This video presents statistical evidence challenging the common assumption that poverty directly causes crime. The host discusses research showing that Asian communities, despite often having higher poverty rates than other groups, consistently demonstrate significantly lower crime rates across the United States and globally. Statistics presented include Asian Americans comprising approximately 7% of the US population but accounting for only 1.3% of arrests, 1% of murders, and 1.7% of rapes. The video also presents data from Japan showing a murder rate of 0.23 per 100,000 people, which is 10 times lower than Canada and 30 times lower than the United States. The host argues that correlation does not equal causation, and that cultural factors, family structures, and other variables may explain these patterns rather than poverty alone.
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HAKE | Tue 5/26/26Added:
Boom. Boom. And it's 9:00 a.m. Hold on.
Let me just make sure. Yep. Here in Los Angeles, it's Tuesday the 26th. Hope you had a nice Memorial Day if you were if you're into that.
Or a beautiful Monday. Everybody loves Mondays, right?
Um, it's the 26th AD 2026 of in May and uh I'm live it looks like on YouTube of course and punchy.tv.
Thank you to Jesse Lee Peterson raiding the stream on uh on Rumble. Hello to Brandon B. Go Gus Krevin Jules V. I guess I could say Jules Vern. Good morning to Boo Jim in Alaska. Hey.
Um, you know, I always say it, but it bears repeating.
Info may be false, and I there's nothing specific that was false that I'm thinking of right now, but uh I do have just floating in my mind examples, none of which I can call to mind right now.
of falsehoods on the hate report. All right. So, info is oftentimes false. I will be live on on Facebook eventually, right? They usually take a few minutes to get going on the JC Peterson show, the Jesse Lee Peterson Facebook, it goes right away.
Good morning, NRDJ on pill.net.
Y'all can call in as what's up. Kilo Alpha Tango 8887753773.
You can super chat by me a coffee.comthehatereport or just right there on YouTube or Rumble or even pill.net. There are ways to super chat. And I do have access to the funds on all three of those channels which is cool. Thank you kindly.
Facebook not Facebook. Yes, Facebook, I guess. But thank you kindly YouTube and Rumble and PIL shout out also live on X and F well Facebook eventually.
Um, let's see. Let me just double check over on there. Um, it looks like I'm pretty well caught up on the uh buy me a coffee.comthehre report, but I uh interesting news perhaps to get to. I did come across some things. I may go through my DMs. Don't look too closely at my DMs, y'all.
Uh um it looks like I'm pretty well >> over on um here. Let me do this.
over on X as well as maybe even IG. Although IG is kind of a risk. You know, Instagram is a little bit unwieldy.
There we go. Look at that beautiful ocean under the Manhattan Beach Pier.
Pretty cool.
And shout out to the Rumble crew. See, they raided the stream.
Um, pause that or mute it and just have it play in the background. Is it going to stress my computer to have it playing in the background? I kind of like it going um nice, huh? Look at the beautiful sunny day in January of last Oh, of this year.
Sweet.
We're nearing five months since then, right? I think so.
February, March, April, May, June. Yeah.
Five months.
Um, what has been going on? Oh, yeah. Okay.
So, let me just tell you just a little bit, a little bit of info, a little bit of news before we get going.
Our greatest president, Donald J. Trump, did a strike.
A defensive strike they called it. I saw an incredulous post. Yeah. Okay.
defensive of uh on Iran and yet they still call it a ceasefire because it's just defensive. We're looking at the this thing that says Manhattan Beach Pier designed by city engineer Al Harris, constructed by the city of Manhattan Beach during the years 1917 to 1920.
Wow. Right. Am I reading that correctly?
The roundhouse building was added a year later. And the roundhouse building is a um an aquarium. You can check out Well, it has aquariums.
So, I guess the place is you could call it an aquarium. That's not the roundhouse building. That's a lifeguard tower. But way down over there is the roundhouse building. Check it out. This place was lined with just a week before this, which was Christmas area. It was lined with uh Christmas trees, you know, type stuff. And now we're down in what is that? Sanopre, California, the beaches.
You can get some nice fresh air.
Allegedly fresh air. But watch out for the if you get down close too close to San Diego all up and down c the west coast actually you may get some mist ocean spray mist that has Tijana river waste in it. Waste that was poured into the Tijana River that flowed out into the Pacific Ocean. and uh base America first told me about it and then I found a news report about it myself.
There's a there's a bird right there in the lower right corner. I was covering him up. Sandpiper, I guess you guys told me.
But it's a you're not safe anywhere, it seems.
Okay, so strike news, right? News strike. Uh TJ River spray. Gross. Uh I've completed the disclaimer and I think that I'm pretty well almost set to go, y'all. So anyway everybody, let's just get right on with it with the show. That is one 2 3 4. Oh the hat.
The hatorn la.
Oh the horn.
The hat.
La.
Oh, it's the horn boy. The horn.
La.
Oh, it's the horn.
The horn.
La.
>> So, how y'all doing? I am fine. I have my pocket tea on. Don't let RD art come and rip it out. Shout out bullies. Don't wear a pocket. Note to self, don't wear a pocket tea to a a school with your with your black friends because they enjoy roughousing and I enjoy roughousing, but to the point where they'll stretch. Have you ever had seen or witnessed or had it done or you done it to anybody where they stretch out your shirt? Like they pull on your shirt and it stretches the neck. That's so wrong. But kids do that to one another. By kids, I mean young people.
Cut them slack. They they don't know.
You have Older people have more understanding and patience for younger people because they remember the very foolish, mindless, thoughtless, senseless things they did. I think shout out to the older, wiser people.
Uh, nice. What's up? Uh, modern day debate. Ronnie from Ohio, the dude.
Cloud Bobs, Chris from chat. Nice to see you. Franko.
Okay.
Shall we just dive in to these uh to these chats? I have been seeing I I sent some things to me to me. Okay.
I don't know if I want to do the fallen state one.
Let's see this fall. The fallen state sent me a tip on X Fallen State. At least 23 people killed, 71 injured after a suicide bomb attack near a railway station. This is a few days ago. Couple days ago, May 24th.
Bomb attack near a railway station in southwest Pakistan. Kills 23, injured 71. Man, oh man. You can't even go around in Pakistan, southwestern Pakistani city of Queta.
Pardon me if I'm butchering the name as a train was passing through an attack near a a railway station.
What a mess. So, and they call it a suicide bomb attack.
Terrible, huh? And you can see a screen still or a photograph of the mess that was created. I I see pictures of these men cleaning up the mess. I wonder if there are ever women helping, but men are more capable obviously at this type of work. I do not envy this type of work.
Much less do I envy having to be rescued from that. Although it would be, you know, sometimes you don't you get to rest but and let other people take care of you. That's kind of a vibe.
But this is not and look at all this smoke people after 911. All this smoke and dust and stuff got into people's lungs and caused I heard chronic issues.
Is this razor wire here? That razor wire didn't prevent any prevent this attack apparently. Just all this rubble.
What a mess. Who would do such a thing?
Let me repost it.
Madness.
So that's that for uh that. I wonder if I have Oh, this was interesting. Just some little tidbits. Okay. Tidbits.
tidbits of news. Okay. Uh Pakistan.
Um 58 racists says Cerno.
Uh CBC, is that what they are?
Congressional Black Caucus. This was a less than a month ago. Okay. Two, three weeks ago. May 13th. I can't do math.
This is nearly two weeks ago. The NA the Congressional Black Caucus according to NBC News reporting May uh 13th reached a record 58 House members this Congress.
Now thanks to a Supreme Court redistricting ruling expected to dramatically diminish black representation over representation I say on Capitol Hill.
Oh where am I?
Pardon me.
on Capitol Hill. I didn't realize I wasn't showing myself in the lower right corner. Um, the CBC is fighting a five alarm fire, so to speak, that could devastate its membership, and most of them are Democrats. I believe that Alan West, when he became a congressman, he did join the Congressional Black Caucus, if I would remember correctly. IRC, if I recall correctly, Democrats warn a third of the CBC could be wiped out. Congressional Black Caucus and and uh as I mentioned, if you're into your race, you're racist and Cerno adheres to that type of a thing. And that's what the black thing is. I hit the like although we all know that it doesn't exist. It's just identifying with yourself and then your other false ideas because you're not even yourself. You know what I mean? Not only when you're hungry are you not you. You're not even you when you're not hungry.
Look at these people. What a joke shout out.
There's that guy that sort of light-skinned guy who's trying to play like he's minority leader or something.
Uh there's these gals. Fancy glasses. I like them. I like the glasses. Shout out to the people who whose heroes I'm attacking and heroins I'm attacking here. I don't mean to be vicious, too vicious, but you look at that, it looks silly. It looks silly. It just does.
And then you hear them talk. That's partly why I think that it looks silly.
They're not talking about real things.
They're talking about lies. They're pushing their lies.
Terrible lie, you know. So, the 58 members of the CBC, right? Is CBC a good abbreviation for Congressional Black Caucus? Congressional Yeah. Yeah. Not to be confused with uh would they call it that?
Goodation.
Yes. CBC.
Okay.
terrible could be that's good news. It could be decimated by no longer gerrymandering because we have law. The uh law allows for and encourages gerrymandering, giving them artificial power that they don't earn.
It's just to make up for past racism, which doesn't even exist.
And then I'll show I didn't know that AI took water. So, when you see an AI video, that took a lot of water. What a mess. That's a little preview. But I want to get to your calls as well. It's 15 after and uh you know, we got to keep it moving. David in Okala, Flo, Florida is uh here with us on the air.
