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Every morning is a new opportunity to take in the news
of the day and the challenges of life.
You try to make sense of it all.
Right now, we've got to show the titles of the topics
and ask what you think.
So get ready to start your day with a bold look
at history as it happens.
Let's learn, live, and sometimes laugh together.
It's the Mark Davis, shall.
Un-660-A-L.
The answer.
All right, everybody.
Is it 90 degrees yet?
No.
It's going to be toasty.
Heading into the weekend, heading into some hot days
and some hot topics.
Get ready to join us 866-660-5759.
In fact, Mike gave us a little something.
I asked him a question, and I-
I think when I asked you the same question,
but before the question, if I may be permitted
a declarative statement, it's Friday.
Wow.
I feel good.
I feel good.
I feel good.
I feel good.
I feel good.
You want me to say I feel good?
I feel good.
I feel good.
I wouldn't know.
So good.
So good.
I got it here.
You are not going to believe this.
I had something here.
We go hang on a second.
It literally blanked out on me for five seconds,
but those five seconds are over.
Here we go.
That was close.
Summar coming.
Like today.
All right, now the reason for Clint Black is
what you think?
Birthday?
No.
Nope.
Chart history?
Nope.
Onstage locally.
Ding, ding, ding, ding, ding.
No, he's hit the keys to throw.
Get me back on track with my old portrait.
Man, oh man, Clint Black, better man, killing time.
Nobody's home, walking away.
Where are you now?
Clint Black, onstage, Billy Bob's, tomorrow.
There you go, making plans for you this weekend.
Anything indoors is a good, that was the outdoors
is a good idea.
If you want to sweat off some of those winter pounds.
All right, welcome, 866, 660, 5759, 866, 660, 5759.
What I envision this hour is there's a lot of journalism.
I mean, it's, it's, it's kind of catnip where just send somebody out to a gas station and
just sit there and let people roll up and get gas and hey, let's interview them complaining
about gas prices.
Is it a story?
Yes, it is.
The thing that intrigues me is how high will they get before it hurts us?
How high will they get before it begins to damage support for the war effort?
Do people have a grasp of the notion that this short term pain is for the long term gain
of actually having less terrorism in the world?
Is that worth it?
Well, to me, it is, I am what you call a very blessed.
If somebody is, I'm, I'm, I think I, I paid for my first $4 plus gallon of gas and
I got about, you know, 18 gallon tank and it, so it was, those, those, those are pricey
tank full and we've had a lot of driving lately.
We had a lot of errands to run a lot of stuff to do.
So I blew through a tank pretty quickly and I thought, you know, life's hard enough for
you know, if, you know, paycheck to paycheck, you know, pulling down about 25 grand, this,
this is some difference making stuff and I think about travel, I think about the notion
of, you know, loading up the family and, you know, let's, let's, let's, let's drive to
Porter, Kansas.
Well, and of course, flagging to get more expensive too.
So this is a function of when a war starts in that part of the world.
So it's a big week for Marvin Hurst on the, on the show, Channel 11's Marvin Hurst.
He was out of the gas station, talking to people.
I'll play that in a minute.
But the question I wanted to ask you is the question that, that I was asking Mike when
he brought up the Florida sheriff who had said, and this was one of those straight talking
and I think I remember the quote from the sheriff.
It was like, you know, you may come on vacation, but you'll leave on probation.
Well, you miss me even spring break kids.
But this admittedly law in order tough on crime, man's man of a sheriff, the kind of
people I like a lot, offered some national immigration policy advice and essentially
was back off of these people who've been here forever and getting into the country illegally
is the only law break and they've done.
Let me unpack this for you, because if it starts to sound reasonable, it's your heart eating
your brain.
Now work with me here, and the question I have is at the end.
If we start to say that, you know, look at this wonderful guy and his wonderful wife
and their wonderful kids, well, the kids are another thing.
Kids might have been born in America.
And thus our citizens, we got to change that birthright citizenship is wrong, was never
constitutional, but they are, and we're not going to go retroactive on that.
Hey, thought you were a citizen, haha, psych, no, you're not, we're not going to do that.
So we'll fix birthright citizenship until we do.
We got to figure out what to do with somebody who let's say came across the border illegally
20 years ago and has been doing nothing but working hard and paying taxes and making
everybody happy ever since, just straight up wonderful people.
What do we do with them?
