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Jeff Poor Show - Tuesday 9-24-24

Duration:
2h 2m
Broadcast on:
24 Sep 2024
Audio Format:
mp3

[MUSIC PLAYING] From Bucks Pocket to the shores of Orange Beach, at all points in between, an insider's perspective on Alabama politics. It's the Jeff Porsche show. I don't think Hank done it this way. No. Good morning, and welcome to the Jeff Porsche Show. And if I'm talking 106.5, good. Tuesday morning to you. Thank you for being with us. We do appreciate it. 2-5-1-3-4-3-0-1-0-6 is the text line. That's how you communicate with this program if you so desire. Gonna buy today's program real quick. Bradley Jame, I'm calling you Breitbart News. Paul DeMarco, a regular on this program, and Alabama Republican Party Chairman, John Wall. So please, also stick around for that as well. I'm kind of kicking off here, and this is a point of personal privilege here. Fair hope, not really engaged in municipal city politics and fair hope that much. I think that the Mayor Sherry Sullivan does a great job and tend to not have many complaints about what goes on in this city. But I'm disappointed with kind of the demeanor of the Fair Hope City Council last night at this town hall. So, let's see, kind of kicking off here. I don't know where these rumors started. Although, my website, 1890 News, is being blamed for it. There's somewhere along the way people began to think that there was going to be a refugee resettlement in the city of Fair Hope. And I don't know where that got started. I've got some ideas here. We can get into that Hal Reber's spread. But here's the deal. There's a guy named Jay Palmer. He used to be affiliated with the Trump administration, and he's, I think, now come to Alabama to live. But he was saying all along, hey, look, there's these, so under this Biden program, the CHNV program. The Biden administration is giving, like, a temporary legal status, but like a semi-permanent status, to refugees from these four countries, Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua, and Venezuela. And there's a lot of takers. They're not likely to come from Mexico or Guatemala. But those four countries, because of political turmoil within their borders, they're being granted a asylum status. They're fleeing a potential persecution, which is something-- we do in America, it's a tradition going back to the Cold War. And I think the Biden administration sees this as sort of a loophole for whatever reason that they want to just kind of bring in more immigrants from other places, from Latin America in particular. They are looking for ways to do so. So these people are coming here, particularly from Haiti, and they're settling them all around the country. And we all see the stories about Springfield, Ohio, and the rumors that they're eating people's cats or whatever. Then we started hearing about it here in Alabama. And it started in Albertville, and this wasn't a rumor. They actually saw Haitians coming off a bus in Albertville. And people in Albertville have a high tolerance for this, because they've been inundated with immigrants for 20 years now. I mean, it's a totally, totally different place than what it was in the 1990s. We saw that like, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, Haitians. So that's a little different. These are here in Russellville and other places that are also hotspots for immigration historically. But did it really, really heat it up with the discussion about silicaga? And you start seeing more and more of this. You hear it about reports that the Haitians are being settled in Athens, Alabama, and Enterprise. And what's going on here, there are these-- the Biden administration has a middle man to go through these NGOs, these non-governmental organizations, and they look for places to put these refugees. And there's potentially up to 500,000. And they got to get them around the country and all these-- so they're trying to settle them, resettle them, I guess is the right way to describe it, in different towns all across the country. Well, lo and behold, somewhere along the way, there's a whistleblower or somebody within one of these NGOs is feeding information out. And since a mobile of Bolic County are on the list here, places to potentially resettle some of these Haitian migrants that are seeking asylum status. And I mean, this is not-- we're just-- I'm just a messenger here, so cool your jets out there, Fair Oaks City Council. And no one said specifically where I had involved in our mobile county, but just that they're on the list, you know? And really, they're looking for places to put these people where they can get work. Maybe there's a church community or something, and it can provide some kind of structure for them, and they can assimilate and become productive citizens. A lot of people in these communities don't want this, like, hey, our schools are already inundated with Spanish-only-speaking children. I mean, this is not something we want. We don't want a third dialect in our schools with French Creole and a third culture. And there's pushback against that. Rightfully so. So lo and behold, I guess so are along the way. And Corey Martin is a Fair Oaks City Council, but if you know who I'm talking about here, he, somewhere, he claims in 2022, he signed a letter or he signed an email. I never heard of this, but signing an email, but he put his name on an email, say he supported a resettled bit of refugees in his community or in our communities here in America. And this is what he claims. Now, what we do know, what we have verified, what we can go and see tangibly, is a website called Welcome League America. And it's got a letter welcoming refugees. And it has all this flowery language about the positives and the awesomeness of refugees in your community. Fair enough. And Corey Martin, a Fair Hope City Councilman, along with Thomas Action Jax and the Thomasville and Travis Hendricks of Fairfield signed this letter. They were the three signatories on this letter sent to Joe Biden on September 12th, 2024. They were the three and you're like, whoa, what's going on here? Why would a Fair Hope City Councilman sign on to this? And people in Fairfield, well, she tried to bring Haitian migrants here. So he goes and says he has a WKRG and claims it was taking out a context, claims it. He really just wanted Ukrainian migrants coming to his local community or something. But it was kind of bizarre, like when you think about it. Well, yeah, you, you crazy. Come on here, but you stay away, you Haitians. What's going on there, Councilman? Anyway, so last night, I like somewhere along the way in this because that Councilman signed a letter and then there is, there are these reports of Haitian migrants coming to Mobile and Mullen County. It became Haitian migrants coming to Fair Hope. I don't know how, but that's how things go on social media. So let us say people showed up at their city council meeting and I could not see a much more disdainful bunch up there as if like you people out here in your internet social media rumors coming to our city council to complain about this. I mean, you guys need to do better job and not pay an attention to social media. Well, it's the message I took away. Well, it was just awful. You got one fossil up there. Oh, been on city council forever. Kevin Boone, I don't read any of that social media stuff. I can waste it 30 minutes of my life. Well, I'm sorry that your preferences of communication are up versus the people that live in your city don't really, don't really job. And others, the Jimmy Connors guy just rolling his eyes at it. I'm Jack Burrell is fine. But I just, these guys get up there and you know, they have to sit through like the two hours of public comment about all this. But this is like, while the concern may not be, it may be legitimate. It may not be, whatever, but this was it. This was essentially it. We haven't been told that there were Haitian immigrants or migrants coming to Fair Hope. So therefore, we don't think it's really a concern. Meanwhile, around the state of Alabama and around the country, it's actually happening and people are actually seeing it. And then it's like, why not, Fair Hope? If I was a Haitian and I come to the United States, well, no, I want to live in Fair Hope for Silicon. Like anyway, and maybe they're not coming. But like, what do you, you've got a plan or what would you do here? It was like, well, all of this. I only saw this six days ago. I had a chance to really think of a plan yet. But like, I just like a little humility when you're sitting up there as an elected official. And don't go so aggressive against the messenger in social media. But also your colleague is citing letters welcoming refugees to America. So I see this and I just shake my head at it. And I don't know what it is. Fair hope is not alone here because there's elected city officials and all these other hotspots have the sort of the same attitude like, oh, that silly internet and its rumors. Oh, that crazy Facebook, you know, like, really? I'll tell you a little secret here. I mean, I don't know if you're not like really reading the internet. Where are you getting your news from? I mean, the newspapers don't come out. The mobile press register, they don't even publish anymore. al.com, I should say. Just watching, just watching the TV news, I guess. 2513430106, but thank you for. Thank you for indulging me here. Oh, and I'm texture. It's a tradition going back to the Cold War, trial of further that. No, no, no, no. The Cuban refugees that goes back to the Cold War, because before the Cold War, there was no reason to be a refugee from Cuba. Sounds like you're a Kuwaiti refugee's legal immigrants. No, I'm not. It doesn't matter. Illegal immigrants, refugees, legal immigrants, whatever. We have an influx of people into your city. And the city's like not really responsive that this is a different sort of set of circumstances of people coming in and they're very dismissive. It doesn't matter where they're coming from. They all secret taxes are pretty high in a bear hope. So maybe a little more, maybe a little more forgiving of the great unwashed next time is what I would ask. 2513430106, but right back, this is the Jeff for show on FM Talk 10065. And look the thing you want to see. Ain't nothing to do, because I was country. It's where I drank my first beer. It's where I found Jesus. Where I wrecked my first car. I tore it all to pieces. I learned the path. Well, imagine the jump for show that you saw for the 65. Thank you for being with us on this huge date. 40 513430106, the text line. I see Biden up at the United Nations and it just looks like the Biden, we all knew and love from the campaign trail. Kind of out of it. Just kind of the facial expressions. It's just, it's a little rough. Let's get through some of these texts real quick, correct me if I'm wrong, but the other cities in the state were notified that mass amounts of refugees would be settled in their city where they know they were not been with the text. I'll say this about that. No, they just showed up and no one really notifies the local authorities or anything. He's kind of kind of find them a place to live and it's legal. No one's saying it's illegal. But like if you're going to do that, you better make stay. I'm sure you're enforcing your zoning ordinances. No, multi-families or whatever in a single family dwelling. And then the local employers around here that employ these people pay them a fair wage and not just exploit the cheap labor. Josh, the old punk rocket. It could be less fair hope feathers getting ruffled. Mobile, ball, and county should keep their eyes open though. Yeah, I, it's a different fair hope though. I think that it, and then it was 20 years ago. King of all Indian textures, fair hope. Isn't the real cap problem will dolphin island? Easy there on a texture. Jeff, ironic that fair hope is hating on Haiti. Why is that ironic? I don't need assistance that they just show up on a house. It would make more sense to gather up a bit of money and ship them all to California or Minnesota. But it's like this though. This is being done by the Biden administration. And maybe it's, maybe this is what I would prefer to see. I don't know is that there is a magic policy that a county or city government could implement to make this all go away or make it better. I