>> What's up? Hey.
>> Hey.
>> Yep. Did you have a good Memorial Day weekend?
>> Yeah, I did. Thank you.
>> Yeah, no problem.
>> How about you?
>> Have you sh It was okay. Hey, if you showed somebody that picture that you just had up of all those black people in the 1960s, they would never believe it.
>> Wow. Yeah. Yeah.
>> You know that you'd have all those black people up there just causing a ruckus.
>> Yeah.
>> Those are those are racist. Every one of them people up there are racist.
>> Yeah. Um Yeah. If you believe in the racism thing, >> that's what says.
>> Well, yeah. In their mind and I mean they're not racist in their mind. We are. You know what I'm saying?
>> Right. Yeah. Yeah. It's just like in a kind of a nasty accusation, but they are um they are projecting their racism, if you will, on us when it's all a lie.
Like you have an although you're not right to identify with your race so much to where like that becomes your point of pride and where you'll puff up and and uh and take umbrage over that then uh that's what they that's what they fall for.
>> They fall for it and they tempt us to fall for it.
>> Who's that guy that's up there, man?
That's just crazy. He's got an afro and he's like walking up trying to intimidate people like he's going to fight him and stuff, man. I mean, is that dude out of his mind or what?
>> Which one are you talking about now? Is this a congressman or somebody some type politician?
>> I don't know. Is one is somebody up there? It's a black dude. I He's upset about the how they're redistricting and all that stuff. And he's gotten into white people's faces and thrown like went crazy up there acting all nuts. And the other day he got up in some white dude's face, man.
>> Oh, I think I know what you're talking about. The uh he's either out of Tennessee or Mississippi. Justin Pearson, maybe.
>> That sounds right.
>> I think so. Cuz he he's like he shouted at a white cop. Uh because he and his >> Right. Right. That's him.
>> Yep. He and his brother were um protesting making a ruckus. The brother got apprehended or arrested or something because he was out of order. And then Justin said, "Boy, to a to a white cop.
If black people don't like being called that, they shouldn't call anybody else that >> do unto others."
>> Arrested him.
>> Yeah. He's out of control.
>> Arrested him right then and there, dude.
>> He's a per he's a performer. Tennessee State Representative, 31-year-old Justin >> J. you know, >> Pearson.
>> Uhhuh.
>> Or Pearson, I forget how it's pronounced.
>> That's the perfect kind of guy, black dude I've been talking about. Come out of the womb racist. As soon as he hit the ground running, his parents were drilling in his head how Whitey's, you know, never trust Whitey. Hate Whitey.
Whitey's the pro reason for all your problems. Got what I'm saying?
>> Yeah. Um, you know, he he I don't know if he came out of the womb like that because there's pictures of scenes of him >> there's scenes of him like being all proper and pronouncing his Rs like a white person, you know, and being all being all civilized and educated quote unquote like a phony politician.
>> And there's same same thing with Jasmine Crockett. She didn't used to act all.
They use the term ratchet >> about her, but she she was all proper herself and dressed up like a uh you know, maybe even with straight hair. I forget. Straightened hair, you know.
>> But they they take the mask off or they put the mask on. They trade masks because it's all fake. None none of it is real.
>> Oh, yeah. They they It's like in trade.
You ever see that movie trade places with Eddie Murphy in it?
>> No. Well, anyway, one of the guys in there was talking about Eddie Murphy and he said he's probably been stealing since the day he was born.
>> Wow.
>> And you couldn't get away with that. You couldn't get away with that nowadays. I mean, those sh the movies from the 80s, you know, 70s and 80s. There's no way you could get away with the stuff that was brought up back then.
>> People would go crazy. Anyway, hey, listen. I just called real quick, man, to tell you that I was I was on the computer the other day and I was looking at something about Aluccino and I noticed he he named his son uh Anton James Pacino.
>> Oh, really?
>> Yeah. And I thought that's interesting.
Was there somebody famous named James Anton or Anton James?
>> I wonder what >> Let's see.
>> Yeah, look it up. You can see look at his siblings. Anton >> Anton or Anton maybe Anton James Pacino born 2001 25-year-old son of legendary actor Al Pacino and actress Beverly D'Angelo >> both of them with Italian names. So, Anton James, I wonder uh let me see.
Um let me let me ask the AI who might be Anton James namesake because it could be just someone in the family. Anon was somebody in my family, >> right?
>> A great grandpa.
>> I just thought that was interest. I just thought that was interesting when I saw it and I thought you should know, you know what I'm saying? Because that is pretty cool, you know, but it's the other way.
>> Alino, >> Alpuccino's middle name is James.
>> And then uh Anton, they say, honors a theoretical creative lineage. The name Anton is the European, Slavic, and Scandinavian variation of the Latin name Antonius or an or Anthony. Um >> Oh, okay.
>> They both have deep roots in theater. So perhaps it's a there's Anton Anton Czechov, Russian playwright. Not sure.
Alputino is spent studying uh classical theater. Maybe Czechov's era of realism.
Um Beverly D'Angelo's maternal side has artistic and literary roots. Who knows?
>> Yeah. Yeah.
That's a funny That's a funny uh um whatever that's called coincidence that my name is James Anon Hake and there's an Anton James Pacino Pacino.
>> Nice.
>> Yeah, Beverly Beverly was hot when she was young, man.
>> Yeah, she was smoking. She was smoking.
All right. Well, listen, man. That's all I had to call up real quick about, man.
Y'all have a great show and thanks for letting me uh let you know about that.
I'm sure it sort of interested you a little bit anyway.
>> Yeah, of course. Thank you, sir.
>> All right. Hey, have a great day. All right. Bye.
>> Bye. Wow.
Son Anton James.
Whoa.
Uh CBC. Um Justin Pearson in people's faces. So bad. You know, there's Beverly D'Angelo, 74 years old now.
I'm curious how old Alpuccino is. She was in National Lampoon's Vacation as well as Vacation 2015. I guess the remake Christmas Vacation 1989 1983 was the all kinds of the Vacation things.
Hair 1979.
Beverly Heather D'Angelo, American actress and musician.
I'm getting educ I'm getting uh a little bit cultured. Okay, you guys are culturing me. Although I still have not watched um Oh, she was in TV shows, too. I have not watched The Godfather or a bunch of other movies or that one Scarface.
Let's Let's make sure Alpuccino is older.
Age.
Come on. Come on. 86. Okay.
good and good and older than uh his wife.
Right on. Right on. Let me get to your um back to your calls a little bit.
Okay.
Jordan, a first- time caller out of Michigan. Jordan, thanks for calling, sir. What's up?
>> Hey, James.
>> Hey.
>> How are you?
>> Fine. How are you?
>> I'm pretty good.
>> Nice.
>> So, I was just calling to give you your props on your show. I think you do a great job.
>> Appreciate that.
>> Yeah, you're welcome. I've been watching since before your beta back days, so >> Wow.
>> It's been a while.
>> Right on. And this is your first time calling in. Appreciate that. That's cool.
>> Yeah.
>> I think I heard your call on uh on JLP.
That was a great call, >> by the way.
>> Oh, thank you. Yeah. Yeah, that was it's the first time I'm calling either of you, so >> nice.
Yeah, it's good to hear from you guys personally. So, >> definitely, man. Well, much respect to you as well. And call me again if you ever have a wild hair.
>> I will.
>> Take care.
>> You too.
>> Very nice.
So, if we get back to the news, uh, shout out. I'll do shout out. Right.
If we mosy on back over to this news stuff, this is kind of old news with Hake News, right? Ah, look.
Scott Adams.
This was kind of interesting.
Scott Adams. Uh, this was a meaningful post to this guy, Doc of Hypnosis or Doc Hypnosis, Bow Tide Trance. Okay. First time I ever noticed his username. Okay, I'm I'm not endorsing it. No endorsement. I don't represent Bond or JLP or even myself, much less Anchor Baby or Derek or uh Bill the Engineer or Kurt or anybody. Of all the Scott Adams clips, this is one that means most to me personally. This was the moment during the initial China virus, well, he says COVID lockdown days that I decided to cancel my lowgrade depression and feeling like I'm trapped and replace it with come out of this stronger, not weak, not weaker. and he shares this little uh clip, minute and a half clip from a former competitor whom I dealt with. I'm kidding. Okay, I didn't I did not give Scott Adams cancer.
>> I don't think any of us should come out of this without a new skill.
I'll just put that out there. You know, I talk about skills stacking all the time, but when in your life are you going to have another time where you're forced to stay home for weeks and you're a little bit bored.
Is that ever going to happen again?
Ever? Will there ever be a time when you could just say, you know, nothing I can do. I just I'm just going to stay home for a number of weeks, whatever it is, and I'm going to be a little bit bored.
If you don't come out of this with a new skill, you're doing it wrong. Hey, >> you're doing it wrong. You should come out of this stronger, not weaker. You want to come out of this maybe with less income. It's going to happen to a lot of us. Certainly will happen to me, but I'll be okay. And no matter where you are income-wise, if if you take a hit, you can compensate for that in the long run by adding a skill. Sign up for a class. learn something that's compatible with what you already do that makes you the the obvious person to get promoted, the obvious person to get a better job somewhere else. So you can you can somewhat compensate. It's not a one for one, but for many people it's more than one for one. For many people, they'll be able to add a skill, something they always wanted to do, and when things go back to normal, which they will, well, you came back more valuable. So you can work on your net worth by improving your skills. So a lot of people are going to do that.
>> Isn't that nice? Shout out to the late great Scott Adams.