If we do nothing, if we go full amnesty and say, hey, you're a nice guy, all is forgiven,
go forth and sin no more.
It seems, it seems kind, well, it is kind.
It seems, it seems just because, you know, what else have they done?
I mean, maybe the 20 years of being a, you know, a good person in the community is on
the counterbalance to that moment and, you know, 20 years ago, when he, you know, sloshed
across the Rio Grande, I mean, oh, I can totally see that logic.
If you follow that logic, though, we are sunk because the messaging, the messaging, then
everything, ding, ding, ding, ding, everybody knows, everybody in every country knows,
I can get into America and have no consequence.
If all I want to do, you know, first of all, you stay under the radar, stay, you know,
in the shadows, vanish into the interior and just work and, you know, don't drive drunk
or kill anybody and, you know, don't commit any other crimes, then they can discover
my illegality after 10, 20 years and all will be forgiven.
Sweet.
And if we do that, we are absolutely screwed because everyone, but then, so I said that and
Mike said, yeah, hey, but you might notice something.
The border is actually closed, which it pretty well is.
So thank goodness for that.
And then I replied to Mike, chomping it to be president forever.
Now we'll president, JD Vance or president Marco Rubio keep, keep the border as tight as
it is now.
I think so.
President AOC, not so much.
And I'm partially kidding, but only partially.
I don't think we're going to be blessed with Republican presidents forever.
We have to have immigration policies that make sense now so that the borders do open
back up.
We don't get a flood of people energized by the knowledge that America has gone full
amnesty.
So if I'm prepared to agree with the sheriff, that worst of the worst, find the really
serious criminals focus on them, focus a little less on rating, you know, the break room
at home depot.
All right, all right, I've opt once again optics.
I get that.
So here's the question.
What is the good, what is the proper consequence?
What is a consequence that doesn't seem cruelly punitive?
I mean, if I'm willing to play ball with those who say that somebody who came into the
country illegally 20 years ago has been just a wonderful soul ever since no, no more
misbehavior.
In fact, contributing to society, working, here's the thing about working.
You know, hello, that's a job an American could have.
So this whole thing about all they want to do is work, all they want to do is work.
Yeah, well, how many slices of the pie are there?
I'm guessing thousands upon thousands upon thousands upon thousands of Indian folk pouring
in on the H one B's all they want to do is work too.
At less money, snarf it up American jobs because companies and government are in on it.
And by the way, God bless our Indian community.
We may do, we may have to do that, but maybe today it's only 815, the Frisco, what the Frisco
Plano, dude, what is going on up there?
Well, first of all, all the Indian folk are moving there, which means, you know, if you're
at the store, it's like, whoa, this is not, you know, I was going to say not 1995.
It's not 2010.
And that's just the marketplace.
That's just folks living where they want to live and do what they want to do.
And then you cannot find better values, better education, better, better people, better
just than the Indian folk, the Indian population, Indian Americans.
But, you know, having started this paragraph, let's add it, why not?
Let's speak globally in a number of ways.
If there really is H one B fraud going on, and who's this guy who keeps showing up at Frisco
City Council, I think he got bounced by T-Mobile, and they made him train the Indian guy.
Did they send him to India to train the Indian guy who's going to come take his job?
It's like, what?
So which gets us to the other talk show.
And that is, and you know what, in fact, these go hand in hand.
Topic A is the folks who come here illegally.
We let too many people in legally.
I think we're pretty good here.
Am I looking to shut the border down to absolutely everybody?
Probably not.
I mean, is there some pocket, some sliver where there is somebody from somewhere that can fill
a niche in the, you know, in the economy that medicine or science or something like that?
Probably looking for some pretty big brain people.
We have big brain people, you know, how about going with them first?
But if we have H one B fraud and I think it's pretty clear that we do.
And the reason we do is the marketplace money, money, money, money, money.
Because companies, here's the dirty little secret.
That businesses love any, this is why businesses are soft on immigration.
I refer to Chamber of Commerce Republicans.
Chamber of Commerce Republicans are pretty conservative on some things when it comes to immigration.
Bring it.
Let's go.
All the illegals will take them because they bring labor costs down and thus improve the company's bottom line.
As does the flood of folks from India who will come in and do things will work as hard as can be in their smart as a whip and they'll work for cheap.
And so companies are going, come on, come on, come on, come on.
Please, sir, may I have a thousand more?