must show a little concern and quit criticizing the messenger. Because this is really happening in other cities in the state. It's not, it's not just a fairy tale. Someone dreamed up on a Facebook post for a bunch of likes and engagements. But it's a real thing. And there's a sort of attitude like, I just don't know how these rumors get started here. Well, okay, people are going to do what people are going to do. But you're kind of supposed to be above the fray. So like, okay, yeah, we hear your concerns. And we're, we're, we're all top of this. We're making sure we're reaching out to all the NGOs and all of the, you know, potential organizations that might do this. And what we're trying to be proactive and ready are, if we're not ready yet, we're going to get there. Instead, they lectured like the people who showed up about not following four rumors on social media. When the council president, by the way, one more time, signed a letter and the letter is like he signed this letter. And the letter says what it says. And then he won't say whether they took his signature and used it and applied it to something. It's just, it's out of context. Hey, guys, we can put, I'm going to put the letter up on my social media. But it's all about the virtues of refugees and bringing refugees to your community and how they really assimilate, they add to the workforce. And there's all of this like flowery language about it. And the letter shows up on September 12th with Corey Martin signature on it. And he says, well, he signed it in 2022 and it was still to Ukraine war. It's kind of bizarre. Well, you want Ukrainian refugees, but not Haitian refugee. Like, buddy, is your position on refugees in your city? So anyway, ask, come on, come on, go away. What is it? What is this? It's the goes on TV and just like starts attacking 18, 19 news. And he had his wife, oh, guys, he had his wife. It was like, if I was an elected official, imagining my wife in a public forum having to defend me. Now I get it. My life sometimes holds to get engaged and defend me, but to have that happen. Kind of a silly thing. Anyway, I won't be labor that anymore. We're right back. This is the Jeff Moore show at Fibtalk 10065. [MUSIC] Count the ones you speak. >> I give you my heart and I try to make you happy. You gave me nothing in return. You know it ain't so hard to say. Would you please just go away? >> Welcome back to the Jeff Moore show at Fibtalk 10065. Thanks for sticking around on this Tuesday morning. In the meantime, text line 2513430106. We will get to your text here in due course over the next few segments. But right now, I want to welcome on my next guest. He is my colleague at Breitbart News, Bradley J. Bradley. Good morning, how are you? >> Good morning, great to be with you, Jeff. >> Hey, thanks for coming on. Always appreciate the time. So, I'm kind of kicking off here and you and I, I've been watching social media, but I've had these members come on last week. And we talked about, you know, the pending government shut down and what that looks like in the middle of an election. But there's, there seems to be at least a growing, or I'm not saying, there's at least a number of members who are willing to vote no on a continuing resolution on the Republican side. If they ditch the SAVE Act, that, that would force Mike Johnson, the Speaker of the House to have to go look for Democrat votes. It looks like it's, it's just kind of a chaotic mess at the, at the least opportunistic time. >> It's a mess, but it's an orchestrated mess. You know the drill, no one works harder at not working than the United States Congress. It's very simple what they're supposed to do by law. They're supposed to consider and pass 12 appropriations bills each year on a certain timeline. Of course, Congress fails every single year. All they, all they want to do is to create this manufactured, chaotic, last-minute situation where they, well, this, this is, this is the bill. We have to pass it. There's no other option is this to rush down and all the rank and file either has to, to fall in line or help vote against it. And then you have everything that comes with that. You stop getting invited to the cocktail party thrown by the lobbyists, the NRCC stops, cut and check to you. So it's all orchestrated and it's all ridiculous. This time is, is unique in the Speaker Johnson. And as you know, paired a CR with the Save Act, which would have, which was designed to stop non-citizen from voting in American elections. Of course, he was never serious about getting that passed. And as we reported at, at Breitbart, he had been telling Senate aides that, well, if we do pass this CR with the Save Act, just strip it and send it back and we'll get it done. And here we go. It'll be three, three months and we'll have a, during the lame duck, when Congress is no longer accountable, we can pass huge omnibus with 12 bills thrown together. And it's just the same every year. And honestly, I believe that a lot of the Congress are just tired of it. They're ready to vote and they're ready to get it over with and go home here 40 some odd days before the election. I mean, I think you're right about that. But there's a lot of pushback against like, let's just get, go along to get a log. And Trump's not helping things, but he, I mean, he's kind of shut it down, caucus. I mean, what, what, what happens there? It seems like you kind of have a little bit of a, of an impasse. Well, what's going to happen, Jeff, is Speaker Johnson is going to spend the rules in the house to pass this CR. Now, what that means, of course, with the spending, the rules, it's fairly commonplace in the house. It's been the rule to pass bills every week. All that does is it's kind of a misnomer. It is in the rule to suspend the rule. But by, by doing that, you don't, you, you have to pass a bill with a two thirds majority. So in this case, and if this is something that Speaker Johnson has employed a remarkable number of times in one year, he doesn't have the support to pass something with Republicans. So he's going to suspend the rules and move a bill, in this case, a CR, that the Democrats support. So he can get, and so even though it requires two thirds to pass, they'll be just enough Republicans to jump on board with the Democrats to pass this CR, which is what they wanted all along again to push this into the lame duck period after the election, but before the new Congress comes in so they can pass them after spending bill without the accountability, so right before the election, I don't think there's, there's all these jaded DC Politico who've seen this a thousand times. Oh, there's no way. There'll be a shutdown. There's no way. I don't like saying there's no way. But I really don't think that there's going to be a shutdown. Johnson talks about how Trump and I are on the same page as far as all this goes. I don't know if that's the case. Honestly, I don't think that this is as much on Trump's radar as some of his comments might have suggested. But the bottom line is we're going to end up with a three month CR that kicks us to the lame duck. Well, and I think you're right probably, but I think you're right probably. But I, Bradley, what I'd say, I don't know that we've never seen this like in this sort of this close to an election come to this, this point, usually both Democrats and Republicans kind of nod along and say, oh, we need to get back our tails back to our districts and campaign or whatever it is that we do. And there does seem to be a little bit, at least philosophy among some of the members there to fight this fight a little differently this time. I mean, just a, have we ever seen this close to government shutdown at this stage of the game and during an election cycle. Well, I think what sets this apart is the fact that we did have that say that dangled in front of conservatives only for that to get to kind of fall apart at the last minute just just last week. The timing is unique. You are right. But I mean, look, it's 40 days out. I really don't think when it gets down to it, this is that different from times past. You're going to have your folks who say, well, I don't vote for CR under any circumstance and they vote and get out of town and by the same token, your appropriators and your Democrats are looking their lips that they're getting what they want. But the bottom line is it's going to end up the same regardless if there's a little bit different feeling going into it. Now, depending on what happens in that lame duck session, you do have Johnson and some others saying that they're saying that there won't be an omnibus. I don't buy that. I think that what Trump would like is to see, to have an opportunity even if it's just six months of funding, but to have the CR extended into say March of 2025 so that if Trump does win, he'll have the opportunity to influence some of these decisions on spending. But it's a little bit different story, but at the end, I think it ends up just about the same as it always does. Join by Bradley Jay of Breitbart News here on the program. I know we talked about this last time you were on about a week ago, but Mike Johnson, and I guess he's handling it as about as well as he can. But this is, well, let me ask you this because this is how you become speaker, right? Like you have the ability to raise money and you could do a lot of things for the campaign infrastructure and members are reward you with their vote for leadership. What does the Johnson led Republican caucus in the house look like in this election cycle? I mean, does it look like he is going to perform really well in this election or, you know, with the NRCC or whatever? Does it look like, you know, that they're all defense instead of an offense? What do you, what do you make of the political situation with sort of this patchwork of of leadership that they've just the Republicans got just trying to get to the finish line here? Yeah, that's a great question. I remember telling me yesterday, oh, we're going to win, we're going to win 12 to 14 seats. We're going to have a, we'll have a 12 to 14 seat majority next year. Then at the same time, he told me that Mike Johnson is doing a great job fundraising. This is a freedom caucus guy, you know, and they, they've butted heads with, with, with Johnson this year. But, but that's just not true. I mean, by, if you look at the numbers, I mean, House Republicans are stuck in hindsight when it comes to fundraising. So even if Trump at the top of the ticket does exceed expectations and, and carries some of these House members with him, it will be Trump that does it, it will not be because of Johnson's fundraising. Now to, to his credit, he, he wasn't hired for this job as a fundraiser. Folks knew when they voted for him for Speaker that he didn't have this kind of experience and, and framework and staff to build a race all this money. That was expected. But, but you're right that it is a very hodgepodge leadership group in the House. It doesn't seem like it's very well coordinated, partly because of Johnson's weakness. And that so many of these other strong fundraisers, whether it's folks who were in leadership right now, whether it's someone like a Jim Jordan who might have his own on, on moving up the ladder, they are all fundraising to set themselves up to move up the ladder as well. It's, it's a very unique time right now inside the House Republican conference, because there really isn't a, there isn't a strong leader who's pulling everybody in the same direction, not even like we had with McCarthy. And I was never a big McCarthy fan, but he was a good communicator with his conference. You knew folks knew what to expect from him. He very rarely caught anyone off guard. He let's, let his members know what he was going to do. And he set a firm direction. He was very clear on what he hoped to accomplish this Congress. Well, obviously he didn't. Yeah, the thing about McCarthy, like you saw him around like doing fundraisers and you see the guy like Boehner was the same way. These guys who did the part of being like speaker or leader or whatever, it's not just hey, you get the hold the gavel and yeah, you have a lot of power. But with that power, it gives a lot of responsibility. And it's, it's, it's kind of bolstering your political effort. And I don't, I mean, I know Johnson's short term speaker right now, but I don't