Multiple time guest on well he was on the Jesse Lee Peterson show at least once. He was on the Fallen State at twice.
creator of Dilbert and but much bigger than that.
He sought to he had some good sense about living wisely, better, right? Not bitter.
Yeah, the China virus lockdowns, we're communist. But part of what the commies rely on is you becoming bitter, not better.
so they can swoop in and save you with their socialism. You know what I mean?
Jelly Bean, shout out to the non boomers. I'm a boomer. I don't like socialism. I don't think. Okay. I don't think. And uh a lot of you non-boomers are like, "Okay, boomer. Socialism is not that bad as long as it's nationalist."
Uh shout out better not bitter.
That's a t-shirt on the Jess Lee Peterson channel.
Okay, here's another little tip. Okay, this one bears uh California, the highspeed rail.
I didn't really understand it. I just kind of generally know that it's um not good. This guy's running for governor of Californiaa.
I don't see that. I don't believe he has any chance.
Sorry, I shouldn't say that. He has a great chance of doing it. Everybody get out and vote for him. I know I will.
Trump endorsed him. Trump endorsed him.
I believe in him. That settles it. Real James Woods shares this post. If you ever need to know about what a catastrophe Gavin Newsome is, and I think this may even predate Gavin Newsome a little bit, but it's all of Gavin Newsome's thing. I think of course the fires that killed 31 people top the list says James Woods and I'm not sure exactly how you blame the death of 31 people from in fires to on Gavin Newsome but maybe I don't know the buck stops here types type stuff but how about this they call it a boon doggle a boon is something that's really good for you like the Abraham Accords are a boon for some of those Middle Eastern countries that want get along with America and Israel, right? Although the people don't like it. They don't they don't like getting along with Israel, but the powers that be in their countries are like, "No, this is a boon for us. Let's uh do it." $200 billion dollar over budget. Not a foot of track ever laid.
Trump would not let such a thing happen.
Where did the money go? Gavin asks this actor, real James Woods.
Okay. And I'm here's Steve Hilton. He was on the Jason Lee Peterson show. Now, even though I just said vote for him, I'm gonna vote for him. I'm kind of hamming it up. Okay, so no endorsement implied. All right, who knows? Maybe Javier Bera, that Democrat, would be a better governor. I'm hamming that up, too. But here he explains it. He actually does a really good job explaining it. He's an Englishman, but also a an American, frequent Fox News contributor or co-host or guest or or all of the above.
But he's running for governor. And check this out. There it is. The flagship achievement of Gavin Newsome and 16 years of Democrat one party rule. This is the high-speed train to Whiskus from San Francisco to Los Angeles in 2 and 1/2 hours. It's open in 2020, didn't you know? And it was finished for $30 billion. Oh, wait. They have still not laid any tracks.
>> I have to slow it down because I don't like the the speed and pacing of shorts reels. And this has the speed and pacing and effects of very professional shorts and reels. And for the sake of my show, I'm slowing it down. Did you know it was supposed to be done in 2020? Did you know that it was supposed to be um which is six years ago, right? I think 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025, and 2026.
Yeah. Like, think six years ago.
6 - 0, 26 - 20. Anyway, um, and I didn't know that it was supposed to go to from San Francisco to LA.
Okay, so let me back it up just a little.
not laid any tracks. Now they're saying that maybe if we're lucky, it's spare me the whoosh. You're running for governor, sir. Whoever did that whoosh. I don't know. Maybe I could use some whooshes in the shorts that I make. So there's the map. If you're looking San Francisco to Mercer, Merrced to Bakersfield. See, I had heard that type of stuff. Merced is more inland and it's a little bit further south. It's like eastsoutheast of San Fran. San Fran is the place to be if you're not in LA. Okay, as far as cities to go. And if you're not in San Fran or LA, you want to be in SD, San Diego. Those are like the three top cities. Or Santa Barbara. Santa Barbara is very beautiful, but it's quieter.
It's chill. Now, LA, you hate it for the traffic. San Fran, you hate it because I mean, it's just thievery and everything.
Merced is hot. It's, you know. Okay. Anyway, here it is. It's gonna take It's gonna take you from San Francisco to Merced on the regular train tracks, then from Merced to Bakersfield on highspeed rail whenever they finish it, and then Bakersfield to LA in a bus, which itself could take 2 and 1/2 hours.
That's the project that they're now saying, if you're lucky, will be finished by the end of the 2030s for 200.
>> Stop with these sound effects. 231 billion dollars and it's going to be a whole rigomearroll. You may as well like fly or something or even like drive >> 30.
>> But maybe it'll be a little bit cheap in that little section.
>> 1 billion $200 billion over budget.
Three dec. And we we the voters voted for it. I didn't vote for it. 30 years late. That is not a bullet train. That is a [ __ ] train.
>> Oops. Sorry kids.
these cussing people.
That's That was Steve Hilton explaining it.
Politicians cussing like crazy now. They all think they're Trump and manly.
I I resend my endorsement for him. He cusses.
What a mess, huh? Bogus speech, he meant. Thank you, sir, for the explanation.
Terrible. What a mess. This This is what I This is one guy I kind of like now. No endorsement, but he's running for mayor.
When is the mayor vote? When is LA mayor vote?
Mayoral election in LA, June 2nd. Okay.
The primary for mayor, nonpartisan primary.
Karen Bass, Spencer Pratt, and Nathia Raman and 13 others running for the nonpartisan primary mayor per ballot pedia for of LA June 2nd and we're May 26th currently and I was I heard all this hype about Spencer Pratt.
Currently we have Karen Bass, sort of a former communist radical woman. and she went to Cuba and you know debated JLP on at Politicon some years back congressman woman came over here to be mayor of LA short-haired afro gal shortaired afro glasses lawyer liar um pretends like she's the reasonable one but she's not join in on the attacks over her being in Ghana or wherever.
Was she in Ghana? I just made that connection.
Karen Bass, Ghana is what appealed to the UN to call slavery the worst crime against humanity ever, the slave trade.
I'm shaking my head. Is that where she was?
Anyway, here is Spencer Pratt explaining um his position on you guys heard about the viral teeth moment. This was covered on the Jess Lee Peterson show about Oh, Kim, I think JLP covered it. I wonder if Anchor Baby covered it. I forget.
Eric Doerty posted this. Holy smokes. LA mayoral candidate kind of promoting Spencer Pratt just exposed that the N that the NOS's are busting in homeless people using them as products quote unquote to steal taxpayer funds. 60% of LA's homeless under Karenbass aren't from LA. They're not from Los Angeles.
Many are quote unquote bust in by non-government organizations formerly known as nonprofits. But some of these non so-called nonprofits, they get government money. So they're basically arms of the government of the liberal communist type of government stuff.
NOS's are synonymous with fraud at this point, claims Eric Daherty. Not necessarily a reliable source, but he's a chief content officer at Right Line News in Florida Voice News. Maryland Marylander turned Floridaian.
Men must vote. Charlie Kirk. That's a quote that he likes on his bio. Over 60% of the people in the streets of LA aren't even from LA. This is a quote from Spencer. Info may be false, right?
Or it may be true. It's because of NGO.
These NOS's have bust them in because they're products. They're they use their social security numbers to get Medicaid money. They get state money, federal money, city money. These are products.
These human beings, they don't care about these people. Oh, they being the NOS's really. Okay. And then uh they don't care about these people. They fix these people. If they fix these people, meaning if these people are fixed to where they can take care of themselves, the money stops.
So when I get in, we unplug. this whole complex in the city is going to have billions of dollars to get put back into our infrastructure.
Okay, so Spencer Pratt is being interviewed here and there's a picture of Karen Bass in this thing and he is asked about her saying we you can't have a life you can't live if you don't have and be successful if you don't have your teeth. You know how people take certain drugs like methamphetamines or something and I don't know if they grind and their teeth or they get really hungry and eat a lot of sugar and don't brush their teeth or what happens to their teeth but their teeth rot.
Maybe perhaps our resident health expert can explain. But here is Spencer Pratt.
>> Would you support giving the homeless people new teeth?
>> You know once I get them mandatory treatment and get them health and get them ready to get back in society. Of course, people need teeth. Is that a priority right now? No. What we need to give them is no more needles. Make sure they don't get fentanyl or the super pure meth or the super meth. That's the priority. But of course, whatever we need to do down the line because the billions are there to help these people.
But you need to have it so the people that actually need the help. There's a lot of people because there's different boxes of homelessness.
>> You've been following that though.
>> Yeah. I mean this everything she says is, you know, so my dad's a dentist, so I'll never, you know, shade, you know, people getting good teeth. I understand that. What these people need right now is more than good teeth. We have seven people dying on the street. That's what we need to focus on. The teeth >> where how many people >> the street that's what we need to focus on the We have seven people dying on the street.
>> Oh, seven people dying on the street.
Oh, really? Is that true?
>> That's what we need to focus on. the teeth can come down the line. But until we get all these people ready for the stat city watch this week, over 60% of the people on the streets of LA aren't even from LA. It's because these NOS's have bust them in because they're products. They use their social security numbers to get Medicaid money. They get state money, federal money, city money.
These are products. These human beings, they don't care about these people. If they fix these people, the the money stops. So when I get in, we unplug this whole complex and the city is going to have billions of dollars to put back into our infrastructure.
>> Isn't that nice? What a nice liberal man. He's They're going to get their teeth fixed. They already have billions to fix them and they have a mandate.
It's It's part of the law to get them the mandatory treatment. So, how about we enforce the law, I guess.