And local government's glad to do it too because those expansions make businesses happy, happy businesses make a broader tax base.
So you have government complicity in all of this.
So what are we going to do?
So there's, I guess, dual questions.
Can we walk into you gum at the same time?
I think we can't.
The H one B thing.
A lot of people refer to it as the Indian takeover.
Not real comfortable with that.
But I know what somebody means if they're referred to it.
And the other thing is, if you find somebody, this is probably more of a South of the board.
It's not just just Mexican folk.
It's O.T.M.'s other than Mexico.
Folks from Honduras, Nicaragua, El Salvador.
If they have, you know, they obviously came, they got into Mexico to get into here.
And they say, again, 10, 15, 20, 30 years ago, and they've been great ever since entering the country illegally as the only law breaking they did.
What is the consequence we can offer to that that dissuades it in the future that is a deterrent for the future that seems commensurate with their sin.
866, 660, 5759.
We are in for it worth Wayne.
Mark Davis, welcome.
How are you?
Good Friday to you.
Good morning, Mark.
I think I can win you over with more.
Empathetic facts and not the political view.
So if you may recall, I called in a month or two back and we talked about demographics and how we are facing depopulation.
So here's the sales pitch I would give you.
Since depopulation is a serious problem, even though people don't realize that it is, and it's happening in the United States.
So here would be my sales pitch.
The people who are here, who have skills for an established job.
And speaking English can stay.
They get a special passport that designates them their status.
And here's the penalty.
They don't get to vote for 20 years.
From the moment they are discovered or is there a credit for time served as you might say.
If somebody got into the country 10 years, you know, I'm going to get right now.
From the moment they convert and they become a real actual citizen from.
So let's say it's July 1st this year.
You become a real citizen just like something like Emily.
Well, if you're a real citizen, you get the words mean things.
We discover you've been here illegally for 20 years.
But getting into the country illegally is the only illegal thing you've done.
You've been great ever since we're going to make you wait 20 more before you can actually vote.
20 more.
Yep.
Hmm.
Hmm.
Hmm.
Hmm.
I don't think.
That's your penalty.
I think you're on to something because it is interesting because if the voting is held in a dance,
Democrat enthusiasm for it will drain because it's while it's Republicans who are interested in the cheap labor.
It's Democrats who are interested in the votes because there they want lots and lots and lots of people.
Normalize naturalized and energized to be grateful Democrat voters right off the bat for decades to follow.
All right.
Thanks.
Let me run that up the flag.
Well, thank you.
Okay.
So it's only been here for 20 years.
We're going to make him wait 20 more.
10 more.
We can haggle.
And I guess we're going to.
All right.
Let's a little more haggle and a little more thoughts, thoughts, thoughts, lots of thoughts.
So what we're about every day, 8666, 5759, Mark Davis, 820.
Got to get you off of my mind.
I know it's just a matter of time.
You found somebody new.
Most underrated soul R&B voice in American history, I will suggest you.
The great Solomon Burke.
Got to get you off of my mind.
You didn't.
Born in Philadelphia, 86 years ago today, passed away back in 2010.
Go get you some Solomon Burke.
Cry to me.
None of us are free.
Don't give up on me.
If you need me, fast train.
All right.
8666, 5759.
How many immigration related problems can we solve in one show?
We're trying.
And we're in Gainesville.
David, Mark Davis, welcome.
How are you?
I couldn't be better if you if you bottled me.
Yeah, I offered a solution.
You just talked about it.
It's the old Rush Limbaugh solution that he talked about for years.
I'll accept your amnesty if illegals can't vote for 20 years.
And if we say they can't use public services.
And watch how quickly the amnesty proponents dry up.
But now wait a minute.
We can't do it.
I know.
Well, there's part of it that might be a tough ask.
First of all, the voting thing.
I think that's getting a name in all of the text line.
Sparkling to life.
Absolutely.
Because it's all about voting for the left.
The reason they do think that the left wants open borders because they are kind-hearted
toward these people.
They want them to vote.
They want them to come in here and vote Democrat for the rest of their lives so they can
keep political power.
How precisely do we tell somebody who we have allowed to stay?
What services are we going to tell you you can't have?
That's the, as John Wayne said, that's when we get down to the rat killer.
Exactly true.
I love flow charts.
So let's see.
So if we're going to do that, what would then be the next box is?
Which services are we going to say you can't have?
And we can't wait to see the Chuck Schumer floor speech about that.