really get a sense. I mean, Paul Ryan was pretty terrible at it. I don't know where Johnson is like, you know, and we even have a dad here in this area and you're well aware, we have a swing seat up for grabs with Carolee Dobson facing Shamari figures. And I just, I don't know how much national buy in, there is there with this, with this leadership team. I can tell you, Jeff, that if there was much more concerted and effective effort up here in Washington, DC to grow the house majority, a race like Alabama O2 with, with Carolee Dobson there at the ticket. Oh man, folks with just the, the, the giddy about that opportunity about her because she's such a great dynamic candidate who's given us a chance in the district that a lot of the conventional wisdom said we wouldn't have a chance in. And then I mean, some, I mean, she's right there knocking on the door. But again, it is, it is a presidential year. So a lot of the a lot of the eyeballs are all that very interesting in a lot of ways unprecedented race. But there just isn't the kind of attention on a lot of these house races that there should be. And you're, you're honestly, it's, I think that you're not hearing about them a lot because of the weakness of House Republicans leadership to be able to coalesce and get the message out about that. And I think that that's very unfortunate. Well, maybe it's just this that the presidential election is sucking up so much oxygen out of the room that maybe we aren't hearing about it. Um, that, but, but this, this down balance stuff, I mean, I feel like the Senate's done a decent job with that. They have a favorable map. But Bradley, like the house, it's a coin flip right now. And I feel like with sort of the tide are sort of the, my perception of kind of the mood of the country, it ought to be a little more positive for House Republicans, shouldn't it? Well, part of the region that is a lack of enthusiasm there is, if you're, if you're running to be in the house as a Republican, look, the Republicans have the majority. And so if you're running in the house as a Republican, what are you going to say? Well, look at the House Republican record this year. We, uh, we extended the Pelosi Schumer 2022 lame duck CR. Uh, we passed, uh, Pfizer, uh, without the, uh, without, uh, the, without, uh, the amendment in there to stop warrantless surveillance. Uh, we passed, uh, Ukraine, a, you know, basically all of the Biden administration's top goal. If you're going around and talking with, uh, constituents, the people who you want to elect you with all these voters, I mean, what do you, how can you be on the team and how that team's record? Uh, Johnson's really put his folks in a, in a difficult position. Uh, I mean, I just don't, I wouldn't want to be out there campaigning on the Republican, on the House Republican record right now. Bradley, uh, we're out of time. We are folks who will defy the online. How can they do so? At Breitbart.com. We're always, uh, keeping you up to date on what's going on on Capitol Hill that these campaigns and old Twitter at Bradley, a J. Y'all check you out, Bradley. We always appreciate your time. Thanks for hopping on this morning. Thanks, Jeff. All right, guys, we got to get a break in here. We'll be right back to says that Jeff fore showed up and talked what it was like to stay up late again watching TV with my best friend laughing at late night show. I don't know what's wrong with me. Cause I know I need my wrist, but I'm not stay about night. Sleep on day eight of my best. Hey, yes, we are. Showed up and talked one oh six, five, thanks for sticking around on this Tuesday morning, two, five, one, three, four, three, zero, one zero, six, you want to be a touch with the program? My guy do is text me, still come on the program, Paul DeMarco in about 45 minutes. He and I will talk probably about this, Birmingham shooting five points south and like the dishonest power brokers of Birmingham and their reaction. The mayor there are black switches head and constitutional carry. We need to, we need to do away with those. And suddenly the scapegoating of the Alabama legislature. I'm kind of a sorry ass mayor. Watch his conditions. Watch his people die in his city. And his response is just shamelessly political. Look, uh, that happens down here. I mean, are we going to be like, oh, well, if it weren't for those clocks, which is that the state won't ban, but would have been admitted to bed federally. Well, and so Roy Johnson, who's a columnist at ale.com, one of the most disgraceful human beings writing a column saying that Alabama Republicans have the blood of those who died at that Birmingham shooting on their hands. What a jerk. As if, uh, as if they had anything to do with the gang problem that no one wants to talk about, I don't think it just a Birmingham, but in this state guys, you remember the Davidville shooting a year ago? Well, more than, yeah, a little more than a year ago. It was rival gangs from another city in Dadeville. Uh, a lot of what you're seeing just sort of this, this, this lack of concern for life, no, no value in life. We have a, we have an anti gang statute on the books in Alabama. We're not going to talk about that. Um, there's some reasonable Democrats in the legislature are going to kind of push it back against Randall Woodford and saying, and want to look at animal people. So she's kind of the, maybe not quite reasonable in the sense that what her solution is, but acknowledges the problems is the city's lost control. We need to bring in the national guard. Oh, if they're quite there yet, Roger Smithman, who has been in the Alabama state Senate forever was just kind of talking. We need more penalties. Like he and Shane Stringer are all the same page. It's like the lock switches, but we're going to now with Paul also come up on the program. John Wall, I'll be able to Republican party chair, but we're right back to says the Jeff Porchola, if I talk one, oh, six, five. From Bucks Pocket to the shores of Orange Beach at all points in between, an insider's perspective on Alabama politics. It's the Jeff Porchola. Welcome back to the Jeff Porchola from talk one, oh, six, five. Thank you for being with us on this Tuesday morning, hour two, hour number two underway right now, Paul DeMarco in about a half hour and in the 11 o'clock hour, if you're still around or you tune back in, you'll hear, we'll hear from John Wall, the chairman of the Alabama Republican party who is making his weekly appearance on the show. In the meantime, two, five, one, three, four, three, zero, one, zero, six, plenty of guests for the Haitians at from Duke men. I don't know. I'll see you through these texts real quick. Michael find it a little more erotic. Fairhood people aren't happy with refugees coming in. It reminds me of Martha's Vineyard story. Pharaoh up is by far the most left wing enclave in South Alabama. It may be the most left wing, but it's not left wing. It's not. I mean, you know, you can look at the voting patterns in the city and some other things. And it's it's not left wing at all. There are left wingers here. Just just cruise down to the local bookstore there downtown and you'll see it. But that doesn't really represent the entirety of the municipality. I don't believe a lot of these guys who are in city government around with ours next to their name. And when Democrats try to run, especially in the state house district here, they get clobbered and they tried. I mean, you go back and look. So it's not a Martha Vineyard situation at all. I don't think in fair hope. But what what kind of reaction would this inspire if it were any other place if it were Daphne? When they just shrug it off? I don't know. What if what if you had Haitian refugees being resettled in Grand Bay or satsuma? Well, I mean, you look you people live in these places out there and they come to your community even mobile proper. How would you feel about that? Are you even if there was just the concern that they might come and they very well may, according to people who are kind of writing out these NGOs around this state? How would you feel about this this culture coming to your community? And here's the problem we hear, Michael. You can't put you you're you're not allowed to complain about this. Well, why not? Well, because of something that happened 150 years ago during the Civil War or whatever, something that happened 60 70 years ago with the Jim Crow in the south. You don't and this is what we're being told by our by our betters at AL.com like John Archibald. Like, well, you got a Confederate flag monument in front of your courthouse. So therefore, you don't get to complain about Haitian migrants settling in your community. And the texture we can't feed or this is be dark. I don't know. We can't feed and house our own citizens. The why bring thousands more. They got to go somewhere. That's the problem. It's not as if we're like, okay, here's the SS love mode and it's setting up. It's stocked in porta prints or wherever and say, come on, come all Haitians. And we're set cell for Florida, but it's they're coming here and they're guaranteed this sort of status. It allows them to function as sort of an everyday citizen without voting privileges, of course, but getting some government benefits in some cases and indeed the ability to work. I mean, would you rather live in impoverished conditions in Haiti or impoverished conditions in the United States, at least the United States, though, the water or sewer systems. And I mean, there are some just basic standards of living here that we have that they don't have in Haiti. Um, on the texture, a simple fix to the budget BS, we have to listen to Congress fighting over our tax money. Congress does not pass a budget by October 1st. The previous year's budget will remain in effect until the October 1st deadline. Well, I don't till the next October 1st deadline, then we'll do what happened because here's what will happen on named texture. Then they'll just wait till that next October 1st deadline and we'll have the same sort of stalemate that we have right now. I mean, you can change the deadlines or whatever, but but they're not going to, I don't think they'll react. Good morning, Jeff. That's from a, not any texture. Ballet County is going to complain about legal refugees after all these years. They didn't seem to mind when a cartel franchise was arrested in fully 2013. Those embrace were illegal, no deportation for the family, some were probably released early at her back in Ballet County. Oh, Steve, well, Steve, um, I, I, I can't speak on the 2013 incident, especially fully. But to me, just if we, if it happened now, I think you would get a little more pushback. I don't think the people here will really, really want an influx of, you know, big migration from foreign countries in Ballet County. Well, who cares what they want? I mean, they're here legally. They can do whatever they want. Yeah, but they don't, they don't, the local governments don't have to pay you the way for this to happen. You can be really strict about like some of these companies that hire these people, especially these construction companies getting you, you can enforce zoning ordinances. There's a lot of tools in their tool belt. But don't really, I don't really get the sense that this is being treated. Even though it's happening in places in Alabama, it's being treated as a silly internet, his rumor hysteria. Okay. And you, you people could go back to your shanties and watch your, um, bachelorette or whatever it is that you watch it. And we'll, we'll handle this. Okay. We're the adults here. We were, I don't read that social media. Oh, I don't even have the internet at my house. I had to go read the internet. I said, I want that 30 minutes back because I read real slow. Two, five, one, three, four, three, zero, one, zero, six. Uh, so gang members is buying legal guns now. Demers are ridiculous. That from Brandon Leo, Morty, Jeff, in reference to Burby of shooting, does the Alabama legislator sure need to take a few, make a law against me owning an RPG? It's already federally illegal. Yeah, I'd be right. Hey, Leo, we need to pass the law against machine guns. And I guess it's this and maybe somebody in law enforcement could correct me if I'm wrong. If they do come across somebody with a Glock switch and you're a local police officer, do you have the