Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Indeed, indeed it is.
Speaker 2 (00:03):
I'm grateful for every day, truly grateful, grateful for all
the blessings.
Speaker 1 (00:14):
And it's those blessings I want to protect, and I
know you do as well.
Speaker 2 (00:21):
Our safety, security, prosperity, opportunity, fairness.
Speaker 3 (00:27):
There are evil people.
Speaker 2 (00:29):
Out to destroy it, and it is our job to
prevent that from happening. It is also Hispanic Heritage Month.
I didn't realize this, but Ramon told me. Oddly enough,
it goes from September fifteenth to October fifteenth. I don't
know why they screwed the month up, but that feels
like a slight to Mexicans.
Speaker 3 (00:48):
But anyway, oh la megoes.
Speaker 4 (01:06):
It's me your favorite cultural tour guide for Hispanic Heritage Month,
Ramon Roebliz. I'm here to celebrate all the amazing things
our Hispanic brothers and sisters have done for America. I mean,
who else could have given us both Taco Tuesday and
spicy Salca at the same time. That's a national treasurer
right there. I mean, where would the United States be
(01:30):
without Hispanic influence? Probably still eating flavorless casserole and wondering
what cilantro is Thanks to Hispanic heritage. I now know
there's a spice rack that extends beyond salt and pepper,
mind blown and the music. Let's talk about the music.
Who doesn't love a good reggaetone be I may not
(01:51):
understand half the lyrics, but I can sure pretend I
do while embarrassing myself at every family wedding. This basito
may have been slow, but dance moves were even slower
this seed. But hey, I'm not here just to talk
about food and music. No, no, no, Hispanic culture has
given us so much more. Like Oh, Sophia Vergara, She's
(02:13):
basically the reason I binge watch TV. Oh and Danny Trejo,
the only man who could terrify me and sell me
a taco at the same time. Now that's serious multitasking.
And let's not forget about history. I heard somewhere that
some guy named Sezar Chabez fought for workers rights. I
think it involves grapes. Anyway, I've never felt more connected
to produce. So to all you great pickers out there,
(02:34):
gracias and salude to my wine collection. So this Hispanic
Heritage Month, let's raise a margarita to everything that makes
this culture incredible, from the salsa I put on everything
to the fact that I can dance like no one's watching,
because believe me, they shouldn't be. Remember, friends, Hispanic Heritage
Month isn't just a month, It's every day we enjoy
(02:55):
a good taco dance, a Latin beat, or attempt to
roll our ours like a troopro. So here's to you
me and he goes gracias for everything, Viva la Fiesta.
Speaker 2 (03:07):
Fiscal year of twenty twenty, the US Border Patrol apprehended
over four hundred thousand people four hundred thousand and six
fifty one is their official number trying to cross the
southern border into the United States.
Speaker 1 (03:24):
Four hundred that's in your mind.
Speaker 2 (03:26):
By way of comparison, a new ICE report reveals the
Biden Harris administration has let in four hundred twenty five
thousand illegal aliens who are convicted criminals, who they then
released into the country. They are letting more people in
(03:48):
who are convicted criminals than were allowed in during the
Trump administration, and he was limited by what he could do.
This is this bad, bad stuff. The data says that
among those not in detention, there are four hundred twenty
(04:10):
five four hundred thirty one convicted criminals, two hundred twenty
two thousand, one hundred forty one with pending criminal charges.
This is according to ICE. This isn't some right wing conspiracy.
You know the numbers are higher than this. This is
what ICE is releasing. Those include sixty two thousand, two
hundred thirty one convicted of assault, fourteen thousand, three hundred
(04:34):
one convicted of burglary, fifty six thousand, five hundred thirty
three with drug convictions, thirteen thousand, ninety nine convicted of homicide.
None of this had to happen. Americans are being raped,
murdered by people who were never supposed to be here.
(04:55):
An additional two thousand, five hundred twenty one have kidnapping
convictions and fifteen thousand, eight hundred eleven have sexual assault convictions.