Thank you, sir.
And again, it's not the Chuck Schumer floor speeches run my life.
But is there a day that goes by that I don't say the word optics?
And I guess because these days it is so important how things look.
You know, Minneapolis, there wasn't really anything to matter with what we were doing
with ice and Minneapolis, but the optics were terrible.
Which was, which was not helpful.
And again, here's the other thing I'm saying multiple times every day.
Anything that helps us win in the midterms is good.
Anything that hurts us in the midterms is bad.
Now, obviously a lot of these immigration solutions are not stuff we're going to do.
You know, in the next seven or eight months, these are long term things of how to
hit the long term problems.
Obviously, one of the main problems with illegal immigration is the drain on our
social services budgets.
But what do you do?
Tell me that the kids can't go to school.
I broke my leg.
Can't go to the emergency room.
Yeah, good luck with that.
Thoughts, please.
866, 660, 575, 9.
Mark Davis, 831, Mary Rose in the newsroom.
Little Jim Krochi, so what's the motivation here?
First of all, bad bad Leroy Brown, right?
Pretty well, the same song as you don't mess around with Jim, isn't it?
And if you go down there, you better just be well.
Oh, man, let me roll around.
You don't tug on Superman's cape.
You don't speed into the wind.
You don't pull the mask off the old long range and you don't mess around.
Okay, let's throw Jim some love and let's do it in the following way.
Okay, what is it?
What is it, birthday?
No, no, no, no.
Chart history?
No, no, no, no.
Local appearance.
Well, that would be tough since Jim died in a plane crash in 1973.
Oh, but wait.
But wait, but wait, but wait.
His son, AJ, was two years old when his dad died in that plane crash,
leaving behind just that remarkable list of execution.
I have a little fun with those records, but they were great.
They were toe-tapping classics.
But then you get operator.
I got a name, time in a bottle.
I think Jim Krochi might be really might be one of the most underfits.
It's sort of underappreciated under underrated people of Solomon Burke's birthday,
et cetera, et cetera.
So where am I going?
Where am I going?
His son, AJ, now tours singing his dad songs.
And does a pretty fine job of it.
I'm given to understand.
Let me see here.
And that is, that's tonight.
My friends at Arlington Music Hall tickets at ArlingtonMusic Hall.org,
AJ Krochi doing his dad's song list playlist.
So love it.
So go see AJ.
Pretty cool.
All right, 866, 660, 575, 9.
All right, solving all kinds of all manner of immigration problems.
And working our way into the weekend and talking about stuff.
And I've gone a half hour with that plug-in project Hail Mary.
So let me tell you if you just turned it on the radio.
We saw it last yesterday afternoon.
It officially opens today.
Good luck getting a seat.
Get on in there.
It is as good.
It does live up to that.
Right.
Gosling is great.
Set design.
Incredible.
Rocky and unforgettable.
Alien character.
I mean, what is the pantheon of alien characters?
There's ET, you know, Elliott and you can't, can't beat that.
One of the other.
And it's, I'm, you know, and again, I don't, I don't go to,
in sort of in the world of sci-fi.
In the world of first contact.
And it's funny.
There are elements speaking of contact.
The Carl Sagan book turned into a movie with Jody Foster.
The elements of that.
And I was talking about science fiction that's really heavy on the science.
Actual science.
Actual.
And it doesn't mean it has to be dorky or academic or, or impenetrable.
It just, it's just, it does more than just bay view in the wonder.
It also immerses you in the actual science of science fiction.
Interstellar does.
Contact does.
The Martian Andy Weir's first book turned into a movie with it.
And with that, Damon, it surely does.
And Project Hail Mary does as well.
It's just so, so, so, so, so, so good.
Okay, phone call time 866, 666, 057, 599.
We are in Richardson.
Randy.
Happy Friday.
Are you sir?
Good morning, sir.
Good.
Thank you for taking my call.
You bet.
Okay.
My idea on it would be similar to what they have.
This might be like 12 years ago about a month ago, but it's all between 12 years ago.
So I got.
I got, I got, I got, I got, I got.
I got, I got, I got, I got, I got.
I got, I got.
I got, I got, I got.
I got, I got, I got.
I got.
I got, I got, I got.
My idea on the way out here.
I have, I got, I got.
And, I got.
So, yeah, I got, I got.
So, yeah, I got.
It's all about these things.
You know, actually.