statutory ability to arrest that person? Or do you have to call in for backup from the feds and the feds come in and they handle it, but who knows that they're available or not? Maybe that's it. But I would question the federal government here and like, well, why aren't they doing their job? Like, like who is, who is manufacturing these switches? Where are they coming from? Why aren't you cracking down? These, these things seem to be so plentiful everywhere. Chris, well, Jeff, you finally figured it out. They have zero regard for life. They are, in fact, the Olympic Neanderthals. Gary, good morning, Jeff. Question. If title they like to oral college, what happens? It goes to the current Congress and they get the vote on it. Jake, and Pharaoh isn't left to lean. They are nimbs. Yeah, I think that's probably more accurate. Not my backyard. But like, this is the question, Jake, what, what community in this listening area isn't somewhat nimby. Like, if this were happening in Robert Stale, and it's changed Robert Stale for Fair Hope, would they not be up, would you guys in Robert Stale not be upset about this? James, the audacity caught immigrants when they are doing jobs, Americans feel they are above. You know, why Americans feel they are above because they don't pay anything. It's, it's, this is the, this is the thing you want to pay me enough. I mean, I'll go dig ditches. I'll go work in your chicken plan. I'll go do the jobs and just make the pay right. I'm just not above the work. So I'm, I'm above what it pays. And so since these employers aren't paying what a market value is or whatever, and, and, and, you know, to, and their defense, they have to compete against the government who's handing out freebies. But if they won't work, or should you, you pay the going rate? Well, instead of wanting to pay the going rate, they want to shave a little bit off the top, James, and, and hire, like, hey, we got these, uh, we got these refugees looking for a job, but we'll have to pay them, like, pay these on the dollar, which I think it's just an exploitation or it's, uh, uh, it was a Scott Bunch, I would say, caught an indentured servitude. That's where you're wrong, James. I mean, I don't think you have any grasp of what, how this really works. I think it's just you're, you're watching MSNBC. I need texture. Jeff, any left lingers in Fair Hope or frauds and limousine liberals, they are lying to themselves. I don't think there's this misconception that the city of Fair Hope is like a Beverly Hills or something. And it's really not. There's some affluency, but it's not, it's, it's, it's not exclusive little enclave. There are a lot of, there are a lot of transplants here who brought their politics with them. Like you said, go hang out at the local bookstore and you'll see what I'm talking about. But to just, uh, it's sort of, it's sort of silly, but I hear this comparison all the time of Fair Hope and Martha's Vineyard. I don't think that's the case at all. I think texture at Fair Hope, they're not trying to figure out a formal housing for people who are rich, but they're trying to bring in a bunch of foreigners that came here legally and try to find a place for them. I don't, I, well, number one, they didn't come here illegally. I mean, they're here legally. And, and that's, this is their, their legal status is a product of who's in the White House. Okay. And I don't know that they, I don't think that we have a sign Fair Hope open for Haitians at the city limits line, but I just might gripe with what happened is just sort of this arrogance. Oh, you know, how these social media rumors start. Well, you know, guess what? That's what you got to deal with. You're an elected official. Don't demean your constituents by speaking to such a condescending way about where they get their news. And a texture can Fair Hope mobilize the National Guard like all the hypocrites in Martha's Vineyard. That would have to come at the state level. The difference with Martha's Vineyard is you had some very powerful people who live on Martha's Vineyard and were able to get the governor there engaged. I don't know that, I don't know the city of Fair Hope carries that kind of political clout. To be honest, scroll. The bad guys do know they can get caught, but they know they can bail out. They also know the lawyers will argue for them. They know that they don't care about the reported suspect will be a broad description of demographic and they can get lost in the crowd. They also know the news media will not mention that description. We'll be right back. This is the Jeff Moore Show and if I'm talking one oh six five. I hear you singing in the wire. I can hear you through the white. And the witch's all lined up. It's still on the line. Welcome back to the Jeff Moore Show to talk one oh six five come up in the next segment. We'll hear from Paul DeMarco. So stay tuned for that. Community notes want to be a little luxury here. Apply your gun logic to immigrants. Parker was right. This is nothing but racism and xenophobia. Well, well, gun rights are guaranteed by the Second Amendment. Well, what, what are, what, tell me where immigration falls in that category. Community does want to be now. Maybe you and I have a different interpretation of our founding documents, but I'm pretty sure mine's the one that prevails in this country right now. So why do you, why do you just hate listening to this show and be wrong about everything? Maximus. Yes, it's a federal fits. We make the arrests and they adopt a case and from a street cop, there are a lot of switches out there. Pat, I can pretty glock switch. Well, my 3d plitter at three hours, but not a hang or have a need for a glock switch. It makes it highly inaccurate. Grant James doesn't understand flooding the works of market and reducing wages. Well, I just, uh, that this, this is like the leftly trying to tug on your heartstrings, but it doesn't quite hit like it's supposed to. They're just doing jobs under Americans won't do. Well, why won't you about that? Why would Americans do them? Is the question you need to ask? Is it just like, Oh, I think I'm too good for that? Oh, because it's a paste terrible that we don't put enough of the blame or the, the responsibility on these people who hire these people, but they're only, they're exploiting cheap labor and they're exploiting your community, especially these poultry plants. They, they exploit the resources, the environment, and they get the way paid for them by our government who give tax abatements and, you know, build those, the water and sewer or infrastructure for them because they're going to bring jobs, jobs, jobs. And then you, you, you see them like, well, we don't want to pay the local workforce because they're too expensive. So we'll just bring in a workforce from elsewhere and, um, well, uh, you know, CB Carl, uh, it's fully, it's too late to be a nimby look around. Fire dog. We also have a thing called, uh, food here that 80 doesn't might be fine. Oh, but the jury is still out. We also have a huge marketing campaign called work smarter, not harder. Hard work is a bad work word phase right now. John, well, you are a feral transplant, aren't you? Uh, Jake, I know Jeff, nobody wants a group that disrupts your quality of life. Well, I just shouldn't be, do you think people should have a say? If you have a refugee settlement in your community. Uh, Ricky, I'm more afraid of the Zionist controlled government than any crackhead, Jeff. You know, our country is being destroyed, Jeff, and you don't seem to care. I named texture. I done said it one time, Jeff. They need to go to Ukraine. Biden is already sending everything else over there. Tim, Jeff, what are your thoughts on councilman Martin signing the letter about anything without it being discussed in a council meeting? He needs to be voted out. Hey, look, and that's, that's, that's what people kind of take exception with. And he's like not really addressing this. He say, well, yeah, I signed that, but it was in relation to Ukrainian refugees. Well, a couple of questions here. What is your positional Haitian refugees? And do you, do you want them here? Why, why are Haitian refugees inferior to Ukrainian refugees, councilman Martin? Well, address this, like, like, man up, stop having your wife come to city council meetings to speak for you. And when you give your little remarks at the very beginning of the city council meeting, don't try to Obama us. Okay, like, don't try to flowery talk us about unity and all that address the subject matter at hand. I mean, this iron sharpens iron thing you were trying is, is baloney. We'll be right back. This is a Jeff or show it. If you talk, what, oh, six, five, 'cause this time. Welcome back to the Jeff or show it. If you talk, what, oh, six, five, I guess I'm pushing your buttons today. Still to come on the program. Alabama Republican Party Chairman John Wall. That's in about an hour from now. So stay tuned for that. But joining us on the line always my pleasure to bring on a regular old program about Paul DeMarco up near Birmingham. Paul, good morning. How are you? Good morning, Jeff. Hope you and your listeners are well this Tuesday. Hey, thanks for making time for us. I'll start here. And I guess it's all about the Saturday night incident at five points south and then like, you know, growing up in Birmingham and having spent my, you know, coming coming of age years there. I mean, if I point south was like where people went kind of shocking to hear that it's now sort of part of the war zone of Birmingham shouldn't be surprised. But I tell you what, the most like disappointing thing is sort of this reaction that rather than acknowledging a gang problem, we're just going to kind of nitpick about things we didn't like that the legislature did. Is anybody buying that from Mayor Randall Woodfin up there? Well, and you mentioned the gang problem. What did the legislature end up titling it? It was an organized crime. They couldn't use the word gang in that legislation after the mass killing in April. You remember the legislature passed the bill. They didn't want to use the word gang. Yeah, it was a, it was a barfoot bill and they had, he had to go to Roger Smitherman and Bobby Siegelton and they had to take out what they called objectionable language to get it was like, you became like organized crime or something, Bill. Yeah, you're right. Can we still call it gang? Yeah, are we, are we okay with using gang now? Did, did, did, is, is our folks using that word and our gang? I don't know. I think it's that, is that taboo? Oh, but how many times has as Mayor Woodfin talked about the gang problem? Like he will not, he goes, walks, would you, per bill is Carrie? I just, why? What's he afraid of? Well, here's what's not being talked about. Here's what's not being talked about. Let's look at some recent cases in Jefferson County, Alabama at the Jefferson County Courthouse, where there have been plea bills, where people have been killed or almost killed 20 years in jail, where you had a terrible rape of a 12 year old, 20 year sentences. I don't hear any of the mainstream media up here in Birmingham, Alabama. I don't hear any of the elected officials talking about what is going on at the Jefferson County Courthouse. And until you talk about that, then you're just with, went past the graveyard. Look, it is not having enough police officers from, absolutely. You, you think you had, there used to be, if I remember, like police officers on horseback in South side, if I remember that, right? But there was absolutely police cars and police officers walking around five points. But if they, my understanding is they don't have enough officers to do that, even though the South Creek thing, Jeff is like two blocks away. There is a police, the South Creek thing of the Birmingham police office, you know, where it gets by Rand Huckle is literally two or three blocks away from the shooting. I mean, yeah, you're right. I remember police officers. I remember those officers on horseback down there. Now, I mean, that's what we do at Mobile. If you go down the Dolphin Street, or at least we used to, I don't hang out and down down. And I, but you, you'd see these officers on horseback all the time. And I, I mean, I haven't spent a lot of time in five points South in a long time, either at night. But I remember that they used to