You know, when people are kind of crazy, you can 5150 them or something like that.
Shout out to Spencer Pratt. No endorsement implied.
But right on, sir. Don't you like how he just seems sort of reasonable?
He seems to He reminds me of Trump in that he's seems like Now, I'm not saying he's Trump. I'm not saying that he's good or whatever, but he seems like he he uh is that no even a liberal who's maybe undecided or slightly open-minded will be like that sounds like a good answer, right?
He forgot to vote. Don't worry about me.
This is so insane, says David. It is. I didn't know that seven people had died in LA. Is that true? Seven homeless deaths in LA.
Let's find out. Homeless deaths in LA are leveling off. Okay. Says LA Times article in March of last year. Just under seven people died on average every day. Every day in LA County.
Oh, seven deaths per day. I was like, imagine that if uh over the course of a year, I was thinking or something, you have seven people found dead in in on the streets. That's horrifying.
But I don't know that it's I mean, LA County is huge. Let's find out. A recent count public health report indicates an average of more than six unhoused. They call them liberal term, right?
People still die every day. However, this rate has begun to improve. LA County Department of So-called Public Health mortality rate dropped 10% in 2024, marking the first decline in more than a decade. I wonder if that's partly because in 2024, remember Gavin Newsome started to do like a homeless cleanup.
He started cleaning up trash and stuff like he to did a video thing where he was picking up trash. He rolled up his sleeves and the uh amount of homeless around these parts which had exploded since 2013 diminished a little bit again.
Crisis remains severe. 2,28 unhoused unhoused deaths recorded in the most recent county data.
Overdoses leading cause of death 40% of fatalities. That's a plurality, right?
Recent decrease due to expanded harm reduction and treatment services. They call it mortality rate more than four times the general LA County population.
Rising causes of death. Overall do overdose deaths have declined but traffic related injuries mostly affecting pedestrians and cyclists and suicide rates ooh unfortunately seen have seen increases in recently.
That's horrible.
remember one guy was uh I don't remember if whether he was homeless or not, but he was on his bike and wanting to do himself in.
Somebody told him about church with Jesse Lee Peterson and he's doing much better now.
What a mess.
Who knew?
Thank you, Spencer Pratt. Looking out for not just the homeless and not in the wrong way necessarily, but uh but uh whatever.
Also looking out for the people. See, this is the thing. Um I was talking to you guys about crime 85 IQ.
uh statistic from this guy who's banned Stefan Malinu, Master of Arts, MA, is that what that stands for? Free domain.
Been on the Fallen State. He's interviewed JLP a couple of times. They have very high IQ. Okay, so somebody asked, "Why don't Asians commit crimes?"
He says, "Because they have very high IQ." And the sweet spot for criminality is around IQ 85.
Very interesting.
Okay, so info may be false. Bear that in mind. But this was an interesting report from Ken Laort.
And I'll share with you a little bit of his little video, a nice presentation, a nicely edited video where he's presenting this thing about East Asians at home at home in their countries or as immigrants commit crime at rates far below other ethnicities even when they are poor. So this poverty causes crime thing false. I remember the late great Asodora and others have said, you know, you guys have pointed it out. I think some of you that Hispan uh black um even when they are rich wellto-do their criminality is now there I'm thinking about this their criminality is still higher than the rich white people or even maybe the poor white people not sure a lot of their wealth is some of let's say more per capita is from entertainment and athleticism and when you're an entertainer and athletic IC you don't necessarily get the wealth by being full-blown having tried and tested discipline you know whereas if you get your wealth for the most part by uh work and not necessarily nepotism of course then because that's affects everybody then you're less likely to be more you're more likely to be more stable but this it blows out the poverty causes crime narrative now There is a correlation, but correlation is not causation. And people think stuff that's not true. This is a 10 and a half minute video. I'm not going to share the whole thing with you, but listen to this. Why don't Asians commit crimes? I mean, they do, but not nearly as much as any other ethnic group. In America or around the world? And it's not just a stereotype, but a statistical fact that shows up everywhere you look. From Tokyo to Toronto, New York to San Francisco, Asian communities consistently rank as the safest. And I'm not talking about small differences here either. Their crime rates are often a fraction of other groups. If you look closely at statistics at all, you routinely see those numbers. And at first, the answer seems pretty clear because so many people tell us that poverty equals crime and Asians do better financially. But as it turns out, that's really not true.
And it's not like they're just naturally peaceful people either. Even a brief look at the Pacific theater in World War II will sober up anyone. The same culture that gives us today's ultraafe neighborhoods once produced some of history's most brutal regimes. So, what's going on? I'm Ken Laort. I dig into uncomfortable topics to find real answers, not just comfortable myths. The elephant in the room is this. What makes Asians so incredibly law-abiding in normal times? And what makes them absolute terrors during wartime? In the next few minutes, you'll learn some fascinating truths about culture, crime, and human nature that challenge everything you may think about what you know that makes communities safe or dangerous. We'll look at Asian crime numbers, including the broken link between poverty and crime. We'll investigate how Asian family and culture helps prevent crime. And we'll look at Asian countries during wartime when those social structures turned ugly.
There's a lot we can learn from all of this. So, let's start with the United States because the numbers here are striking. Now, comparing crime rates by ethnicity makes some people queasy, but ignoring them just isn't an answer to anything. When you look at crime rates on a per capita basis in the United States, per capita means per head or per hundred or per 100 thousand type type thing. Okay? compared to their share of the population. That's what per capita means. If that helps you guys who don't understand per capita, winky face emoji.
>> You almost always see the same pattern.
At the top are Native Americans and black Americans, Hispanics, whites, Asians. Looking at the raw numbers for Asians is eye opening. They make up about 7% of the US population.
>> It didn't used to be that high. They used to be less than 5% just not long ago, a decade or two ago. But only 1.3% of the total arrests only 7% of the general population but arrests and murders. 1.3% 1% >> of murderers 1.7% of rapes, 1% of robberies. There's only one category of crime where Asians are actually over represented. Gambling. They apparently commit 11% of America's gambling crimes.
>> So they're over represented. 7% of the population, 11% of gambling crimes.
All gambling is not a crime, apparently.
>> Go figure. And where there are concentrations of Asians in American cities, you can sometimes visually see differences. Look, I live in San Francisco and it's often obvious. Some of this city is a dystopian nightmare.
But when you go through heavily Asian neighborhoods like the Richmond District, they're like another world. I mean, they're not really wealthier, but you don't see nearly as many city problems like graffiti, trash everywhere, people peeing on the sidewalk, and bars covering all the windows. It's a palpable feeling, but it's not just in America.
>> This is so interesting.
>> Quirk of immigration patterns. When we look across the Pacific, the numbers are even more dramatic. Now, most of the world is Asian, almost 60% of the Earth's total population. So, we're looking at a lot of countries and billions of people. But in general, crime rates in Asian countries are just incredibly low. And the region that stands out by far the most is East Asia, Japan, South Korea, Hong Kong, and China. Japan has a murder rate of 0.23 per 100,000 people.
>> It's lower than Western Europe.
>> He said 0.2 something per 100,000.
>> 10 times lower than Canada. The United States, it's 30 times higher than Japan for murders. The results show up in ways that seem sometimes unbelievable to Westerners. In Tokyo, you'll see little kids riding the subway, going alone to school.
>> People leave their cell phones.
>> We used to do that. People, Listen to this. This is the part that is striking, and I interrupted it.
>> Show up in ways that seem sometimes unbelievable to Westerners. In Tokyo, you'll see little kids riding the subway, going alone to school. Listen to this. People leave their cell phones on empty tables to reserve their seats. In a study comparing dropped phones and wallets in New York and Tokyo, 88% of phones dropped by the researchers were handed into the police by Tokyo residents. Just 6% in New York.
Terrible.
>> For the wallets, 80% of Tokyo wallets made their way back. It was just 10% in New York.
>> Very interesting. They kept the phones more than they kept the wallets.
6% of lo of quote unquote lost phones.
This is a research study, okay? So, they just purposely drop a phone, right? or a wallet and just see whether it's handed into the police or uh you know kind of lost and found type stuff. 88% of phones, almost nine out of 10 phones quote unquote lost by researchers handed back to the police in Tokyo, Japan. 6% of the phones in New York. Nobody cares about anybody in New York. Shout out.
80% of Tokyo wallets handed back.
So they were more likely to keep the wallets. Japan was more likely to keep the wallets compared to the phones. They're like, "I can't use this phone. It's not mine.
It's not set up for me." And it's not like they're not smart enough to hack the phone, I guess, right? Maybe. I don't know. To me, I wouldn't be tempted by a phone. I'd be slightly more tempted by a wallet. Maybe. I guess. Not that I'm really tempted by either one. Uh, compared to 10% in New York.
Okay. So, we'll get >> Oh, wait, wait, wait, wait. What did they say about the abundance of police?
The abundance of police stations must make it easier, but there is something else going on. Interesting. Oh, yeah.
Yeah. Imagine it's not it's not convenient to turn it back in because we have to go all the way over to the police station or something. Anyways, >> just 6% in New York.
>> There might be something else here that I wanted to show.
>> For wallets, 80% of Tokyo wallets made their way back. It was just 10% in New York. Okay. So, we'll get into the wise, but let's start with a why not.
>> I mentioned it earlier, but pretty much everyone knows that poverty causes crime. It's like criminology 101 because it seemingly makes sense. When you're desperate for money, you're more likely to steal, rob, or worse. Except it's just not true. And Asian crime rates blow this theory apart. In New York City, with lots of immigrants, the percentage of Latino, blacks, and Asians living below the poverty line, they're all hovering around 24%. The percentage of whites living in poverty is about 13%.