There are another eighteen hundred and forty five with pending
homicide charges, forty two thousand, nine hundred and fifteen with
assault charges, thirty two hundred and sixty six with burglary charges,
(05:20):
forty two hundred and fifty with assault charges.
Speaker 1 (05:26):
Ramon, do me a favor. I guess it's too long
to do that. I guess it's you.
Speaker 2 (05:34):
Know what, save this segment. We're going to play this
segment again in the next hour. I'm tempted to just
play this segment again and again and again and again
and again. When people understand you rush to your abortion rally. Okay,
rush to your abortion rally and say, I'm voting for
(05:57):
her because I'm for her story. Because abortion, your baby's
going to be killed, and you too, by these people.
Your economy has been killed. You're going to be killed,
Your child is going to be killed. And this is
(06:19):
this is what people signed up for. This is apparently
what people want because the only reason, the only thing
she is running on is more abortions. And if you
listen to the idiots, by the way, it's a lot
of women. And then it's cissy men, which which is
(06:42):
what Tim Waltz is, which is what Doug m Hoff,
Kamala Harris's husband or whatever, whatever his relationship.
Speaker 1 (06:51):
Is, it is cissy men.
Speaker 2 (06:54):
That that's in fact, there's an interview we're going to
play it for you later that Doug m Hoff is
doing where the reporter says you have redefined masculinity for
American men. That's not masculinity, touts I got news for you.
He hasn't redefined masculinity. Him and Tip. You know what
him and Tim Waltz have done since Richard Simmons died.
(07:16):
They've made us think of Richard Simmons. That's about all
they've done. They've not redefined anything. And I got news
for you. If you live in an area like North
Carolina that's been hit by a big storm, you don't
want those sissy men aren't coming to help you. I
can guarantee you that. I can guarante you that Fox
(07:37):
News with the story.
Speaker 5 (07:38):
We just got these numbers moments ago. But it's a
jaw dropper, to say the least. So to set the
stage here, let me just explain what these numbers mean.
ICE has something called a non detained docket. Essentially, what
that is is it means migrants who were encountered by
DHS but are no longer in federal custody. So who's
on this non detained docket. It's illegal immigrants who are
(08:00):
caught and released at the border, released with the court
date years away. They're in immigration proceedings, combined with illegal
immigrants who have already been ordered deported from the country
by a judge but are still here. Roaming the country,
So keep that in mind. This non detained docket. According
to a letter that the acting Director of ICE just
sent to Texas Congressman Tony Gonzalez, on ICE's non detained docket,
(08:26):
they're currently tracking four hundred and twenty five thousand non
citizens who have been convicted of a crime. Of that number,
over thirteen thousand non citizens have convictions for homicide and
are on the non detained docket, meaning they're roaming the
country right now. On top of that, there are another
(08:47):
fifteen thousand, eight hundred and eleven non citizens convicted of
sexual assault who are roaming the country right now on
ICE's non detained docket. It doesn't stop there. Those are convictions.
The ICE director also says there are currently just under
nineteen hundred non citizens on the non detained docket who
(09:08):
have pending homicide charges who are roaming the country, and
another four thousand, two hundred and fifty non citizens who
have pending sexual assault charges who are roaming the country
on the non detained docket. So people's eyes might be
glazing over right now with all the numbers we just
threw out. You just to put it in a nutshell
(09:29):
right here, what we've learned from the acting ICE Director
via this letter to Congressman Tony Gonzalez is right now,
there are over thirteen thousand illegal aliens convicted of homicide
who are roaming the United States right now. There are
another fifteen eight hundred and eleven illegal aliens roaming the
country right now who have been convicted of sexual assault,
(09:51):
and there are even more who are facing charges for
homicide and charges for sexual assaults. So this just goes
to show, guys, the non detained docket has exploded under
the Biden administration to over I believe it's seven point
three million. They're anticipating it could hit eight million by
the end of the years. But looking at the numbers
on this letter right here, there are currently over six
(10:14):
hundred thousand non citizens on ICE's non detained docket who
are either convicted excuse me, six hundred thousand non citizens
on this non detained docket who are roaming the country
right now. Of that, four hundred and twenty five thousand
have already been convicted of crimes, two hundred and twenty
two thousand are pending crimes, and again, the most serious
(10:35):
crimes we just told you about over thirteen thousand convicted
of homicide, over fifteen thousand convicted of sexual assault. And honestly,
that is not a surprise to hear, given these horrible
headlines we keep seeing popping up in multiple parts of
the country almost every day now of a horrible sexual
assault or a murder or another violent felony committed by
(10:56):
an illegal alien who is often caught and release from custody.
