight them in the streets in no uncertain terms. Now that your hood's
being invaded by the biggest gang there is, there ain't a peep out of you. So they've declared
open war on federal officers who are really there enforcing federal law and doing their jobs.
Is it aggressive? Absolutely. Is it in their face? Absolutely. Is that avoidable? Yeah, it would have been.
had the state and local officials simply cooperated with federal officials and done what they used to do back in the day, not so long as 15, 20 years ago, which is to allow federal officers to come into the prisons and jails and actually take people who are criminal illegal immigrants and detain them and ultimately deport them.
They stopped cooperating a while back.
And as a result, the federal officers have to do their jobs nonetheless and go into the field and identify and apprehend these individuals.
This obviously makes it a lot more messy, but all of that is avoidable had they just done what they used to do in the past.
Now, front and center in this conflict is L.A. Mayor Karen Bass. She is tweeting nonstop about this, even on the 4th of July, saying we would be celebrating the 4th of July, if not for these tyrannical ice raids, effectively.
We've had new reports that she's maybe providing cash cards for illegal immigrants. And she says openly that she is directing government resources to illegal immigrant.
families in the face of the ice raids. What do we know for sure about her handling of the
standoff with ice? Yeah, it's very clear. First, in terms of the cash cards, you know, she made it
very clear in plain English that she is going to be distributing hundreds of dollars in cash
to illegal aliens who are impacted by ice. And what she means by impacted are people who
won't leave their homes, won't go to work because of fear of apprehension, arrest, and deportation.
And so that means basically everyone qualifies, and she's going to be issuing credit cards that have cash on them.
So debit cards, basically, loaded with cash, hundreds of dollars apiece, if not more over time.
I think she's partnering with that organization called Churla, which is an NGO, but is government funded,
that happened to have actually helped organize the riots against the ICE officers, supply them, organize them, funded them, et cetera.
And they're going to be the ones apparently administering this cash card process.
What's it doing? It's again incentivizing, you know, undocumented immigration. It's keeping them from leaving their homes. It's providing aid and comfort to them while their own citizens who are legally here aren't able to afford food, rent, electricity, gasoline, insurance, etc. So it's really backwards and it shows you where her priorities are. Rather than focusing on the people who she has sworn to protect, the citizens, the people who voted her in, she's very clearly drawing a line and saying, these are not.
my people. My people are the folks who are here illegally. And it's really disturbing because,
you know, she's a person who had a chance to do something right this time around after really
botching her fire response, not being in town, going off to a junk in an Africa, coming back,
showing zero leadership and allowing her city and a neighboring city of Malibu to burn to the ground
for the most part. She had an opportunity here to say, you know what? We're going to do the
uncomfortable thing of cooperating with federal officers, allowing them to do their job, but to do so
in a peaceful, organized manner. And instead of that, she basically said to her people, let's go after
these guys, and I'm going to protect you. And this is what's led to these problems. Again,
this is preventable, but they're choosing to escalate it to a point where it's almost physical,
and that's what's wrong. Now, you mentioned the LA fires. I actually wanted to talk to you about that
next. We heavily covered that when it happened, of course, and there were a lot of concerns in the
immediate aftermath about the rebuild effort and how that would be handled by officials.
What is the latest on that front? Yeah, so this is a very interesting point. We're now just
past the six-month anniversary of the January 7th and 8th fires. We would have expected,
in any other place on earth, by now, you would have had a flurry of construction activity,
most permits, issues, etc. What's happened? I live literally blocks from the fire zone. It
approached my home to the point where we had to leave in the middle of the night. So I, and,
And we actually have a piece of empty land in Malibu that would have earned had there been a house on it.
Everything else around us is completely gone.
So for miles and miles, for up to an hour of driving, there is almost nothing left.
And when you go there, six months later, there are maybe two, maybe three homes being framed.
Everything else remains empty.
Some lots have not even been cleared out yet six months later.
In one place, the old frozen yogurt shop that my kids would go to once or twice a week after school,
that place is not just not cleared up.
the debris is still covering the sidewalk, and they haven't even bothered pushing it back to clear a major
sidewalk in a place that everybody walks in that area.
Absolute disaster.
When you look at the number of permits issued, the number of permits that they say, the city says,
is deceptive because many individual addresses have numerous permits issued.
So when they say we've issued a few hundred permits, when you actually look at the individual
addresses, it's only in a matter of like the 20s or 50s, some exceedingly low amount.
