'Stop the # Mob Mentality' - 8⧸23⧸18
Episode Stats
Length
1 hour and 51 minutes
Words per Minute
148.05165
Summary
In one week last month, the city of San Francisco logged over 16,000 complaints of human poop on the streets. Mayor London Breed was, I m quoting, absolutely shocked after walking around town and seeing not only all the poop, but all of the used drug needles.
Transcript
00:00:00.000
The Blaze Radio Network, on demand, Glenn Beck.
00:00:08.360
Well, we have to start the show with a California update, brought to you by our sponsor, New Pooperoni.
00:00:19.440
Yes, California's crappy policies now yielding some literal crappy results.
00:00:24.200
In one week last month, the city of San Francisco logged over 16,000 complaints of human poop on the streets.
00:00:35.040
16,000 people called the city and went, there, somebody's crapping in the street in front of my house.
00:00:42.720
In seven days, the mounds of vagrant-generated poop actually forced the closure of a convention being held downtown.
00:00:55.200
You know, didn't somebody just pull a convention because of a bathroom issue in some other state?
00:01:07.180
If you live in San Francisco, I want you to know, help is on the way.
00:01:11.740
Mayor London Breed was, I'm quoting, absolutely shocked after walking around town and seeing not only all of the poop, but all of the used drug needles.
00:01:23.260
Now, how many needles are they giving out in San Francisco every month?
00:01:29.380
It's hundreds of thousands of needles they're giving out.
00:01:32.380
Well, and some of those come back to be recycled, too.
00:01:37.340
Well, they're supposed to return them, but you can't expect when you, you know, heroin users, they're not always dependable.
00:01:43.420
Well, the mayor has decided she's mad as hell, and she's not going to take it anymore.
00:01:54.560
I think we're going to be seeing this action hero on the big screen soon.
00:01:59.440
It is the San Francisco version of Delta Force, or the Navy SEALs, and they may already be patrolling your streets in San Francisco, dressed in hazmat suits and patrolling neighborhoods with the state-of-the-art patrol vehicle equipped with a steam cleaner and disinfectant.
00:02:18.460
They are the men and women of the San Francisco Poop Patrol.
00:02:36.640
San Francisco has now allocated over $100 million to combat the poop and needle problem.
00:02:47.140
Now, you might be thinking to yourself, holy crap, $100 million?
00:02:53.740
That sounds like a colossal waste of a ton of money.
00:02:56.760
You can't get it done for cheaper than $100 million?
00:03:01.860
Well, remember, it's California and San Francisco.
00:03:09.660
You remember when $100 million, you know, was a lot of money?
00:03:12.660
It doesn't go as far, you know, as it used to in that hellhole of San Francisco.
00:03:18.320
$100 million in San Francisco, I think, can get you maybe 175 square feet, you know, of a beautiful apartment.
00:03:29.320
Probably, I think, somewhere between five and eight gallons of gas or the Poop Patrol.
00:03:39.240
The new San Francisco Public Works budget includes $72.5 million for street cleaning.
00:03:48.620
$12 million for housekeepers to get this clean homeless encampments.
00:04:10.800
If I'm working in San Francisco, I'm just working at a deli, and I'm paying taxes to San Francisco,
00:04:20.840
I'm paying taxes so the people who come and poop in front of my store,
00:04:36.180
Also, $2.8 million for washing down the camps and removing any biohazard.
00:04:40.880
$2.3 million to steam the poop-infested streets.
00:04:53.920
And, of course, nearly $900,000 for the poop patrol.
00:04:58.780
Each member of the poop patrol takes over, you ready?
00:05:03.480
Takes home over $184,000 in salary and benefits.
00:05:11.080
I don't know what it would cost to get me to pick up human poop.
00:05:17.860
It would probably be a little more expensive than that.
00:05:23.600
But are you telling me that you can't find, oh, I don't know,
00:05:29.460
a group of teenagers, college students, anybody?
00:05:33.320
How about all of those progressives that just love people so much,
00:05:39.720
and you're telling me that you can't get them for, I don't know,
00:05:47.700
You can't get them to go clean the streets of the human feces?