>> But the Asian crime rates, they're not in the same league as Latinos or blacks.
They're some of the safest areas of the city. The same holds true in San Francisco.
>> Even when they're poor, >> which has more Asians living beneath the poverty level than any other group, >> so-called poor.
>> While Asians make up over a third of the city, they count for 4.4% of arrests.
>> Wow.
37% of the city, 4.4% of arrests. Does that mean the Asians are even slicker than blacks at committing crimes?
Anyway, >> now let me make a point. Arrests aren't always the best metric to look at crime because some neighborhoods have a lot more cops in them and >> for good reason. A lot more cops in them for good reason. Many people in those communities want more cops in there.
>> Make a lot more arrests. But these numbers for Asians hold true across the board. Arrests, reported victimization rates, murder stats, you name it.
Asian poverty doesn't translate into Asian crime in America or in Asia. Boom.
Hey, look. I think this is a City Journal. This looks like Okay. Barry Lzer. City Journal also has that woman whom I really like.
Heather Macdonald. She wrote the book The War on Cops or War on Police or something like that. And she's talked about the black um violent crime thing that kind of explains the black versus police conflict.
Right on. Right on. Right on. Poverty and violent crime do not go hand in hand. Per this article by uh Barry Latzer, L A T Zer. It looks like new data on Asian-Americans in New York City undercut a common ass assumption. May 25th, 2022. That article in City Journal. City Journal has a write up on JLP. I think I forget if that was Let me just look that up. City Journal Jesse Lee Peterson. I think it might have been Cra Claven. Yeah. Yeah. Andrew Claven. You guys know and love Andrew Claven, right?
Huh? Anybody?
Andrew Claven. This is a nice little thing. Not you, Siri.
That's funny. It was like Anyway, um Jesse Lee Peterson versus the Black Experience. Andrew Claven, winter 2010.
Winter in the Northern Hemisphere. That is if we're ballards, which many of us are. Shout out to the flatearthers. They are also in our Haker ranks. It's a picture of Jesse courtesy of Bond Reverend Peterson.
Okay. Um, deny cookies because I don't want to get in trouble with Bill. Not that he's told me anything about that.
In December 2001, Toyota Motor Company held a public meeting at Los Angeles Chapter of Commerce in conjunction with racial activist Jesse Jackson, the late great, right?
Rest in peace, Jesse Jackson. The purpose of the not that not that I was appreciative of him in his life except to make fun of him. What in the world did Jesse Jackson say? You could barely understand him, but it was always generally something evil. The purpose of the gathering was to discuss Toyota's 21st century diversity strategy 10-year program, some seven 8.8 billion dollars when a billion dollars was worth a dime in contracts for minorityowned businesses.
a capitulation to Jackson, it looked like, who threatened to call for a black boycott of the car maker of some ads he sees saw deemed racist.
Anyway, they denied that it was a racial extortion. Not convinced. Also in attendance that day, another black minister named Jesse, the Reverend Jesse Lee Peterson, staunchly conservative head of Bond Brotherhood organization of a new destiny. Rebuilding the family by rebuilding the man.
Um, and he called Jesse Jackson a racist demog demagogue. See, even JLP was calling him racist back then, but now he knows that it's something different.
I'm a boomer. I clicked something funny.
Okay.
All hell broke loose when he's he wrote in his book Scam. So, um, he talks about uh JLP and it's a very nice writeup.
Andrew Claven, now of Daily Wire, Christian but Jewish, of Jewish heritage. I think he's Christian though.
You, many of you guys are kind of haters of Andrew Claven, but it was a good a good writeup.
Very nice.
Shout out City Journal. a great source. Poverty and violence, crime do not go hand in hand. Thank you to once again to this guy, Ken Laortt.
I reposted that one, but maybe I should repost this one about the 85 IQ is considered the sweet spot for uh let's let's confirm this sweet spot for criminality.
Let me let me disclaim it by saying uh come on seen online. I'll put seen online just to distance myself from the statement. Uh it looks like you saw a garbled or exaggerated meme online.
Standardized IQ tests cap out mathematically around uh 16.
What? No, no, no, no, no, no. Okay.
Yeah, I accidentally typed a seven.
Let's see what the AI what Google AI says. The idea that IQ around 85 is the sweet spot for criminality, a popular internet theory rather than scientific consensus. Oh, they would dane. Is that a good word for it? They would dain to concede that or arrive at such a consensus.
Studies show an inverse relationship.
Lower IQ generally correlates correlates with higher rates of impulsivity and detected crime. But highly intelligent individuals simply commit different types of offenses. Aha.
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Makes sense. you hide your evil and do it in ways that are uh you know, everybody has their issues, but a little bit less unconducive to civilization, right? At least on the surface, at least in its immediiacy.
Dumb enough not to succeed in society legitimately, but smart enough to figure out how to commit crimes. So is so is one of the ideas per Google AI. That's not my word. Don't say dumb kids. Much of the and I'm not calling kids some.
I'm saying kids don't say dumb. Um much of the criminal justice literature links below average intelligence 70 to 90 with higher rates of violent impulsive and petty crimes often due to poor early academic performance and fewer legitimate whatever man economic opportunities.
Higher IQ in crime. Studies of high IQ populations, 149, pretty high, right?
Show they actually commit more property and white collar crimes than the average population, but much better at avoiding detection or exe executing complex victimless crimes, so-called H.
You know, I was thinking about um Jesse write up. That's cool.
And then I'll get to your calls. If you if you would like to call in, you're welcome to. Um, I was thinking, what was I thinking about?
Where was I?
Victimless crimes. Oh, yes.
I saw this little portion of this little debate on a competitor's channel on YouTube where it's a whole bunch of people who have are on one side of the argument and one lone person surrounded by them. Okay?
And there was this, you could call him a Trump detractor, a journalist talking about corruption. And he's talking about financial corruption specifically. And he made the claim that Trump, the Trump administration or Trump is more corrupt financially speaking than Biden, Joe Biden that is.
And maybe it's because Trump is smarter and all these other people are smart.
the people working with him, Kushner and whatever, Eric Trump maybe, I don't know. Um, and I don't endorse this corruption idea, of course, because when I'm talking about corruption, I'm talking about moral corruption. Lies.
Terrible lies. And as far as terrible lies, Joe Biden blows Trump out of the water with his terrible lies.
Trump's lies are the best lies. They're beautiful lies. big beautiful lies, the best.
But he mentioned these meme coins and Trump coins, you know, crypto type coins. And there's this crypto thing that the UAE, United Arab Emirates invested in that Trump Trump uh organization or something started. And so it's pumped up billions and billions of dollars according to this guy, Glenn Greenwald. I saw him say it.
And I saw a man who actually is called into the hate report in the JLP show and stuff say, "Okay, he knows what to do with money to make money." Fine. those guy he him and his you know his son-in-law and maybe his son and people in his organization know how to make money that's fine that's in my position and he also asked an interesting question this guy who was questioning the Trump detract war if it's real if that's real corruption there is such a thing as corruption in uh the law books I don't think that this real corruption in the law books something about enriching yourself using the office to enrich yourself or something.
I don't think that one is really enforced. Or is it?
Because I don't really understand what what these politicians do, but you know, they gain notoriety. They gain a sense of legitimacy and that is seen as valuable and they can use it to make money or something. Or they have people accuse Nancy Pelosi of insider training, trading, and I understand how that's not fair because you know what policy is on the horizon, right? And so you kind of know what's invest you get a little head start on everybody else on what to invest in. So that's considered not fair, I guess, if that's true about her. But I don't know or care. I never You've never heard me talk about Hunter Biden and the big guy because Hunter Biden talked about the big guy. You never heard me talk about that, I don't think. I certainly didn't harp on it. I didn't because I didn't care about it. I don't know. I don't care. I don't understand it. So, there's these so-called crimes like tax tax type crimes. I feel like the tax itself is practically a crime upon us.
So, whatever.
Now, you should I believe in being honest, of course, but I also believe in finding a way not to pay so much, especially when you have a messed up corrupt, if you will, government that doesn't enforce their laws. That's my idea of corruption, not enforcing the law, especially just laws.
That's what Obama did his as a he created this thing where I have a policy where I'm not going to enforce the laws and I'll just call it my policy. I have the freedom in terms of how to enforce the law. You have you have to have some leeway in terms of how to enforce some of these laws that Congress has given you. I get that. But he just plainly didn't enforce some of these laws.
That's real corruption.
Monetary corruption or real corruption.
Biden blew Trump out of the water and or the the administration, you know, in uh the corruption. Both of them. I notice the Trump administration and the Biden administration and the Obama administration, all three, I guess, they all went after their political enemies.
Uh, I felt like Obama was the sickest about it. I guess he definitely got away with it the most.
I mean, black people kind of get away with stuff because you can just cry racism and there's not much sympathy for whites.
So that's a corrupt culture. That's a corrupt culture where you don't treat everybody with the same sense of fairness.
Um Biden did it quite nakedly going after the J6ers and the media endorsed it. So the whole culture is corrupt, right?
And then Trump administration tried and failed with multiple of these people who probably are no good.
But they were I don't know they weren't very successful seemingly so far.
So there's monetary corruption or real corruption.
Trump, Biden, Obama, all these people getting all rich.
Anyway, oh wait a minute.
Before I get to uh your super chats, I want to invite you.
8887753773.
Okay, you can call in. You can super chat. We're past the top of the hour.