And the jaw drop for here too, guys, is all
these numbers we just rattled off, they don't even account
for the nearly two million gotaways who have crossed our
border under the Biden administration. Those almost two million gotaways,
they were never encountered by DHS. They snuck in, they
were never caught by border patrol, they were never encountered
by ICE. There's no record of them. So they have
(11:18):
nothing to do with the numbers I just rattled off
to you. These are just the numbers of people that
ICE has already encountered, that Border Patrol has encountered, that
DHS knows who they are. And we just saw those
horrible stories in Nantucket the other day. ICE ran a
week long operation in Nantucket and in a single operation,
in a forty eight hour span, they arrested two salvador
(11:40):
and illegal aliens who came into the country as got
aways and were arrested for child rape. On Nantucket, they
got a Brazilian guy who was arrested for sexually assaulting
a Nantucket resident, and then a Guatemalan guy who was
previously deported who was arrested for sexually assaulting a Nantucket resident.
So we keep seeing all these headlines about migrant crime
(12:01):
popping up in different cities all over the country. This
right here is the first time we have ever seen
specific numbers as to who and what ICE is tracking
when it comes to convicted criminals who have crossed the
border at some point and are either supposed to be
deported or are going through their immigration proceedings but are
not in nice custody right now and are roaming the country.
(12:22):
So I'll ping it back to you guys, but some
pretty jaw dropping numbers that we are still going through
as we speak right now.
Speaker 6 (12:29):
Joe Biden became mentally impaired with the Michael Perry.
Speaker 3 (12:32):
Kamala was born that way.
Speaker 1 (12:35):
Let's take a moment.
Speaker 2 (12:37):
And congratulate, applaud, praise some folks because it's very easy
to point out the evil, but there's.
Speaker 1 (12:44):
Good people doing good things.
Speaker 2 (12:47):
The Union for the Border Patrol Agents stood up to
the fact that Kamala Harris did nothing more than a
campaign stunt on the border. Kamala Harris says, she cares
about the border, all right, and then she has a
meeting or she has a little pressop where she goes
along and the story goes that no regular Border patrol
(13:09):
guards or officers were there with her. It was only
the top.
Speaker 1 (13:14):
Folks from the Border Patrol.
Speaker 2 (13:16):
Well, this is what the Vice President Art de Quito
of the Border Patrol Council had to say about that
little photo op.
Speaker 7 (13:25):
Look, I stood with President Trump when he actually went
to the border to areas that is, you know, notorious
for drug smuggling and human smuggling. He stood there, he
spoke to the agents. He's been speaking to the boots
on the ground for over eight years. He's spoken to
him asking what's going on. He's gone through the National
Border Patrol Council numerous times. He stood there for over
an hour in over one hundred degree heats with victims
(13:47):
of families from illegal alliance, and he spoke to reporters
today Vice President Harris went down there and she spoke
to two members of management. She didn't speak to agents.
Speaker 8 (13:57):
She spoke to.