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$184,000 is what you're paying people to pick up poop?
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If I may, I'd like to give some advice to the new unit patrolling California streets.
00:06:05.960
If you would like to clean up all the crap in your cities,
00:06:11.060
I would suggest that you start removing the human poop that you,
00:06:19.040
The ones that are throwing all this money at a failed city and a failed policy,
00:06:29.480
by simply spraying something on it to cover up the scent.
00:06:36.160
May I suggest that you start shoveling out the Capitol building in Sacramento
00:06:40.240
and then work your way down to every city government from there.
00:06:47.700
Poop Patrol for Progressive Politicians and Policy,
00:06:54.500
And, you know, and I think there would be some funding from,
00:07:01.780
I mean, I would make a donation right now to the PPPP.
00:07:11.940
Keep an eye out and look for them coming soon to movie theaters near you,
00:07:17.040
patrolling the streets of D.C. and San Francisco.
00:07:46.400
Now, there are services in this service economy we now have.
00:07:51.340
Which will come to your home and pick up the dog poop from your lawn for like,
00:07:59.860
you know, you come over once a week and it's like maybe $50 a month.
00:08:07.380
but there is also another service that comes over and picks up the poop in your lawn
00:08:17.560
As I explained to my kids, that's what I had you for.
00:08:22.480
But first of all, that seems like a really high rate.
00:08:35.560
How much would it take for me to get you into the poop industry right now?
00:08:39.600
Well, I mean, so am I employed or am I not employed?
00:08:50.120
You know, they're no longer requiring college degrees.
00:09:00.200
How much does it take to get you into the poop?
00:09:03.440
I mean, $184,000 easily gets me into that gig, right?
00:09:07.060
I mean, $100,000 gets you into that gig probably too.
00:09:26.080
I will thank God when people stop crapping in the streets.
00:09:33.820
When did we, like, you know, just drop the trout right here
00:09:44.500
it's like, you know, when you go to a concert or something
00:09:47.020
and there's a bunch of parking spots and they're all filled
00:09:49.760
and that first person pulls up onto the curb and onto the grass?
00:09:54.400
And then five minutes later, you've got rows of cars on the grass.
00:09:59.740
I mean, it probably was a little strange, I'll give you.
00:10:02.560
The first time someone was like, you know what?
00:10:07.840
That was probably a strange decision the first time it happened.
00:10:13.260
When you have an entire product line called Poo-Baroni,
00:10:28.680
When there's enough poop going on at that point,
00:10:43.540
I'm willing to give you the $15 wage on that one.
00:10:51.540
It just requires you to be willing to pick up somebody's poop.
00:11:01.780
$20 an hour is a lot less than, let's say, $20 an hour times 40 times, let's say, we work
00:11:14.160
Now, San Francisco, I mean, you know, I mean, it's probably not going to go that far.
00:11:24.520
It's not like I've got my degree in poop picking up.
00:11:26.920
There's some jobs, like you have, you've talked about this before with certain things
00:11:31.320
you have to do to cows on your farm, which to me sound like completely horrific escapades.
00:11:39.460
Now, I can't think of an amount of money that you would have to pay me to do that one
00:11:45.220
Although once you experience it, you are kind of like, you look at the guy with only one
00:11:50.800
sleeve on his shirt and a giant glove that goes up to his shoulder, and you're kind of
00:11:55.240
like, you can feel the baby inside, and he's like, oh, yeah, and you're kind, there's a
00:11:59.600
piece of you that goes, I kind of want to feel that once.
00:12:03.260
But then you come to your senses, and you're like, no, no, no, I don't want my hand in
00:12:14.040
But see, that guy is not just like, he's not like, I just, they pay me to come here
00:12:19.780
and just, you know, stick my hand in the butt of a cow.