I got a big thing.
Very, very, very Mcdonald, I'm glad I'm a big nonprofit.
I don't, I don't know.
else and then you would get it's normally a two-year but give them a three-year
temporary visa so they can work and they can live here and then do a second
round of background checks. If you've done anything wrong, disqualified. If you've
taken any kind of government assistance or state assistance, you're disqualified.
If you passed that three-year mark, then you get another two-year temporary
visa. Okay, pause for a second. Pause for a second because I had a question
about one of your, because I'm following along, I'm taking notes. If you've
accepted, on the notion of accepting some type of assistance in a fraudulent
fashion, because if you live in a state, California will twist itself into a
pretzel to give you all kinds of benefits that if you're sick or if you're
poor or if you're whatever, what are folks supposed to do? Not accept
something that a state actually offers you? I would go along along the lines of
fraudulent. I mean if you're if it's actually a legitimate, then that would be
okay. Okay, but if you're coming in front of some sort of disqualify. Okay,
continue. Thank you. Didn't mean to rock it down. Go ahead. Oh, not a problem. And
extend it for another two years so that you have a total of five-year
temporary visas. So your other background check, same as the same process, if you've
done anything wrong out. But at the end of that five years, then you're gonna
have your fine, pay your fine, and you'll be able to get your resident visa so
that you can live here. You can work here. You can draw benefits if you're
well, you have to be working this whole time. You can't just live here. You have to
be working. Gotcha. But while you're working, you're paying your social
security and what have you. So whenever you get old enough to retire for
social security, you can get your social security for whatever you have paid
in. Gotcha. But that's as far as you can go. Just your resident visa. You'll
never be able to become a naturalized citizen. No citizenship whatsoever. And
you'll never be able to vote. I was gonna say that because that's the bottom of
vote. It's so fun. Everybody think everybody gets it. Voting is the bottom line
voting is the holy grail. It's the only reason Democrats ever wanted open
borders. Lord knows it's not kindness. It's so that these folks can come in
and vote Democrat forever. And if you take that off the table, watch everybody's
attitude change. Cool.
Exactly. Hey, listen, thank you. I'm sorry, I'm going to finish up. As long as you've
been a good, as long as you've been a good upstanding citizen, and you can
continue to do it and continue to assimilate, then go for it.
No citizenship. Thank you. Thank you. Now, this is interesting.
Interesting. We talk about the appeal that this would have to Democrat
politicians or Democrat voters. What does the yeah, you can come here and
work, but it'll be a long time before you vote, or maybe you might not vote
at all. What does that do to the appeal that it carries for the actual
immigrant? Show me 100 folks really eager to get into America. And they're
only a few hundred million. But show me a hundred chosen at random.
Why do they want to come here? The list is long. Obviously, yet in this
horrible, horrible country of America is just as as hideous as everybody says
it is. Why is everybody tripping over each other to get here? Please, there's
the door, if you think we're, you know, if we were so bad. But of the people
who just imagine the folks who are trying to get in here, maybe it's because
their country is a hellhole. Maybe it's because their country is is crime
riddled. Their country is an economic disaster. Their country is politically
punitive. Their country, they're just so many ways in which the life in America
is exponentially better than virtually anywhere else. And obviously, I don't
think there are a lot of people banging on the door to come in from Sweden,
although they might be for taxation reasons. But you know what I mean, it's a
lot of its economic, a lot of it's for being downtrodden, being politically
persecuted. It's about freedom. It's about money. And everybody likes freedom.
And everybody likes money. Now, you know, where I'm headed here. And if you
don't, here it is. Is voting that big a deal? I mean, if for all the people
who are so eagerly, I think they just want to stop getting shot at it in
the streets of Managua. I think they just want to, you know, stop, you know,
eating dirt on the hills of Guatemala. I think they want to, you know, stop
being persecuted, you know, in the streets of whatever country they come
from. So the good news is, okay, we'll let you in under these very specific
conditions that a lot of people are offering up today. I'm not going to be
voting. So ever or 20 years, but the very least you won't be voting for a
very low, I will think until someone tells me otherwise that that would not
be that much of a deal breaker. And listen, if you go to a country, you know
what? And honestly, especially if you assimilate, I think the kind of people
that, you know, and I love this phraseology, the good ones, you're the good
immigrants, the people who come here, obey the law and assimilate and learn
the language. Hello, and embrace our constitution embrace our laws, embrace
our culture. And that doesn't mean punting your own doesn't mean you can't wear
festive things from your homeland or speak your own native language in your
house or out in the street or wherever you want, but dog on it, you're going
to be bilingual. You're one of those languages is going to be English.