Speaker 7 (13:58):
Two members of management. And I'm going to tell you,
I've bet money that even those two members I feel
bad for them because I guarantee you they didn't even
want to be there. But she spoke to these two
members of management, and she was there for twenty minutes
for a photo op. That's all she did. President Trump
actually cares, and he has actually gone down there and
met with boots on the ground, and he's done it
multiple times, for long times at all. Every single time
(14:21):
he's been there. This is just nothing but a complete
photo op. That's all it is. It's her hail Mary
before the election.
Speaker 2 (14:29):
And a reminder as to who these people are who
are coming across the border. Bill Malusian with Fox News told.
Speaker 5 (14:36):
Us ICE has something called a non detained docket. Essentially,
what that is is it means migrants who were encountered
by DHS but are no longer in federal custody. So
who's on this non detained docket. It's illegal immigrants who
were caught and released at the border, released with the
court date years away. They're in immigration proceedings, combined with
illegal immigrants who have already been ordered deported from the
(15:00):
country by a judge but are still here roaming the country,
So keep that in mind. This non detained docket. According
to a letter that the acting Director of ICE just
sent to Texas Congressman Tony Gonzalez, on ICE's non detained docket,
they're currently tracking four hundred and twenty five thousand non
(15:21):
citizens who have been convicted of a crime. Of that number,
over thirteen thousand non citizens have convictions for homicide and
are on the non detained docket, meaning they're roaming the
country right now. On top of that, there are another
fifteen thousand, eight hundred and eleven non citizens convicted of
(15:42):
sexual assault who are roaming the country right now on
ICE's non detained docket. It doesn't stop there. Those are convictions.
The ICE director also says they're currently just under nineteen
hundred non citizens on the non detained docket who have
ten homicide charges who are roaming the country and another
(16:04):
four thousand, two hundred and fifty non citizens who have
penning sexual assault charges who are roaming the country on
the non detained docket. So people's eyes might be glazing
over right now with all the numbers we just threw
out you just to put it in a nutshell right here,
what we've learned from the acting ICE Director via this
letter to Congressman Tony Gonzalez is, right now, there are
(16:27):
over thirteen thousand illegal aliens convicted of homicide who are
roaming the United States right now. There are another fifteen
eight hundred and eleven illegal aliens roaming the country right
now who have been convicted of sexual assault, and there
are even more who are facing charges for homicide and
charges for sexual assault. So this just goes to show, guys,
(16:49):
the non detained docket has exploded under the Biden administration
to over I believe it's seven point three million. They're
anticipating it could hit eight million by the end of
the years. But looking at the numbers on this letter
right here, there are currently over six hundred thousand non
citizens on ICE's non detained docket who are either convicted
(17:11):
or excuse me, six hundred thousand non citizens on this
non detained docket who are roaming the country right now.
Of that, four hundred and twenty five thousand have already
been convicted of crimes, two hundred and twenty two thousand
are pending crimes.
Speaker 1 (17:26):
Those numbers are just staggering.
Speaker 2 (17:29):
Well, this is a segment where we're paying compliments, and
our compliment in this case is to Boise State women's basketball, sorry,
women's volleyball team. They had a match schedule up against
San Jose State and they said, you know what, San
(17:52):
Jose State has a man on the team. And having
a man on the team means that, as we've seen,
there is the potential that one of our players could
get hurt because a man can spike the ball so
hard that one of our players has her face crushed.
(18:12):
And this has actually happened, not against Boise State, but
against other teams. The governor of Idaho, Brad Little, applauded
the move, saying, we need to ensure player safety for
all our female athletes and continue the fight for fairness
in women's sports. You know, if San Jose State wants
(18:34):
boys to play in girls volleyball, literally every team should
say we refuse to play, even if you have to
forfeit the game. That's the only way you stop this stuff. See,
you can't bring about change, you can't exercise conviction without suffering.
(18:55):
But if everybody will do it, you'll win. See everybody
thinks they want someone else to do it first. Congratulations
to Boise State. This story from KTVB TV in Boise, Idaho.