00:12:26.040
This is actually, you pay him for more than just doing the thing that you don't want to
00:12:31.020
But I think, I do think part of the premium that doctors receive, and this is all good
00:12:35.960
humans and veterinarians and everything, is the ability to get over the really disgusting
00:12:42.020
Now, it's also, you're healing people, but like, there's people who go and change bedpans,
00:12:47.420
Like, you know, like the guys who do change bedpans, it should be, I mean, we should look
00:12:53.740
at things, oh, you're changing bedpans, and you're, oh, you have to clean up all the vomit
00:12:59.760
The guy who's doing breast augmentation, I don't put them, I mean, I like to see their
00:13:04.840
wages come a little closer to each other, you know what I mean?
00:13:08.400
One's working on women's breasts, and the other one's cleaning up vomit.
00:13:12.480
I thank God for both jobs, personally, but I would say that, I would say that they think
00:13:18.200
there is that idea, this is something we've talked about with the supposed gender wage
00:13:28.540
It's a BS stat, but one of the reasons it's a BS stat is that guys tend to pick jobs where
00:13:34.600
they're very dangerous, you know, some in the middle of nowhere, oil rig, that is a dangerous
00:13:39.540
taxing job, physical jobs, and also sometimes kind of the nasty jobs.
00:13:44.880
There's a lot of jobs out there that are really gross, and one of the reasons the women have
00:13:49.300
closed up that gender cap is because they've taken a lot of roles in healthcare that are
00:13:56.200
So there is a premium, like if you were picking up rappers, you know, candy rappers after
00:14:00.960
a concert, I think there's a premium you pay to the poop squad from that job.
00:14:05.840
You're working in Disneyland, and you've got one of those little claw things, and you're
00:14:09.920
picking up the wrappers, and you're putting in the trash can.
00:14:23.320
I'm not afraid to say, you need to make a little extra more.
00:14:30.560
What would you say the difference is from the person who is picking up dog poop for
00:14:37.840
a living, as opposed to someone picking up human poop?
00:14:43.000
I think there is, but once you're in the poop business.
00:14:46.300
I'd be interested to hear from anyone who's in the poop business.
00:14:50.260
But it's not the same kind of distance between the candy wrapper guy and the dog poop guy.
00:14:58.460
Once you get into the poop business, you've got a large spread.
00:15:01.880
Now, dog poop, human poop, there's still a spread there.
00:15:16.580
If you're following one animal in a parade, no.
00:15:18.860
So if you're in Africa and you want to have everything clean and you're at an elephant refuge,
00:15:29.180
There's something, I think, different about animals than humans.
00:15:35.120
You expect them to poop on the streets or wherever they're standing.
00:15:39.400
Here in America, we're now apparently just expecting humans to act like animals.
00:15:50.900
If this isn't the perfect example of job creation in a progressive world, I don't know what is.
00:16:03.180
Because every homeless camp is going to now have housekeepers.
00:16:06.780
They can't be expected to, you know, clean up their sleeping bag.
00:16:16.640
Maybe we can leave a little mint on their pillow, too.
00:16:36.660
You know, if an alien was threatening the earth, we would increase our economy because we would all go together and go crazy to build up our society.
00:16:47.540
No, we just break the windows and then we can have people replace the windows.
00:16:51.040
The broken windows thing, that's a conservative idea.
00:16:57.900
Yeah, you see people pick up windows and rocks and they break a window on an empty street.
00:17:03.700
Okay, we're not talking about broken windows anymore.
00:17:06.420
We're talking about people crapping on the street.
00:17:09.220
If we just pick up the crap, maybe they won't crap on the street.
00:17:21.640
And maybe you own a home, but you don't like the bathroom in it.
00:17:25.860
And so you have to go to your neighbor's yard and crap in your neighbor's yard.
00:17:39.020
Or just buy a pair of pants and recognize that you're a human being.
00:17:43.920
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00:18:52.240
A lot of people are tweeting and calling about the Poop Patrol in California.
00:19:01.940
Taylor writes, maybe the Poop Patrol is what Obama was going for when he said shovel-ready jobs.
00:19:09.460
What about the next person we see pooping on the street?
00:19:11.500
Instead of arresting, they have to pick up the poop until we get to the next pooping person who will have to help.
00:19:21.260
Jeff writes, later on our show about poop economics, special guest Thomas Sowell.