Hi, you're here time to start learning. And I know it's hard. Is it still
English and Mandarin Chinese? English and Mandarin Chinese, the two most
absolutely mind-bending languages to actually pick up on the fly. I am so, so
empathetic. And I will give you some time and some latitude and all kinds
of props for just trying to learn English. They're people born in America,
ain't that great at learning English. So if you come in and you don't know a word
of it, you're just arrived in your 26. Man, let's let's sit down and all help
you out. Let's go. Let's get the absolute. But there's so much, it says so much
about you that you're trying. So thank you. Keep trying. A simulation means
everything. But of those types that do want to assimilate, I think ultimately
there, they, of course, I say, I could, you know, I think, as I always do, I go
back to Ellis Island. I think about the kinds of people that we brought in at
Ellis Island. They were all about the assimilation, all about the work ethic,
all about obeying our laws, all, and listen, we didn't make it real easy for
them. I'll put you to the Taylor Sheridan 1923, right?
Woof. Ooh, that young lady coming in from England or Ireland or ever she's
coming in. Ooh, that was, that was not pretty in Ellis Island. But we've made
some of these folks go through. We made it hard. Um, but also sure they'd like
to vote. And I totally understand that. But I think most of what we've been
talking about is folks who came, and by the way, if you come in here legally,
there's a process and it's naturalization and you haven't broken any laws,
you'll be voting a lot quicker. I'm good with that. We're going to offer you
citizenship. And it needs to not be in 30 days. But there's a process. And
then that's, that's an avenue toward voting. But if you broke the law to get
in here, and by the way, I've said this 10 times today that coming in is the only
law you broke. Yeah, it's not the only law. Because the moment you break the
law to come into America, virtually every day that you're here involves
breaking some additional law or another phony social security card,
some other type of fraud. So it does tend to snowball. But if, but if your entire list of
offenses is based only on the fact that you're here illegally and you haven't, you know, killed
anybody in a bar fight or anything like, sorry, that's so stereotypical, whatever, whatever,
yeah, whatever, I would come in any other serious crime. Uh, and we, we find you the going,
thank everybody's even text line 20 years, man, 20 years. You know, what if we find you when you're
50? Well, that's, that's called consequences. Starting to see you in your 70 at the polls.
866, 666, 5759, Mark Davis 850.
Some driving around with mom and dad. I'm 14 stylistics on the radio, Betcha by Gollywale.
This record comes out and I'm thinking, hey, who's this woman?
Well, that woman is Russell Tomkins Jr.
Yeah, I'm not good.
And on that, you know, let's let's get in the hook all together and come on, let's do it together.
Love me some stylistics. You are everything. Everything is you. You make me feel brand new,
uh, break up to make up. Stone in love with you. Uh, but the sort of the falsetto vocal there.
That is Russell Tomkins Jr. Still around. Thank you. It's like 21, 22 recording that.
He's 78 tomorrow, a little musical birthday. All right, let us cruise into the 9 o'clock hour.
Ah, the playground, especially on Fridays. We get it in now or you got to wait till Monday. No,
no TSA lines required for access to the show. We won't, we won't patch it down,
feel you up anything. Just put you on. Let's just start talking. Sorry, that's a minute.
866 660 5759 gas prices. Yeah, little gas price talk. Um,
sort of day two of watching them just sandblast says our shoves out of everybody's life.
What else? What else? What else? Victor Davis Hanson. He's had some tough health issues for a few
weeks. He was back. Was it his first time back on anybody's show? He was on Hannity last night,
talking about the media rooting against America in the war. Oh, and also, and you know, the guy
who got shot in the, um, shot and killed in the children's hospital parking lot,
who end up being one of Jasmine Crockett's most valued security guys turns, and he was like a fake
cop. He had misrepresented himself as, as an actual cop. And he ran a company employing other people,
employing actual cops to do a private sector security. Yeah, company apparently was a sham.
And some of those guys haven't been paid. Shannon Miller has that story from Channel 5.
So probably offer that to you too, as well as anything else you would like to offer 866 666 0 5759.
It's Friday 9 o'clock hour. Here we go. Stick around.
The Mark Davis Show