Let me um let you guys know. You got to catch Anchor Baby. Let me refresh. See if he's set up.
youtube.comsignameanbabyaby and rumble.comamericanerbaby.
It's not up yet, but make sure that you are following and have notifications turned on for both of those channels.
You can follow his here. Let me share it in the chat.
Nick, that's the American anchor, baby.
and call 8887753773.
All right, let me uh anchor baby Monday through Thursday 11:00 a.m. Pacific and then Fridays like 12:30 after the fallen state. What's up? Okay, let me do these super chats. What's up, Neo? Gifted the shades catch anchor baby ne uh supers.
Thank you. Unp.net.
Neo gifted the shades. Happy taco day.
Hey, that's right. It's taco Tuesday or tightwad Tuesday. Very nice. Great video, says NRDJ.
Indeed, sir. Very good video. If you follow Hey on X, let me see if I'm live on Facebook. Yes, indeed.
and about an hour ago.
Good morning to Ponto King over on Facebook. What's up CT with a heart?
Nice to see you. Thanks for the reminder about that thing CT about that caller on the Jess Lee Peterson show. She remembered something about a collar that could have been that might have been actually a little bit helpful in the conversation there.
shouting out my different platform viewers.
Let me refresh over on the buy me a coffee.com. Indeed, if I mosey on down over here, there was a super chat from Eric.
Coffee from Eric, as well as from someone and from Tori. Hey, and popcorn wanted to talk about the men of the town.
Men of the town philosophy. Popcorn, I believe that you agre you actually agree with me. Maybe I'm just not expressing it well. Sometimes I don't express myself the best. Maybe it's because I'm so high IQ but not high verbal IQ because something that's so obvious to me I'm explaining in maybe shortorthhand or just in a way that's garbled, not the clearest mind. But I believe you believe in men being running things. I know you probably I mean you would have voted for Kamla, but on some level you agree with me about men being men. And if men were men, those kids wouldn't steal, right? They wouldn't even they wouldn't it wouldn't even enter their minds to be stealing from a 7-Eleven.
I'm referring to something that took place yesterday. we were talking.
Okay, so Tori says, "Are we still friends? The anger baby is trying to cancel our trying to cancel our friendship yesterday. Yours and mine."
Perish the thought, Tori. An angger baby would do no such thing.
He just doesn't He just doesn't feel like playing the way that you play. It's nothing personal. He said, "Appreciate it.
Please say no to the anger baby attempt at cancel culture. Please tell me we are still friends.
Yes, sir. We are indeed. Tori, don't be so insecure.
Oh, don't take it. Don't take offense to me, calling you insecure.
Someone bought a coffee to answer the grown straight guy, quote unquote, who calls you Hickeyy Bear. Eye roll emoji.
I care because people like you want our history or erased.
This person alleges you want us, you want to say slurs so badly, but people put people like Zeni, Art, or William III in the same category as John, Ronnie, R O N, I believe, or Ryan just because of our skin. We are all very different. And you saying Ronnie changed your mind is wonderful yet crazy that you for so long saw black people as the enemy because you got robbed.
See, you got putting words in this man's mouth. I don't like you and I'm sort of glad you got robbed. He didn't get robbed. He just got threatened, sir.
Assaulted. Waved a gun waved in his face. You're getting the You can't even get the story straight. See, this is why we don't trust certain people as witnesses, even eyewitnesses or listeners, because you because of your ways. But at the end of the day, it was wrong no matter what race. Right on, sir. And to make sure I'm answering, I'm a black guy who cares about my history and ancestors because we know what white people like you would do to the black community. And that will never happen again.
You don't know. I forgot to give a shout out to Freddy. This is his birthday month. Ra. Hey, Frederick. Sometimes called Frederriica, but I don't necessarily call him that, but he calls himself that. And so I do call him that. This is his birthday month, and thank goodness Tony is calling in again. I love hearing from them, as well as Ryan, Maize, and Steven. Sve v apostrophe n. He stylizes it that way the most. Hopefully I'm not darning y'all. And yikes, it's Zenny Tuesday. Sick green face emoji. Throwing up emoji. It is any Tuesday. Let's see.
Indeed, it is actually. And a cast your votes chat. Who is the biggest racist now that Mark is gone?
He's joking around. The 60-year-old teenager David from Ocala. Boom hour.
Uh Jeff from Louisiana. Straight quote unquote. Alex from California.
Californiaia.
I don't think you're supposed to say [ __ ] William III. Thanks again, James. Well, thank you very kindly. Mr. Someone, which I believe to be I believe I can safely and with his blessing docks him as JC, I think, right? Eric with 10 coffees. Kora the Explorer.
Like Dora the Explorer. It's a children's thing. It was after my time, but I familiar because I've had um I know children, right? I know some former children. I'm a former child, but I wasn't a child at that time. Wants to explore every ounce of her parents' sanity. Yeah. Or lack thereof. Kora has been calling in for at least for the last 15 months to the Jay Lee Peterson Show. I don't know if I've heard from her on the Hate Report. She used JLP's advice to free her conscience. Her family isn't the problem. They're behaving normal or normally. Her reaction to them is the problem. Indeed, she originally used JLP's advice to go silent with her family to create chaos.
So, it would kick her out. That's what women do. They create chaos, then use the confusion to get what they want while making themselves into innocent victims.
On this person has a whole timeline.
March 14th, 2025. She called back when her parents gave her the boot.
kind of the only choice I have at this point. It's the only safe place I have to go, said Kora. When she's crying, she's lying. She This She did this intentionally because she knew she had an exit plan to move in with her boyfriend, now husband. She wanted to escape accountability by making it her parents' fault.
Alleges Eric, that's what she does with JLP. She calls in and plays word games until he sides with her. Then she uses it advice, his advice to free her conscience. She's blaming her family because it gives her a thrill and escape. It's her who won't cut contact with them. It's her anger, not theirs.
She enjoys the thrill of making them the problem to avoid seeing herself. The ego endlessly seeks to control the environment, to control people and not to see herself. Mirror emoji. I said, "Keep your family. Cut off contact with your mind."
And then he shares a link to her last year if JLP wants to see what she's doing. and he uh shared shares this link that I don't really want to get into at this time, but thank you for the tip, sir.
It is saved on my thing.
Very nice. Okay.
And let me just double check on the fan funding. All clear over here. Oh, no, we're not clear. Germaine Canada 007 sharpshooter James is black type stuff. Lol. Lots of laughs. Yeah. Um I was watching this white YouTuber guy who kept on saying type something.
It's a cuss word I guess of sorts.
And uh and it got into me. the things it stuck.
Thank you guys for the super chats.
Pilled coffees.
Um, a little bit of re reiteration about uh men using the truth and venting and some venting ladies as well.
Very nice.
Anyway, I want to get to um D out of New York is on the line, a first-time caller, I believe. D, thank you for calling. And holding, how you doing?
>> I'm good. How are you?
>> Fine. Is it D E?
>> Yeah, De E.
>> Nice. Thanks. Thank you, sir.
>> No worries.
Um, you seem to be like a progressive call-in show and I appreciate the opportunity to to speak with you and your audience.
>> Nice. How'd you find us?
>> Scrolling. Do scrolling >> right on on YouTube or where?
>> On YouTube. Yeah.
>> Nice.
Um, but yeah, I wanted to have a conversation because it sounded like you were talking about anchor babies and um I guess people that >> people that come into this country and I'm curious why you have so much anger to people that are immigrating and none for let's say um the military that has spent $25 trillion over the past 40 years.
>> That's a mind-boggling number. I wasn't even aware. I wasn't even aware that over the past 40 years the military, our American military has spent that much. I wasn't aware of that.
>> 24 trillion worth of our national debt.
>> And that's in present day, right?
>> I I would have to check. I'm not exactly sure. It's over the course of the past 40 years.
>> Yeah, that's fair enough. That's a lot.
I'm not, you know, we see, and just to clarify, there's a there's a host who's also on my network and his name is the American Anchor Baby. I'm not I wasn't expressing disdain toward all Anchor Babies by talking about the American Anchor Baby.
But I do have an issue with the B with the so-called anchor baby is issue where they people come in here who are not citizens, don't necessarily have loyalty to America or America's values, don't really love white people or black people or anybody who's like here. They just came to take advantage of the opportunities, which is a human nature thing to do. And then their children come up and they may be more humble. The immigrants may be more humble, but their children grow up spoiled and brainwashed in our education system and in our social media and media, mainstream media to be kind of anti-American. And then they have subverted America that way. And it's not the anchor baby's fault, too. They're just part of they're just, you know, a products of this situation, too.
>> Well, that's what I see is going on.
I thank you um for sharing.
>> Yeah.
>> I my my my struggle and my frustration I think with your point of view is that um you know a lot of these countries where a lot of these children come from.
>> Yeah. is a lot of these countries where these where these kids come from are from countries that the United States has um in like like interjected into like politics. So Venezuela is a good example or like or Colombia or um uh uh Iraq, Iran. Now >> we seem to um invest a lot of US dollars into um other countries uh politics >> and then claim um that we're doing it out of um any kind of just reason. And it's really just to export that country's resources.
>> Yeah. And then it's it's interesting >> always cost us and never it never comes back to the American people.
>> They end up coming here and some of them are contributors and some of them are are takers and so it ends up hurting us >> uh hurting the people but benefits the government. So >> well billionaires take more take more from the the the the actual resources that America generates and you have a lot of people working for less than nothing. I don't think it's um an insane thing to criticize the infrastructure and the society for making like enormous amounts of wealth and not addressing basic things that would help all the people. And I think it's almost irresponsible to then point at Republicans or Democrats and say that this party has it, you know, the idea better when Democrats are guilty of both and Republicans are also guilty of both.