00:19:32.080
I mean, I shut off the mic and I looked at Stu and I said, so what important things did you talk about today?
00:19:39.780
Well, you'll feel better from Gordon's comment.
00:19:42.100
I've been listening to you guys for over a decade.
00:19:43.760
This morning is the most informative radio broadcast you've ever done.
00:19:48.600
And Drew says, elephant poop smells incredibly worse than human poop.
00:19:59.340
But I still don't think it's worth $184,000 a year.
00:20:12.060
We're going to cover the situation in South Africa.
00:20:15.280
I want to do something extraordinarily different next hour.
00:20:28.640
And I don't have $184,000 to pay a person to do it.
00:20:33.040
Also, we should get to Asia Argento a little bit.
00:20:37.480
And I was joking on Twitter last night about how I've noticed that CNN is spending a lot
00:20:42.500
more time talking about Donald Trump paying off people to be silent about sex than the
00:20:48.380
Asia Argento situation where they're paying off people to have sex.
00:20:50.720
And, like, obviously, like, you know, he's the president of the United States.
00:20:55.220
Though, I mean, I think arguably the Asia Argento thing is the number two story right
00:21:01.360
And it was almost not mentioned at all in the hours that I watched CNN yesterday.
00:21:05.900
And I found it interesting that if you think about what we've seen over the past year,
00:21:10.120
year and a half, you have CNN, who is pretty much constantly been talking about,
00:21:17.320
one, the Me Too movement, and two, Donald Trump paying off people to be silent about sexual
00:21:27.460
During that entire time, one of their employees, Anthony Bourdain, was in the middle of the
00:21:39.980
Now, Anthony Bourdain obviously killed himself and is gone now.
00:21:48.420
But he paid, of his own money, $380,000, which, by the way, you'll note, is more than
00:21:54.260
Stormy Daniels and Karen McDougal combined to keep this kid, who was a kid, he's not now
00:22:00.500
a kid, but he was 17 years old at the time, silent about a Me Too affair.
00:22:05.640
So, the same exact situation when it comes to...
00:22:35.300
He's working at a news organization that is zeroed in on paying people off to keep them
00:22:52.000
I don't know if she asked him or he volunteered.
00:22:58.460
But bad if he volunteered because he pays $380,000 and then has to live in that world with the cognitive
00:23:09.900
dissidence of, these things are bad, but I just did it because I know her and I love
00:23:23.980
And, you know, I don't think CNN was aware of this at the time, but I mean, it's an interesting
00:23:31.100
I mean, here is an organization that is on the air constantly hammering the Me Too movement.
00:23:38.460
And look, we all want the end goals of what is the generalism of Me Too, which is women
00:23:44.840
get respected and don't have to deal with sexual abuse and assault and harassment.
00:23:51.640
Men, boys, girls, women, nobody should deal with that.
00:23:56.540
But that storyline is being protected by one of their employees.
00:24:02.760
Here's a massive part of this story that is sitting there.
00:24:07.360
One of the founders of the Me Too movement and the most serious allegations against Harvey
00:24:13.080
Now, there's lots of them, so there's plenty still there.
00:24:17.320
And at the time they're covering the story, one of CNN's employees is paying $380,000 to
00:24:29.860
And what's just as bad, if not worse, is now that it has come out, they're not talking about it.
00:24:39.080
They don't want to talk about Anthony Bourdain's.
00:24:41.980
They don't want to say, what really happened with Anthony Bourdain?
00:24:47.240
Here's a guy in our own midst who was doing this.
00:25:07.720
If I did this, if I paid $380,000 to somebody and I died, same way, do you think they wouldn't
00:25:22.320
And I, you know, look, but that, but see, that's the problem.
00:25:32.060
There's a great story, uh, uh, a conversation between, uh, the president and editor of chief,
00:25:43.200
I don't even know what cut is, but I, I, I saw this story and I started reading it.
00:25:48.560
Uh, so, uh, Stella bugby, she is the, uh, editor in chief.