You see hundreds of lots for sale at very low prices compared to what they would have been pre-fire.
About half are being bought by developers, about half are being bought by end users.
But many of the actual people who live there, whose homes burn, are choosing not to come back.
They're taking the insurance money and running and just abandoning their properties because they can't wait five, 10 years or so to rebuild.
And the reconstruction costs have also gone sky high.
The other thing which is concerning is that many of us predicted, and we were called conspiracy theorists right after the fires, that this is going to be a sort of land grab by the government.
We were worried that they're going to take these properties either by force through eminent domain or by purchasing them at rock bottom prices from people who are unwilling or unable to build and turn it into low-income housing.
Government constructed.
And guess what just happened?
You have state, I'm sorry, you have state senator Ben Allen as well as L.A. County supervisor, Lindsay,
Horvath, who represents the area. Both of them are very much pro-government-built homeless and low-income
housing, both of whom had said, no, we're not going to change the zoning, we're not going to do
anything here, we're not going to be buying land. Guess what just happened? This last week, they held a
town hall. They had the results of their independent Blue Ribbon Commission, which is really made
up of their own people. And they said, because of what the Blue Ribbon Commission said, we are going to
impose bonds that are going to be financed via future property taxes from the burned outlots,
we're going to use the bond money to build a land bank to purchase properties from people who
no longer have the means or the desire to rebuild, which means people who just can't afford it
and are fed up with a permitting process that they're deliberately slowing down.
We will buy that land and we'll use taxpayer money to build affordable homes that then people
can lease back.
And around that same time, Gavin Newsom authorized over $100 million for the construction of low-income housing in those kinds of areas.
That's not a coincidence.
And guess what?
Some of that low-income housing, the fine print, says has to go to people who have recently been in prison, people who've been in mental institutions recently.
This is a disaster.
Pacific Palisades was one of the last quiet, peaceful, beautiful, untouched, single-family, mostly single-family neighborhoods in all of L.A.
People went there because they wanted their kids to be able to walk to school safely, to play
outdoors safely, to not have noise and crime, et cetera.
And now you know what they're planning to do.
They're really pushing this densification and the low-income housing and the government
built and government-owned housing on them.
And that's really going to spell disaster for that area.
The roads simply can't even handle that much density.
There's only one street in and out of the palisades.
That's sunset boulevard, two lanes in each direction.
already been so gridlocked that when the fires occurred, the people couldn't get out and the fire
trucks couldn't get in. And you may remember those images of them having to bulldo those abandoned
vehicles out of the way so the fire department could come in. Imagine now adding, you know,
three, five, ten times more people to the same area. It's incapable of accommodating them just
with respect to the traffic and good luck putting in a bus line there. It's really a fantasy in
terms of them that this is somehow going to work out nicely. But again, it fulfills what they want,
which is government ownership of land and government built rental properties. Like you said,
six months ago, this was a conspiracy theory. Some elements of this look like they're coming true.
Final question, where do you see the battle to standoff with the Trump administration going
in the next few months? Is there any sense of California giving in on any of these issues that they've
really dug in on? Or is this going to continue?
You know, look, I think there's zero chance that California, especially Gavin Newsom and Karen Bass will give in. And here's why they have politicized this issue. They mistakenly believe that they're going to score points against the Trump administration by showing that they are the force of resistance. When you look at the Democrats in general, what have they become? They have become the anti-Trump party. They don't really have necessarily a positive platform. They're not saying, we have something to offer you. All that they've been offering lately since the election has been, we oppose
everything that Trump does. And so with Newsom, very obviously planning a 2028 presidential one,
and with Basque coming up for re-election another couple years or less, they're both seeing this
as an opportunity to define themselves as the anti-Trump resistance candidate. And as a result of that,
there's no chance they're going to back down. The moment Newsom backs down, he loses his only card
to play in the presidential election. And so he's going to double down, triple down on this,
and you're going to see Bass doing exactly the same. And ultimately,
That's going to harm the Californians and the L.A. residents. And it's going to create more havoc,
caused the citizens a lot more, and create unnecessary disruption across the board.
A lot going on in your state while Gavin Newsom, like you said, is on the road, even going into the deep south on this sort of pseudo campaign trail.
Thanks so much for taking the time and talking with us today.
It's a pleasure. Thanks for having me.
That was California political commentator Humann Hamadi.
And this has been a weekend edition of Morning Wire.