They both really just want to keep feeding corporations rather than addressing like the really basic infrastructure things that we could address with that massive amount of wealth that we've generated. $ 24 trillion would look so much different over the past 40 years had we invested it back in the rail system, invested it back in making sure people had health care, invested it back in making sure people had housing. Like all the things that I think that you say are negatives that are borne on by immigrants are really just a lack of investment by both parties. It's not a it's not an eitheror. It's that both of them have failed to make sure that like workingass people have what they need. That's why the middle class is gone. That's Democrats made sure that um that NAFTA happened. They offshore jobs in the 90s and 2000s. Then then Republicans >> Yeah. So like and the Republicans don't care about um workers rights. They make sure that unions aren't a thing. Like a lot of the things that are very American and aren't left or right are never discussed in like in this kind of like dialogue. You know what I'm saying? Like like I'm an American. You're an American. I'm black. You're white. But like we can't seem to have like a basic conversation about why the government is failing to address even the most basic of needs of of people.
H the government I'm one who okay so let me go back to you you drew a contrast between frustration with immigrants and people born here to immigrants who are then called um Americans by birthright and uh I do have a frustration with that and then you said why don't I why don't I have that same frustration with the military spending that's bring that's in some cases causing those people to immigrate or refugee over here. And so if we didn't do that military stuff intervention, then we probably wouldn't have those people over here and for me to gripe about. I'd have to find something else to gripe about. That's true.
>> And uh but I'm of the opinion and I so fair point on the military thing. I'm for having a strong military and maybe there is some time to intervene, but it's probably way less than what we're doing and in a different way than from what we're doing, what we've been doing anyway.
>> Um, >> what what would you say is a justified war that we've had in the past I'm 40 years old. I I can't tell you a single war in the past 40 years that has been justified. We lied about Iraq, about having weapons of mass destruction. Um, we lost the war in um in Vietnam. We've uh we've uh losing this war in Iran. I mean, it's it's it's inflating um the cost for everybody. And nobody can tell me a single reason why we're there. I I I I I can't Afghanistan was a absolute like um like terrible um experience for almost everybody. I I I've known um people that I graduated with and friends that died in Afghanistan for another lie that the media and um and our politicians told us about. Like there hasn't been a single war in my entire lifetime in the past 70 years if you think about it that we either won Ukraine is another war that doesn't make sense. We spent $350 billion dollars on that war during Joe B. Joe Biden's presidency during that same time, 18% of um the homelessness rate went up. Like every single time we have a a a war that has that has not um benefited uh the American people whatsoever, we say we don't have a conversation about it. And Donald Trump is now increasing the military, but it's a 1.5 trillion dollars. Like, how do we keep spending this much money when this we're literally doing nothing about all the things that are happening during Donald Trump's presidency? 125,000 farmers are going to go bankrupt this year. Just this year alone, 125,000 farmers. I'm not a farmer, but I think that's a serious problem. And I I can't stop but look around every single place where white collar jobs are and they're laying off people left and right. Amazon, Walmart, uh uh UPS, um I I the list goes on and on and on.
All the major um employers across the country are laying off people left and right. Donald Trump doesn't have a single thing to say about it. And the fact is is that like um he he lies about like the the job numbers. What do you mean this is the best job numbers that you've ever seen in your life? These are obvious lies.
>> I don't know. I haven't kept up with it.
>> It's pathetic. It's pathetic. Well, it's pathetic to to to look at MAGA and think that, you know, there is um that they're they're winning and not look at the obvious. You don't have to be a political pundit to see what is right in front of your face. And I I look across the country and I I I don't see a single a single city in America doing well.
Every there's poverty everywhere.
>> Um I can't tell you of any war in my lifetime or in another whole lifetime prior probably that was necessarily right. So I can't tell you. I'm just saying for for the sake of principle maybe there is a time.
I generally have a lot more trust in Trump than what you're expressing.
Um I don't have any defense for >> why why I trust Trump.
>> He is really good. He is unique as a man and as a politician in that he speaks his mind with strength and he holds fast when he believes he's right. He's not such a flip-flopper. He does change his mind or not necessarily know. Maybe maybe there is a time for flip-flopping.
But he's um he comes across as capable positive thinking.
You know when you uh speak positively when you when your public statements kind of create the world his public statements sort of create the world.
When he speaks the whole world listens for better or worse. And he's speaking quite positively about this Iran thing.
And so this Iran thing may turn out well in the long run. Maybe you'll be proven right, but he may be proven right. Um >> well, can you show me an example of of something that he has done that has turned out positively?
>> The immigration thing. you know how um the border was just chaos seemingly under Obama and Biden and it's been a problem with people coming across illegally um for all all of our both our lifetimes right because I'm in my 40s as well. So he brought that way way way way way down to where we have net negative migration and or at least at one point. But but that's but I'm not exactly sure that that's true. Respectfully, I um looking at the numbers, uh Barack Obama had uh deported more people during his presidency than all of Trump's presidency um as of right now. Right.
>> I do not like Barack Obama. I think he lied us. I think he's another war criminal. He killed nearly two million people in Iraq and Afghanistan. Um, and if you if you look at like um at like Wikileaks, the reason why Julian Assange and um and uh I'm not forgetting the other guy's name. Um >> Edward Snowden or something.
>> Edward Snowden. They they released papers showing that the United States was killing 90% of innocent people. And I I don't see any difference between like Donald Trump and anything that the Democrats have done like even in immigration, but he's just doing it in a way that's more that's just louder that people that are >> right >> um more interested in hurting people that are immigrating here illegally or that they perceive as not acclimating to the American culture.
um as as being effective. And when you're actually looking at the numbers, immigration isn't a it isn't a rounding people up and tossing them out on their ass kind of thing. It's a paperwork thing. It's people overstaying their visas. The majority of people that come to America do so legally and then overstay on their visa. That's that's not a that's that is the American process. The problem is the process is not is not effective. It's not good. We need to fix the process. But like >> that that isn't that isn't making America better. I'm still looking around and I'm still seeing mass unemployment.
Um Donald Trump claimed to he created Doge and um he he he he reduced the the the um the budget by like you know a few hundred million dollars but then the budget has increased. We haven't he hasn't reduced the budget in America now. So >> meaning like our debt is going way up still.
>> Yeah. Our debt is still going up and our spending is still going up. So whatever whatever he's claiming was fraud, neglect, and abuse has still gone up beyond whatever he's And it seems like everything Donald Trump says, even though he has >> the um the presidency, the House, the Senate, and the um and the the the um the um the court the court system.
Nothing has actually changed. He doesn't really want immigration um changed in America. I think he still actually wants free cheap labor. Majority of the businesses that he owns uses um illegal immigrants. Donald Trump is not a anti- illegal immigrant um candidate. He he relies on the the inexpensive workforce that um that illegal immigration um relies on. I mean, like, if if you are a MAGA person and you believe Donald Trump is who he says he is, it it just like it baffles me when I I I hear people talk about Donald Trump as like even like a Christian. He is one of the most despicable people that I've ever seen or heard of in my life. He randomly kills people. Look, he he was he he was killing people in um off the shore of um of Mexico and in the Caribbean Sea.
>> Drug boats allegedly, right?
>> Alleged drug boats without any kind of evidence. And if you believe what you say, then demand evidence. I don't think it's it's an insane thing to ask to be um to be questioned about the thing that you claim is a well-held belief. And especially if you think that he's a Christian, if you believe in these lofty goals and you are a Christian, then it it does um come into question that everything that you believe is a lie. If this is the man that you think represents you, >> okay, so um let's deal with that.
>> I know that's a lie.
>> No, I know. No, you're fine.
>> Those start with the last thing first since that's fresh on my mind. I saw a New York Times article looking into one example of those drug boats because, you know, the media is very much questioning of Trump on those drug boats thing. And according to the media, a lot of them are like fishermen who take money to um to transport drugs.
And so they are indeed drug boats but they are just regular people but dealing you know transporting drugs and so uh some of them are called you know some of them by the administration have been called terrorists and they're and I don't know if that's true or not. I do take everything that Trump says and predicts and promises with a grain of salt because um not because I question that he wants to do those things, but I question that I don't I just know that in real life you're not necessarily going to be able to do a lot of the stuff that you set out to do. And so I I take a lot of those things as the right intentions. He talked about death penalty for drug dealers. And you could say that's a manner of in a manner of speaking a death penalty for drug dealers. Um, >> well, we don't we don't currently have a death penalty for for drug dealers, >> right? No, it's >> police should kill people that deal drugs. No, that was the military killing people because they they considered them, you know, like enemies of America because this drug situation in America is killing a lot of people. And so they deem it an emergency such that we're not putting up with this anymore. And so I can respect.
>> So why aren't we so why aren't we killing putting the death penalty to the Sackler family? the the Purdue >> the Sackler, the Purdue Pharma um CEOs that killed millions and millions and started the opioid epidemic in America, they they actually systematized the the the the known um uh dependencies of opioids across the United States. They killed they killed more than any of those individual fishermen than ever. Would you be for a death penalty for those guys? The death the Sackler family if that's true about them.
>> No, but they should be in jail. I mean, if we're talking about >> they should be in jail. That's the that's the process that >> if that's true.