00:25:52.720
She says, you know, one of the things I find most interesting about these allegations is
00:26:00.220
I have when I hear about false, uh, rape accusations, they're rare, but devastating to all future
00:26:07.700
This doesn't mean all rape accusations are fake and it makes me simultaneously defensive
00:26:13.420
Will people who were anti hashtag me to use this as an attempt to prove that it was all BS.
00:26:20.220
I just want you to listen to this because remember, we are either going to add to the chaos or we're
00:26:28.760
And if, if you believe that we are a culture in trouble, then I don't want to add to the chaos.
00:26:36.760
I want to try to heal and I'm willing to do whatever it takes to heal within the parameters
00:26:47.520
Let's listen to these two women talk back and forth with a different ear and maybe somebody
00:26:54.960
else who's on their side will listen to us with a different ear.
00:26:59.600
Now, listen, one of the things I find interesting triggers a lot of fears in me.
00:27:05.200
The same sickening feeling I have when I hear about fake, uh, rape accusations.
00:27:09.400
They're rare, but devastating to all future accusers.
00:27:17.480
This doesn't mean all rape accusations are fake.
00:27:21.520
Now we have a fear when you see something like the lacrosse team and the just, and Al Sharpton's
00:27:27.760
of the world coming down and politicizing it and making it all about race and rape and
00:27:33.420
We feel like saying, wait a minute, all of these aren't true.
00:27:46.560
What did you do to heal the wounds of the, of the team that was verbally maliciously raped?
00:28:04.400
Have you, has anybody even thought about what their lives are like now?
00:28:07.340
No, I have a friend of a friend of mine was on the team and, uh, she tells me that he,
00:28:12.780
even though he was not actually there, he was just on the Duke lacrosse team.
00:28:18.260
He was never accused of anything, any wrongdoing at all.
00:28:21.460
Uh, and he left with, you know, Duke and Duke lacrosse.
00:28:25.120
He was, you know, mentioned at any time you Google his name, he'd come up as the Duke
00:28:33.260
And for years he struggled to get a job after college.
00:28:37.700
He had no, he wasn't even accused of wrongdoing, but just because Duke lacrosse was
00:28:42.580
was what you got when you Googled the guy, he couldn't find a good job for years afterwards.
00:28:53.360
Her point is don't let this discredit the ones that are real.
00:29:00.620
Don't even let this discredit what Harvey Weinstein did to Asia.
00:29:09.880
But what we also have to talk about is the mob mentality, the hashtag mentality.
00:29:20.360
When you make an accusation, it doesn't mean it's true.
00:29:25.980
And so if we have a system of justice, you let that system of justice work.
00:29:33.020
Otherwise, you're going to destroy lives that shouldn't be destroyed.
00:29:45.500
Not, uh, not, uh, uh, hashtags, not mob mentality.
00:29:54.620
And process versus generalism is a problem we're dealing with right now.
00:29:57.560
It is, I have not heard anyone on, you know, what do we say our side of the argument, which
00:30:06.040
I want every single person who did these things to go to jail, but I want to process before
00:30:10.480
I've never heard anyone on that side of the argument say, what we want is no women to
00:30:17.920
What we want is every accusation to be dismissed.
00:30:20.520
The problem on the, I have heard that on the other side, what we want is all women to be
00:30:26.140
What we want is all women to be honored and, and, and automatically trusted.
00:30:30.000
And that, well, I don't think it's the majority of that side of, uh, of the movement is, is,
00:30:34.980
is a significant enough piece of it that makes you very, very hesitant to embrace the movement
00:30:41.520
The goal is yes, but the movement as a whole has some parts to it that are questionable.
00:30:45.080
Because the movement has post-modernist roots because there are people in there who they
00:31:00.580
They're trying to destroy the, uh, the Western white cisgender, uh, uh, hierarchy.
00:31:12.780
I can join you on, Hey, let's have a system and I'll stand with you.
00:31:19.220
And I will believe you enough to make sure that you are heard and that the process works,
00:31:26.960
but I'm not going to believe you and take you at your word because you say it's true.
00:31:35.760
You know, everybody has to be innocent until proven guilty.