Speaker 9 (19:10):
Boise State Athletics has announced it is canceling its volleyball
match against San Jose State tomorrow. Boise State will be
forfeiting the game that was supposed to be played in
San Jose, California, so Boise State Volleyball will be taking
an official loss in the forfeited match. The team is
not providing a reason right now for canceling the game tomorrow,
(19:32):
but we do know that San Jose State has a
transgender athlete on their volleyball roster. And we also know
that at least one other school has canceled a match
against the San Jose State team this year, and there
has been calls from international and national groups against transgender
athletes in women's sports for more schools to take similar actions.
(19:52):
We can also tell you that after Boise State announce
the cancelation very briefly, Idaho Governor Brad Little He posted
a statement on s social media saying, quote, I applaud
Boise State for working within the spirit of my Executive
Order to defending Women's Sports Act.
Speaker 8 (20:08):
We need to ensure a player safety for.
Speaker 9 (20:10):
All of our female athletes and continue to fight for
fairness in women's sports.
Speaker 8 (20:14):
We are going to the border. We've been to the border.
Speaker 2 (20:16):
You haven't been with the model very and I haven't
been to Europe. Unless the score is seventy to nothing,
if a game is close, I will watch anything.
Speaker 1 (20:28):
I don't care.
Speaker 2 (20:29):
I love high school football. I wish there was a
better way to watch high school football. It tends to
be a little rough when you do when they do
put it on TV, because it's poor video production quality
and you're used to the cameras and all that of
big money college and pro football. But I love watching young.
Speaker 1 (20:52):
People youth football.
Speaker 2 (20:54):
That is, especially when they put Trickeration works at that
level because there's so much easier to trick a triple reverse,
a statue of liberty, a swinging gate.
Speaker 1 (21:06):
I love that stuff, love it.
Speaker 2 (21:09):
You know, there was a moment this week, let's see
if I got time to do this.
Speaker 1 (21:15):
Yeah, there was a moment this week.
Speaker 2 (21:19):
That I didn't get to play out the entirety of
what I wanted to talk about. So I saved it
and I don't want the week to go by because
this is a great.
Speaker 1 (21:26):
Learning moment, teachable moment.
Speaker 2 (21:30):
The Trump campaign several weeks ago released an ad.
Speaker 1 (21:35):
This is five oh one.
Speaker 2 (21:37):
They released an AD and they aired it during NFL games. Now,
when you air a spot during NFL games, you don't
play the spot that is designed for your base. You
play a spot that is designed for that demo that
they'll connect with. And rather than talk about traditional publican
(22:00):
type issues because it's an NFL crowd, the ad was
about how creepy it is that Kamala supports and we
can prove it because it's her saying.
Speaker 1 (22:11):
It in her own words.
Speaker 2 (22:12):
She supports sex changes for prisoners, inmates, murderers, rapists in prison,
sex changes for them and illegals who are in prison.
She supports us paying for that. Now, that's so creepy
(22:35):
and so irrational. It's not the most important thing perhaps
in the country, or the biggest expenditure, but it tells
you a lot. It hits people on a level they go, well,
if she would do that, did she's crazy?
Speaker 1 (22:52):
So here was the ad.
Speaker 8 (22:54):
Kamala supports taxpayer funded sex changes from prisoners, surgery.
Speaker 7 (23:00):
For prisoners, every transgender inmate in the prison system would
have access.
Speaker 8 (23:07):
It's hard to believe, but it's true. Even the liberal
media was shocked. Kamala supports taxpayer funded sex changes for
prisoners and illegal aliens.
Speaker 2 (23:15):
Every transgender inmate would have access.
Speaker 8 (23:18):
Kamala is for they them. President Trump is for you.
Speaker 4 (23:21):
I'm Donald J.
Speaker 8 (23:22):
Trump, and I approve this message.
Speaker 2 (23:24):
This is why you have to campaign outside your comfort zone.
So Charlemagne, who is the host of a show called
The Breakfast Club, which is in the radio.
Speaker 1 (23:34):
It's called urban.