>> If that's true, I suppose they should. I I know that I've heard people talk about the Sackler family before and they may be way wrong. It it it's kind of like um there's things that you can do politically that you can get away with politically. A lot of that is foreign action, drug boats, bombing Iran that you can't just deal with as easily in America. If you were to look into the different things that Trump is doing and the administration is doing with regard to immigration, going back to that thing, you would find out that he's actually a lot better on the immigration thing. If you believe that the immigration thing is out of control, as I do, Trump is a lot better than Obama.
Notwithstanding that Obama was able to deport a lot more. Obama had people working with him, local authorities working with him on holding them in jail for ICE or whatever. And a lot of the activists weren't for that. But if you looked into it, everything that Trump is doing, Trump was trying to reverse DACA.
Obama did DACA, deferred action for people who came here illegally as as minors or whatever. Um, so in and Obama allowed in unaccompanied alien children back 12 years ago like crazy.
>> Okay.
>> And so, um, >> how many how many how many people were was that? Could you have a >> No, I have no idea.
>> But just in general, >> like less than two million people, >> whatever the case is, the numbers aren't necessarily my point. It's um it's that Obama was for a lot of these people staying here and even coming here whereas Trump is more of a common sense law and order. Let's get a control of this. Let's let let's make it the best people come in not people from allegedly he said blank blank whole countries according to New York Times. So, he's looking out for America's best interests and and as far as hiring the illegals.
Let me talk a long time a little bit for a second.
>> No, you're fine.
>> Um, >> as far as that stuff goes, the business conditions created by the government made it so that it only made sense to, you know, hire people who who may be here illegally. Maybe they have their I9s. You can't as an employer, you cover your rear so that you don't actually know that they're illegal, even though you kind of do. Wink wink, maybe. And then uh same thing with uh manufacturing in China. You didn't mention this, but they say like a gotcha. Oh, Trump's ties are manufactured in China. Well, I mean, the federal the US government, you mentioned NAFTA and these different things. Um, they made it so that stuff had to go to China, you know. So, anyway, that's my thing.
>> Well, I I was gonna say then if if what you really wanted to do would be a far more effective way to make sure that immigrants didn't come into the country would be just to arrest the business owners that are um that are hiring them.
>> No, sir. Let me just explain. I just I just told >> if you wanted if you wanted to Sorry, go ahead. I just told you that I I know alleged illegals, right? I used to work with them.
>> And the business owner who hired them cannot be arrested because >> these people get their it's called an I9 >> and they are paid not under the table.
>> An I9 means you are here legally. You have a right to work in the country.
And so, uh, there it's like a common talking point that I question you. You, yes, we should crack down on people who knowingly hire illegals or whatever, but we got to crack down on both. And the and crack down on drug I'm for cracking down on both drug users and drug dealers. There's this thing where, oh, users are just victims. No, >> you know what I mean? I I I I personally I'm not a um I I'm not pro uh arresting.
I I don't think the drug war has worked at all. Uh we spent the past I I I I um was born in the 80s and I remember DARE and I remember all the Yeah.
>> Um I remember the dog. What was the dog's name? Um >> McGuff Scruff McGruff. Yeah. Scruff McGruff, right? Don't do drugs and all that stuff. I've been a a kid in America told not to do drugs for for my entire life and it has not worked. Drugs are everywhere and it doesn't seem to be an effective way to address the the real problem in America and I I I I don't think it's the drugs themselves. I think we live in a society that grinds people down. It makes living and having the things that we all kind of need to survive, a roof over our heads, um, you know, a meaningful existence where we work and we we find a place in society, um, an opportunity to raise our kids and a safe environment. And drugs are, I think, for a lot of people an escape from the fact that, um, their lives are sh are crap, excuse me. And that what we really need to do is address those under like the the the drug use in America is an underlying symptom because you don't have the same drug use.
>> Yeah. It's a symptom.
>> Well, we you have you have you don't have the same drug problem in all the places that you say that that drugs are coming from. China has the same drug problem that we have because they have the death penalty. doesn't have the same.
>> Well, they have well they have um they they experienced um the opioid they had like opio opium wars and they they I think suffered a long time but they also address like basic needs of people. The cost of food is is much much less is significantly less. They have you know affordable housing. 70% of all millennials in China own their homes.
like a lot of >> I hear that affordability is a problem in China and they're not having kids that much anymore either. I'm hearing that that it's it's kind of a worldwide problem maybe.
>> Maybe I think they had a problem with like the one child policy.
>> Oh yeah. One child and then two child and that's >> very counterproductive.
>> Yeah. China is not perfect at all. I'm not I'm not suggesting it is. I'm just simply saying that they don't what they don't have is the drug problems that we have here. And we make uh four times more um more money than they do like GDP. And then >> maybe that's why we're on drugs cuz we're spoiled.
>> Four times less people.
>> I don't think that. I think people are generally I think generally like like struggling. People in America are working two or three jobs just to make rent right now. Like it's a real real issue for people to just get by in America. I don't think it's a accident that people are are leaning on drugs. I don't think it's I don't think it's a mistake that people think that like that their their lives can't um can't be fulfilling if they don't have some kind of way to cope. I I think it's I think it's a real like backwards way that we look at everything that we spend money on is like drug enforcement punishing the people that are doing the thing that we actually cause. Why not spend some of that $24 trillion on on making sure we don't have so many homeless people or making sure that like there's enough jobs everywhere across the country or like there's a million things that we need to do across the country. There's infrastructure projects everywhere I look. Bridges that are failing, roads that are um that are pot potholes >> D in New York.
I'm running out of time, sir. Let's if you want to talk again, you're welcome to call in tomorrow, the next day. Uh I'm I'm live daily Monday through Friday. Uh you're in New York, so it's noon to what is it? Noon to 2 Eastern.
>> Yeah, it's almost 2 o'clock.
>> Yeah, I I end at 5 till and I have like another caller that I have to get to.
Appreciate you, sir.
>> No worries. Thank you, man. Appreciate you, son.
>> All right, Zenny out of Canada on the line here.
Zenny, how are you doing, man? Yo, supposed to be Zy Tuesday, not D Tuesday.
>> I know >> like half an I mean I agree with the basic what he was saying, but >> Oh, so you're a fellow liberal.
>> He called me progressive.
>> More money more money should be uh spent on >> the American people than on foreign wars and crap.
>> That's fair.
>> Even on supporting illegals. I say that we like take that money away from them and let the people keep their money. But go ahead.
>> Yeah. Also, yeah, remove the income tax, property tax. That would be great, too.
I for >> shrink the government.
>> Shrink the We need >> be going to >> Go ahead.
>> What What it shouldn't be going to is the federal task force to combat anti-semitism announces 15 city national awareness and action tour. President Trump has made it clear that this administration will not tolerate anti-semitism and the Department of Justice is committed to implementing that directive. This national tour is an important step in ensuring communities across the country know the federal government stands ready to work with them to confront anti-semitic threats, protect public safety, and uphold civil rights. Acting Attorney General Todd Blanch.
>> Beautiful statement. And I disclaim it.
>> I disclaim it. I don't know if that's wise. Uh you kind of spread anti-semitism the more you fight it, you know, like uh look at the people who who fight hate for good. The a the ADL or whoever it is.
>> Yeah. Um >> and the SPLC.
>> Yeah. Those people who fight hate, they spread hate. So I'm I'm with I'm I'm I'm kind of with you. Even though I tr as as far as hating anti or calling out anti-semitism, I would trust the Trump administration to do it less subversively than say uh anybody else.
But yeah.
>> All right. Hey, so so you're for Trump implementing anti-semitism laws? Yeah.
>> Because you you trust you trust Trump to implement anti-semitism laws even though it >> Yeah. He'll do it the right way. Not like the Bolshevixs who did it and then proceeded to uh exterminate what 30 million Christians in Russia.
>> Yeah. That that the anti-semitism laws always precipitate >> genocide against Christian communities.
So I wouldn't uh I wouldn't be very supportive of supportive of those anti-free speech laws that benefit one group in your country. I mean I don't think that's you know just more more evidence that Trump is Jewish.
>> That's funny man. And like so where's the anti- you know the anti you know people who are anti-Christian there's not even a word for that a nice little handy dandy word for that >> we have >> anti-whitism >> we have one minute >> whiteism oh yeah see what happens when I don't get my zeny Tuesday man I got content bro >> anyways anyways but like uh yeah so basically what I'm saying is so what's more important anti-whitism fighting anti-whitism in America or fighting anti-semitism Uh, I I don't know if I don't know if fighting anti-whitism should be necessarily a a law, but it should be a cultural revolution, if you will, which that's already happened. And and but if you're fighting, >> you never see Trump talking about that.
>> I know, but if you're fighting, >> nobody's ever used the word.
>> If you're fighting anti-white hate with hate, then you're not really helping, >> you know, because You and I are ticked about the attack on whites, right?
>> But that tickness isn't doing any good.
Whereas Trump is is just rolls his eyes about the racism thing and that does more for healing America than you or me with our hatred.
>> I don't think so, man. I think I think he needs to explicitly say that, you know, white people are being attacked in their own country, replaced. He has kind of alluded to that like whiteism lost.
>> Okay. Okay. Trump has a 99% approval rate in Israel and a 35% approval rating in America.
>> Thank you, sir. I appreciate you, man.
We'll talk again, I hope.
>> All right.
>> Yeah. Next Tuesday. Bye.
>> All right. Bye.
>> Oh, he got me with that click.
>> Unfortunately, I cannot get to Rick Hampton Tori Californiaia or the uh coffees that I was just showing y'all.
Peace in the Middle East, at least in your hearts. American Anchor Baby up next. Bye all. Adios.
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