00:31:40.480
That doesn't mean that you're guilty because you stood up and said, Hey, this person did
00:31:46.300
And I, that's when people attack that person, like, like it happens on all sides.
00:31:54.260
When they attack somebody, sometimes you can go, okay, I get it.
00:32:00.740
I mean, they're really not credible, but other times they are very credible and we have to
00:32:11.700
This article continues to talk about, you know, uh, this story.
00:32:17.420
Maybe we're just, we didn't pay attention to her and we dismiss some of these warning
00:32:23.720
And yes, yes, yes, that happens to all of us and that's happening.
00:32:32.660
That's, that is the crux of the issue in America today.
00:32:36.320
The press believes one side, they believe that they are, that that one side is right.
00:32:45.720
And anything that helps the wrong side, they won't cover or say anything that hurts the
00:33:01.520
We need a process that reason is fixed in her seat and no one plays favorites.
00:33:09.960
Now that's really hard to do when you're a nation of men and not a nation of laws.
00:33:23.280
Because if you were in favor with the court, you're fine.
00:33:29.540
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00:33:37.940
I mean, it is protecting the, uh, ruby slippers and, uh, the cup of a carpenter from Indiana
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The good thing is you don't have to work for the patrol in San Francisco and earn $184,000
00:33:58.220
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It's unbelievable how much money you have been built, uh, when it comes to the security.
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I saw something from, uh, the Australian news agency.
00:34:59.260
They have a 60 minutes program that's about to premiere and it, it looks like they read
00:35:07.740
I, you know, it was off the cuff comment that was inappropriate for air.
00:35:11.420
It shouldn't have been on radio, you know, a hundred percent.
00:35:17.820
The thing is, um, as I said, we've got no income now and there's no real light at the
00:35:23.400
end of the tunnel of where that will change or when that will be.
00:35:44.160
Now, Yasmin upset the entire country when she posted on Facebook on Anzac Day.
00:35:51.100
I think we've got to accept stupidity as a constant of human life.
00:36:19.300
And you'll find it in my new book, Addicted to Outrage.
00:36:22.500
And why it's a huge problem if we want to save the Western world, we must, must surrender
00:36:31.020
and admit to ourselves, hey, uh, I'm an American and I've got a problem.
00:36:43.400
In an interview yesterday, Massachusetts Democrat Senator Elizabeth Warren and sworn enemy of
00:36:53.360
Now that in itself is not news, but the specifics of her statement all started with a goofy, vacant
00:37:03.340
Here she is in an interview with host John Berman.
00:37:09.440
And I know this is hard, not only for the family, but for the people in her community,
00:37:16.020
Um, but one of the things we have to remember is we need an immigration system that is effective,
00:37:25.400
Um, last month I went down to the border and I saw where children had been taken away from
00:37:32.300
I met with those mothers who had been lied to, who didn't know where their children were,
00:37:36.860
who hadn't had a chance to talk to their children.
00:37:38.940
And there was no plan for how they would be reunified with their children.
00:37:54.760
She didn't want to pay any attention to it when it was happening under Obama, but she was
00:37:58.680
there and she was talking to the mothers who had their children ripped out of their arms.
00:38:10.000
Uh, you know, of the things that we have to remember is we need an immigration system
00:38:15.080
that is effective, that focuses where the real problems are.
00:38:24.840
Because in this past week alone, ICE, which people like, uh, Elizabeth Warren want to
00:38:31.240
abolish, they could, she compares them to Nazis.
00:38:37.300
ICE has hauled off an illegal immigrant charged with murder in Mexico at the request of Mexico.
00:38:49.200
That was reported that, oh, this poor guy was just taking his wife.
00:38:57.900
It wasn't like, she's like, oh my, I got, now I got to drive myself to the hospital too.
00:39:19.060
I didn't know Jeffrey Dahmer was taking his wife to the hospital.
00:39:34.240
Something that the Obama administration couldn't get done.
00:39:39.720
Donald Trump's administration put pressure on Germany to take back a Nazi.
00:39:45.700
This guy's been living here since World War II.
00:39:53.860
Now, the world is so concerned about Nazis in America.