Speaker 2 (23:34):
It means black black listeners across the country like kind
of the way the Tom Joyner Show used to. I
listened to Tom Joyner for years. I thought it was
the best show on in the mornings. It was fantast
I woke up to it. Anyway, Charlemagne has a younger,
slightly more political audience on black radio across the country.
(23:56):
And this is him responding. And this is why that
ad airing on the NFL. He may not ever watch
Fox Fox News, he may not ever listen to our
show or any other, but he was watching in an
NFL game when that came on. And it's undoubtedly true
because she's saying it herself.
Speaker 1 (24:14):
So listen to this. I'll tell you what.
Speaker 10 (24:17):
That ad they was running during the football games this
weekend claiming the vice president supports funding gender transition surgeries
for all president mats and migrants in the US.
Speaker 8 (24:24):
That was nuts.
Speaker 6 (24:26):
I don't know if it wouldn't say nuts, but that
was crazy.
Speaker 3 (24:28):
That was funny. I don't know.
Speaker 10 (24:29):
I don't know if it was the backdrop of football.
But when you hear the narrators say Commala supports taxpayer
funded sex changes for prisoners, that one line, I was like, hell, no,
I don't want my taxpayer dollars going to that.
Speaker 6 (24:39):
Definitely say that she did. That ad was effective. KAMMLA
took a picture of the transgender it was. It was
this is what they were saying that It made it
seem like Kammala supports transgender sex changes in jail with
our money. That's what That's what it came.
Speaker 10 (24:50):
That was yes, it said it literally said, uh that
kmmala supports taxpayer funded sex changes for prisoners, and it
talks about how you know, uh uh, she supports funding
gender transition surgeries for all prison inmates and migrants in
the United States.
Speaker 3 (25:05):
That ad was impactful, like it was I'm.
Speaker 1 (25:08):
Not gonna like that because it was dorm football. Yes,
I think it was because it was dorm football.
Speaker 8 (25:12):
Like the contrast of it.
Speaker 6 (25:14):
Yes, But the last week they had the same thing
running on. Tim Watson said he lets likes tampons and
boys bathrooms.
Speaker 3 (25:19):
I would not have paid that.
Speaker 10 (25:20):
I don't think I would have paid that commercial no
attention if it was any other time. But when you're
watching football and you just mind, you just what what
the hell? In between being commercials, they give you this.
Speaker 1 (25:33):
So what you're seeing there is.
Speaker 2 (25:38):
That even folks who, for their own professional protection, are
kind to Kamala Harris and we're kind to Joe Biden,
even those folks are having to admit.
Speaker 1 (25:55):
It's embarrassing.
Speaker 2 (25:57):
Because you don't want to be associated with Mala Harris
when she's saying, I want to take your money and
spend it on having men's wieners cut off who are
in the country illegally and in prison for committing murders.
I want to spend your money because they want their
wiener cut off. The creep factor there is so bad.
(26:23):
And by the way, you know who really really doesn't
want that? You know what demographic doesn't want that the most.
The demographic that has the most trouble with that position Blacks.
On social issues like that, black males have the biggest
(26:43):
response to it. Now, is Trump going to win fifty
percent of them?
Speaker 9 (26:48):
No?
Speaker 2 (26:49):
Is he going to outperform? Yes, they are desperately trying
to spark a George Floyd event. And these are the
types of things you got a black coworker. Don't talk
to them about the same old, same old. Never discuss abortion.
Focus on this. Hey, do you want your tax dollars?
(27:11):
You're paying too much in taxes going for an illegal
alien that commits a murder and ends up in prison
and he wants his winner chopped off? Or do you want
to pay for that because Kamala wants you to pay
for that. You don't believe it. Well, here is the link.
Here is her saying it to a dude, by the way,
a dude dressed as a woman. That's how you want elections.
That's how you want elections.
Speaker 6 (27:31):
Right there.
Speaker 2 (27:32):
You find common ground. We don't have to agree one
hundred percent of things. You find common ground