be there whenever we'd go down there. So, so is that absolutely part of the problem to have not having a police president, either a police president or police officer to solve the crime? Absolutely. You know, we can talk about the whole, that the gang culture and all that. But, but here is my legitimate question about, oh, you know, you need to have more of the gun laws. If you're not even enforcing the current laws on the book for murder and rape and violent assault, what makes you think there are going to be strict sentences based on the, the, the switches anyway? If you're not even enforcing the current one. And I have not heard that being discussed in any of this. No one has discussed, well, if we would keep the bad guys off the street, then they wouldn't commit these crimes because I guarantee you, would you disagree, Jeff, that these guys were not a couple of voiceouts that did this, that they, this isn't their first rodeo? Shoot that people. Well, no, I mean, I, if I had to bet on it, no, I don't know for sure. But it does, it does seem that way. But I mean, like, Paul, it's just like, there's, there's, there's clearly that's been going on here for a while in that city, a, a sub kind of gang war underway. And I mean, what Randall, what is he doing? Like, why, why is it this, the, the topic? Like, this isn't, this isn't like Compton or, or, or, you know, Watts or wherever this is, this is Alabama, this is Birmingham, and you have a gang problem. And this is what is happening because of your gang problem. And you're blaming the Alabama legislature. Like, like, why, why aren't the media or anybody talking about it? Well, again, they're blaming the legislature, but no one is talking about what is going on inside the courthouse. And that is a missing component of the crime problem, Jefferson County. If indeed, if we get, I think if there are 28 more homicides in Jefferson County, it'll be, I think I believe I read a record that goes back to 1933. Why is not anybody asking the question up here in Jefferson? I'm asking the question I've been talking about. I've been talking to look at what's going on with these sentences, these weak sentences, some of these weak plea deals where bad guys and girls are, are not getting the punishment they deserve to keep them off the street and instead having a revolving door of bad people on the street committing these crimes. And until you do something about it up here, it's going to continue. That what can the legislature do? Yeah, we can have truth in sentencing to mandate some of these sentences that you have judges refusing to do. And that's where the legislature can step in, is having a truth in sentencing and mandatory sentences. Because unfortunately, you have some judges in the state who are using the discretion to not punish bad people in Alabama. Well, again, it's also this, like, I get it that the prisons are overcrowded, the jails are overcrowded. So the thing that I would like to hear from the legislature is like, we need to figure out how to build more prisons. We need to figure out how to, if we're going to have a, and we should, if we're going to have a strict criminal justice code here and system and enforce it to use it as a true deterrent, which is what it should be. I get, I mean, we put way too much focus on the other side of it on recidivism and reforming these, these individuals, which I think is a part of it. But I think the line is shared to focus on to be on the front end, like, hey, don't do this, you're going to spend all this time in jail and your life's going to be ruined. Maybe instead of going to be in a gang banger, you are going to go join the Cub Scouts or something. Hey, Jeff, you're not talking about it. I really am concerned. Are we going to have enough beds after these new prisons eventually are built based on the crimes that are being committed? And what then, you know, all I hear is this joke about criticizing the best parole board chair we've ever had who was keeping these people behind bars and they want to let more of these individuals out of jail. What do you think a lot of them are going to do when they get out of jail? They just go back to what they know. Yeah. Yeah. And then we're like, oh my gosh, we had a mass shooting. We had a mass shooting. Four people were killed and five or hospitals and 21 people were shot. Look at the records of the people. They're, they're doing it again and again and again and then you wonder why it's happening. So that's where we are. So does the legislature have a role? Yeah. The legislature could mandate some of these sentences that we're not seeing from some of these judges across the state of Alabama, particularly here in Jefferson County, where again, we can give example after example of a horrible crime and you're like, well, that guy will never see the day a lot in light of day. And then you look at their sentence and you're like, oh my gosh, same thing with someone how quickly they are up for parole. You're like, how is that person up for parole that quickly based on that horrible crime? It's a real problem in Jefferson County. Well, I tell you what, though, it's just to me, we have this statute on the books dealing with the gang problem and I don't know that these mayors are really using it to its logical extent, right? Well, that's a good point, Jeff. And look, that law was passed. Was that two years ago after the day, Bill? Yes. It would be really interested to say, okay, that law was passed. But we got all kind of the task force. That would be a good use for a study committee. Okay, let's look at some of these sentences and some of these laws have been used. We know when Nia's law has been used multiple times that that needed to be done. Great law being used across the state of Alabama by prosecutors. Now let's look at this gang law. Is it being used? Since it was enacted two years ago after the gang shooting in Davis, Alabama, I believe four people were killed there 20 shot injured. Has that law been used to go after these gangs or whatever they wanted to call it in the bill after they changed the bill up and called it something else? But we know we've targeted a gang. Well, we got we got Senator Barfoot coming up on the program later this week. We're going to talk about this, but is it is it that it's new and they don't really know how to interpret this new law or is it that they these local governments they they don't want to they disagree with it in theory and they don't want to you know, encourage it. It's are they don't want to validate its existence. But that's what this was all about. I mean, I think just kind of acknowledging the problem, Paul is that we're not even getting that this is what bothers me. It's like acknowledging that you have a problem. Do we need a like a 12 step program here to get these some of these mayors to admit that they have a gang problem and they just you know, once you acknowledge that, then maybe that's the step to dealing with it. I do know that there are local police chiefs in Jefferson County. And if there's a crime involving a gun, they will go to the US Attorney's Office to get it prosecuted because they know that the they will get a longer sentence because you have truth and sentencing. You have closer to truth and sentencing more of a day for day in the federal system and that they will get prosecuted and that they will have a fifth sentence. So, I mean, you do see that happening in Jefferson County when with some of that, but there's a lot of them. They're not. Again, when you're seeing some of these other cases out here, when someone was killed and they end up with 20 years in jail and the question is, how did they end up with 20 years? Well, why didn't this case go to trial? Why would the, how did that happen? It doesn't make any sense to anybody here on why something like that's happening here with some of these weak sentences and plea bills. Join by Paul DeMarco here on the program. Paul, let me ask you this and we hear about these clock switches and the mayor's won a clock switch ban at the state level and there's already a federal bad in place. Well, then why do you, I mean, what is the take on the US Attorney there? What is the take? Why, why aren't, why isn't there more of a federal presence in trying to crack down on these clocks, which is if it's really a problem? Why because because you were there, Paul, and when the Alabama legislature passed a law that dealing with something that was under the federal government's jurisdiction, remember the, the Beeson law with immigration, I mean, they got told, well, there's a supremacy clause here and it's not really a function of the state to enforce this law. Well, this is not the same people who were protesting that at the time, are wanting the state government to come in and do something that the federal government's already done. I mean, number one, why aren't the feds taking more of a role here and cracking down on some of this? But number two, like, well, how do they, how do they want to handle this? You either have a Supreme federal government or you don't on these hot button issues. Well, the US Marshal's office and local police chiefs are prosecuting those taxes up here. So again, I commend them. I get back to the Jefferson County Courthouse in the DA's office here, where let's say the legislature passed this law that has been proposed. What difference does it make if a judge says, well, that may be what they can be sent to, but I'm not going to give them that time. And I'm not going to give them that time. What difference does that make? You see what I'm saying is, you can pass a new law saying, oh, if you've got a, a Glock switch, we're going to send, send you to jail for, you can be up to you in so many years. But we've got people who are being murdered and they're not getting giving them the maximum, so you don't even have to go that route. You can say, hey, you murdered somebody. We're going to put you in jail for that. What difference is it going to make if you pass another law that's just not going to be prosecuted or sentenced? Delete here in Jefferson County. Well, I, I just, uh, clearly there's an efficiency at some level of government and no one's asking the right questions. Instead, we get this red herring out here, uh, the Alabama legislature and, uh, you know, forget your second amendment argument. This is not the time for that. Well, I'm sorry, but the second amendment's always going to be there. The second amendment's always going to be a part of this and you have to do whatever it is your policy solution has to, uh, has to at least acknowledge we have a second amendment in the constitution. I just, again, how was that going to change the problem in Birmingham if you're not even punishing the bad people, the violent criminals, the murders, the killers with the current laws on the book that you could do? I mean, again, week, week sentences here and nothing's being done about it. So I'm not sure what more laws on the book are going to change. If you won't even enforce the laws, you currently have them. That's not being discussed here. That is not being discussed. It is like taboo to say, Oh, we, we don't have judges or prosecution that is putting these folks in jail based on the plea. It's like nobody wants to talk about it. Why is that why we've talked about everything else after this mass shooting about every other part of it? But why is this not being discussed? I mean, it's an Alabama apple seed lobby, the hanging out there. But anyway, Paul, we're out of time. We appreciate it. Thanks for talking a little bit about this. Let's do it again soon. Thank you, Jeff. Y'all have a great day. Paul DeMarco, Paul Underscore DeMarco on social media. We'll be right back. This is the Jeff Porsche show. What if we talk about it? Six, five a week. If you turn the other cheek, I hope you're old enough to understand. Spend my dollar. Parking a holler needs a mountain moonlight. Hold her up tight. Make a little oven, a little turnt oven on a mason, dixon. We'll go back to the Jeff Porsche show that we'll talk about those six, five things you're sticking around on Tuesday morning. 