00:39:57.320
We've got 24 stupid people who are protesting in the street, and you have a literal Nazi,
00:40:05.940
and somehow the Nazi organization, as you call it, ICE, somehow or another, they got him out?
00:40:15.220
If anything, the system has failed in not preventing the entry of an illegal immigrant who murdered Molly Tibbet.
00:40:30.120
In no rational or reasonable world is anybody actually thinking that I'm saying all immigrants are rapists.
00:40:39.660
I'm saying here's a guy who, I don't know why, raped this woman and killed her.
00:40:52.900
He shouldn't have been here in the first place.
00:41:02.700
Maybe it was her time, but it was not her time to go in that way.
00:41:14.180
Then she says, last month I went to the border and I saw where children had been taken away from their mothers.
00:41:24.160
Wasn't she ripped out of the arms of her loving family?
00:41:35.180
Her parents didn't take her to a dangerous place where they all knew they could be separated.
00:41:44.300
Molly most likely didn't even say goodbye as the front door closed behind her because she was just going for a jog.
00:41:52.860
Here's Molly ripped out of the arms of her family and taken away from her mother permanently.
00:42:06.280
There's nothing that might have been misplaced and soon they'll be reunited.
00:42:14.800
And it wasn't done by a group of people who are just overzealous.
00:42:24.180
They were, she was ripped out of the arms of her family by somebody who shouldn't have been in the country in the first place and is a true monster.
00:42:34.040
I think we need immigration laws that focus on, on people who pose a real threat.
00:42:41.380
You mean like murderers, like murderers who murder young women, maybe?
00:42:47.800
I don't think mamas and babies are the place we should be spending our resources.
00:43:25.160
Very low percent of people who said, oh, yeah, no, no, no, no.
00:43:31.460
I think, I think the policy that Obama started of just, you know, ripping them out from their parents and just shoving them all in different jails and cages.
00:43:42.900
I don't think there was nobody, virtually nobody that held that belief.
00:43:47.700
But shouldn't Molly Tibbet's death signify the need for more comprehensive, a more comprehensive system that keeps people out that are criminals?
00:44:03.100
You know, the guy who is taking his wife to the hospital.
00:44:12.440
This guy could have come through the front door.
00:44:21.020
And then he might have murdered Molly Tibbet's.
00:44:29.360
But shouldn't we at least, shouldn't we at least try?
00:44:33.920
You know, MS-13 kills four times the number of kids.
00:44:44.500
They've killed four times the number of people that have been lost in school shootings.
00:45:03.920
She uses the tragedy of a young woman who was murdered and says,
00:45:21.000
But in Warren's world, the man who murdered her is himself a victim.
00:45:28.060
This is the postmodern system of anti-logic that is getting dangerous.
00:45:39.520
Members of Congress are more concerned about the evils of having a southern border
00:45:52.520
because they weren't there when it was about their side.
00:45:57.520
And they care more about destroying the other side than actual compassion.
00:46:17.760
You know, I spent the last two years, I spent the last five years,
00:46:29.800
but particular attention in the last, in the last two,
00:46:39.660
Okay, I remember, I remember trying to figure out around 2004,
00:46:48.480
How did we go from this nation with our founders
00:46:50.940
to this nation that is so far removed from the Constitution?
00:47:00.680
And everyone told me Woodrow Wilson in the early 20th century didn't matter.
00:47:07.340
And I made my case every day, much to the chagrin of many people
00:47:11.720
in the audience at first going, it doesn't matter.
00:47:14.880
It doesn't matter if they're liberal or progressive.
00:47:21.340
And now I see, now I see my country doing exactly what I feared.
00:47:29.420
I take my share, in fact, I think I take more than my fair share
00:47:34.420
of responsibility for what's happening in the country.
00:47:39.560
And I'm willing to do that because I know you know the truth.
00:47:47.420
you heard me say more about peace and coming together
00:47:54.580
You heard those words from me more than anyone, left or right.
00:48:07.040
And I'm willing to take more than my fair share
00:48:33.740
Because we're a nation that's not listening to one another.