2513430106, coming up in the 11 o'clock hour, John Wall, the Alabama Republican Party chairman. But it takes a few here. We'll go ahead and get started, but probably we get to most of these over the next segment. Sean, even the big companies here like Airbus pay super low wages, but job shops, I just, that's true. Well, you know, low wages are better than no wages. Well, that would be true if you didn't have so much government assistance out there, you know, that and the problem is these corporations, these companies are having to compete with the federal government, how to compete with state government, because you can just sit on your couch in as long as you don't make a certain above a certain income, you collect the, you collect this. So it's a, it's an appendiment to the economy. But what I would say is, well, then if you, if you got a workforce, it's not interested in working. Why is, why is that such, why is the Chamber of Commerce desires your biggest focus, Governor Ivy? I mean, that's what it is. Like, is she talking about highways, not not really, you know, they pass a gas tax or building a road that I would say 90% of the state will never use in West Alabama. It's never going to be finished, not in our lifetimes. Um, you know, what else is the education system here? It's not as if Alabama has got winning awards every week. But this, her real legacy is going to be, hey, I was the jobs governor. I, I brought industry to Alabama. I made deals with these companies to get them to locate here. I fought off the unions, uh, at UAW at, uh, advance from Mercedes. That's going to be her legacy. And how did it improve our quality of life? Ten years as governor. Do you, do you feel like your quality of life is better now than it was in 2017? We'll be right back. This is the Jeff Moore show it if I'm talking with us. Six, five. From Bucks Pocket to the shores of Orange Beach, at all points in between, an insider's perspective on Alabama politics. It's the Jeff Porsche show. I don't think we've done it this way. Welcome back to the Jeff Porsche show at the talk with us. Six, five. Thank you for staying with us on this Tuesday morning. I would number three now under way coming up in about 30 minutes from now, John Wall, the chairman of the Alabama Republican party. Simply stay tuned for that two, five, one, three, four, three, zero, one, zero, six is the text line, uh, by giving his final address to, uh, the United Nations over there on the upper east side. Uh, I see a lot of headlines coming out of that, but it is, uh, it should have been an important speech just given the state of affairs around the world and how people are sort of asking a question like who's really running the country is in jail by Dr. Jill running the show the way it appeared last week for many of us. But that's, uh, really, I think overshadowed by the presidential election and even the left wing media with all of their pushing and pulling. I mean, they acknowledge like she's Kamala Harris. They're clearly on the side of. Is it really performing up to par? I mean, if Donald Trump is so bad and such a liar and such an awful human being, why isn't Kamala Harris beating him by 20 points right now? That's the same question I had about Biden. The difference is Harris is a quasi incumbent, Biden wasn't a incumbent. Here you have 34 felony convictions twice impeached and a symmetrical, coverage from the media. And the best you could get is a tie for your candidate. What in it? What a joke Democrats, your candidate is not doing that well. Now, maybe it's mythology. Maybe this is, they know that they got, they got the ground game on election day or they got the ground game during the election season as it goes in some states. But that's, that's what they're banking on. They're kind of listening to the morning show today and they're talking about this. It was like, well, they don't, they want Harris not to do. She's, it's okay if she stays in the basement. We have a moral and ethical obligation to vote against Trump. He's Hitler, which is just over the top. I mean, they're literally calling Donald Trump Hitler and he's, like I said, in their polls, 50 50. Could you imagine, I guess they, I guess that they did try to do this with George W. Bush. He was, he was Hitler. I don't remember. I scant memory of H. W. Bush. Just kind of, the knock on him, he was aloof and then he picked a dummy to be VP who couldn't spill potato. Reagan was out of it. Reagan was a dumb movie star. Meanwhile, just the defining of built over Bill Clinton. He was so dreamy. Two, five, one, three, four, three, zero, one, zero, six, tell them the real reason they're black people. Well, no, and he spells their T. H. E. I. R. Y'all are, I guess you're calling us racist for this because yet you can't really get your grammar right. That's not true. There's, I don't know if you've been around. There is a sizable African American population here. So that's not, that's not really it. Jake, I look close to the buy you a battery. So we've dealt with the refugee since 1974. That's true. I mean, it's a totally fair, fair point. How would you feel, Jake, how would you feel about Haitians and buy you a battery? Pat refugees that come to the country legally should be welcome in every city and in every state. The station talk will go nowhere because it's just blinding people before a big election and you have been bitten by the bait hard. I disagree with that. I tell you what's going on here, Pat, and then you're totally wrong here. You're, you're, you're, you're all based here because the, the border policy, it's a policy decision at the very top. And we know what the program is that is bringing in that is luring so many Haitians, 30,000 or so. And they're having to find a place to put them here. Now they know if Donald Trump is elected, he will rescind this executive order and he will tell these people they had to go back home. So what the, the Biden administration is doing near, there in a rush here to settle as many of these refugees as they can between now and January 20th. That's not saying that they think Trump will win. They probably don't, but they say he might win and we need to, it's better to be safe than sorry. I still think Trump is going to win, but you're never going to convince a leftist that, that they're, that they're not, that they don't have God on their side or whatever they pray to. So they got to settle these guys. And I explained this before, Pat, this is what's going on. This is truly what's going on. If you talk to people who, who tell me they're in the know, DHS has are somewhere around half a million Haitians they got to do something with. And if they don't, they're sitting Dutch, those Trump's going to send them back. So right now they're looking around, they're trying to get help to trying to settle these people as many communities around the country and the spursum. Despite the wishes of the people in the communities, they don't care about that. They are here legally, but it's only, it's only out of a, an executive fiat here. Not, there wasn't some law that grants this legal status. It's an interpretation of law as per the Biden administration. And it will be rescinded by Trump if he is indeed the president of the United States, the next president. So they're trying to make it harder for him to do that. They're sitting this up for 2025, assuming Trump wins in January 20th, he resends the CHNV program. Well, we will send these Haitians back. Well, first you got to find them and they're in like a thousand different communities around the country. Once you find them, they're settled in and you could try to deport them, but there's already probably briefs ready to be filed. There's probably already lawsuits ready to be filed seeking an injunction in federal court that would say, Hey, you can't renege on your deal. You've got a, these people have legal status. They need their due process rights and a liberal judge will say, yeah, that makes sense to me. They can stay. And they will slow walk these cases through the district courts, through the appeals court and all linked to the Supreme Court and maybe by 2028. The Supreme Court will say, yeah, the president actually has this authority to deport why these lower courts didn't recognize this. We don't know, but this is our ruling. And by then, I mean, who knows what happened? What's going on in the country? I mean, it's, it's, it's a very cynical, almost sinister thing they're doing here, Pat. So yeah, sure, they're here legally, but the basis of their legal status is very, very dubious. The border policy has nothing to do with Haitian migrants who are here legally. You're off base. But, but I who says this border policy, it's refugee policy, whatever you want to call it. It is a policy. You're off base. You're wrong. You're just wrong. This, this program, this parole program is giving legal status. And it's like a magnet. Do you want about where do you live? Well, you want us to kid, kid, somebody's Haitian settle next door to you? Would you like that? Would that be okay with you? If it's okay with you, I mean, your neighbor's okay with that? Oh, well, you they're here legally. You can't do anything about it. No, you can be upset about it. You're right as an American. You're right as a taxpayer to be upset about it. Martin, it's because the government made it easy for some able-bodied people to stay home and get paid and have health care. And it's true. That's what I think is going on with the workforce participation, damn Yankee. It's just a very different culture than the typical Spanish-speaking refugee. If a large number of Haitians landed Fair Hope, we'll see protests meltdown never be seen before in our enemy history. Community notes want to be which constitutional rights are not available to people here legally. The radicals who moved here are so right we even fellow Republicans appear liberal. I think this though, if you're if you're not a citizen here, you don't have, I mean, you don't have full constitutional protections. If you're not a, you know, it'd be like, if you're if you're a citizen of like another country and you're visiting the United States, you don't have all the full constitutional protections. At least that's the the views of many people. I don't think I'm off. They saying that you don't have. I mean, they don't let you just like carry a gun if you are not a citizen here. You don't have the same due process rights. If you're a spy on American soil, do you have the same rights and protections? I mean, it's a very that that's a very different area community notes want to be. I don't think people the the gun rights crowd is saying, hey, yeah, second amendment rights for everybody. But if you're a citizen and you're here and you're naturalized or you are, you're born here or whatever it is, you're a native born citizen, then you know, you get the rights, you get, you know, you're sworn in, you get to go vote to people who are just visiting the United States. If I'm from Yugoslavia, well, that's not a country anymore. If I'm from the Czech Republic and I'm here in America on election day, do I get the right to vote in our elections? Done. I'm sorry. It's not Daphne. It's fair hope. Morning, Jeff. I was wondering if you give a shout out to my nephew, it'll all John Luke Tiner who lives with my niece, Morgan Tyler, Daphne out of 6,000 players in the U.S. John Luke made the top 64 in the mid amateur golf tournament. And I'm not even going to try to pronounce this in Virginia. He will now go to round three. He could possibly play the Masters next year if he can win. We are so very proud of him. And hopefully his community will get behind him and cheer him on. Thank you, Jeff. Uh, this is not Daphne. It's fair hope. Okay. I guess that was the context there. Also an positive note. He missed the course record by one stroke this past weekend. We're good for him. Uh, we wish him the best. Unape texture, just the first thing that happens in the plea deals, the district attorney has to agree with it. Then it's presented to the judge. So it might start with the district attorney. Maybe Birmingham has another Soros district attorney. A lot of judges just agree with whatever the district attorney presents to them. They feel like that way it's not on them. It starts with the DA. And this week judges, if it permeates a dark society allowing to be on the street instead of prison where they belong, I agree, certain crimes should be a minimum sentence required. So the judges can't turn these people loose. Great show. Uh, I think texture, you're right. Uh, and it may be a product of there. There is a one sort of message. There's one Soros, um, are there's one DA in the state who accepted money from a Soho Soros funded entity. Uh, it's, it's, uh, Jesse County has two districts. It's so big. And there's so many people in such a big caseload. They have the Jefferson County, like DA and the courts there. Then they have what they call the Bessemer Cut-Off, which is in the western part of the county. And the Bessemer Cut-Off District attorney is a Soros DA, the only one in the state that we can figure. So maybe there's something to that. It's a philosophical thing with the prosecutors. I don't know. Let's get a break in here. I'll be right back. This is the Jeff Moore show it. If I'm talking about 065. [Music playing] Welcome back to the Jeff Moore show it. If I talk about 065. They should stick it around on this Tuesday morning programming not coming up tomorrow the program. Congressman Gary Palmer from the sixth congressional district of Birmingham asked for time on the program. So we're always, always happy to oblige. And Joey Clark from News Talk 93-1 in Montgomery and a guest to be named later. Uh, we'll probably work on that third guest sometime after the conclusion of this meeting. Uh, but I still come on this program. John Wall, I'm a Republican party chairman. Let me get to these real quick here because we're running alone time. Hey, Baltimore County accepts the legal as it gets upset about legal refugees. Sit on the Haitians in Bama to Lafayette, Louisiana. Uh, a name texture you think about the FBI butting that letter out promoting a hit on Trump. Uh, drunk texture. I hope Trump, uh, come on, man. Uh, Auburn can surely be Oklahoma LOL. That won't solve your problem. And I hope Trump is preferred over freeze. Uh, so we're up, buddy. Uh, fire dog. The reason you can't talk about it is skin color. If you try it, point out that the problem in Birmingham are the gangs. You then have to point out the gangs are black and are shooting each other blacks. Racism. You don't have to point that out. Like, why is that? Why? Why do we, why can't we just talk about gangs? Why does race matter? I don't think you have to point out the ethnicity at all. Like we're supposed to be colorblind. And let's be colorblind for a moment. Well, if you're, you're just seeing things and you're not looking at their color and everything is the same ethnicity, it's still a gang problem. I just, I mean, what am I missing here? Uh, if you add 20 most populous cities all run by Democrats, you end up with 400 dead a week and other than Breitbart. That's a complete no-go area for the media. But, but it's what I'm saying though, like we can take color. We can even take party affiliation out of it. Whatever is there, there are factions of people who coalesce around what they call a gang and they are committing violence against one another. That, that is the, that is what's going on. Why aren't we acknowledging this? Am I crazy? Why does race have to be a part of acknowledging your gang problem? I don't care what, I mean, there's, there's gangs of all ethnicities all around the world. And in Birmingham, they have a gang problem and this mayor is talking about Glock switches. What the hell is going on there? Uh, Jeff, nobody is talking about the real reason why they are placing those people in large number of areas around the country. Just look at what they did in Michigan. They are sitting up a few new house seats for the Democrats. Terry, they ruled out South America gains into Birmingham mass shooting. Squirrel, race matters to the people because they make it an issue. The bill about increasing penalties for shooting incidents was twisted by left us into a racist gesture, calling someone a thug gets called a racist matter. And it's cartels, not gangs. Well, but, but it is gangs. I don't think they're fighting over turf over who who whose territory is this for our vice. No, it's not like a, it's like these groups have beasts with one another and they send out their assassins and they commit these drive by mass shootings or whatever you want to call them. Yeah, I think it's a cultural problem. But I'm less concerned about the ethnicity than I am just the actual existence of these gangs and we have a law on the books. That needs to be used. If not, we need to, if it's not sufficient, then why don't we, how about we just, um, make it tougher, stricter. Jim, you said, are there black gangs or white gangs? It doesn't matter. Who cares? two, five, one, three, four, three, zero, one, zero, six, we'll be right back. This is a Jeff Plors show that the talk when I was six, five. Thanks. He said, you don't have to call me mister mister. The whole world called me high. He said, Erica, can you make more time when you play the same? Had you played? Let them laugh at you in Jackson and I'll be dancing on a pony king. Let me drown how white was called it, how with your tail, look between your legs. Yeah, go to Jackson. Welcome back to the Jeff Plors show it. If I talk with those six, five, thanks for sticking around on what's the left of this Tuesday morning. We do appreciate it. Two, five, one, three, four, three, zero, one, zero, six. Got a couple of texts. If I'm permitting, uh, it's always kind of hurry up off. It's an outlast segment. We'll get to what we can. Joining us now on the line, he's chairman, the Alabama Republican party. Always a pleasure and also the chairman of the Alabama Public Library Service now. John Wall is on the line with us. Chairman, good morning, how are you? Yes, sir. I'm doing well. It's good to be on the show. So you're like double chairman now, I guess. That's right. Well, and don't forget my regional spot with the R&T. I believe you can refer to me as chairman, chairman, chairman. Oh, that's, that's a mouthful right there. Well, let's start with that. You know, you know, you know, I got to interrupt because I am really just a farm boy from more Alabama butterfly farmer. We haven't talked about the butterfly business in a while, have we? Yeah, no, you know, in that I always tell people that's actually how I got elected. People didn't really care about my political field. They just thought it was cool that I was a butterfly farmer. And here, well, yet here you are and you've come all this way. Uh, talk about that. Uh, getting, getting, uh, elected the head of the state library agency. What, what, what should we expect out of that? Well, I mean, the first thing is it's an incredible honor to have my fellow board members put that faith in trusting me because I think we're at a very pivotal point in our state libraries and especially the leadership that is needed from the APLS board with a controversy that we've seen over the last few years. Um, it's pretty clear that our libraries have become a key part of the culture war that we're seeing played out. Um, with, in my opinion, socialist pushing a, a socialist agenda that includes this sexualization of our children. And that's been a major discussion with libraries. And, you know, it's been something that I have immediately, um, stood up and said, no, I find this inappropriate. Um, I will not accept this narrative that we should sexualize a children, that we should have sexualized this material in children's sections. That's absolutely incorrect. Um, we need to protect our children just as we do with video games, with TV ratings, with movies, libraries should be no different. Parents should make the decision of whether their children, what their children are exposed to. Government should not use taxpayer money to put this material, inappropriate material in front of our children. Um, and ever since that time, it's been, you know, it's been this, this conflict back and forth. Um, I feel like the APLS board has taken those hard stance. We have stood up with, right? Um, we have listened to parents across the state of Alabama. And I think this is just one more sign, um, that they fill us for, you know, my election, just when we're signed that APLS board does care. And we are going to make a difference. Well, and I mean, this doesn't happen without there being problems, right? The your role with this, you, you becoming the chairman. Uh, it was just like, Hey, I, I, I, I, I don't want to take on this new endeavor here. But like, clearly, there's a problem here and people can dismiss it or whatever. But it's a big enough problem. There's concern for people about it. And that has to be readily acknowledged, right? Oh, that's, that's what that's absolutely right. And we know it's a big issue because you see it by how the left responds. Um, and I shouldn't even say left because, you know, I've seen polling the vast majority of you in democrats. Um, do not want sexually put material in the children sections or libraries. This is not a partisan issue. This is very much, uh, of, of an issue that concerns every single Alabama. And especially our parents. And I think this is what the conversation is about. This was not a political issue. Um, it's still not a political issue. This issue was, was parents, concerned parents across the state of Alabama who were finding, um, pornography in libraries, bringing those concerns to the state agency and asking for a redress of grievance just as a representative from the government should work. And that agency, the APLS board, um, took action to listen to those parents and to represent them with the policy changes to be made. And I think that's the key when you, when you look at the APLS, you know, and for some of us, it took longer than we wanted. But I think at the end of the day, we saw representative government at work with the APLS board and we saw those hard decisions made and we stood up for the parent that I'll down. Well, all you said, this, this doesn't happen without there being a deficiency there. Uh, let's move on to politics and, uh, we're, we're, um, again, we're a little removed from the, uh, dinner, but I, I guess the big event, Donald Trump coming to Alabama again. I'll Saturday. Uh, what are you hearing out there? No, that's absolutely right. I mean, I mean, and they kind of go together, right? Like, Alabama GOP, we hosted that dinner, um, as a fundraiser for Donald Trump campaign, as well as our annual meeting, um, still getting the final count in. We'll, I'm sure we'll be doing a press release when we get everything done, but it looks like we'll be over a million dollars raised for Donald Trump at that event. And then yeah, um, Donald Trump coming back to the state of Alabama for the Alabama Georgia game. Um, you, you know, one of my priorities as chairman has always been raising the state parties or the state profile. Um, I think Alabama doesn't get the credit we deserve nationally. And, um, you know, that's something that I've been working for. You know, we, we had the first ever president of primary debate. We've had Donald Trump visit our state in the primary, several other of the front running candidates. I think this just continues that trend. Um, what a great opportunity for the state of Alabama to welcome, uh, the former president back here to the Yellow Hammer state or for, for what I consider to be the best game, um, of the SEC team. It's going to be a zoo. I, I mean, I expect, uh, I will not be in attendance. Uh, I have obligations on the other side of the state that day, but I, you know, it seems like there's a lot of national media attention here. And I guess, well, I would think why this would make sense, chairman, to me, every eyeball in the state of Georgia is going to be watching this game. So he'll have to get some kind of exposure I would assume. No, look, that's absolutely right. And I've had, you know, a lot of press talking about, you know, it's just a political stunt. I mean, look, yeah, obviously he's going to the Georgia game, right? Like this is going to be a positive or, um, with the campaign in Georgia. But I want to highlight that after he was elected president, he attended the Alabama, uh, LSU University of Alabama. Um, he's been to a college football game as a city president in Georgia. Donald Trump is a college football fan. Um, he knows good and well, this is a big game. And I have literally had Trump's team tell me they're worried about too many guests trying to come in because he actually wants to watch this game. Um, and I love that. I think you're actually seeing, uh, you know, Donald Trump come here to watch in person, when he also considers an exciting football game. Do you think Kamala Harris, uh, is even remotely aware of the, uh, aspects of this game? I don't know if Kamala Harris knows who the Georgia Bulldogs are. Um, but you know what? She probably knows who the, the, the, the, the University of Alabama Cruz would tie this. Cause I don't know how you can live in America and not know, know that Cruz would tie it. Uh, maybe it's that they were like the founder of, uh, some kind of DEI policy or something. And that's why it's on a radar. I don't know. But, uh, well, move along. I'm a somewhat state of the race right now. I gotta, I gotta come into that. Um, if, if she does know about a university, it probably is because of diversity and equity inclusion programs instead of the football. Uh, yes. Yes. Uh, you know, the, the, the daughter of a professor at Berkeley, I think, uh, it's reasonable to think she's aware of these things. Uh, we're joined by Alabama, uh, Republican party chairman John Wall here on the program, but, uh, back to, back to where we're talking about, uh, the, the state of race itself and, uh, you know, the polling on this stuff, it just shows a deadlocked race. And before, and this is why people are, uh, especially myself included or bullish on Trump, it's like all the polling in Trump's past races showed him playing from behind. And in this one, it shows a jump ball making you think like, well, this, this is not a bad place for him to be, uh, at least if you believe the polls. Uh, no, I think you're absolutely right. Um, look, we know that in both 16 and 20, um, Trump overperformed his polling. Um, if that trend continues, and that isn't it, um, but if that trend continues and the Republican base, and let me take it past Republican, Donald Trump has a wider appeal. He's, he's not politically correct. Um, the American people have seen the weaponization of the justice system against him. He, he was higher with African Americans than, than any other Republican in recent history. Um, he's gonna pull in some independence. They're just tired of the status growing. They're just tired of the, the DC swamp and the bureaucrats controlling their lives. And so he, he pulls people out to vote that don't always vote. And if that trend continues, him neck and neck and the polls in the swing stages absolutely where he wants to be. Um, he doesn't need a massive weight. Um, obviously that would be nice. And he had one before the Democrat party realized that they were already beat once and replaced their candidate. Um, so we're literally in, in the second presidential campaign, we won the first one. We're in the middle of the second one and I'm, I'm incredibly, um, optimistic about what we're Donald Trump is right now. I think if the election were held that they keep it win, obviously we still got, we saw five weeks left and that's an eternity in president of politics. There's a lot of things that could change, but right now I'm happy and I think the trend is good. Well, I tell you what though, I mean, like the trend is the trend that I know, you know, everybody says the, the time left is an eternity and then well, that's true. Martin Luther's no like seismic event that would disrupt this race. And I don't know what it would be at this point. I mean, obviously you got to make it through the month of October and the October surprise, but, but here Trump is on his third presidential run and you're still sitting on an October surprise, right? But if we're going to Donald Trump does not have an October surprise. I think she was huge. The numbers are fairly big. Um, you know, we're talking about incredibly small margins that could even move in any of the states. Yeah. So, so what I think it is though, chairman, it's, it's not even going to be really about Trump or Harris, but it's going to be about kind of the conditions on the ground. Do you, how do you feel about your life right now? Uh, do you, do you feel like the country's going in a good direction or do you think the economy's right? And I think it's a referendum on that. Harris is going to, I mean, she, that's what people will vote. And if it's, if it does stay that way, like you said, there's not like a terror attack or some seismic event that would really change things than this. This is Donald Trump's to lose. I tend to agree. Um, now you, you remember that this is not, unfortunately, it's not just the campaign against mala Harris or the Democrat party. This is also a campaign against big tech, um, censorship and the mainstream media as a whole. Um, and that does make it harder because, look, over the next, next few weeks, the mainstream media is going to make this race about saving democracy. If Donald Trump gets elected, democracy is gone, you know, always talking points project 2025. Um, and I find that so disingenuous because if you look at the, which group over the last year has done everything in their power to undermine the election process, it's been the Democrat party. Um, whether that's trying to keep Donald Trump off ballots in states for the general election, um, not let the voters decide whether it's the weaponization of the justice system and using the power of government to influence elections, um, or whether it's taking the party, the Democrat party's nominee who received tens of millions of votes and replacing him with someone who has never won a Democrat primary for president United States. And so I really think we as a Republican to just flip this narrative and say, look, if you want to see the enemies of democracy, we need to ask the Democrat party to look themselves in the mirror because those are the enemies of the American election process. Right. Well, they're just blown right past that. And here's the thing, and I said this about Biden, but the difference is with Harris, she's not the incumbent. Well, she's a quasi incumbent because she's vice president. But essentially it's this like, Donald Trump has been impeached twice. He's been making a victim of 34 counts by a New York judge. He has a very, very, very hostile media against him. He has all of these things stacked up against him. And the best they could do is a 50 50 tie. I mean, what does that tell you? Well, I told you that the American people still believe in America. They still believe in the American dream. They still believe in freedom. And and they know at least 50% of them know good and well what they're watching. They are watching a government go down an incredibly scary half towards totalitarian government towards towards the the elite deciding what people should think is working in it to be in terms of the socialist model and communist model where the party elite is taking control. And they tell the the serfs what they should do and what they should think. And by the way, what they should how they should live their life through draconian regulations and the borders that are unconstitutional and un-American. All while pay lip service to a woke ideology that is so far out of the American made stream that I don't even think that they believe, but for some reason they they find virtue in it. Yes. And I don't forget why also claiming that they're the party who stands up for the American people and quote unquote democracy, which we've had that conversation, I believe we're a republic, but we saw the democratic election process. And it's very disingenuous. And and I hope and I pray that the American people see through it and they see the injustice, they see the hypocrisy, and they vote for the American dream. Freedom itself is on the ballot. They really don't like it when you question the democracy thing. I don't know if you notice this chairman. A lot of people get upset about that. Yes, I know. It was actually this show that got me in trouble. We were talking about democracy versus Republican. I explained that there is a difference and we are not a democracy. And yeah, made it all the way to MSNBC. So I'm kind of I was kind of proud of myself. You know, you're doing something right when MSNBC tried to kick you in the back. But they got it wrong. And you know, I know if you 19 print it, my op-ed in response, where I really go deep and explain there is a difference in those two form of government and why our founders were so proud of the fact that we have a republic. And I you know, I noticed that if no one has said anything after I wrote that article, because I think it's impossible to review. It's very clear that our founders wanted us to be a republic and that there is a difference. Yeah, I think so too. And too, like the democracy narrative is for stupid people. Sorry, that's me saying that. No, no, no, no, no. It's true. Basically, you're saying you're not intellectually intelligent enough to dig deep enough to understand that you can have a constitutional republic as our founders envisioned that uses a democratic election process. They're they are not mutually exclusive. You have both. But the democratic election process is what is what how we elect our representatives, but they are still bound by the rule of law and the constitution that trained feed anything else because they protect our God given rights that no government, no man, has a power to paper. Chairman John Wall, the Alabama Republican Party Chairman, thanks again for making time for us. No, it's always good to be on the show. I appreciate it. Look forward to being back. John Wall, we'll be right back. This is Jeff Porte Show, what I've been talking about. [Music] Welcome back to the Jeff Porte Show, and if you talk about 065, thank you for sticking around on what's left of this Tuesday broadcast coming up tomorrow. Congressman Gary Palmer from the six congressional district will make time for us. Somebody that's got a no, he doesn't, you know, he just wants to move on with the continuing resolution, keep the government open so a lot of members can get back to their districts and campaign. That seems to be where the focus is also on a program from News Talk. 93 won our buddy, Joey Clark. Let's see what we got here. Are they texture? BS, if you're silly dope, you're the rug. Let's see what happens. I'm not sure what that means. Michael, the violence problem. Erase issues are number one of the same. The gay problem is a majority within the black and Latino community. You're not going to find 2% of the white community actively gang banging like you do with this. Why does this matter though? Why does you commit a crime? You commit a crime. Why are we talking about the race so much? There's like an unneeded undue amount of focus on race. Uh, squirrel race does matter. The mainstream glorified to think of aspects like eggs and drugs and crime that used to define black white, but the cultural stuff is different from the actual enforcement. Sorry, I didn't cut it off there, but coming up here shortly, midday mobile. Sean, what's got? Hey, Jeff, coming up in just a few minutes. First time on the show, Baldwin County Sheriff Anthony Lowry joins me for the first hour of the show. So lots to talk about with him about what's going on. Baldwin County, plus he's just back from the border. Also coming up April, Marie Fogle and hour number two and you know, this thing. I keep worried about been worried about it. Well, almost coming up a year now that we keep ramping up the number of US troops in theater there, you know, in the greater Israel area in the Levant. And I don't know how this I don't know how this goes any other way than putting our people in harm's way. I just so we'll talk about that as well. What do you think they know that we don't know? Did they want to be there? Yeah, I don't know. I mean, you know, Iran was who knows if they ever respond for the on a, you know, explosion there in Tehran, but poised to get themselves in a war. I don't know. I don't know what they know that we don't know because I don't know it. But I know this that they're putting more. The more people you put in theater, the more chance something happens to American troops, the more chance it pulls us into a wider regional war. Well, I just want seems like the Israelis are doing a good enough job for now. Yeah, they've had quite a quite a couple weeks. Yeah. Does this do we really need to be there? But anyway, that's a discussion for another time. I got to get out of here. It has been a pleasure. I will try to do better tomorrow. This has been the Jeff Porchow on FM Talk 1065.